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Metafictional Predestination in Muriel Spark's The Driver's Seat

Authors :
Carlos Villar Flor
Ana Altemir Giral
Source :
Miscelánea: A Journal of English and American Studies, Vol 65, Pp 191-208 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Universidad de Zaragoza, 2022.

Abstract

Muriel Spark’s The Driver’s Seat is a radical metafictional experiment, suggesting the inexorable connections between contingency and a predetermined plot which are so common to many Sparkian novels. Following Marina MacKay’s perception that Spark’s experimental narrative operates “in the conceptual space where the more abstract preoccupations of Roman Catholic theology overlap with the metafictional and fabulist concerns of postmodernism” (2008: 506), this essay will discuss how the notion of predestination reverberates in The Driver’s Seat, not only as a remnant of Spark’s Presbyterian education but also as a postmodern re-visitation of classical tragedy in a metafictional key. Spark’s preference for predetermined plots may echo a long philosophical and theological discussion spanning many centuries about free will and predestination, particularly intense in the times of the Protestant Reformation, but it also reflects the sense of predestination as a necessary ingredient of classical tragedy. In The Driver’s Seat Spark deliberately brought to the fore some conventions of Aristotelian tragedy, although she approached them through an experimental subversion ultimately resorting to comedy and ridicule, on Spark’s own admission her weapons for the only possible art form. Our contention is that the metafictional implications of The Driver’s Seat’s prolepses undermine a Calvinist-like certainty concerning predestined salvation or damnation. By using a partial narrator only capable of producing limited accounts, Spark may be playing with an experimental and essentially postmodern interpretive openness which is in tune with the ultimate uncertainty about each individual’s eternal salvation that is commonly accepted in Catholic thought.

Details

Language :
English, Spanish; Castilian
ISSN :
11376368
Volume :
65
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Miscelánea: A Journal of English and American Studies
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.60dda37c75c5461ca2cfb652a682e1f1
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.26754/ojs_misc/mj.20226852