Pictures from Google Image Search

Norfolk, Lawrence

Contemporary Novelists | 2001 | | Copyright 2001 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

NORFOLK, Lawrence

Nationality: British. Born: 1963.

Publications

Novels

Lemprière's Dictionary. London, Sinclair Stevenson, and New York, Harmony, 1991.

Pope's Rhinoceros. London, Sinclair-Stevenson, 1996; New York, Harmony Books, 1996.

* * *

Lawrence Norfolk's formidable reputation rests upon a small collection of works. The success of Lemprière's Dictionary, an erudite, intricately designed, and densely textured novel, derives chiefly from its pastiche of literary forms and sensibilities even more varied than its range of geographical and temporal settings (from England to India, from 1600 to 1788). Impossible to classify (or summarize), the novel combines numerous genresGothic, Victorian, historical, adventure, mystery, detective, political thriller, and questin a decidedly postmodern (even postcolonial) way that strongly suggests the influence of writers such as Umberto Eco, Thomas Pynchon, and Peter Ackroyd.

Norfolk's protagonist is John Lemprière, a fictional version of the author of the well-known Classical Dictionary (1788). Building upon the relative dearth of information about the real Lemprière's life, Norfolk fashions his own version (a narrative ploy of considerable thematic import). His Lemprière is a myopic youth whose reading has addled his brain, causing him to see the myths he reads about come to life. Instead of correcting the problem, glasses only enable him to see all the better his father torn apart by his own hunting dogs, in the manner of Actaeon. Himself torn apart by guilt and the desire to solve the family mystery, Lemprière begins his exile/quest. Early in his wanderings, it is suggested that he write a dictionary as a form of therapy. Although it offers him a refuge from a series of baffling mysteries (and thus functions in much the same way the novel itself does for the similarly naive and escapist reader), the dictionary also serves a more sinister purpose. It is the "signed confession" linking its innocent author to a series of myth-inspired murders perpetrated by a shadowy Cabbala. It is this Cabbala, comprising descendants of François Lemprière's former business partners, that the hero believes he is searching out but has in fact been directing his efforts all along.

Norfolk's title recalls other, more famous dictionaries. Unlike Samuel Johnson's (1755), Norfolk's does not attempt to "fix" and "preserve" its subject. Like the Oxford English Dictionary, it is "based upon historical principles" that in the novel are to be understood semiotically rather than scientifically. As Norfolk explains in "Bosnian Alphabet" in the Spring 1993 issue of Granta, a dictionary is a very useful but also highly arbitrary means for organizing chaotic experience. It is also a way to organize a novel, as Walter Abish (Alphabetical Africa ) and Milorad Pavic (The Dictionary of the Khazars ) have demonstrated. And just as Pavic's novel exists in two forms, male and female, each with its own ending, so does Norfolk's: the longer, denser, more fantastic original English edition and the shorter American, with its greater "forward momentum." Appropriately, Lemprière's Dictionary is filled with twins, metamorphoses, mistaken identities, and deliberate disguises and pretends to be a good many things that it is not, including a historical novel (about the East India Company, England's coming-of-age as a colonial power, the events leading up to the French Revolution, and so on). Even as the details are deployed to create a Jamesian "sense of the past," they also serve as a set of facts, some real, some fictional, whose permutational possibilities allow for a seemingly endless series of rearrangement and reinterpretation, that may be understood as an instance of postmodern play or, more seriously, as Don DeLillo has said of his novel Libra, as a way of thinking about history, including the history of the novel).

Norfolk's novel repeatedly calls attention to the reading process: to how characters read or, more often, misread events and texts, sometimes, as in François's message to his partners still in the besieged city of La Rochelle, with disastrous consequences. The consequences for the novel and its readers are of course quite different, misinterpretation being the engine that drives them both. Reading a novel such as Lemprière's Dictionary becomes at times a highly self-conscious affair. What is said about characters and events often applies equally well to the novel itself. Like the Cabbala, it is "a kind of joke, a huge prank" turned serious; like the rumors of impending massacre, it is something that the reader, like the citizens of La Rochelle, perversely "want to believe." It is as well a bog, a fraud, a game of chess, a conspiracy, a simulacrum (in the Baudrillardian sense, a postmodern image having no antecedent reality). Ultimately it resembles the creation of one of Lemprière's own mythical subjects, the master artificer Daedalus, maker of automata and labyrinths.

The title The Pope's Rhinoceros might seem metaphoric on first glance, but in fact it is quite literal, referring to an unsuccessful attempt by Portuguese explorers of the 16th century to bring a rhinoceros from Africa back to Rome as a gift for Pope Leo X. These facts, however, are merely a point of departure, and from there Norfolk takes readers on a ride that is as complex (in the view of some detractors, overly so) as it is intriguing.

Robert A. Morace

Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.

  • MLA
  • Chicago
  • APA

Morace, Robert A.. "Norfolk, Lawrence." Contemporary Novelists. The Gale Group Inc. 2001. Encyclopedia.com. 11 Nov. 2009 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

Morace, Robert A.. "Norfolk, Lawrence." Contemporary Novelists. The Gale Group Inc. 2001. Encyclopedia.com. (November 11, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3401500452.html

Morace, Robert A.. "Norfolk, Lawrence." Contemporary Novelists. The Gale Group Inc. 2001. Retrieved November 11, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3401500452.html

Learn more about citation styles

Related newspaper, magazine, and trade journal articles from HighBeam Research

(Including press releases, facts, information, and biographies)

Morphine uptake, disposition, and analgesic efficacy in the common goldfish (Carassius auratus).(Report)
Magazine article from: Canadian Journal of Zoology; 5/1/2009; ; 700+ words ; ...and Greene (1970), who reported that morphine was rapidly absorbed by goldfish (Carassius...conclusions were based on measurements of morphine analyzed colorimetrically for phenolic...fish was removed, the concentration of morphine in the water decreased from 10 to 8...
Morphine honors lead singer by pressing on
Newspaper article from: The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel; 3/9/2000; ; 700+ words ; Morphine honors lead singer by pressing on By ROGE...triggered the heart attack that killed Morphine lead singer Mark Sandman last summer during...pressed forward, though, with the music Morphine left behind. The trio's final studio...
Morphine alone or with naloxone may reduce the growth of certain tumors.
Newspaper article from: Drug Week; 6/20/2003; 700+ words ; ...NewsRx.com & NewsRx.net) -- Morphine alone or with naloxone may reduce the...discussion. "In the present study, morphine inhibited tumor cell proliferation at...than or equal to 500 microm for 24 h), morphine also caused cell death. In nude mice...
Morphine delays discharge following ambulatory surgery: a prospective institutional study
Magazine article from: The Journal of Perioperative Practice; 8/1/2009; ; 700+ words ; KEYWORDS Morphine / Delayed discharge / Ambulatory surgery...contribution; Peer reviewed. Introduction - Morphine is used regularly in day surgery despite...into 2 groups: 50 patients received morphine and 50 patients received non-morphine...
Morphine regroups for tour Band recalls former singer
Newspaper article from: Chicago Sun-Times; 5/5/2000; ; 700+ words ; Orchestra Morphine 7:30 p.m. Sunday Metro, 3730 N...triggered the heart attack that killed Morphine lead singer Mark Sandman during a performance...pressed forward, though, with the music Morphine left behind. The trio's final studio...
Morphine delays discharge following ambulatory surgery: a prospective institutional study.(RESEARCH & AUDIT)(Clinical report)
Magazine article from: Journal of Perioperative Practice; 8/1/2009; ; 700+ words ; ...analgesia is crucial in day surgery. Morphine, a powerful analgesic is commonly used...operatively and postoperatively. However, morphine use is associated with nausea, vomiting...analgesia preparations with combinations of morphine derived compounds and anti-inflammatory...
Combined morphine/oxycodone is more effective than morphine alone.
Newspaper article from: Biotech Week; 2/25/2004; 700 words ; ...com & NewsRx.net) -- Combining morphine and oxycodone for patients with advanced...relief and results in less vomiting than morphine alone. "The antinociceptive effect of morphine and oxycodone is mediated preferentially...
Conversoin from intrathecal morphine to oral methadone
Magazine article from: Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine; 5/1/2002; ; 700+ words ; ...from high-dose intrathecal (IT) morphine to oral methadone. Case Report...converted from IT to intravenous morphine and then to oral methadone. Conclusions...The conversion from high-dose IT morphine to oral methadone has not been previously...
IV to po morphine conversion ratio of 1:3 achieves pain control.(Neurology)(intravenous)(Clinical report)
Magazine article from: Internal Medicine News; 5/15/2008; ; 700+ words ; TAMPA -- A ratio of intravenous morphine to oral morphine of 1:3 can be successfully used to achieve pain control when converting cancer patients from intravenous morphine to oral morphine, according to study results presented...
Prehospital administration of morphine for isolated extremity injuries: A change in protocol reduces time to medication
Magazine article from: Prehospital Emergency Care; 10/1/2002; ; 700+ words ; ...protocol allowing paramedics to administer morphine without a physician order to patients with extremity trauma with respect to time of morphine administration, scene time, morphine amount and number of doses per patient, and...

Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses

morphine
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition morphine principal derivative of opium , which...addiction and drug abuse . Effects and Uses Morphine, a narcotic , acts directly on the central...may interfere with the menstrual cycle. Morphine is highly addictive. Tolerance (the...
Morphine
Dictionary entry from: Baker's Biographical Dictionary of Popular Musicians Since 1990 MORPHINE Formed: 1990, Cambridge, Massachusetts...ruled by guitar-driven grunge rock, Morphine was a band without a guitarist. The trio...1990s' best-respected cult bands. Morphine emerged out of Treat Her Right, a conventional...
Friedrich Serturner
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography ...1783-1841) successfully isolated the morphine crystals contained in dried poppy resin...he successfully isolated and extracted morphine crystals from a tarry opium substance...discovery enabled physicians to prescribe morphine in regulated dosages. It was a powerful...
Narcotic
Book article from: World of Forensic Science ...on mood and general disposition. Morphine, codeine, and heroin are the main...abuse in the narcotic category. Morphine is a controlled medication prescribed...relieving) properties. However, morphine is highly addictive and can present...
opium
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition ...taste. Its chief active principle is the alkaloid morphine , a narcotic . Other constituents are the alkaloids...noscapine (narcotine); heroin is synthesized from morphine. Morphine, heroin, and codeine are addicting drugs; papaverine...

For students and teachers!

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including:

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including: