This is a very demanding book.
Chapter 1: Reading for the Plot
Plot as an organizing force: Plot is not merely a sequence of events, but "the design and intention of narrative," giving it direction and meaning. It is the "principal ordering force" that helps us make sense of time and our own mortality.
The historical nature of plot: The modern emphasis on plot emerged in the 19th century, a time when societies were moving away from sacred masterplots and seeking new ways to understand the world. This historical context is crucial to understanding the function of plot in the novel.
Plot and the reader's desire for meaning: We have a fundamental need for plots to make sense of our lives and the world around us. This "passion for meaning" drives our engagement with narrative.
The relationship between fabula (story) and sjužet (discourse): Brooks builds on the Russian Formalist distinction between the raw material of a story (fabula) and its artistic presentation (sjužet). Plot is the "interpretive activity" that arises from the interplay between these two levels.
Plot as a "double logic": Narrative operates on a "double logic" where events are presented as the cause of the plot, but are also secretly produced by the plot's need for meaning. The ending, in a sense, determines the beginning.
Chapter 2: Narrative Desire
Desire as the motor of narrative: Desire is the "dynamic of signification" in narrative, propelling the story forward and engaging the reader. It is a force that seeks to "combine organic substances into ever greater unities".
Ambition as a key form of narrative desire: In the 19th-century novel, ambition is a "dominant dynamic of plot," driving the protagonist's quest for success and self-realization.
The "desiring machine" and the "motor" of the self: Brooks uses the metaphor of the motor to describe how desire functions in the novel, as a self-contained source of energy that drives the plot forward.
The link between desire, narrative, and capitalism: The rise of the novel is connected to the rise of capitalism, with both systems fueled by a desire for acquisition and exchange.
The "erotics of art": Brooks argues for an "erotics of art" that goes beyond formalist analysis to explore the ways in which texts engage our desires and emotions.
Chapter 3: The Novel and the Guillotine, or Fathers and Sons in Le Rouge et le noir
The problem of paternity in the 19th-century novel: The conflict between fathers and sons is a central theme in many 19th-century novels, reflecting a broader societal concern with authority, legitimacy, and the transmission of values.
Le Rouge et le noir as a novel of revolution: Stendhal's novel is shaped by the legacy of the French Revolution, and its plot is driven by the hero's "usurpation" of a place in a society that seeks to deny him.
The interplay of politics and manners: The novel shows how politics, the "unassimilable other," constantly threatens to disrupt the seemingly stable world of manners and social conventions.
The role of fictional models in shaping identity: The hero, Julien Sorel, constructs his identity and his life's plot through a series of bookish models, from Napoleon to Tartuffe.
The arbitrariness of the ending: The novel's abrupt and seemingly unmotivated ending, with Julien's execution, can be seen as a "laying bare of the device" of plotting, exposing its artificiality.
Chapter 4: Freud's Masterplot: A Model for Narrative
Freud's Beyond the Pleasure Principle as a model for narrative: Brooks proposes Freud's theory of the death instinct as a "masterplot" for understanding narrative. The drive toward the end, toward a state of quiescence, is a fundamental organizing principle of plot.
Repetition as a key element of plot: Repetition in narrative is not simply a formal device, but a way of binding and working through the trauma of existence. It is a "return" that is also a form of "remembering".
The "dilatory space" of the middle: The middle of a narrative is a "detour" or "postponement" of the end, a space of "vacillating rhythm" created by the interplay of the pleasure principle and the death instinct.
The danger of "short-circuit": The narrative is always in danger of reaching its end too quickly, of achieving an "improper death" that would foreclose the possibility of meaning.
The "desire for the end": The desire of the text, and of the reader, is ultimately a "desire for the end," for the moment of recognition and closure that gives meaning to the whole.
Chapter 5: Repetition, Repression, and Return: The Plotting of Great Expectations
Great Expectations as a novel about plot: The novel is exemplary in its exploration of how we find and lose plots for our lives, and how we are "cured" from the need for them.
The search for a beginning: The novel begins with the hero, Pip, in search of an "authority" that would authorize the plot of his life.
The layering of plots: The novel is structured around a series of "official" and "repressed" plots, with the return of the repressed—the convict plot—ultimately proving to be the most decisive.
The misreading of plot: Pip consistently misreads the plot of his life, mistaking the "fairy tale" of Satis House for the true source of his expectations.
The "cure" from plot: The novel ends with Pip in a state of having "outlived plot," renouncing the desire for a directed and meaningful existence.
Chapter 6: The Mark of the Beast: Prostitution, Serialization, and Narrative
The erotic body in the 19th-century novel: The novel traces a "progressive unveiling of the erotic body," particularly in the context of commercialized literature.
The serialized novel as "industrial literature": The rise of the serialized novel in the 19th century is linked to new industrial modes of production and consumption.
The reader's desire for narrative: The popular novel of the 19th century catered to a massive public appetite for narrative, creating a "utopia of reading and writing".
The transformatory power of reading: The novel can have a profound impact on its readers, illuminating their own lives and creating new possibilities of meaning in the world.
The pleasure of the text: The popular novel, at its best, offers the pleasure of a "dilatory, almost fetishistic text," where the suspense and mystery of the plot are enjoyed for their own sake.
Chapter 7: Retrospective Lust, or Flaubert's Perversities
Flaubert's critique of traditional plotting: Flaubert's novels, particularly L'Education sentimentale, challenge the reader's "passion for meaning" and refuse to provide the satisfactions of a coherent and meaningful plot.
The insignificance of the hero: The hero of L'Education sentimentale, Frédéric Moreau, is an "insignificant" figure whose desires fail to invest the world with meaning.
The "retrospective lust" for the past: The novel offers a "retrospective lust" for a past that is always already lost and can never be fully recovered or understood.
The subversion of the Bildungsroman: Flaubert's novel subverts the traditional form of the Bildungsroman, or novel of education, by showing the hero's failure to learn and grow.
The "unreadable" text: L'Education sentimentale presents the reader with a world that is ultimately "unreadable," a world where events refuse to cohere into a meaningful pattern.
Chapter 8: Narrative Transaction and Transference
Narrative as a transaction: The telling of a story is a "dynamic exchange" between a speaker and a listener, a "transaction" that is shaped by the desires and expectations of both parties.
The "transferential" model of narrative: Brooks proposes a "transferential" model of narrative, based on the psychoanalytic concept of transference, in which the listener becomes a "surrogate" for figures from the speaker's past.
The roles of teller and listener: The meaning of a narrative is a product of the "listening as of the telling," with the listener playing an active role in the construction of meaning.
The "evaluation" of narrative: Oral narratives often contain a moment of "evaluation," where the speaker calls attention to the "point" of the story and asks the listener to judge its importance.
The self-consciousness of modern narrative: Modernist literature is characterized by a "crisis" in the understanding of plot and a heightened self-consciousness about the act of storytelling.
Chapter 9: An Unreadable Report: Conrad's Heart of Darkness
Heart of Darkness as a narrative that resists interpretation: The story of Kurtz is an "unreadable report" that cannot be fully deciphered or understood.
The search for meaning in the other's death: The narrator, Marlow, seeks to find the meaning of his own life in the story of Kurtz's death, but the meaning remains elusive.
The failure of transmission: The novel dramatizes the "anxiety about the possibility of transmission," as Marlow struggles to communicate the meaning of his experience to his listeners.
The "lie" as a necessary fiction: The novel suggests that the "lie," the fictional narrative, may be necessary to protect us from the unbearable truth of the "heart of darkness."
The limits of narrative knowledge: Heart of Darkness ultimately questions the ability of narrative to represent and make sense of the world, highlighting the "epistemological and linguistic problems posed by storytelling".
Chapter 10: Fictions of the Wolf Man: Freud and Narrative Understanding
Psychoanalysis as a narrative art: Freud's case histories are a form of narrative, in which he constructs a coherent story out of the fragmented memories and dreams of his patients.
The "construction" of the past: The analyst "constructs" a version of the patient's past that is not necessarily a simple recollection of what "really happened," but a fiction that has therapeutic power.
The role of "circumstantial evidence": Like a detective, the psychoanalyst uses "circumstantial evidence" from the present to reconstruct a story from the past.
The problem of narrative authority: The case of the Wolf Man raises questions about the authority of the analyst's narrative and the patient's own "fictions."
The "double logic" of narrative construction: The analyst's narrative is shaped by a "double logic," in which the events of the past are both the cause of the present and a product of the narrative's need for coherence.
Chapter 11: Incredulous Narration: Absalom, Absalom!
Absalom, Absalom! as a novel about the impossibility of narrative knowledge: The novel poses a "radical doubt about the validity of plot" and challenges the very possibility of knowing and telling the past.
The absence of a stable plot: The story of Thomas Sutpen is told through a series of "incredulous narrations" that never cohere into a single, authoritative plot.
The "dialogic" nature of narration: The story is constructed through a "dialogic" process of telling and listening, in which the narrators and listeners collaborate in the creation of meaning.
The "hermeneutic fiction": The narrative of Sutpen's life is a "hermeneutic fiction," a story that is created in the act of trying to understand it.
The "raging and incredulous recounting": The novel suggests that narration is a necessary but ultimately futile attempt to "bear with living" in a world where meaning is always elusive.
In Conclusion: Endgames and the Study of Plot
The "endgame" of modern plot: In modern and postmodern literature, endings are no longer seen as definitive resolutions, but as "arbitrary" and "tenuous" moments of closure.
The persistence of narrative: Despite the "crisis" in the understanding of plot, the desire for narrative ordering remains a fundamental human impulse.
The return to psychoanalytic models: Brooks reaffirms the value of psychoanalytic models for understanding the dynamics of narrative, particularly the interplay of desire, repetition, and transference.
The "transactive" nature of reading: Reading is a "transactive" process, in which the reader actively participates in the construction of meaning.
The refusal to allow temporality to be meaningless: Plot is ultimately a product of our "stubborn insistence on making meaning in the world and in our lives".