Martin Boyd: the aesthetic temperament : a critical study
Abstract
The claim of this thesis is that Martin Boyd is a writer of
aesthetic inclination whose fundamental concerns and values, while they
emerge in a highly individual manner and with the complicating orientation
of a religious view of the world, have clear affinities with the
fin de siecle celebration of beauty and pleasure as the goal of life.
Section I concentrates on the milieu into which the novelist was
born, its aim being to investigate the presence of late Victorian ideas
in this environment. Attention is given to the role of the a Beckett-
Boyd family as a shaping force in the novelist's formative background, with
particular emphasis on the cultural interests of Boyd's own parents,
painters associated with the flowering in Australia of an art that has
been labelled 'Impressionist.' Both the European and Australian nineties
are considered for their alternative and, at times, complementary
contributions to the general cultural atmosphere affecting the novelist's
upbringing. The part played by Boyd's schooling is also considered.
Section II examines Boyd's theoretical notions as these are developed
in a discursive work of the writer's mature years, Much Else in Italy,
A Subjective Travel Book. The idea of the primacy of beauty, a central
concept in nineteenth-century aestheticism, is revealed as vital to Boyd's
exploration of the marriage of Classicism and Christianity in Western
civilization. In this way his vision is linked with the Hellenizing
impulse of the late Victorian imagination.
Section III, comprising chapters three to seven, sets out to show that
the aesthetic view of life, expressing itself as a vision of pleasure,
dominated the novelist's imagination from the outset and continued as a
major preoccupation of his fiction. Chapter three discusses the lesser
fiction, where a theme of pleasure is often mechanically presented. Chapters
four, five and six analyse its more sophisticated treatment in the better
fiction: The Montforts, Lucinda Brayford and the Langton novels. In the
case of the Langton books, my concern is with The Cardboard Crown and
Outbreak of Love as the two novels in the series most preoccupied with
evoking those aspects of life which reveal themselves as 'the face of
pleasure.' In these novels Boyd concentrates on what he terms 'the Greek
story' in his portrayal of a number of searching individuals who are
afforded at least a partial experience of a life of beauty and enjoyment.
Chapter seven is a transitional chapter discussing the system of values
underlying Boyd's division of his characters into the categories of
aesthetes and puritans. The idea of a spiritual contest focuses Boyd's
need to reconcile his vision of a life of pleasure with his awareness of moral evil and initiates a discussion of his approach to the graver
issues of life.
Section IV, comprising chapters eight to ten, discusses the treatment
of the suffering hero in four novels, Lucinda Brayford, Such Pleasure,
A Difficult Young Man and When Blackbirds Sing, in which Boyd seeks to
portray a transcending of the aesthetic vision and to offer a view of
life able to give a positive interpretation to the fact of pain and
sorrow. A variety of approaches is revealed: the rather abstract
provision of the framework of Christian myth in the story of Stephen
Brayford, the discursive argument of Such Pleasure, the entirely aesthetic
evocation of 'the face of sorrow' in A Difficult Young Man, and, finally,
the presentation in When Blackbirds Sing of a double world, the symbol
of a personality divided against itself. In each case, we witness the
novelist's search for a resolution to the apparent conflict between the
pleasure-loving personality's desire for fulfilment and his knowledge
of evil. Significantly, the values important to Boyd's aesthete characters
are not rejected but are gathered up in the appreciation of a higher kind
of moral beauty, that of sacrificial love.
Section V discusses Boyd's aesthetic impulse from the point of view
of a technique of Impressionism he shares with a number of other writers
and which, in his case, owes something to his background of a family of
painters. The early novels are examined for elements which anticipate
major developments in the mature fiction. The implications of an
Impressionist approach for the form of the novel - its handling of
narrative, plot and character - are considered in detail.
An Appendix is included with the aim of highlighting both fin de siecle
and Impressionist developments in Australian art at the turn of the century.
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