| A Review of: Tests of Time: Essays by Jeff BurseyNear the midpoint of his newest collection of essays, William Gass
says that "Words are persuasions poured into the ear, revelations
delivered to the reading eye." There is a perhaps unconscious
allusion to the poisoning of Hamlet's father here. That words can
be toxic recalls the preface to the first section: "It will
surprise no one to learn that I much prefer my own bile and bad
nature to theirs." On the acknowledgements page Gass advises,
"Each piece has suffered second thoughts, had cuts restored,
tactlessness and injudiciousness rejoined, caution, like a scoutmaster's
hat, once more thrown to the winds." A reader is prepared for
the sourness to come.
The content is divided into three categories. "Literary
Matters" begins with how narratives are formed and what
experimentation in fiction is like, and moves on to appreciations
of Italo Calvino and Peter Handke. There follows a discussion of
list-making, and an essay, "The Test of Time", which
attempts to describe how art survives. The second section, "Social
and Political Contretemps", contains essays on writers and
politics, tribalism, censors, on finding something to have faith
in, and prejudice. The concluding section, "The Stuttgart
Seminar Lectures", presents three pieces: the thoughts of a
fictional author, a revisiting of a children's rhyme, and musings
in a Platonic fashion on the nature of words.
As with most essays, Gass's cannot be described as purely expository,
descriptive, argumentative or narrative. They are verbose, didactic,
bullying, and filled with unsubstantiated assertions. The style of
these will be looked at later; his thinking will be examined first.
An early example of flawed reasoning is Gass's argument that the
nineteenth-century novel was "a delight to the bourgeois. It
was story glorified by fiction." For Gass, stories "invent
a world which isn't there," while fictions "fill their
pages and the stories they pretend to tell with data..."
Stories, he expounds, are told "in order to live. That is just
another one of our problems, and one wonders will we ever grow up.
But we do not tell ourselves fictions" for they are "too
complicated." While Gass does say that many nineteenth-century
novels are "great as works of art," they are clearly
wretched hybrids-mostly story, gussied up with a bit of fiction-created
to validate specific beliefs (in money, religion, the class system).
"The Nature of Narrative" provides no evidence for these
assertions. There aren't any sketches of novels by, say, Dickens,
Melville, Balzac or Dostoevsky to serve as examples of the point
Gass wants to make. There is an almost irrational spite towards the
literature of various countries and an entire century of writers,
not to mention the readers damned through their consumption of these
works.
The number of problems in Gass's essays mount rapidly. There are
numerous passages where wordplay is meant to rush one by the
abandonment of exactness or common sense. "When the Seine
leaves Paris for the Channel, it makes several large loops while
being forced by physics to skirt high ground." Well, no. Geology
plays a considerable part. Perhaps Gass, who is not a scientific
thinker, is convinced that all natural phenomena come down to
physics. Physics describes certain "laws" of nature, but
on its own physics doesn't "force" anything. Here is more
in the same vein: "Unfortunately, history, even in [Rousseau's]
own time, had already shown that God did not exist..." History,
like physics, shows nothing. Furthermore, the argument over whether
or not God exists isn't a closed case for other people, so the
smooth assurance that history has dealt with the God problem' is
really just wistful and disingenuous. Elsewhere, Gass can say that
were there something "worthy of worship" it should not
be addressed or paid attention to, "so it may lie safe like a
city left empty and forgotten, silent inside us, solely in the deeps
of us, so we might wonder about it like some wonder about Atlantis
and, lost and alone, so it may remain worthy of worship, and a star
shining in the midst of our dirty earth." This is a concise
description of his isolationism and misanthropy. Gass's inadequacy
at providing solid arguments calls into question the purpose behind
collecting these essays in the first place, and the further one
reads, the more inescapable becomes the conclusion that they may
be unworthy of being published.
In the essay "The Writer and Politics: A Litany", Gass
tells in fleeting fashion how writers have managed when involved
with, or assaulted by, the state, organized religion and public
opinion. His glancing view means that remarks about particular
individuals open up more than he wants to delve into. "T.S.
Eliot's politics, unlike Wyndham Lewis's or Ezra Pound's, were
everywhere yet remote, like a distant smell or a sound of surf."
When it comes to anti-Semitism, Eliot is not that different from
his friends, and Gass's insulation of this revered figure becomes
suspect. However, he doesn't hesitate to target Alexander Solzhenitsyn,
stating that his "opinions are those of someone still in the
pay of the czar." This is an incredibly undeveloped way of
looking at a remarkable figure in twentieth-century literature, who
now is often portrayed as a reactionary. To say that Solzhenitsyn
is of one mind with all czars is critical bankruptcy." Is Gass
not capable of some more penetrating insight concerning Solzhenisyn's
love of and devotion to pre-Communist Russia-specifically, its great
literature and art? Solzhenitsyn was a deeply divided man, a great
mind, but emotionally scarred and psychologically troubled. Yet
Gass makes no attempt to understand him.
In "Tribalism, Identity, and Ideology" Gass laments for
Salman Rushdie: "What scale can weigh his years of imprisonment
within the hug of security police, where we must imagine his spirit
being cautioned to skulk through the hallways of his own head? There
is no way we can share these fears of a hidden gun held at the
heart, as in a cruel game, to go off at a time unnumbered on any
dial." For years Solzhenitsyn was imprisoned in a camp, under
the eye of security guards, barely fed, poorly clothed, labouring
daily (and he has said many others suffered much worse), surrounded
by guns, without benefit of intercession by governments or the media
until well after he was released from a small prison to the larger
prison of the USSR. How, and why, Gass arrives at a moral decision
in favour of Rushdie and against Solzhenitsyn is a mystery. In the
latter's case Gass isolates him from his culture, and makes a snotty
remark, but when it comes to Eliot, Gass essentially excuses his
odious beliefs by turning them into an intellectual trend in which
Eliot merely partakes along with some of his contemporaries.
Apart from poor reasoning, and obvious malice, most essays contain
stylistic problems. There is clumsy alliteration and wordplay, as
two examples will show. First: "Work occupies, amusement
preoccupies, promises attract, threats distract, rigamarolic rites
reassure, dogmas deaden and disguise." Second: "The
signifier has swallowed the signified, although you may still observe
it as a swell in the stomach, like a bulge beneath the bedclothes
of a bereaved and sleeping body." These are high-class tongue
twisters, with nothing illuminating to offer. Early on, Gass provides
an excuse for such cleverness: "Alliteration does more than
candor can to justify God's ways to man." This is meaningless,
and a bad excuse for an awful tic which is found throughout the
book. As well, the invocation of God is odd, since Gass denies there
is one, and even if one were to allow that it's a play on Milton,
it's still a very weak defence. Occasionally he does produce a
memorable phrase, as when he says that lists "are the purposeful
coming together of names like starlings to their evening trees."
And there are times when one can agree with his points, while noting
their later contradiction (e.g. his ambivalence on the power of
writers) or awkward phrasing.
In the first two pieces which make up "The Stuttgart Seminar
Lectures", Gass's talent for fiction and riffs find a suitable
form, but "Quotations from Chairman Flaubert" and "There
Was An Old Woman Who" do not redeem the bulk of Tests of Time.
Gass's fiction-such as The Tunnel (1995) and Cartesian Sonata and
Other Novellas (1998)-is innovative, controversial, and explores
how to tell a story. A mordant wit, aggression and loose generalizations
may work in a character's voice, but in this collection they prove
fatal to all arguments.
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