Stream of consciousness

From New World Encyclopedia


In literary criticism, stream of consciousness is a literary technique which seeks to portray an individual's point of view by giving the written equivalent of the character's thought processes, either in a loose internal interior monologue, or in connection to his or her sensory reactions to external occurrences. Stream-of-consciousness writing is strongly associated with the modernist movement. Its introduction in the literary context, transferred from psychology, is attributed to popular British writer May Sinclair. The phrase “stream of consciousness” to indicate the flow of inner experience was first used by William James in Principles of Psychology. The name of the literary technique comes from the psychological concept of stream of consciousness, also known as internal monologue, which means thinking in words.

Modern stream of consciousness writing is closely related to but distinct from the Surrealist concept of Automatic writing, which is the process of wriitng material that does not come from the conscious thoughts of the writer. By contrast, modern Stream of Consciousness writing comes from the conscious thoughts of the writer, but is untempered by constraints of style, structure, and punctuation, coming unfiltered from the mind. Stream of consciousness is writing that sounds more like how people think than how they speak.

Style classification

Stream-of-consciousness writing is usually regarded as a special form of interior monologue and is characterized by associative (and at times dissociative) leaps in syntax and punctuation that can make the prose difficult to follow, tracing a character's fragmentary thoughts and sensory feelings. Stream of consciousness and interior monologue are distinguished from dramatic monologue, where the speaker is addressing an audience or a third person, chiefly in poetry or drama. In stream of consciousness, the speaker's thought processes are more often depicted as overheard in the mind (or addressed to oneself) and is primarily a fictional device. The term was first introduced to the field of literary studies from that of psychology by philosopher and psychologist William James, brother of the influential writer Henry James.

Notable examples

The earliest precedent of any literary work using this technique is possibly Ovid's Metamorphoses in ancient Rome.[citation needed] Sir Thomas Browne's discourse The Garden of Cyrus (1658) with its rapid, unconnected association of objects, geometrical shapes and numerology, may be considered one of the earliest examples of stream of consciousness writing.[citation needed] Some of the works of Gyula Krúdy (The Adventures of Sindbad) also employ a technique that can be considered the forerunner of stream of consciousness.[citation needed] Further examples of the development of this style are The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman by Laurence Sterne, (1760)[citation needed] and Édouard Dujardin's Les Lauriers sont coupés (1888). Tolstoy used a similar stream-of-consciousness technique in Anna Karenina (1877) in the portions leading to the climax; another early example is Arthur Schnitzler's 1900 short story Leutnant Gustl, and the false document making up the bulk of Arthur Machen's "The White People" (1904)[citation needed]

Stream of consciousness writing gained rapid prominence in the twentieth century, particularly through the writings of Virginia Woolf, James Joyce, and William Faulkner.

Several notable works employing stream of consciousness are:

Particularly notable here are Eliot's poems, which defined the technique of Stream of Consciousness, which was a central component of the Modernists and which greatly influenced all subsequent generations of poets.

Multi-media

The technique is not specifically confined to literary sources, and has been used loosely to described either separately or in combination with other media. For instance, Travis Trent sings unwritten stream of consciousness lyrics on five of the six songs on the album Stories: His, Mine, Others. The proliferation of Stream of Consciousness writing to other media has resulted in it being much misunderstood. (Not every interior monologue is necessarily stream of consciousness in the literary sense. Stream of consciousness is characterized by its wild associative leaps, not just conscious and linear thought.) Even so, hundreds of genuine examples of stream of consciousness in diverse mediums exist, far too many to catalogue exhaustively here.

Cinema and sketch comedy

  • The British comedy troupe Monty Python used the technique in their sketches. The technique capitalizes on the nonsensical absurdist humour that Python is famous for. The technique also features in the animated shorts created by Terry Gilliam for the show, which, similarly, use stream of consciousness as means to showcase absurdist humour. An example of this within their work is the famous opening scene of Monty Python and the Holy Grail, in which conversation progresses from a discussion about the master of the castle to African Swallows, all due to the characters who speak their thoughts, nonsensical though they may be.
  • Writer and dirctor Terrence Malick is notable for using a stream of consciousness voice over for one or several of his characters in all of his four films to date. His style as an auteur is closely linked to Transcendentalism and his characters usually express thoughts of existentialism and are deeply rooted in philosophical matters.
  • The movie The Weather Man with Nicolas Cage presents a scene where the main character narrates his line of thought when going off to buy tartar sauce. The use of stream of consciousness in this scene has the purpose of explaining why the character forgot to buy the tartar sauce.
  • The movie Adaptation. by Charlie Kaufman, starts with an internal monologue from the main character, who is also called Charlie Kaufman. The monologue shows he suffers from a writer's block, and is by association filled with random thoughts of failure.

Television and Comedy

  • The NBC sitcom Scrubs is presented with the protagonist’s thoughts heard by the viewer as a stream-of-consciousness voiceover playing the role of narration; it often goes off on seemingly random tangents—much as any person’s thoughts tend to wander if not focused on something specific. The viewer also frequently sees the protagonist’s imagination at work.
  • Stand-up comedians Dennis Miller and Richard Lewis perform fast-paced monologues containing pop culture references which are often described as stream-of-consciousness.
  • TV show Family Guy often uses the technique. For example, the protagonist once stated "And it'll be special! But not special like the boy down the street. More like Special K. And for that matter, whatever happened to regular "K"? Or Kay Ballard? You know, if you had a cold and said "ballard" it would sound like "Mallard."

World Wide Web

One example of a website that uses the technique is Cognitec/3rd Force, which is the progressive work of an anonymous author known only as "HC." The site began in the mid 1990s as a series of bizarre and sardonic original passages which was "spoofed" to look like prominent web portals of the early Dot com boom. For example, the now defunct "Pathfinder" site (now simply the Time Inc. portal [1]) was parodied as "Crapfinder," the "New York Times" became the "New Times York."

Because of the site's extensive use of the literary method, transitory and seemingly-unrelated themes became connected through hyperlinks. These seemed to further reflect the free-flowing thought process of the strangely prolific author. It was later revealed that much of the content consisted of excerpts from the metafictional novel MFU (ISBN 188640402X) [2]. The novel's desultory narrative structure and breadth of material was sufficient for creating years worth of related material in the form of multiple parodies, faux news reports, and essays, as well as providing prospective readers of the novel an opportunity to "sample" the book. Most of the novel was subsequently released as either readable or searchable on-line [3].

Many online forums have sections for so-called "Off-Topic" discussions. Threads in these forums tend to loosely follow stream-of-consciousness simply by virtue of the fact that multiple people express their own thought processes without hesitation of retribution. This perspective is, of course, controversial since traditional stream-of-consciousness is the result of one person's writing alone.

A relatively new website, chainofthoughts.com conforms to the stream of consciousness style of writing using tag clouds to shift readers through various seemingly unrelated pages. Following the Virginia Tech massacre the website was used as a place of semi-anonymous mourning and was highlighted on the BBC website. [1]

The act of browsing encyclopedias such as Wikipedia tends to create a sort of artificial stream of consciousness, as easy and convenient to click hyperlinks will lead to related topics, which have their own links to related, related topics, by daisy-chained leaps of association. This 'Wikipedia effect' can result in browsers spending hours on the site without ever researching the topic they intially set out to.

Astral Weeks

At least two of the songs on Van Morrison's acclaimed album Astral Weeks were said to be stream of consciousness by the composer. "'Madame George' just came right out. The song is just a stream of consciousness thing, as is 'Cyprus Avenue'. Both these songs just came right out. I didn't even think about what I was writing."[2]

Hip-hop music

In the realm of audio, hip hop artist Ghostface Killah is well known for his stream of consciousness rapping, a style largely his own that utilizes complicated and constantly shifting subject matter to illustrate his mindset and viewpoint. Also prominent in hip-hop for their stream-of-consciousness style is anticon. rapper Doseone (born Adam Drucker). Canadian rapper Buck 65 has also been known to employ the technique eg. "sexy girl, air freshener, snacks in the pin wheel" -Wicked And Weird. Rapper Eminem has also used the technique in his song Rain Man, parodying the character in the film Rainman on his album, Encore.

External Links

Notes

  1. Jackson, Patrick. BBC: Coping with death on the web. Retrieved 2007-05-30.
  2. Yorke, Into the Music, p.61

References
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