Fifth lecture for my students in English 165EW, "Life After the End of the World," winter 2013 at UC Santa Barbara.
Course website: http://patrickbrianmooney.nfshost.com/~patrick/ta/w13/
1. Lecture 5: The Day the World Went Away
English 165EW
Winter 2013
23 January 2013
“[W]ell, maybe you’ll have seen some of Doré’s pictures of sinners in hell. But Doré couldn’t include the
sounds, the sobbing, the murmurous moaning, and occasionally a forlorn cry.”
—William Masen in The Day of the Triffids (14; ch. 1)
2. Some administrative matters
● We have now taken enough quizzes that I have a basis
for providing tentative grade evaluations for you.
● It is always OK to email me and ask me what your current
grade is.
● There are some new documents on the course
website:
● “How Your Grade Is Calculated (in Excruciating Detail)”
● Sample MLA-compliant paper
● Paper topics, grading rubric
● Let’s take a vote on 28 Days Later at the end of class.
3. … and the idea of everyday life
“Horror has two central elements:
(1) an appearance of the evil supernatural or of the
monstrous (this includes the psychopath who kills
monstrously); and
(2) the intentional elicitation of dread, visceral disgust, fear,
or startlement in the spectator or reader.” (Nickel 15)
“Although these reactions may be unpleasant and it
may be puzzling to some people why I should ever
wish to experience them, they are not desensitized
reactions. On the contrary, the reaction to terror
appears on its face to be a morally engaged
reaction.” (16)
4. “[H]orror's bite is explained ...”
“… as a sudden tearing-away of the intellectual
trust that stands behind our actions.
Specifically, it is a malicious ripping-away of this
intellectual trust, exposing our vulnerabilities in
relying on the world and on other people. […]
[H]orror puts forward scenarios that through
their vivid depiction threaten our background
cognitive reliance on others and the world
around us.” (28)
5. Horror provides three
epistemological insights
1) “[T]he intellectual backing for our practical
trust, consisting in the various background
beliefs we have that our environment (natural
and social) will behave in regular ways, cannot
be made perfectly certain.”
2) “[W]e can still go on, even in the absence of
perfect certainty.”
3) “[T]he construction of the everyday is
necessary.” (28-29)
6. So why do I belabor this point about horror?
“[H]orror gives us a perspective on so-called
common sense. It helps us to see that a notion of
everyday life completely secure against threats
cannot be possible, and that the security of
common sense is a persistent illusion. […] [T]he
idea of security in the everyday is based on an
intellectually dubious but pragmatically attractive
construction.” (17)
“The crucial point is that the viewer is not in a
position rationally to refuse the scenario of the film
as impossible, and that the paranoid scenario thus
threatens to annihilate the viewer.” (20)
7. In other words ...
● Post-apocalyptic fiction does many of the same
things that horror fiction does, and often in the
same ways, even when it does not overlap with
the horror genre explicitly.
“Horror often dramatizes the ordinary or everyday
world gone berserk and the transmogrification of
the commonplace.” (18)
● Among other things, post-apocalyptic fiction
and horror fiction share a capacity to throw our
unquestioned background assumptions into
relief and help us to think about them explicitly.
8. John Wyndham Parkes Lucas
Beynon Harris (1903-1969)
● Probably best known for
The Day of the Triffids
(1951).
● Published prolifically in
the science fiction (or
“logical fantasy”) genre
under various
combinations of
elements of his long
name.
Image from en.wikipedia.org
9. ● A defining characteristic of Wyndham’s
fiction is “the manipulation of one
fundamental element that introduces
chaos into an organised society and
culminates in the decimated civilisation
making a desperate attempt to reinvent
itself and survive.” (Mark Slattery,
“Down on Triffid Farm”)
● “With its psychological interest in how
ordinary people react to extraordinary
situations, and its air of cold war
anxiety, the novel [Day of the Triffids] is
characteristic of much of Wyndham's
mature work.” (Alastair Horne,
A triffid, from the BBC’s
Literature Online biography of
1981 television Wyndham)
adaptation of the novel.
10. Thematic concerns in post-apocalyptic
fiction
● The world in its everydayness, its (social) construction, and
its precarity.
“But then [before the ‘Great Catastrophe’] there was so much
routine, things were so interlinked. Each one of us so steadily did
his little part in the right place that it was easy to mistake habit
and custom for the natural law.” (12; ch. 1)
“Triffids were, admittedly, a bit weird—but that was, after all, just
because they were a novelty. […] The bat was an animal that had
learned to fly; well, here was a plant that had learned to walk—
what of that?” (29; ch. 2)
Josella: “You know, one of the most shocking things about it is to
realize how easily we have lost a world that seemed so safe and
certain.” (93; ch. 6)
Josella: “[T]hose of us who get through are going to be much
nearer to one another, more dependent on one another, more like
—well, more like a tribe than we ever were before.” (104; ch. 7)
11. Thematic concerns in post-apocalyptic
fiction
● Value, and the presuppositions that go into our
systems of valuing.
“Wha's good of living blind's a bat?” (17; ch. 1)
“‘Anybody who has had a great treasure has always
led a precarious existence,’ she [Josella] said
reflectively.” (55; ch. 4)
“[M]y existence simply had no focus any longer. My
way of life, my plans, ambitions, every expectation I
had had, they were all wiped out at a stroke, along
with the conditions that had formed them.” (46; ch.
3)
12. ● Often, a specific concern is the relative nature
of ethical judgments.
Bill: “Put like that, there doesn’t seem to be much
choice, does there? And even if we could save a
few, which are we going to choose? And who are
we to choose? […] Do we help those who have
survived the catastrophe to rebuild some kind of
life? Or do we make a moral gesture which, on the
face of it, can scarcely be more than a gesture?”
(85; ch. 6)
Dr. Vorless: “We must all see, if we pause to think,
that one kind of community’s virtue may well be
another kind of community’s crime; that what is
frowned upon here may be considered laudable
elsewhere; that customs condemned in one country
are condoned in another.” (98; ch. 7)
13. ● Evidence and consequence – and how causes result
in effects.
“Certainly they [the triffids] were not spontaneously
generated, as many simple souls believed. Nor did most
people endorse the theory that they were a kind of sample
visitation – harbingers of worse to come if the world did
not mend its ways and behave its troublesome self. Nor
did their seeds float to us through space as specimens of
the horrid forms that life might assume upon other, less
favored worlds […] My own belief, for what that is worth, is
that they were the outcome of a series of ingenious
biological meddlings – and very likely accidental.” (20; ch.
2)
“[A] tall, elderly, gaunt man with a bush of wiry gray hair
[…] was holding forth emphatically about repentance, the
wrath to come, and the uncomfortable prospects of
sinners. Nobody was paying him any attention; for most of
them the day of wrath had already arrived.” (43; ch. 3)
14. ● What it means to be human, and how the human is
separated from “the natural.”
Coker: “God almighty, aren’t you people human?” (81; ch.
6)
Bill: “I had the feeling that it was all something too big, too
unnatural really to happen.” (70; ch. 5)
Dr. Vorless: “I would ask you to consider very carefully
whether or not you do hold a warrant from God to deprive
any woman of the happiness of carrying out her natural
functions.” (101; ch. 7)
Alf: “Triffids, huh! Nasty damn things, I reckon. Not
natcheral, as you might say.” (110; ch. 8)
“‘Bloody unnatural brutes,’ said one. ‘I always did hate
them bastards.” (121; ch. 8)
Commander Torrance: Feudalism is “the obvious and
quite natural social and economic form for that state of
things we are having to face now.” (222; ch. 17)
15. Characteristics to discuss on Monday
● Practicality and “realism.”
● Social (re-)organization.
● The re-production of implicit, theoretical, and
practical knowledge.
● Balance and precarity.
● The (social) production of space.
16. So, what do we want to do about
28 Days Later?
17. Media credits
● The title slide includes an engraving from Gustav Doré’s
illustrations for a translation of Dante Alighieri’s Inferno,
which engraving is now out of copyright. Source:
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Inferno_Canto_3_
Charon_strikes_lines_107-108.jpg
● A partial still used from the BBC film adaptation of The Day
of the Triffids (slide 9) is under copyright, but has been
selected for its value as a teaching tool, and is a low-
resolution excerpt from a single frame that not suitable for
producing a quality reproduction.
● The photo of John Wyndham (slide 8) is a low-resolution
copy being used only as a teaching tool, and is
irreplaceable. Original source:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:John_Wyndham_Parkes_L
ucas_Beynon_Harris.jpg