[With work
on my current book project ramping up to a fever pitch, at precisely the same
time that the end of semester grading pours in—thanks, universe!—this week’s
series will be particularly quick hits: each day a single American Studies
insight, not necessarily earth-shattering but on my mind, courtesy of one of my
classes this semester. Your insights and responses very welcome in the
comments!]
Today’s
insight came toward the end of the semester, as my American Novel to 1950
students discussed our different authors and texts from across the semester.
As we
talked about two of our more interesting characters, Kate Chopin’s Edna Pontellier
and Willa Cather’s Ántonia Shimerda,
the link between literary elements like narration and perspective and American
Studies questions of identity and community really hit home to me. Chopin’s
conventional realistic narrator—who has the ability to give us many characters’
thoughts but also creates a great deal of ambiguity about how we read those
characters—is hugely different from Cather’s more modernist and artistic one
(who is consciously writing a novel about his memories). There are lots of potential
reasons for those choices, and an equal number of important effects—but without
question, these narrative choices drive our readings and responses to both key
women, and to the many important issues (women’s rights, marriage, romance and
reality, immigration, work, and more) to which they connect.
I could
write a lot more on that topic, and unfortunately don’t have time at the
moment. So for those who know the novels, I’ll just pose this thought
experiment: what if Chopin’s novel were narrated by Robert LeBrun, highlighting
the stages of his love for Edna? And what if Cather’s had an outside narrator
who could both show us the complexities of Ántonia’s perspective and comment
critically on her identity and live (even representing the critical perspective
of Black Hawk, for example)? How different would both novels be as a result?
And how much does this help us see the centrality of a choice of narrator to
every other aspect of a novel?
Next insight
tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What
do you think? And any insights to share?
5/7 Memory
Day nominee: Archibald
MacLeish, the World War I veteran and poet whose career included
some of the most innovative
Modernist poems, important tenures at the American Academy of Arts and Letters and the Library of
Congress, and an impressive willingness
to evolve and grow with the twentieth century.
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