Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-gtxcr Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-19T22:37:28.869Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Benjamín Jarnés: Aspects of the Dehumanized Novel

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 December 2020

Paul Ilie*
Affiliation:
University of Michigan, Ann Arbor

Extract

Ortega has maintained in his Ideas sobre la novela that action is not the essence of a novel, a principle which he corroborates by the fact that most plots are readily forgotten. For Ortega, the novel's essence is pure being or nonaction, manifested by the state of its characters. One of the most conscientious practitioners of Ortegan theory was Benjamín Jarnés, who in Locura y muerte de nadie (Madrid, 1929) wrote a novel revealing human reality stripped of its vital core: action, passion, and sentiment. The process of devoiding reality of its real content while leaving a mere semblance of reality as the remainder is, of course, “dehumanization” in the Ortegan definition of the term. Two further aspects of Jarnés' novel—the absence of a personality in his protagonist and the use of a highly abstract, cerebral language—serve to supplement the meaning of “dehumanization” at least as far as narrative fiction is involved. But Locura y muerte… also commands attention because its author reaches out into areas of cultural and philosophical significance in order to determine the causes of a comparable dehumanization in contemporary life at the same time that he depicts this life fictionally. My procedure in this essay will be to discuss first Jarnés' notion of the interplay between the masses and the individual personality; then, in the light of this, the attitudes underlying his approach to this particular novel; and, finally, the techniques involved in the verbalization of his novel.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Modern Language Association of America, 1961

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Note 1 in page 247 The term is Azorin's. Cf. Superrealismo (Madrid, 1929).

Note 2 in page 248 In the collective ranks there is an occasional revolt against standardization, as Jarnés admits with great irony in the illustration of the fast walker on busy streets. “Persiste entre las multitudes el tipo de guerrillero de la circulación, que, con grave peligro de sus huesos, se lanza heroicamente a ganar batallas de velocidad. Y la masa se complace en destacar esa suerte de individuos exteriormente indociles. Exteriormente—piensa Arturo—, porque la docilidad en el hombre apunta en razón inversa de su excelencia personal. Por eso el sabio obedece como un niüo a los signos del agente, mientras se obstina en rebelarse contra un principio de Euclides” (pp. 36–37). The method adheres to the principle that man's life is “… un esfuerzo desesperado por afirmar su existencia, por dejar surco en ella” (p. 42).

Note 3 in page 248 “El individualismo espanol,” Obras completas, ill (Madrid, 1950), 390–391.