Susan Stewart - Cap. 3 The Gigantic
Susan Stewart - Cap. 3 The Gigantic
Susan Stewart - Cap. 3 The Gigantic
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)
3. THE.GIGANTIC
Skywriting:
Exteriority and Nature
t the end of the Book of Job, God
asks Job: "Can you draw out
Leviathan with a fish hook, or
press down his tongue with a cord?
Can you put a rope in his nose, or
pierce his jaw with a hook? Will he
make many supplications to you?
Will he speak to you soft words?
Will he make a covenant with you
to take him for your servant for
ever? Will you play with him as
with a bird, or will you put him on
leash for your maidens?" (41:1-5). The comic image of the monster on
a leash, of the domesticated beast, the pet or "friendly" lion, tiger, or
dragon, illustrates the absolute inversion of the miniature which the
gigantic presents. Whereas the miniature represe~ts .clos,ure, inte-..
riority, the domestic, and the overly cultural, the gigantic repre~~~~,.
infinity, exteriority, the public, and the overly nah!nd. T/1e elephant
joke, for example, depends upon this principle, the pink elephant
being the most incongruous mixture of nature and culture, a beast
dreamed by an interior decorator.
.
~_only staJ.!cioutsid,e, looking in, experiencing a type of~gic distance. Here we might think of the paintings of the contemporary folk
artist Ralph FasaneUa, who paints views of apartment buildings and
tenements asu "their structures could be sliced open and we could
simultaneously examine aU the interiors they enclose. Fasanella presents us with an arrangement of simultaneous and unconnected dramas which, as in viewing the dollhouse, we can attend to only one
scene at a time.1 The confrontation of so much life results in an
experience of ~[<?unc!~_<?~~:,:,_e~~
akin to that which Socrates experi- '
ences suspended in a basket above The Clouds; or, perhaps less ab- r;.
stractly, the loneliness of Frankenstein outside the peasant hut or
King Kong as his shadow falls over a sleeping New York City. AI- .though the miniature makes the body gigantic, the gigantic transfomis~aY.:-:Ul.T~~ia~.~!__espedally
,'poiI1ting to. the bOay's
"toyli!<.e~~__~~:~~~E!l!'~:~"~s.pects.
.
..
Our most fundamental relation to the gigantic is articulated in OUL
relation to landscape, our immediate and lived relation to nature as it
~surrounds" us. Our poSfooi'inere iSllie antithes1S of oiiiposi~
relation to the miniature; we are enveloped by the gigantic, surrounded by it, enclosed within its shadow. 'Whereas we know the_
miniature as a spatial whole or ~~-=~e~ra!'p_arts, w~ ~~~,the gigan- L{.
tic only pa~~li:-WeIIiove-ffiiough
the land~~~
it d~_~snot move y. ;
tnrough ~ This relation to the landscape is expressed most ofte!l..
through-an abstract proJectiOn'()f]h~__boc!y,uP<?J;\.llie,n~tl1r.ig_~2..rl~
ConsequentIy;'boththemmiature
and the gigantic may be described
Through,'metaphors of containment-the
miniature as containeti,~,ttl~-.
gigantic as container.
-'We find 'the miniature at the origin of private, individual history,
~t we find the gigantic at the origin of public and natural history;.
The gigantic becomesanexpIanafion for tne-envu-Oil.menT,-afigure on
the interface between the natural and the human. Hence our words
,
',,'
J~e
landscal?: are o~te[\ p~oje~~~~. ?fan.e~?~~,~
~~r. ~e.~
i' ',.,
the mout-n-oftne river; the foot-hills, the fingers of the lake, toe heartlands, the elbow of the stream. This gigantic reading, of the landscape
is often supplemented in folklore by accounts of causality: the Giant's J.
Causeway as part of a road constructed by giants between Scotland fl.,
and Ireland; Stonehenge as the Giant's Dance (choreagigantum); glacial pot-shaped cylindrical holes ascribed as Giants' Kettles; Giant's
Leap, the name given in mountainous regions to the rocks separated
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72 ON LONGING
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count of two large boulders in the hills above the Vale of Blackmoor
that were positioned when two giants had a contest to see which was
the stronger and thereby could throw a weight the greatest distance.
Nearby is the Giant's Grave, a large mound of earth said to be the
burying place of the unsuccessful of the two. The Scottish giants,
called Fomorians, are similarly attributed with the power to throw
boulders. In his book on English giants, tlarold John Massin~ham
writes of giant figures etched into the turf at the villages of Cerne
Abbas in Dorset and Wilmington in Sussex:
On the slope of a chalk hill surmounted by a small earthwork just
outside the village, a rude colossus had been etched into the turf. Like
its brother of Wilmington in Sussex, it is the seal of a god-mountain
more towering, robust, and grandly moulded than any in its
neighborhood;
. . . climb
swelling calves. . . the figure is 180 feet long and carries a great
indented dub in the right hand. Many of the turf figures on the Downs
are, of course, comparativelymodem; but the Ceme Giant, the
Wilmington Long Man, and the White Horse of White Horse Yale in
Berkshire "antiquitate Antiquity:')
, Massingham concludes that the figures were not simply a form of
what we now call. "found" art, but rather were deliberately constructed anthropomorphic representations of the gods. He also art" gues that "it is tenable that the giants of folk-lore are the literary
:'equivalents of the giants incised upon the chalk downs:'4
In addition to the Cerne Abbas and Wilmington anthropomorphic
representations, we find the white horses carved in the turf of the
downs in southern England. The White Horse of Uffington Hill in
Berkshire, which Massingham mentions, is the most famous of these
figures, stretching 335 feet from nose to tail and 120 feet from ear to
hoof. Massingham records that the duty of scouring the figure was
undertaken by various local parishes. Up until the twentieth century
the scouring ceremony was accompanied by a general festival of
junketing, horseplay, feasting, and cudgel bouts.s
Mary Williams suggests that "belief in giants can easily be accepted. Early invaders to th~se islands, seeing the gigantic menhirs, stone
circles such as Stonehenge, Avebury and many others, would naturally conclude that only giants could have moved such immense
masses of stone and set them upright. Again the very large boulders
scattered over the countryside would suggest giants at play, hence
the many tales of giants, including King Arthur and his Queen, casting huge rocks at one another."6 In the same vein, large barrows
would be attributed as giant's graves. In Germanic tradition ---we find_
THE GIGANTIC
similar stories in which giants make canals, rivers, lakes, islands, and
mountains, or in which lakes and streams are formed from the tears
and blood of a giant. Large boulders are described as pebbles shaken
from a giant's shoe; large lakes are formed when giants leave their
footprints in the earth to be filled by rain; a roaring in the forest, or
billowing waves in a field of grain, mark the passage of a giant.7
Such explanations of the orig!~.~geograEhical
feal;yres often
conta~~~~!.'~ing
accounts of h()w the earth was origina~.lyinhabited by a giant ~Ctt:.~_of
mt\!~,preser:tt-day man being a fi\1l~~descendant of these original figures. We find this idea developed into a
philosophy in 's
prophetic books: "The giants who formed this
world into its sensual existence, and now seem to live in it in chains,
are in truth the causes of its life and the sources of all activity, but the.
.chains are the cunning of weak and tame minds, which have power
to resist energy, according to the proverb, 'The weak in courage is
strong in cunning'."s Similarly, the childr~n___ofUranus rep~~~nt ' --'
physical force and lawlessness, a superfluity of nature over culture.:':
.
l)te Cydops-his~y~
aft ~~front t() syriunetry an~the. "correct" view,
his cannibalism the ultimate. ~s~ult upon domesticity and the pri- _.
vai~zing'functions' onh~?i~t_u.r.~~,..~is labor a mark upon the' Iand- .
sc~p~,_Y!:~_~!~.h.~ut.cul~y'ation-has his analogues in the one~'yed
gi.~~~~jJul~~~!
Croatia, Slovenia, Ireland, and Wales. Odysseus
describes the Cyclopes as "giants, louts, without a law to bless
them. . . . Kyklopes have no muster and no meeting, no consultation
or old tribal ways, but each one dwells in his own mountain cave
dealing out rough justice to wife and child, indifferent to what the
others do:'9 The giant. from Leviath~lL!Q_th~jQ~!!9_~ J.r.~ak, is a
mixed category; a vio~~t_()~.<?f
~u_l!d'!.ry.!i~d rule; a.~ov,,:rabu[1da~.c!..2L
.f!t~~aKi~T.a-nd:nfri..ce.~naffro.nt ~~_~.Ih1~~1
systems, Here we find the .
opposite of the clockwork preaslOn or the rriiniature; for while the
miniature "works," coordinating the social, animating a model universe, the gigantic unleashes a vast and "natural" creativity that
bears within it the capacity for (seIf-)destruction.
In one Germanic legend, a giant girl comes down from the mountains into a valley. Here she sees a plowman at work in a field. She
puts the peasant, the oxen, and the plow in her apron and takes them
home as toys. When she shows these playthings to her parents, they
are displeased and tell her she must take them back, "for these men
are not playthings for giants, but belong to that race of people who
will some day do great harm to giants."lo Typically, the giants 3rt\!_D.ot
the gods; they do not inhabit a transcendent space; they inha~!!. the
ea~~,. .~~. i~ ~. their movement through the sensual world. which
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74
ON LONGING
75 THE GiGANTiC
in Cantovn of TheFaerieQueene:
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~d
in the Peri Hupsous of Longinus, the aesthetic experience of
the sublime is 'characterized by astonishment and surprise: the granleur of scenery results in a sudden expansion of the soul and the
I,
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What distinguishes
the sublime
is ,.f:J "
, ',.
"
'
that the former is individual and painful, while the second is s~aL t ,'. '>,' ,.,
_~;dpieasarn, -resffii8:!i'p-:ojfI(jv~YiiC!:I~~.~~!<!!!.~~i!i~gQ.!J.S,
i'4-This description of the beautiful thus appears historically on the
interfacel>etWeeil the sublinieand the picturesque, that rather bourgeois taming of the sublime which emerges at the end of the eigh~ y~
i teenth
century
and
flowers
during
the Victorian
period.
The terrify-
II,',',..,. ,
~ing and giganticized nature of the sublime is domesticated into the t,.-.,
,? orderly and cultivated nature of the picturesque.~!!t~!'!.~l!!!l~.j;;_
marked by a potential recklessness, a dangerous surren~ertc?..~.:..
"
-aerln' nat!:!~
'~~~pic~resque
is marked'&yii""harmonyof 'fo~!.-c2!Q.L._
and'Tight, of-inodulatioii:,a:~p!~~~~'~'?iX,i!~,~c~~y[~~~~~ ~
apparerirrri"the' word'itS"elf, t~~ 'p'is.~j,!~l;1_e isJ~~~~.?.J .!~! lE.~sformation of nature !rito art-ana thus the manipulation of flux into form-;m~~~i~to,. f~~it\,~.PoetiY7~~~:~~ri'g,ga,f~~.ri!!tg~'~~~c.,teC~!~ar:!!.
:7ffi~,art!Jftravel"15 make up an art of landscape, an art ()f!1'eaitii.~I:)!)..
'
It;,
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lONGING
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THE GIGANTIC
from the ground up to a height of five feet, clearly articulates the trace
of culture uEQn na_t.!~'In fact, we might be remindedOf1I\ehapless
gardeners in Alice in Wonderland painting the Queen of Hearts' white
roses red. Thus~~~,!!,_~~. ~_e_e~rt1u~rt.r..no.ye!1'.~!'t
centers on a humanistic reaming!:!n.~!'t. .Q.Ll::1a~! _~~_IE!!y~_.~':.~._.t..o -.the-'Eictur~sque:-Ana;aespite
its gigantic scale, the enclosure of the earth object within gallery space further links it to the Victorian attempt to
domesticate and re-form nature within cultural categories. The earthwork that is displayed out of doors and traveled through is closer to '
the experience of landscape in the sublime; the viewer is dwarfed by
the landscape, which allows him or her a partial vision over time. But'
the earthwork that is contained ~~.~n
object; the viewer stands
away from it in a distanced position approximating a simultaneous
and transcendent vision.19 The contained work of earth art must be
linked to landscape arrangement, to the formal garden, and ultimately to nature under cover. Oppenheim's 1968 scale models in fact use
grass, flowers, hedges, and furrows in a metaphor of cultivation and
hence echo formal garden arrangements.
The critic Sidn~_nlli.~ has connected much contemporary earth
art to the eighteenth- and nineteenth-century picturesque tradition
on semantic grounds. "Less than sublime, yet seeking a surrogate for(
the ideal. it [the eighteenth- and nineteenth-century picturesque] sig-(
naUed, by virtue of its resultant sentimentality, the end of the ideals!
of high art. It substituted the sentimental for nobility of feeling and,~
developed the cult of nature as an antidote to the excessive sophis-(
tication of cultivated society. At the same time it was an affectation of/
cultivated taste at its most refined. As the 20th century form of the)
picturesque, Earthworks signify ao analogous degree of overcuItiva-!
tion of the modernist idiom."20TiIlim links the earth art movement to,'
the picturesque on the basis of its oversophistication, but he overlooks the strongly "moral" character of both artistic movements. I
Earth art cannot be separated
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ON LONGING
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relation to the human body), the earthwork itself mimes the distance
assumed by the monuments of public space. As Michael Fried has
pointed out, literalist or minimalist sculpture's aspirations toward a
nonpersonal or public mode have an obvious theatricality: "the largeness of the piece, in conjunction with its non-relational, unitary character, distanas the beholder-not
just physically but psychically. It is,
O~l.~..Y:d:~~~~Y.
this ~~cing
tha.t ~
the beholder a
s"!iect ~~ ~e piece .in,question '. . . ~ object. "23 The irony of this
theatricality is apparent in the double-voiced quality of all manifestations of the sublime. The loneliness of nature spreads out before the
solitary figure at the edge of the cliff :JSthe stage of his consequent
(and consequential) experience. But this beholder must always remain aware of the frame, aware of the encompassing role of nature.
Hence the natural in the sublime is always a tamed beast, is always a
1
, transformation of action into object and distance into transcendence,
I and hence always sublimely ironic.
,
In this section we have briefly looked at the ways in which the
point of view chosen in the presentation of the natural will relate to
the prevailing ideology of the natural. The clockwork charm of the
pastoral in the Enlightenment, the terror of the romantic sublimJ:, and
the sentimental distancing of tl1e picturesque each reflect the historical Circumstances of their origin. Thus these forms must alway~..
seen in relation to the modes of productio!,\, the. pef~~ption of qj~rance"betWeen dci"sses,-a"nd the symbiosis between rura! .et9c;\.y!ban
~~_~~~!!P.~~~at prevailed in their times. Furthermore, as can be~"
in romanticisrii;"siichT6rms' can be consiaered asreadi6iis.agamst or .
re,-:ival~.of t~,ei(own internal periodization. :rhe gigantifica1i911QfJhe.:.
natural is approached through cultural categories, nature :'h.EO!self':':'_
be~~g the object of such categorization and thus progressivelYE~~~~:..
-~~ated and interiorized as an agent of a history invented by n"\rr.~.tjy~,'
Exteriority: The City
If we attempt to describe the city from a distanced and transcendent position, to thereby miniaturize it, the t~nder:t9'~s.t,C?!,~~~~e
the ci.!}'.lanci$.cape.As Philip Fisher has noted, 'Wordsworth's sonnet
on Westminister Bridge landscapes the city with a rural frame, captures the city across from the self as a view or prospect..Ib~
significan~ _~.~.!~~p.!_.~"~!,
_n.?t itself, and the observe!!
~ID~..1h~. s~~~e.".~oes not stand within it at all but in ~i~
on a..bridge outside~n.q. oyer. against it as a whole. "24This past~~izing of
the city may be traced to what Bakhtin has called the mooe o( ':e:x:peri_. mental fantasticality" in 1he&rei'tippean-satire. Here obserVation from
THE GIGANTIC
an experimental or unusual point of view results in a "new perspective" on the object. For example, Lucian's Ikaromenipposand Varro's
Endymiones observe the life of _t~~cio/...fr~_I!!..~.!!i$h..~!..t!!.u.Jie.2S
Such a
point of view enables the viewer to trivialize the cultural landscape as
he or she magnifies and situates the larger natural landscape. At the
same time, tNs_vj&!JYJ!:~ms_~~cally outsi(,le fu.~.~~ene:one cannot
enter into th~Jit~_Qf.fue city ~~<?ut ~~~~E~&'_~"J:!JiTe~~nding
cha~.s~1e~.~ye.
Therefore
a view
'-,
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ON LONGING
the natural world mirrored in the vastness of the individual perceiv. ing consciousness) and the mediation we see at work in the pastoral.
B~t wi!!YDJhe-rise of industrial..capjta1ism..tb.e..gigan!k becomes located within the abs,tracti,on.()f.a~ e~change. ~Qn0I!\..Y..The gigantic is
moved frommi!presocial world of the natural to a social world of
material~'p~~uCqon:--.
. '-..
".
-.-----his study of Rabelais, Bakhtin notes that the gigantic figure, as
part of the popular imagery of the grotesque, moved from)ts ascription to the landscape to the festive carnival world. Gargantua, as a
canuvalesque narrative, .dlsplaysthls tradition"onhe gigantic features
of landscape. For example, Rabelais mentions the gigantic bowl in
which the giant ate his gruel, and adds that the bowl can still be seen
in Bourges-an immense rock scooped out like a bowl and ca1led
Scutellagigantis. 28Under an agrarian economy, the ~t~~associated with the man<eTaiid the fair and. their attendant feasts. In both
statuary and living form, the gigantic appea~ed as~isymGOfof surplus
and licentiousness, of overabundance anciu~~~~d.
.rornymp.tion.
Here the giant's consuming image is placed at the center of local civic
identity: the hub ofthe marketplace and its articulation of commodity
relations. At the end of the Middle Ages a number of European cities
employed "town gi.ants," even "families of giants," along with town
jesters, who would take part in all public festivals. 29
We see this world of feasting and the founding of towns in the
opening books of Gargantua and Pantagruel. Gargantua is born amid a
feast to consume an overabundance of tripe (itself. of course, an
image of consumption): "The tripes were plentiful, as you will understand, and so appetizing that everyone licked his fingers. But the
devil and all of it was that they could not possibly be kept any longer,
for they were tainted, which seemed most improper. So it was resolved that they should be consumed without more ado. For this
purpose there were invited all the citizens of Cinais, of Seuilly, of La
Roche-Germault, and of Vaugaudry, not to forget those of Le Coudray-Montpensier and the Gue de Vede, and other neighbors: all
strong drinkers, jovial companions, and good skittle players."30 Because Gargamelle eats too much (sixteen quarters, two bushels, and
six pecks), her "fundament" slips out. And thanks to a midwife who
stops up Gargamelle's bottom, Gargantua eventually arrives crying
"Drink, drink," through his mother's ear. We see Gargantua linked
to the life of towns in the account of his trip to Paris. Here he
drenches the citizens in his piss, drowning two hundred sixty thousand four hundred eighteen of them. Those who escape swear and
curse, saying, "We've been drenched in sport! We've been drenched
paT Tis." The narrator explains that although the city was formerly
tn
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...
,
...!
81 THE GIGANrlC
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ON LONGING
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THE GIGANTIC
were written of the giants Corineus and Gogmagog and other giants
being displayed on London Bridge to celebrate the public entry into
the city of some distinguished person; they are also recorded as being
used in the Lord Mayor's pageants and in Midsummer's Eve festivals.
Puttenham, in his Arle of English Poesie(1589), writes of "Midsummer
pageants in London where, to make the people.wonder, are set forth
great and uglie gyants, marching as if they were alive, and armed at
all points, but within they are stuffed full of brown paper and tow,
which the shrewd boyes, underpeeping, do guilefully discover, and
turne to a great derision:'38
Although the English giants frequently were used for occasions of
pomp and 'solemnity, their secularity and profanity also are strongly
marked. The pageants in which they appear are performed by trading
companies; thus they seem to be descendants of the more ancient
feast-day giants. Of all monsters or animals depicted in gigantic form,
the dragon was the mostpoplilatinEi1g~.n.(f~n(n:~ni:e;Jjl.:!DOst
cases ~~~_~..n1g~~s-=c<?tivey~d.t1i~ide~.
o.f~~, ~rcery,or~er.esy.and
~ere linked in te~~nd !?~!:..P.~!!.~_~t
ofJh.~.t~'Y_~!~I)<?~~~iijd to
h~ve defeated the dragon in battle. Here we might be reminded, too,
of the foundingCirTIiebe5,Torthe
original citizens of that city were
giants who sprang up from the ground where Cadmus had sown the
teeth of a dragon. The dragon of Norwich was carried in mayoralty
processions until 1832. Yet giants in human form were themselves
often held to be evil figures associated with the pagan past. A History
of Winchester, written in 1798, accuses the giants of Dunkirk and Douay of being symbolic of pagan giants who ate the inhabitants of the
town until the town's patron saint destroyed them.39 Thus, as was
the case in twelfth- and thirteenth.-century France, the giant continued to be associated with the inversion of orthodoxy and allegiance
to the vernacular, decentralized, local political structure.
As the gigantic splits into the official parade and the unsanctioned
festival, between central and local, sacred and secular respectively, itl
works to contribute to the creation of the new public spaces necessary "
to class society: the spaces of reproduction and production within
which those classes define themselves by means of an exaggeration of ';
boundaries. Fairholt records that the prosperous traders "rivalled the (
glories of the old nobility in the palaces they constructed for their
Guildhalls: and having no pride of ancestry, they chose the legends of
their old cities for display on public occasions:'40 Contrary to a feudal
system of allegiances, allegiance here was directed toward the town
and the middle class, which sustained the town's economic relations.
Th~~!\_G._~lMa!ines an.d Douai were popularly call~4. r"ILG_randPap'~ an~ were ~xhibited ~>npedestals, while a "fa~nily" of sII1.~~er
86
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ON LONGING
as an abs~ct _J:!ICl~e1iality.
.~at is equ~y .~P!l:ate from the body: the
gi~an_~~~e, th~ .~~de .()f vcd~es.
;
~~v~~
through movement,
through being in
It 15 the
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rHE GIGANTIC
Travels tends toward the stillness and transcendence of the anthropological model, the Boobdingnag section tends toward the partial and immediate experience of the diary. The description of Lilliput
moves toward scientific discourse in its transcendent concern with
pattern, design, and replicability. The Lilliputian world is trivial in its
comprehensiveness; its time is cyclical time,. the time of past and
present meshed, the time of lyric. In contrast, the description of Boobdingnag tends toward narrative suspense in its concern with the immediate, the partial, and the surprising action. Its temporality moves
toward an unknown closure. Because the first-person narrative voice
is in the present looking back, we assume that Gulliver will survive,
yet we don't know how many or what nature of obstacles he will face
before the end of-the story. The observer is subjected to manipulation
and misunderstanding, just as Gulliver
is condescended to by the
.
kin g.
Tragedy in the first book is the threat to Gulliver's vision; tragedy
in the second book is the threat of consumption, of having the entire
body destroyed by being made into an object or small animal. After
his road show in the fanner's box, Gulliver becomes the Queen's pet:
"The Queen giving great Allowance for my Defectiveness in speaking, was however surprised at so much Wit and good Sense in so
diminutive an Animal." He is housed in a traveling closet arranged
with doll-size furnishings, and the King "was strongly bent to get me
a Woman of my own Size, by whom I might propogate the Breed: But
I think I should rather have died than undergone the Disgrace of
leaving a posterity to be kept in cages like tame Canary Birds; and
perhaps in time sold about the Kingdom to Persons of Quality for
Curiosities." We might note thatthe contemporary science-fiction
story LAndof the Giants similarly portrays the capture of humans by
giants and the giants' desire to keep the Earth creatures in cages amid
collections of small animals. Just as Gulliver is continually threatenedj
by the natural in Brobdingnag (among his adversaries are a cat, rats,
hail, a dog, a kite, a frog, a monkey, and an eagle, along with the (
uncultured or anomalous human-the
baby and the dwarf), so the
Earth creatures
I
of the.
by a cat, a snake,
Travels have
88 ON LONGING
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THE GIGANTIC
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depict~..~_&:1r.~_~~.~~pict.~_
lan~~~Q.~L~
th~~~oe
mensionality forffi=i.!~~~~<:~~t
~!~@!tr.~~~
__~ol}~~o~~ for
9.f~~.Yt~~~r.
sa&P.tu~s..llu:e.e-di-
relation between
its
--
Distinct from the domestic arts and the decontextualized art 9f the
collection/museum, the art of public space is an eternalized parade, a
fixing of the symbols of public life, of the state, within a milieu of the
abstract authority of the polis. The reduction of the individual viewer
in the face of the public monument is all the more evident in the
function of the inscription; one is expected to read the instructions for
perception of the work-to acknowledge the fallen, the victorious,
the heroic, and be taken up in the history of place. All public monuments of this _typeare monulI\ents to.de~~~_<,:n~o!!,e.~~iv!..rl.~_al's
prostraQon before. ~to~ry_~c!.~!J_th~.~o/. On the other hand, the nineteenth- and twentieth-century obsessions with science, technology,
and the occupation of the sky have resulted in a different form of
public sculpture and monument. The very fact that you can climb
inside and to the top of the Eiffel Tower, the Statue of Liberty, or the
statue of William Penn on the tower of Philadelphia's City Hall, simultaneously speaks to an abstract transcendence above and beyond
the viewer and the possibility that the viewer can unveil the giant,
can find the machin~ry hidden in the god and approach a transcendent view of the city himself or herself. It is a symbol of the corporate
impulse toward absolute authority that the president's office and
penthouse suite are often on the top floor of the skyscraper, while the
public observatory deck is on the floor immediately below.
The &.g~!1ticart of !h_epu.W.f!!p'~ce i~an art of culture, not an art of__
nature; its forms and themes are taken crom-the Tlfe-Ofihe city that .,
suriolinCis it. If the urueisnid"seids.- the essential metap'hor of the
romirillCSiibiiIDe-;-tfieoKhestratedlounta1niS-tfiee55m"tial
metaphor -Of the art of public spac~ 'f'fiUSrarln-ffus section we have seen a
movement from the legendary figures of natural force and destruction associated with the founding of cities and exhibited in pageant to
the "heroic" statues of the public square to the abstract sculpture
preferred by the corporate state. The town giant memorializes the
imposition of central authority and, at the same time, the persistence
of vernacular tradition in the face of and in the service of that authority. And like the town giant, the hero on the horse also symbolizes the
reproduction of the sOcial. In this case, a historical narrative, or instructions for the generation of ideology, is presented: the founding
fathers, we may be assured, are eternally protecting us from the
incursions of the outside, be it nature or the cultural other. The hero
on the horse memorializes the status difference between those who
can afford to ride and those who must walk as much as it celebrates
the subjection of nature. In pageant and memorial, the giant states
-0
','
THE GIGANTIC
u.
VI"
L.UN(;ING
-..
93
THE GIGANTIC
with the human body never came up. so that the epoch-making
.actuality.
1928-29 Construction in Wire. although a scant twenty inches high in
was as large as the imagination cared to make it. . . . The
.~photograph. as Michelangelo Antonioni was scarcely the first to realize.
t,permits a blowup to any scale. even the most gargantuan. Througlt the
;'agency of the photograph. the viewer can mentally transform the
\ intimate living-room art of early modem sculpture into the outdoor
(monuments Duchamp-Villon envisioned.57
We might also consider here the "monumental" small sculptures by
Henry Moore. Rose's experience is that of the tourist who finds the
representation of culture in the guidebook and the postcard more
significant and more attractive than the true culture. contaminated by
history and difference, can ever be,
The paradoxes of this problem of the proliferation of images are
most clearly articulated in pop art. which has taken its place within the
abstract space of mass culture and the mass spectacle at the same time
that it has usurped the space of public sculpture. Th~~~t
dot the urban landscapes of Chicago and Philadelphia are the legendary giants. the topo~"phical mascots, of 'those cities,'They are reIatiV'esUo[other forins of the architecture-af-the;above, particularly the
billboard and the neon sign, those forms which are all fa~ade. And
they are representations of mechanical reproduction arrested into
\authenticity by being "original objects." We see this paradox of "the
(authentic object" moving out of mecbanicaI reproduction in the phe; nomenon of people asking Andy Warhol to autograph "real" Camp; bell's soup cans. Thus. as Lucy Lippard and others have noted. the
! authenticity of the artist, as well as the authenticity of the artwork.
) becomes tenuous. In the movement from Jasper Johns' s BallantineCans
; (1960). which is made of bronze, hand-painted, and displayed on a
bronze
base, to Warhol's
1964 exhibit
)machine,"
I
I
sion with the mechanical possibilities of exaggeration, and its anticlassicism, are the modem expression of the qualities of gigantification we find in previous uses of the spectacle-the articulation of
quantity over quality, of "fa~ade" over "content," of materiaIity and
movement over mediation and transcendence. But whereas the gigantic in landscape is approached as a reIlc'of a more violent and
natural era, and while the town giant eventually loses its ferocity and
acquires the sentimental qualities. of the vernacular at the same time
that it speaks to a historically determined future, the gigantic in pop
art celebrates the proliferation of the new. As Lippard has observed
about "New York Pop," "Use conn<:>J~!dhe.P.~~tJ
j~QQ.Jbe.Pii,~<-~yen
ili.~~edia~~~~t!..~~~!<:~~ ~~.!!':o_ri~~,Pop ,~~~ec~determin~_cl~yforg,? the _'!f!iq~~E,~_~s
_a.~9~~_,~y _~~e. They '!~~_~P.tvet worn or left
~very
Campbell's soup.can.1ooks like every other Ca!l'P~Il's
soup can- 'since 'It has had no time to acquire character; every TV
commerCial on 'one'Channel at a' given moment is the Seune.whether it
is seen in Saugatuck orin Sioux City."SBThe pol' ~g~n~c e"i.sts in_the
abstract space of mass production. The noman body is not gigantic
here; the image is, anathe Image-is an object whether its referent is in
fact an object or not. Unlike the use of objects in painting to simulate
the interior world of the domestic (the still life), and even unlike the
surrealistic collage, which still tends toward the evocative and
nostalgic in its choice of objects. the pop object resists the symbolic; it
exists in an abstract and autonomous space. a space of the fac;ade. of
consumption without "meaning." It is the next-to-the-Iast stage in
the secularization and denaturalization of the gigantic. for in its
wholesale rejection of temporality. pop becomes subject to temporality, to the process of periodization which attaches symbolic
meaning to its context of production. Just as the location of the pop
object in space makes it vulnerable to symbolization (e.g., the town
mascot), so does its particular form of iconography, as well as its
accompanying manifestoes (or lack of them). make it vulnerable to
"dating." As we shall see in our fmal chapter, .~hen~m~~~s._ofpgp is
the_,!Q.s~illgia
for novelty ~hich we find in the coiiliadictions o~:Ki~ch
and~":.JE.p'-'
.'
9S THE GIGANTIC
94 ON LONGING
work's "internal" system of signs forms a field of relativity within
which elements are displayed. But it would be naive to assume that
such aesthetic/social constraints play no part in the determination of
(scale. When Barbara Rose complains that many artists feel th~y can
, "blow up" any design-in
her words, "to understand the pitfalls of
.: such speculation,
one need only entertain for a moment the night, marish vision of a fifty-foot Degas bronze dancer"59-she is articulating the aesthetic constraints offered by the subject and form of the
work. We cannot have ~ ~T!I.m.othpetite.and g!~~Jul1?alIerID.a unless
we wariF a parooy;"for the history of the 'depic.tjQ.!'-9.Ll?alle~~~as
fixed their relation to scale. Indeed, our simultaneous and transcendent view of the clockwork precision of the classical ballet has resulted in a strong tendency toward miniaturization here. Thus we
may also begin to ascribe Joseph Cornell's affinity for nineteenthcentury ballet to formal as well as nostalgic and thematic considerations.
We have emphasized the skewed relation of language to physical
scale, to the fact that description of the miniature and description of
the gigantic rely on internal systems of comparisons and social notions of t~~~~!a.rcl:ty.J>.f..<;leJa.iI.
Describing ~!1!.ILtffi.ng.
~ma.!Unvolves
the same type of work as describing something enormous: the work
ofcoinpari$.ol1a.rid~'~election:of deta.if and ex!!~ple: These aesthetic
conventions of description arise out of the constraints of making fictions, the constraints of genre. Hence, when Florence Moog publishes an article in Scientific Americnn entitled "Why Gulliver is a Bad
Biologist,"60 she misses the point. A human the size of a Brobdingnagian may be a physical impossibility, but a fictive human the
size of a Brobdingnagian is absolutely appropriate, particularly in
relation to the physical impossibility and fictive possibility of its inverse, the Lilliputian. It was the Lilliputians as much as Swift who
made the invention of the Brobdingnagians necessary.
These considerations of aesthetic conventions in relation to exaggeration bring us to the problem of "aesthetic size," the relation
between genre and significance. In Chapter 7 of the E.O!!!ics.M$tIe
writes:
But, besides this, a picture, or any other composite object, if it is to be
beautiful, must not only have its parts properly arranged, but be of an
, appropriate size; for beauty ~.t;.nds o~ s~.!'.'!.c!~.t!.Ucture.
,Accordingly, a minute picture cannot be beautiful (for when our vision
;' has almost lost its sense of time it becomes confused); nor can an
i immense one (for we cannot take it all in together, and so our vision
iloses its unity and wholeness}-imagine
a picture a thousand miles
(, long! So, just as there is a proper size for bodies and pictures (a size
that can be kept in view), there is also a proper amplitude for fables
(what can be kept well in one's mind).61
I.
i
i
I
This argument might be seen as a cognitive one, implying that complexity and simplicity are functions of the intellectual capacity of the
viewer. Yet it can also be seen as a sociologic~ one, implying that the
proper amplitude of a form depends upon the expectations of genre.
In a nonliterate culture the qualification "what can be kept well in
one's mind" is an aesthetic value serving the particular and necessary
functions of memory. Any work composed in such a way that it was
unmemorable would, of course, quickly lose its social life. With the
advent of mech.Aoi~.n:production,
the text can acquire a nwnoer. of
properties, from seriality to disjunctiveness~ properties that are made
pos'sible through its physical form. Repetition formS the mcisfobVious
exa:mp1eOftfiis '&arisfonnition;Ior-whereas
repetition may be a major
structural and thematic principle of oral art, it tends to be a minor
ludic principle in written works. The physical size of a work is dependent upon the social function of the genre; the economy of the
proverb and of other forms of multum in parooarises from their situation in the immediate context of conversation and the turn-taking
rules prevalent in that context. T~~ structure of War and Peaceallows
for_!,:,~.ximumvar:i,!~io~and complication at least in part beca~~e of
theJ~i.s.u~e time that is available to its readers and becaus~ ..9f the
physic:al.s.tatus of the book, which permits "dipping," rereading, and
the mapping of consecutive chapters onto consecutive situations of
re~~!I1g. Similarly, Bakhtin has traced the divergences between the
"banquet dialogue" (through Menippean satire to carnival to the
DostoevsIdan .novel) and the aphoristic thinking of the Enlightenment; he.Ee.s~p~s~he
first a~ a aisplay of tensions between social
classes, and the second as an idealization of a unified consciOl-!sness
<
(,
~
96
ON LONGING
~'I
,I
97
THE GIGANTIC
his readers: "So, as they say, two useful words are enough, and yet I
say quickly that it was not quite a hundred and a half years ago that
being in Lyons, in flesh and bones, in the company of many boon
companions, my good friends, while having a good feed at Mother
Gillette's and drinking the freshest and the best, many merry stories
and amusing tales, some fresh and others salty were told: there was
as much crying as laughing over them."66 As in Rabelais, the tall-tale
trcI~C!!Lin,co.rporates the themes of the gigaittic whic:h we have been
enumerating: the grote~~~~~.~o~y,
feasfu.tg, ,,!~is.1:!!~,.~l:Le
exterior
anathe public .over tht:.go~,sticL!h.e ve~acular and. sE;~la~.~.v...~r
the
official and sacred. In Europe, and later in America, the casual talltale session in the tavern becomes formalized into the;. Liar's ~i
.
Thomas writes that in the eighteenth century, provincial clubs arose
in France and the Netherlands for this purpose. In 1783, for example,
La Societe d,es Canaris was founded by men who cultiva1ed songs in
the Walloon dialect. This club later became a Cercle des Mintelirs
(Liars' Circle) and, in 1834, Li Cabinet des Mintes (The Cabinet of
Joyful Lies). In order to join, one had to successfully narrate a tall tale
in dialect.67 Thus the tall-tale session might be seen as the everyday'(
equivalent of the public market days that involved a parading of the <:.
gigantic and a concomitant celebration of the vernacular. In both <'
there is an interruption of the temporality of work, an inversion of /'
official values into the vernacular, and a festive display of accumula- )
tion over balance.
'
In folklore, the tall tale bears a particular relation to its context of
telling. Ynl!ke the colloquy in the written work, which assumes a
sta(\da.rcl.of exaggeration and remains there, the tall-tale session begins with understatement and pro~eeds with each narrative element
to movefarther away from reality as defined by everyday lived expefrom' Zora I'JeaIe
riEmce.. A passifge' desciibing' a 'hyperb6lesession
HilrStOn's study of Afro-American
might serve ~s an example:
folklore in Florida,
Uoe answered:) "Man, he's too ugly. If a spell of sickness ever tried
to slip up on him, he'd skeer it into a three weeks' spasm."
Blue Baby stuck in his oar and said: "He ain't so ugly. Ye aU jus'
ain't seen no real ugly man. Ah seen a man so ugly till he could get
behind a jimpson weed and hatch monkies."
Everybody laughed and moved closer together. Then Officer
Richardson said: "Ah seen a man so ugly till they had to spread a sheet
over his head at night so sleep could slip up on him."
They laughed some more, then Clifford Ulmer said: "Ah'm goin' to
talk with my mouth wide open. Those men y'all been talkin' 'bout
,
99
wasn't ugly at all. Those was pretty men. Ah !mowed one so ugly till
you could throw him in the Mississippi river and skim ugly for six
months. "
"Give Oiff de little dog," Jim Allen said. "He done tole the biggest
lie;"68
On this particular morning the men are waiting for a foreman who
never shows up, so they spend the morning bookooing(from beaucoup,
talking loudly and aimlessly) and "telling lies." Clifford moves this
passage toward closure because h!s .!s"_~i!~
!1l0$t"e~tremeJ:2@ggeration.
Arid yeT.1ikeaIn~llI-We sessions, this set of lies threatens infinity.
The context of the: talI-tale session, ~~!.~ C1!:~~i~1!y'~ly:...
Each lie sets a
plateau for tlte_~~l_~o~g lie!~ t~e.~~p-asis
for the possible. (Here
we see' the" appropriateness of Pinocchio's magic nose.) Hence the
fiction progressively moves from understatement to the most impossible and improbable of statements.~tIy
a male genre, the tall tal~_
is associated with the worker in a period ofIeiSilr~-Incontrast to the_
livea-expenence oT work: an experience at least" traditionally know.!)_.
"'fitsth1ufd"1Kioiigh-the-body,
the tall tale recounts/mvents e~:_
ences that are possible only in a fictive universe. The f~.~ltc here is
iroliically -iinaerscored by. the juxtaposition of a Jirst=persoILY.Qice
with fabulous events, or by the recounting of an "obyi.C?_ll_5...lie"
as
legend-that is, true within some historical past. It has been noted in
/ both Europe and North America that those who tell tall tales are often
sailors, hunters, fishermen, emigrants, immigrants, soldiers, and, occasionally, farmers.69 These situations involve considerable distance
between the workplace and the home. Often they are typified by
solitary outdoor labor. They are "outside" positions in.Jh.f;..~nsethat
they are far from the dome~tic an.d domesticated ~~<I:~~.2fsoci-a6iliti.
"The one that got away" IS all the more credible because we nave
only the narrator as witness, yet all the more incredible beaiusentS
beyond the range"onne-audience's
experience. Thus the narrator
plays upon his own credibility in a pattern of understatement and
overstatement. Because of this positioning in cont':.xt,._~J:t.~_~tale
presents the geneiic antithesis of the aphorism.- Ap~ori~"t!~_t~g
moves toward transcendence and away from the immediate context
of situation, seeking to subsume the situation beneath "therur~t but
the tall tale is caught up in its own narrative procE:!ss,a. p~s
of
invention through progressive stages. The tall tale is nearly ~n_~otable; each of its elements is tied within the narrative struct\ii-e.of"the
overall tale, and the tale itself is tied into a contextual strUcfure from
which it cannot be detached without a considerable loss of effect.
Hence the literary talI tale cannot employ the improvisationciI- techniques of the oral tall-tale session.
THE GIGANTIC
IUI
,
/
being dragged halfway aaoss the continent. Even to this day, one can
still see stretches of red soil and sand between California and Nebraska.
Those Redwood trees were ground to powder as Febold dragged them
along.
He simply shrugged and said, "Oh, weB, live and learn." However,
he did regret that he had wasted three days walking to and from
Ca1ifornia for nothing but a dozen tree StumpS.71
-
,Ht.
L'L/\Nlle:
I
I
I
I
I
I
II
heroes
anaas symboIsofcOmmWiitY-v.iIues,'pecos
~d F~l?olc!.f~~I~n
w~_~Y!!r:'t.~ by- i'loq( ~I~_r -~~ers" to sell
more ne~~papers and magaEn..~. Bunyan was made famouS by an
advertising executive for the Red River Lumber Company who prepared a pamphlet containing Bunyan stories punctuated with testaments to the company's product.76 This appropriation of the gigantic
away from the vernacular by the domain of commodity advertis_ing
marks the gigantic's transition into an abstract space of production.
Contemporary giants such as "the Jolly Green Giant" or "Mr. Oean"
are nothing-more than their products. Behind them we see not labor
but frozen peas and the smell of disinfectant; commodities are naturalized and made magically to appear by the narrative of advertising
itself. Such giants are symbolic of a transition from production to
anonymity, of the transfonnation of leisure and production into consumption. Simi1arIy, the architecture of. the sign (it is possible, for
example, in southern New Jersey to give someone the directions
"Turn left at the champagne bottle. If you pass the dinosaur you've
gone too far") marks the subsuming of lived relations regarding space
and shelter to the abstract image of the commodity. The names of
grocery chains alone-Giant,
Star, Acme-speak
to this abstraction of
the exchange economy. To complete this process, ~he local-color hero
becomes the symbol of the resort, or "fantasy island~7Tandtnus is
incorPorated into the spectacle of consumption. Disney'sworiCiS-becoi1\e-me-ta~'pectacles of the spectrum of decontextualized vel'J1!i~ar
giantS. Thus i~~te_ capital~sm we see the incorporation of the gigantic
into:i~~p~~!e ()f private industrial production as it is translated into
the pseudo-labor of consumption, and a simultaneous transfere,l)ce_of
the- ~gantic's sensual and consuming ethic to the spttere.
Of necessity, our discussion of the miniature took place in the
shadow of the gigantic. Now as we conclude our discussion of the
gigantic-its relation to landscape, to the exteriority of nature and the
city, its place within systems of representation-we
find ourselves_
once again at the place of origin for any investigation of exaggeration:
the site of the body. T~ditionally, the body has served as our primary
mode of understanding and perceiving scale. We have seen earlier in
tIUSchapter the ways in which the image of the body can be projected
upon the landscape, giving it form and definition. The world in ~g-
102
103
ON LONGING
THE GIGANTIC
182
NOTES
TO PAGES
71-81.
183
C1uIpter 3. '17U!Gigantic
1. See P. Watson,
FllSIlndlA's City.
2. Brewer, Dictionary of Phrase and Fabk, p. 460.
3. Massingham,
Fee, ft, to, {um, pp. 57-66 (pp. 65-66).
"'~
!:i
20.
Tillim,
"Earthworks
21. See
Earth
Art.
";1,'.
p. 43.
22. But the modernist impulse here can also tend toward irony. Consider, for
example, Smithson's tour of the "monuments"
of Passaic, New Jersey, a photographic
of
Passaic."record of the detritus of industrialism. See Smithson, "The Monuments
23. Fried, "Art and Objecthood," p. IS.
24. Fisher, "City Matters: City Minds," p. 372.
25. Bakhtin, Probl~ms of Dostoroslcy's Poetics, p. 95.,
26. R. Burton, Th~ Anatomy of M~lancholy, p. 47. I am indebted to Philip HoIland for caUing my attention to this atation. In his study "Robert Burton's Anatomy of Melancholy and Menippean Satire," p. 272, Holland writes:
Whatever particular dramatic ~tting th~ vkw-from-<lOOveis given, its impart is
always the same in the m~nippeAiof w~
structural ,doubl~n~ it provUks a
concnt~ imag~. It opposes the point of view (the version of "truth") prevailing in the
realm that is being survey~, not from another point of view (another particular
"/ruth" as {or tJCQmp/~,a contrary id~/ogy), but from a positionthat is
indeterminat~ of its~/f, w~
truth rests in its wry unfixity or unapproachabl~
transand~na. Th~ vkw-from-<lOOverepresmts a princip/~ of ot~.
An ~
may mgage the work btIow in dialog~, but may never be absorbedinto it.
27. See Lefebvre, lA Produdion <k /'espaCtl.
28. Bakhtin, RabtlAis and His World, pp. 342-343.
29. Ibid., p. 343.
"
30. Rabelais, Gargantua and Pantagr~/, pp. 47-48.
31. Ibid., pp. 74-75.
..
i-'
NOTES TO PAGES81-95
32. See, for example, Radin's analysis of the Winnebago trickster myth in The
Trickster.
D. Dacre, G!IInts d'hier tt d'aujourci'hui, p. 32.
34. An early-fourteenth-century
Inquisitor wrote of the Albigensians: "Moreover they read from the Gospels and the Epistles in the vulgar tongue, applying
and expounding them in their favor and against the condition of the Roman
Oturch." See Cantor, '17U!M~ieval World, 300-1300, pp. 279-280. Dawson notes
in Religion and the Rise of Western Cullure, pp. 208-209, that "the Catharist or
Albigensian heresy was not a reformist movement or even an unorthodox fonn of
Otristianity. It marked the reappearance of an anaent oriental religion as far or
farther removed from Christianity than the religion of Islam. Consequently the
Papacy used the same methods as it had employed against the Moslems-the
method of the Crusade, and of an appeal to Christian princes to use their power in
defense of the faith; a method which was supplemented by a missionary compaign for the reconversion of the affected regions and finally by a code 01 repressive legislation'which gave birth to the Inquisition."
35. Darre, G!IInts d'hier et d'aujourd'hui, p. 83.
36. Ibid., p. 36.
37. Fairholt, Gag and Magog, the Giants in Guildhall, p. lS-17.
38. Ibid., pp. 51-52.
39. Ibid., pp. 100-101. Fairholt does tell of one saintly giant, 51. Christopher,
who was converted to Christianity and devoted his life to carrying travelers across
a dangerous stream. One night, according to legend, a child asked to be carried
over, but the child was so heavy and the waters rose so high that Christopher was
nearly drowned. The child then tells him it was Christ he had borne across (ibid.,
pp. 103-104).
40. Ibid., p. 64.
41. Ibid., pp. 89-90.
42. Ibid., p. 65.
43. Kowzan, Utttratur~ ~t spectacl~, p. 180.
44. Debord, Th~ Society of the Spectacle, p. 29.
45. Ibid., p. 153.
46. See M. Leach, Standard Dictionary of Folklore,Mythology, alld Lge",t, t:453.
47. Squire, Celtic Myth and Lgend, p. 38.
48. Fairholt, Gag and Magog, th~ Giants in Guildhall, pp. 100-\01.
49. Swift, Gulliver's Travels, p. 71.
SO. Ibid., p. 90.
51. Ibid., p. 95.
52. Ibid., p. 84.
53. Ibid., p. 17.
54. ~on~, The Voia of Things, pp. 58-59.
55. ~lowenthal,
Uleraturt, PopulAr Culture, and SocietB pp. 109-136.
56. Lippard, Pop Art, p. 98.
57. Rose, "Blow-Up-the
Problem of Scale in Sculpture," p. 83. For a discus-
..
184
NOTES
TO PAGES
95-108
185
or over-loading occurs. the result is blurred structure. lack of clarity. and a consequent perceptual discomfort leading to loss of interest. Nothing is sufficiently
followed through or held together. and the effect is one of perceptual and aesthetic frustrntion." A solution to the ethnocentrism and lack of historica~rs.E'ective
here might be found in Bakhtin's notion of the chronoto~. ACCOrdin~ilitin.
ther.rerarywonc'S~!l~OQJ!R~~
a concrete whole detenmned by
social values. The developmental novel. for example. relies upon culture-specific
notions of time and space and their relation to ideas of progression and character.
See Bakhtin. "I'M DiszlogicImagination. For suggestive analyses of the relations
between seventeenth- and eighteenth-century
conceptions of time and space and
literary genres. see Kawasaki. "Donne's Microcosm"; and Stevick. "Miniaturization in Eighteenth-Century English Literature."
62. See Bakhtin. Problems in Dostoevsky's Poetics. pp. 63-82.
63. See Jessup.
"Aesthetic
Size."
p. 32.
64. See the appendix to ElIman's Ulysses on the Uffry. "The Unati and ConnanGilbert Schemas Compared." pp. 186-199 (p. 195).
65. Rabelais. Gargantua and Pantagnul. p. 393.
66. Thomas. "I'MTall Tale and Philippe d'Alcri~. p. 79.
67. Ibid.. p. 26.
68. Hurston. Mules and Men. p. 73.
69. Thomas. The Tall Tale and Philippe d'Alcri~. p. 7.
70. See Dorson. American Fol1dort. pp. 199-243.
71. Beath. Febold Feboldson: Tall Tales p. 19. See also Beath. Legends of Febold
Feboldson.
72.
73.
74.
75.
76.
'I~
.,",
,.
,.,
'.
... :
"'-_ _a.w._~_
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11
; H....