| A Review of: Oblivion: Stories by Lyall BushModernism, the tradition David Foster Wallace belongs to with what
used to be called a vengeance, was supposed to have been wiped away
long ago by Postmodernism, with its shifting styles and its deadpan
assurances that surface is depth and skin is just another way of
saying soul. Samuel Beckett and Andy Warhol, and the last century's
presiding genius, Marcel Duchamp, were the gray eminences of the
new tradition. They shrugged away the Moderns' ghosthunter humanism,
their hungry hearts, their wager that well-arranged words could
revive cities (Ulysses), capture thought as it passed through the
wobbly glass of its own reflection (The Waves), and make eerie
tintypes of the past's glow-y litter in the present (The Waste
Land).
Both traditions attracted virtuosos by the score. No Modern topped
Joyce for wit and word invention ("strandentwining cable of
all flesh" is one of many in Ulysses), and for many years now
Thomas Pynchon's bravura style has made the most interesting
Postmodernism cocktail of pessimism and irony in the language. His
characters and his sentences shape and re-shape themselves on the
pages until they pull back the curtain on the world-culture,
mind-exposing it as a Moebius-strip loop about junk and godlessness,
the infinite a mute figure within the finite.
David Foster Wallace's past few books-Infinite Jest, A Supposedly
Fun Thing I'll Never Do Again, Brief Interviews with Hideous Men-carry
echoes of Joyce's supple authorial gaze as well as Pynchon's
polymorphous roll through cultural detritus. The presiding consciousness
in his stories twists anxiety and hysteria together in scenes that
bulge with comedy, stream-of-conscious obsessions and spiritual
paralysis. Often his stories seem to be mounting a grand mal moral
seizure about the present world's turn from logic, coherence and
soul, but then they fade before going all the way. His sentences
whirr and roar with scene-painting, ferociously accumulated layers
of data and detail that seem to want to fill in the world that is
being so comically analyzed as empty.
The first story, "Mister Squishy", is a good example of
the sort of ekphrastic that Wallace specializes in. In its sixty-five
pages the story inventories an astonishing number of material and
psychological specifics that are part of the launch of a new snack
cake. Set in the upper floor of a skyscraper, in 1995, a jittery
facilitator from "Team ?y", a "cutting-edge market
research firm," moves his focus group to the final phase of
an interview that includes sampling the new "chocolate-intensive"
version of the familiar Mister Squishy cake, and the chance for the
group to discuss the product in the facilitator's absence. The story
bristles with a Photo Realist satire that is captured in the moment
when the narrator reveals what the new cake is: "The dark and
exceptionally dense and moist-looking snack cakes inside the packaging
were Felonies-a risky and multivalent trade name meant both to
connote and to parody the modern health-conscious consumer's sense
of vice/indulgence/transgression/sin vis vis the consumption of a
high-calorie corporate snack." This is the Wallace style in
brief: the logician's razoring of concepts, the auto-didact's motor
mouth, the deconstructionist's zeal to expose.
"Mister Squishy" is a classic Pynchon lose-lose proposition:
By holding a magnifying glass up to a scene whose center (selling
moist cake) is part of-we can guess-the problem with the American
soul, Wallace gives us a space that is utterly empty of meaning,
even after he fills it up with the intimate details of the facilitator's
fantasy life, the hierarchies of power within the advertising firm
and-small drum roll-the fact that Wallace (a fictional Wallace?)
is a stealth member of the Focus Group, a member of Team ?y pulled
in to ensure that the millions spent on marketing the new cake will
confirm what the company wanted to be true about its product. (There
is also the little joke that Team ?y must be pronounced "Team
Die.") In the final turn, the story reminds us that 1995 is a
pivotal, prelapsarian year innocent of cyberspace's potential for
pooling fine-grain details about individual buying habits. A final
scene brushes out a cinematic encounter between a younger member
of Team ?y, who sees this future and another, larger man, who
imagines only the younger man's erasure. Finally, its conclusion
turns into a strange, Jacobean Death of a Salesman in which the
Willy Loman is the nervous fantasist whose life is in the hands of
shadowy, would-be entrepreneurs who circle each other in a final
endgame of their own devising.
Infinite Jest's bulging Rabelasian satire was built on the central
trope of a film that gave its viewers a bliss so fine that they
abandoned everything for the pursuit of repeated viewings of it.
The stories in Oblivion carry that forward, showing more than one
character enchanted by images. Indeed, the new snack cake is a
governing trope for the collection and for Wallace's concern: the
cake for the masses is ultimately being guided into the market as
an image.
Intoxication with images forms a core part of the second story too.
"The Soul is Not a Smithy" is a comic memoir of an
elementary classroom just before and after a hostage taking. While
a substitute teacher leads the class in a math lesson, our narrator
describes, in immense detail, how he would spend his school days
"story boarding" the scenes that appeared and disappeared
in the glass windows that ran on the outside wall of the class. The
scenes are lurid and violent: two dogs mate and get stuck together;
a neighbor appears to lose his hand in a snow blower's blades. When
the teacher enters a psychotic episode and writes "KILL,
KILL" on the board you wonder whether the substitute teacher
and the boy share mental screens. Do they both have radar that is
picking up the bloody and dreamlike world of images outside the
classroom?
In "Oblivion", a stressed-out narrator takes the opportunity
of a rain delay in a golf game with his stepfather-in-law to broach
the subject of his wife's "severe sleep disturbance,"
which has led her, beyond logic (the narrator believes), to accuse
him of snoring and keeping her awake at night. In his own
sleep-deprivation, the narrator now finds himself haunted by tableaux
hovering before him: "travelers are hurrying laterally past
the row of phones. . . while the telephone, which remains at the
center of the view of the scene or tableau, rings on and on,
persistently. . . ." Eventually, a long scene in a sleep clinic
reveals both husband and wife to be in a complicated relationship
to each other's sleeping and dreaming selves.
Wallace's genius for anatomizing convoluted contemporary situations
is large, but such staggeringly complete inquiries into characters'
thoughts and meta-thoughts, his massing of the mobile vectors of
intent and trajectory in situations, brings a numbing sensory
overload with them. (In this way his stories, I want to suggest,
are a little like exceptionally smart-talking malls, if malls could
talk.) The downside of all this brilliance is that future generations
might read Wallace the way we read a work like Burton's Anatomy of
Melancholy, which we call masterful but then leave on the shelf.
Like Burton, Wallace diagnoses the culture: his anatomy of the
American soul suggests a condition of profound displacement, the
coming on of a metastasizing fissure between the people we think
we are and the people we say we are. The implied melancholy in the
gap is Wallace's most un-Postmodern annunciation.
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