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Peter Otto, Blake's Critique of Transcendence: Love, Jealousy, and the Sublime in The Four Zoas. Oxford:
Oxford UP, 2000. xiv + 365 pp. $95.00. (Hdbk; ISBN: 0-19-818719-X).
Bibliographic
Citation: Lundeen,
Kathleen. "On
Peter Otto, Blake's
Critique of Transcendence:
Love, Jealousy, and
the Sublime in The
Four Zoas." [date
of access]. Romantic
Circles Reviews 8.2
(2005): 5 pars. May
2006. <http://www.rc.umd.edu/reviews/otto_w06.html>.
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations
Key to References
Abbreviations
Introduction
PART I. THE RHETORIC OF TRANSCENDENCE
1. Blake, Blake Criticism, and the Sublime
2. Rational Heavens and Carnal Hells
PART II. FALLING INTO A WORLD OF LOS(S)
3. The Birth of Los(s) from Tharmas
4. Urizen's World of Los(s)
5. A Cacophony of Voices
6. Building a Swedenborgian Heaven
PART III. BUILDING THE FALLEN WORLD
7. The Elaboration of Los(s)
PART IV. REASON'S STRUGGLE AGAINST THE FLESH
8. Urizen Explores his Dens
9. Flesh and Spirit
10. A Sensitive Body
PART V. THE END AND BEGINNING OF HISTORY
11. Death of the Body/Liberation of the Spirit
12. The Last Judgement
Bibliography
Index
Reviewed by
Kathleen Lundeen
Western Washington University
- Night
the Ninth of The
Four Zoas has
been likened to the
fourth movement of Beethoven's Ninth
Symphony.
The words epiphany, apotheosis, and climax have
all been used to
describe the grand
finale of Blake's
unfinished epic, in
which all of life
appears to rush together
to restore the transcendent
unity that was shattered
in Night the First.
In a recent study
of The
Four Zoas, Peter
Otto argues otherwise. "It
is my contention," he
writes, "that
rather than urging
sublime transcendence, The
Four Zoas hopes
to thwart it." He
explains, "The
poem aims
to delay the
movement of
the sublime
from blockage
to transport
and elevation,
long enough
for the reader
to see the
warring visual
and verbal
elements of
the fallen
world as the
fragmented
and dismembered body of
humanity" (8). "Blake's
poem," he
goes on
to argue, "directs
us to a
human rather
than transcendent
reality.
Contrary
to the thrust
of the sublime,
therefore,
the 'transcendence'
canvassed
in this
poem is horizontal
and temporal
rather than
vertical
and eternal" (33-4).
In the 300
pages of
commentary
that follow,
Otto defends
his thesis
through an
exhaustive
explication
of the poem,
including
its graphic
design.
- In
the introduction Otto
offers a concise history
of the poem's construction,
including the alterations
and censoring that mark
its development and seem
to restrict access to
it. He also provides
an overview of twentieth-century
interpretations of the
poem, thus clearing the
way for his own reading.
In Otto's study, The
Four Zoas emerges
as a multi-layered
allegory whose psychology,
philosophy, and theology
counter those traditions
that idealize a separation
of the spirit from the
body. To present the
poem as a critique of
transcendence, Otto
situates it within the
tradition of the sublime.
Enlisting the services
of Locke, Young, and
Swedenborg clarifies
Blake's response to
the sublime and shows
convincingly how each
member of that motley
group is essential
to Blake as he forges
his response to it.
The premises Otto assumes
about the illustrated
poem are as follows:
Blake's
Critique of
Transcendence
argues, first,
that The
Four Zoas is
structured as
a coherent,
albeit complex
and multi-voiced
narrative, which
details the
history and
outlines the
relations that
constitute the
body of the
fallen Albion.
Second, far
from being opaque,
the illuminations
(drawings and
proof engravings)
are arranged
in a multifaceted "visual" narrative,
that stretches
across the entire
length of the
poem. Third,
text and illumination
sustain an intimate,
mutually clarifying
relation to
each other (10).
Otto's presentation of the poem as a coherent statement is nothing short of remarkable, in light of the elusive nature of Blake's prophetic method and the sheer density of detail in the poem. Some readers, however, may encounter the same challenge in navigating his deciphering of The Four Zoas that they confront in reading the prophecy itself. Otto's patient explanations of the complicated relationships among Blake's cast of characters, along with his elaborate decoding of Blake's iconography (airborne genitalia and all), give readers the sense they are traveling through the poem in real time; but real time in literature and art is not as reader-friendly as imaginary time. Though one might expect a moment-by-moment unwrinkling of the manuscript to yield a smooth and lucid narrative, unrelenting scrutiny of minute particulars poses a difficulty for readers: being introduced to so many verbal and visual parts demystifies the individual components of the prophecy, but it doesn't always facilitate comprehension of the whole. Such an approach makes it difficult at times to see Blake's epic forest through the signifying trees.
- Though
Otto discovers a logic
in Blake's prophetic
method, he also reflects
on the unconventional
nature of The
Four Zoas.
In the early pages of
his book he writes, "the
narrator is himself
an effect of the story
he wants to relate." He
also notes, "Far
from providing a frame
within which history
can be ordered, The
Four Zoas sometimes
seems little more
than a container within
which narratives and
voices multiply" and
then muses, "It
is as if the poem
is haunted by voices,
traces of other poems,
and allusions to
other projects and
times, all of which
it can embrace but
not assimilate to
a single point of
view" (2-3).
Though in the next
paragraph Otto argues
that the poem does
in fact have an accessible
structure, his shrewd
observations of
the prophecy's postmodern
features linger as
one proceeds through
his argument.
- Otto himself helps sustain the lingering. In the course of his encyclopedic cataloguing of the visual motifs and verbal images, from time to time he steps back to remind the reader of the built-in problems of critiquing such a poem. At the end of the third chapter, for example, he writes:
The fallen world is a moment in the life of Albion that is spatialized and temporalized as a world of seven thousand years. It is in this space that Los and Enitharmon are born. Their world is based on contradiction, for in the spaces of Eno, within the lifeless body held by the Saviour, nothingness is given a time and a space (77).
Here,
it would be worth showing
the problems Blake encounters,
as poet and graphic artist,
in depicting that contradictory
world and representing nothingness
in time and space. Similarly,
there are occasions when
Otto's attempt to resolve
the conflicts in the narrative
mutes the dynamic of the
poem. For example, Otto
notes that "the
narrative detailing the
birth of Los from the divisions
of Tharmas is continually
undermined and qualified
by other narratives," which
leaves the reader "encompassed
by a babel of voices" (101).
Instead of accepting "a
cacophony of voices" (to
borrow his own apt chapter
title) and the discomfort
in inhabiting such a rhetorical
realm, however, he reassures
the reader that "this
instance of a cumulative
threat to the poem's narrative
structure provides us with
helpful insights into the
structure of the poem as
a whole" (101).
Perhaps the cumulative threat
to the poem's narrative
structure is the
principal structure of the
narrative? Otto's argument
that Blake's unfinished
prophecy is a critique of
transcendence would be more
convincing if he showed
the ways in which The
Four Zoas stymies
conventional criticism and
its complicity with transcendental
structures rather than justifying
its every mark as part of
a unified scheme. Indeed,
Blake's prophetic method
does not produce seamless
narratives or stable rhetorical
structures, and his words
and images do not always
join in fruitful collaboration.
- The problems that face any reader—when to read texts literally and when to read them figuratively; when to read texts ironically and when to read them in a straightforward manner—are exacerbated in Blake's prophecies, thanks to the ways his texts, both verbal and visual, resist becoming contexts in the poem. Otto's interpretive choices lead him to read the The Four Zoas as a poetic proposition that "spirit and flesh [are] contraries rather than opposites" (344). Whether readers accept his interpretive choices and his conviction that leaving no Urizenic stone unturned reveals a coherent theme and structure, there is value in rambling with Otto through the pages of Blake's manuscript. By immersing us in the formality of The Four Zoas Otto enables us to see that Blake, at least on the inscribed page, was a player in the intellectual debates of his day—one who understood the contenders in philosophy, art, and theology well enough to orchestrate his own revolution.
Romantic
Circles Reviews
Editors,
Jeffrey N. Cox & Charles
Snodgrass
Associate
Editor, Jeffrey Ritchie
Review
published: April 2006.
Romantic
Circles
- Reviews -
Winter 2006 - Peter
Otto, Blake's
Critique of Transcendence:
Love, Jealousy, and the Sublime
in The
Four Zoas
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