Philosophy in John Gardner Grendel
Philosophy in John Gardner Grendel
Philosophy in John Gardner Grendel
Shahbazi
Abstract
John Gardner’s Grendel is a celebrated example of the ontological
postmodernist fiction. Along with a discovery of self with which Grendel the
narrator of the novel is concerned, grand narratives such as philosophy are
questioned. Grendel denies the external objective reality and generously
allows the legitimacy of fantastic and non-realistic methods by using “life-
affirming fabulous art” as its major technique. Art becomes the central issue
related to the question of ontology; it is both presented as the only mediator
giving meaning to the futility of life or yet another grand illusion.
Philosophical questions are elaborated in the novel through the seminal
technique of the amalgamation of a medieval setting with modern concerns
(the rewriting of an old English epic). The paper is an attempt to shed some
light on the philosophical turn of John Gardner’s novel which, it is argued, is
its central postmodern aspect.
Key words: John Gardner, Grendel, postmodernist fiction, philosophy, art
1. Introduction
John Gardner’s Grendel is an eminent novel of the postmodern era. The
techniques used in the novel are apparently those of postmodernist fiction,
although the story is the old English epic Beowulf rewritten. Grendel is very
much concerned with the question of philosophy, a feature it shares with
many other postmodernist novels. This paper is an attempt to explore the
philosophical issues raised in the novel.
116 | H. Pirnajmuddin & S. Shahbazi
Philosophy has been both a prime site for debate about postmodernism
and a source of many of the theories of what constitutes postmodernism
(Crowther, 2003; Sim, 2001). One of the best Ways of describing
postmodernism as a philosophical movement would be as a form of
skepticism, an essentially negative form of philosophy, which sets out to
undermine other philosophical theories claiming to be in possession of
ultimate truth (ibid.). Skepticism leads to a number of questions about the self
and the world. It is not only skepticism that Grendel is concerned about but it
also hinges on philosophic notions such as ontology, nihilism, death, order in
opposition to disorder, time and space and law of the excluded middle which
are elaborated separately in the following pages.
2. Ontological questions
To begin, the notion of ontology is central in the novel. In his book
postmodernist fiction, Brian McHale proposes that the dominant of
postmodernist fiction is ontological whereas that of Modernist fiction is
epistemological, that is, postmodernist fiction deploys strategies which
engage and foreground questions like the ones Dick Higgins calls “post-
cognitive” (McHale, 1987, p. 7). Epistemological questions are related to the
question of knowledge - knowledge of the world - while ontological
questions refer to the world itself--what the world is and what kinds of
worlds there exist. In postmodernist texts, of course, ontology is
foregrounded at the expense of epistemology being put into the background
(p. 11).
2.1 Definition of ontology
Postmodernism is characterized in terms of its ontological indeterminacy
and instability. In Grendel this indeterminacy is pictured as a given
experience of the universe. Ontology is perceived as the study of the world,
but it is appropriate to give a full definition of it:
An ontology, writes Thomas Pavel, is “a theoretical description of a
universe.” This definition should lay to rest the objections of those
who find the coupling of “postmodernist” with “ontology” in itself
oxymoronic and self-contradictory on the grounds that
postmodernist discourse is precisely the discourse that denies the
possibility of ontological grounding. An ontology is a description of
a universe, not of the universe. That is, it may describe any universe,
potentially a plurality of universes.
(McHale, 1987, p. 27)
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limited knowledge of himself but after hearing the harper’s songs, he comes
to realize what he has always been thought of in the world of men. The harp
is metonymic of art and art functions as a mediator in the postmodern world
(as it is a source of knowledge). From then on, Grendel turns into a pilgrim
who is after the truth of life. His mother does not do much to help him;
therefore, he sets out to see the dragon. The dragon is a different character in
the novel. He seems to be the wisest of all; he is a god-like philosopher
concerned about the meaningfulness of life and the question of time and
space. In comparison to him Grendel is the postmodern man after the
philosophy of life. The dragon believes that Grendel has an “illusion” of the
harper as human beings who harbor the illusion of art.
The dragon is dominant over space and time as he says. He knows “the
beginning, the present, the end” exactly like a god whereas Grendel only sees
“the past and the present” like a human. When Dragon speaks in the novel,
there appears a more colorful ontology along with epistemological notions; in
other words, some issues are raised regarding the world and the knowledge of
the world. He speaks of the cause of knowledge (p. 63) and there is a
reference to free will and intercession. When asked of the truth of life, he
replies:
Things come and go, that’s the gist of it. (p. 70)
Grendel tries to have an optimistic view towards life but the dragon that
is wiser and more experienced, and of course more skeptic, tries to show him
something else. In a very famous passage he tells Grendel:
You improve them my boy! Can’t you see that yourself? You
stimulate them! You make them think and scheme. You drive
them to poetry, science, and religion, all that makes them what
they are for as long as they last. You are, so to speak, the brute
existent by which they learn to define themselves… you are
mankind, or man’s condition…if man’s the irrelevance that
interests you, stick with him! Scare him to glory! It’s all the
same in the end, matter and motion, simple or complex. No
difference, finally death, transfiguration. Ashes to ashes and
slime to slime, amen (p. 72).
The dragon believes that Grendel is the only one who gives meaning to
the life of human beings since he is the “unknown fear”. He is the source of
art, poetry, and religion. People attain heroism when fighting Grendel and the
contrary is also possible; Grendel’s life is also defined by the existence of
human beings; they interest him, therefore, they make his life meaningful. He
119| Journal of Applied Language Studies (JALS), 1 (1), 2010.
becomes the source of art and creation for them while he himself is filled
with enthusiasm by their art.
Reuben Sanchez observes that as Grendel begins to discover the
possibility of order in the world, the dragon points out that the ordered world
of man is actually insane: “They‘d map out roads through Hell with their
crackpot theories, their here–to-the-moon-and-back lists of paltry facts.
Insanity –the simplest insanity ever devised!” But the dragon adds that it is
Grendel himself who gives meaning and therefore value to that insane world
(p. 48).
2.4 Skepticism and nihilism
Once Grendel has heard the Shaper’s song about the creation of Cain and
Abel and God as the omnipotent creator, he accepts to play the role of Cain,
for it would mean that he does have a place in the world, an identity that
gives meaning to his life. But later on, when he talks of how the Shaper let on
that “the greatest gods made the world” to the dragon, his vision of the song
is totally shattered. The dragon assails:
Ridiculous! What god? Where? Life force, you mean? The principle
of process? God as history of Chance? (p. 74)
This quotation from the dragon shows the extreme nihilism he believes
in. The idea of “God as history of Chance” is a modern issue discussed in
western philosophy. The dragon is the Nietzsche of the novel, an issue
indicating the importance of intertexuality which is one of the hallmarks of
postmodern fiction.
Before meeting the dragon Grendel has tried to get a positive grasp of
the world and the purpose of life and his own creation while the dragon’s
view of life makes him see things in a new way. From then on, art-the
Shaper’s song--enrages him: “It no longer filled me with doubt and distress,
loneliness, shame. It enraged me” (p. 77).
The dragon opens Grendel’s eyes to the vileness of the human kind. He
has already found out that human civilization is motored by greed and the
will to power; he has seen their “shooting”, “stealing” or “killing” one
another and, just like the postmodern man, he feels depressed about the
foulness of life. But when the dragon becomes the clearinghouse for all his
experienced feelings of human life, he is filled with contempt. Art used to
neutralize his distress, but now that it has been called “ridiculous”, he finds
nothing else to cling to except for “heroism”, hence the end of his life is
determined by this very notion.
120 | H. Pirnajmuddin & S. Shahbazi
That is how Grendel is led towards the thought of “the pastness of the
past”; he says: “I think of the pastness of the past: how the moment I am alive
in, prisoned in, moves like a tumbling form through darkness (p. 146)”. Since
life has no new dimension to present, Grendel begins to observe it in
retrospect. It seems to be the same idea of postmodernist writers that
“everything has already been written”; there exist only the remnants of the
past owing to the fact that human beings are all prisoners of time and the
prisoners are all being led to the darkness of death. The sentence quoted
above from the book is the condition of the postmodern man. What Grendel
says here is intensified by his later words: “Nihil ex nihilo” as making up the
end of his contemplation of life and his decision of a heroic suicide; Gardner
(as cited in Farrell, 2008) explains:
My monstrous central character, Grendel, will believe in
nothing he cannot logically justify. Scorning the Anglo-Saxon
scop who reshapes reality into noble ideals, scorning the great
Anglo-Saxon values, he grows more and more vicious, more
and more helpless, more and more existential until he commits
a kind of suicide.
3. Philosophy and Death
McHale (1987, p. 228) states that in postmodernist novel, Death is more
typically functional: it sets stories going or brings them to an end. Death
often marks the limits of representation. There are important expectations to
this when death itself becomes the object of representation. Postmodernists
bring (death) into foreground (while in modernism, death is more or less in
the background).
Death is the one ontological boundary that we are all certain to
experience; the only one we shall all inevitably have to cross. In a sense,
every ontological boundary is an analogue or metaphor of death; so
foregrounding ontological boundaries is a means of foregrounding death, of
making death, the unthinkable, available to imagination (McHale, 1987, p.
231). Thus, in Grendel the ontological issues are highlighted in order to shed
light on “death” as the only unthinkable idea. Grendel is obsessed with life
since he believes if there remains nothing to wreck in Horathgar’s land, then
the wrecker will be wrecked himself and in order to stop this wreckage, he
chooses to die heroically by making Beowulf the hero of the story. Sanchez
(2007) says:
Of course Hrothgar -wrecker is wrecked at novel’s end. As
Beowulf has Grendel in his deathgrip, Grendel must (heroically)
121| Journal of Applied Language Studies (JALS), 1 (1), 2010.
The art of the writer to create this fantastic world finds its parallel in the
matter of “Harp”-- the symbol of primitive art-- and Grendel whose life
changes through this mediator. The Shaper sings of heroism of man and the
battles fought. He realizes that “man had changed the world, had torn up the
past by its think, gnarled roots and had transmuted it” (p. 43). The Shaper
turns into the moral creator and whatever he sings becomes the truth: “the
power of his songs: created with casual words its grave mor(t)ality (p. 47)”.
“Mor(t)ality” may refer to the morality principle in creation of art in
Gardner’s view. “The Shaper may yet improve men’s minds” (p. 53) and
mortality is the tragic creation of the Shaper. Grendel believes his own evil in
view of the songs of the shaper, yet, he knows that human beings have also
abused “art”:
It was a cold-blooded lie that a god had lovingly made the world and
set out the sun and moon as lights to land dwellers, that brothers had
fought, that one of the races was saved, the other cursed. Yet he, the
old shaper, might make it true, by the sweetness of his harp, the
cunning trickery. (p. 55)
It is not only Grendel who has become aware of the power of art but also
the dragon. He knows that people get this feeling of “living by nonsense”
every now and then. He is aware of man’s apprehensions of the existence of
God and what he supposes as solution to this feeling is the Shaper. The
Shaper “provides an illusion of reality--puts together all their facts with a
gluey whine of connectedness” (p. 65). Hence, as Baudrillard has proposed,
art functions as a “hyperreal” trying to hide the illusions of reality in order to
free man from the futility of life.
6. Intertexuality and grand narratives
One of the other features of postmodernist fiction is the notion of
intertexuality in relation to the grand narratives (Butler, 2002; Luntley,
1995). In Grendel, grand narratives such as philosophy, religion and literary
criticism are questioned. To start off, let us focus on the impact of philosophy
on postmodernist literature.
According to Vattimo (1998), in order to examine the question of
postmodernism in philosophy in a way that avoids a rhapsodic comparison
between contemporary philosophy and the apparent traits of post-modernity
in other fields we must turn to Heidegger and Nietzsche.
Nietzsche was the greatest skeptic of all philosophers in the new era; he
had little tolerance for enlightenment values such as reason, universality,
124 | H. Pirnajmuddin & S. Shahbazi
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