Tone Clusters : The Joyce Carol Oates Discussion Group
October 1 to 15, 1997



Date: Wed, 01 Oct 1997 19:47:01 -0400
From: "Ralf A. Engeldinger" oatesian@feynman.harvard.edu
To: jco@usfca.edu
Subject: Re: "Where are you going..."

Harvey Diamond wrote:
> 
> Now, would Joyce Carol Oates ever say that "Some teachers aren't up to
> the intellectual task."? (let alone "some readers"!)

You obviously never read that piece in the New Yorker where she reports
her attempts to confirm her invitation to a screening of a movie based
on a novel by Walter Mosley.

Ralf A. Engeldinger


Date: Wed, 01 Oct 1997 18:30:15 +0000 From: Francie Schwartz fabela@gte.net To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: "Where are you going..." ... But I have read that piece, and it was unforgettable, so very jco. Francie
To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: "Where are you going..." From: composer2@juno.com (David C. Chaudoir) Date: Wed, 01 Oct 1997 21:05:58 EDT Would the movie be "Devil In A Blue Dress?" Yes it would. JCO was invited to the premiere, heh? And did she go; did she want to go? Curious -- movies not such an intellectual venue, at least stereotypically. Especially Walter Mosely! More info, please! David C. Berrien Springs, MI On Wed, 01 Oct 1997 19:47:01 -0400 "Ralf A. Engeldinger" writes: >Harvey Diamond wrote: >> >> Now, would Joyce Carol Oates ever say that "Some teachers aren't up >to >> the intellectual task."? (let alone "some readers"!) > >You obviously never read that piece in the New Yorker where she >reports >her attempts to confirm her invitation to a screening of a movie based >on a novel by Walter Mosley. > >Ralf A. Engeldinger >
From: diamond@math.wvu.edu (Harvey Diamond) Subject: Re: "Where are you going..." To: jco@usfca.edu Date: Thu, 2 Oct 1997 17:17:29 -0400 (EDT) No, I never read that piece. It obviously has something to do with what I wrote, though. Perhaps it'll provide some guidance on when to sneer, eh? Harvey Diamond > > Harvey Diamond wrote: > > > > Now, would Joyce Carol Oates ever say that "Some teachers aren't up to > > the intellectual task."? (let alone "some readers"!) > > You obviously never read that piece in the New Yorker where she reports > her attempts to confirm her invitation to a screening of a movie based > on a novel by Walter Mosley. > > Ralf A. Engeldinger >
Date: Thu, 2 Oct 1997 23:43:11 -0400 (EDT) From: Bryan M Valentine To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Confused? 1. In paragraph 12 of "Against Nature", Joyce Carol Oates calls "wonderfully consoling" (and, she implies, false) the usual way of considering Nature "as human, if not dilettante, experience." What does she mean by "dilettante" and why does she use that word here? 2. In paragraph 15 of "Against Nature", Joyce Carol Oates refers to "our first mother's awakening to the self's fatal beauty" in Milton's "Paradise Lost." What does she mean by "our first mother" in connection with this passage from Milton? 3. In paragraph 19 of "Against Nature", Joyce Carol Oates quotes Oscar Wilde, who is referring to a beautiful evening sky as "simply a very second-rate Turner, a Turner of a bad period." What does Wilde mean by "a Turner"? I am the Resident Director here at the University of Pittsburgh at Greensburg and I need these questions answered to completely understand the reading. Thank you for your time. Bryan M. Valentine Resident Director
From: Cyranomish@aol.com Date: Fri, 3 Oct 1997 07:18:22 -0400 (EDT) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: "Where are you going..." Harvey, would you please give us the New Yorker reference for that piece concerning the Walter Mosley book/film? I'd like to read it. Thanks, Cyrano.
Date: Fri, 03 Oct 1997 11:38:45 -0700 From: Randy Souther Randy Souther To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: Confused? Bryan M Valentine wrote: > 1. In paragraph 12 of "Against Nature", Joyce Carol Oates > calls > "wonderfully consoling" (and, she implies, false) the > usual way of > considering Nature "as human, if not dilettante, > experience." What does > she mean by "dilettante" and why does she use that word > here? I assume she means that most people's idea of "experiencing"Nature is not unlike the way a tourist "experiences" another culture--as if Nature were some amusement park which you can visit on the weekends and bring home photographs to show that you were "there." > > > 2. In paragraph 15 of "Against Nature", Joyce Carol Oates > refers to "our > first mother's awakening to the self's fatal beauty" in > Milton's "Paradise > Lost." What does she mean by "our first mother" in > connection with this > passage from Milton? I seem to have missed this passage--I'm reading the essay as collectedin (WOMAN) WRITER. Perhaps you have a different version? > > > 3. In paragraph 19 of "Against Nature", Joyce Carol Oates > quotes Oscar > Wilde, who is referring to a beautiful evening sky as > "simply a very > second-rate Turner, a Turner of a bad period." What does > Wilde mean by "a > Turner"? J.M.W. Turner (1775-1851) English painter, known, apparently,for his atmospheric landscapes. Nature filtered through Art is better than Nature? Or we see Nature only through the filter of Art. Randy
Date: Fri, 03 Oct 1997 20:15:11 -0400 From: "Ralf A. Engeldinger" oatesian@feynman.harvard.edu To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: "Where are you going..." David C. Chaudoir wrote: > > Would the movie be "Devil In A Blue Dress?" Yes it would. She didn't give the name of the movie. > JCO was > invited to the premiere, heh? Yes. > And did she go; Presumably, but she seemed to have written it before the actual event. > did she want to go? Sure, that's what got the whole thing started. > Curious -- movies not such an intellectual venue, at least > stereotypically. Especially Walter Mosely! More info, please! I don't have the copy here, thus I can't give you the reference. Maybe Francie can help. Suffice it to say that the Roger S. Berlind Professor for Creative Writing is not always above raising her eyebrows at the literarily (and aurally) impaired, especially those in LA, especially those at TriStar offices. Ralf A. Engeldinger
Date: Fri, 03 Oct 1997 19:46:36 +0000 From: Francie Schwartz fabela@gte.net To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: "Where are you going..." Thanks Ralf, for thinking i've kept track of jco's New Yorker stuff - but I don't have the date for you on the "invitation" brouhaha. It was in "SHOUTS & MURMURS" - the back page. Maybe I can find out from NYorker. I'll try... I've saved every issue with anything of value in it, so it's probably in my personal "stacks"... Francie
From: Cyranomish@aol.com Date: Fri, 3 Oct 1997 18:18:13 -0400 (EDT) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: Confused? Hi Bryan, "First mother." Well, who in the Bible -- would you suppose to be "our first mother"? Chances are she's the first female mentioned in the Bible. Go for it! Cyrano.
Date: Fri, 03 Oct 1997 19:46:51 -0700 From: Randy Souther Randy Souther To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: New Yorker article Cyranomish@aol.com wrote: > Harvey, would you please give us the New Yorker reference > for that piece > concerning the Walter Mosley book/film? I'd like to read > it. Thanks, Cyrano. I believe the article you're trying to locate is the following: Phone Hex New Yorker Sep 4 1995 p102 Randy
To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: New Yorker article From: composer2@juno.com (David C. Chaudoir) Date: Sat, 04 Oct 1997 09:59:32 EDT Randy, You are a walking Joyce Carol Oates dictionary. Wow! How could you reference an article like that from so far back? I'm impressed! David Michigan
To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: New Yorker Article From: composer2@juno.com (David C. Chaudoir) Date: Sat, 04 Oct 1997 09:59:32 EDT If it's not too long, Francince, perhaps you would key it in for those of us who have been New Yorker-illterate of late (the past 4 years!). Thanks. David C. Michigan
Date: Sat, 04 Oct 1997 07:18:39 +0000 From: Francie Schwartz fabela@gte.net To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: New Yorker Article If I find it in the stacks, which I'll be searching this morning for the recent Kinsey bio, yes, I will. francie
Date: Sat, 04 Oct 1997 14:07:47 +0000 From: Francie Schwartz fabela@gte.net To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: New Yorker Article Dear David: I was going to re-organize my NYorker stacks anyway, so please don't think I'm in a huff about this - the issue with jco's "Phone Hex" piece must be one of the three issues I DIDN'T save from 1995. Drat. But then I realized: if Randy knows the date of publication and the page number, why doesn't HE key it in so we can all relax? Or scan it onto the mailing list. Whatever! It was really a very light, funny piece about the way moviedom and its PR minions have no clue how to deal with jco, by telephone, or apparently, in translating her work to the screen... I remember when the "operator" says "Joyce who?" Plus the Op doesn't even know who Moseley is, either. Back to work. Francie
To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: New Yorker Article From: composer2@juno.com (David C. Chaudoir) Date: Sun, 05 Oct 1997 12:32:35 EDT Good Idea Francince! Randy, could you key in the New Yorker article about JCO and the movie premiere? It would be SOOO much appreciated! Thanks. Thanks for all your work, Francince! David
To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Where are you going... From: composer2@juno.com (David C. Chaudoir) Date: Mon, 06 Oct 1997 21:56:35 EDT I would just like to get the discussion on "Where are you going, Where have you been?" up and running again. Somehow I deleted all the interpretations recently posted about it, and would appreciate others' imput about its meaning, and particularly to the signifigance of Oates's use of the name "Friend" as Arnold's last name, as well as a general analysis for the story. I am currently discussing it in a university literary analysis course and would love to share your thoughts with the class. Thanks as always. David Michigan
Date: Mon, 06 Oct 1997 20:39:26 -0700 From: Randy Souther Randy Souther To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: New Yorker Article Francie Schwartz wrote: > But then I realized: if Randy knows the date of > publication and the page > number, why doesn't HE key it in so we can all relax? Or > scan it onto > the mailing list. Whatever! > > It is true: we at Celestial Timepiece have all JCO trivia memorized. And we do enjoy watching the discussion group scramble for texts. However, we do aim to please, so here, forthwith, is the much- discussed "Phone Hex." ;-) PHONE HEX Joyce Carol Oates New Yorker, 9-4-95, p102 "DEAR FRIEND, the invitation reads." "You are cordially invited to a special screening for our upcoming TriStar Pictures presentation 'Devil in a Blue Dress.'" What welcome news! You're an admiring acquaintance of the mystery writer Walter Mosley, from whose best-selling novel the film has been made, so you R.S.V.P. at once, setting into motion the ensuing exchange-much abbreviated in this space, and from memory. "Publicity, Columbia TriStar," a youngish-sounding woman announces, already a bit impatient, so you give your name, explaining that you're accepting the invitation to the screenin g of "Devil in a Blue Dress." The young woman says, "Who? How do you spell Your name?" You spell out your name carefully, last name first. Irritated, the young woman says, "Which name is that? I can't hear you, ma'am." So you raise your voice gamely and spell out your name again, stumbling a little bit at this higher volume. "Listen, I can't hear you, it's like you're long distance," the woman says. "You're gonna have to speak up." So you raise your voice by several decibles, veins tremulous in your throat, and the woman interrupts, "All right! No need to shout, Ma'am!" So You apologize-you, who so rarely shout that the experience has left your vocal cords raw- and she interrupts, "Listen, Ma'am, you weren't shouting. That was a scream. You were screaming in my ear!"--So you naturally apologize again. You've begun to perspire-you, who so rarely perspire--and there's that dull throbbing of a migraine coming on, like a leaf-blower just revving up in the near distance. "Affiliation?" the woman asks, brusquely. You draw a blank: "Affiliation?" "Are you TriStar, or Mystery Writers, or what?" "Well, I don't know--" "Don't know your affiliation, Ma'am? What's your affiliation?" "Well, possibly-" "Speak up! I can't hearyou!" "Possibly Walter Mosley invited me? I can't think who else would have invited me." "Who, Ma'am?" "Walter Mosley-the author." "The who?" "The author." "What's that name?" "Wal-ter Mos-ley. You know, the-" "'Wadder' what? How do you spell that?" "Walter Mosley, the author of'Devil in a Blue Dress'? You must know his name?" "Ma'am, I asked how do you spell that?" "W-a-l-t-e-" "Is that first name, last name, or what?" "'Walter' is his first name. W-a-l-t-e-r" "Ma'am, I can't hear you, it's like you're long distance. You're gonna have to speak up." "W-a-l-t-e-r M-o-s-" "No need to scream in my ear, Ma'am! Break my eardrum!" "But you can't seem to hear-" "I can hear fine, Ma'am, without you screaming." "I'm sorry! I'll try again. You asked for my affiliation, and I'm giving you the author's name, Walter Mosley." "I said spell that, will you?" "WALTER MOSLEY-he's the author of the novel-" "0.K, I'm putting you down for 'Mystery Writers.' " "Thank you." A sharp click in your ear. The young woman has hung up. A week later, on the eve of the screening, the phone rings. A man says, "Walter Moses, please." "Walter Moses? There's no one heer by that name," you say. "Which number is that there?" the man asks, annoyed. "Which number are you calling?" you counter. The man pauses, as if re-thinking his approach. "I'm calling to confirm your reservation for the screening of 'Devil in a Blue Dress tomorrow night," he says. "Oh, well--yes," you say, catching on, almost. "Except you're not calling Walter Moses, you're calling-" and you provide him with your three-pronged name, which, unexpectedly, he doesn't ask you to spell. You explain that you are coming to the screening, but that "Mr. Moses" won't be accompanying you. And you can't resist adding (oh, why can't you leave well enough alone?), "But the name isn't Walter Moses, in any case." "The who?" "The author. Author." "Who's that?" "Walter Mosley." "That's who?" "The person who wrote the novel the film is based on, Walter Mosley." There's a baffled pause. "What about him?" the man asks, and your mind has gone blank, as if a great thumb has pressed 'ERASE' or were moving even now to do so.
From: smancin1@ix.netcom.com Date: Tue, 7 Oct 1997 16:51:45 -0500 (CDT) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: upon the sweeping flood Anyone, I am going to discuss "Upon the Sweeping Flood" in my fiction group tomorrow. My reading of this short story is simply that Stuart recognizes the evil in nature in himself after confronting it in the flood. This causes him to act on it in the violent fashion he chooses. The collapse of the house is the collapse of his faith in goodness and order, and the snakes signify evil as well as the capacity to remake oneself. Does anyone care to add to that? I appreciate all of your careful insights. SMB
To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: New Yorker Article From: composer2@juno.com (David C. Chaudoir) Date: Tue, 07 Oct 1997 19:26:26 EDT thanks randy -- a great article! david
To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: upon the sweeping flood From: composer2@juno.com (David C. Chaudoir) Date: Tue, 07 Oct 1997 19:26:26 EDT good story... but i am interested in anyone's views (i know you're tired of this) on where are you going, where have you been. please! the best, david michigan
Date: Tue, 7 Oct 1997 19:42:42 +0100 To: jco@usfca.edu From: chgrgrl@widomaker.com (Pitard) Subject: "Where..." I know that this has been discussed previously, but hopefully someone is okay with me opening it again. I wrote to Randy Monday night, desparate for answers, and he was gracious enough to send me to the discussion list. Thanks! I see that people agree that the "code" on Arnold Friend's car means '69'. However, you all don't agree why he has that. Does anyone think like me, in the fact that he wrote that because he is older and trying to get her to think on his level? (whatever that might be!) It is funny because I thought of it meaning "69" but I couldn't think of why! Also, I am studying to be a high school English teacher. Would this story be appropriate for them?? Let me know and thanks for you help... Katie
From: Murray72@aol.com Date: Tue, 7 Oct 1997 19:50:34 -0400 (EDT) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: "Where are you going..." I am curious: Of those who've read the story, how many thought Connie's encounter with Arnold Friend was a dream, and who thought it really happened? Christine Murray
From: Murray72@aol.com Date: Tue, 7 Oct 1997 20:01:04 -0400 (EDT) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: Where are you going... In a literature class I took, the teacher guessed that it was a dream Connie had. She had been laying out in the sun, remember, and it certainly had dream qualities. Arnold Friend might have been a garbled "Our old friend", something the radio announcer might have said. Christine Murray \I would just like to get the discussion on "Where are you going, Where \have you been?" up and running again. Somehow I deleted all the \interpretations recently posted about it, and would appreciate others' \imput about its meaning, and particularly to the signifigance of Oates's \use of the name "Friend" as Arnold's last name, as well as a general \analysis for the story. I am currently discussing it in a university \literary analysis course and would love to share your thoughts with the \class. Thanks as always. \David \Michigan
Date: Tue, 7 Oct 1997 17:40:54 -0700 To: jco@usfca.edu From: Nikki Senecal Subject: Re: "Where are you going..." >I am curious: Of those who've read the story, how many thought Connie's >encounter with Arnold Friend was a dream, and who thought it really happened? Why would it matter? What are the implications that are raised if we read the story as "true" or having happened? Which ones are no longer present if we think it was all a dream? Are we doing students' homework again? Nikki Department of English University of Southern California Los Angeles, CA 90089-0354 Internet: senecal@scf-fs.usc.edu
Date: Tue, 07 Oct 1997 22:09:04 -0400 From: "Thomas A. Hulslander" To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: "Where are you going..." Murray72@aol.com wrote: > > I am curious: Of those who've read the story, how many thought Connie's > encounter with Arnold Friend was a dream, and who thought it really happened? > > Christine Murray I think it really happened--for Connie, it was slow-moving, like a dream, but that is what makes the story's impact so profound. By the time her realization hits, it is too late...she looks around the house, thinking of her sister, her parents, and knows that she will not return. She wants it to be a dream, but it is not....
From: Amy_Hendrick@baylor.edu Date: Wed, 08 Oct 1997 09:07:22 -0500 Subject: Re: Where are you going... To: jco@usfca.edu >In a literature class I took, the teacher guessed that it was a dream Connie >had. She had been lying out in the sun, remember, and it certainly had >dream qualities. Arnold Friend might have been a garbled "Our old friend", >something the radio announcer might have said. > >Christine Murray How about Arnold Friend as "A(r)n old friend," a name we might presume to have been chosen by the character for its supposed subliminal appeal, like the numbers on the car? To the person who is wondering if it might be suitable high school material: my brother was introduced to the story in a first-year junior college class, to great effect. The story seems to generate lively class discussion no matter what the setting, although obviously some high school students might need a lot of prompting and preparation Christine Cavitt
Date: Wed, 8 Oct 1997 09:58:13 -0500 To: jco@usfca.edu From: Ray Lewis White rlwhite@ilstu.edu Subject: Re: upon the sweeping flood For a wonderful topic for a student paper, compare "Where Are You Going..." to eecummings' poem in just spring Both about innocence inevitably becoming maturity/knowledge/sex/ etc. Cheers! BENE FACERE SED BONUM
Date: Wed, 08 Oct 1997 19:02:49 -0400 From: "Ralf A. Engeldinger" oatesian@feynman.harvard.edu To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: "Where are you going..." Murray72@aol.com wrote: > > I am curious: Of those who've read the story, how many thought Connie's > encounter with Arnold Friend was a dream, and who thought it really happened? Answering this question implies imposing a frame on the story which is not given or intended (or even implied) by the author. The story is a work of fiction and not an account of an actual event. Since there is no "real" Connie, one cannot ask whether she actually experienced the series of events or whether she just dreamed about it. Ralf A. Engeldinger
From: composer2@juno.com To: jco@usfca.edu Date: Thu, 9 Oct 1997 07:51:20 -0400 Subject: Re: "Where are you going..." CERTAIN PLOT SUB-STRUCTURES AND DRAMATIC IRONY IMPLY THAT POSSIBLY CONNIE IS DREAMING THE EVENTS W/ ARNOLD FRIEND. IT IS WRONG TO SAY THAT ANY ONE INTERPRETATION IS WRONG. THE DREAM INTERPRETATION OF "WHERE ARE YOU GOING" IS WIDELY HELD AMONG LITERARY CRITICS, ALTHOUGH NOT AS MUCH AS OTHER INTERPRETATIONS. CHECK IT OUT. DAVID MICHIGAN
Date: Wed, 08 Oct 1997 21:05:15 -0400 From: "Ralf A. Engeldinger" oatesian@feynman.harvard.edu To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: "Where are you going..." Does that invalidate anything I said? Ralf
Date: Wed, 08 Oct 1997 19:54:14 -0700 From: Randy Souther Randy Souther To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: "Where are you going..." Ralf A. Engeldinger wrote: > Murray72@aol.com wrote: > > > > I am curious: Of those who've read the story, how many thought > Connie's > > encounter with Arnold Friend was a dream, and who thought it > really happened? > > Answering this question implies imposing a frame on the story > which is > not given or intended (or even implied) by the author. The story > is > a work of fiction and not an account of an actual event. Since > there is > no > "real" Connie, one cannot ask whether she actually experienced > the > series of events or whether she just dreamed about it. > > I can't see Connie's experience as being a dream--it would seem to blunt the significance of her "demise"--which is to say, she would have none, but simply wake up. Nonetheless, I do think it's a perfectly reasonable question to ask and explore. That it is a work of fiction and therefore not "real" enough to even ask the question seems a rather disingenuous suggestion. I mean, why then discuss it at all? I am struck by the incongruity of the ending: Connie is presumably going to her death, yet the landscape to which she is crossing is described in glowing terms. I believe this has been discussed in the criticism. In any case, I have found it helpful to read this ending (and to read many of JCO's earlier works) in the light of her essay "New Heaven and Earth." http://storm.usfca.edu/~southerr/earth.html It opens: "In spite of current free-roaming terrors in this country, it is really not the case that we are approaching some apocalyptic close. Both those who seem to be awaiting it with excitement and dread and those who are trying heroically to comprehend it in terms of recent American history are mistaking a crisis of transition for a violent end." I would argue (and I don't believe this is original with me) that you can see Connie's "end" as just such a transition. Randy
Date: Wed, 08 Oct 1997 20:11:21 +0000 From: Francie Schwartzfabela@gte.net To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: "Where are you going..." Thank you, Randy. As usual, jco herself provides cogent "answers" all over the place. As a writer, I particularly enjoy the interpretations of those who are NOT bound by the standard criticisms. My mother remembered a phrase from somewhere that has been glowing transcendant in my head for days... "permission of interpretation". And ralf, I liked your take very much. I will answer the question you asked me several days ago when I get a break. Very hectic week! Francie
Date: Thu, 09 Oct 1997 13:49:10 -0400 From: "Ralf A. Engeldinger" To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Musings about Interpretations Randy Souther wrote: > > Nonetheless, I do think it's a perfectly > reasonable > question to ask and explore. I was merely illuminating the semantical setting implied by the question. My point is that simply reading it as a dream implies constructing this frame I alluded to, and thus any naive adoption of a dream interpretation (i.e. one unaware of this) is misleading. In principle, one can make of any "text" whatever one likes to. I mean, "Black Water" could be read as the nightmare of a manic depressive, couldn't it? (Ignoring the Real World connection of the story.) Doesn't the constant iteration of certain sequences, among other things, make this rather plausible? In other words, a dream interpretation is a speculation adding an exterior element to the narrative. A critic who maintains to be taken seriously has to be aware of that and acknowledge it. An immediate consequence of this is that such an interpretation can never be more than an option and can't possibly claim universal validity because the exterior element is by its very nature subjective, since added by the reader - or left out. This seriously limits the usefulness of the concept for interpretations. Nor do I deem it necessary since this author, for one, provides more than enough structure with the narrative itself for the reader/critic to dwell on. > I am struck by the incongruity of the ending: Connie is presumably > going to her death, I have to admit that I feel that this interpretation is imposed on me by critics. I take the ending as it stands. I do not see any need to rationalize or "translate" this (or any, for that matter) story into some kind of underlying "denotative" plot of events that can be reported objectively. I cherish the literary medium (as utilized by thus inclined, gifted authors) for the absence of such necessity. To be honest, for me the "artistic" or "literary" quality of writing begins where the need for such rationalization ends. In this sense, (explicit) interpretation inevitably trivializes literature. (This is not to be constructed as an implicit criticism of interpreting or discussing writings. It is not directed at anyone, it's merely a "musing", if you like. Thinking out loud.) Ralf A. Engeldinger
Date: Thu, 09 Oct 1997 11:49:11 +0000 From: Francie Schwartz fabela@gte.net To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: Musings about Interpretations Hear, Hear! Ralf, I thank you for saying that criticism, especially "credentialed" criticism, has a trivializing effect. I have published a memoir that reads like fiction, sold (but aborted just before publication due to editorial revolt) a novel, published dozens of non-fiction feature articles (mostly humorous counter-culture journalism) and written a few short stories. I am currently working on a nonfiction project that deals with the current schizophrenic ethics of literature (including academic) and art. Sorry I took so long to answer - I am always flattered to be asked, especially in this distinguished forum. I have been extremely busy moving, setting up my new office, and finishing a proposal. I look forward to your next post. Francie
From: Amy_Hendrick@baylor.edu Date: Fri, 10 Oct 1997 10:37:20 +0000 Subject: Re: "Where are you going..." To: jco@usfca.edu On Fri, 10 Oct 1997 09:50:33 -0400 (EDT) jco@usfca.edu wrote: >\Since there is >\no >\"real" Connie, one cannot ask whether she actually experienced the >\series of events or whether she just dreamed about it. > >\Ralf A. Engeldinger > I don't mean to corner you, but I am curious: if we were to be constantly aware only of the artifice in a story, what would then be discussable? Your view seems to allow only for a narrow, particular kind of deconstructive interpretation. Perhaps I misunderstand--please explain! Christine Cavitt
From: Murray72@aol.com Date: Fri, 10 Oct 1997 09:43:22 -0400 (EDT) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: "Where are you going..." \I am struck by the incongruity of the ending: Connie is presumably \going to her death, yet the landscape to which she is crossing is \described in glowing terms. I interpreted the landscape behind Arnold Friend as representing adulthood, for which she was leaving adolescence. But then, I also thought it was all a dream. Christine Murray
From: Murray72@aol.com Date: Fri, 10 Oct 1997 09:50:33 -0400 (EDT) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: "Where are you going..." \Since there is \no \"real" Connie, one cannot ask whether she actually experienced the \series of events or whether she just dreamed about it. \Ralf A. Engeldinger I was simply curious as to what other people thought about it. Is it your place to decide what "one cannot ask"? I thought this group was for discussion, and if you think my question wasn't worthy of discussing-THEN DON'T ANSWER IT. Sorry to get defensive, Christine
From: Ehaggar@aol.com Date: Fri, 10 Oct 1997 13:46:28 -0400 (EDT) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: "Where are you going..." Hi! I am new to the list so perhaps I shouldn't jump right in; but Joyce Carol Oates was at the College of Charleston two years ago, and in a speech there said that "Where Are You Going..." is supposed to show Connie in a dream-like state, but that we are to understand that this is really happening and that Connie is going to be killed when she goes of with Arnold Ellen Haggar
Date: Fri, 10 Oct 1997 13:59:19 -0400 From: "Ralf A. Engeldinger" oatesian@feynman.harvard.edu To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: "Where are you going..." > >\Since there is > >\no > >\"real" Connie, one cannot ask whether she actually experienced the > >\series of events or whether she just dreamed about it. > > > >\Ralf A. Engeldinger > > > > I don't mean to corner you, but I am curious: if we were to be constantly aware > only of the artifice in a story, what would then be discussable? Your view > seems to allow only for a narrow, particular kind of deconstructive > interpretation. Perhaps I misunderstand--please explain! > Christine Cavitt Yes, you misunderstood. I don't consider the story as artifice, but that doesn't mean it can be "interpreted" in whatever way somebody might please. I think it's necessary to distinguish between an entirely subjective reading, where everything is allowed in principle, but no argument or general validity claim is possible at all, and anything one intends to argue for and insist on when being challenged. As pointed out in my "Musings" post, an appropriate approach to the literary medium requires a sharp distinction of what is contained in the narrative and what is not; as far as I am concerned this is indispensible as an expression of respect for the author, respect for the community with which one wants to enter a discussion and of one's own intellectual integrity as well as one's respect of that of others. There are only few things I detest more than incapability to properly distinguish between subjective and "objective" (what one can reasonably expect others to accept on the grounds of insight and honesty) or refusal to do so. An argument that the narrative itself allows a dream interpretation cannot be uphold due to failure of sheer semantic consistency which I described in previous posts, alone (if for no other reasons). (This is how I wanted the "one cannot ask" to be understood.) A sincere argument for that interpretation requires the acknowledgement that this actually amounts to an extention of the story - which nobody is obliged to adopt. Ralf A. Engeldinger
To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Literary Analysis From: composer2@juno.com (David C. Chaudoir) Date: Sat, 11 Oct 1997 01:46:13 EDT As a professional literary critic, I have authored and adopted the following thesis for those who analyze literature, and perhaps it will end, at least temporarily, the youthful bickering over who's right and who's wrong (and why neither one is correct): "The defining and appealing aspect of good literature is that it speaks to all who read it, and that no one's interpretation is ' wrong.' " David Michigan
Date: Sat, 11 Oct 1997 06:08:05 +0000 From: Francie Schwartz fabela@gte.net To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: Literary Analysis Bingo. I am grateful, as one who has had plenty of nasty professional criticism tossed at my work, to see that there is at least one critic who has a decent foundation for his approach. Francie
To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: Literary Analysis From: composer2@juno.com (David C. Chaudoir) Date: Sat, 11 Oct 1997 19:52:29 EDT Francine: Believe it or not, there are people who analyze and critique my REVIEWS!!! Isn't that absurd? Or perhaps it's just the literary equivalent of checks and balances, and if so, let it be. As far as nasty reviews go, I don't believe in them. Personal attacks are unnecessary (as the NY Times Book Review has done to JCO of late, and Norman Mailer for years). Speaking of NY Times, they need to get rid of some of those critics with the personal vengeance! Perhaps I would be available to fill the positions. :-)
From: Cyranomish@aol.com Date: Sun, 12 Oct 1997 17:02:56 -0400 (EDT) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: "Where are you going..." Hi Ellen, welcome to the discussion group. Thanks for the info on Oates's own recent interpretation of "Where Are You Going." The sentence at the story's end: "so much land that Connie had never seen before and did not recognize except to know that she was going to it" -- always seemed extremely ominous to me; it suggests shallow graves; and that old expression "gone to earth" which is a euphemism for death. On the primary level of the story I've always thought that Connie will not survive her ride with Arnold, unlike the movie version in which Arnold is merely a dream figure and a steppingstone for Connie to maturity and sexual self-actualization. A few weeks ago someone in these pages said that Connie achieves "vaginal awareness." I think there's a lot more to the story than that since Connie is already getting to be a randy young lady before she meets Arnold. Oates used to drive me crazy the way she juxtaposes sex and death (as in that early story title of hers: "What Death with Love Should Have to Do" in the colection "Upon the Sweeping Flood." ) This is psychic territory loaded with landmines. Why do lovers so often turn up in the tabloids in murder-suicide pacts? It's very baffling. We just had a trial here in Boston about a 15 year-old boy who slaughtered his 48 year-old neighbor because he had a morbid crush on her and had been stalking her for months before he sneaked into her house one afternoon, found her napping on her sofa, and stabbed her 98 times. I find Oates's explorations in the murder/sex line fascinating; few other writers explore it as intelligently and thoroughly as she does. Cyrano
From: Cyranomish@aol.com Date: Sun, 12 Oct 1997 17:13:18 -0400 (EDT) To: jco@usfca.edu Subject: Re: ee cummings Hi Ray. YES. Those little goat-footed balloon men will get you every time. Cyrano
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