Postmodernism and Biology in John Fowles S The French Lieutenant's Woman
Postmodernism and Biology in John Fowles S The French Lieutenant's Woman
Postmodernism and Biology in John Fowles S The French Lieutenant's Woman
Postmodernism and Biology
in John Fowles's
The French Lieutenant’s Woman
Shumpei Fukuhara *
1. Introduction
John Fowles is known not only as an experimental postmodern novelist,
but also as a nature lover, who wrote most of his novels in his house in
Lime Regis. His love for nature can be seen clearly in his novels, but its
significance seems to have been underestimated in criticism of his novels.
Although John Fowles is widely recognized as an existentialist, Fowles
revealed in his letter to Robert Huffaker that his
‘philosophy of life [. . .] is
. The purpose of this paper is to
much more biological than existentialist’
1
focus on this biological philosophy of life and analyse its implications in his
postmodernist novel The French Lieutenant’s Woman.
While love for nature may be easy to understand, his biological
philosophy requires more explanation. To clarify it, I consider that
Fowles's following comment in an interview is helpful:
‘I do tend to take an
ornithologist's view of human beings. I like watching people's behaviourisms
. To Fowles,
as I watch the behaviourisms of certain birds in my garden’
2
*
福岡大学人文学部准教授
1
Robert Huff aker, John Fowles (Boston: Twayne Publishers, 1980)
, p. 17.
2
Dianne Vipond (ed.), Conversations with John Fowles (Jackson, MS: University
Press of Mississippi, 1999)
, p. 17.
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718
human beings were not so different from birds in terms of behaviours,
for he regarded people as a part of the animal kingdom. Also, when his
philosophical work The Aristos was criticized as being elitist, he emphasised
the importance of genetic factors:
Biological elitism I certainly believe in – I don't see how you can
dispute it. I mean you could get everybody in this country absolutely
equal educationally and you would still end up with gross differences
in intelligence, perception, memory. I'm not defending this; I'm simply
saying that it is a biological fact about life.
3
As the last sentence clearly shows, he believed that biology was a
determining factor in human life. Genetic inheritance of mental capacities
might be a truism, but it is important to note that he asserted it in the age
of post-structuralism.
In postmodernism, into which categories John Fowles is often assumed
to fit, the self is generally conceived as a linguistic, cultural, and social
construct. The nature/nurture controversy has a long history, with
its pendulum swinging one way or the other, but postmodernism has
represented an especially dominant preference for the explanatory power of
nurture. Joseph Carroll, a leading figure in literary Darwinism, accuses post-
structuralism, a major theoretical backbone of postmodernism, of neglecting
the natural order and suppressing innate human dispositions, reducing
reality to semantic systems or ideological structures. Considering this
4
intellectual context, Fowles's outspoken acceptance of biological determinism
3
Ibid., p. 44.
4
Joseph Carroll, Literary Darwinism: Evolution, Human Nature, and Literature
(New
York: Routledge, 2004) , pp. 15-18.
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Postmodernism and Biology
in John Fowles's The French Lieutenant’s Woman(Fukuhara) 719
appears to be at odds with his postmodernist dimension. It is in The French
Lieutenant’s Woman that this discrepancy is most clearly discernible. On
the one hand, featuring an amateur palaeontologist, the novel thematically
pursues Darwin's theory of evolution and its implications for human beings
and society. On the other hand, being a work of historiographic metafiction,
a typically postmodernist literary genre, it exposes how our ideas and values
are constructed historically and culturally, by juxtaposing the Victorian
age with the modern world. Also, in its frequent references to Karl Marx,
another intellectual giant of the Victorian age, the novel reveals a concern
for sociological structures as well.
Importantly, this apparent discrepancy corresponds to a dual focus of
Fowles on society. The following comment in another interview epitomizes
his philosophy of life:
‘I have all my adult life been torn between a biological
. This statement clearly shows that he had two
and political view of society’
5
5
Vipond, p. 62.
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720
the new reality Darwin and his followers introduced into life just over a
. This paper analyses two approaches to reality in The French
century ago’
6
fiction often explores and deconstructs the idea of reality, as Brian McHale
states as follows:
The postmodern dominant [. . .] is ontology. Postmodernist fiction
6
Ibid., p. 191.
7
Patricia Waugh, Metafiction: The Theory and Practice of Self-Conscious Fiction
(London and New York: Methuen, 1984). Linda Hutcheon, A Theory of Parody: The
Teachings of Twentieth-Century Art Forms
(New York: Methuen, 1985) .
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Postmodernism and Biology
in John Fowles's The French Lieutenant’s Woman(Fukuhara) 721
implicitly raises issues about modes of being (which is what ontology is:
the theory of being)
, and stages problems involving worlds – the worlds
of fiction, but also those of itself.
‘reality’
8
In postmodernism, the real world and fictional worlds are not separated,
as they are woven together with the same material of sign systems. To
put this point differently, what is called reality is in fact a type of fiction.
Demonstrating postmodernist views of the world, Patricia Waugh refers to
Peter Berger and Thomas Luckman's constructivist theory, which regards
reality as a social construct. Although constructivist theory is not usually
9
discards the pretence of realism, but also subverts the dichotomy between
fiction and reality:
You do not even think of your own past as quite real; you dress it
up, you gild it or blacken it, censor it, tinker with it . . . fictionalize
it, in a word, and put it away on a shelf – your book, your romanced
autobiography.
(p.97)
8
Brian McHale, ‘The French Lieutenant’s Woman, Mantissa and A Maggot’ , in James
Acheson (ed.), John Fowles
(London and New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2013), p. 173.
9
Waugh, pp. 51-53.
10
John Fowles, The French Lieutenant’s Woman (London: Vintage, 2004) , p. 95.
Subsequent references are given in the text.
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722
In this didactic passage, the narrator tells the reader that the self is
also a type of fiction, which is formulated through the same process as
fiction writing. Moreover, as the phrase
‘[f]iction is woven into all’
(
p.97)
manifestly shows, Fowles's understanding of reality was akin to the post-
structuralist idea of the intertextual construction of reality. This confession
of the narrator shares the same goal as deconstructionists; according to
Waugh, by laying bare the fact that reality is an artefact, Fowles teaches the
reader that because their common sense and values are neither universal
nor absolute, they can challenge and change them. In this way, metafiction
11
can be understood as a challenge to arbitrary conventions, both in literary
tradition and in human society.
In the framework of post-structuralism, literary studies have mostly
focused on
‘historical, social, and political, as well as intertextual’
aspects of
postmodern fiction. However, I would like to emphasize that, in The French
12
Lieutenant’s Woman, there can also be found a recognition that the act of
narrative is a biological propensity innate to human beings. In Chapter 13,
after the passage cited above, the narrator's discourse continues as follows:
‘We are all in flight from the real reality. That is a basic definition of Homo
sapiens’
(
p. 97). The use of the words
‘Homo sapiens’
suggests that Fowles
assumed that narrative construction of reality was a biologically endowed
feature of human beings as a species. In other words, narrative is regarded
as a basic biologically innate framework for human beings to understand the
world and other people. This is a view expressed in other post-postmodernist
11
Waugh, p. 34.
12
Linda Hutcheon, Politics of Postmodernism
(London & New York: Routledge, 1989)
,
p. 51.
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Postmodernism and Biology
in John Fowles's The French Lieutenant’s Woman(Fukuhara) 723
granted among many writers, contemporary novelists tend to exploit this
feature of narrative as a literary device. Kazuo Ishiguro's biased narrators
transform their experiences in their favour through the act of story-telling;
and Ian McEwan exploits Neo-Darwinist and evolutionary narrative theories
in Enduring Love (1997). Fowles can be regarded as one of the earliest
contemporary novelists emphasising the biological aspects of narrative.
The conception of human beings as story-telling animals is most often
seen in cognitive approaches to literature. As post-structuralist criticism is
based on a linguistic paradigm, its emphasis tends to be on nurture, rather
than nature. Of course, it would be unfair to claim that an innate drive for
narrative was overlooked in the age of the linguistic turn; Roland Barthes
begins
‘An Introduction to the Structural Analysis of Narrative’
with an
acknowledgement of the universality of narrative, and Peter Brooks admits,
14
nature is a specialty of the cognitive approach to literature. For example,
13
Andrzej Gasiorek, ‘Postmodernisms of English fi ction’ , in The Cambridge Companion
to the Twenties-Century English Novel (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
2009), p. 204.
14
Roland Barthes,
‘An Introduction to the Structural Analysis of Narrative’
, trans.
Lionel Duisit, in New Literary History: A Journal of Theory and Interpretation 6, no. 2
(1975), p. 237.
15
Peter Brooks, Reading for the Plot: Design and Intention in Narrative (Cambridge,
MA.: Harvard University Press, 1984) , p. 3.
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Postmodernism and Biology
in John Fowles's The French Lieutenant’s Woman(Fukuhara) 725
confusion or panic. This aspect of narrative as a preparation for the future is
also a point emphasised in cognitive approaches to narrative. It is probable
18
that the open ending of the novel illustrates this function of narrative; as
Bran Nicol points out, by offering multiple endings, the novel shows that
fiction allows us to have various hypothesis on what might happen in the
future. As Katherine Tarbox argues, The French Lieutenant’s Woman is
‘an
19
. While
anatomy of the relationship between human cognition and narrative’
20
the novel demonstrates how dependent we are on a narrative framework in
understanding everyday reality, it also poses the reader
‘radical cognitive
by exploiting subversive literary techniques of metafiction. The
challenges’
21
relationship between the narrator and the reader is similar to that between
Sarah and Charles; as Sarah leads Charles to a new understanding of the
world through her forged stories, the narrator's deceptive narrative brings
about a new intuition for the reader. For Charles, Sarah is a fascinating
22
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726
regarding Sarah is that she is very good at understanding the thoughts and
feelings of other people. The narrator refers to her intelligence frequently,
but she is also said to be
‘a fine moral judge of people’
(
p. 53). In fact, her
strong point lies in having in-depth intuition into the personalities of others:
Sarah was intelligent, but her real intelligence belonged to a rare kind;
one that would certainly pass undetected in any of our modern tests of
the faculty. [. . .] It was rather an uncanny – uncanny in one who had
never been to London, never mixed in the world – ability to classify
other people's worth: to understand them, in the fullest sense of the
word. (p. 53)
According to the narrator, Sarah's intelligence cannot be rightly measured
by any modern test, for example, an IQ test, because it is in her ability to
understand people that she is truly exceptional. The ability is called
‘uncanny’
as she did not have opportunities to meet diverse types of people in the
town she grew up in. Importantly, it is this ability that made her estranged:
‘This instinctual profundity of insight was the first curse of her life’
(pp.
53-4).
Sarah is good at what is called
‘theory of mind’
in cognitive psychology,
which is a faculty to understand the intentions and feelings of others. Lisa
Zunshine, a leading cognitive literary theorist, argues that story-telling is
essential for human beings because stories function as a training for theories
of mind by inviting us to walk in another person's shoes. In fact, in The
23
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Postmodernism and Biology
in John Fowles's The French Lieutenant’s Woman(Fukuhara) 727
poetry, those two sanctuaries of the lonely, than most of her kind. They
served as a substitute for experience. Without realizing it she judged
people as much by the standards of Walter Scott and Jane Austen
as by any empirically arrived at; seeing those around her as fictional
characters, and making poetic judgements on them
(p. 54)
.
It is through literary works that Sarah has come to have intuitions into
others. Fiction provided her with alternatives for experiences she could
not have in the rural town. Although her interaction in the real world was
limited, she developed a theory of mind through a variety of characters in
literary works.
Another important feature of Sarah is her ability to empathize. Empathy
is a key element for theory of mind, and Charles Darwin discusses its
significance in terms of the struggle for survival in The Descent of Man.
Sarah has a
‘sympathetic voice’
(
p. 56); it is through her heartfelt reciting
of the Bible that she managed to change Ms. Poulteney's mind, after initially
finding Sarah strongly disagreeable (p. 58). In this respect, the following
evaluation of Sarah is quite intriguing in that it encapsulates her enigmatic
aspect and her insight into others:
In a much earlier one
[age]
I believe she would have been either a saint
or an emperor's mistress. Not because of religiosity on the one hand, or
sexuality on the other, but because of that fused rare power that was
her essence – understanding and emotion
(p. 59).
According to the narrator, her
‘essence’
is her ability to emphasize with
and understand others. This feature of Sarah endorses the awareness of
cognitive aspects of narrative in the novel. With her ability to emphasize and
understand others, she tells stories and manipulates Charles. In other words,
( 11 )
728
Sarah poses Charles cognitive challenges. He keeps trying to understand her,
applying narrative frameworks of hysteria cases, or pornography. Through
a series of failures, he is forced to develop a theory of mind, and the final
ending suggests that he acquires an existentialist view of the world.
illustrate this point, I cite a conversation in McEwan's Enduring Love, in
which the vogue of evolutionary biology since the 1970s is denounced as a
new form of determinism:
‘It's the new fundamentalism,’
she had said one evening. ‘Twenty
years ago you and your friends were all socialists and you blamed the
environment for everyone's hard luck. Now you've got us trapped in our
genes, and there's a reason for everything!’
she was perturbed when I
read Wilson's passage to her.
25
This conversation contrasts post-structuralist constructivism and a Darwinist
biological approach. As mentioned above, post-structuralism envisions
the self as an entity formed and constructed linguistically, culturally, and
socially. Evolutionary biology, on the other hand, emphasizes genetics, which
24
Lars Bernaerts et al., (eds.), Stories and Minds: Cognitive Approaches to Literary
Narrative (Lincoln and London: University of Nebraska Press, 2013) , p.12.
25
Ian McEwan, Enduring Love (London: Vintage, 2006) , p. 70.
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Postmodernism and Biology
in John Fowles's The French Lieutenant’s Woman(Fukuhara) 729
has resulted in it being criticized as a form of biological determinism. In
other words, the passage above shows the swing of the pendulum from one
extreme to the other in the nature/nurture controversy.
However, nature/nurture does not involve an exclusive dichotomy, and
the interaction of nature and nurture is now an important object of study
in cognitive literary studies. For example, Zunshine advocates ‘cognitive
cultural studies’
, comprising efforts to incorporate cultural aspects into
cognitive approaches. While human beings are genetically determined
26
to a certain extent, they are also social animals whose environment is not
untamed nature but an artificially constructed culture. In Tony Jackson's
words, ‘Because cognitive structures are not determined in a strictly
biological sense, specific cultural practices and ideologies will have a strong
. In
part to play in the actual manifestation of a given cognitive universal’
27
this sense, it is worth noting that Zunshine claims that
‘cognitive cultural
. As
studies is cultural studies as originally conceptualized by Williams’
28
26
Lisa Zunshine (ed.), Introduction to Cognitive Cultural Studies (Baltimore: John
Hopkins University Press, 2010) .
27
Tony E. Jackson,
‘Issues and Problems in the Blending of Cognitive Science,
Evolutionary Psychology, and Literary Study’ , Poetics Today, 23, no. 1
(2002), p. 176.
28
Zunshine, Introduction to Cognitive Cultural Studies, p. 8.
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730
Lieutenant’s Woman refers to diverse literary works, but in terms of
theoretical works, those of Darwin and Marx are the most noticeable for
their presence. The significance of Darwin in this novel is obvious, but Marx
is just as important as Darwin for the novel. The episodes of the novel are
set from 1867 to 1869; 1867 marked the year Das Kapital was published,
and the novel features Marx writing the book in the British Library.
Thematically speaking, the plot of the novel consists of class struggle. In
29
criticism of The French Lieutenant’s Woman, Darwin and Marx have been
discussed but mostly separately. However, Darwin and Marx had some
intellectual interests in common. In this section, I examine the novel in
relation to biology and social structure, which Darwin and Marx wrote on so
memorably.
As Finney points out, Fowles rated highly a Marxist palaeontologist
Stephen Jay Gould. In an interview in 1986, Fowles made positive
30
references concerning Gould, who was open regarding his Marxism alongside
his views on evolution. Interestingly, in another interview in 1999, Fowles
31
differences in attitudes toward biological determinedness, what is in common
between them is their general approach. Consilience has been a controversial
work which aimed for a unification of natural sciences, social sciences, and
humanities. Because of its extensive ambition, according to Nancy Easterlin,
traditional humanists used the work as ‘as a convenient weapon against
29
See David W. Landrum,
‘Rewriting Marx: Emancipation and Restoration in The
French Lieutenant’s Woman’ , Twenties-Century Literature, 42, no. 1
(1996), pp. 103-4.
30
Brian Finney, ‘The French Lieutenant’s Woman as Historical Fiction’ in James
Acheson (eds.), John Fowles
(London and New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2013) , p. 93.
31
Vipond, p. 135.
32
Ibid., p.233.
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Postmodernism and Biology
in John Fowles's The French Lieutenant’s Woman(Fukuhara) 731
anyone today attempting criticism informed by the sciences of the mind’
.
33
relativity of values and ideas; however, he also searched for universal
constants. In Chapter 35, Fowles contrasts modern and Victorian attitudes
toward sexuality. Representing the Victorian attitude as different from the
modern attitude, the narrator also argues that these differences are rather
superficial:
The Victorians chose to be serious about something we treat rather
lightly, and the way they expressed their seriousness was not to talk
openly about sex, just as part of our way is the very reverse. But these
‘ways’
of being serious are mere conventions. The fact behind them
remains constant. (p. 270)
33
Nancy Easterlin, A Biocultural Approach to Literary Theory and Interpretation
(Baltimore: The John Hopkins University Press, 2012) , p. 11.
34
Hutcheon, A Theory of Parody, p. 92.
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732
According to the narrator, it is only forms of narrative or representation
that change, and behind them something remains universally constant. In
the words of Hutcheon,
‘He says that he is dealing with human constants
and that the only changes are those of vocabulary and metaphor. It is not
the existence of this temporal telescoping, then, that is significant, but its
.
function’
35
This pursuit of universal constants was probably rooted in his
interests in natural sciences. As Fowles stated,
‘I suppose I'm a good field
, and he was also an amateur natural scientist. Moreover, his
naturalist’
36
enthusiasm for nature formed the basis of his literary works:
‘I might keep
.
claiming that natural history (as I knew it) was behind all my fictions’
37
The importance of natural history in The French Lieutenant’s Woman is
obvious, with its protagonist being an amateur palaeontologist. For Charles,
evolution is not merely a principle in nature, but also provides him with a
framework to understand human society and its changes. Using the theme
of evolution, Fowles dealt with both the natural world and human history.
As the story develops, however, Charles is forced to adjust how he applies
Darwin's theory of evolution to human society and himself. Initially, as a
prospective aristocrat, Charles thinks of himself as being at the top of the
social hierarchy. Applying the principle of the survival of the fittest, he is
convinced that
‘[h]e himself belonged undoubtedly to the fittest’
(
p. 165).
This sense of superiority is visualized in the form of strata, which represent
the vertical evolution of life:
35
Ibid.
36
Vipond, p. 17.
37
John Fowles, Wormholes: Essays and Occasional Writings (New York: Henry Holt
and Company, 1998) , p. 351.
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Postmodernism and Biology
in John Fowles's The French Lieutenant’s Woman(Fukuhara) 733
[W]hat he did see was a kind of edificiality of time, in which inexorable
laws (therefore beneficently divine, for who could argue that order was
not the highest human good?) very conveniently arranged themselves
for the survival of the fittest and best, exemplia gratia Charles Smithson
[.]
(p. 50)
However, this sense of superiority is to be undermined later. The rise of the
middle classes in Victorian society forces Charles to reconceive the upper
classes as being superseded by the middle classes through an evolutionary
process. When an unexpected marriage of his uncle resulted in his inheriting
much less than originally supposed, Mr. Freeman, a prospective father-in-
law, suggests Charles become a business partner as a first step to becoming
the successor of the business. Ironically, Mr. Freeman avails himself of the
theory of evolution in his persuasive attempts, although he had once called it
ridiculous:
I would have you repeat what you said, what was it, about the purpose
of this theory of evolution. A species must change
[. . .] ?’
‘In order to survive. It must adapt itself to changes in the
environment.’
‘Just so. Now that I can believe.
(p. 290)
Thus, Charles recognises that the social order is changing and that, in the
new order, he is no longer the fittest:
‘He stood for a moment against the
vast pressures of his age; then felt cold, chilled to his innermost marrow by
an icy rage against Mr Freeman and Freemanism’
(p. 299)
. Even worse for
him, Charles could regard himself as a loser in the struggle for survival:
‘He
was one of life's victims, one more ammonite caught in the vast movements
of history, stranded now for eternity, a potential turned to a fossil’
(p. 336)
.
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734
the novel in the Bildungsroman tradition, Mike Marais regards the novel's
understanding of Darwin as existentialist, in that evolution in the novel turns
out to be a result of chance and contingency without a sense of purpose.
39
On the other hand, Jackson discusses this loss of teleology and the emphasis
on contingency in relation to the postmodernist aspects of the novel. For
Jackson, the changing understanding of Darwin shows a transformation
38
Elizabeth D. Rankin,
‘Cryptic Coloration in The French Lieutenant’s Woman’
, The
Journal of Narrative Technique, 3, no. 3
(1973), pp. 193-207.
39
Marais, pp. 246-8.
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Postmodernism and Biology
in John Fowles's The French Lieutenant’s Woman(Fukuhara) 735
from the Victorian Darwin to the postmodern Darwin: in the Victorian age,
evolution was generally thought to be a providential process whose aim
was to create human beings at the top of the natural world; however, the
postmodern Darwin dismisses the Victorian teleology and anthropocentrism
in evolution and emphasizes the role of chance instead.
40
Be it existentialist or postmodernist, the understanding of evolution in
the novel leads to the recognition of horizontality in all life. With the force
of a revelation, Charles suddenly grasps evolution as horizontal rather than
vertical:
‘In a vivid insight, a flash of black lightning, he saw that all life was
parallel’
(p. 207). This intuition is akin to the one that comes to Charles
at Undercliff:
‘He stopped a moment, so struck was he by this sense of an
exquisitely particular universe, in which each was appointed, each unique’
(p. 241). Importantly, this recognition affects his understanding of reality
itself. After the revelation that
‘all life was parallel’
, the passage continues as
follows:
Time was the great fallacy; existence was without history, was always
now, was always this being caught in the same fiendish machine. All
those painted screens erected by man to shut our reality – history,
religion, duty, social position, all were illusions, mere opium fantasies (p.
207).
Considering that this novel is a metafiction concerned with the fictionality
of reality, it is understandable that social systems involving history and
religion are denounced as fallacies or fantasies. Importantly, it is the
40
Tony E. Jackson,
‘Charles and the Hopeful Monster: Postmodern Evolutionary
Theory in The French Lieutenant’s Woman’ , Twenties-Century Literature, 43, no.2
(1997), p. 223.
( 19 )
736
biological reality that is covered over by these fantasies; the narrator argues
that these artefacts veil the universal, ahistorical condition of human life.
As discussed, Fowles sought human constants while showing the plurality
and arbitrariness of histories through exploiting the literary device of
historiography. In this passage, similarly, linguistically/culturally constructed
illusions are contrasted with biological reality. In other words, this passage
is another variation of the traditional dichotomy between nature and
nurture, and Fowles regarded the Darwinian view of nature as providing a
foundational reality for cultural constructs.
However, it is important to note that these
‘opium fantasies’
cannot be
dismissed easily. Fowles seemed to assume that universal constants appear
repetitively throughout history, but in different forms in different ages. For
example, Charles Smithson is a type which repeats itself in history with
differences:
Perhaps you see very little link between the Charles of 1267 with all his
newfangled French notions of chastity and chasing after Holy Grails,
the Charles of 1867 with his loathing of trade, and the Charles today,
a computer scientist deaf to the screams of the tender humanists who
begin to discern their own redundancy. But there is a link: they all
rejected or reject the notion of possession as the purpose of life
[. . .]. (p.
298)
Similarly, Charles's Cockney servant Sam Farrow, with his peculiar interests
in fashion, is a prototype of 1960's mods, and the narrator compares him
frequently with Sam Weller from The Pickwick Papers. Obviously, Sam
Weller is a literary model for Sam Farrow, but Fowles illustrates how
historical background affects their personalities, behaviours, and eventually
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Postmodernism and Biology
in John Fowles's The French Lieutenant’s Woman(Fukuhara) 737
career courses:
‘But the difference between Sam Weller and Sam Farrow
(that is, between 1836 and 1867) was this: the first was happy with his
role, the second suffered it’
(
p. 44). As a result, Sam Farrow desperately
tries and fails to overcome his Cockney accent, an accent that was a typical
feature of those servants in Sam Weller's generation. His attitude toward
his accent is of minor significance in the story, but the narrator finds it to
be a sign of social change:
‘But his wrong a's and h's were not really comic;
they were signs of a social revolution, and this was something Charles failed
to recognize’
(
p. 43). Sam Farrow and Sam Weller are the same type but
differences in social background result in their following different future
paths, Farrow realizes his ambition to start a new career in the fashion
industry, rather than being content with his role as a servant like Sam
Weller. These instances suggest Fowles was willing to acknowledge the
moulding power of a historically-conditioning environment.
As evolution involves an outcome of the interaction between genes and
environment, so Fowles was concerned with interrelationships between
human beings as a species and their environment or society with its
historical and cultural backgrounds. As mentioned, Fowles rated highly
both E. O. Wilson, a father of sociobiology, and Stephen Jay Gould, a Marxist
evolutionary biologist. This fact resonates with his statement that he had
been
‘torn between a biological and political view of society.’
With this point
in mind, it is quite significant that Fowles quoted a sentence from Martin
Gardner's The Ambidextrous Universe as an epigraph for the final chapter:
‘Evolution is simply the process by which chance (the random mutations in
the nucleic acid helix caused by natural radiation)
co-operates with natural
law to create living forms better and better adapted to survive’
(p. 464)
. As
( 21 )
738
Finney points out,
‘all the epigraphs but the last are by or about Victorians’
so this epigraph is exceptional. This sentence epitomizes the interpretation
41
of Darwin that Charles eventually reaches. It is important to note, however,
that evolution is not the main topic of The Ambidextrous Universe. In other
words, there is a question regarding why Fowles quoted a passing sentence
from that book. A probable answer is that the sentence happened to match
best with the understanding of evolution applied in the novel, but I suggest
an alternative answer, that citing from that specific book was significant
for Fowles. Gardner was an exceptional generalist whose interests covered
mathematics, science, and literature. In the field of literature, he made a
significant contribution to studies of Louis Carroll with The Annotated
Alice. The Ambidextrous Universe is the epitome of Gardner's multifarious
approach, consisting of essays on symmetry and asymmetry, in such diverse
topics as physics, astronomy, natural sciences, genetics, and, importantly,
art including literature. Having an epigraph from such a work of scientific
and cultural unification was quite appropriate for The French Lieutenant’s
Woman, which is an ambitious attempt to reconcile apparently contradictory
biological and cultural views of human life.
4. Conclusion
While The French Lieutenant’s Woman has often been discussed in
terms of postmodernism and existentialism, insufficient attention has been
paid to the naturalist aspects of John Fowles and his writing. Fowles had
been
‘torn between a biological and political view of society’
, and this novel
41
Finney, p. 96.
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Postmodernism and Biology
in John Fowles's The French Lieutenant’s Woman(Fukuhara) 739
can be regarded as a literary endeavour to reconcile these two views.
Postmodernist textualism and Darwinian biology might appear incongruous
together, but as Spolsky argues in
‘Darwin and Derrida’
, the conception of
evolution as a process of recategorization has an affinity for deconstructionist
postmodernism. The French Lieutenant’s Woman, with its focus on both
42
nature and nurture, is concerned with biological evolution and social
changes. Just as Sarah is an enigma refusing stereotypical interpretations,
the novel as a metafiction provides the reader with cognitive challenges to
help deconstruct orthodox understandings of human beings and society. As
a historiographic fiction with interests in human constants, the novel can
be regarded as Fowles's quest to investigate how society affects us as an
environment designed by human beings, and how we might make changes
to society accordingly.
42
Ellen Spolsky,
‘Darwin and Derrida: Cognitive Literary Theory as a Species of Post-
Structuralism’, Poetics Today, 23, no. 1
(2002), p. 57.
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