NATURE DENATURED IN FLANN O’BRIEN’S THE THIRD POLICEMAN

The Third Policeman, the last and most complex of the major novels of „Flann O‟Brien‟ – the Irish satirical writer Brian O‟Nolan – is a latecomer in a European movement of antinaturalism begun by Rimbaud, Zola and Huysmans in the last quarter of the nineteenth century. In it, O‟Nolan subverts an a...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Richard Witt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Bucharest University Press 2012-03-01
Series:University of Bucharest Review. Literary and Cultural Studies Series
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ubr.rev.unibuc.ro//wp-content/uploads/2012/09/12-Richard-Witt-1-2012.pdf
_version_ 1797641937540349952
author Richard Witt
author_facet Richard Witt
author_sort Richard Witt
collection DOAJ
description The Third Policeman, the last and most complex of the major novels of „Flann O‟Brien‟ – the Irish satirical writer Brian O‟Nolan – is a latecomer in a European movement of antinaturalism begun by Rimbaud, Zola and Huysmans in the last quarter of the nineteenth century. In it, O‟Nolan subverts an age-old Irish literary tradition of observing, latterly with nostalgia, the Irish rural landscape. Here a prime irritant to him was his own, mercenary M.A. dissertation on Irish nature poetry that secured him employment in the Irish Civil Service and settled him in a powerfully urban environment. The presence of nature in Flann O‟Brien‟s first and experimental novel At Swim-TwoBirds is embodied in the adventures of the two characters, no longer seriously heroic, Finn MacCool and king Sweeny; it is explicitly headed “a humorous...excursion into ancient mythology.” Similarly, in the author‟s only extended book in his native Gaelic, englished as The Poor Mouth, the squalor of a small village in the boglands of the Gaeltacht, traditionally treated with reverence, is portrayed with comic glee. In The Third Policeman itself, Flann O‟Brien begins by subverting the natural world via the theme of “unnatural” buildings in the countryside. Then, as his plot – which is in fact an antiplot – unfolds episodically, the phenomena of the natural world, described with virtuoso hyperbole, are manipulated in order to reflect the vicissitudes of the simple-minded narrator. This runs out in a superb image of nullity and a Viconian recursus. O‟Nolan‟s strategy can fairly be compared to the use of the chorus in a Greek tragedy; it also to some degree prefigures the landscapes of Samuel Beckett.
first_indexed 2024-03-11T13:52:55Z
format Article
id doaj.art-0e53805bda0747609224cb36da204cb8
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2734-5963
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-11T13:52:55Z
publishDate 2012-03-01
publisher Bucharest University Press
record_format Article
series University of Bucharest Review. Literary and Cultural Studies Series
spelling doaj.art-0e53805bda0747609224cb36da204cb82023-11-02T07:43:17ZengBucharest University PressUniversity of Bucharest Review. Literary and Cultural Studies Series2734-59632012-03-01NATURE DENATURED IN FLANN O’BRIEN’S THE THIRD POLICEMANRichard WittThe Third Policeman, the last and most complex of the major novels of „Flann O‟Brien‟ – the Irish satirical writer Brian O‟Nolan – is a latecomer in a European movement of antinaturalism begun by Rimbaud, Zola and Huysmans in the last quarter of the nineteenth century. In it, O‟Nolan subverts an age-old Irish literary tradition of observing, latterly with nostalgia, the Irish rural landscape. Here a prime irritant to him was his own, mercenary M.A. dissertation on Irish nature poetry that secured him employment in the Irish Civil Service and settled him in a powerfully urban environment. The presence of nature in Flann O‟Brien‟s first and experimental novel At Swim-TwoBirds is embodied in the adventures of the two characters, no longer seriously heroic, Finn MacCool and king Sweeny; it is explicitly headed “a humorous...excursion into ancient mythology.” Similarly, in the author‟s only extended book in his native Gaelic, englished as The Poor Mouth, the squalor of a small village in the boglands of the Gaeltacht, traditionally treated with reverence, is portrayed with comic glee. In The Third Policeman itself, Flann O‟Brien begins by subverting the natural world via the theme of “unnatural” buildings in the countryside. Then, as his plot – which is in fact an antiplot – unfolds episodically, the phenomena of the natural world, described with virtuoso hyperbole, are manipulated in order to reflect the vicissitudes of the simple-minded narrator. This runs out in a superb image of nullity and a Viconian recursus. O‟Nolan‟s strategy can fairly be compared to the use of the chorus in a Greek tragedy; it also to some degree prefigures the landscapes of Samuel Beckett. https://ubr.rev.unibuc.ro//wp-content/uploads/2012/09/12-Richard-Witt-1-2012.pdflandscapeironyinfinitytheatricalparatragicflann o’brienthe third policeman
spellingShingle Richard Witt
NATURE DENATURED IN FLANN O’BRIEN’S THE THIRD POLICEMAN
University of Bucharest Review. Literary and Cultural Studies Series
landscape
irony
infinity
theatrical
paratragic
flann o’brien
the third policeman
title NATURE DENATURED IN FLANN O’BRIEN’S THE THIRD POLICEMAN
title_full NATURE DENATURED IN FLANN O’BRIEN’S THE THIRD POLICEMAN
title_fullStr NATURE DENATURED IN FLANN O’BRIEN’S THE THIRD POLICEMAN
title_full_unstemmed NATURE DENATURED IN FLANN O’BRIEN’S THE THIRD POLICEMAN
title_short NATURE DENATURED IN FLANN O’BRIEN’S THE THIRD POLICEMAN
title_sort nature denatured in flann o brien s the third policeman
topic landscape
irony
infinity
theatrical
paratragic
flann o’brien
the third policeman
url https://ubr.rev.unibuc.ro//wp-content/uploads/2012/09/12-Richard-Witt-1-2012.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT richardwitt naturedenaturedinflannobriensthethirdpoliceman