If short story collections often play second fiddle to novels, then pity the poor novel, which must play second fiddle to nonfiction. A quick check of books sales make it quite evident that more people buy nonfiction than fiction books. And the recent adoption in many states of the so-called Common Core, which insists on students reading more nonfiction and less fiction, seems to reinforce the widespread assumption that no real knowledge can come from reading something someone has made up.
I would argue that the common cause of the Common Core attitude toward fiction is due to a general misunderstanding about how to read "literary" fiction--which the short story is more apt to illustrate than the novel—and a general underestimation of the human value of reading literary fiction.
A recent study by David Comer Kid and Emanuele Castano in Science (vol. 342-18 Oct. 2013), which got a bit of publicity in the popular press, concludes that reading literary fiction led to better performance on tests that reflect folks' ability to understand other people's mental and emotional states than those who read nonfiction, popular fiction, or nothing at all.
I plan to talk more about this study next month, using the stories of Alice Munro, as examples of literary stories, in order to make some suggestions as to why reading "literary" stories might improve one's ability to identify and understand the subjective states of others, while reading popular stories and nonfiction--not so much..
The general preference for nonfiction might suggest that if writers of fiction create stories that make use of or communicate the kinds of ideas that we often encounter in nonfiction, e.g. science, history, sociology, readers might find those stories more appealing. Is it any wonder that some short story artists, finding themselves at least three seats down the row in the string section playing third fiddle, might make themselves more popular by incorporating nonfiction in their stories. Jim Shepard is one of the best-known such writers. In answer to an interviewer’s question about whether “historical short stories” provide readers the pleasure of both fiction and nonfiction, Shepard replied:
They
do feed the hunger that readers have for nonfiction in fiction. When I first started
reading literary fiction, I was struck by how much I was learning – not only
about the human heart, which is traditionally what literature is supposed to be
about, but also about how the world worked and the way the world was. So when I
read Ernest Hemingway’s [short story] “Big Two-Hearted River,” I felt I was
learning not only about Nick Adams’s interior but also about fly fishing.”
I have
already talked about this issue in an earlier post on Shepard and his colleague
Andrea Barrett, expressing my reluctance to believe that one of the real values
of "Big, Two-Hearted River" is to learn about how to catch fish, even
as I expressed my admiration for the stories of Andrea Barrett. Barrett, who
has published some well-received novels, as well as three collections of short
stories. Her most recent collection, Archangel
has made the shortlist for the Story
Prize this year, and once again, as in her two earlier collections, she
integrates history and science into her fiction.
Uncertain
about a chosen career, Andrea Barrett was in and out of graduate school in the
late 1970's and early 1980's, doing advanced study first in zoology and then in
medieval and reformation history. She
held a number of jobs--receptionist,
billing clerk, customer server representative, greenhouse technician, clerk,
secretary, and research assistant; in the late 1980's, she did free-lance
medical editing, book reviewing, and teaching.
She has said she learned a great deal of biology and medicine from
several of these jobs, which she has used in her fiction.
Barrett
has said that she shifted from science to writing because she realized while in
graduate school that what she had was a passion for the passion of science; she
says that it took her many years to realize that what she mistook for her own
obsession with science was, in fact, other people's obsessions. Andrea Barrett
once told an interviewer that after doing graduate work, she began to see a way
to weave science and history together with her love of fiction. The resulting elegant tapestry was her
collection Ship Fever and Other Stories,
a surprise winner of the National Book Award in 1996.
Although
the stories in Ship Fever focus on characters caught up in pursuits in
the natural sciences, Barrett seems equally interested is in the vulnerable
human element behind the scientific impulse.
Many of the stories are historical fictions in the classic sense: they
involve real people from the past, often very famous scientists such as Gregor
Mendel and Carl Linnaeus, and they present the past as it impinges upon and
informs the present. All of Barrett's
stories use scientific fact and historical events to throw light on basic human
impulses and conflicts.
The
title story of her second collection, Servants
of the Map, is a carefully constructed novella about a nineteenth-century
surveyor who is part of an exploration party to the Himalayas. In a series of
letters to his wife Clara back in England, Max Vigne discovers the power of
writing to construct reality and thus the ability to go beyond mapping and
recording to actually “seeing,” thereby creating a map not only of the physical
world but of the human mind.
Barrett’s
conviction of the basic similarities between science, history and storytelling
is based on her conviction that all three construct narratives—whether they are
called scientific theories, historical accounts, or fiction--to reveal
connections, relationships, the interdependence of all things; all are human
efforts to understand, or perhaps construct, what makes life meaningful.
As she
did in Servants of the Map, Barrett
has created some links between stories in her new collection Archangel. A young boy named Constantine or Stan, who
appears in the first story "The Investigators," later shows up in the
final story as a World War I soldier.
And a middle-aged woman named Henrietta Atkins, who influences Stan in
"The Investigators" later appears as a young woman in "The
Island." Finally, a young boy named Sam, who appears in "The Ether of
Space," later shows up as a central character in the story "The
Particles." I am no real fan of
such inter-story connections, for I think they are often promoted as
quasi-novels, shifting focus from the integrity of individual stories to
novelistic connections. Thankfully, Barrett does not push this linked-story
device; each story stands fully on its own.
Rather
than summarize the five stories—which deal with such facts of history and
science as Darwinism, genetics, manned air flight, and x-ray technology—I will
talk a bit about my favorite story in the collection, "The Ether of
Space." Most reviewers favor
"The Particles" (chosen for this year's O. Henry Award Stories), which deals with genetics, or "The
Island," which deals with the still-controversial issue of Darwinism vs. creationism,
as propounded by naturalist Louis Agassiz.
I suspect that those two stories are reviewer favorites precisely
because they focus more on what they like to call "hot-button" issues
involving genetics, race, and religion than on individual human complexity and
universal human themes. Stories that seem to focus primarily on current social
issues are more appealing to readers who prefer nonfiction, for they deal with
issues that nonfiction often makes its own.
I like
"The Ether of Space" best primarily because it does not deal with a
current "hot-button" social issue, but because I think it deals with
the more general philosophic conflict between what human beings can know and
what they yearn for, i.e., between what is and what is desired.
The
story is set in 1920. An American
astrophysicist named Owen is intrigued by theories of Sir Oliver Lodge, who
affirms the reality of the ether as a means by which the living can communicate
with the dead. The other central character
is Phoebe, a writer of popular science books, whose husband Michael, an astronomer,
died ten years previous. The conflict
within her is between her scientific acceptance of Einstein's theories and her
human desire to believe the opposing theories
of Lodge. She and Owen correspond by
mail, and she challenges his tentative acceptance of Lodge's theories.
Phoebe
goes to a lecture Lodge gives on "The Reality of the Unseen," in which he argues that there are things
known to be real, even though no one can see them, for example atoms, radio
waves, radar, etc. He also talks about the reality of mental events, such as
thoughts and feelings, and from these analogies, he posits that the human
personality exists after death in a form invisible, but which makes
communication after death possible. He
says the dead are only separated from us by a "veil of sense" and
that the senses have been developed through necessity for the physical survival
of the fittest. He argues that the space
that separates us, one from the other, is not empty, that indeed we connected
by it and communicate through it. Lodge
is interested in "imponderables," "things that work secretly and
have to be apprehended mentally," such as electricity and magnetism. Since Phoebe knows that Einstein is only
"possibly" right, Lodge is "possibly" not wrong—at least
about the ether, although she thinks he is utterly wrong about spirits of the
dead that exist in the ether.
A
reporter in a newspaper article about
Lodge calls him a "typical Victorian," in the tradition of Darwin and
Huxley, who still reads his Wordsworth and Tennyson and who "appreciates
the poet's wonderment in those days at the marvels of science."
Lodge
argues that the ether is the most substantial thing in the universe and that we
have failed to discern it for so long precisely because it is so
universal. He offers the example that if
we were fish surrounded by water, with no sense of anything but water, water
would be the last thing we would discover. He argues that although we cannot
apprehend the ether as we do matter by touching or smelling it, we move through
it without any friction whatsoever. He
claims that a body can only act on another body through a medium of
communication. "Always look for the medium of communication," says
Lodge. "You cannot act at a distance without some means of communication;
and yet you can certainly act where you are not, as when by a letter or
telegram you bring a friend home."
He insists the ether of space is, in the material world, the
"fundamental substantial reality," claiming that the whole problem
with Einstein's relativity theory is that it rejects the ether as our standard
of reference and replaces it by the observer, that is, instead of claiming the
potential connection of all human kind, asserts the isolation of the individual
and all reality as relative.
Phoebe
struggles with the implications of Lodge's theories: "The ether was a home
for ethereal beings, the medium by which soul spoke to soul; perhaps God lived
there: perhaps it was God himself."
What torments her is the possibility that if Lodge is right, her husband
has been within her reach all the time and she could have been talking to him.
Owen
writes her and asks if she has fallen into the old trap "of trying to
make, from the symbols we use to reason about reality, pictures we can view in
our minds?" He reminds her that we
make "models" because they help us think. She thinks that although she has lost Michael
and is at a loss with Sam, "on the page she could make an object that was
shapely, and orderly, and on occasion helpful to others." (This is what Barrett's story tries to do--create
an orderly, patterned fiction that help us think about what it means to be a
human being in the world).
The
heart of the story comes near the end when Phoebe reads what her son Sam has
written about his father Michael and the theories of Lodge: "I don't know
whether my father exists in some ethereal form or only in my heart. What I do know is that the questions we ask
about the world and the experiments we design to answer them are connected to our
feelings." As Phoebe listens to her father playing Bach while she
and Sam and her mother read, she knows that "space between her and her family
wasn't empty at all but held light and music, feelings and thoughts, and a bond
that could be stretched without breaking." And indeed, whether she denies
Lodge's theories about the ether, she recognizes something that connections all
human beings—the music of Bach, for example, something that Carl Jung
called Synchronicity—an underlying
pattern or connection between things.
Lodge,
who still reads his Wordsworth and Tennyson, theorizes a reality that might
best be described as "aesthetic," a theory that may not correspond to
external physical reality, but that holds together in a beautiful
"wish," like a myth or a metaphor.
It may be "wrong," but it may reveal more about human
complexity than what is "right." As William H. Gass says, the core of
creativity lies in metaphor, in model-making.
Walker
Percy talks about this in his essay
"Metaphor as Mistake" in The
Message in the Bottle.
He opens
with an example about a coin-operated juke box manufactured by Seeburg Co.,
which, in the South, was often called "seabird." He says this reveals
a feature of metaphor that has always troubled philosophers—that it is wrong;
that it asserts of one thing that it is something else. But Percy argues that in conceiving of the
juke box under the "wrong" symbol "seabird," rather than the
"correct" description "Seeburg," we know the object better,
"conceive it in a more plenary fashion, have more immediate access to it,
than under its descriptive title."
Percy
also gives the example of a boy who calls a "blue darter hawk" by the
mistaken name "blue dollar hawk" because the bird's flight suggests
some "incommunicable something," which Gerard Manley Hopkins called
"inscape." He says the situation of the boy is like that which philosopher
Ernst Cassier calls the "mythico-religious Urphenomenon," in which
primitive man comes upon something so distinctive that it seems to have a
presence, which gives rise to the "momentary deity," a sense of the
unformulated presence of the thing; "the metaphor arises from the symbolic
act in which the emotional cry of the beholder becomes the vehicle by which the
thing is conceived, the name of the thing."
Or as Andrea
Barrett's character Sam says, the questions we ask about the world and the
experiments we design to answer them are connected to our feelings. Several
chapters in my book, I Am Your Brother:
Short Story Studies deal with Cassirer's theories and how they illuminate
the means by great short stories make possible human understanding and empathy
with other human beings.
I plan
to talk more about what is called Theory of Mind and how reading literary
fiction improves understanding other's mental states during March and April, as
I prepare for a keynote presentation I will be making in May at the Canadian
Literature Symposium in Ottawa on Alice Munro.
You can take a look at the program at http://www.canlit-symposium.ca/
1 comment:
Thanks for this review. Just wanted to ask you about the extensive back story in "The Particles."
Don't get me wrong, I thought the story was wonderful on many levels, characters expertly drawn, and the moral conflict was very interesting.
But at times, it felt like I was reading a novel, instead of a short story.
So did you think the back story took away from the piece? I'd be interested to get your thoughts on this.
Thanks,
Dwayne
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