Tone Clusters : The Joyce Carol Oates Discussion Group
January 16 to 31, 1998



Subject:  Re: Just to say hi!
Date:  Fri, 16 Jan 1998 17:12:28 +0900
 From:   "±è*±Çü" 
To:jco@usfca.edu

Dear Sue, very pleased to meet you, really.
Your Simson and JCO analogy was great, wow!
Anyway, I tried to find some nice Korean-teaching software for you,
but I'm afraid there's no such great program out in the market yet.
However, I could mail you very nice books of any kind, if you are
interested.
Let's keep in touch.

Kim


Subject: Mothers and Daughters Date: Fri, 16 Jan 1998 17:31:11 +0900 From: "±Ëº±«," To: "¡∂¿ÃOmega∫ ƒ≥Σ- ø¿√~ ±◊ΣÏ" jco@usfca.edu Cyrano, Yes. But I suppose I should have elaborated the question. You know I only read two of her numerous works. Coincidentally the mother-daughter relationships in the two novels were very similar. A sexually prominent mother and a very introverted daughter. Besides, father is literally and psychologically absent. On Randy's site I read JCO saying in an interview concerning Because It Is Bitter that the book is largely based on her own experience. And then you also said that this peculiar mother-daughter relationships are repeated in her works. So I was just wondering if it's related to her bios or something. Guess your answer is no. ;) Kim
Subject: Re: Mothers and Daughters Date: Fri, 16 Jan 1998 12:38:13 EST From: Cyranomish Cyranomish@aol.com To: jco@usfca.edu Correction: The story "Images" appears in the book BY THE NORTH GATE, not UPON THE SWEEPING FLOOD. Cyrano
Subject: Re: Mothers and Daughters Date: Fri, 16 Jan 1998 11:59:10 EST From: Cyranomish Cyranomish@aol.com To: jco@usfca.edu Hi, Kim. Actually, I would assume that JCO's experiences as a daughter are very important in her writing. In CHILDWOLD we find a mother who usually gives way to her strong-minded daughter. But in the majority of her works, the mother is the dominent one. There's an early JCO story in the collection UPON THE SWEEPING FLOOD called "Images," which has settled the whole biography-mother-daughter issue for me. In the story, the young heroine is talking with a teacher about her home life and says about her mother: "She hates me for having a mind different than hers. But she loves me, she cherishes me!...She doesn't drink milk anymore, to save money -- she SAYS she has hers in the morning. But she really doesn't want us to know. She would keep it to herself -- secret -- she doesn't even know it SHOULD be secret. She doesn't know how she gives herself. She doesn't even know it!" Then, a few pages later, the speaker changes her attitude 180-degrees: "She would like to run at her mother, scream accusations. Why is my body so thin? Why am I so ugly? To her mother's despair, she would continue: Because you drank all the milk when I was little! Drank it all! There was none left for me to grow on!" I think this story is a wonderful example of the ambivalence inherent in the parent/child relation. One minute it seems Mother was a model of self- sacrifice, then another memory comes to mind that makes Mother seem like a bad, selfish parent. Which one is true? Both? Neither? We're left with the stuff of great fiction. Cyrano
Subject: Joining the Group Date: Wed, 21 Jan 1998 16:25:20 -0800 (PST) From: joyce l merritt jlm29260@email.csun.edu Hello, group. I've been following the discussion at Randy's website for a few months, waiting in the hope that I might get E-mail at home, but it hasn't happened yet. Now I've gotten to the point that I can't stand not joining the group, so I've done it through my wife's university E-mail account, which I have to use at the library. You're a very interesting and fun group to read. I notice that (as of the last thing posted when I looked at the web site today) no one has taken Randy's bait and commented on the "Man Crazy"-related quotes from JCO that he put in. In fact, I notice that the group generally seems to have avoided discussing "Man Crazy". Is this because everyone dislikes the book? I don't dislike it myself (though it's not exactly the kind of book that you "like" in the conventional sense), and I'm inclined to think that it represent's a trend on JCO's part. You could almost say that "Man Crazy" and "Foxfire" are a series parallel to the Gothic series. Perhaps the new series could be called the "True Confessions" or "Tabloid" series, because JCO uses deliberately sensationalistic plots and deliberately awkward first person writing styles. But I think that, with these books, she is, in part, reclaiming something for "literature", as she has done in a different way in the "Gothic" books. Does this make sense to anyone else? Steve
Subject: Welcome, Steve, and a comment Date: Wed, 21 Jan 1998 16:34:48 +0000 From: "F. Schwartz" fabela@gte.net To: jco@usfca.edu Nice to have a new guy among us. I was struck by the quote that Randy posted. JCO's description of the masochistic streak in women really resonated for me; in fact, I used part of it in a women's discussion group, to support my argument on a related subject. Indeed, jco really knows about the eroticism of victimization, quite apart from man-bashing. Guess I'll have to read MAN CRAZY before I comment further on Steve's interesting contribution. Francie
Subject: FOXFIRE, MAN CRAZY SERIES Date: Wed, 21 Jan 1998 20:27:06 EST From: composer2@juno.com To: jco@usfca.edu Steve, I don't know what it is that JCO might be "claiming" from literature, I think MAN CRAZY's only real predecessor could be FOXFIRE, and lo and behold, it's the same author. I cannot think immediately of what you might mean by "claiming"--unless you are using it like claiming new land. In the pioneering sense, yes yes yes yes yes! It is definitely true. FOXFIRE is a brutal, in-your-face, unforgettable book--MAN CRAZY is more forgettable, I think, but in a way I buy your "series" notion. Whether or not it is conscious, you may be correct about that. In fact, the more I mull it over, your argument is very valid. No matter what, JCO has given us a lot of literature that has pioneered the way for other works. Your "series" idea definitely makes sense. I think I will skim over FOXFIRE again this evening and give it some more thought. David C. Michigan p.s. -- Has anyone read any Alan Paton books here? I am currently reading Alexander's biography of him.
Subject: Re: Joining the Group Date:Thu, 22 Jan 1998 08:38:26 EST From: Cyranomish Cyranomish@aol.com To: jco@usfca.edu Hi, Steve. Welcome. I too was interested in Randy's new offering on JCO. In recent years I've noticed how attracted some women -- young, highly-educated women -- are to "mean" men. It's unnerving. I'm about to head out of town til Monday, but look forward to discussing MAN CRAZY further with the group. Bye, Cyrano
Subject: Re: Joining the Group Date: Thu, 22 Jan 98 09:10:57 From: "Frank Malgesini" fmalgesi@uach.mx To: jco@usfca.edu Hello Steve I can`t respond to your comments about Man Crazy because I haven`t read it but I want to mention that Foxfire seemed to me to be a departure for Joyce Carol Oates. As I was reading it I thought of it as a children`s story in that the good characters were good and the bad characters were really bad. Only at the end when Foxfire began to become morally ambiguous did their victims also begin to become more complex. I think Foxfire is a very good book but it is not intended as realistic fiction -more like a mythic construction or perhaps a moral allegory. Frank Frank Malgesini fmalgesi@uach.mx Facultad de Filosofia y Letras Universidad Autonoma de Chihuahua
Subject: Re: FOXFIRE, MAN CRAZY SERIES Date: Thu, 22 Jan 1998 10:37:21 -0500 (EST) From: diamond@math.wvu.edu (Harvey Diamond) To: jco@usfca.edu I haven't read Man Crazy, but the discussion seems to be about first-person "confessional" novels. In that case, what about JCO's novel "Expensive People" - it's in that same style from what I can recall. I remember being quite impressed at JCO's ability to take on the character of a juvenile boy and the wicked sense of humor displayed in the book. Harvey Diamond
Subject: Re: FOXFIRE, MAN CRAZY SERIES Date: Thu, 22 Jan 1998 17:14:27 EST From: FredMancor FredMancor@aol.com To: jco@usfca.edu Hi I found very interesting your comments on "Expensive People". I find this book one of the best of JCO, and very injustly, and significantly, forgotten. I find it to be fresh, sanely cynical and not overwritten at all, which cannot be said of many of more recent JOC's novels.
Subject: Re: FOXFIRE, MAN CRAZY SERIES Date: Thu, 22 Jan 1998 17:48:31 EST From: Ehaggar Ehaggar@aol.com To: jco@usfca.edu I am interested in the comments that several of the group made about how many of JCO's heroines seem to be attracted to brutal, even psychopathic men---and one male member of the group remarked ruefully that often it seemed that way in life, that women go for the bad guys rather than the good guys. As someone who has read a lot of JCO AND done a lot of work with battered women's centers I found the questions interesting and provocative. I think JCO does a wonderful job of expressing the adolescent girl's confusion over what rough and brutal mean----to an inexperienced girl, both can be confused with strength, that is, sure this man might bat me around sometimes, but he could also protect me from people who would hurt me worse. By the time these women understand their error they are deeply involved in abusive relationships. I myself come from a family of intellectuals, and tend to be attracted to blue-collar guys, or tough guys---men who can DO something instead of just talking! To be fair to myself, though I have to say I have never been in an abusive relationship---but I wonder if JCO ever has--or has perhaps observed them? I am counting on Greg's biography to tell all! Let me hasten to add, there are plenty of women in intellectually abusive relationships--these I have been involved with, and would guess that most women have at one time or another. Forgive the confessional aspect of this---but that strain in JCO's writing always distrubs, intrigues, and fascinates me... Ellen Haggar
Subject: Re: FOXFIRE, MAN CRAZY SERIES Date: Thu, 22 Jan 1998 16:38:06 -0800 (PST) From: joyce l merritt jlm29260@email.csun.edu To: jco@usfca.edu I think that what JCO is claiming "for" (I hope I used that word instead of "from") literature is the complex reality behind sensationalism. By using the first-person narrations, I think she is trying to give the experiences of people we don't usually hear from unless they've been filtered through the "National Enquirer" or some equivalent TV series. The victimized people whose stories would have been sensationalized would commonly be women outside the elite mainstream. I assume that this is crucial to JCO's interest in them; as she indicated in the quote Randy gave us, she knows or used to know people like that. Perhaps she wonders why she didn't become one of them. My impression is that, at various points in her career, JCO has wanted to write about practically everyone in practically every way possible, but that now, more and more, she is interested in representing the sorts of disenfranchised people that she knows best. She seems to be doing this not only by telling their stories, but by encorporating their esthetics into her work, using the skills of an artist. I agree that "Foxfire" is a more attractive novel than "Man Crazy", but I believe that JCO meant it that way. After all, the members of "Foxfire" tried to take control of their own lives and to stop being victims, which is more pleasant to read about, even when the effort turns into a fiasco, than reading about someone like Ingrid in "Man Crazy", who repeatedly cooperates in her own victimization, and who turns away from her opportunities to improve her situation. JCO is deliberately placing us as readers in an ambiguous situation (even morally; if we like the book, are we, too victimizing Ingrid? Is JCO victimizing her own character by making art about her?). As to my thoughts on why people want to be victimized, I'll save those for later, as this message is getting pretty long. Steve
Subject: Re: FOXFIRE, MAN CRAZY SERIES Date: Thu, 22 Jan 1998 21:19:14 EST From: Doozer411 Doozer411@aol.com To: jco@usfca.edu Ellen and my other fellow Oates fans- I, too, have done extensive research on battered women and have spent much time in a battered women's shelter. I completely agree with all you said, Ellen. I only have one thing to add. Another reason for which women often end up with abusive men is not because they are attracted to their men's brutality but rather to his passion. That passion can be at one of two extremes- on the one hand, it can manifest itself in the form of very affectionate and fervent adoration, and, on the other, it can manifest itself in the form of vehement anger. It is the men's passionate natures to which the women are attracted. It is not because of a innate masochism that women choose to remain in abusive relationships, but rather because when their men are at the positive extreme, they are provided with the ferocious love and passionate sex they crave- this is most definitely not a masochistic urge. Therefore, I disagree with Oates' perception of women as inherently masochistic- while, I do acknowledge that some women may exhibit masochistic tendancies on occasion, I believe this to be the exception rather than the rule. -Lindsay
Subject: Re: FOXFIRE, MAN CRAZY SERIES Date: Fri, 23 Jan 1998 11:59:41 +0000 From: John ivan139@spiritone.com To: jco@usfca.edu I agree A. Wright. Families do tend to replicate . . . My personal un-psychological (aka layman) view is that we learn our personal definitions and expections of LOVE in childhood, in the 'love' patterns and dynamics of our families. Then, as no one is perfect, whatever strengths and weaknesses of that initial pattern of LOVE is sought in adult intimate relations. Something I think JCO is onto. Unfortunately the deficiences seem to weigh more in our personalities. It is the wanting vs. having thing. We care more about what we lack than what he have. It is my feeling that we try to 'repair' and overcome these deficiencies in adulthood. Seeking relationships that replicate those old love patterns, and in some cases (not all) seeking to 'fix' them. It marks a personal victory. Might even be part of individuation. Just a thought. Ivan
Subject: Re: FOXFIRE, MAN CRAZY SERIES Date: Fri, 23 Jan 1998 09:50:52 -0500 (CDT) From: ANDREA WRIGHT To: jco@usfca.edu I find it interesting that Ingrid's behavior with Enoch parallels (at least somewhat) that of her mother with her father. Both relationships are abusive; both women are absolutely infatuated with their "men" (remember Ingrid's collection of her husband's supposed mementos, which weren't really his after all). Though I have not done work with battered women or abusive relationships, from what I read, families tend to replicate behaviors that they have experienced. I'm sure Oates had this in mind while writing the novel. A. Wright
Subject: Re: Re: FOXFIRE, MAN CRAZY SERIES Date: Fri, 23 Jan 1998 11:57:29 EST From: Ivan139 Ivan139@aol.com To: jco@usfca.edu Lindsay and Ellen, (and others) I found your comments on the tendency of some woman to pursue potentially abusive relationships interesting. The attraction to power, rather than an attraction to victimization. Though in a way I think these two combine. Sometimes I've wondered whether the attraction to power is a desire/need to overcome the abusiveness, to win the love of the abuser -- possibly to convert the abuser; perhaps to win a victory (through change) over abusers. But the abuse has its value as well, for whatever 'dysfunctional' purpose it serves. It seems to me that people (men and women) who suffer negative self-images and self-pity seek affirmations of their presumed valueless-ness. Self-loathing is not an easy thing to maintain, it requires help from outside. I hate (and love) to bring up the example of Dennis Rodman. Being a consumate Bulls fan, I've given Dennis a lot of thought. (Most people just write him off, don't seem to care about him -- but he makes a good example of what I'm talking about.) Note the title of his book: "Bad as I wanna be." (No, I haven't read it, nor will.) Is this really what he wants? I think not. Dennis, obviously wants to be loved, but lacking an ability to achieve positive intimate relations, he pursues the exact opposite -- to turn himself into such a bad and pitiful person that he suddenly merits our attention and affection and concern. I don't know if any of you watched the NBA finals last year, but prior to the final game they showed a recorded interview with Dennis, in which the utterly obnoxious interviewer from NBC (who I've noted is no where around this year) kept prodding Dennis, saying something akin to: "You've really screwed up, haven't you. No one wants you, even the Bulls. Your desperate, claiming you'll play for free. You're just really a horrible person, a real screw up." Dennis response: he started crying and prematurely left the interview. Sorry for that diatribe, but it's my realm. I haven't read "Man Crazy" but from reading what you've all written, I offer the notion that JCO got the idea after seeing the film Breaking the Waves. Any of you catch it? It is about a women (someone demented) who marries a man, but right after the marriage the man is paralyzed in an accident. He then taunts his wife to go out and have affairs (so he can vicariously have a 'sex' life), but his poor wife, not quite understanding, can only fulfill and justify it by elevating it to a spiritual challenge of humility and degredation. Quite a painful film to watch. Another film (I work in film, thus all the references) that depicts two abusive men is Mike Leigh's Naked. Quite an astounding piece of work. Ironically, the year it came out, it tied for best picture at Cannes with The Piano. Take care. Ivan
Subject: Re: FOXFIRE, MAN CRAZY SERIES Date: Fri, 23 Jan 1998 18:35:08 -0000 From: "Gary Couzens" Gjcouzens@btinternet.com To: jco@usfca.edu It must have had some effect on me too - it was the first JCO novel I ever read, about fifteen years ago! Gary Couzens >Hi > >I found very interesting your comments on "Expensive People". I find this book >one of the best of JCO, and very injustly, and significantly, forgotten. I >find it to be fresh, sanely cynical and not overwritten at all, which cannot >be said of many of more recent JOC's novels. >
Subject: EXPENSIVE PEOPLE Date: Fri, 23 Jan 1998 16:10:56 EST From: composer2@juno.com To: jco@usfca.edu EXPENSIVE PEOPLE was my first full-length JCO piece after Because It Is Bitter and Because it is my Heart. I thought it was very contemporary even today, and as you say, not overwritten at all (We Were the Mulvaneys was a great piece of work, but a tad overwritten I'm afraid). You know, I write a comment like that and then I think, Could I have done any better? Of course not! So I only say that with the utmost respect and reverence. To Greg J.: How did it feel to have "Will You Always Love Me?" dedicated to you?? That is so cool, I have grown to love that collection even more now that when it was first published a year or whenever ago. Also, can't wait to read your biography! Are you pleased with the layout? David C. Michigan.
Subject: Re: FOXFIRE, MAN CRAZY SERIES Date: Fri, 23 Jan 1998 16:13:07 EST From: Ehaggar Ehaggar@aol.com To: jco@usfca.edu Dear Ivan and Everybody, Enjoying all the comments on abusive relationships and why some women are drawn to them---I was struck by Ivan's comment "We care more about what we lack than what we have." That pretty much sums up the state of mind of all JCO's heroes and anti-heroes (male and female). I also thought you might be interested in a comment one of my clients/friends at the battered women's center made. She is one of the despairs of do-gooders like me [grin], someone who returns to the same abusive relationship over and over again. I finally asked her in some exasperation why she didn't just give ALL relationships a rest for awhile (no children or economic neeed in this case) She said, "Bu t it's awful out there--if you're a woman you need to be with one man to protect you from other men!" That is a scarey way of thinking, and I offer it as another basis for a lot of JCO's stuff..... Ellen Haggar
Subject: Re: FOXFIRE, MAN CRAZY SERIES Date: Fri, 23 Jan 1998 18:24:19 EST From: FredMancor FredMancor@aol.com To: jco@usfca.edu This is to the whole group. Is anybody here interested in literature? Sometimes I feel like I am a -rather passive, indeed- participant in a psycho-therapy group. After all, JCO is a writer. If some of her novels are good it must be because they are literature, not essays on human psychology, and, if they are good, may be is because they are an original and personal contribution to literature. Then the question and the answer are in the texts, in their narrative strategies, style, etc.
Subject: jco group dynamic Date: Fri, 23 Jan 1998 15:46:59 +0000 From: "F. Schwartz" fabela@gte.net To: jco@usfca.edu Hey, Fred, chill. jco is quite possibly one of the most psychological writers around today. Nobody writes the dysfunctional American mindscape as well. And Randy's quote was not just provocative - it was useful in understanding jco. I don't happen to agree with some of the statements that have been made here regarding the masochistic streak in women - but I don't think we are in danger of becoming a support group. In fact one of the strengths of this group is that we are not bound by the "academic" rules of literary criticism. As a writer, I am interested in how devoted readers such as the ones who post here relate to what they're reading. When I'm not interested in what's being said, I just push the old delete key and move on. Francie
Subject: Re: FOXFIRE, MAN CRAZY SERIES Date: Fri, 23 Jan 1998 16:15:49 -0800 (PST) From: joyce l merritt jlm29260@email.csun.edu To: jco@usfca.edu I wonder if there is really a dichotomy between literature and psychology? Literature is certainly texts written in a certain fashion, but (despite the deconstructionists) the evidence that I've seen suggests (I think it really does more than suggest) that authors normally intend their texts to be about something (more likely "somethings") which readers may catch on to at least in part and find meaningful. JCO, in particular, appears to want (dare I say "need"?) to write, among other things, about psychological issues that interest her, so that her choice of issues and the reasons for which she's interested in them are major determinatives in her choices of style and strategy and can't really be separated from them. I would certainly hope that we discuss the style and strategy of "Man Crazy", which I meant to do in my original E-mail. But, personally, I'm grateful for messages such as Ellen's and Lindsay's, and appreciate the courage involved in using insights gained from personal experience. Surely all these points enhance one another. It it felt (to me, anyway) that the quote from JCO about "Man Crazy" was an invitation to do just this kind of thing. Perhaps any technical points that Fred might want to raise would be valuable for their own sakes and simultaneously for shedding light on the psychological issues. I look forward to more of both.
Subject: Re: FOXFIRE, MAN CRAZY SERIES Date: Fri, 23 Jan 1998 19:47:22 EST From: Ehaggar Ehaggar@aol.com To: jco@usfca.edu In reply to Fred--- I am sorry that I was pushy enough to assume that life and literature were equally important to all of us here, and that we thought the two were connected---I will not contribute anything more, and will be waiting eagerly for Fred's literary insights Ellen Haggar
Subject: Re: EXPENSIVE PEOPLE Date: Sat, 24 Jan 1998 12:41:12 EST From: RJohn713 To: jco@usfca.edu Of course, the dedication was much appreciated. Yes, I think the graphic designers did a beautiful job with INVISIBLE WRITER. Thanks, Greg
Subject: Re: FOXFIRE, MAN CRAZY SERIES Date: Sat, 24 Jan 1998 20:21:10 EST From: FredMancor To: jco@usfca.edu I am sorry if I offended anybody, I sincerelly apologize, Fred There are, in my view, many differences between psychology and literature although one could see some coincidences which psychologists like Freud took in account and used to illustrate their theories (Oedip, Electra, etc., to be perfectly obvious) . But the differences are clear. There are differences in the purposes, in the organization of the discourses, in strategies, in style, etc. Psychology is, or pretend to be, a science. So, the discourse of Psychology is impersonal, the author doesn't implicate himself in the text - or so it seems-, there are not human characters, -if one can find them is because they are used to illustrate or verify the theory-, there is no story, there is no plot, there is not any specific traits of literary language: metaphors, metonimia, allussion, symbols, and so on, at least in the quality and quality and aestetic purpose that can be found and enjoyed in literature. Do you imagine a psychology text which could possibbly start like this: "I was a child murderer...", and spend the next paragraphs to explain the ambiguity of the sentence, and keep this way (and the first narrative person) for the next hundreds of pages, till the end? Of course, the reader reads and exists, and has all the right in the world to read what she or he wants from a text. But reading literature is a game with some implicit rules among them arbitrarity, and an excess of subjectivity, in my view, don't form part of the game. Once said so, I am really sorry if I hurt somebody. Honestly it was not my intention. Fred
Subject: By Means of an Introduction Date: Sun, 25 Jan 1998 12:27:55 -0800 (PST) From: "AnthonyH. Risser" ahris@yahoo.com To: jco@usfca.edu JCO Discussion List, Hello. I've been visiting this website for a number of months now; I have nothing but praise for its creator/keeper. However, I did not discover the discussion-forum link until last week. I've been reading through some of the archived discussions, decided to join in, and--since it appears acceptable for "newbies" to do so--decided to send an introductory e-mail. I have been a reader of JCO for about 15 years. My introduction to her was her collection of stories, "Crossing the Border." I was living in Canada at the time, and it was a time when borders were of heated concern there: borders between the U.S. and Canada and between French-Canadian and English-Canadian versions of "Canadian." I also enjoy the works of Alice Munro, Margaret Atwood, Anita Brookner, Alice Hoffman, Francesca Lia Block, among others. By profession, I am a neuropsychologist--a diagnostician concerned with examining the consequences of brain disease and damage. Thank you. Anthony H. Risser, Ph.D. ahris@yahoo.com
Subject: Re: By Means of an Introduction Date: Sun, 25 Jan 1998 14:39:22 -0600 From: chrisr5 chrisr5@concentric.net To: jco@usfca.edu I have been reading JCO for many years as well and especially enjoy her gothics like Bellefleur. I met her at a local bookstore when BLACK WATER came out and she autograhphed it. She is a person that once you meet her you never forget her. Every time I read a new book or a short story in PLOUGHSHARE...I think of her image..esp. her eyes. Many of her poetry books are out of print so I get them from the local library and type them and save them to disk. Have you ever read her poems? One of the reasons her books never make the best seller lists like D. Steel is that they are too thought provoking for the average reader. One must read between the lines to digress the meaning of her messages.
Subject: "Them" Date: Sun, 25 Jan 1998 15:43:27 -0700 From: "Jennifer Hambly" jhambly@mailcity.com To: "JCO Discussion Group" jco@usfca.edu Greetings Group, I am a recent member of this discussion group and like the rest of you, am a huge Oates fan. I have a question about "Them" I would like to pose to the group: How 'real' are the Wendall characters in Oates' "Them"? The Author's Note of "Them" explains that the novel is based on the true experiences of one of Oates's students. However, Oates's explanation of the Wendall characters in the Preface to "Them" seems to suggest that they are mostly fictional. Any ideas? Best Regards, Julie
Subject: Re: By Means of an Introduction Date: Sun, 25 Jan 1998 19:42:55 EST From: composer2@juno.com (David C. Chaudoir) To: jco@usfca.edu Anthony Welcome to the group. You should have been in on our discussion a while ago about Atwood, Oates, and Munro -- mostly Atwood and JCO-- I think it was Francine and I who were discussing it mainly. Anyway, welcome to the group. I am surprised to hear you like Alice Hoffman--she has always seemed a little too much of a "woman's writer" to me, more so than any other I've read in the group, however before I get a lot of flack for saying that, I would like to say that I very very very much enjoy her contributions in literary reviews such as Richard Burgin's BOULEVARD and others. Clap clap. David C. Michigan p.s.-- did anyone see the piece "LOST KITTENS" in TriQuarterly's last issue--it is a section from MAN CRAZY. Speaking of TriQuarterly, I guess that Reginald Gibbons is out of there to devote more time to other things.
Subject:Re:passion in the works of JCO Date: Mon, 26 Jan 1998 07:36:04 EST From: Cyranomish Cyranomish@aol.com To: jco@usfca.edu Wow, what a great discussion's been going on this past weekend. I'm really glad to be home, although it will take me some days to catch up. Ellen and Fred's remarks are very exciting and I hope neither of them withdraws from this conversation despite occasional rough spots. I like the use of the word "passion" in place of masochism. The m. word never really explained certain male/female behaviors to me. When I first read the turbulent early works of JCO back in 1971 -- it reopened a world that I'd glimpsed only in the works of Emily Bronte. Then, when I first saw a photo of JCO, I burst out laughing because I realized I'd been expecting the author to look like a wild woman, not the gentle, highly intelligent person she actually is. (Perhaps the two types are one? and all parallel lines meet in the end?) Now I have to go do my laundry and then run over to the library and pick up Dennis Rodman's book, which sounds very intriguing. I will just add that the reason MAN CRAZY didn't work for me was that Enoch was too much the monster -- we didn't get to see the charismatic aspect of him -- the ingredient that makes people follow "leaders" like Manson, Hitler, etc. Cyrano
Subject: You kidding Cyrano? Date: Mon, 26 Jan 1998 10:58:51 +0000 From: John ivan139@spiritone.com To: discussion group JCO jco@usfca.edu Come on, Cyrano, are you really going to read Dennis Rodman's book? It is hard to tell if you are joking or not. Hope you are not joking. I think it would be an interesting read. Interesting yes, worthwhile, maybe. I'm apologize to anyone and everyone who might have scoffed when I brought up a character as questionnable as Rodman in a normally more noteworthy forum. Like I said, I am just a huge Bulls fan -- whom I must say have an extremely enlightened coach, and that is the root of my fanatacism. I too scoffed when Rodman came to my team. I did not jump on the bandwagon immediately -- it was one incident in particular that aroused my curiosity -- when Rodman head-butted the referee two years ago. You have to watch the events leading up to the headbutt. Dennis has fouled, complained, received a technical, complained some more, been called for a 2nd technical, which means an automatic ejection from the game. But he doesn't immediately leave the court like he should; instead he remains, wandering around in disgruntlement while the other Bulls try to calm him and the ref down. Now here's the interesting part: Dennis wanders away a few feet, all by himself, and you can tell he is already thinking about it, mulling the action over. Then quite calmly he sidles his way through the crowd to the ref, pauses, and gives a long look up, like to heaven or to God. Then he brings his head down onto the ref's. What was that look about? My over active, Dostoevsky inspired imagination leads me to think it was just that, a look to God, saying, "I know what I'm about to do, You know what I'm about to do, so what happens next? What wrath will I incur? Just watch and see whether or not I can take it." What I read into this presumed exchange is the foundation of my previously mentioned thoughts on Rodman -- the only way he knows to get our attention, or God's, is to do something obviously bad. He only knows how to elicit this type of attention, only knows how to respond to this type of attention. It is the key to his personality. Yet what a befuddled, almost pitable personality it is. He badly needs new info, reformation, and he senses, I believe, that he is capable of it. Just old habits are hard to break. Take care all, hope I haven't bored you. Really, am just curious to know what you think about this. What anyone thinks. Ivan
Subject: Re: You kidding Cyrano? Date: Mon, 26 Jan 1998 16:51:18 EST From: Cyranomish@aol.com To: jco@usfca.edu No bull, Ivan, I'm reading Mr. Rodman's book even as we speak here. It took a little doing to find it though; the book had been stolen from most of the libraries in my immediate neighborhood. But now I have it (and will probably return it when I'm finished). I've just read the first chapter in which the author tells how he and his friends used to sneak into the Texas State Fair when he was a lad via a 5-mile treck thru a sewer pipe. The tough but ernest tone of the narrative reminds me of JCO's early novel THE TRIUMPH OF THE SPIDER MONKEY, which I consider the first of her 1st-person worm's-eye-view short books about sociopaths. I'd put THE RISE OF LIFE ON EARTH, and ZOMBIE into that category. I like your parallels with Dostoevsky; his compulsive gambling was, I think, an invitation for the gods to render a judgment on him. Earlier this month someone asked about JCO and Dostoevsky. I meant to reply that there are some good essays here on Randy's web page (the full text page) in which she analyzes FD's works. I've always thought her great concern with young people and the experiences that shape their souls is a VERY Dostoevskian issue. Cyrano
Subject: Date: Mon, 26 Jan 1998 17:09:22 -0800 (PST) From: joyce l merritt To: jco@usfca.edu Here is a thought on "Man Crazy" which I hope is both literary and psychological: The main character is named Inrid Boone, and her mother is Chloe (I can't remember whether or not Chloe's original last name is given). It strikes me that these names could be taken as a sign of reaching for beauty in an awkward manner. I'm working on the assumption that it was essentially Chloe's decision that her daughter should be named "Ingrid Boone", that "Daddy" didn't take an active part in the naming process (and perhaps a similar process on the part of Chloe's mother led to Chloe's getting her own name). The same person who is named Chloe and chooses the name Ingrid for her daughter is an excellent dressmaker, probably with more talent than she has the opportunity to display. In other words, she's a creative person to whom beauty is important. Ingrid is a writer. Both are living in situations in which it is apparently natural for them to assume that they will become involved with men, and that the men they will become involved with will abuse them--JCO seems to imply that it is part of their culture. In that case (and referring back to JCO's quote that mentions women she has known, presumably women who make this same assumption about men, finding beautiful and mystical experiences that way), are the forms of the abusive relationships that Chloe and Ingrid seek out ways of structuring and realizing beauty in their lives, given a confused, awkward and in a sense hopeless way of defining beauty? Are Ingrid's abusive relationships more extreme than Chloe's in part because Ingrid seems to be more intensely creative than Chloe is? If what I am suggesting has much validity, then perhaps there is no deepseated masochistic streak in "women" as a class, but rather an extreme response on the part of women who are born into terrible cultural situations. Which is not to say that other elements may not be there, too (such as what seems to be a common human love for frightening ourselves, as by riding on roller coasters, watching scary movies, etc--but surely for most people, who are born into less extremely abusive environments than Ingrid's, a crucial point is the cathartic effect of knowing that the danger wasn't real, or was survived, after all, whereas with Chloe and Ingrid the danger is real and may not be survived). Steve
Subject: Re: FOXFIRE, MAN CRAZY SERIES Date: Mon, 26 Jan 1998 22:04:25 EST From: Shmoopak Shmoopak@aol.com To: jco@usfca.edu I am fascinated by the discussion regarding the psychological aspects of JCO's work, and I truly feel that (in JCO's case anyway), the psychological cannot be disconnected from the literary. It is difficult to ignore the preponderence of "troubled" female characters in almost ALL of JCO's work, and there is a common theme of masochistic behavior amongst these women. I also think that since the title of her latest novel, man CRAZY has such a blatant psychological reference, we really shouldn't try to cut this discussion short. I can't help but compare certain scenes from this latest effort with another one of JCO's "psychological" thrillers, Zombie. At one point, Ingrid tries to lure a young girl in a mall parking lot into walking into a dark alley to help save some "baby kittens," so that the satanic cult could kidnap this young lady and throw her into a van. Naturally, I couldn't help but remember Quentin's strategy of luring an adolescent young boy into his van, by asking him to help capture some "baby chicks" in a dark alley. In fact, JCO often employs such kidnappings through "psychological" seduction. Rarely is anyone just thrown into a van by brute force a la "Silence of the Lambs." Rather, it's almost as if these victims (mostly women) are "psychologically raped" first, so that they are compelled by something within themselves, to go to these cars or dark alleys or vans: Connie in Where are You Going Where Have You Been is first fascinated (albeit a little disgusted) with Arnold Friend. Yet Connie keeps talking to Arnold who continues to charm his way into her psyche. Moreover, Connie is lured by the music playing in the background so that she is lulled into believing she is safe. Thus, when Friend finally goes in for the kill, he has already wormed his way into Connie's psyche - so much so, that Connie knows that resistence is futile and walks slowly and detached toward her certain rape and death. And Iris Courtney of Because it's Bitter Because it's my Heart feels compelled to walk alone in a dangerous neighborhood: "what logic, what purpose, walking alone at night in a neighborhood so far from her own, a part of her mind not numbed with fatigue but brightly alert, even hopeful, imagining she's in Hammond somehow...in Hammond, in Lowertown...the slow-smiling eyes, the bared teeth glistening..." Again, Iris is compelled to go into a dangerous neighborhood not by "the young black men in their late teens," in their car, but by her own brightly alert mind - by some kind of "hope." I think that the psychosis of these "vicitms" as well as their abusers, is absolutely fascinating, especially since these same scenarios show up again and again in so many of JCO's tales - the more we flesh it out here the better. Thanks for all the insight! Sue
Subject: Re: By Means of an Introduction Date: Mon, 26 Jan 1998 19:31:56 -0800 From: Knabke jamesk@lightspeed.net To: jco@usfca.edu David C. Chaudoir wrote: > I am surprised to hear you like Alice Hoffman--she has always > seemed a little too much of a "woman's writer" to me, what defines a "woman's writer ??"
Subject: Re: FOXFIRE, MAN CRAZY SERIES Date: Tue, 27 Jan 1998 08:17:47 +0000 From: "F. Schwartz" fabela@gte.net To: jco@usfca.edu Francie here, having just read a fascinating article (NYTimes, Art) about the divided reaction to Ted Hughes's "Birthday Poems," about his life with Plath. In keeping with the question, "What constitutes a Woman's Writer?" I think we are drawn to jco's depiction of the "romance of abuse" because it is a great question in literature right now. The world's continuing fascination with Plath is being fed again, in poetry form. jco does know a great deal about this particular dynamic, the fires that arise from the pairing of two strong artists, and the reasons Plath committed suicide. jco's women can fight back, but she shows us the psychology from the inside, she's not strictly bound to Freudian theory, and we are not to pity these women. Understand them? Perhaps. ZOMBIE, it seemed to me, has a "shadow meaning" - although the gender is male, it can also be read as an allegory for the female's self-loathing/arousal pattern, taken to the far extreme, to insanity. I guess you could say I'm prejudiced, being a woman and being a writer, and knowing how easily I ventured into relationships with dangerous men, and knowing the twisted thrill of writing about it, I may be giving jco more credit than she's due. "A Woman's Writer" seems to me to be an empty phrase, of no use whatsoever except to the mindset of marketing. jco is beyond this sort of characterization, IMNSHO This is fun! Francie
Subject: Re: FOXFIRE, MAN CRAZY SERIES Date: Tue, 27 Jan 1998 08:21:37 +0000 From: "F. Schwartz" fabela@gte.net To: jco@usfca.edu Eek, a jco quote from the article I was reading: "But the American author and critic Joyce Carol Oates said the Hughes poetry 'lacks the originality and sharpness of Plath's poetry.'" Yea for jco! And it's "Birthday Letters", I goofed. Oh the heck with it, I'm attaching the whole article. Just delete if you're not interested.
Subject: Re: FOXFIRE, MAN CRAZY SERIES Date: Tue, 27 Jan 98 13:01:25 EST From: MSUTTON@VM.SC.EDU To: Joyce Carol Oates discussion list jco@usfca.edu On Tue, 27 Jan 1998 08:17:47 +0000 F. Schwartz said: >"A Woman's Writer" seems to me to be an empty phrase, of no use >whatsoever except to the mindset of marketing. jco is beyond this sort >of characterization, IMNSHO I think Oates would agree with you. I skimmed "(Woman) Writer" recently, and she seems opposed to the whole classifying authors by gender. On a related note, are there any other essays/interviews/etc. where Oates discusses her feelings on gender (particularly gender roles)? I've found a few, and I need to know for research, but I can't keep up with her output. Thanks in advance. >This is fun! Yep. Mark Sutton
Subject: FRANCINE-WOMAN'S WRITER Date: Tue, 27 Jan 1998 13:29:45 -0800 From: composer2@juno.com To: jco@usfca.edu Francine--- I think the question What is a woman's writer? was related to my comment on Alice Hoffman. Further, I totally and completely agree with you on your comments, and that JCO fits no such label (just as she fits no genre). Then again, how could anyone compare JCO to Alice Hoffman? Imagine! David C. Michigan
Subject: A WOMAN'S WRITER Date: Tue, 27 Jan 1998 13:21:00 -0800 From: composer2@juno.com To: jco@usfca.edu So as not to corner myself nor compose a sloppy definition in the few minutes I have, I can not give a definitive definition of what a "woman's writer" is. I can, however, say what I mean when I say "woman's writer" when referring to Alice Hoffman. I believe that of the portions of her novels I have read, I think that women in general can appreciate more what Hoffman is saying as it applies members of the feminine gender. Whatever. I would define Alice Hoffman as a woman's writer just as I would define Norman Mailer as a man's writer. Let's see what kind of flack I get for that. David C. Michigan
Subject: Date: Tue, 27 Jan 1998 15:04:14 -0500 From: cafuller@EVE.ASSUMPTION.EDU (Catherine Fuller) To: jco@usfca.edu Let's face it. If you are going to assign gender ownership, the only true women writers I know of are bell hooks and Adrienne Rich.
Subject: Re: A WOMAN'S WRITER Date: Tue, 27 Jan 1998 12:39:27 +0000 From: "F. Schwartz" fabela@gte.net To: jco@usfca.edu Bzzzt! I dedicated my first book to Norman Mailer, before he became the feminist Antichrist. I do not think he is strictly a man's writer, as Woman is the focus of his novels... furthermore, I would say that only a woman who knows men of Mailer's stripe, and "appreciates" the irony of Mailer's machismo obsession, can enjoy him. But again, I don't think "womanizers" can't be women's men, or write *for women*... it's too limiting a concept. And it's not Francine. Francie
Subject: Re: Silence of the Lambs Date: Tue, 27 Jan 1998 16:30:43 EST From: Cyranomish To: jco@usfca.edu I have to make a plug for SILENCE OF THE LAMBS. It's an excellent book with an outstandingly human (as opposed to superwoman) heroine. Many subsequent books that come across my review's desk try to emulate it, but none succeed. By the way, the victim in SILENCE isn't tossed into the van -- she' s lured in by a cunning psycho who tricks her into "assisting" him: he's got a fake cast on his arm. In the movie, the "normal" ordinary-guy appearance of that character -- nicknamed Buffalo Bill -- was much more terrifying than his appearance later on when he smears himself with warpaint and dances around his lair in the nude. Who was it in this discussion group talking about movies recently? The European film "The Vanishing" contains a similar lure-her-into-the-car deception; and it's one of the most horrifying films I've ever seen (the American version gives it a happy ending.) Cyrano
Subject: (WOMAN) WRITER Date: Tue, 27 Jan 1998 14:37:03 -0800 From: composer2@juno.com To: jco@usfca.edu Oates would definitely disagree with gender labels judging by what she has said in the past. Thank you for bringing up the book "(WOMAN) WRITER" -- I think it is too often overlooked and of high value for understanding Oates and her work. David C. Michigan
Subject: Re: Women as decoys for other women Date: Tue, 27 Jan 1998 16:17:38 EST From: Cyranomish Cyranomish@aol.com To: jco@usfca.edu Sue, in the same vein as Ingrid deciding not to lure a new victim with the baby kitten ploy, Josie S. in FIRST LOVE similarly defies her "mean man" Jerod by not luring a five year old girl to their house with promises of cookies & "a baby-sized doll for her to play with." For a tragic ending to this situation, see the story "Testimony" in the collection RAVEN'S WING, told in the voice of a preadolescent tomboy who's so smitten with a brutal older man that she does indeed follow his orders and brings home a new victim, whom he tortures to death. JCO really plumbs the depth of the young accomplise's motives: "It was sort of disappointing toward the end. She (the victim) wasn't awake much, only just breathing funny, ..the inside of the tub was all filthy from her soiling herself, and the blood, it made me sick to clean it out, but I had to...Later I looked in the mirror and my face was wet from crying, but I didn't remember crying." For those readers who don't know the story behind "Where are you Going, Where have you been?" JCO got partial inspiration for it from a Life Magazine story about a psycho nicknamed "the Pied Piper of Tucson" by the press -- who resembled Arnold Friend. What intrigued JCO about the newstory was that the fact that many of the kids in Tucson who knew what the "Pied Piper" guy was doing with his "dates" did not turn him in. Something about him charmed them into a weird collusion with their silence. Thanks for sharing the Plath article. It's interesting. I remember being bummed out way back in the early 1970s with JCO's article on Plath in a book of criticism NEW HEAVEN NEW EARTH, her conclusion being merely that "Plath's era is concluded." It seemed to me that "Plath's era "-- of having so many tantalizing options to choose from and no real support in a sexist world -- was just beginning. No doubt JCO got tons of admonishing letters from feminists & Plath-lovers around that article. By "Plath's era" she meant, I think, romantic wishful thinking; an era which is still very much with us to this day. Cyrano
Subject: Re: Women as decoys for other women Date: Tue, 27 Jan 1998 13:59:11 +0000 From: "F. Schwartz" fabela@gte.net To: jco@usfca.edu Amen, Cyrano!
Subject: Re: Silence of the Lambs Date: Tue, 27 Jan 1998 17:03:02 +0000 From: John ivan139@spiritone.com To: jco@usfca.edu Here's an anecdote about 'Buffalo Bill' I work in film and used to work in Chicago, where 'Buffalo Bill' resides. Confoundedly, I can't remember his name. Anyway, his significant other was a make up artist I worked with regularly, tho she never mentioned her personal star connection. Yet I used to run into these two all the time around town, and it took me at least four or five meetings for my mind to click and realize the role this guy had played. I offer this anecdote because the scene in which Buffalo Bill dances around nude in front of the video camera was never scripted; it was an idea of the actor, which Jonathan Demme could net let pass. The make up artist/Buffalo Bill portrayer have a child. My friend used to lament to me about what their child might think when he is old enough to view that interesting scene. Just a thought. Take care all Ivan
Subject: Gender? what is gender? Date: Tue, 27 Jan 1998 17:12:28 +0000 From: John ivan139@spiritone.com To: discussion group JCO jco@usfca.edu Forgive these thoughts, but I am just loving interacting with all of you. It takes quite a bit of restraint not to post as often as I'd like. (This is a compliment to you all; thanks for sharing.) I am a bit uncomfortable with all this gender talk. Specifically the terms 'man' and 'woman', especially with all the psychological talk we've been trading. Are not the qualities of femininity and masculinity a spectrum within us that varies per person? The most extreme example I can think of: Was the character in 'The Crying Game' and man or a woman, and whom did he or she read? Ivan ('Everything is permitted', isn't it?)
Subject: Re: Silence of the Lambs Date: Tue, 27 Jan 1998 22:08:08 EST From: Shmoopak Shmoopak@aol.com To: jco@usfca.edu Ivan, how fascinating! I live in Chicago and now I'll have to keep my eyes peeled for good ol' Buffalo Bill. Actually, he was just in some horrible movie on HBO where he plays a psychotic militia man who still lives with his mother and sits in his underwear at the kitchen table looking at a catalog of weapons and when his mother won't agree right away to buy him a 62 dollar knife he starts screaming and ranting and raving until she finally gives in. I think this guy better hide a lot more from his kid than just "Silence of the Lambs" :) Sue
Subject: Re: Women as decoys for other women Date: Tue, 27 Jan 1998 22:02:41 EST From: Shmoopak Shmoopak@aol.com To: jco@usfca.edu Cyrano: First you were right about the Silence of the Lambs. I too read the book and saw the movie, and I totally forgot that in both instances, the Buffalo Bill character did indeed use very cunning JCO-type tactics to "lure" the girl into the van. I will have to rearead Testimony based on your brief synopsis, as well as First Love. The "lure" occurs again and again, but never as "formula" just a pervasive theme which I am very interested in. On a related note, so many of these stories seem to end in asomewhat somber note: Zombie, Testimony (just from what you've described), Where are You Going. I was amazed when I finished Man Crazy and found myself teary-eyed with happiness. Can you guess when I started getting schmaltzy? Yep. It was the second Ingrid identifies the "you" as her therapist. That is, when she tells her mother she will be marrying her therapist. It was such a NON JCO ending that I just about fell out of the big stuffed chair at Barnes and Nobles. This seems to be the closest thing to a "real" happy ending that I have ever seen in a JCO work (perhaps with the exception of Corkey Corcoran surviving being shot in What I Lived For, and I'm not sure I was happy about that or not because he was so despicable, but still you loved to hate him just like JR Ewing in the early 80's). I don't know what to make of it. Is it really a happy ending or is it just wishful thinking on my part? Is this to be the same type of marriage that Elena faced with Martin Howe in Do With Me What You Will? Indeed, Oates has explored her fair share of older authoritarian men exploiting younger vulnerable women (this theme occurs almost as much as the women as decoys for other women!), but somehow I'd like to believe this is a little different. Looking forward to your thoughts! Sue
Subject: Re: Silence of the Lambs Date: Tue, 27 Jan 1998 22:36:24 EST From: Cyranomish Cyranomish@aol.com To: jco@usfca.edu Ivan: What would "Buffalo Bill's" kid think when he sees that scene in SILENCE? Turning to the words of Fr. Zossima: "There are no memories more precious than those of early childhood in one's first home ... indeed, precious memories may remain even of a bad home, if only the heart knows how to find what is precious." I offer this lovely quote because I think it's reflected in some of JCO's work, most recently in the concluding pages of MAN CRAZY. I think there's often some precious detail in even the most turbulent JCO fiction. Cyrano
Subject: Re: Gender? what is gender? Date: Tue, 27 Jan 1998 19:59:44 +0000 From: "F. Schwartz" fabela@gte.net To: jco@usfca.edu John, please post more often. The lately much-maligned Dr. Kinsey was one who began to understand that we all fall into a range of sexual behavior, our position within that range may evolve, devolve, or change over our lifetime, and that labels are not all that useful when studying human sexuality. I too have great difficulty understanding the need for such labels. Both "Silence of the Lambs" and "Red Dragon" are Thomas Harris novels that have been made into intriguing movies ("Manhunter", directed by Michael Mann, was where we first met Hannibal Lecter, who was played by a cool Anthony Cox (check me on that name) -- and my affinity for FOXFIRE, ZOMBIE and now, MAN CRAZY (still waiting for an avaiable copy) would make me a candidate for enjoyment of characters like Buffalo Bill. I think jco understands the erotic aspect of horror better than most contemporary writers. Furthermore I think her understanding transcends gender considerations. Thanks for another enlightened view... are we having fun, or what? More, more! Francie
Subject: Re: FOXFIRE, MAN CRAZY SERIES Date: Tue, 27 Jan 1998 23:28:29 -0500 (EST) From: Jennifer Nash jnash@fas.harvard.edu To: jco@usfca.edu Fred- I don't think you can really separate the two. People are drawn to literature partially because it depicts something about humanity - something about the nature of people. A good writer, like JCO, balances stylistic mastery with psychological insight. - jen "we shall not cease from exploration and the end of all our exploring will be to arrive where we started and know the place for the first time." - t.s. eliot On Fri, 23 Jan 1998, FredMancor wrote: > This is to the whole group. > Is anybody here interested in literature? Sometimes I feel like I am a > -rather passive, indeed- participant in a psycho-therapy group. After all, JCO > is a writer. If some of her novels are good it must be because they are > literature, not essays on human psychology, and, if they are good, may be is > because they are an original and personal contribution to literature. Then the > question and the answer are in the texts, in their narrative strategies, > style, etc. >
Subject: Re: Silence of the Lambs Date: Wed, 28 Jan 1998 05:40:35 +0000 From: John ivan139@spiritone.com To: jco@usfca.edu Well put Cyrano. And nice quote from Dostoevsky. I've read Brothers Karamazov only twice, and somehow that quote has never stuck. Personally, it doesn't hold true for me, but alas, this is not a 'support' group. You attribute more power to the positive side of the human psyche than either I or my friend, the make up artist/mother of the child. " . . . if only the heart knows how to find what is precious" -- yes, but perhaps the biggest obstacle to this heart's perspective is fear. At the time the mother made her lament to me their child was only three, and I bet she projected her own lack of understanding of her husband's psyche onto the child. But thanks for inspiring contemplation! And even some hope! Take care. Ivan
Subject: Re: FOXFIRE, MAN CRAZY SERIES Date: Wed, 28 Jan 1998 15:41:20 -0500 (EST) From: Jennifer Nash jnash@fas.harvard.edu To: jco@usfca.edu Hi everyone- Sorry for responding to something thats a little dated - I was out of town for a few days. > I agree that "Foxfire" is a more attractive novel than "Man Crazy", but I > believe that JCO meant it that way. After all, the members of "Foxfire" > tried to take control of their own lives and to stop being victims, which > is more pleasant to read about, even when the effort turns into a fiasco, > than reading about someone like Ingrid in "Man Crazy", who repeatedly > cooperates in her own victimization, and who turns away from her > opportunities to improve her situation. JCO is deliberately placing us > as readers in an ambiguous situation (even morally; if we like the book, > are we, too victimizing Ingrid? Is JCO victimizing her own character by > making art about her?). I always related Foxfire to Zombie - in both, JCO implants the reader in the mind of the protagonist(s). Zombie frightened me because I felt as though I was living in the mind of the insane. Steve, you are right, Foxfire is a more attractive novel because JCO places us in the midst of moral ambiguiuty where we can rationalize actions that we would generally view as wrong. My favorite JCO novels (Zombie, Foxfire, and The Rise of Life on Earth) are the ones where she places us in the mindset of someone else and then rips us out suddenly, forcing us to adjust the lens through which we see the world. - jen "we shall not cease from exploration and the end of all our exploring will be to arrive where we started and know the place for the first time." - t.s. eliot
Subject: Re: A WOMAN'S WRITER Date: Wed, 28 Jan 1998 15:50:46 -0500 (EST) From: Jennifer Nash jnash@fas.harvard.edu To: jco@usfca.edu Francie- I like what you said about writing and women and men. Whenever I hear people talk about "women's writers" or "men's writers," I think of what Virginia Woolf said at the end of A Room of One's Own where she says that we must all strive for the androgynous mind where our gender is the dominant part of our mind, but where both masculinity and femininity exist. She says that the androgynous mind is resonant and lucid. And I think thats so precise and so beautiful. - jen "we shall not cease from exploration and the end of all our exploring will be to arrive where we started and know the place for the first time." - t.s. eliot
Subject: Re: DOSTOEVSKI PARALLELS Date: Thu, 29 Jan 1998 10:07:03 -0500 From: "Anthony" jackv@ptdprolog.net hi....my observation will be mercifully short, essentially that there is a resemblance between JCO and FD due to the preoccupation with psychology. Psychology is the modern religion, but not the only one. It just happens to be the only one that people seem to believe in these days. One of the (to me) interesting things about Dostoevski is that he often concerns himself with the psychology of religion. I haven't read so many JCO books as many of you. Does JCO approach the notion of religion in any of her novel and/or characters? I wouldn't know. On the other hand, she's a terrific psychologist. Anthony
Subject: Re: FOXFIRE, MAN CRAZY SERIES Date: Thu, 29 Jan 1998 10:11:21 -0500 From: "Anthony" jackv@ptdprolog.net >Francie here, having just read a fascinating article (NYTimes, Art) >about the divided reaction to Ted Hughes's "Birthday Poems," about his >life with Plath. > I read the same story in the NYT. It was interesting in general and particularly interesting that the article had a comment from JCO. I wish I had it to look it over again or to post it.
Subject: Re: A WOMAN'S WRITER Date: Thu, 29 Jan 1998 10:19:27 -0500 From: "Anthony" jackv@ptdprolog.net >Bzzzt! I dedicated my first book to Norman Mailer, before he became the >feminist Antichrist. I do not think he is strictly a man's writer, as >Woman is the focus of his novels... furthermore, I would say that only a >woman who knows men of Mailer's stripe, and "appreciates" the irony of >Mailer's machismo obsession, can enjoy him. But again, I don't think >"womanizers" can't be women's men, or write *for women*... it's too >limiting a concept. That seems a pretty fair assessment to me. I think it's only natural that male writers would be able to write with greater empathy and perception of male characers. And vice-versa. On the other hand, JCO's characterization of her male protagonist Corky Corcoran in WHAT I LIVED FOR seems to have mapped out the male animal with great perception and artistry, a sort of ultimate and obsessive seeming naturalism.
Subject: Re: DOSTOEVSKI PARALLELS Date: Thu, 29 Jan 98 12:44:00 EST From: Mark Sutton MSUTTON@VM.SC.EDU Oates focuses on fundamentalist Christianity in _Son of the Morning_ and, if I'm reading the various posts right, Satanism in _Man Crazy_ (I have not read either of the novels, so both of these points are from my readings of criticism). Religion shows up in some of the short stories, most notably (ie. the ones I can remember) "In the Region of Ice" and" At the Seminary." _First Love_ also has grotesque religious iconography that covers Jared, Jr.'s true colors. As far as her presentation of religion, I believe she examines it as a kind of defensive mechanism against the world. That's the impression I got from the short stories, so it might be different with her novels. So, she continues to be a psychologist. Take this with a grain of salt, Mark
Subject: Re: DOSTOEVSKI PARALLELS Date: Thu, 29 Jan 1998 12:52:53 -0500 (EST) From: diamond@math.wvu.edu (Harvey Diamond) Anthony, "Son of the Morning" is a religously-oriented JCO novel about the life and making of an evangelist. It was written during the period when televangelism was an important feature in American culture & religion. Of course this reassertion of religion in America and the "culture wars" (between religious and secular, and now European vs. nonEuropean) remain important to any description of American, long after the Swaggarts, the Falwells, and even the Robertsons have been marginalized and JCO's novel has been forgotten. It's a good novel though. Harvey Diamond
Subject: Re: DOSTOEVSKI PARALLELS Date: Thu, 29 Jan 1998 13:44:10 EST From: Cyranomish@aol.com Hi, Anthony. I was just rereading the Brothers Karamazov. What a great psychologist FD was! JCO's SON OF THE MORNING is about a preacher, She also has an essay about the books of GENESIS and JOHN in an anthology entitled CONFIRMATIONS. I was at an inn in Maine last week and discovered a tiny book entitled DEADLY SINS in which prominent American writers have written essays on the seven deadly sins. JCO's essay was on "Despair." I will look up the editor for CONFIRMATIONS -- in her essay for that book, JCO discusses the churches she went to in childhood and what they meant to her. Cyrano
Subject: Some thoughts Date: Fri, 30 Jan 1998 03:55:14 +0900 From: "±Ëº±«," sweetalk@netsgo.com Lindsay, Ellen, Ivan, Jen, Francie and others, I'm finally back from the new-year's visit to my family-in-law (in lunar year yesterday was the new year's day) and wow, I had to spend a few hours to catch up with all the discussion posts. I immensely enjoyed reading your thoughts on this masochistic streak in JCO, and the tendency her characters are drawn to abusive relationships. These days I'm reading ON BOXING, and I think this essay could give us a clue. What I suspect is that she is attracted to and deeply fascinated with men's physicality, as well as with what you called brutality, or passion. In JCO's novels that I read, the heroines are naive, pale, white, and intellectual, but the men they are attracted to are powerful, brutal, passionate and physical. I felt the author clearly identifies herself with the girls. Reading ON BOXING, I could picture JCO intensely staring at the bleeding, fighting boxers half frightened, half fascinated, all the way mesmerized. It reminded me of Iris secretly glancing the Fairchild brothers diving into the Peach Tree Creek, Josie S. in FIRST LOVE eyeing the two dark nipples and sweating body of Jared. The passage rites for these girls are always bloody physical. Always strange and fascinating. Perhaps because the physicality means reality/authenticity, I thought. So the pale white girls must face the reality at least once in their lifetime. Could be brutal, but also beautiful, even sweet. And as this personal problem unfolds, it gets interrelated with the larger, social perspectives. In this JCO may be said to have something in common with D.H.Lawrence, though sexuality in JCO seems more corrupted and distorted. It is also noteworthy that JCO's attitude is essentially feminine. That physicality/brutality is always depicted as the attribute of the Other. Something women don't have in them but inevitably have to face and deal with when they get involved with men. It is interesting because typically dangerous sexuality(physicality) is allotted to female, femme fatale characters. I personally like this side of JCO, breaking the rules of typical writing, mainly established by men. She could be called a feminist writer though I think she wouldn't claim to be one and probably would hate the title. But what I mean by that is just she faithfully represents what the world feels like when it's filtered through a thinking woman's perspective. I agree with Jen that truly great literature should aspire to the androgynous vision, but Virginia Woolf's writing itself(not the vision of her writing) is far from androgynous. It is clearly a woman's writing. I mean, the simple fact of being a woman defined almost every aspects of her writing, which I don't think, however, detriments the greatness of her works. Well, I still enjoy reading Lawrence or Milton, though I'm a female reader. Their writing is definitely male-centered, but the vision of their works are not that simple. They aspire to the ideal vision of androgynous, i.e. humanistic world. It's also true with the movies of Jane Campion. Let's take THE PIANO for example, this is not a "women's movie" at all but still its perspective is distinctively feminine. So the terms such as "women's writer", "men's writer" are not quite to the mark, as many of you pointed out. But still, JCO's writing feels intrinsically feminine to me. At least so far. Well, I know I'm not equal to making this kind of hasty generalization, but I'm just sharing my spontaneous reactions... Thank you for the great insights! and Happy New Year to you all! Kim from Korea
Subject: Re: Some thoughts Date: Thu, 29 Jan 1998 14:14:59 -0500 (EST) From: Jennifer Nash jnash@fas.harvard.edu Kim and everyone... I think you are definitely right - and Woolf touches upon your idea in her BRILLIANT essay. She says that in the male, the male side of the brain should dominate the women's side and in a women, the female side should dominate the male's side. What is nevessary is a harmony. "Perhaps a mind that is purely masculine cannot create, any more than a mind that is purely feminine." Her female-ness is part of her self, it is something that defines her experience and the lens through which she sees the world but she encourages the reader to see through an androgynous lens. Happy New Year to you too, Kim. - jen "we shall not cease from exploration and the end of all our exploring will be to arrive where we started and know the place for the first time." - t.s. eliot
Subject: Re: DH Lawrence Date: Thu, 29 Jan 1998 17:39:50 EST From: Cyranomish@aol.com Hello, Kim. You might be interested to know that JCO published a little book on Lawrence in the late 1970s entitled THE HOSTILE SUN. In regard to gender- writing, two stories in the collection ASSIGNATION come to mind: "Ace," a well-rendered hoodlum's perspective of a drive-by shooting; and "Fin de Siecle," the emergence of a body-building Madonna-type character who may be either a relic of the late 20th century or a harbinger of the new century ahead. Cyrano
Subject: NORMAN MAILER / WOMEN Date: Tue, 27 Jan 1998 16:52:00 -0800 From: composer2@juno.com See. I am eating my words and it's still the same afternoon. I know & love Norman Mailer and think he would get a kick out of "feminist Antichrist." Apologies on the name! David C. p.s. -- What do you think of the women in "Tough Guys Don't Dance"--that seems to be the epitome of a man's novel, yet a lot of women I know are attracted to it (maybe for Mailer's sheer prose and genius rather than the subject matter). "The Naked and the Dead" certainly does not seem to have Woman as the focus of his novel, nor does "Ancient Evenings" or "Armies of the Night." Read "The Prisoner of Sex" for Mailer's few on femininity! :-)
Subject: Re: NORMAN MAILER / WOMEN Date: Thu, 29 Jan 1998 16:40:48 +0000 From: "F. Schwartz" fabela@gte.net Prisoner of Sex (Atlantic Monthly) lays out Mailer's obsession for a complete viewing. I don't think it's his "view" of womanhood as much as his gaze upon it. Unforgettable prose. Henry Miller was proud. "Deer Park", his "Hollywood" novel, orbits around the women in it. "Naked & the Dead" was certainly a novel of war, but the beginnings of his reverence/rhapsodizing/wailing for the love of women can be found in the sexual reveries of the soldiers. "Armies of the Night" is non-fiction. Peppered with descriptions of the women in the various political camps. "Ancient Evenings": well, if you've read the entire thing, I congratulate you, but what I read had an awful lot of sexual subtext, I think I recall some anal references in the context of limning sexual practices in Egypt... glad to see some signs of life in this forum! And I agree, Norman's about much more than sex, and yet sex is writ large all over his work. I also confess I was looking for a Mailer page the day I found jco's... Francie
Subject: Re: FOXFIRE, MAN CRAZY SERIES Date: Thu, 29 Jan 1998 17:02:14 -0800 (PST) From: joyce l merritt jlm29260@email.csun.edu Francie: "Amen" to your comment about the term "a woman's writer". Now, if only society as a whole could be persuaded to agree with you (about that, and about all the related issues involving women)! Steve
Subject: Re: A WOMAN'S WRITER Date: Thu, 29 Jan 1998 17:12:21 -0800 (PST) From: joyce l merritt jlm29260@email.csun.edu David: I don't mean this to be flack. Surely men should care deeply about what we commonly call "women's issues" and women should care deeply about "men's issues" because both are necessary aspects of being human. It seems to me that most of us, of both sexes, are egotistical enough to assume that being human means being as much as possible like we are ourselves. As long as humanity consists of two sexes (not to mention commn subsets of the "standard" sexes, such as gay people), none of us can be more than half human at most. The closest we can come to full humanity is to become as familiar as possible with the concerns of the kinds of human that we aren't (that's a horribly awkward sentence, but I think it says what I want to say). In that sense, I don't think it's helpful to classify anyone as a "woman's writer" or a "man's writer", even if the writer seems to concentrate on the issues of one sex (there's also the matter that such terms are commonly used to devalue a writer's work, implying the word "only"). Steve
Subject: Re: Women as decoys for other women Date: Thu, 29 Jan 1998 17:22:04 -0800 (PST) From: joyce l merritt jlm29260@email.csun.edu Sue: I'm a great fan of your insights, but I strongly disagree about the ending of "Man Crazy". I'll reveal that I've been in therapy myself, and have been told (as a general statement; I didn't want to get involved with my therapists) that it is not only unethical for therapists to have romantic relationships with their therapists, but that they can lose their licenses for doing so in less than two years from the end of the therapy (at least in California). I believe that JCO wrote the ending knowing this point, and that she meant to show that Ingrid is still open to abusive relationships with men who remind her of "Daddy" (for the unethical therapist is definately being abusive). Steve
Subject: Re: JCO & religion Date: Thu, 29 Jan 1998 20:59:48 EST From: Cyranomish@aol.com Correction, the essay in which JCO talks about her relationship with religion and the Bible is in a book entitled COMMUNION: CONTEMPORARY WRITERS REVEAL THE BIBLE IN THEIR LIVES, an anthology edited by David Rosenberg. Before she left home for college, JCO attended a Methodist church and then went to a local Catholic church with her family. Cyrano
Subject: Re: A WOMAN'S WRITER Date: Thu, 29 Jan 1998 21:20:23 EST From: Shmoopak@aol.com I always wondered how apt JCO's portrayal of Corky Corcoran really was (not being a man myself). Obviously he was not just any man but a political animal. Given all the scandal going on about the White House, I think JCO's portrayal of this up and coming politico seems pretty on the mark.
Subject: Re: Women as decoys for other women Date: Thu, 29 Jan 1998 23:33:47 EST From: Ehaggar@aol.com Hi--- Just wanted to add my strong agreement to Steve's analysis of the end of Man Crazy----there is NO relationship more manipulative than that of a male therapist and a distraught female client. This novel is not a happy ending one----it is one in which a badly damaged girl moves from relating to the psychopath to relating with the therapist----there is no sense of independence here, just a continued need to be managed by forceful men----- Ellen
Subject: Re: NORMAN MAILER / WOMEN Date: Fri, 30 Jan 1998 15:32:24 +0900 From: "±Ëº±«," David, Think I can agree with you when you say Mailer is a man's writer. Not so much as a label as a convenient way of describing some characteristics of his novels. I read "Tough Guys Don't Dance", and yes, I agree that seems to be an epitome of men's novel in the same way Alfred Bester's "The Demolished Man" or Gavin Ryal's "Midnight Plus One" is a man's novel. But though being a woman, I immensely enjoyed all three of them. Yet still, when I think of the women in their novels, I get kind of uncomfortable feelings. I think it's the popular fiction tradition they are using (like all the Hollywood pictures). Well, the paradox is...I can still enjoy "men's novels" so long as they are beautifully done. While reading, they make me forget I'm a passive woman victimized by the plot. Maybe that's the real problem according to some feminist critics, though. :-) Kim from Korea
Subject: Re: Women as decoys for other women Date: Fri, 30 Jan 1998 10:25:31 EST From: Cyranomish@aol.com Hi, Steve. I agree that Ingrid's situation at the end of MAN CRAZY does not look very promising. Cleverly, JCO keeps Ingrid's new boyfriend completely out of sight -- possibly he is the one who loaned Ingrid the car to go visit her mother. At first, it made me think of Marianne's (sp?) happy ending in WE WERE THE MULVANEYS, but then we see M. meeting that doctor -- who is a veternarian, not a psychotherapist -- and his policy is to let her reach her own conclusions. (a therapist would be directive, even if he were a nice, decent guy who means well.) The end of MAN CRAZY reminded me of the scene in THEM where Maureen tells her mother that she's going to marry a college teacher -- but we readers can see that this marriage will have lots of problems and that in fact Maureen is simply continuing her old maladaptive strategies on a new level. Back to Ingrid, however, I think JCO provides a poetic clue in the final image of the damaged tree that continues growing toward the light the best way it know how. The broken fir tree goes on living in its fallen state -- its only option being to die. Cyrano
Subject: Re: A WOMAN'S WRITER Date: Fri, 30 Jan 1998 11:03:24 -0800 From: composer2@juno.com Steve, I agree that it is not helpful to classify writers as a "man's writer" or a "woman's writer." But, just as you pointed out, I do think there are certain texts written about/for/encompassing women and same with men, and in that sense writers who continually write in one of those ideas could be dubbed (not necessarily 'labeled' a woman's writer or a man's writer--not in the sense to demean their work or deraugotize them. I am in concordance with the thought that no author could be fixed in one area (men or women) of writing, but they certainly can be thought to be of the school of a particular style. Norman Mailer from the school of "man's writing" and V.S. Naipaul from the school of "Magic Realism." That is kind of like comparing apples to oranges, as they say, but you get the idea. Great discussion. David C. Michigan
Subject: Re: JCO & religion Date: Fri, 30 Jan 1998 10:40:43 -0800 From: composer2@juno.com JCO maintains to this day a Methodist preference (although I don't know how "church-going" she is). At least that is what she said in a recent lecture. David C. Michigan
Subject: Re: JCO & religion Date: Fri, 30 Jan 1998 13:49:23 EST From: Cyranomish@aol.com Hi, David. In that COMMUNION book I mentioned yesterday, JCO refers to herself as "a nonreligious observer of religion." Cyrano
Subject: Re: "Methodist preference" Date: Fri, 30 Jan 1998 13:53:45 EST From: Cyranomish@aol.com One more thought, JCO's "Methodist preference" makes sense in that the Methodist religion has always had a special concern with the poor, as does JCO's writing. One of her earliest declarations about her own writing was that she wanted to speak for people who were unable to speak for themselves. Cyrano
Subject: Re: "Methodist preference" Date: Fri, 30 Jan 1998 15:15:31 EST From: Ehaggar@aol.com Cyrano--- Just a note about JCO's religious preference---when Methodism was started by John Wesley in mid-19th century England, it appealed not just to the poor, but to the working class and rural population---I like to think that JCO is particularly good in expressing those states of mind, and these are certainly groups of people who cannot speak for themselves in a literary manner. And before anyone hits me on the head for sounding elitist---I come from a semi-literate rural background and have the most respect for people caught in that kind of life (Fred, sorry to link literature and life again) Ellen Haggar
Subject: Re: A WOMAN'S WRITER Date: Fri, 30 Jan 1998 20:14:41 -0000 From: "Gary Couzens" Gjcouzens@btinternet.com I agree with this on the whole. I'd even suggest that there are no subjects that a writer must have first-hand experience to write about. If a novel about women cannot speak to men, or vice versa (given a open-minded reader), then I'd suggest this is a failing of the novel, or of the reader's imagination or both. (You could extend this argument to include novels written by and about racial and sexual and religious minorities.) You don't have to be a woman to be able to read Jane Austen, say; conversely, you don't have to be Jewish to read Isaac Bashevis Singer. I don't know what the ratio of the sexes on this discussion group is - from the posts I'd guess it's close to 50:50. As it happens, I'm a male reader who does find himself reading quite a few writers who are women, JCO included. This may say something about me. I recently wrote an article about writing fiction from the POV of the opposite sex. I'm talking from a British perspective here, and other countries' experience may be different - certainly, when I was growing up, it was okay for girls to aspire to "boys' things", but not the opposite. To call a girl a tomboy would not insult her, but to call a boy a "sissy" would be devastating. Women may have to adapt themselves to male viewpoints to get by in a male-dominated society, but the converse is actively discouraged. Possibly as a result of that, we tend to notice more when male writers write about women than vice versa. One example that springs to mind is William Boyd's "Brazzaville Beach"; more recently, Martin Amis's "Night Train" was much discussed because it's written first-person-female (by a writer who's been accused of misogyny more than once in the past). Women writing with a "male" voice tend to attract less attention. A couple of examples: Rose Tremain's "Restoration" (Booker-Prize nominated, later filmed) and Donna Tartt's "The Secret History" both attracted quite a bit of attention - deservedly, as they're both good novels - but nobody to my knowledge commented upon the fact that they're both written first-person-male. And quite convincingly too, to my mind. In the light of this, I think it's important to say that JCO writes consistently well about men. Corky in "What I Lived For" is a brilliant portrait from inside (third person, admittedly, but consistently from his viewpoint) of a certain type of man. His machismo, his insecurities and casual sexism come across very clearly. He's the sort of man who would regard his "feminine side" as a weakness. You could put a male pseudonym on this novel and (JCO's distinctive prose-style apart) fool a lot of people as to the author's gender. Gary Couzens
Subject: Re: A WOMAN'S WRITER OR... Date: Fri, 30 Jan 1998 15:00:16 +0000 From: "F. Schwartz" fabela@gte.net Gary, don't tantalize us in the "States"! -- "Night Train" hasn't come out here as yet. Being a Martin Amis "freak" (favorites are "Money" and "The Information") I am all a-twitter about the new one... and now you've told me its voice is that of a female. Hope nobody's neck is sprained during the jump from Mailer to Amis - shall we now talk about the American "womanizer" as compared to the "Brit" version -- and compare Amis's women to Mailer's? And maybe it should be called "A Writer's Women."... Oh - I keep forgetting to mention that, for me, "Tough Guys Don't Dance" was not Grade A Mailer - I can't even remember the women. Certainly they weren't as strong as Elena in DEER PARK. The later you get in Mailer's oeuvre, the stronger the non-fiction (Picasso, Marilyn), and yet he still has an old world way of writing about sex. When I say "old world" I mean prefeminist. *girlish giggle* Francie
Subject: Re: "Methodist preference" Date: Fri, 30 Jan 1998 18:19:34 EST From: Cyranomish@aol.com Ellen, thanks for the info on Methodism. Rural & blue collar are certainly JCO's background. I hope her 1997 story "We Were Worried About You" appears in the next collection. It's a skillful tale about one family's relationship with cars -- how owning big, solid cars buffers them from the poor and scruffy-looking people in their town. Cyrano
Subject: Re: "Methodist preference" Date: Fri, 30 Jan 1998 18:47:14 EST From: Ehaggar@aol.com Cyrano--- I look forward to reading "We Were Worried About You." I always enjoy JCO's obsession/understanding of the importance of cars in many people's lives. Don't know how it is in other parts of the country, but in North and South Carolina if you want to see the fanciest, most impressive cars, you go to the poorest parts of town. Indeed, it isn't unusual to be driving along the backroads and pass shacks falling to pieces side by side with the most up-to- date and accessorized vehicles. I am sure that for some of the owners the car is their spiritual home, not the mean places in which they actually have to sleep...... Ellen Haggar
Subject: Re: Martin Amis Date: Fri, 30 Jan 1998 19:25:18 -0600 From: JonWendell@webtv.net (John Eggers) Francie wrote that "Night Train" is not available in the USA. It is, and I'm almost done. It's a short novel(174pp) and is the size of Man Crazy. I like it , quite a departure for Amis.
Subject: Re: Martin Amis Date: Fri, 30 Jan 1998 17:42:12 +0000 From: "F. Schwartz" fabela@gte.net Wow. It hasn't reached little San Luis Obispo prior to this week. Now I'm all excited! Francie
Subject: Re: Martin Amis Date: Fri, 30 Jan 1998 20:57:46 EST From: Ehaggar@aol.com Francie--- Are you a published novelist? You mentioned having dedicated one to Norman Mailer--give us titles! Ellen Haggar
Subject: ON BOXING Date: Sat, 31 Jan 1998 11:06:29 EST From: composer2@juno.com (D. C. C.) Kim-- While I somewhat agree with you that JCO's ON BOXING reveals her obsession with men's physicality, brutality, and perhaps passion, I think it deals more with just her ultimate love and greater obsession with the sport of boxing. I hope you are reading the book-length version from Ecco Press. I have spoken to Miss Oates about that particular work, and she has commented that boxing is one of her "secret" or "side" passions. She also commented on how shocked everyone was when the books was published, including many prominent New York Time sports columnists, that a WOMAN was writing about this very male sport. It kind of broke the barrier for women boxing writers, and provided an outlet for Oates to blurb about boxing legends like Mike Tyson and Muhammad Ali. Look for a portion of the book, ON BOXING, to appear in THE MUHAMMAD ALI READER, which will appear in June from Ecco Press. I have just finished reading the pre-pub proofs and the entire collection, edited by Gerlad Early, is a magnificent forum of great boxing writers (Plimpton, Mailer, Hauser, Talese, etc.). David C. Michigan
Subject: Re: Women as decoys for other women Date: Sat, 31 Jan 1998 11:35:54 EST From: Shmoopak@aol.com Steve, I hate to admit it, but I think you are right. Of course JCO would know the potential for abuse if a therapist starts seeing a patient. And as we all know, JCO has written countless stories revolving around the vulnerable young woman and the powerful older daddy figure, and these all end tragically. And JCO does give us a terrifying protrayal of a patient's relationship with her therapist(s) in Lives of the Twins (as Rosamond Smith). I guess the ending of Man Crazy seems happy to me because in comparison to the satanist, the therapist ain't such a bad alternative. But in reality, it's just another JCO story waiting to happen! Thanks for the response, Sue
Subject: Re: ON BOXING Date: Sat, 31 Jan 1998 08:59:30 +0000 From: John ivan139@spiritone.com Katherine Dunn is also quite into boxing, though I can't say that I've read anything of hers on this subject. Don't really care to. Don't see what all the excitement is about. Ivan
Subject: Amis Critical Triumph Date: Sat, 31 Jan 1998 09:09:41 +0000 From: "F. Schwartz" fabela@gte.net Just read two rave reviews of NIGHT TRAIN (NY Times). It's beckoning to me! I think the "darkness" of boxing is another element in the mix that results in jco's heightened understanding of some women's attraction to "brutal" men. Now that I know Amis has written a dark romance, a police procedural from a female point of view, I can hardly resist finding strands for comparison. I have written (and published) briefly about NBA basketball. The magazine who bought the piece cut out almost all the actual "sports writing" -- very likely because women aren't supposed to write about roundball, either. Someday I hope to write about basketball, maybe as the setting for a "dark romance." Francie
Subject: Re: Women as decoys for other women Date: Sat, 31 Jan 1998 12:29:13 EST From: Ehaggar@aol.com Hi Sue-- Not to take anything away from Steve, but I was the one who commented on the ending of Man Crazy and the therapist/patient abuse thing----I was answering Steve, who indeed does say a whole lot of excellent things! Ellen Haggar
Subject: Re: Women as decoys for other women, "Man Crazy," Therapists Date: Sat, 31 Jan 1998 09:43:44 -0800 (PST) From: Anthony Risser ahris@yahoo.com Several from the list have written over the past week concerning the therapist-client relationship in the novel "Man Crazy." For example, ---Shmoopak@aol.com wrote: >...Of course JCO would know the potential for abuse if a therapist starts seeing a patient... And JCO does give us a terrifying protrayal of a patient's relationship with her therapist(s) in Lives of the Twins (as Rosamond Smith)... I guess the ending of Man Crazy seems happy to me because in comparison to the > satanist, the therapist ain't such a bad alternative. But in reality, it's just another JCO story waiting to happen!... Psychologists have a code of Ethical Principles. Adherence to them is typically dictated within each state's statutes as part of licensing and regulation statutes. The list might be interested in the one's that address sexual/romantic relationships: Standard 4.05: Psychologists do not engage in sexual intimacies with current patients or clients. Standard 4.06: Psychologists do not accept as therapy patients or client persons with whom they have engaged in sexual intimacies. Standard 4.07: (a) Psychologists do not engage in sexual intimacies with a former therapy patient or client for at least two years after cessation or termination of professional services. (b) Because sexual intimacies with a former therapy patient or client are so frequently harmful to the patient or client, and because such intimacies undermine public confidence in the psychology profession and thereby deter the public's use of needed services, psychologists do not engage in sexual intimacies with former therapy patients and clients even after a two-year interval except in the most unusual circumstances. The psychologist who engages in such activity after the two years following cessation or termination of treatment bears the burden of demonstrating that there has been no exploitation, in light of all relevant factors including...(7) any statements of actions made by the therapist during the course of therapy suggesting or inviting the possibility of a poosttermination sexual or romantic relationship with the patient or client. Am I wrong in remembering "Man Crazy" as being more than a 'slam dunk' in outlining that relationship? Although I would need to re-read "Man Crazy" before offering a definitive comment here, I do remember when reading it the first time, the part of the dynamic in that relationship which was the most interesting to me was who, if it was either of the two, would emerge, actually, as the manipulative one. Anthony H. Risser, Ph.D. rissera@yahoo.com
Subject: Re: Women as decoys for other women, "Man Crazy," Therapists Date: Sat, 31 Jan 1998 14:06:42 EST From: Cyranomish@aol.com Hi, Anthony. The thing about Ingrid and her therapist is that we never see them together, and Ingrid's romance with him happens at the end of MAN CRAZY. By keeping that relationship entirely offstage, the author forces us to think the matter through. Those of us who long to see the heroine have a happy ending will hope for the best and see it as a positive development. Those of us with some experience in/or knowledge about therapist/doctor relationships will find the ending more poignant and troubling. Cyrano
Subject: Re: Women as decoys for other women, "Man Crazy," Therapists Date: Sat, 31 Jan 1998 11:57:33 -0800 (PST) From: Anthony Risser ahris@yahoo.com Greeting, Cyrano: Yet, am I mistaken: wasn't the therapist introduced to us right at the start, with the invitation to Ingrid to tell her story? "Offstage" yes, but wasn't that enough of a 'red flag' to the reader that something, somehow, sometime (though not necessarily what did occur) would occur? Again, I am relying on my memory, but wasn't there something about the initial portrayal of the therapist that almost seemed that he might be somewhat naive in nature or experience (which was what opened up the dynamic for me to keep some part of my mind open for things to happen)? [There already is someone who signs as "Anthony," so I'll continue with the full:] Anthony H. Risser, Ph.D. rissera@yahoo.com
Subject: Re: Women as decoys for other women Date: Sat, 31 Jan 1998 15:01:22 -0800 (PST) From: joyce l merritt jlm29260@email.csun.edu Sue: Thanks for your response, too. I've been thinking vaguely about reading "Lives of the Twins"; now I guess I'll have to go out and really do it soon. But first, "Mysteries of Winterthur" (I just finished "A Bloodsmoor Romance"--now there's a book with the happiest ending I've seen yet in JCO. I gather that the happy ending was part of the point in writing it). I do agree with you that Ingrid in "Man Crazy" is better off with her therapist-lover than with Enoch (or perhaps "in less extreme trouble" would be the right term), so there is a sort of positiveness to the ending, even though it's poisoned. But among the possibilities for Ingrid's future (along with emotional collapse, isolation and a return to drugs and dangerous sex) might be a development of her writing beyond the therapist-lover's controlling intentions, and an eventual disgust with her manipulator that she might not direct completely against herself. I don't think she would have the self-confidence to walk out on him "Doll's House" style, but perhaps her response might be enough less self-destructive than her previous responses to let her find a new plateau that would be at least a little better than the previous one. At least we can't completely rule out such a hope. Steve
Subject: Re: A WOMAN'S WRITER Date: Sat, 31 Jan 1998 18:04:29 -0500 (EST) From: Matthew A Cheney macheney@cisunix.unh.edu Gary Couzens makes some great points. This whole thread on "women writers" and "women's writers" makes me think of things a number of "minority writers" have said about their work and their audiences -- for instance, Sarah Schulman's call for men (gay & straight) to start reading "lesbian novels" and to thus help reduce the ghettoizing effect of such labels. The whole issue of labels is gigantic -- where do they start, where do they end? Some science fiction writers absolutely hate the term "science fiction", while others go out of their way to embrace it. (An English professor once told me that science fiction can't be literature, because it is escapist formula fiction. But what if a story or a novel isn't escapist, isn't formulaic, but is still science fiction? "Then," he said, "it's literature. Not science fiction.") I suppose the discussion could get really deconstructionist and say, "But what's a novel?" (To which we answer, "I know it when I see it." Or, "Who the hell cares?") Another concept the discussion brings into question is the old adage, "Write what you know." Of course, those four words can be interpreted in many different ways, but the most dangerous interpretation has led to teachers telling students that they can't possibly write about people in situations that they have not themselves experienced. (I've heard of this happening many times.) This would, of course, preclude writing about someone of a different gender, sexuality, race, etc. My favorite answer to the "Write what you know" command comes from the end of Gore Vidal's essay on Thomas Love Peacock: "In any case, write what you know will always be excellent advice for those who ought not to write at all. Write what you think, what you imagine, what you suspect: that is the only way out of the dead end of the Serious Novel which so many ambitious people want to write and no one on earth -- or even on campus -- wants to read." Matt Cheney
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