Thursday, February 08, 2007

`I Should Like for My Work to be Human'

That endangered species, the man of letters, may be best represented in the United States by a writer out of North Carolina, Fred Chappell, who is 70 years old and since the nineteen-sixties has published novels, short fiction, poetry and much readable criticism. Chappell is a formidably bookish man who taught for 40 years at the University of North Carolina-Greensboro, but his criticism is less formal scholarship than reviews and personal essays, published in newspapers and literary journals alike. In other words, he loves books and loves writing about them, rare qualities among today’s academics.

Over the years I’ve read most of Chappell’s work and have reviewed one of his novels, so browsing through The Fred Chappell Reader, published in 1987, feels like going to a family reunion where you actually like most of the people in attendance. The book’s afterword, “A Pact with Faustus,” is a chronicle of Chappell’s enduring love for Thomas Mann’s Doctor Faustus, a book he first read as a boy growing up in “the grimy little town of Canton, North Carolina (pop. eternally 5,000; tucked away in the folds of the far western mountains of the state).” It’s a superb essay on two levels – as a bittersweet evocation of his boyhood friendship with Harry “Fuzz” Fincher, a musician (like the hero of Mann’s novel, Adrian Leverkuhn) and fellow Tarheel aesthete; and as a meditation on the interdependence in our lives of reading and writing. Chappell admits that he eventually had to suspend his emotional projection into the figure of Leverkuhn, whom Mann based on Arnold Schoenberg:

“It is clear that I am no figure of literary `importance,’ that I have not the means and no longer any desire to transform the outer contours of the art. In my case adventurous experimentation with form seems to lead to overintellectualization, to desiccation, of content. I have got to where I should like for my work to be human, and I do not much care if it even becomes sentimental. Perhaps it would be nice if a few artists in our time decided to rejoin the human race, and I think that I would be glad to do so, however much I disagree with its politics.”

Chappell’s candor feels like pure oxygen after three days in a mine shaft. I think of a writer like John Barth, whose early novels I briefly loved, but who became unreadable for me about 25 years ago. I still think of Barth as a supremely intelligent, very funny novelist who could write crystalline prose that sometimes reminded me of Evelyn Waugh’s. But, like a dirigible, Barth’s books tend to be big and empty and often in danger of blowing up. They are cold performances, not “human” in Chappell’s formulation, and you can easily understand why they appeal to some academics and theorists of “metafiction.” Chappell continues:

“New heroes come to me, figures I wish I had known how to long to emulate as a lad. Spinoza is a lovely and brilliant man; there is more worth for me in Robert Browning than in a platoon of John Berrymans; I don’t see how Carl Ruggles can be much less a composer than Mann’s imaginary figure; Chaucer is a supreme artist, full of grace and light and wisdom and humanity. Is he really so much less a poet than Dante? Is consistent System so much greater a good than superabundant spirit?

“As soon as I set these rhetorical questions down, they no longer look rhetorical. There are probably sufficient critical reasons to prefer Dante over Chaucer and maybe even Berryman over Browning….But I have been through that, and it has seemed important to me to set, however regretfully, strict critical necessity aside. It is only my temperament that makes me say so, of course, but sooner or later an artist must take account of his temperament as one of his basic materials. There are already so many artists whom one admires more than he likes. Am I the only reader who finds in the achievement of James Joyce something that is – well, a little obtuse? Who sees Chekhov as being in some intimate way not only better, but greater?

“Probably not.”

All heresy, of course, but aren’t some of our purported literary tastes rooted in snobbery and defended with a reverence that is almost religious in nature? Aren’t many acolytes of Gertrude Stein and Finnegans Wake the literary counterparts of biblical inerrants, staunch protectors of texts they defend without understanding? And isn’t the prose of Stein and late Joyce a species of glossolalia – that is, talking in tongues, understood only by the initiated?

Chappell may be wrong about Berryman, but he’s right about Browning, Chaucer and Ruggles, and he’s certainly right about admiring some artists more than we like them. Especially among the young, admiration can seem more important, more sophisticated, than mere enjoyment. Saying you enjoy Pound’s Cantos is like saying you enjoy the taste of Scotch. No one believes you. The Joyce vs. Chekhov contest, fortunately, is not an either/or proposition. I love Joyce at his best (Dubliners, Ulysses), and not to love Chekhov is to foreswear one’s essential humanity. When it comes to books, I feel no compulsion to be consistent.

3 comments:

Brian Sholis said...

Dear Patrick,

Just yesterday I picked up Joan Acocella's new essay collection, Twenty-Eight Artists and Two Saints, and re-read her 2000 New Yorker profile of Susan Sontag. At one point in the essay Sontag relates coming to a somewhat similar revelation concerning having admiration versus actually liking particular artists. An excerpt:

Those were the outer forces—political disappointments, artistic failures—that sapped Sontag's critical ambitions. But
there were inner forces, too. The leading idea of "Against Interpretation" was its call for formalism, particularly in
fiction, which to her at that time seemed America's most out-of-date art form. But, she now says, what appealed to
her about formalism was mostly just the idea of it. As for its application to the novel, the very thing she stumped
for, she didn't really like the models she held up: "I thought I liked William Burroughs and Nathalie Sarraute and
Robbe-Grillet, but I didn't. I actually didn't." In "Against Interpretation" you can sense her reservations. The most
energetic essays in that book are not on fiction but on film. (The piece on Bresson is still, thirty-six years later, the
best essay on him—moving, deep, judicious.) And it is telling that the writers she focussed on in her later criticism
were not—or not primarily—novelists but thinkers, essayists: Artaud, Canetti, Barthes, Benjamin. And she went on
writing about filmmakers: Bergman, Godard, Leni Riefenstahl, Hans-Jurgen Syberberg.
Still, the idea of formalism haunted her. It seemed to her to represent, she says, "a certain fastidiousness." There
was a lot of bad art around. Why was it so bad? Because, she told herself, it focussed on content, not form.
Eventually, however, that explanation failed her. A crucial experience was her infatuation with dance, and
particularly with New York City Ballet, beginning in the sixties."I remember, when I started going to see Balanchine's
work, I thought that what I loved in it was the austerity and the purity, the non-narrative quality. I loved 'Agon,' I
loved 'The Four Temperaments.' Things such as 'A Midsummer Night's Dream' I merely tolerated. Also, I was very
influenced by Lincoln Kirstein's writing on Balanchine's work, by his screwy Gurdjieffian take on it. Ballet,
Balanchine—it was discipline, order, submission, formality. And I thought, Sure, that's what I love. But you know,
that wasn't what I loved. I remember, in 'La Valse,' Joseph Duell putting his white-gloved hand in front of his face,
and he did it in a certain way, and I used to feel stabbed through the heart. I would go and see 'La Valse' again and
again, and I would wait for that moment. I would say to myself, 'Is it going to happen again?' And it did. And what
is that about? I'm not sure, but it's not about formalism.

---

Best wishes,
Brian

Steve Barton said...

Spot on about Barth. I looked at my quarter-finished copy of "Letters" for years, and could never pick it up again.

And I've hefted my old paperback of "The Sot Weed Factor" and wondered if I would enjoy it again a second time through. Other books have interposed...

All the best,
Steve Barton
Dunwoody, Georgia

Buce said...

I think Joyce's reputation survives because people read Dubliners and assume the big books must be better. They are not better: nothing in Joyce is better than the best half dozen stories in Dubliners. Some bits of Ulysses come close to that standard; others are admirable; others are bloated and overdone. Don't know about FW, never finished it, but I suspect you could trade pretty much all of it for the last page of "The Dead."