Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 December 2020
Despite the fact that the stream of consciousness technique occupies an important position in twentieth-century fiction, there is no general agreement as to where the method originated or what it really is. As Frederick J. Hoffman observes, “Writers and critics are both confused by the idea of ‘interior monologue,’ or the ‘stream of consciousness,’ as it is more familiarly known.”1 Elizabeth Drew says that the stream of consciousness technique was “invented by Dorothy Richardson.”2 Katharine F. Gerould remarks that Henry James “introduced the method into English fiction.”3 In an editorial note appended to the English edition of Edouard Dujardin's Les Lauriers sont coupés, James Laughlin holds that Dujardin invented interior monologue.4 In making this statement, he is following the position taken by Dujardin in Le Monologue intérieur, in which he attempts to describe and define the method first used by him, he says, in Les Lauriers.
1 Freudianism and the Literary Mind (1945), p. 125.
2 The Modern Novel (1926), p. 256.
3 “The Stream of Consciousness”, Sat. Rev. of Lit., IV (Oct. 22,1927), 233.
4 We'll to the Woods No More (1938).
5 An Honest Thief and Other Stories, tr. Constance Garnett.339
6 Le Monologue intérieur, p. 71.
7 For an analysis of the stream of consciousness technique as employed in this novel, see my article, “The Technique of The Sound and the Fury”, Kenyon Review (Autumn, 1948).340
8 Ulysses, Modern Library edition, pp. 725-726.341
9 The Twentieth Century Novel: Studies in Technique (1932), pp. 388, 392.344
10 The Modern Novel, pp. 256, 84, 88.