Rebecca
Jane Eyre
Allen Ginsberg
"Poetry is not an expression of the party line. 
It's that time of night, lying in bed, 
thinking what you really think, 
making the private world public, 
that's what the poet does."
"The only thing that can save the world
 is the reclaiming of the awareness of the world. 
That's what poetry does."
"Nobody saves America by sniffing cocaine, 
jiggling your knees blankly in the rain, 
when it snows in your nose you catch cold in your brain." 
Question:
The ‘popular’ is a site of ideological struggle between resistant 
subordinate groups/culture in society and the dominant groups
/culture who perpetually endeavour to incorporate them” 
(Johnson 54). To what extent do you find his definition 
appropriate when analysing Rebecca and the poetry of 
Ginsberg?
The ‘Popular’ text as Dwight Macdonald asserts “is like 
chewing gum”, lacking in literary value; it caters to the lowest 
sense of contentment for the common people of the mass 
culture. Modernists assert that ‘serious’ literature: an art for 
radical use, should be avant-garde, constantly reinventing 
itself, catering only to a small discerning audience. Thus, in 
brief, ‘Popular’ is: trivial, formulaic, repetitive, uninventive, 
exploitative, devoid of aesthetic value, distinctive from the 
great literature of the past and catering to the middle-class, 
philistines and the mass.Value-judgments: aesthetic, social 
and politics in literature are infamously wavering so no 
literary work is innately valuable in itself. The literary 
canon is a construct by specific people for specific purpose 
at a specific time frame. 
The ‘popular’ Rebecca is not merely 
a replica of the canonical Jane Eyre; only acute, discerning 
critics are enlightened to its theoretical readings of identity, 
class and gender and Sigmund Freud’s psychoanalysis and 
Ginsberg’s poetry is not merely ‘popular'. It serves to 
revitalize old rigid conventional poetry and to shout out the 
soul of his society.
Rebecca defies the rigid definition of ‘popular’- the fact it is 
considered merely a gothic romance. Its fairytale setting comes 
with a twist; it hints at the nightmare perversion of the orderly 
domestic setting. Additionally, upon close examination, 
Rebecca reveals theoretical readings of contemporary critics: 
identity, class and gender. It also is uncannily suggestive of 
Sigmund Freud’s psychoanalysis: the development of female 
sexuality. Its mixed genres: romance, murder, historical
/cultural studies and psychology challenge the inflexible 
boundary between ‘High’ and ‘popular’ literature.
From the historically specific perspective, Rebecca could have 
engaged in the anxiety of its time: identity, class and gender. 
The moment the nameless narrator steps into her new home, 
she abandons her own name and takes on a new title of de 
winters, yet she is constantly struggling with an invisible 
identity. Marriage renders the effacement of women’s 
individual identity. Class issues are also depicted by the 
disparity in age, wealth and class of the narrator’s marriage 
and gender roles are closely aligned with class struggle. 
Maxim and Manderley that represent perfect domesticity are 
seen as warped and rootless. The promiscuous Rebecca and 
the infertility of her malformed cancerous uterus depicts her 
as an antithesis of a proper womanhood: being married, 
monotonous and child-bearing. The murder of Rebecca and 
her unproductive female sexuality has reduced the upper class 
Manderley into a warped representation of conventional 
domesticity. The fact that Manderley is eventually destroyed, 
this could endorse the victory of the middle class. Thus the 
text could be seen as shaking up and reinventing one’s role in 
the social structure. The focus of class consciousness, the 
decaying façade of aristocratic power and the renegotiating 
of perceived power relations between the classes is highly 
evident in its text.
The first chapter of Rebecca is deftly crafted in a dream, in line 
with Freud’s dream theory:A dream is a disguised fulfilment 
of a repressed wish. The ingenious option of first person 
nameless narrator, invites the reader into the surreal world 
of her complex subconscious: the blurring of fantasy and 
reality. Freud’s Odeipus complex, from the perspective of 
female sexuality alleges that the girl’s first love is her mother 
but as she grows, she becomes intimately attached to her 
father. In this process, she now starts to detach from her 
mother, develops a hostile relation and an intense fear of her 
and directs her affection to her father instead. Mrs Danver 
resembles an oppressive motherly figure and Rebecca as 
the ‘other woman’. Furthermore, Freud also asserts that 
women usually marry a man who is a substitute of their father 
while subconsciously battling their inner conflict of their hostile 
relationship with their mother. This conflict is reflected in the 
narrator’s insecurity and unstable relationship with Maxim. 
Additionally, according to Freud’s model of the psyche: the 
Idrepresents the pleasure mind, seeking only immediate 
enjoyment; the ego is the rational mind, prohibits one’s basic 
drives foridealistic fantasies and the super-ego, the 
perfectionist, plays the critical, moralizing role. Rebecca is 
significant as the moralizing principle, she is the epitome of 
social grace that is torturing the narrator. The conflicts of the 
Id, the ego and the superego is constantly battling in the 
narrator’s mind. Viewed through a Freudian lens: Rebecca is 
no longer a straight-forward romance, rather it emerges as a 
psychological study of the complex female sexuality; thus 
perhaps so, it has an enduring intriguing appeal with the mass 
readership. Hence, the genre of Rebecca is ambiguous and 
it has an avant-garde perspective at the time it is written; 
and only the acute critics can identify the psychological 
insight the novel delivers.
Allen Ginsberg’s innovative Beat poetry is the new poetic 
voice of America in the fifties. Beat poetry, in order to 
distinct itself from conventional poetry, borrows from ‘high’ 
poetry and energized its new forms with jazz-improvising 
style plus a plurality of mass culture’s voices. These voices 
are their passionate rebellion against American culture: the
hypocrisy of any established norms; and their ecstasy is 
immersed in jazz, homosexuality and dope-addiction. Beat 
poets serve a public purpose: protest against capitalism, 
consumerism and social inequalities. In its fierce attacks 
against the mainstream US values, this new and 
revolutionary force sought a new audience within the 
counter culture.
Ginsberg believes that the mind should be free to roam so 
that significant associations and connections could be made 
and truths emerge. Ginsberg asserts that old poetry should be 
revolutionised. He creates an enduring, intriguing tension 
between the ‘high’ and ‘popular’ by adding new forms to 
the existing ‘high’ literature. Thus, using his self-reflective 
technique, he straddles between describing his poetry first to 
make it more spontaneous, colloquial and conversational as 
well as polishes them with careful construction. Some of the 
new forms include jazz-like form: unrhymed lines, no regular 
metre, no stanza form, ellipsis and catalogue.
Additionally, the relentless litany-style repetition like the 
active verbs ‘who’ in Howl conveys a sense of intensity and 
urgency in actions,movements and momentum. The varying 
length and inconsistent flow of lines adhere to the 
spontaneous experimental jazz –like style of improvising 
and the lack of full stops give a sense of breathlessness. 
More significantly, the unconventional word play (placing 
words in uncertain relations to each other) is mightily 
intriguing. For example, Moloch (a name of god) has 
being juxtaposed:
“Moloch whose mind is pure machinery!
Moloch whose blood is running money!
...
Moloch whose ear is a smoking tomb!”
(Howl part 2, 5th stanza)
Though the tone is colloquial and conversational it is 
accompanied by powerful vivid images that heightens its 
poetic qualities, for example, the juxtaposed religious and 
‘de-romanticed’ mechanical images:
“Moloch whose skyscrapers stand in the long streets like endless 
Jehovahs!”
(Howl, part 11, 6th stanza)
Ginsberg’s father, Louis, uses the ‘high’ poetic tradition: 
regular stanza form, rhythm and rhyme, very different 
from his son’s. In Atomic:
The splitting apart
Of man from man
Dooms more than splitting
The atom can.
The ‘high’ poetry here, has a sense of rigid formality with 
much focus on the meticulously aesthetical structure of words. 
This seems to focus on the vanity of the poet himself rather 
than passionately expressing the seriousness, agony and 
tragedy of the atom bomb. Compare this with 
Ginsberg’s Howl:
"I saw the best minds of my generation destroyed by madness, 
starving hysterical naked,
dragging themselves through the negro streets at dawn
looking for an angry fix,…”
Here, people are described as ‘starving, hysterical, angry, 
burning’; the imagery here is vivid and the words are 
intense. The passion is ignited, it captures the precise, 
particular rhythm and sentiments of his generation.
Ginsberg’s sense of poetry is, as stated at the end 
of Howl:
“to recreate the syntax and measure of poor human prose 
and stand before you speechless and intel-
ligent and shaking with shame, rejected yet con-
fessing out the soul to conform to the rhythm 
of thought in his naked and endless head.”
Ginberg’s new poetry speaks profoundly and genuinely of 
what is really happening in his society and more significantly, 
the communication between the souls rather than rigidly 
adhering to the form of ‘high’ literature soullessly.
Literary value is not a fixed phenomenon: its value is 
subjective and continuously shifting. The rhythm of each 
generation is different, all things evolve: politics, economics, 
lifestyles. So why shouldn’t literature evolve? High literature 
no longer belongs to the exclusive elite especially in this age 
of technology; the literacy rate has expanded tremendously 
and there are more educated and intelligent people belonging 
to the mass culture than in the era of the canonical writers. 
To rigidly focus on the aesthetic stylistics without expressing 
the entire explosive emotions, anxieties and sentiments of the 
contemporary society is to be devoid of genuine emotional 
rhythm and momentum which is worse than the devoid 
aesthetic values. 
If Jane Eyre can evolve from popular fiction to ‘High’ 
literature, why shouldn’t Rebecca? Rebecca is not just a 
slavish imitation of Jane Eyre, it is a re-write of an original 
idea. Its intertextual and ambiguous quality can be interpreted 
in many ways and has an enduring appeal. Additionally, 
Ginsberg ingeniously revolutionised old poetry with new forms. 
His energized poetry can precisely depict the hurricane of 
emotions of his generation that rigid forms fail to do so. 
Mikhail Bakhtin, the Russian philosopher in his work of 
literary theory denounces the ‘monologic’ work of literature, 
he contends that all works of literature is dialogic: it is a 
continuous dialogue with other works of literature and 
other authors.
(1586 words)
Bibliography:
Du Maurier, Daphne. “Rebecca” Virago press. 2010. Print.
Johnson, David. “The Popular & the Canonical.” The Open University, Routledge. 2005. Print.
Ginsberg, Allen. “Howl” City Lights Books. 1959. Print.
Dialogic.Wikipedia. Web. 21 Aug. 2010
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dialogic
Freud about Dream Interpretation. Web. 21 Aug. 2010
http://dreaminterpretation.freudfile.org/freud_about_dreams.html
Oedipus complex. Wikipedia. Web. 21 Aug. 2010
<
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oedipus_complex>
Total Mark : 80
Dear Cheryl
This has been a pleasure to read with many keen insights that address the question and engage with the issue of resistance to ideologies. There is also close textual analysis and a distinct flow of the arguments.  That said, it’s a well-constructed and relevant response.
Marcus