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Laurence Sterne: Tristram Shandy

beer good

Well-Known Member
The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman by Laurence Sterne.

To those who are unfamiliar with the plot, it can be summed up in three little words: "But I digress." The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman has precious little of Tristram's life or opinions, and makes it doubtful whether he's much of a gentleman - in fact, it often strikes me how much more bawdy, dirty and, well, uninhibitedly fun 18th century literature is than it would be during Victorian times. Not that I'm an expert, but between Swift, Rabelais, Bellman, Voltaire and Sterne I think I can form some sort of opinion and Tristram Shandy gets away with a lot of stuff - sex talk, various bodily functions, etc - that would have made his pruder grandchildren blush.

But I digress. Tristram Shandy tries to tell us about his life and opinions, starting with his conception and continuing with his birth, education and career - and he fails miserably; the fictional narrator himself isn't even born until about halfway in and even after that appears in his autobiography only sporadically, whenever the plot is in danger of - gasp! - advancing and he needs to derail it with an amusing anecdote or a learnéd discourse on warfare, childbirth, religion, noses, or whatever he feels like lecturing us on. Someone said that this book was post-modern before there was a modern to be post, and I can see where they get that - as much as he leans on Rabelais and Cervantes, to my modern eyes it keeps bringing up people like Pynchon and Eco. Like those, he is less concerned with telling a story or giving straight answers than with painting an entire society's thoughts, and he'll lean on any reference no matter how wise or un- to get there. In a sense, the lives and opinions he chooses to reference tell more about him (the narrator, not the author) than he perhaps intends.

However, that's also part of the problem. Ironically, it seems at least to me, time has run away from Tristram Shandy. It's supposed to satirize a lot of popular thoughts, beliefs and conventions, but while some of those are universal, others have simply faded into obscurity. I can read and appreciate Pynchon's Mason & Dixon - which, much like this, takes place in the latter half of the 18th century - because Pynchon still writes for a modern audience's preconceptions. With Sterne, I'm out of my depths; too many of the HOBBY-HORSES (always in upper-case), social memes and authorities he makes fun of are completely unknown to me - not to mention that the style he parodies is almost unreadable at times. It's like... imagine someone 200 years from now trying to make sense of Hot Shots! while Top Gun has long since been (rightfully) forgotten.

But I digress - this, of course, isn't Sterne's fault, he was writing for his time. But what remains of Tristram Shandy does tend to seem like one single joke stretched out over 615 pages - the joke being that he smugly keeps derailing his own story, mocking the reader's (and critics') expectations of it and gleefully even his own ability to tell it. Stuff like that is fun once, twice or even half a dozen times, but eventually you just want to smack him and tell him that all of that stopped being cute about 83 chapters ago.

Yes, it's occasionally very funny. Yes, it's occasionally still quite relevant, both on the nature of literature and the human condition - especially in the many hilarious exchanges between Tristram's father (rational, experienced man of science) and uncle (naive theoretical believer in love - and soldier). There are some nice turns of phrase that I need to write down for posterity:

On literature:
Writing, when properly managed (as you may be sure I think mine is) is but a different name for conversation. As no one, who knows what he is about in good company, would venture to talk all;--so no author, who understands the just boundaries of decorum and good-breeding, would presume to think all: The truest respect which you can pay to the reader's understanding, is to halve this matter amicably, and leave him something to imagine, in his turn, as well as yourself.

On... renewable energy sources, I shit you not, this is 1760 and it reads like a Greenpeace manifesto:
if the wind only served,--but would be excellent good husbandry to make use of the winds, which cost nothing, and which eat nothing, rather than horses, which (the devil take 'em) both cost and eat a great deal.

For that very reason, replied my father, 'Because they cost nothing, and because they eat nothing,'--the scheme is bad;--it is the consumption of our products, as well as the manufactures of them, which gives bread to the hungry, circulates trade,--brings in money, and supports the value of our lands;--and tho', I own, if I was a Prince, I would generously recompense the scientifick head which brought forth such contrivances;--yet I would as peremptorily suppress the use of them.

On his own inability to tell a straight story:
I believe in my conscience I intercept many a thought which heaven intended for another man.

&c &c &c &c. But I digress. I'm glad I read Tristram Shandy; I'm glad I won't have to read it again. It's not bad, but the law of diminishing returns kicks in around page 200 and after that it's all uphill. This cock and bull story ends on a rather groanworthy pun regarding the male reproductive organs and male cows; I call bullshit - but at least Sterne's a good bullshitter. 3/5.
 
Thank you for reminding what a good time I had with this book many years ago. Not that I want to read it again, of course, but once was fun.

As I recall the act of his conception was interrupted by his mother asking his father whether he had remembered to wind the great clock. In some way this detailed their offspring's mental processes forever after.
 
Though Tristram Shandy remains a brilliant book I agree that one needs massive tolerance to endure every page. After 400 or so pages I stopped reading it and haven't picked it up again. Not because I hated it but because I was exhausted. The legal parody, though hilarious, goes on a bit too long. But the experience does give a sense of what reading an anti-narrative form novel feels like. You want the story to develop though you know that's not the point at the same time. Sterne lashes out, in parody, at dramatic fiction and undermines its necessary artifice with hundred of undeveloped pages. Brilliant and influential, no doubt. But I agree that one reading will probably suffice for many. Regardless, it remains one of my favorite books. Even my reaction to it is illogical.
 
Sterne lashes out, in parody, at dramatic fiction and undermines its necessary artifice with hundred of undeveloped pages. Brilliant and influential, no doubt.

Very true, but there's also the problem, I think: at what point does a parody of bad/overblown/boring writing become simply bad/overblown/boring writing in its own right? IMO it happens quite a few times - though certainly not all the time - in TS... especially if one is unfamiliar with the material being parodied.
 
Took a while for me to read this but I did enjoy it. Tristram doesn't finish his book because he's filled it with digressions, mostly about his Dad and Uncle. I identify quite strongly with Toby Shandy, Tristram's uncle. This is a man that converted his bowling green into many successive scale replica European battlefields. It was only when a truce was called and there was no more current military news that he started courting a woman. The more things change, the more they stay the same...
 
Yes! One of the great books! The digression into the contract his mother and father made concerning his birth, including the actual turgid legalese, is amazing. Not to mention "Alas, Poor Yorick!" his Uncle's groin injury, and the realization that so much of who we are happens when we're not there, or perhaps not even born. This one heavily influenced Salman Rushdie's "Midnight's Children," amongst others. This one and "Gargantua & Pantagruel" remain two of humanity's best poignant comedies. Now I need to read them again.
 
the realization that so much of who we are happens when we're not there, or perhaps not even born.
I like the way you put that, thanks. And now I'm wondering if I should read Gargantua & Pantagruel... it's a pretty thick volume.

Maybe we could have this thread merged with the other thread on the book?
 
Though Tristram Shandy remains a brilliant book I agree that one needs massive tolerance to endure every page. After 400 or so pages I stopped reading it and haven't picked it up again. Not because I hated it but because I was exhausted. The legal parody, though hilarious, goes on a bit too long. But the experience does give a sense of what reading an anti-narrative form novel feels like. You want the story to develop though you know that's not the point at the same time. Sterne lashes out, in parody, at dramatic fiction and undermines its necessary artifice with hundred of undeveloped pages. Brilliant and influential, no doubt. But I agree that one reading will probably suffice for many. Regardless, it remains one of my favorite books. Even my reaction to it is illogical.

This thread has inspired me to blow the dust off and read it in a slower, more methodical way. This book is Dickens on steroids, few words with deep meaning and intent. One section at a time, definitely not a speed read.
 
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