The Little Spark and the General Blaze: Speech, Narrative and Fact in James Boswell’s "Life of Johnson"
Abstract
The thesis performs an explorative reading of James
Boswell’s Life of Samuel Johnson (1791) in order to interrogate
assumptions about the function, use and epistemological limits of
direct speech in Boswell’s work, and the Eighteenth Century
more generally. Rather than ignoring the problems posed by the
competing and contradictory epistemological and ontological
claims of the presentation of speech in text, the thesis reads
Boswell as engaging with these problems at different scales. Each
narrative scale carries with it different assumptions about facts
and events, and different conventions with which to represent
speech as a combination of both. The thesis aligns the problems
of narration at different scales with different forms of
narrative intervention and manipulation of the putatively raw
materials of Johnson’s speech and their transition into the
text published in the Life. It does this by drawing on archival
research investigating the many states of Johnson’s speech in
Boswell’s records, drafts and the final version of the Life.
Chapter One investigates Boswell’s attitude to the project as a
whole, seeing in his ideal of journal-keeping and personal
affinity a vision of biography that draws on the non-narrative
conventions of different genres. Chapter Two traces Boswell’s
engagements with connected events and sustained scenes before
investigating his own role as a nodal point constructing extended
analogue conversations between Johnson and other figures over
many years. In these chapters the print technologies of quotation
marks and dashes are read as the mechanism that allows narrative
connections at these different scales. Chapter Three investigates
the workings of dialogue through Boswell’s use of parenthetical
stage directions, reading them as a method of massaging his
journals into narratives. Chapter Four turns to Boswell’s
writerly interventions on the surface of words, seeing in
italicisation a blunt tool for marking conceptual and textual as
well as aural differences in speech, and considers the stress
this places on interpretation. Chapter Five considers Boswell’s
interpretive interventions within the orthography of words
themselves, investigating his attention to the potential of type
to convey aberrant or historically particular sounds through the
representation of laughter, accents and onomatopoeia. Each level
of analysis reveals both the contingency of the whole enterprise
and the inescapably preemptive interpretive choices made by
Boswell in the course of his composition. Boswell emerges as a
writer engaging constantly with the demands and contradictions of
what remains an under-theorised yet crucial aspect of non-fiction
narrative in a context of changing ideas about truth and
narrative.
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