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A History of the World in 10½ Chapters

A History of the World in 10½ Chapters by English writer Julian Barnes published in 1989 is usually described as a novel, though it is actually a collection of subtly connected short stories, in different styles. Most are fictional but some are historical.[2]

A History of the World in 10½ Chapters
First edition
AuthorJulian Barnes
Cover artistMorgan Bible folio 2v[1]
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
PublisherJonathan Cape (United Kingdom), Alfred A. Knopf (United States), Knopf Canada (Canada)
Publication date
October 7, 1989 (United States)
Media typePrint (Hardcover)
Pages307
ISBN0-224-03190-2 (First Edition)
ISBN 0-394-58061-3 (First American Edition)
ISBN 0-394-22121-4 (First Canadian Edition)
OCLC8569817
823.914
LC ClassPR6052.A6657
Preceded byStaring at the Sun 
Followed byTalking It Over 

One of the several recurrent motifs is that of ships.

Plot edit

Chapter 1, "The Stowaway", is an alternative account of the story of Noah's Ark from the point of view of the woodworms, who were not allowed onboard and were stowaways during the journey. The woodworm who narrates the first chapter questions the wisdom of appointing Noah as God's representative. The woodworm was left out of the ark, just like the other "impure" or "insignificant" species; but a colony of woodworms enters the ark as stowaways and they survive the Great Deluge. The woodworm becomes one of the many connecting figures, appearing in almost every chapter and implying processes of decay, especially of knowledge and historical understanding.

Chapter 2, "The Visitors", describes the hijacking of a cruise liner, similar to the 1985 incident of the Achille Lauro.

Chapter 3, "The Wars of Religion", reports a trial against the woodworms in a church, as they have caused the building to become unstable.

Chapter 4, "The Survivor", is set in a world in which the Chernobyl disaster was "the first big accident". Journalists report that the world is on the brink of nuclear war. The protagonist escapes by boat to avoid the assumed inevitability of a nuclear holocaust. Whether this occurred or is merely a result of the protagonist's paranoia is left ambiguous.

Chapter 5, "Shipwreck", is an analysis of Géricault's painting, The Raft of the Medusa. The first half narrates the historical events of the shipwreck and the survival of the crew members. The second half of the chapter analyses the painting itself. It describes Géricault's "softening" the impact of reality in order to preserve the aestheticism of the work, or to make the story of what happened more palatable.

Chapter 6, "The Mountain", describes the journey of a religious woman to a monastery where she wants to intercede for her dead father. The Raft of the Medusa plays a role in this story as well.

Chapter 7, "Three Simple Stories", portrays a survivor from the RMS Titanic, the Biblical story of Jonah and the whale, and the Jewish refugees on board the MS St. Louis in 1939, who were prevented from landing in the United States and other countries.

Chapter 8, "Upstream!", consists of letters from an actor who travels to a remote jungle for a film project, described as similar to The Mission (1986). His letters grow more philosophical and complicated as he deals with the living situations, the personalities of his costars and the director, and the peculiarities of the indigenous population, coming to a climax when his colleague is drowned in an accident with a raft.

The unnumbered half-chapter, "Parenthesis", is inserted between Chapters 8 and 9. It is in the form of an essay rather than a short story and offers a philosophical discussion on love, and briefly history. There is a direct reference to Julian Barnes in this half chapter.[3] A parallel is drawn with El Greco's painting Burial of the Count of Orgaz, in which the artist confronts the viewer. The piece includes a discussion of lines from Philip Larkin's poem "An Arundel Tomb" ("What will survive of us is love") and from W. H. Auden's "September 1, 1939" ("We must love one another or die").

Chapter 9, "Project Ararat", tells the story of a fictional astronaut Spike Tiggler, based on James Irwin. Tiggler launches an expedition to recover what remains of Noah's Ark. There is overlap with Chapter 6, "The Mountain."

Chapter 10, "The Dream", is an account of a modernized version of heaven, where even Hitler is found. It is individualised for each person and the occupants eventually "die".

Critical reception edit

Reviewing A History of the World in 10½ Chapters for The Guardian, Jonathan Coe found that it, "while hardly a ground-breaking piece of experimentalism, succeeds to the extent that it is both intelligent and reasonably accessible. Where it falls down is in denying its reader any real focus of human attention or involvement". He added that, "To dismiss the book as being too clever (or merely clever, for that matter) would be ungenerous as well as facile. Barnes is clearly serious about his themes, and there's more than a nod towards emotional commitment. One of his central concerns is the nature of history, and naturally enough - as a good, free-thinking, commonsense, late-20th-century liberal - he rejects any theory of history as pattern or continuum: 'It's more like a multi-media collage,' he explains, and this, of course, is the rationale behind the novel's own structural disjointedness". Coe judged that the book failed to explore history's relationship with the exercise of power "via the interaction of character. And this is where Barnes disappoints: I can't remember reading a novel which showed so little interest in the politics of everyday relationships - or one, at any rate, which isolated them so ruthlessly from the speculative realm of 'ideas'". Coe found the "Parenthesis, or half-chapter" to be "both too florid and too cool at the same time", but concluded that, overall, "Readers of this novel will feel awed, I'm sure, by the range of its concerns, the thoroughness of its research, and the agility with which it covers its ground. But when there are such big themes at stake, the reader can get tired of being teased, however ever waggishly. It's like finally going to bed with the partner of your dreams and then, instead of making love, being given a jolly good tickle".[4]

Writing in The New York Times, Joyce Carol Oates began by noting, "Post-modernist in conception but accessibly straightforward in execution, Julian Barnes's fifth book is neither the novel it is presented as being nor the breezy pop-history of the world its title suggests. Influenced to varying degrees by such 20th-century presences as the inevitable Borges, Calvino and Nabokov, as well as by Roland Barthes and perhaps Michel Tournier among others, A History of the World in 10 1/2 Chapters is most usefully described as a gathering of prose pieces, some fiction, others rather like essays". She found his "concerns throughout are abstract and philosophical, though his tone is unpretentious […]. Very like Borges, Julian Barnes has a predilection for tracing leitmotifs through a variety of metamorphoses". For Oates, "Given the principle of repetition, of permutations and combinations, it is inevitable that some of Mr. Barnes's prose pieces are more successful than others.[…] the second piece, The Visitors, […] is wholly unbelievable, and the head terrorist speaks a stagey, mock-Hollywood lingo". "But", she wrote, "as A History of the World in 10 1/2 Chapters progresses and leitmotifs recur, often in comically ingenious combinations, the book becomes increasingly engaging and entertaining; and […] the book attains that genial mastery of tone that characterized Flaubert's Parrot." Oates concluded by writing, "A History of the World in 10 1/2 Chapters demystifies its subjects and renders them almost ordinary: 'Myth will become reality, however sceptical we might be.' In so doing it deconstructs, perhaps even mocks, its own ambition. If the reader does not come to the book with certain of the expectations of prose fiction - that ideas will be dramatized with such narrative momentum that one forgets they are 'ideas,' and that complete worlds will be evoked by way of prose, not merely discussed - this is a playful, witty and entertaining gathering of conjectures by a man to whom ideas are quite clearly crucial: a quintessential humanist, it would seem, of the pre-post-modernist species".[2]

For D. J. Taylor, writing in The Spectator, "[…] A History of the World in 10 1/2 Chapters is not a novel, according to the staider definitions; it possesses no character who rises above the level of a cipher and no plot worth speaking of. It is sharp, funny and brilliant without suggesting that this sharpness, humour and brilliance is sufficient to carry through its purpose to any satisfactory conclusion. Yet it is a significant novel, if only because it provides an inventory of the hoops through which the contemporary novelist has to jump if he wants to be taken seriously". He went on to claim that "there exists a whole pack of modern writers who delight in giving the game away, in telling you that they are making it up, in indulging in outrageous manipulations of character and plot. The result is that hardly anyone in these novels — brilliant novels, swimming with lively conceits — has that most necessary fictional quality, a life of their own" and that "A History is another of these newfangled romps, a series of neat, artfully stage-managed stories which combine to create a bizarre, off-centre view of world history". In the end, he decided, "This is an entertaining book, containing any number of sparkling jokes, but to suggest, as one or two people have begun to suggest, that it pushes back some sort of fictional frontier would be a mistake. […] Like a great deal of theoretical literary criticism — to which it bears a strong resemblance — A History expends vast ingenuity on proving something that might be regarded as an axiom. Tous les significations sont arbitraires, ["all significations are arbitrary"] as a French theorist once put it. Well, we knew that".[5]

References edit

  1. ^ MS M.638, fol. 2v | The Morgan Picture Bible | The Morgan Library & Museum Retrieved 2019-04-18.
  2. ^ a b Oates, Joyce Carol (1 October 1989). "But Noah Was Not a Nice Man". The New York Times Late Edition - Final Section 7; Page 12, Column 1; Book Review Desk. New York City. Retrieved 11 May 2017.
  3. ^ "Julian Barnes". BBC Radio 4 Desert Island Discs. BBC. Event occurs at 26:32. Retrieved 7 December 2020.
  4. ^ Coe, Jonathan (23 June 1989). "A reader-friendly kind of God: A History of The World in 10 1/2 Chapters, by Julian Barnes". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 11 May 2017.
  5. ^ Taylor, D. J. (23 June 1989). "A newfangled and funny romp". The Spectator. London. Retrieved 12 May 2017.

External links edit

  • Julian Barnes' Website, with extensive bibliography of translations and scholarly articles.
  • Brian Finney Article
  • The Search is All?: The Pursuit of Meaning in Julian Barnes’s Flaubert’s Parrot, Staring at the Sun and A History of the World in 10 ½ Chapters by Wojciech Drag

history, world, chapters, this, article, relies, excessively, references, primary, sources, please, improve, this, article, adding, secondary, tertiary, sources, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, august, 2010, learn, when, remove, this, m. This article relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources A History of the World in 10 Chapters news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2010 Learn how and when to remove this message A History of the World in 10 Chapters by English writer Julian Barnes published in 1989 is usually described as a novel though it is actually a collection of subtly connected short stories in different styles Most are fictional but some are historical 2 A History of the World in 10 ChaptersFirst editionAuthorJulian BarnesCover artistMorgan Bible folio 2v 1 CountryUnited KingdomLanguageEnglishPublisherJonathan Cape United Kingdom Alfred A Knopf United States Knopf Canada Canada Publication dateOctober 7 1989 United States Media typePrint Hardcover Pages307ISBN0 224 03190 2 First Edition ISBN 0 394 58061 3 First American Edition ISBN 0 394 22121 4 First Canadian Edition OCLC8569817Dewey Decimal823 914LC ClassPR6052 A6657Preceded byStaring at the Sun Followed byTalking It Over One of the several recurrent motifs is that of ships Contents 1 Plot 2 Critical reception 3 References 4 External linksPlot editChapter 1 The Stowaway is an alternative account of the story of Noah s Ark from the point of view of the woodworms who were not allowed onboard and were stowaways during the journey The woodworm who narrates the first chapter questions the wisdom of appointing Noah as God s representative The woodworm was left out of the ark just like the other impure or insignificant species but a colony of woodworms enters the ark as stowaways and they survive the Great Deluge The woodworm becomes one of the many connecting figures appearing in almost every chapter and implying processes of decay especially of knowledge and historical understanding Chapter 2 The Visitors describes the hijacking of a cruise liner similar to the 1985 incident of the Achille Lauro Chapter 3 The Wars of Religion reports a trial against the woodworms in a church as they have caused the building to become unstable Chapter 4 The Survivor is set in a world in which the Chernobyl disaster was the first big accident Journalists report that the world is on the brink of nuclear war The protagonist escapes by boat to avoid the assumed inevitability of a nuclear holocaust Whether this occurred or is merely a result of the protagonist s paranoia is left ambiguous Chapter 5 Shipwreck is an analysis of Gericault s painting The Raft of the Medusa The first half narrates the historical events of the shipwreck and the survival of the crew members The second half of the chapter analyses the painting itself It describes Gericault s softening the impact of reality in order to preserve the aestheticism of the work or to make the story of what happened more palatable Chapter 6 The Mountain describes the journey of a religious woman to a monastery where she wants to intercede for her dead father The Raft of the Medusa plays a role in this story as well Chapter 7 Three Simple Stories portrays a survivor from the RMS Titanic the Biblical story of Jonah and the whale and the Jewish refugees on board the MS St Louis in 1939 who were prevented from landing in the United States and other countries Chapter 8 Upstream consists of letters from an actor who travels to a remote jungle for a film project described as similar to The Mission 1986 His letters grow more philosophical and complicated as he deals with the living situations the personalities of his costars and the director and the peculiarities of the indigenous population coming to a climax when his colleague is drowned in an accident with a raft The unnumbered half chapter Parenthesis is inserted between Chapters 8 and 9 It is in the form of an essay rather than a short story and offers a philosophical discussion on love and briefly history There is a direct reference to Julian Barnes in this half chapter 3 A parallel is drawn with El Greco s painting Burial of the Count of Orgaz in which the artist confronts the viewer The piece includes a discussion of lines from Philip Larkin s poem An Arundel Tomb What will survive of us is love and from W H Auden s September 1 1939 We must love one another or die Chapter 9 Project Ararat tells the story of a fictional astronaut Spike Tiggler based on James Irwin Tiggler launches an expedition to recover what remains of Noah s Ark There is overlap with Chapter 6 The Mountain Chapter 10 The Dream is an account of a modernized version of heaven where even Hitler is found It is individualised for each person and the occupants eventually die Critical reception editReviewing A History of the World in 10 Chapters for The Guardian Jonathan Coe found that it while hardly a ground breaking piece of experimentalism succeeds to the extent that it is both intelligent and reasonably accessible Where it falls down is in denying its reader any real focus of human attention or involvement He added that To dismiss the book as being too clever or merely clever for that matter would be ungenerous as well as facile Barnes is clearly serious about his themes and there s more than a nod towards emotional commitment One of his central concerns is the nature of history and naturally enough as a good free thinking commonsense late 20th century liberal he rejects any theory of history as pattern or continuum It s more like a multi media collage he explains and this of course is the rationale behind the novel s own structural disjointedness Coe judged that the book failed to explore history s relationship with the exercise of power via the interaction of character And this is where Barnes disappoints I can t remember reading a novel which showed so little interest in the politics of everyday relationships or one at any rate which isolated them so ruthlessly from the speculative realm of ideas Coe found the Parenthesis or half chapter to be both too florid and too cool at the same time but concluded that overall Readers of this novel will feel awed I m sure by the range of its concerns the thoroughness of its research and the agility with which it covers its ground But when there are such big themes at stake the reader can get tired of being teased however ever waggishly It s like finally going to bed with the partner of your dreams and then instead of making love being given a jolly good tickle 4 Writing in The New York Times Joyce Carol Oates began by noting Post modernist in conception but accessibly straightforward in execution Julian Barnes s fifth book is neither the novel it is presented as being nor the breezy pop history of the world its title suggests Influenced to varying degrees by such 20th century presences as the inevitable Borges Calvino and Nabokov as well as by Roland Barthes and perhaps Michel Tournier among others A History of the World in 10 1 2 Chapters is most usefully described as a gathering of prose pieces some fiction others rather like essays She found his concerns throughout are abstract and philosophical though his tone is unpretentious Very like Borges Julian Barnes has a predilection for tracing leitmotifs through a variety of metamorphoses For Oates Given the principle of repetition of permutations and combinations it is inevitable that some of Mr Barnes s prose pieces are more successful than others the second piece The Visitors is wholly unbelievable and the head terrorist speaks a stagey mock Hollywood lingo But she wrote as A History of the World in 10 1 2 Chapters progresses and leitmotifs recur often in comically ingenious combinations the book becomes increasingly engaging and entertaining and the book attains that genial mastery of tone that characterized Flaubert s Parrot Oates concluded by writing A History of the World in 10 1 2 Chapters demystifies its subjects and renders them almost ordinary Myth will become reality however sceptical we might be In so doing it deconstructs perhaps even mocks its own ambition If the reader does not come to the book with certain of the expectations of prose fiction that ideas will be dramatized with such narrative momentum that one forgets they are ideas and that complete worlds will be evoked by way of prose not merely discussed this is a playful witty and entertaining gathering of conjectures by a man to whom ideas are quite clearly crucial a quintessential humanist it would seem of the pre post modernist species 2 For D J Taylor writing in The Spectator A History of the World in 10 1 2 Chapters is not a novel according to the staider definitions it possesses no character who rises above the level of a cipher and no plot worth speaking of It is sharp funny and brilliant without suggesting that this sharpness humour and brilliance is sufficient to carry through its purpose to any satisfactory conclusion Yet it is a significant novel if only because it provides an inventory of the hoops through which the contemporary novelist has to jump if he wants to be taken seriously He went on to claim that there exists a whole pack of modern writers who delight in giving the game away in telling you that they are making it up in indulging in outrageous manipulations of character and plot The result is that hardly anyone in these novels brilliant novels swimming with lively conceits has that most necessary fictional quality a life of their own and that A History is another of these newfangled romps a series of neat artfully stage managed stories which combine to create a bizarre off centre view of world history In the end he decided This is an entertaining book containing any number of sparkling jokes but to suggest as one or two people have begun to suggest that it pushes back some sort of fictional frontier would be a mistake Like a great deal of theoretical literary criticism to which it bears a strong resemblance A History expends vast ingenuity on proving something that might be regarded as an axiom Tous les significations sont arbitraires all significations are arbitrary as a French theorist once put it Well we knew that 5 References edit MS M 638 fol 2v The Morgan Picture Bible The Morgan Library amp Museum Retrieved 2019 04 18 a b Oates Joyce Carol 1 October 1989 But Noah Was Not a Nice Man The New York Times Late Edition Final Section 7 Page 12 Column 1 Book Review Desk New York City Retrieved 11 May 2017 Julian Barnes BBC Radio 4 Desert Island Discs BBC Event occurs at 26 32 Retrieved 7 December 2020 Coe Jonathan 23 June 1989 A reader friendly kind of God A History of The World in 10 1 2 Chapters by Julian Barnes The Guardian London Retrieved 11 May 2017 Taylor D J 23 June 1989 A newfangled and funny romp The Spectator London Retrieved 12 May 2017 External links editJulian Barnes Website with extensive bibliography of translations and scholarly articles Brian Finney Article The Search is All The Pursuit of Meaning in Julian Barnes s Flaubert s Parrot Staring at the Sun and A History of the World in 10 Chapters by Wojciech Drag Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title A History of the World in 10 Chapters amp oldid 1168097420, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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