The Alexandria Quartet

Lawrence Durrell’s Alexandria Quartet

Lawrence Durrell’s Alexandria Quartet has provoked a variety of responses from ‘astounding tour de force’ to ‘flawed masterpiece’. The work was hugely popular in the 1960s when its publication coincided with the sexual revolution and the start of the post-modernist and post-colonial inquiries. After huge early popularity, critical reception fell off, with critics suggesting the work was not profound nor meaningful or that its view of love is shallow or perverse. Yet transcending these critiques is appreciation for Durrell’s stylistic elegance– the gorgeous form with which he explores the sensual and dangerous world of Alexandria in aftermath of WW II. Our study will also consider how the a Western mind portrays the Eastern world–and how we are all outsiders looking in.

Recently there has been a resurgence of critical interest in Durrell’s Quartet in particular the insights it offers of the clash between cultures, as the Western outsider struggles to understand the blend of cultural influences and jagged edges of post-war Egypt. The play with linear time and multiple perspectives add to the modernist position of the work as Durrell uses multiple voices to capture the chaos of a changing world.

Here is a review from the Mellen Press on Mike Diboll’s work, Lawrence Durrell’s Alexandria Quartet in its Egyptian Contexts

In Lawrence Durrell’s Alexandria Quartet in its Egyptian Contexts, Dr. Diboll argues that Durrell’s tetralogy is the most important English novel of the mid-nineteen-fifties, an historically significant period which has been much overlooked by literary scholars. It convincingly demonstrates the importance of the Alexandria Quartet as a “Janus text” which looks back to the lost world of the British Empire, yet anticipates many important aspects of later post-colonial and postmodern writing. Thus, the book insists, the Alexandria Quartet should be recognised as a colossal work of literature, standing astride the nexus separating the colonial and post-colonial moments, a paradigmatic text for scholars of Empire studies, late Modernism, literary postmodernity, orientalism and post-colonial literature.

It is Durrell’s lyric style and the use of place as defining identity that most readers consider among his strongest achievement. Here is a quote from Justine that evokes the Alexandria that bewitches the narrator:

“Capitally, what is this city of ours? What is presumed in the word Alexandria? In a flash my mind’s eye shows me a thousand dust-tormented streets. Flies and beggars own it today — and those who enjoy an intermediate existence between either. Five races, five languages, a dozen creeds: five fleets turning through their greasy reflections behind the harbour bar. But there are more than five sexes and only demotic Greek seems to distinguish among them. The sexual provender which lies to hand is staggering in its variety and profusion. You would never mistake it for a happy place.The symbolic lovers of the free Hellenic world are replaced here by something different, something subtly androgynous, inverted upon itself. The Orient cannot rejoice in thesweet anarchy of the body — for it has outstripped the body. I remember Nessim once saying — I think he was quoting — that Alexandria was the great winepress of love; those who emerged from it were the sick men, the solitaries, the prophets — I mean all who have been deeply wounded in their sex.”

The Sound and the Fury

William Faulkner’s The Sound and the Fury

sound-and-fury_norton-critical

“…I seemed to be lying neither asleep nor awake looking down a long corridor of gray half light where all stable things had become shadowy paradoxical all I had done shadows all I had felt suffered taking visible form antic and perverse mocking without relevance inherent themselves with the denial of the significance they should have affirmed thinking I was I was not who was not was not who.”

 ― William Faulkner, The Sound and the Fury

In William Faulkner’s first truly modernist work, he attempts to break through the confines of time and sequence to get at the essence of human nature. As Malcolm Bradbury explains, “Faulkner’s preoccupation with time has to do with the endless interlocking of personal and public histories and with the relation of the past to the lost, chaotic present.” The Sound and the Fury exposes a crumbling world through inference and allusion rather than through direct social critique. In the modernist method, Faulkner employs stream of consciousness and symbolism as connecting fibres against individual interior realities that must compete for authority.

This study will draw upon participants’ questions and ideas to shed light on this complex text. The book is richer when discussed, enabling the first time reader access to Faulkner’s vision, while those re-reading will find greater depth and resonance. Upon a first reading, the narratives appear jumbled and opaque; but as the pieces start to fit together, the complex and careful planning that Faulkner employs becomes apparent. Does the work expose the depths and hidden realms of the human spirit?  This is what we must grapple with in our study.

SALON DETAILS

  • One-meeting, three-meeting or five-meeting study
  • Recommended edition: The Sound and the Fury by William Faulkner, Norton Critical Edition (edited by Michael Gorra); ISBN-13: 978-0393912692

Light in August

William Faulkner’s Light in August

Light in August cover

“Nothing is ever simple in a Faulkner book. However plainly the people talk, however straightforward that the situations seem, there are layers and layers of things to dig through to find the ultimate truth, if indeed there is any. It’s Faulkner’s way with words, he’s not flashy like some contemporary authors, preferring to slowly wind his way into your consciousness with his gift of writing. It’s only as you read, maybe as you peruse a passage for the second time do you see the little details that you missed the first time out, the choice of a word here, the flow of a paragraph. Just immerse yourself in a time and place thought long gone, that still lurks in the corners of people’s thoughts and the traditions that never die.” — Michael Battaglia

Courage—those who read and are ready to discuss this searing work must have great courage. The violence of the work is intimate and explosive, even as it is presented in the narration without emphasis or drama. I do not think this suggests acceptance; but might Faulkner be attempting to write us into the place and time and particular local world in which violence, racially or gender-inspired, would be part of the fabric of being. As you are reading, make room for the horror and discomfort the book conveys. Of course part of our conversation will focus on this aspect of the text, and what use it is (or is not) to Faulkner’s overall purpose. Is this horrific tale crafted to cry despair on the human condition? Or is there a construct of hope and redemption woven into the work?

I propose that racism is one of the primary challenges to human progress. Faulkner has alluded to race in all of his work; Light in August is the work that most addresses race head-on. As a white Southerner living in the post-Reconstructed South, race issues were part of the construction of his world. Although critics have discussed Faulkner’s own limitations in his racial views, this work offers us the torments and tragedies Faulkner understood to be embedded in racialized relationships. The work, I think, stands as a testament to his desire to confront the racism that was embedded in his world.

Although Light in August is less structurally challenging then some of his works, it is still experimental in the weaving of the three major narrative strands. We need to consider how these strands work together and illuminate each other. Each strand also contains elements of the tragic and the comic—Faulkner is breaking genre constrictions by interweaving the elements even through the strands.

SALON DETAILS

  • Seven-meeting study
  • Approximantely 55 pages of text per week– trying to move slowly enough to allow for full consideration of Faulkner’s incredible writing. 

The Bear

William Faulkner’s The Bear

“The Bear” is not so much a long short story as it is a short novel…but in our meeting, we should be able to do justice to the depth and complexity of this work. “The Bear” is ostensibly a coming of age story, but the narration also probes the cracked surfaces of human relationships—between mentor and child-man, between slave and master, between hunter and prey…Equally potent are the relationships between man and the pulsing world: between the beast and man and the wilderness around and within him. Go Down Moses is the collection of stories that contain The Bear; the collection described as the most spiritual of Faulkner’s work.

While most of the five sections of this 100-page story center on the hunt and Isaac’s growth, it is the difficult fourth section that has attracted the most critical attention, ‘possibly of any work in 20th century fiction’. As Malcolm Cowley describes it,

“(The fourth section) is harder to read…in it Faulkner carries to an extreme his effort towards putting the whole world into one sentence, between one capital letter and one period. There is a sentence that occupies six pages…with a two page parenthesis…it is probably the longest sentence in American fiction, longer than any in English or Irish except for Molly Bloom’s soliloquy. In all this section of “The Bear” the reader may have difficulty in fitting the subjects to the predicates and in disentangling the subordinate clauses; and yet, if he perseveres, he will discover one of Faulkner’s most impressive theme: the belief in Isaac McCaslin’s heart that the land itself had been cursed by slavery, and that the only way for him to escape the curse was to relinquish the land.”
—Editor’s note, pg. 226 The Portable Faulkner(Viking Press, NY 1965)

Charles McNair, aka The Booky Man, writes of “The Bear” with not a little Faulkner dripping into his review. The whole essay is well worth reading and can be found at pasteMagazine on-line.

“He’s a most unusual literary giant. Has there ever been a more willfully difficult writer, a novelist who put more challenging pages before his public? I still recall part of a sentence I memorized from Absalom, Absalom back in college—a line I remember for its ridiculous comic complexity. Faulkner wrote of “… a Presbyterian effluvium of lugubrious and vindictive anticipation.”
“But you learn to read Faulkner the way you read Shakespeare—you give way to it, sink into it. You immerse yourself. You let the challenging strangeness, the barbed-wire coils of complex language and structure mesmerize, then suffuse. In Faulkner, you go THERE … his work does not, will not, come to you.
Then, once you’re deeply settled into the unspooling sentences and the rushing streams of consciousness, once you’ve caught the rhythms, things start to make sense. Insights and revelations arrive. It takes more energy to read Faulkner than any other writer I know, save maybe James Joyce. But the divine rewards of giving up your soul to Faulkner are tremendous. His works, like Shakespeare, build a new architecture of ideas in the mind. Much other serious thought can then be supported on this framework. Especially if you’re from the South.
“Among Faulkner’s greatest achievements is the subject of today’s Booky Man review, a novella included in the 1942 collection, Go Down, Moses. That novella, “The Bear,” attempts in a single work to explain the whole sorry mess the South was making for itself from the time of settlement to Faulkner’s day. Though the 100-page or so work is mostly a coming-of-age story carried by a plot centered on the hunt for a great bear named Old Ben, Faulkner here comes to grips with issues of freedom and slavery, innocence and sin, the wild world and commercial exploitation.”

SALON INTENSTIVE DETAILS
The Salon Short Story Intensive offers a wonderfully dynamic three-hour study in one meeting. With less reading than the whole novel intensives, these studies are composed of a discussion that thoroughly considers the short story, its narrative techniques, contexts, style and themes. The study is a rich weave of participant questions and responses, readings of significant passages and consideration of the themes and genres that the book illuminates.

Recommended Edition Go Down Moses Vintage Edition OR Bear, Man and God that contains the whole text and some wonderful critical work around Faulkner, the South and the text. Also available in Three Famous Short Novels by William Faulkner.

As I Lay Dying

William Faulkner’s As I Lay Dying

“He had a word, too. Love, he called it. But I had been used to words for a long time. I knew that that word was like the others: just a shape to fill a lack; that when the right time came, you wouldn’t need a word for that anymore than for pride or fear.

–WIlliam Faulkner, As I Lay Dying

Published in 1930, As I Lay Dying uses thirteen narrators to explore the many voices found in a Southern family and community. Addie Bundren, the wife and mother to a poor white farm family, is on her deathbed… As her last wish, she requests that her husband bury her among her family in the town of Jefferson. And so, upon her death, her family, for the most part begrudgingly, follows through with her wish. We hear from everyone involved in the journey, including Addie from the grave—a testament to Faulkner’s creation of an environment so believable that such outrageousness is allowed. The humor is dark. You might not expect to laugh at the image of a dead women’s corpse falling from a casket into a river—but you will.

Faulkner used multiple narratives, each with his or her own interests and biases, to create a puzzle that readers could piece together from the ‘true’ circumstances of the story. The conclusion presents a key to understanding the background to the central event in a way that traditional linear narratives simply cannot accomplish. With that said, in As I Lay Dying, all of the narrators are believable, even Addie who is dead when we hear from her…The most brilliant aspect of this novel is how Faulkner carefully weaves bits and pieces from the many narrative voices, thereby creating a rich tapestry of often conflicting and competing perspectives.

SALON DETAILS

  • Four-meeting study, or one-day intensive
  • Recommended edition: As I Lay Dying, by WIlliam Faulkner, Vintage Classics. ISBN-13: 978-0099479314

Absalom Absalom

William Faulkner’s Absalom, Absalom!

Vintage International 1990
Marc J. Cohen

Absalom, Absalom! is said to be Faulkner’s most difficult but most brilliant work. Absalom presents the story of Thomas Sutpen, an enigmatic stranger who came to Jefferson in the early 1830s to wrest his mansion out of the muddy bottoms of the north Mississippi wilderness. He was a man, Faulkner said, “who wanted sons and the sons destroyed him.”

Described as ‘hard-core Faulkner’, one review says: “The words and writing are critically acclaimed since your parents were in school. The examples of how a war can raze an entire culture’s edifice of identity are compelling, each person’s doom and curse being common among her kin and her countrymen: ghosts and sex and violence and cruelty, gut wrenching drama to challenge any soap opera or miniseries or movie. There are themes and studies aplenty within the nightmare realm of Faulkner’s masterpiece.”

Absalom, Absalom! includes characters and shadows from The Sound and the Fury but delves more deeply into the surrounding world and Southern inheritance that S&F traces. The multiple voices and perspectives each clamor to have their story told, to get to the heart of how they understood the fecund and exhausted world and their role in it. Faulkner orchestrates shifting sympathies and the reader is struck with how deeply immersed we become with the characters and the unfolding mystery at the heart of the work. Racism and its imbedded structure in Southern history at first seem to be the background against which the drama of the story is played out; but ultimately slavery and its de-humanization of all involved becomes the project of the book to explore—although from an unusual and intimate angle.

This book will offer the Salon much to discuss in its gorgeous language and complex subjects: racial identification, pride, identity, impact of history on family, the drive of revenge, the struggle to claim selfhood in a broken world. . .

 SALON DETAILS

  • Five meeting study
  • Recommended edition: Absalom, Absalom!, by William Faulkner, Vintage Classics  edition (1995); ISBN-: 978-0099475118

Invisible Man

Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man

invisible-man_ellison

“I am invisible, understand, simply because people refuse to see me. Like the bodiless heads you see sometimes in circus sideshows, it is as though I have been surrounded by mirrors of hard, distorting glass. When they approach me they see only my surroundings, themselves or figments of their imagination, indeed, everything and anything except me.”

― Ralph EllisonInvisible Man

I consider this to be one of the greatest works of American Literature. The unnamed protagonist’s search for identity in a world that will not see him gives us as readers an opportunity to try to understand the psychological devastation of racism in its subtle as well as its violent forms and to consider how each of us participates in the fate of all humanity. Ellison weaves in themes and images from Virgil, Dante, Emerson, and TS Eliot while also using the structure and transcendence of Jazz to create a work that haunts and stirs to the core of our experience.

SALON DETAILS

  • Seven-week study
  • Recommended edition: Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison, Penguin Modern Classics (Aug. 2001); ISBN-13: 978-0141184425

From Saul Bellow’s essay:

“Man Underground”

Review of Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man
published in 
Commentary (June 1952)

“It is commonly felt that there is no strength to match the strength of those powers which attack and cripple modern mankind. And this feeling is, for the reader of modern fiction, all too often confirmed when he approaches a new book. He is prepared, skeptically, to find what he has found before, namely, that family and class, university, fashion, the giants of publicity and manufacture, have had a larger share in the creation of someone called a writer than truth or imagination that Bendix and Studebaker and the nylon division of Du Pont, and the University of Chicago, or Columbia or Harvard or Kenyon College, have once more proved mightier than the single soul of an individual; to find that one more lightly manned position has been taken. But what a great thing it is when a brilliant individual victory occurs, like Mr. Ellison’s, proving that a truly heroic quality can exist among our contemporaries. People too thoroughly determined and our institutions by their size and force too thoroughly determine can’t approach this quality. That can only be done by those who resist the heavy influences and make their own synthesis out of the vast mass of phenomena, the seething, swarming body of appearances, facts, and details. From this harassment and threatened dissolution by details, a writer tries to rescue what is important. Even when he is most bitter, he makes by his tone a declaration of values and he says, in effect: There is something nevertheless that a man may hope to be. This tone, in the best pages of Invisible Man, those pages, for instance, in which an incestuous Negro farmer tells his tale to a white New England philanthropist, comes through very powerfully; it is tragi-comic, poetic, the tone of the very strongest sort of creative intelligence. In a time of specialized intelligences, modern imaginative writers make the effort to maintain themselves as unspecialists, and their quest is for a true middle-of-consciousness for everyone. What language is it that we can all speak, and what is it that we can all recognize, burn at, weep over, what is the stature we can without exaggeration claim for ourselves; what is the main address of consciousness?

“I was keenly aware, as I read this book, of a very significant kind of independence in the writing. For there is a way for Negro novelists to go at their problems, just as there are Jewish or Italian ways. Mr. Ellison has not adopted a minority tone. If he had done so, he would have failed to establish a true middle-of-consciousness for everyone.”


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