This section contains 2,128 words (approx. 6 pages at 400 words per page) |
In the following essay, Janik explores the interaction between history and the Here and Now in Waterland.
On one level, Waterland is a series of history lessons, the lessons Crick teaches in the last few weeks before he is forced into early retirement after thirty-two years. As such, they are often wildly inappropriate: the nominal topic of his class is the French Revolution, but he alludes to it rarely, only to illustrate a point about the family and personal events that form most of the narrative's substance. On another level, Waterland is a manifestation of man's need to tell stories to keep reality under control, and Crick can be seen in much the same light as Prentis, a man telling his story in an attempt to cope with its implications.
The novel's structure is rambling and recursive, intermixing episodes from three major elements. The first of these...
This section contains 2,128 words (approx. 6 pages at 400 words per page) |