Wednesday, September 24, 2008
"Good Country People" vs. "The Life You Save May Be Your Own"
As the only male characters in the story, a lot can be interpreted about Pointer and Shiftlet's roles in these women's lives. Shiftlet's repair of the car is a feat of manliness: "With a volley of blasts it emerged from the shed . . . Mr. Shiftlet was in the driver's seat, sitting very erect." (178) It's a moment of male potency, both in the field of autorepair (traditionally masculine) and Shiftlet's posture. His role as husband to Lucynell the younger after their marriage is thereby conflated with his role as father to her, and husband to Lucynell the elder, the repair of the car being rather Elektric.
Pointer's role to the Hopewells seems far less Greek. To Mrs. Hopewell, he is an annoyance. She says, "'[H]e bored me to death but he was so sincere and genuine I couldn't be rude to him.'" (274) But to the younger Hopewell, Hulga/Joy, he is some kind of romantic hope. So excited for their picnic, she "didn't take anything to eat," and spruces herself up by putting "some Vapex on the collar of [her shirt] since she did not own any perfume" (276-77). Pointer's role as a romantic interest to Hulga/Joy seems to be more than similar with the misguided pairing of Shiftlet and the Lucynells, each female party seeing in this new male an opportunity and being terribly mistaken.
Because Pointer's theft of Hulga/Joy's leg puzzles me, I'd like at this time to continue in an analysis of Shiftlet - specifically as a kind of perversion of the Christ figure. Lucynell the elder's insistence on Shiftlet's marriage to her daughter purports him to be, in her eyes, some kind of savior - and who could blame her for thinking so? He is, after all and in his own words, a carpenter (175), famously the vocation of Jesus. And, before even introducing himself, Shiftlet turns to face the sunset: "He swung both his whole and his short arm up slowly so that they indicated an expanse of sky and his figure formed a crooked cross." (173) Shiftlet is put on the cross before word one to Lucynell! That notion of the cross being crooked is a masterwork of foreshadowing, as Lucynell puts all her egg's in Shiftlet's basket only to have her salvation ruined beyond recognition. Shiftlet as the crooked Christ figure becomes complete when he perverts Luke 23:34. "Then said Jesus, Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do." Compare this to Shiftlet's line at the end of the story, "'Oh Lord! . . . Break forth and wash the slime from this earth!'" (183) Shiftlet's prayer is antithetical to Jesus' plea, one requesting the forgiveness of sinners, and the other the purging of them. The irony, of course, lies in it beginning to rain on Shiftlet. Water is a cleansing force, and Shiftlet, perhaps realizing that the slime that needs washing may be himself, "race[s] the galloping shower into Mobile." (183)
Yet, Shiftlet as the crooked Christ figure does not necessitate Pointer as all that. Where one could draw a comparison between Jesus healing the sick and Pointer robbing the maimed, calling the Bible salesman any kind of Jesus is probably giving him too much credit. Certainly Hulga/Joy sees him as some kind of salvation, but not in a Christian sense. After all, she sees herself as already saved - "'We are all damned,' she said, 'but some of us have taken off our blindfolds and see that there's nothing to see. It's a kind of salvation.'" (280) Instead of pat Christian saving, Hulga/Joy sees Pointer as a kind of avenue to intimacy, to experiencing what about life is enjoyable before her prophesied premature death. In imagining her seduction of Pointer, she fantasizes "that she took his remorse in hand and changed it into a deeper understanding of life," (276) the irony here lying in Hulga/Joy's own virginity - "[s]he had never been kissed before and she was pleased to discover that it was an unexceptional experience" (278) - and so this foray into sexuality could lead to a deeper understanding of life for her.
It is too bad that Pointer is no full-blown Christ figure, because Hulga/Joy makes no secret of her atheism (278). (Neither does her mother, 270.) It could have lessened the ache of being forsaken in that hayloft, cut off and alone. But in my mind, still, Pointer and Shiftlet are two very like peas - both are strange men with ulterior motives who crash a girls-only party. What is O'Connor saying about men in a world of women? On one level she says that they can't be trusted, that they are deceptive and ultimately no good. Are these stories an advocation of nunnery - of cloistering yourself from that foul sex - or, in fact, the opposite? Of exposing yourself to men, and becoming the better for it? Of course we have no way of knowing if Hulga/Joy makes the best of this situation, if she learns from it. She can be awfully dense for a genius.
And, a tad off-topic, I think O'Connor's choice to have Mr. Paradise fail to save Bevel and, one page later, title a story "The Life You Save May Be Your Own" just excellent.
Contempt in Good Country People
Disillusionment and the Double Meaning of Good Country People
Disillusionment in this story is very important and Manley Pointer, a simple country folk, is its main proponent. Manley says that he is selling Bibles and speaks often of Christianity. However, in the end he proves to be the story’s protagonist. Manley has succeeded in tricking “good country people” into believing that he is like them and moreover, that he is a Christian, simply by using the word. Thus, the role of the phrase “good country people” in this story takes on another connotation. Disillusionment also occurs with the character of Joy. Rather than being fooled by Manley, she brings herself to her own demise. By instantly assuming Manley to be what he says, a good Christian country folk, she instantly assumes her intellect is superior to any of his motives. By regarding her own mental capabilities too highly, Joy’s guard is let down and she is taken advantage of by Manley.
As a whole, Good Country People is about taking first impressions as face value and the disillusionment that ensues when no questions are asked of character.
Good Country People
I also thought the names in this story were interesting, and I think the names play into what the statement of the story is. The two women in this story were referred to as Mrs. the whole way through, even though we do not see their husbands in this story. Because they are referred to as Mrs. they become identified by their marriage and by their husbands instead of by their own identities and their first names. Their names were also interesting choices: Freeman and Hopewell. Both of these names indicate their personalities. I also thought this was an interesting sentence too, "One of her [Joy's] major triumphs was that her mother had not been able to turn her dust into Joy" (267).
Tuesday, September 23, 2008
An "intellectual's" POV
The scene in the barn with Pointer had me very tense the entire time. I honestly thought he was going to rape her. Mainly because he pulled out the box that said "only to be used in prevention of disease" (i.e., condoms). When he finally took her leg, I actually let out a nervous laugh. Who would do something like that? Where is his pleasure in stealing women's artificial body parts? Obviously, it's some form of control, as is highlighted by the condoms and rape insinuation. But it's weird. The dynamic between religion and the characters in this story is much different from the others. He pushes his way into their home by making them at ease by being a good Christian, yet he ACTUALLY wins over the only Atheist in the house! Is it because he is simple? Hulga couldn't have really believed in him when he said he liked to have "serious thoughts." College graduates don't talk like that, from any time period. So what was his charm? Maybe she was happy that someone was attracted to her despite all her physical problems. Maybe it was their common condition. Maybe she thought she could manipulate him. That's how I saw it anyway. She really wanted to manipulate him into putting down the Bible and pick up another book but instead she got a lesson of her own. Even though she had all this higher learning, it still didn't erase all the stereotypes she had in her mind. She really wasn't any better or smarter than the country folk.
RE: Names
Grotesque in Good Country People
Hulga's encounter with Pointer is disturbing, but also humorous in that "I can't believe this is funny-I-feel-a-little-sick-and-uncomfortable-laughing-about-this" kind of way.
The first time I read this story as a freshman, I remember thinking it would be kind of romantic to be a chilly intellectual like Hulga- finish a phD in philosophy and then retire as a sort of hermit to the country. Yet each time I read the story for a new class, I am struck more and more intensely by the perverted nature of Hulga's unsociable behavior. Presumably, she comes home to live with her mother because of a heart condition, and makes no effort to make herself sexually appealing (at least, before Pointer). Her existence is supposedly predicated on her nihilism--she accepts her fate in the country, because she believes that the world is without permenance or meaning. For her, their is no salvation of any kind. With all this in mind then, it seems strange that a nihilist would attach so much psychic energy to a material object as Hulga does with her leg. O'Connor writes that Hulga "took care of it as someone else would his soul, in private and almost with her own eyes turned away" (281). Hulga professes a belief in Nothing, yet when her leg is actually taken from her (when she is left with Nothing, instead of Something), she is faced with a true instance of vacuum--nothingness. Perhaps on an intellectual level she had convinced herself that she believed in Nothing, but Pointer's acknowledgment and theft of her leg rob her of her illusions of a purist's nihilism: her leg is a totem endowed with mystical powers, a fetish that "makes [her] different." Only when she experiences the loss of her leg, "like losing her own life and finding it again, miraculously, in his," does she realize that she values Something (perhaps a Something entirely outside of her articulation, but a Something none the less) that can be taken away or lost. The story remains Grotesque in the sense that we cannot resolve what that Something might be, or what the moral consequences of the story might be, for her or for Pointer.
Names in "Good Country People"
Manipulation in Good Country People
I also thought is was really interesting that her mother believe that Pointer is such a good kind person too so he not only manipulates Hulga, but her mother as well. It was really ironic at the end of the story when her mother say that she wishes she was a simple good person like him, where really he just tricks Hulga into believing that he is this honest Christian whom just wants to help the world and preach the word of God while he is still live since he apparently has a heart condition. Which could be true seeing as he is always panting and tired but it seems like a way to get to Hulga and her mother due to Hulga’s heart condition; so they have something in common which is an easy way to intrude into someone’s life.
I also thought it was interesting that it was not the first time that he has taken advantage of someone with a disability; he admits that he has stolen a glass eye from another girl. So I just have to wonder why he goes after people with disfigurements. Maybe if he does have a heart condition he feels as if he has been abused and wants to do it to other people with problems. Or maybe he just goes after people with eccentricities because they have weaknesses in which they are self-conscious about and they become easy targets.
Monday, September 22, 2008
"The Displaced Person"
My initial reaction after reading “The Displaced Person” was discomfort and a little anger as well. There were a couple of parts in the story where I was extremely frustrated with the characters and their behavior. When Mr. Shortley, for example, is explaining how if he could travel he would go to Africa or China only because people would be able to tell the difference between him and the natives. He says, “You go to these other places and the only way you can tell is if they say something” (O’Connor 324); I am assuming “these other places” that he is speaking of are Germany and Poland given that he has repeatedly says there is no difference between the two. This is a very rude and almost vulgar thing to say. It is amazing to think that someone could say that there is no difference between people from Germany and people from Poland simply because they look alike especially during this time period. Why do we feel the need to distinguish ourselves from those who are different from us? Are Mrs. McIntyre and Mr. Shortley any better than the Guizac family? No. However, it matters to Mr. Shortley; he wants everyone to know that the Guizac family is different and where they come from.
I found all of this rather disturbing; Mr. Shortley would not have this foreigner outdo him and the only way for him to keep Mr. Guizac down is to spread rumors because it is evident that Mr. Shortley is no where near as good of a worker as Mr. Guizac. Therefore, since he cannot surpass him in physical labor he will try and hold him back through horrible gossip. This is irritating because Mr. Shortley has no right to do this simply because Mr. Guizac is a displaced person and he takes advantage of his “American” status to hold Mr. Guizac back.
Ordinary Folk
On the one hand, her characters subscribe to a loosely defined code of social decency, focused more on meeting these criteria than actually acting decent. On the other, her characters feed off each other like parasites. Exploitation is a common theme, and if there is a character that I believe best fits O'Connor's view of the typical person, it's Pointer.
I say this because he is able to work within this social construct not with an idealistic bent but rather an opportunistic one. He looks after his own best interests while conforming to an acceptable image. In the end, he has it both ways.
Pointer stands in contrast to Mrs. Hopewell and Joy (funny names), who are each idealistic in their own way. In Mrs. Hopewell's case, she subscribes to the social mores, at least superficially. Like most of O'Connor's characters she sees herself as moral and looks down on "trash" who don't subcribe to the mores.
Joy is equally idealistic, though in opposition to her mother. She realizes that the "code" of "Good Country People" is a farce, and she is too intelligent to be aussaged by the contradictions of her mother's life.
Both, however, are subscribing to a moral code: Mrs. Hopewell to one of social mores, Joy to one of truth. This makes them both susceptible to the advances of Pointer, who is equally adept at hocking Bibles to housewives and stealing the limbs from their daughters.
While there are plenty of Mrs. Hopewells and Joys in the world--or at least people who fancy themselves as such--I believe O'Connor believes that there are more Pointers in the world. While Mrs. Hopewell's "Good Country People" are a myth, Pointer is all-too real.
Two Sides of Immigration
As has always been the case in this country, immigration is vital to the success of our economy. Though this can lead to exploitation, American businesses rely on low-income workers to come in from other countries desperate to do the dirty work Americans don't want to do.
At the same time, Americans complain that the immigrants are taking our jobs.
How true is this with Guizac! At first, he's a godsend for Mrs. McIntyre, as he's grateful for any work, and unlike her American laborers, who are prone to loafing, he is a hard, uncomplaining worker.
The initial suspicion of him comes not from Mrs. McIntyre, but rather from the other characters who feel threatened by his work ethic. They eventually convince Mrs. McIntyre to act against her own best interests, and not with logical reasons, but rather suspicion and xenophobia.
This type of thinking has permeated immigration issues, and still does. The absurdity of it would be comical were it not so tragic.
Paranoia in The D.P.
The Displaced Person from a Sociological Standpoint
The religious overtones in this story seemed to saturate every part of the story. The peackock stood as another metaphor for Christ. Mrs. Shortley prophesized “the children of wicked nations with be butchered,” foreshadowing the death of Mr. Guizac. Both Mrs. Shortley and Mrs. McIntyre claim to be Christian women but condemn the priest as one who “comes to destroy.” The women use religion to appease the guilt they would otherwise have felt toward the Polish family. If I had more time, I would dig more into the religious themes of this short story.
Rich or Poor, Everyone Fears Industrious Immigrants
Displaced Person
Blindness in "The Displaced Person"
Many characters, one way or another, seem to suffer from poor eyesight. The first instance of blindness I noticed was with Mrs. Shortley, when the peacock is first introduced. Her "unseeing eyes [are] directly in front of the peacock's tail", and yet she is unable to see it, because she is trying so desperately to see what is beyond it. Mrs. McIntyre, perhaps more than any other character, carries on the motif of blindness. She lacks foresight, that is the ability to see how her actions will affect her and others around her, and also the ability to see people clearly for who they truly are. She wills herself to be blind to the faults of some people, while willing herself to be blind to the virtues in others in order to justify her selfishness. When Guizac tells her about Astor stealing her turkey, she responds that "all Negroes will steal". Mr. Guizac strives to bring honesty and enlightenment onto her farm, and she struggles equally against his attempts in order to remain ignorant. She also chooses to ignore Mr. Guizac's virtues and humanity, seeing him as one of a million faceless victims, in order to deny her responsibility to him. Mrs. McIntyre, Mr. Shortley, and Sulk are also blind to how their actions will result disastorously. Like many of O'Connor's works, she uses foreshadowing to alert the reader to a disastrous end; although she provides her readers with sight, her characters obliviously continue on towards a path of self-destruction.
Once again, the peacock also emphasizes the blindness that is taking place on the dairy. The bird is considered "a mythic metaphor as all-seeing witnesses to hidden transgressions" (vanishingtattoo.com), which is why O'Connor is always careful to emphasize its presence its presence in the story. The bird is all-seeing and all-knowing- once more associating it with God- and a witness to the many sins that are occurring on the farm. Ironically, it is the one character who can see everything that is taking place, yet lacks the language to communicate. I also wonder if the fact that Mr. Guizac wears "gold-rimmed glasses" is significant. He also has poor eyesight, but tries to correct his insufficiencies, his human imperfections, through glasses. While the others will themselves to be blind, he wants to see clearly. This motif of blindness ties into my assertions last night about racism. The characters allow themselves to be blinded by appearances, and are unable to see people for who they truly are.
Sunday, September 21, 2008
The D.P. has made me worry
This fear of the unknown and "exotic" has pretty much been a constant theme in all our history. I feel like the peacock in the story kind of represented the Guizac family. They are such beautiful creatures, but all except for the priest, everyone seems annoyed by them and just put up with them (another mouth to feed). A part of me feels really guilty for not knowing. Why? It's part of tolerance. I feel like I'm a pretty accepting person when it comes to other people's ways of life... but I worry that there is some polite immigrant out there who sees me as a Mrs. Shortley.
I think I'm getting off track... My initial reaction I guess was just uneasiness. And not the same uneasiness that Mrs. Shortley felt in the beginning. It was the tension between the two sides. The two "white" sides anyway. I honestly do not know how I feel about the black servant representation in this story. I KNOW they have an integral part in it, but I think I'm too clouded right now about the immigrant/worker tensions that I've actually failed to think about the black workers. How should I feel about the put downs, but then when push comes to shove, it's the Shortleys that are fired? Obvious racism, but there is also obvious comfort in knowing them, making them less of the unknown. But the Shortleys were a comfort to Mrs. McIntyre too. I'm confused about this so I welcome any comments.
Displaced Jesus
O'Connor's portrayal of her modern-day Jesus was refreshing to me simply because he was realistic and easier to relate to; it seems very rare that an author humanizes a Jesus figure in their literature, and Mr. Guizac therefore is more believable and carries a strong symbolic significance. She describes Mr. Guizac as "shaped like a peanut", and socially awkward in the eyes of American society; many Catholics could consider this depiction of Christ as blasphemous, and it's surprising that O'Connor would portray him as vulnerable, dislikeable, and weak. To his observers, Guizac is a pathetic character, and his appearances enable others to look past his better qualities. O'Connor seems to be playing with the dichotomy of appearances and essence: I argue this through juxtaposing the Pole and the peacock, who also symbolizes a religious character, and whose fate is also determined by its appearance. The peacock, when it is first introduced, is "like a miniature god". Father Flynn is left awe-struck by its beauty, and remarks that, "Christ will come like that", as he watches its feathers unfold before him. In religious iconography, the peacock is associated with "the Transfiguration", which the Father alludes to. Unlike Mr. Guizac, whose personality makes him a symbol of Christ, the peacock is ultimately revered by the Father because of its appearance. This struck me as extremely ironic, because O'Connor is careful to emphasize that, although beautiful, it was extremely annoying and dirty. Their contrasting fates can also be attributed to their differing appearances: while Mr. Guizac dies tragically, the peacock is able to live its life being cared for by Father Flynn. It is his appearance, its "glittering green-gold and blue" feathers that ultimately save its life.
I feel that O'Connor is exploring the dichotomy of seeming vs. being in order to comment on racism. The peacock is privileged because it appears holy; while Mr. Guizac is the Christlike figure, his unusual demeanor, accent, and exterior prevents others from seeing his remarkable qualities. It is also set after World War II, when issues of racism and appearance were at the front debates. By making her Christ figure believable, and therefore perfection attainable, she is also commenting on how tragic racism is. She reveals that it is ultimately our fears of something that is different and "ugly", and not their actions, that often separate the revered from the crucified.
"The Displaced Person"
I liked this story because, while O’Conner focuses on the discrimination of the Americans, she remains true to the notion that most people do not change in regard to ideals deeply instilled during their lifetimes. I think that Mrs. McIntyre was possibly struggling with her “more obligations” to keep Mr. Guizac as a worker. However, I am also convinced that she had more trouble firing him because he is the best worker she has ever had. She is forced to look at the worth of her other employees and I like the strain that is created in her character as a result.
Friday, September 19, 2008
Emasculation and Power
Where is the Love in "That Tree"?
Time in That Tree
I also thought the narration in this story was interesting, and something else that I wanted to add on to that, that Austin touched on, was the issue of time and how this adds to the story. To me, the time in this story seems very non-linear, and at points in the story, it is hard to tell if the story he is narrating is happening in the present, or if it is happening in the past. I think Austin is on to something, and I think that this varied time adds to the idea that the artist is spinning his wheels. The story starts out with the artist sitting under a tree, then it jumps to the reasons why he decided to get his act and gear, and get out from under the tree and become a journalist, but then from there the time shifts back and forth from the past to the present. For instance when he is narrating the story of when he first got married to his wife this is told in the past tense, but then he goes further into the past and narrates how before his wife had arrived he had been living with a Native American woman. These time shifts show to me how the artist is living in the past and spinning his wheels, not sure of what to do or where to go next.
Marriage
In "Theft," all of the men have mistresses that are more exciting than their wives. In "Maria Concepcion," Juan ping-pongs between Maria Concepcion and Maria Rosa (one providing the sustenance of chicken, the other the indulgence of sweet honey). And in "That Tree," our protagonist bounces between married life with the prim schoolteacher who functions more as a mother figure and an exciting life of poetry, art and unattached Mexican women.
What's interesting about "That Tree" is that Porter, for the first time, is giving the male's side of the story. While it's no more flattering than the others, it does offer a different perspective on this thread that runs through many of Porter's stories.
In all of these stories, marriage is an undesirable end for the male figures, perpetuating a timeless stereotype. In "That Tree," the protagonist is so noncommittal that he talks himself out of paternity of a child. The single life for these male characters is something exotic, fulfilling. Marriage is a necessary evil, and time and again wives are seen not as romantic interests or life partners but as replacements for mothers.
Braggioni keeps a wife at home to wash his feet, but prefers to play music to Laura. Married men buy purses for their mistresses, not their wives. Juan relies on Maria Concepcion for food, but runs off with Maria Rosa.
As for our protagonist in "That Tree," if his stated motives are to be believed, he ultimately chooses life with this mother figure, though that doesn't seem to be his true desire. She is the character that comes in and improves his living conditions, encourages him to break ties with his slacker friends and pushes him into journalism, garnering "the kind of success you can clip out of newspapers and paste in a book, you can count it and put it in the bank..."
I wonder what Porter's ultimate conclusion is on this topic. Is this theme prominent in her work because these are her observations? Or is Porter, whose romantic life appears to be more aligned with these male figures in her stories, working out her own issues?
Love in That Tree
That Tree Post
Narrative Structure in "That Tree"
The narrative structure in "That Tree" struck me first for sticking it to convention, and second for being the third story of Porter's (that we've read) that does so. Where stories like "Flowering Judas" and "The Jilting of Granny Weatherall" employ narrative flashbacks, and "Maria Concepcion" indulges in gentle exposition, "That Tree" - along with "Theft" and "Magic" - are all examples of unconventional - at times non-linear - storytelling.
"Theft" begins with the protagonist fresh out of the shower, noticing her purse missing. Most of the story is concerned with the nights of the event previous (when she had her purse) and getting her purse back from the janitress.
We discussed "Magic" as a dramatic monologue in class - an idea I stand behind - though, for the sake of my discussion of "That Tree," I'd like to put forward my own pet theory here. Because of the way the story is formatted, where the hair-brusher's words are all put forward as the be-all, end-all narrative, and with Mme. Blanchard's interspersed dialogue in quotation marks, I think "Magic" is a retelling of the narrator telling Mme. Blanchard this story in the first place.
(I especially find this theory compelling because of the implications of that suggestion in class that the narrator - now armed with Mme. Blanchard's hair - is threatening her new employer with casting the very same spell that was used on Ninette. Further evidence for this idea - the fancy house madam "always hit people over the head with bottles, it was the way she fought" (39); Mme. Blanchard's only has one action in the entire tale (beyond saying something), and that is to close her perfume bottle (41). Could she be arming herself for the coming conflict, the climax that the retold telling of the tale is leading towards? This is thin ice, I know, but isn't it just like Porter to give us a taste of a hint to let our imaginations run wild.)
In "That Tree," the narrator seems to be paraphrasing the words of the journalist to his companion, quoting him directly to spice up the story or reground it in the cafe. The scene is after three marriages, and before Miriam's return.
"Theft" is the working model for my argument. What happens in the moment that Laura stands outside the shower - the opening of the story - is an opportunity for change. She spent the night previous being walked all over, thinking of other people's feeling before her own. With the theft of the purse the protagonist finally has a chance to stand up for herself, but instead gives in, and it's the janitress' own weird pride that gets her the purse back.
So what if these first present moments (the woman standing outside the shower, the narrator brushing Mme. Blanchard's hair/telling of how she brushed Mme. Blanchard's hair, the journalist in the cafe) stand as a crux between how it has been and how it will be, which are nearly identical? What if these present moments represent, instead of a turning point in people's lives, a portrait of a wheel in a rut? So often Porter's stories are the tales of unhappy people stuck going in some direction they never wanted to go in the first place, and unable to get themselves back on tracck.
Some evidence of this "wheel in a rut" idea in "That Tree": Miriam seems to have a new outlook on the journalist in her letter begging for him to take her back; "she regretted, oh, everything, and hoped it was not too late for them to make a happy life together once more" (79). Contrast that with Miriam's letters before their marriage, and that breathy, hopeful tone pops up for the first time; "she longed to live in a beautiful dangerous place among interesting people who painted and wrote poetry" (73-74). Miriam has different desires but seems to be setting herself up for much the same disappointment, especially considering that that happy life she wants to have "once more" never existed in the first place, much like she doesn't find the painters and poets interesting the first time around.
And, of course, there is the problem of that tree. The journalist opens his story to his companion in that way, noting he "had really wanted to be a cheerful bum lying under a tree" (66). And despite all of the alleged changes he has gone through - Miriam's abandonment, becoming an authority on revolutions (moments of real change, mind you), two more marriages - "that tree" persists throughout the story as some impossible ideal. The journalist has spent his adult life proving to Miriam that he "was not just merely a bum, fit for nothing but lying under a tree," when lying under a tree, "writing poetry and enjoying his life" is exactly what he wants to do (78). What the journalist wants hasn't changed, and Miriam doesn't seem to have changed, and when they both get back together - though no one can tell for sure - change doesn't seem to be on the horizon. In fact, the journalist makes a point of saying that things are going to be the same: "She was going to live again in a Mexican house without any conveniences and she was not going to have a modern flat" (79).
In brief, my theory is that Porter uses the unconventional narratives to spice up what could otherwise be a boring story. By telling them non-linearly, or from a strange point of view, she captures the humdrum in an exciting way, adding mystery and a sense of possibility to lives going nowhere (and of course getting all literary in the meantime). Maybe someone can beef this argument up for me, or tear it on down?
Thursday, September 18, 2008
That Tree
It was also interesting me his connection with the tree and how he only describes the tree as an oasis in which he is able to be artistic and just worry about his poetry rather than worry about anyone else or what they think about him or his poetry. The tree is his own escape which he gets to disappear into his work.
Re: That Tree
She was the same way too. The reason that they got together in the first place was because she said she wanted something different than the boring life she had back home. This poet offered her a fantasy... however the fantasy ended up being a nightmare for her. To him, living a life of constant struggle gave him excitement, and it wore her out because she worked her butt off so he could live in his fantasy.
When she finally leaves, he doesn't have the tension anymore. He also doesn't have the financial support, which makes him go get a real job. When she leaves his life, his muse is gone. The muse of struggle and tension and turmoil that a bad relationship offers - not her necessarily.
In the end when he "takes her back," it is all on his terms. No marriage, no compromise, no washer/dryer... She must spend the rest of her life repenting for leaving him. There must be some co-dependency between these two, and I do not think that a second time around is going to make anything better. It sounds like they will just continue to be miserable.
I also think it is important to note how he states their break up. Even though she is the one who leaves, he says she kicked him out. Why is that? Especially when the story emphasizes that she hated Mexico, so it is implied she wouldn't stay.
That Tree: Narrative Viewpoint and Semi-Eclipsed Characters
The fascinating part of this narrative construction is that we don't know exactly how much the journalist is admitting to his "guest" --(and I think the guest him/herself is one of the most intriguing characters in Porter thus far, as well)--while we might presume that the third person narrative is being relayed in the first person over drinks, intervening sections of first-person, quoted dialogue destabilize this assumption. In third-person, the text remarks that "Miriam knew better. She knew they were looking for the main chance" (76). Then, the journalist jumps into dialogue, without even breaking the paragraph saying, " 'She was abominably, obscenely right." (76) So even in moments when we think we see a bit of self-reflection, we're not sure how much the journalist is actually admitting in conversation. This slippage in the one-sided quality of this man's narrative constantly frustrates our attempts to get at Mariam's character.
She seems terribly unlikable, a bit prudish, and too serious as the journalist paints her--he even makes her seem cowardly in the dancing scene when she dives under the table to avoid the fallout of a potential gun battle. Yet we get little lines from her: her self-preservation instinct "had nothing to do at all with him," and she "had no intention of wasting her life flattering male vanity." Of course, the journalist is upset she didn't have the presence of mind to use him as a gallant human shield--she embarrassed him by her lack of faith in his masculine chivalry. Yet can we really blame her? After all, he's been living with another woman, and really makes very little effort to support her. (If he could get around to committing himself to the real effort of writing his poetry--of finding "that ideal tree he had in his mind's eye"--instead of "trying to live and think in a way that he hoped would end by making him a poet," he might get somewhere). His aspirations of giving her a sexual education are likewise fraught with ambiguous sympathies: in limited third person, we learn that he intended "to play the role of a man of the world educating an innocent but interestingly teachable bride" (73). Yet Mariam is "not at all teachable" and takes "no trouble to make herself interesting" (73). She comes off as emotionally stunted in some way: no imagination, no romantic spirit, no sense of curiousity or humor or adventure. But from a feminist theory perspective, that doesn't necessarily make her stunted as an intellect or as a woman. Tough luck if she isn't interested in sex or his poems. Tough luck if she doesn't want to play into his romanticized notion of masculinity. There is more to Mariam then this man can ever relay fairly to his guest, since she is often in a world of her own altogether: when they were together, "her mind seemed elsewhere, gone into some darkness of its own, as if a prior and greater shock of knowledge had forestalled her attention" (73). Even in the end, when it seems that Mariam is running back to financial security as a fair-weather friend, the very presence of the ambiguous, obscured guest as an audience to a one-sided tale alerts us to the possibility that there may be more to this woman than there appears.
What Tree? Under the Table and Daydreaming
Wednesday, September 17, 2008
Flowering Judas
Despite all my questions and confusions about the setting and the relationship between Laura and Braggioni, I found myself enamored by the imagery of this piece, especially in the contrast between Braggioni and Laura and in the ending. Phrases like “every sea shall be merely a tangle of gaping trenches” or “his eye sockets were without light, but she ate the flowers greedily” turned this political tale into a poem, a song. I also was enthralled how Porter shaped the entire text to be a foreshadowing of Laura’s death—or as I interpreted it, her spiritual death.
Flowering Judas: A Story of the Betrayal of Ambiguities
Not only is the idea of betrayal prevalent throughout Flowering Judas, it is also ambiguous. Unable to make opposing beliefs coincide, the characters find themselves lost and ultimately unable to achieve their different ideas of self-actualization and are, in turn, lost in a sea of ambiguity. Likewise, the flowering Judas tree serves as a symbol for the ambiguity experienced by these characters. We first see the Judas tree when Laura rejects a suitor by throwing a flower from the tree at him. The flower, traditionally a sign of love, is, of course, misconstrued by the admirer as a token of Laura’s affection. In addition, this tree, in it self aesthetically pleasing, stands for ultimate betrayal. In her nightmare, Laura eats the sensuous flower from the tree, similar to the way in which Eve eats the forbidden fruit. The flower is a beautiful disguise of personal intent from both receiver and giver alike. Thus, Laura is blinded by her beautiful faiths and cannot understand why she is unable to achieve the perfection she so desires. Furthermore, the name “Judas” refers to the name of Jesus’ disciple who betrayed Him and led Him to death.
(Deep Breath: THE END!)
Laura's Self Betrayal
Re: Re: The Tree of Betrayal
The Mexican revolutionaries follow Braggioni for one of two reasons: a) They don't see the real person, only the image he's projected, or b) Like him or not, following him is the best option for their quality of life and possibly survival.
It can't be b) for Laura, as she has a home elsewhere and as far as we know would be able to return but chooses not to. It's certainly not a) because she knows the true Braggioni and seems to despise him.
You bring up a great point: What led her to this stoicism?
Flowering Judas
It also seems as if Laura believes she betrayed Eugenio, due to her dream where she asks for his hand and all he does is gives her the blossoms of the Judas Tree, and when she eats them and he then calls her a “Murderer” and states that it is his “body and his blood”. So Laura not only feels guilty as if she murdered Eugenio the only person she does not isolate herself from but also uses the Christian theme of taking the Eucharist as an expression of betrayal due to Judas’s actions during the last supper and his betrayal to Jesus.
Tuesday, September 16, 2008
Political Narrative
Braggioni frames himself as a prophet--perhaps a Christ figure--but unlike Christ, Braggioni is a "professional" who "will never die of it"(98). Yet, in the teleological narrative of the revolution, there is an expected apocalyptic endpoint: Braggioni claims that "Some day this world, now so composed and eternal...shall be merely a tangle of gaping trenches, of crashing walls and broken bodies" (100). If he is a prophet or a Christ figure, he must see himself as one of the few surviving "elect spirits destined to procreate a new world" (100).
In the driving political narrative, I had to wonder about Laura's place. She only half-heartedly buys into Braggioni's prophet character. But does she still accept and believe in the teleological pseudo-religious narrative of the revolution? She seems enamoured with her own role: she enjoys playing the spy, the go-between. Certainly, it's glamourous. I think this is the core of her betrayal of Eugenio. As an expat, she doesn't have a vested interest in the revolution in the sense that she doesn't have to put herself in these dangers for the sake of her home country. Yet real patriots like Eugenio are committing suicide in prison. Reading the reference to cannibalism in here, I think Laura can be considered a cannibal in the sense that she is feeding off the narrative of a revolution which is not her own.
On a side note, something to consider for the second part of the course: Did Porter have anxieties about "feeding" off of Mexico? Did she have anxieties about living the glamourous life of an expat and using the stories of the people of a country which was not originally her own?
Flowering Judas
Re: The Tree of Betrayal
Laura "Hannibal" and loss of faith
I understand why he calls her a murderer. It is the connection with the Judas blossoms and Judas betraying Jesus, which lead to his death. Since I don't actually know what the connection between Laura and Eugenio is (there was a line about love, but I read it over and over and I cannot seem to grasp it!) I'm not really sure what the value of the murder line is here. I just understood the connection.
Now the cannibal line... I connected this with the loss of her Catholic faith. How I read the story was that she used to be Catholic, but life and especially the revolution has jaded her, and she doesn't really have faith in anything. She is walking this path that she has chosen for herself, but even though she's not fond of it anymore, she doesn't really care to change it. As I understand, during communion, Catholics take and eat and drink the actually blood and body of Christ. This is a literal view of the last supper where Jesus offers these things to his disciples. Can this be where the cannibal comment came from? Or have I just royally offended people by taking such a literal view myself? I guess we can take this more figuratively. The definition of cannibalism is one that eats others of its own kind. I didn't really see Laura as a life sucker of any sort, rather, just a good woman making the steps of the right path yet not really believing in any of it.
I would love to hear comments on this. Possibly from those that have more knowledge on either Catholicism or cannibalism.
The Tree of Betrayal
The use of Christian imagery in “Flowering Judas” was very interesting. Not only is the image of Judas brought about from the title, but the Tree of Knowledge, the infamous last supper and also the image of Mary Magdalene washing Jesus’ feet are all referenced. It is very rare that the name Judas is not associated with Christ’s betrayer. Simply upon reading the title “Flowering Judas”, I knew some sort of betrayal would take place. After Laura eats the blossoms from her Judas tree she is given some kind of knowledge, she is now awake. Before she eats the tree blossoms Eugenio calls her a prisoner and this is why she must eat them. Just as the Tree of Knowledge frees Adam and Eve from their prison like state, this Judas tree will free Laura as well. After she eats the blossoms Eugenio calls her a murderer because she is eating his body and his blood, which bring about images of the Last Supper. She sees that she has betrayed him. I am a little confused of the order in which these events are presented especially when compared to the biblical references. Judas first attends the last supper, where he breaks bread and drinks of the wine and then he goes on to betray Christ. However, in “Flowering Judas” Laura first betrays Eugenio then eats the Judas blossoms, which make her realize her betrayal. Can anyone clarify this for me? Is the order important?
The image of Mary Magdalene washing Jesus’ feet can be seen in the actions of Braggioni’s wife washing her husbands feet once he has returned to her. She sits as his feet with a basin of water just as Mary Magdalene did with Jesus.
Why Mexico?
Also, I find it interesting that Porter emphasizes, again, the gluttony of her character Braggioni. I think that Porter is once again alluding to Diego Rivera, who is also very politically motivated, and considered an important leader. Other similarities include that Braggioni is insulted by Laura when she is not willing to sleep with him. Also, he indulges in American perfumes, women, and food.
Eugenio
It is clear to Laura that Braggioni is using the revolutionaries for his own profit, and she assists Braggioni in playing the Polish and Rumanian agitators against one another. And though she provides some refief to the prisoners she visits, she is well aware that Braggioni is doing nothing to help them get out. Laura is living well off of Braggioni's money and influence, drinking hot chocolate and enjoying a good job, while the prisoners "entertain themselves with counting cockroaches..." (94).
Laura acknowledges her complicity on page 93: "'It may be true I am as corrupt, in another way, as Braggioni,' she thinks in spite of herself, 'as callous, as incomplete,' and if this is so, any kind of death seems preferable."
So when Eugenio, who is assumed to be dead, appears in her dream, leading her to death, and calls her a murderer and a cannibal, this is her subconscious manifesting its guilt over bringing the prisoners drugs in lieu of real help (and in fact possibly making things worse by offering false hope) and the fact that she is living well in cahoots with Braggioni while they are suffering for his profit.
However, I am suspicious of an even deeper connection between the two. Of all the men Laura interacts with, from her suitors to the agitators to the prisoners, only Eugenio is named. Earlier in the story, Laura's virginity is brought up but never fully explored. I doubt that Porter would make mention of this without it bearing some significance on the ending. So I can't help but wonder if there is some deeper connection between Laura and Eugenio. We never know why Laura is there, in a foreign country, with these people, and Braggioni suggests it is either that she loves someone, or someone loves her. And for all the men that Laura visits in prison, why is Eugenio the one that brings her guilt to the surface?
Not sure if there's something to that or if I'm making connections that aren't there, but I'm very curious about the connection between Laura and Eugenio.
Monday, September 15, 2008
The Martyr
Maria Concepcion
The Human Inability to Reduplicate Christ's Suffering in Perfect Form
Maria Concepcion’s suffering more closely resembles Christ’s than does Rueben’s. Maria suffers the loss of her newborn child after her husband’s betrayal, but rather than curse him and openly bemoan her pitiful state, she secludes herself and attends church with increasing frequency. However, when Reuben is abandoned by his sitter Isabella, he suffers openly, making his burden the burden of his friends.
Though Maria Concepcion suffers nobly, her downfall is ultimately her desire for vengeance. When Maria Rosa returns with Juan, Maria Concepcion’s husband, Maria Concepcion’s jealously and pride erupts and she murders her husband’s lover. In contrast, Rueben’s downfall is his own self-hatred. Rueben outwardly portrays this hate by eating absurd proportions of food, though he can see how this habit is affecting his health. Ultimately, this gluttonous, self-hatred kills Rueben.
While Maria’s flaw may seem worse than Rueben’s, these characters are judged differently by their peers. After the murder, no one speaks out agaist Maria Concepcion, although they all know she killed Maria Rosa. Furthermore, they do not protest when Maria Concepcion claims Maria Rosa’s baby for her own. In the villagers minds, this action seems just, and Maria Concepcion’s pious life seems to right this immense wrong. In contrast, though Rueben’s suffering harms only himself, no one seems to truly remember him. Rather, one man decides to write a book that will ultimately profit the author, and says that he will truly remember the tamales, Rueben’s favorite dish.
Thus, both Maria and Rueben commit fallacies. While Maria suffers inwardly, Rueben suffers outwardly. Maria’s suffering ends in murder while Rueben’s suffering ends in self-inflicted death. Maria’s peers stand up for her, while Rueben’s merely forget him. Thus, both characters cannot suffer silently for other and are ultimately blinded by their own human desires.
Immaculate Conception of "Maria Concepcion"
There are also times when Maria Concepcion is referred to in such a way as the Virgin Mary would be. When the police are questioning the townspeople, they defend Maria Concepcion saying, “She is a woman of good reputation among us, and Maria Rosa was not” (Porter 19). Maria Concepcion, just like Mary, had a good reputation because she was a virgin and had not sinned, unlike Maria Rosa.
Maria Concepcion is robbed of her husband and her child and therefore she takes Maria Rosa’s life and her child as her own. Does she take Maria Rosa’s child simply because she was deprived of her own? Why does she not kill the child along with his mother, since he was conceived by her husband and another woman?
"The Martyr"
O'Connor's Reference: Black lawn jockeys
http://www.lawnjock.com/images/blackjockey1.jpg
It probably should have dawned on me that many (all?) of you would never have seen statuary such as this. We have come some disdance after all.
Puzzled over "The Martyr"
Also, the end of the story left me wondering about Isabel: what happens to her, her reaction (or lack of one) to Ruben's death, etc. I wonder if Porter is purposefully not giving us closeure on that one to make a point or merely because the main thrust of the story was about Ruben and not her.