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Q.D. Leavis's criticism: The human core. (Reconsideration).


IN THE PRESENT RECONSIDERATION of the literary criticism of Q.D. Leavis (1906-1981), I wish to discuss three related topics. First, I want to show that, independent of her collaboration with her famous husband, F.R. Leavis (1895-1978), Q.D. Leavis is an important critic. Second, I will argue that she is, in particular, a major critic of the novel, especially of the nineteenth-century British novel, and specifically the English and Anglo-Irish novel. Thirdly, I will support my case by discussing her method of analysis in, arguably, her finest discussion of a nineteenth-century novel, "A Fresh Approach to Wuthering Heights Wuthering Heights

remotely situated home where Heathcliff nurses his vengeful plans. [Br. Lit.: Emily Brontë Wuthering Heights in Magill I, 1137]

See : Houses, Fateful


Wuthering Heights
" (1969).

When Q.D. Leavis died in March 1981, David Holloway in The Daily Telegraph (London) described her relationship with her husband, F.R. Leavis, as forming "one of the most formidable literary partnerships ever."1 Presumably pre·sum·a·ble  
adj.
That can be presumed or taken for granted; reasonable as a supposition: presumable causes of the disaster.
, he had in mind the Brownings, the Carlyles, Harriet Taylor and John Stuart The name John Stuart can refer to:
  • John Stuart, 4th Earl of Atholl (d. 1579)
  • John Stuart, 3rd Earl of Bute (1713–1792), Prime Minister of Great Britain from 1762–1763.
 Mill, and George Eliot and George Henry Lewes. In North America North America, third largest continent (1990 est. pop. 365,000,000), c.9,400,000 sq mi (24,346,000 sq km), the northern of the two continents of the Western Hemisphere. , we might think too of the Leavises' contemporaries: Mary McCarthy Noun 1. Mary McCarthy - United States satirical novelist and literary critic (1912-1989)
Mary Therese McCarthy, McCarthy
 and Edmund Wilson Noun 1. Edmund Wilson - United States literary critic (1895-1972)
Wilson
, the Trillings or Janet Lewis Janet Lewis (1899 - 1998) was an American author.

Lewis, born in Chicago, Illinois, and a graduate of the University of Chicago, taught at both Stanford University in California, and at the University of California at Berkeley.
 and Yvor Winters Arthur Yvor Winters (October 17, 1900 - January 26, 1968) was an American poet and literary critic, whose criticism was often embroiled in controversy As modernist . A collection of essays edited by Whitney Chadwick and Isabelle de Courtivron, entitled Significant Others: Creativity & Intimate Partnership2 describes, among others, the relationships of Camille Claudel and Auguste Rodin, Clara and Andre Malraux Noun 1. Andre Malraux - French novelist (1901-1976)
Malraux
, Virginia Woolf Noun 1. Virginia Woolf - English author whose work used such techniques as stream of consciousness and the interior monologue; prominent member of the Bloomsbury Group (1882-1941)
Adeline Virginia Stephen Woolf, Woolf
 and Vita Sackville-West Victoria Mary Sackville-West, The Hon Lady Nicolson, CH (March 9, 1892 – June 2, 1962), best known as Vita Sackville-West, was an English poet, novelist and gardener. Her long narrative poem, The Land, won the Hawthornden Prize in 1927. , Frida Kahlo Frida Kahlo[1](July 6, 1907 – July 13, 1954) was a Mexican painter, who has achieved great international popularity. She painted using vibrant colors in a style that was influenced by indigenous cultures of Mexico as well as European influences that include  and Diego Rivera, and Lillian Hellman Noun 1. Lillian Hellman - United States playwright; her plays were often indictments of injustice (1905-1984)
Hellman
 and Dashiell Hammett Noun 1. Dashiell Hammett - United States writer of hard-boiled detective fiction (1894-1961)
Hammett, Samuel Dashiell Hammett
. It shows that couples in love inspire each other. Though allied interests and love may be difficult to disentangle in most of the cases listed above, it is certainly tru e that the Leavises assisted and supported each other in their critical endeavors. Their mutual dedication to Dickens the Novelist (1970), as much and more the work of Q.D. than of F.R. Leavis, says it all:

We dedicate this book to each other as proof, along with Scrutiny (of which for twenty-one years we sustained the main burden and the responsibility), of forty years and more of daily collaboration in living, university teaching, discussion of literature and the social and cultural context from which literature is born, and above all, devotion to the fostering of that true respect for creative writing, creative minds and, English literature English literature, literature written in English since c.1450 by the inhabitants of the British Isles; it was during the 15th cent. that the English language acquired much of its modern form.  being in question, the English tradition, without which literary criticism can have no validity and no life. (3)

Fuller obituaries of Q.D. Leavis followed, but while there are, at least, fifteen books and countless articles about F.R. Leavis, less than half of these concern the Leavises together. Indeed, there are only half a dozen articles that discuss Q.D. Leavis independently, and one of the best of these is as yet unpublished. (4) The first of them, M. B. Kinch's "Q.D. Leavis: 19061981: An Appreciation" establishes the grounds for seeing Q.D. Leavis as an important literary critic Noun 1. literary critic - a critic of literature
critic - a person who is professionally engaged in the analysis and interpretation of works of art
. Kinch indicates "five distinctive types of critical activity" in which he shows Q.D. Leavis's indisputable accomplishment:

the rehabilitation of a writer who has been neglected or underrated or both; the investigation and rejection of claims rejection of claim n. in probate law (administration of an estate of a person who died), a claim for a debt of the deceased denied (rejected) in total or in part by the executor or administrator of the estate.  to classic status made for a writer whose neglect is shown to have been fully justified; the discovery and celebration of a forgotten writer whose work is shown to be superior to many established classics; the immediate recognition of an individual work, since generally accepted as a modern classic, by a relatively unknown writer; and the uncompromising analysis and rejection of an inferior book by a distinguished contemporary writer. (5)

Kinch first discusses how Q.D. Leavis, in her 1938 review in Scrutiny, shows how Richard Jefferies For the former Governor of South Carolina, see .
John Richard Jefferies (November 6 1848 - August 14 1887 ) was an English nature writer, essayist and journalist. He wrote fiction mainly based on farming and rural life.
 had been neglected and underrated. She praises Edward Thomas's biography of Jefferies and, in fact, indicates, in detail, how a complete edition of Jefferies' works should be carried out. (6) As in her highly critical 1947 Scrutiny review of a selection of short stories of Henry James by David Garnettt, (7) Q.D. Leavis reveals her complete and convincing competence as a critic through the depth and extent of her reading of both Jefferies and James. Her judgments in both cases are persuasive because she knows her subjects so well.

Second, Kinch shows how Q.D. Leavis challenged the attempt to rehabilitate the novels of Charlotte Yonge in her 1944 Scrutiny review "Charlotte Yonge and 'Christian Discrimination."' (8) In this review, she makes the important point that, whatever the ideological or theological orientation of a novel (whether, say, Christian or Marxist), it is first of all important that it be a convincing and successful novel. Kinch's third claim is supported by Q.D. Leavis's "discovery and celebration" of the forgotten novels of Margaret Oliphant. Here Q.D. Leavis wrote introductions for a 1969 edition of Miss Marjoribanks Miss Marjoribanks is an 1866 novel by Margaret Oliphant. It follows the exploits of its heroine, Lucilla Marjoribanks, as she schemes to improve the social life of the provincial English town of Carlingford. , as well as for a 1974 edition of Oliphant's Autobiography and Letters. (9) Though she does not claim to have read every word that Margaret Oliphant wrote (and wonders who has), she provides an important critical sorting out of the major novels.

Fourth, Kinch points to Q.D. Leavis's 1942 review, "A Novel to Recommend," of Arthur Koestler's Darkness at Noon Darkness at Noon

Communists accused of having betrayed party principles are imprisoned, tortured, and executed. [Br. Lit.: Weiss, 117]

See : Totalitarianism
 as an instance of her "immediate recognition of an individual work, since generally accepted as a modern classic, by a relatively unknown writer." (10) This, indeed, is one of the most attractive features of Q.D. Leavis's criticism. Although she can be withering about work she finds self-indulgent or immature, the power of her arguments and her enthusiasm for the novel inspires the reader with a desire to read the novels she recommends. This surely is a sign of what a fine literary critic she is. Finally, Kinch points to Q.D. Leavis's 1938 review of Virginia Woolf's Three Guineas as "the uncompromising analysis and rejection of an inferior book by a distinguished contemporary writer." (11) Kinch, it seems to me, successfully establishes solid grounds for regarding Q.D. Leavis as an important literary critic. Clearly, her collaboration with F.R. Leavis was important to her, but reconsideration is ne cessary to indicate her particular contribution to literary criticism and to demonstrate the nature of her critical method. I hope that this reconsideration will show that, by any standard, Q.D. Leavis is a major critic of the novel, one on whose work twentieth-century criticism of the novel is founded.

Born Queenie This article is about the television character. For the Melbourne Zoo elephant, see Queenie (elephant).
Queenie was a caricature of the historical figure Queen Elizabeth I of England
 Dorothy Roth in Edmonton, North London North London is a part of London, England which has several possible definitions. River & geography
The part of London north of the River Thames (illustrated).
, England, into a Jewish family (her father was a draper and hosier Ho´sier

n. 1. One who deals in hose or stocking, or in goods knit or woven like hose.

Noun 1. hosier - a tradesman who sells hosiery and (in England) knitwear
) in 1906, she became a brilliant student at Latymer School, publishing essays in the school magazine by the age of fourteen. Her family valued the arts highly, and, as an adolescent, Queenie Roth was steeped in the novels and stories of Henry James. Before the age of eighteen, she won a scholarship to Girton College, Cambridge, to study English. All her life, Queenie Roth was a dedicated reader. A fellow student at Girton, Gwendolen Freeman, recalls:

We were jolting up the Huntingdon Road to Girton in the college bus, all of us hungry and relaxed after a morning of Cambridge lectures and reading. Near college we passed Queenie erect and alone, strolling along the path. She was not only not hurrying to lunch. She was reading as she walked, her book held high before her eyes, she may have been short-sighted. (I never asked why she wore glasses.) It could not have been easy to read as one walked along that country path, and presumably she had been reading all the two-and-a-half miles from Cambridge. (12)

Commenting on her undergraduate education undergraduate education Medtalk In the US, a 4+ yr college or university education leading to a baccalaureate degree, the minimum education level required for medical school admission; undergraduate medical education refers to the 4 yrs of medical school. Cf CME.  in "A Glance Backwards, 1965," Q.D. Leavis reveals how her method of writing about literature was shaped by the criticism of Leslie Stephen Sir Leslie Stephen (November 28, 1832 – February 22, 1904) was an English author, critic and mountaineer, and the father of Virginia Woolf and Vanessa Bell. Life  and by what she learned from H.M. Chadwick:

I preceded my purely literary work as an undergraduate by taking Anglo-Saxon and associated studies under agreat Cambridge teacher and scholar, Professor H.M. Chadwick [who] invented for us students at Cambridge a course of study, highly educational and rewarding, on the early history and literature of England which was comparable with what the Classical Tripos The Classical Tripos at Cambridge University is equivalent to Literae Humaniores at Oxford. It is traditionally a three year degree, but for those who have not studied Latin and Greek at school a four year course has been introduced.  at Cambridge or Greats at Oxford do for the early history and literatures of Greece and Rome.... His students acquired an anthropological attitude because they had to study archaeology, myth, folk-lore, religious rites, early architecture and other arts while centring on literature and on the associated arts and beliefs as the expression and highest products of those cultures. This inspiring teaching...made it inevitable that when in our later purely 'Eng. Lit.' work we read Chaucer, we at once saw him correctly, not as a crude and naive poet at the beginning of English Literature, but as the sophisticated artist who brought a slowly-developed traditio n of several strands to a climax of achievement by enriching it with grafts from European poetic traditions.

It is not surprising that she sub-titled her Cambridge Ph.D thesis, Fiction and the ReadingPublic, supervised by I.A. Richards and published by Chatto and Windus in 1932, "A Study in Social Anthropology." In a number of places in her work, Q.D. Leavis uses the metaphor of the iceberg in relation to the analysis of literature. It is a useful metaphor to demonstrate both her understanding of literature, as an inseparable part of culture, and her critical method in analysing works of literature. In "A Glance Backwards, 1965," she uses the metaphor to explain what she set out to accomplish in Fiction and the Reading Public and why she chose to undertake the work.

I wanted to find out what part the reading-public has played in determining the form and quality of English imaginative writing. For my purpose Literature (with a capital L) was simply the part of the iceberg that showed above the water, though this top section, and not the whole, was what was then selected as proper to be studied by university students. In fact, when my book appeared in 1932, a leading senior academic of the Cambridge 'English' School, writing an article on 'English Studies at Cambridge,' held it and me up to opprobrium OPPROBRIUM, civil law. Ignominy; shame; infamy. (q.v.) , since, he said, to read 'bestsellers' (as popular fiction was then contemptuously labelled) showed a depraved de·praved  
adj.
Morally corrupt; perverted.



de·praved·ly adv.
 taste and was quite outside the literary field. I felt that part--the major part--of the iceberg had been submerged by the passage of time but was still not negligible from my point of view, since having been read with pleasure by so many it must tell us something important about the formation and taste of the reading-public at any given time, and the climate of lite rature is determined by public taste to a great extent.13

Directly following two lengthy quotations from Q.D. Leavis's writing is probably the best place, before we proceed any further, to discuss her manner, or style, of writing. A frequent critical cheap-shot at her husband has been to say that he is a poor writer, implying thereby that his critical judgments are invalidated by his supposedly inferior prose. In fact, F.R. Leavis is a careful, exact, and often passionately persuasive writer as is Q.D. Leavis, though some readers have found her sentences (and paragraphs) long, complex, even convoluted, and her syntactical constructions perplexing per·plex  
tr.v. per·plexed, per·plex·ing, per·plex·es
1. To confuse or trouble with uncertainty or doubt. See Synonyms at puzzle.

2. To make confusedly intricate; complicate.
. Perhaps her early, extensive reading of Henry James can be held responsible, though, despite their love of the long sentence, the writing of both is generally clear and comprehensible.

Close reading of Q.D. Leavis's sentences, from the two passages of her writing just quoted, reveals, I think, that, like "the Master" himself, Q.D. Leavis is a master of subordination within the complex sentence. Take, for example, the last sentence from the passage just quoted, "I felt that part-the major part-of the iceberg had been submerged by the passage of time but was still not negligible from my point of view, since having been read with pleasure by so many it must tell us something important about the formation and taste of the reading-public at any given time, and the climate of literature is determined by public taste to a great extent." Admittedly, this is a difficult sentence to understand, especially if removed from its context, but once restored to its context and read carefully, is it not perfectly clear? "[T]hat part-the major part-of the iceberg" refers to "popular fiction" or "'bestsellers,"' as opposed to "Literature (with a capital L)." Time submerges "popular fiction" more rapidly than " Literature (with a capital L)" but, from the point of view of Q.D. Leavis's study, "popular fiction" is "not negligible" because, first, it has been read with pleasure by many readers and, second, gives us insight into "the formation and taste of the reading public at any given time." She then adds, though perhaps by this point the sentence has run on, "and the climate of literature is determined by public taste to a great extent." The additional thought is, however, necessary to her overall argument as she endeavors to show in Fiction and the Reading Public that "the climate of literature" at any time is shaped by diverse elements of "public taste." This is what she always argues following her "anthropological" approach to literature.

The point I wish to make is that though Q.D Leavis's meaning has sometimes to be worked for, and she certainly likes long sentences-they are essential to the kinds of modifications and qualifications in arguement that literary criticism needs to make. Her persuasive power as a critic lies not just in the strength but in the subtlety of her arguments. And subtlety can often only be achieved by the kinds of modifications and qualifications found within long sentences. Just as Q.D. Leavis remarks of Charlotte Bronte, I think that we are persuaded that Q.D. Leavis "thought out exactly what she meant to write, choosing each word deliberately." (14)

Shortly after completing a first-class undergraduate degree “First degree” redirects here. For the BBC television series, see First Degree.

An undergraduate degree (sometimes called a first degree or simply a degree
 in 1929, Queenie Roth married her Girton tutor, F.R. Leavis, who had helped her to secure the Ottilie Hancock research fellowship to support her doctoral research. Tragically, her parents broke with her completely for marrying a gentile. In 1940 they were killed during the German blitz on London. No reconciliation had taken place. In the meantime Adv. 1. in the meantime - during the intervening time; "meanwhile I will not think about the problem"; "meantime he was attentive to his other interests"; "in the meantime the police were notified"
meantime, meanwhile
 Q.D. Leavis had had two children, Ralph in 1934 and Kate in 1939, and assisted her husband in establishing the critical quarterly Scrutiny (1932-1953) of which she was an editor and to which she regularly contributed articles and reviews. Her husband's doctoral work was closely related to her own. His Cambridge Ph.D. thesis, completed in 1924, was entitled "The Relationship of Journalism to Literature: Studied in the Rise and Earlier Development of the Press in England." Indeed, it can be argued that Fiction and the Reading Public picks up where "The Relationship of Journalism to Literature" leaves off. In f act, both Leavises were deeply interested in the social context of the novel as well as in the novel itself. Both were dissatisfied with the kind of criticism the novel received.

Apart from Henry James's Notes on Novelists and C.H. Rickword's "A Note on Fiction" in the short-lived The Calendar of Modern Letters (1925-1927), the Leavises thought that there was little satisfactory discussion of how to criticize fiction. They used Scrutiny, in part, to advance such discussion and in collaboration (which was always important to them both) developed an idea of "the novel as a dramatic poem." Briefly, they believed that the novel had always been strongly influenced by Elizabethan (particularly Shakespearean) drama and that the best novels had the same kind of organic unity of character, image, language, symbol and theme as poetic dramas of the highest order. So, during the Second World War, during which their second son Lawrence Robin was born (1944), Q.D. Leavis was publishing her four-part "A Critical Theory of Jane Austen's Writings" in Scrutiny (19411944) while her husband was working towards his magnum opus on the English novel Early novels in English
See the article First novel in English. Romantic novel
The Romantic period saw the first flowering of the English novel. The Romantic and the Gothic novel are closely related; both imagined almost-supernatural forces operating in nature or
, The Great Tradition (1948), with which she assisted.

Though Q.D. Leavis would later (1959) compare Jane Austen's fiction to a canoe and Charlotte Bronte's to an iceberg, the argument of her study of Jane Austen's novels is that Jane Austen deepened her novels through revision. Q.D. Leavis sees the development of Austen's novels as palimpsestic. In revision, she argued, Austen moved towards a deeper personal involvement in, and discovery of, the "human core" of her fictions. Pride and Prejudice may have begun as parody of Fanny Burney's Cecilia but at the point in revision, when Austen moved from outside to inside the central characters in her novel, she began to dramatize dram·a·tize  
v. dram·a·tized, dram·a·tiz·ing, dram·a·tiz·es

v.tr.
1. To adapt (a literary work) for dramatic presentation, as in a theater or on television or radio.

2.
 human love and relationships in a more convincing way. To accept the full implication of her divining metaphor and in Q.D. Leavis's own words, "We can always see where Miss Austen's interests and preoccupations lie in any novel by observing where the stress falls and where the deepest current of feeling flows." (15)

Again, writing of Mansfield Park Mansfield Park may mean:
  • Mansfield Park (novel) by Jane Austen
  • Mansfield Park (film), based on the novel, directed by Patricia Rozema, starring Frances O'Connor, Embeth Davidtz, and Sheila Gish in 1999
  • Mansfield Park (1983 TV serial)
, Q.D. Leavis observes that, "in general the point when Jane Austen's immature draft becomes in conception the novel as we know it is when the author changes her treatment so that from being outside, in a relation of satiric superiority to her characters, and their involvements, she is to be found inside." (16) Commenting on "A critical theory of Jane Austen's writings," David Lyons David Lyons (born 15 June 1980 in Orange, NSW) plays Number Eight for the Australian national rugby union team.

From his debut in 2000 Lyons played 83 consecutive games for NSW, a record for Australian players.
 asks, "Who else was treating fiction like this is 1941?" He observes further that Q.D. Leavis's "analysis of Austen reveals an original and sophisticated sensibility. We glimpse, through obiter dicta obiter dicta (oh-bitter dick-tah) n. remarks of a judge which are not necessary to reaching a decision, but are made as comments, illustrations or thoughts. Generally, obiter dicta is simply "dicta." (See: dicta, dictum)  and glancing allusions, a felt theory of how great fiction is written, of how it must emerge from the life and living of its author." (17)

Q.D. Leavis's literary co-executor and editor of her Collected Essays, Ghan Singh, agrees with Lyons about the importance of "A Critical Theory of Jane Austen's Writings." He writes, "The first--and in many respects the most substantial and original--piece of close critical enquiry she undertook was her classical essay in four parts on 'A Critical Theory of Jane Austen's Writings'--a critique which is as original and pioneering as it is representative of her critical principles, methodology and approach." (18) What both critics acknowledge is a significant critical development in Q.D. Leavis's work from the anthropological method of Fiction and the Reading Public. As she investigates the deepening of human concern in Jane Austen, a deepening of her own critical practice and personal engagement occurs.

As her family responsibilities lightened a little and her health returned after a struggle with breast cancer in the late 1940s, and her responsibilities with Scrutiny drew to an end with the winding up of the journal in 1953, Q.D. Leavis found time to teach and to develop further her critical interest in the novel. One of her most impressive and original inquiries into "the novel as dramatic poem" is her two-part essay on "Hawthorne as Poet," which appeared in The Sewanee Review The Sewanee Review is a literary magazine and academic journal founded in 1892 and the oldest continuously published periodical of its kind in the United States. It incorporates original fiction and poetry, as well as essays, reviews, and literary criticism.  in the spring and summer of 1951. From the time of her work with H.M. Chadwick she saw the importance of comparative study. She was later to write essays and to lecture on the American, Anglo-Irish, French, Italian and Russian novel. (19) Her interest in Henry James and Edith Wharton, on whom she had written in Scrutiny as early as the 1930s, clearly inspired a need to understand the tradition from which they emerged. As she noted in "A Glance Backwards, 1965," in the passage I have already quoted, "when reading for example the early nineteenth-century American novelist Hawthorne I naturally asked myself what does he tell us about the nature of the society in which he wrote, and then went on to inquire why the Calvinistic rural society of seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Scotland produced so different a literature from the similar theocratic the·o·crat  
n.
1. A ruler of a theocracy.

2. A believer in theocracy.



the
 society set up in New England New England, name applied to the region comprising six states of the NE United States—Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and Connecticut. The region is thought to have been so named by Capt.  by the Pilgrim Fathers Pilgrim Fathers
Noun, pl

the English Puritans who founded Plymouth Colony in SE Massachusetts (1620)
 who emigrated from England and were Hawthorne's ancestors--both directly in fact and artistically by determining the theme and values of his writings." (20)

Q.D. Leavis accepts Henry James's view that Hawthorne's intention is poetic. She regards his best work the stories, "The Maypole of Merry Mount Merry Mount: see Morton, Thomas.

Merry Mount

colonists frolic around Maypole, causing Morton’s arrest. [Am. Hist.: Hart, 543]

See : Frivolity
," "Young Goodman Brown "Young Goodman Brown" (1835) is a short story by American writer Nathaniel Hawthorne. The story takes place in Puritan New England, a common setting for Hawthorne's works, and addresses one of his common themes: the conflict between good and evil in human nature and, in particular, ," "My Kinsman kins·man  
n.
1. A male relative.

2. A man sharing the same racial, cultural, or national background as another.


kinsman
Noun

pl -men
 Major Molineux," and "The Snow Image," and the novels The Scarlet Letter scarlet letter

“A” for “adultery” sewn on Hester Prynne’s dress. [Am. Lit.: The Scarlet Letter]

See : Adultery


scarlet letter
 and The Blithedale Romance as dramatic poems. She sees Hawthorne's dramatizations of the conflicts between the "iron" Puritans and "silken" royalists in early America as a complex, imaginative rendering that appeals for a sympathetic understanding of, for example, the human core of the tragic relationship between Hester and Dimmesdale in The Scarlet Letter. Q.D. Leavis's critical discussions of Hawthorne, Melville, James and Wharton show her to be an important critic of both the American and the British novel.

Indeed, Q.D. Leavis is a literary critic whose work becomes deeper as she develops and matures. Her best critical work, in fact, was written during the last twenty-five years of her life. During her last decade she was still lecturing and writing pieces such as "Jane Austen: Novelist of a Changing Society" (1974), her article on Charles Kingsley's The Water Babies (1976), and "Melville: The 1853-6 Phase" (1978). Within a year of her death, she delivered six lectures on the American, Anglo-Irish, English, French, Italian, and Russian novels at the Queen's University Queen's University, at Kingston, Ont., Canada; nondenominational; coeducational; founded 1841 as Queen's College. It achieved university status in 1912. It has faculties of arts and sciences, education, law, medicine, and applied science, as well as schools of , Belfast, in the spring of 1980. Her lecture "The Englishness of the English Novel" was delivered as the Cheltenham Festival The Cheltenham Festival is the most prestigious meeting in the National Hunt racing calendar in the United Kingdom and has race prize money second only to the Grand National.  Annual Literature Lecture in October 1980. It was published in New Universities Quarterly and English Studies English studies is an academic discipline that includes the study of literatures written in the English language (including literatures from the U.K., U.S., Ireland, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Hong Kong, the Philippines, India, South Africa, and the Middle East, among other  shortly after her death in the spring of 1981 and gathered in the first volume of her Collected Essays in 1983. This is the volume in which we find her major work on nineteenth-century English fiction as well as in Di ckens the Novelist(1970), where her chapters on David Copperfield “Copperfield” redirects here. For other uses, see Copperfield (disambiguation).
David Copperfield may refer to:
  • David Copperfield (novel), a novel by Charles Dickens
, Bleak Ho use, and Great Expectations appear.

In 1957 and 1958 she published introductions to Mansfield Park and Sense and Sensibility Sense and Sensibility is a novel by the English novelist Jane Austen, that was first published in 1811. It was the first of Austen's novels to be published, under the pseudonym "A Lady".  for editions of the novels published by Macdonald. Introductions to Penguin editions of Jane Eyre This article is about the Victorian novel. For other uses, see Jane Eyre (disambiguation).

Jane Eyre is a classic romance novel by Charlotte Brontë that was published in 1847 by Smith, Elder & Company, London.
 and Silas Marnerappeared in 1966 and 1967, to the Zodiac Press edition of Margaret Oliphant,s Miss Marjoribanks in 1969, and to a Harper Colophon colophon (kŏl`əfŏn') [Gr.,=finishing stroke]. Before the use of printing in Western Europe a manuscript often ended with a statement about the author, the scribe, or the illuminator.  edition of Charlotte Bronte's Villette in 1972.

But, arguably, the best piece of this period, though the chapters on Dickens and the above introductions are all extraordinarily good, is "A Fresh Approach to Wuthering Heights," delivered as two lectures at Harvard and Cornell in 1966 during her only visit to the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area.  and gathered in Lectures in America (1969) with her husband's lectures "Luddites? or There Is Only One Culture," "Eliot's Classical Standing," and "Yeats: The Problem and the Challenge." Q.D. Leavis uses the metaphor of the iceberg not only in describing the relation of "Literature (with a capital L)" to the whole culture which produces it, but also in relation to the different kinds of balance achieved by different kinds of works. One work, she argues, exhibits the "balance of a canoe on the surface of the water." Another will exhibit "the balance of an iceberg where four fifths of the mass is out of sight." The latter, she argues, "has irresistible strength, force and appeal to the imagination and incomparable beauty."

For Q.D. Leavis, Wuthering Heights appears to be such a work. So, in her "Fresh Approach" to Wuthering Heights, we find her distinguishing between what she calls the "sociological novel" and what she considers the real novel. On the surface we have the sociological novel about two opposed ways of life represented by Wuthering Heights and Thrushcross Grange in which the old farming way of life of the Heights gives place to the newer middle-class life of the Grange. There is a tragic inevitability about this movement that Q.D. Leavis sees Emily Bronte Noun 1. Emily Bronte - English novelist; one of three Bronte sisters (1818-1848)
Currer Bell, Emily Jane Bronte, Bronte
 detail with the detachment and impersonality of great art. This sociological novel is the visible fifth of the iceberg. Beneath the surface, Q.D. Leavis divines the real novel in which Catherine Earnshaw's "fatal immaturity" in her relationships with Heathcliff and Edgar Linton is overcome in the next generation by her daughter Catherine Linton's marriage, following the death of her first husband Linton Heathcliff, to Hareton Earnshaw.

The second Catherine Linton achieves a maturity in her human relationships that her mother (the first Catherine Linton) failed to attain. Maturity, as dramatized in great literature, is always a central value to both F.R. and Q.D. Leavis. The second Catherine Linton provides a convincing example of how romantic immaturity and self-indulgent egotism Egotism
See also Arrogance, Conceit, Individualism.

Baxter, Ted

TV anchorman who sees himself as most important news topic. [TV: “The Mary Tyler Moore Show” in Terrace, II, 70]

cat
 can be overcome. Q.D. Leavis supports her argument by inviting comparison of Wuthering Heights to Henri-Pierre Roche's modern French novel Jules et Jim. In Roche's novel, the central character, Kate, resembles Catherine Earnshaw Catherine Earnshaw, or Catherine Linton, is the principal female character in Emily Brontë's novel Wuthering Heights.

Born Catherine Earnshaw, and originally residing in Wuthering Heights, Catherine - or Cathy, as she is known in her childhood - is Hindley
 in her "fatal immaturity," and her daughter simply repeats the pattern of her mother's behaviour. This, in Q.D. Leavis's view, is a crucial element in distinguishing between Wuthering Heights and Jules et Jim, which she characterizes merely as a "remarkable modern novel." (21)

Q.D. Leavis begins her "Fresh Approach" by noting that, while Wuthering Heights was rejected as "obviously and abominably pagan" when it first appeared, it was subsequently installed as a classic whose mystic significance was beyond criticism. But in view of fresh attacks on the novel as melodramatic, factitious factitious /fac·ti·tious/ (fak-tish´-us) artificially induced; not natural.

fac·ti·tious
adj.
Produced artificially rather than by a natural process.
, or sadistic sa·dism  
n.
1. The deriving of sexual gratification or the tendency to derive sexual gratification from inflicting pain or emotional abuse on others.

2. The deriving of pleasure, or the tendency to derive pleasure, from cruelty.
 from a new generation of readers she has met in the university classroom, Q.D. Leavis wants to ask what kind of classic Wuthering Heights is, since candid readers do find it "a striking achievement of some kind." But, as she notes, "The difficulty of establishing that a literary work is a classic is nothing compared to the difficulty of establishing what kind of classic it is-what is in fact the nature of its success, what kind of creation it represents." (22) However, such exploration is not uncritical. Although Q.D. Leavis does not believe that Wuthering Heights is a seamless work of art, she wants to know "what is the novel." (23) She challenges G.D. Klingopulos's account of Wuthering Heights in Scrutiny (1947) in which he indicated that "the author's preferences are not shown" and that the novel is not "a moral tale." Q.D. Leavis replies by going directly to the human core of the real novel:

Actually, I shall argue, the author's preferences are shown, Catherine is judged by the author in the parallel but notably different history of the daughter who, inheriting her mother's name, and likenesses both physical and psychological, is shown by deliberate choice, and trial and error, developing the maturity and therefore achieving the happiness, that the mother failed in, whereas we have seen the mother hardening into a fatal immaturity which destroys herself and those (Heathcliff and Edgar principally) involved with her. (24)

She argues further that,

if we were to take the sociological novel as the real novel and relegate rel·e·gate  
tr.v. rel·e·gat·ed, rel·e·gat·ing, rel·e·gates
1. To assign to an obscure place, position, or condition.

2. To assign to a particular class or category; classify. See Synonyms at commit.
 the Heathcliff-Catherine-Edgar relationship and the corresponding Cathy-Linton-Hareton one, as exciting by ex-centric dramatic episodes, we should be misconceiving the novel and slighting it, for it is surely these relationships and their working out that give all the meaning to the rest. For instance, though Cathy has in the second half to unlearn, very painfully, the assumptions of superiority on which she has been brought up at the Grange, this is only part of her schooling; it is only incidental to the process by which we see her transcend the psychological temptations and the impulses which would have made her repeat her mother's history; and this is not a question of sociology or social history but is timeless. (25)

Q.D. Leavis's concern as a literary critic of the novel is to reach from the sociological to the timeless. Social history is where she begins but reality is where she ends. In fact, to her, excellent novels provide the best social history because they dramatize and embody reality. She canvasses Emily Bronte's debt to Scott and the Gondal origins of Wuthering Heights which, as a first novel, she feels stumbles in places particularly in the realization of Heathcliff. Though the novel may have begun life as a reworking of the sub-plot King Lear King Lear

goes mad as all desert him. [Brit. Lit.: Shakespeare King Lear]

See : Madness
, Q.D. Leavis argues that it "became a responsible piece of work, and the writer thought herself into the positions, outlooks, sufferings and tragedies of the actors in these typical events as an artist." (26)

She concludes her discussion, "I would make a plea, then, for criticism of Wuthering Heights to turn its attention to the human core of the novel, to recognize its truly human centrality. How can we fail to see that the novel is based on an interest in, concern for, and knowledge of, real life?" (27) Q.D. Leavis is a literary critic of major importance principally because she asks questions like this last.

Early in her career, in Fiction and the Reading Public (1932), Q.D. Leavis saw the need to try to account for why Dickens and George Eliot had enjoyed large, unified audiences for their novels and why, within a generation, Henry James and Marie Corelli had radically different readerships. Serious fiction and the best-seller had been split apart. Like her early mentor, Leslie Stephen, she believed that literature was "the product of the interplay between writer and reader." (28) So, it was always important to Q.D. Leavis to analyze even the best novels with a full awareness of their sociohistorical context. Such understanding helped to open up at least one level of a novel. But as a critical diviner, Q.D. Leavis wanted to identify the human core of the best novels. Certainly she was a pioneer in seeing the importance of discussing novels in their sociohistorical context, but having the high standards and perception of a true literary critic she was also able to deepen our understanding of the works of such maj or nineteenth-century novelists as Jane Austen, Charlotte and Emily Bronte, Charles Dickens, Nathaniel Hawthorne, HenryJames, and Herman Melville. Truly, Q.D. Leavis is a maj or critic of the English novel, and a significant critic of the American novel.

As Q.D. Leavis responded with lively critical interest to the complex dramatizations of life in the novel, so we respond to the life in her critical writing. She saw the reading of literature as a process of continuous and engaged evaluation and re-evaluation. At the end of her life she was engaged with the novels of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn Noun 1. Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn - Soviet writer and political dissident whose novels exposed the brutality of Soviet labor camps (born in 1918)
Aleksandr I. Solzhenitsyn, Alexander Isayevich Solzhenitsyn, Solzhenitsyn
. And throughout she was interested in the Cambridge tradition and in the nature of criticism as well as in the novel. Indeed, an essay should be written on her essays on H. M. Chadwick, A.C. Haddon, Edwin Muir Edwin Muir (15 May 1887 - 3 January, 1959) was a Scottish[1][2] poet, novelist and translator born on a farm in Deerness on the Orkney Islands in the remote northeast of Scotland. , George Orwell Noun 1. George Orwell - imaginative British writer concerned with social justice (1903-1950)
Eric Arthur Blair, Eric Blair, Orwell
, George Santayana George Santayana (December 16, 1863, Madrid – September 26, 1952, Rome), was a philosopher, essayist, poet, and novelist.

A lifelong Spanish citizen, Santayana was raised and educated in the United States, invariably wrote in English, and is considered an American man
, Leslie Stephen, and Henry Sidgwick Henry Sidgwick (May 31, 1838–August 28, 1900) was an English philosopher. Biography
He was born at Skipton in Yorkshire, where his father, the Reverend W. Sidgwick (d. 1841), was headmaster of the grammar school.
, since her interest in the Cambridge tradition and modern criticism provides a useful complement to F.R. Leavis's essays on Johnson, Coleridge, Arnold, and Eliot as critics.

Q.D. Leavis asserts thatshe is "a dowser dowser: see divining rod.  and not a navvy."(29) However, if we take "dowsing dowsing

Occult practice used for finding water, minerals, or other hidden substances. A dowser generally uses a Y-shaped piece of hazel, rowan, or willow wood (also called a dowser or a divining rod).
" in this metaphor to represent the critical function of finding the "human core" of a work of literature, we see that "navvying" may involve the academic investigation of the cultural context that supports that work. A great strength of her work is that it embodies both. Perhaps the last word on Q.D. Leavis as a literary critic should be given to her husband and principal collaborator. In aianuary 1975 letter to P.J.M. Robertson, F.R. Leavis wrote, "It's my wife (who's very different from me--hence our lifelong collaboration is historic) who's the authority on prose fiction. She's both critic and scholar. I think that, on the novel, she has no rival in the world."(30)

(1.) "Obituary: Mrs. Q.D. Leavis," Daily Telegraph, 20 March 1982, 16.

(2.) London and New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
, 1993.

(3.) London, 1970, vii.

(4.) Sarah Emsley, a doctoral student in the Department of English Noun 1. department of English - the academic department responsible for teaching English and American literature
English department

academic department - a division of a school that is responsible for a given subject
, Dalhousie University Dalhousie University (dălhou`zē), at Halifax, N.S., Canada; nonsectarian; coeducational; founded 1818 by the 9th earl of Dalhousie. Except for a few years between 1838 and 1845, Dalhousie did not function as a university until 1863. , Halifax, Nova Scotia For other uses, see Halifax.
Halifax, Nova Scotia may refer to any of the following:
  • Halifax Regional Municipality, capital of Nova Scotia, Canada
, Canada, has written an excellent essay, "Q.D. Leavis and Women Writers," delivered at the Orlando Project's Conference, "Women and Literary History," University of Alberta, September 1997.

(5.) Retford, Nottinghamshire, 1982, 8.

(6.) "Lives and Works of Richard Jefferies," Scrutiny, Vol. 6, No. 4 (March 1938), 435-466. Reprinted in Collected Essays, Vol. 3, ed. G. Singh (Cambridge, 1989), 254, 263.

(7.) Scrutiny, Vol. 14, No. 3 (Spring 1947), 223-229. Reprinted in Collected Essays, Vol. 2, ed. G. Singh (Cambridge, 1985), 177-184.

(8.) Scrutiny, Vol. 12, No. 2 (Spring 1944), 152-160. Reprinted in Collected Essays, Vol. 3, 234-244.

(9.) See Collected Essays, Vol. 1, ed. G. Singh (Cambridge, 1983), 135181.

(10.) Scrutiny, Vol. 11, No.2 (Summer 1942), 161.

(11.) "Caterpillars of the Commonwealth Unite!" Scrutiny Vol. 7, No. 2 (September 1938), 203-214.

(12.) "Queenie at Girton," The Leavises: Recollections and Impressions, ed. Denys Thompson (Cambridge, 1984), 5.

(13.) "A Glance Backwards, 1965," Collected Essays, Vol. 1, 10-11.

(14.) Ibid., 192.

(15.) Ibid., 73.

(16.) Ibid., 97.

(17.) "Q.D.L." The New Criterion (March 1991), 23-24.

(18.) "The Achievement of Q. D. Leavis Q. D. ('Queenie') Leavis (1906-1981), nee Roth, was an English literary critic and essayist.

She wrote about the historical sociology of reading and the development of the English, the European, and the American novel.
," The Aligarh Journal of English Studies, Vol. 9, No. 2 (1984), 189.

(19.) The latter three of these essays are gathered in Collected Essays, Vol. 2, 216-276. "The Anglo-Irish Novel" appears in Collected Essays, Vol. 3, 61-81.

(20.) "A Glance Backwards, 1965," 11.

(21.) "A Fresh Approach to WutheringHeights," in Lectures in America (with F. R. Leavis Frank Raymond Leavis CH (July 14, 1895 - April 14, 1978) was an influential British literary critic of the early-to-mid-twentieth century. He taught and studied for nearly his entire life at Downing College, Cambridge. ) (London, 1969), 104. Reprinted in Collected Essays, Vol. 1, 228-274.

(22.) Lectures in America, 85.

(23.) Ibid., 87. 24. ibid., 88.

(25.) Ibid., 101102.

(26.) Ibid., 101.

(27.) Ibid., 137.

(28.) "A Glance Backwards, 1965," 13. 29. ibid., 25. 30. P.J.M. Robertson, The Leavises on Fiction: An Historic Partnership (London, 1981), vi.

(29.) ibid., 25. 30. P.J.M. Robertson, The Leavises on Fiction: An Historic Partnership (London, 1981), vi.

(30.) P.J.M. Robertson, The Leavises on Fiction: An Historic Partnership (London, 1981), vi.

JOHN FERNS is Professor of English at McMaster University McMaster University, at Hamilton, Ont., Canada; nondenominational; founded 1887. It has faculties of humanities, science, social sciences, business, engineering, and health sciences, as well as a school of graduate studies and a divinity college.  in Hamilton, Canada. He is the author of many books including F.R. Leavis (Twayne, 2000).
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