This section contains 346 words (approx. 1 page at 400 words per page) |
Lee Clark Mitchell is affiliated with Princeton University. In the following excerpt, she discusses how London's repetitious writing style in "To Build a Fire" ultimately undermines the meaning of his language.
Even enthusiasts cringe at naturalism's style. Given excesses so plain and a motion so plodding, sensible critics have simply dropped the subject. And perhaps the greatest embarrassment has been caused by Jack London, whose flat prose seems especially open to criticism. His very methods of composition prompt a certain skepticism; the speed with which he wrote, his suspiciously childish plots, perhaps even his self-advertising pronouncements have all convinced readers to ignore the technical aspects of his fiction.
Yet good manners seem misplaced once we grant that literature need not appear a certain way, since it is difficult to see then what it might mean to reject a work's style as inappropriate. Indeed, the very strangeness of...
This section contains 346 words (approx. 1 page at 400 words per page) |