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![]() Previously in Crosscurrents: "Missing Links" (December 21, 2000) From C. P. Snow's "Two Cultures" to Alan Sokal's hoax, taking stock of the fault lines between the arts and sciences. By Harvey Blume "Faith and Cyberspace" (October 18, 2000) The Talmud and the Internet, a memoir by Jonathan Rosen, and Blue, an experimental novel by Benjamin Zucker, offer strikingly different perspectives on religion and new media, piety and public life. By Harvey Blume "Master of Reveries" (September 7, 2000) Why Proust? And why now? Puzzling out the current vogue and the counterintuitive appeal of In Search of Lost Time. By Sven Birkerts "The Rest Is Silence" (August 16, 2000) Michael Almereyda's Hamlet, Frank Kermode's Shakespeare, and the Prince of Denmark in the age of digital reproduction. By Wen Stephenson More Crosscurrents in Atlantic Unbound. More on books, literature, and the arts in Atlantic Unbound and The Atlantic Monthly. Elsewhere on the Web Links to related material on other Web sites. Carver Web Information on the life and work of Raymond Carver (1938-1988). |
Atlantic Unbound | January 24, 2001
Crosscurrents Raymond Carver's reputation as an American master of short fiction is as good as etched in stone. But his hardbitten prose style has had its day by Sven Birkerts .....
The workmanship in the book's five hitherto uncollected stories (two from the early 1980s, the others of uncertain provenance) is fine—solid, middling Carver. The stories may not rank with the author's very best, but they still repay reading, and the real aficionados will be glad. I confess I always wonder at the wisdom of digging into works of the second tier. It seldom helps the reputation, and generally only unearths the evidence of mere craft that most writers are ultimately trying to suppress. But the deed has been done, and the grounds for complaints are finally few. Lifting the gaze for a moment from the words on the page, however, I am struck by the thought that Call If You Need Me, while serving as a new ornamental detail on the master's headstone, may also be regarded from another angle—as the expiring gasp of a once-dominant mode of writing. I mean the famous "Carver style," and much that was comprehended in that phrase. Raymond Carver came into his own as a writer in the mid 1970s, emerging into the public eye from a now-legendary life of hard knocks and alcoholism. Helped along by the then-celebrated editor Gordon Lish (just how much help remains controversially unclear), he gained wide acclaim for his signature style of flinty understatement on the strength of the short-story collections Will You Please Be Quiet, Please? (1976), What We Talk About When We Talk About Love (1981), and Cathedral (1983). By the time of his death in 1988, at the age of fifty, Carver had established himself as the new torchbearer for what had formerly been celebrated as the Hemingway ethos, forging a scenically simple, dialogue-driven idiom that conveyed powerfully not just the undercurrents of rage and longing in his characters, but also suggested the palpable blockages and blind-spots that kept these forces moving with destructive momentum. The difference between Carver and Hemingway is that Hemingway's sharply angled reticence somehow implicated the whole larger world—as if the corrosions of civilization, a world gone wrong, were to blame—whereas in Carver's world the problem was merely human, there in the very clay. Better: the ordinary clay, in the working people who were almost unfailingly warped by their hard lot and who handed down the misery of their foreshortened lives to their children. Somewhere along the way he got called a minimalist and the label lopsidedly stuck. We get a reminder of the mode in Carver's previously unpublished story "Kindling," which in its delivery, its use of a kind of numbed-out, limited-option narration, can be seen as fairly representative. Myers called his wife, but she hung up on him. She wouldn't even talk to him, let alone have him anywhere near the house. She had a lawyer and a restraining order. So he took a few things, boarded a bus, and went to live near the ocean in a room in a house owned by a man named Sol who had run an ad in the paper.The Carver approach—giving a first- or third-person voice-track to a wounded protagonist, playing the spare plainspokenness of demotic idioms ("So he took a few things, boarded a bus ...") against our suspicion of deeper grief, trusting implication to build a kind of backdraft behind the seemingly solid presentation—was for a time very influential, showing up in writers like Richard Ford, Thomas McGuane, Tobias Wolff, Denis Johnson, Rick Bass, Russell Banks, John Casey, Andre Dubus, and Robert Stone. Chiefly males, though a possibly kindred stylistic restraint could be seen in Ann Beattie, Joy Williams, Amy Hempel, and others. This is not to argue that any of these writers were taking their cues right from Carver. Not at all. It was more that Carver manifested most purely and obviously a feeling about character and disillusionment that was at large in the culture. This was, historically, the aftermath of Vietnam, the period of counterculture in collapse, governed by a sense of moral bankruptcy of the kind Fitzgerald pointed to in the wake of the twenties. Many of our best writers were doing the barometric thing that artists do. And the prose style that came into favor—though there were notable exceptions—was one at which Carver excelled, a style of lyric suppression. Reading through Call If You Need Me, though, and thinking about the state of prose fiction in our very different moment, we cannot but remark the sea-change. That style of heart-struck understatement, of laden economies, appears to have been shouldered aside by a very different sort of expression, one that is complex, jumped-up, hypertrophied. The prose I am talking about —much of it—posits a kind of sentence that might be defined as the opposite of Carveresque: the sentence not as vehicle and gauge for cauterized affect, but rather as a sluice for ideas and neural discharge in overflow. Young writers like David Foster Wallace, Jonathan Franzen, Aleksandar Hemon, Rick Moody, Jeffrey Eugenides, Richard Powers, Donald Antrim, Michael Chabon, Helen DeWitt, David Eggers, and Nicholson Baker are shivering the timbers of the old declarative construction. They are, yes, to some extent following the lead of their seniors—stylists of surplus like Thomas Pynchon, William Gass, William Gaddis, Saul Bellow, Paul West, Annie Proulx, John Barth, Maureen Howard, Cynthia Ozick, among others—but this prose feels less like homage to the past than the announcement of something new. Where the old maximalists tended to open the gates of their prose to the myriad nouns and verbs of prodigal creation—to things and the complex procedures of the world—their younger counterparts are using the resources of their syntax just a bit more abstractly to address the phenomenon of a world in transformation. But we know them less as time goes on. For more and more people that regional solidity, that concrete centrality of place, has vaporized, and been transformed into a great transparency. There is a sense, via screen and wire, that the entire world is now a space traversed by signals, more a climate of pure possibility than a geographical elsewhere, and that it envelops us wherever we are, whatever we are doing. And that doing, our heritage of hands-on labor, of making our way among foursquare nouns, that too has changed in a seeming eyeblink. Our employments have increasingly to do with abstract operations—procedures feeding the inchoate processes of a world become significantly impulse and signal. In this scheme, Carver's tormented plainfolk would stagger about uncomprehendingly. Moreover, the core ethos, the dominant acting script, has slowly morphed from one of restraint to one of emotional volubility. We talk, confide, confess, process, and vent with an ease that our elders cannot fathom. Therapy culture on the one hand and the idea (not unrelated) that we are all entitled to our say on the other have changed our expressive expectations considerably. The public manifestation of this—unhappily served by a proliferation of channels—is a grotesque saturnalia of televised chatter, from political pundits, faith healers, and fitness experts, to the hordes of the aggrieved (many of whom would have been Carver folk in former times) who make their way to the microphone on the sets of Leeza, Oprah, Jessie, Maury, and others. Doubtless there are many other forces in play, but the upshot is the same. The ground, the cultural soil—that element that our writers represent and from which they draw—has been completely spaded up and turned since Carver's day. The writer who now picks up his pen—or, as is more likely, turns on his laptop—tunes in to a very different frequency. Understatement, once very nearly reflexive, sounds suddenly wrong. The held-back sentence looks almost funny on the page; there is a perceptible pressure to open out, annex, pull some of that overwhelming ambient complexity into the circuitry of the sentence. And if this is an exaggeration, it is nonetheless true enough to warrant our attention. Short sentences are—structurally—all alike. Every complicated sentence is complicated in its own way. Even a glance at some of the touted prose of recent years will confirm the new expressive plenitude—or chaos. The small anthology I have compiled will instantly suggest something of the range of possibility. Our friendship had itself, after twenty years, come to resemble one of the towns in a Van Zorn story: a structure erected, all unknowingly, on a very thin membrane of reality, beneath which lay an enormous slumbering Thing with one yellow eye already open and peering right up at us. To some degree, of course, this is a necessary and healthy compensation—fiction suddenly feels enfranchised again. With a new tolerance for ramified expression come new subjects, new perspectives. The dense fabric of contemporary life—its changed ways of doing things, of interacting—is brought more clearly into view. The evolving cultures of science and technology become available, as do more of the vagaries of our destabilized modes of living. Carver's tamped-down narration, guiding us from streetlamp to barstool to sparsely furnished apartment, could never hope to take in the burgeoning culture of virtual simulation (Powers), the domains of science (Goldstein), the endlessly branching nuances of psychological self-awareness (Antrim, Foster Wallace, Eggers), or indeed, scarcely anything of the noun-deprived and process-worshipping way we now conduct our lives. What is sacrificed, perhaps, is a certain emotional force. Thrilling and dark and expansive as so many of these new expressions are, they have a hard time generating a strong emotional charge. The language, mental and nuanced—like the prose structure itself—often serves a bemusedly ironic sensibility; life is more spectated than suffered. When tragedy does occur, it is more often than not given a black-comedic inflection—as in works by Wallace, Antrim, Eggers, and their ilk—not because the authors can't do powerful conflict and emotion, necessarily, but because the hyperconscious self-reflexiveness of their style is hard to turn off. The seductive cerebral-ironic style, which allows so much, doesn't seem to permit the shift to a full frontal seriousness. Which should, in a way, leave the back door open for Carver and his confederates. If his stories can seem limited and vocally plodding from the new perspective, the best of them can also deliver a shudder, a sense of being struck deep beneath the waterline, that the world of the more voluble young cannot quite manage. The trade-off is strange, perhaps telling: to get a visceral connection, it seems, a reader needs to get out of the mode of the now, back into what is likely to feel like the former world. What do you think? Discuss this article in |