|
|
|
ON-LINE
ISSUES
V.3
N.1, October 1995
Remembrances
of Love Past
by
Doug Aoki
Interdisciplinary
Studies
University of British Columbia
|
 |
|
Memories, there were far too many memories;
they raced across her sky like Irish weather.
Julian
Barnes[1]
- A
friend of mine was going through a difficult time--the end of a love
affair. She was hurting, but she coped. I asked her how she was doing,
and she said, "It's pretty bad--but I know I'll feel better in a few
months."
- How
did she know? Well, it's something we all know around here; it's no
more than common sense. Just as losing in love is an ordinary calamity,
and feeling pretty bad about it, the normal response, getting over
feeling bad, eventually, is the normal resolution--practically a rite
of passage. Still, if heartbreak is such a commonplace, it remains
singular enough in its resonances of love passing away. Heartbreak
is a metonymy for grief,[2] and
gathers to itself like despairs, and like consolations. The amelioration
of heartbreak normalizes recovery: its signs elicit sensible gestures
in return, and these circulate in the community. Friends and family
and colleagues, if you are so fortunate to have people of such good
faith about you, give emergency relief and tender small mercies. When
love fails you, your loved ones gather round. The systems for recovery
are in place; the knowledges are generalized; everyone knows what
to do.
- But
you have to hurry, for this offer is only good for a limited time.
Grief may be indulged, but it has its allotted season,
and its vague but definite end. If heartbreak is an ordinary calamity,
then getting over it is a diachronic platitude: "This too shall pass,"
or "Time heals all wounds" (wounding and healing being just two instances
of the cherished biomedical and pathological trope for heartbreak[3]).
Emergencies are by definition always transient, so we all know that
we're supposed to feel better in a few months--as my friend knows,
and so she waits for that comforting and naturalized resolution.
- Yet
the closure of "we're supposed to feel better" is at once sustained
and undermined by its polysemy: it tells us not only what we can expect,
but also what is expected of us. This is where the medical troping
of heartbreak breaks down, for the heartbroken, unlike the merely
diseased, are obliged to recover. This is also where our normalizing
of heartbreak both ramifies and triangulates: First, through normalization
itself being what we can expect. Second, through re-normalizing being
what is expected of us. And third, through our returning to normal
being the achievement of our own restoration.
- Normality,
when the world of the lovelorn unfolds as it should, is the putative
ideal. Resurrecting the medical trope, normality becomes the homeostatic
and valorized condition of health. Conversely, heartbreak (and often
falling in love in the first place) appears as affliction and hurt--the
heartbroken as the sick at heart. In this rhetorical configuration,
"feeling better" metonymizes with the body and its treatments. Thus,
we are told that we can "get over" heartbreak just as we can get over
the flu; the diagnosis comes with the corresponding prescription:
"Don't dwell on the past." But the idiom is something of a prepositional
misfire for "Don't dwell in the past." Or at least in the recent,
distressing past, for homeostatic recovery is a chronological function
that converges the way we are to the way we were once upon a time.
Before, we were normal; then we were in love; later,
we were heartbroken; and now, here we are, trying to get normal,
once again. Trying to get over it; trying to not cling to our past;
trying to leave it behind, and thereby return to ourselves in some
healing place which mediates our present and our distant past. Thus,
the strategy is to move to some kinder and gentler ground than the
shoals of grief. The tactic is to manage the engagement and
disengagement with our remembrances of love past. The key, then, is
memory.
- In
the classics, memory is called anamnesis and hypostatized as Mnemosyne,
mother to not only Clio, the Muse of History, but also the rest of
the Musae. So rhetoric and comedy and tragedy and poetry all motivate
the narratives of memory, although conventionally the success of those
narratives turns on their presentation as wholly uninspired histories,
distinct from art. Thus Mark Twain castigated the
fallible for their creative memories, but I think Homer and Virgil
were more honest-remembrance is inevitably legitimated through its
rhetorical invention. According to Foucault, "truth
is the unrecognized fiction of a successful discourse"[4]
and according to Hayden White, a "true story" is "a contradiction
in terms."[5] Do
you swear to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the
truth, so help you God? The only truthful response is, "I'm not
sure I can tell the truth . . . I can only tell what I know."[6]
- This
admission is as unfamiliar as it is striking; in love, if not in literary
theory, we are accustomed to a discourse that conflates the claim
to truth with the presentation of honesty. The authority of our own
love stories, unlike those of Marcel Proust or Jerry Seinfeld, turns
on their credibility as chronicles of pure truth, on their asymptotic
approach to zero degree writing. You wouldn't lie to me, would
you? This puts the strategy of recovery in a bind between the
management of memory and its immaculate re-presentation as truth.
The modern solution is to consider forgetting a natural gift. Witness
Nora Ephron:
Two
years earlier, when I had been pregnant . . . Mark would sing me
a song every night and every morning. We called it the Petunia song.
It was a dumb song, really dumb. Mark would make up a different
tune and lyrics each time, but it never rhymed, and it was never
remotely melodious. I sing to you, Petunia, I sing a song of
love, I sing to you even though you are bigger than the last time
I sang the Petunia song to you. Something like that. Or: Oh,
Petunia, I sing to thee, even though it's much too early and I have
a hangover. You
get the idea. Really dumb, but every time Mark sang it, I felt secure
and loved in a way I had never dreamed possible. I had always meant
to write down some of the words, because they were so silly and
funny and made me feel so happy; but I never did. And now I couldn't
remember them. I could remember the feeling, but I couldn't really
remember the words . . . . Which was not the worst way to begin
to forget.[7]
- Here,
recovery incarnates as erosion, the gradual, merciful accumulation
of forgetting. Such are the underpinnings of the injunction to not
cling to the past. Since forgetting is natural--which seductively
reiterates the figures of health-you merely need to forego your pathological
grip on the past. You just have to stop languishing over him; you
just have to stop thinking about her.
And
still you think about her every day. Sometimes, weary of loving
her [absent], you imagine her [with you once again], for conversation,
for approval. After his mother's death, Flaubert used to get his
housekeeper to dress up in her old check dress and surprise him
with an apocryphal reality. It
worked, and it didn't work: seven years after the funeral he would
still burst into tears at the sight of that old dress moving about
the house. Is this success or failure? Remembrance or self-indulgence?
And will we know when we start hugging our grief and vainly enjoying
it?[8]
- It
was the same Flaubert, after all, who wrote, "Sadness is a vice."[9]
- The
appeal of forgetting is indeed utilitarian. If you cling to your past,
you hug your grief, and though you may indeed enjoy it at some level,
to keep insisting "it's my party and I ll cry if I want to" [10]
is ultimately a losing game. If
you brood, you get consumed by slow, what-if thoughts that cut deep
but [strike] nothing solid [you can] hold on to"[11]--and
that's not healthy at all.
- And
health is not only the trope, it is the transcendental signified,
the touchstone we hold onto in this New Age of wellnes. Someone once
told me she that she dealt with her past relationships by concentrating
on the good and not dwelling on the bad. That way, she could be positive
about her past and about herself. "No negativity is what she said.
Another told me that it's a matter of psychic healing, of cleaning
up the messes: health is the power of positive thinking, mental
hygiene.
- But
listen:
Perhaps
. . . I have forgotten how I felt. The mind has a way of putting
unhelpful memories down its waste-disposal unit. Forgetting yesterday's
fear ensures today's survival . . . I
might have felt such anger and contempt, but I stifled them with
a pillow like two squeaking puppies, and now I can no longer recall
where I buried the bodies.[12]
- This
may ondeed be a survival strategy, but it comes with its own cost.
If the accomplishment of forgetting is supposed to mark the end of
grief why does the forgetting itself still sound so forlorn? What
are these new and unexpected reverberations of loss? If we figure
forgetting as erosion, we must not mistake what is inevitable and
seemingly natural for what is merciful.
I
think of small stones. At the bottom of the lake, rolled aimlessly
by the waves, I think of them polished. To
many people it would be a kindness. But I see no kindness in how
the waves are grinding them smaller and smaller until they finally
disappear.[13]
- We
make the erosive gestures of forgetting, sometimes merely to impress
the uncritical audience of our selves, and we get by, although the
gestures fail us past a certain point. We make the gestures because
we are expected to, for we are players in a game that is not of our
own making, and if we do not behave ourselves, we risk disapproval,
and even the sting of sanctions. A man lingered too long and verbosely
over his own heartbreak, and a friend, weary of his self-pity, told
him to "get off the pot." There comes a time when the rest of the
world won't put up with morbid exceptions to the presentation of everyday
self.
- Nonetheless,
the mandated gestures of recovery enact only one production among
several now playing in a theater very near you. There, you might let
go of the past, but on some other stage, in some other melodrama or
farce, the past never completely lets go of you--surely even skeptics
of psychoanalysis can take that much from Freud. The reassurances
you were given by well-intentioned friends end up being only half
right:
'It
may seem bad, . . . but you'll come out of it. I'm not taking your
grief lightly; it's just that I've seen enough of life to know that
you'll come out of it' . . . Words you've said yourself . . . And
you do come out of it, that's true. After a year, after five. But
you don't come out of it like a train coming out of a tunnel, bursting
. . . into sunshine[;] . . . you come out of it as a gull comes
out of an oil-slick. You are tarred and feathered for life.[14]
- Once
upon a time, it was amo ergo sum. But that was then; this is
now. I loved, therefore I was; I loved, and I came out of it, and
therefore now I am . . . what?
- The
question nudges us towards realizing that remembering is more than
something that we do, just as heartbreak is more than something that
we experience. Remembrance reproduces our past even as it narrates
it, and therefore retroactively produces our present selves. Augustine
famously writes that the past itself is memory. Then to regard remembering
instrumentally as merely something we do is to gloss
that subjective productivity, and this is the first suspect ontological
consequence of conventional remembrance.
To regard remembering as something someone does is to reconjure
the ghost of the unified subject, in defiance of its Gallic exorcism
from at least the postmodern quarters of the modern academy.[15]
It is a rare man who disavows his own passions; it is an even rarer
woman scorned who feels more than one heart breaking in her breast.
The subject who irrupts into such felt passions is a potently reunified
one, the very antithesis of a dispersion of subject positions--and
this is the second suspect ontological consequence. Love--or rather,
the love we don't want to give up--is too reluctant to decenter.
It is a defining passion, and as anthropologists Lila Abu-Lughod and
Catherine Lutz note, passions are the last bastion of the naturalized
self.[16] And passion under pressure
tends to seek the grace of transcendental solace. If it is true that
there are no atheists in foxholes, then surely it is also true that
there are no postmodernists in heartbreak. Romance and its travails
have made for a consummately humanist discourse--but that particular
metanarrative is long overdue for incredulity.
- If
we valorize the management of heartbreak, we should not forget that
management is a PR euphemism for hierarchical power, nor should we
forget that such power has its own severe limitations. After all the
positive thinking and psychic cleaning, after the subjection and abjection
to the social order, something still remains. The
trope of macro-progress, forced upon the putatively micro-workings
of love, inevitably fails to totalize.[17]
Now, grief presents in many forms, and some can indeed be managed.
Spurned lovers threaten suicide much more often than they commit it,
and I think that happy fact is due less to disingenuousness than to
the relatively successful retreat from despair. Nonetheless,
grief is less swept up in recovery than swept into some less troublesome
and more neglected corner, where it abides, until some leftover moment
when the everyday gestures die away, and we discover that even though
we have managed to "keep the wolves from [our] door, they still howl
out there in the darkness."[18]
- A
man sits on a chair, absorbed in a book. He reaches down to scratch
his leg, but his fingers pass through the empty space where his leg
should have been. He is an amputee; his limb was cut away many months
ago, and his body has healed, but sometimes he still feels that leg
itch. His body remembers its own wholeness too well; severed nerves
send signs up his spinal cord, and some involuntary part of his brain
reads them as messages from the leg that is no longer there. Medicine
calls this phenomenon the manifestation of a "phantom limb."
- A
woman is sleeping an untroubled sleep. She has all of her big bed
to herself, but when morning comes, she wakes, and she finds that
she is neatly curled up on one side, leaving enough space beside her
for some other body that is no longer there.
- I
still think about her, and when I do, what is most vivid is what I
don't remember. I always loved the fragrance of her. The perfume she
wore was some not uncommon designer brand, but I can't remember the
name, and, try as I might (and I have striven mightily), neither can
I bring back the memory of the way she smelled. Perhaps this is just
a failure of rhetoric; perhaps it's that I can't say what she
smelled like. A perfume, which is no more than a mildly exotic scent,
is already well beyond the linguistic indices of my ordinary world.
My English has the typical ethnographic failing: it is so visually
enthralled that any other sense gets lexical short shrift.[19]
The description of smells inevitably turns out to be thin description.
Perhaps parfumiers have the just the right words, some exact
and evocative vocabulary of perfumes like oenophilists have for wines,
but I do not. I have nothing to say, except that she smelled like
. . . her.
- Once
in a while, though, when I'm browsing in a bookstore or waiting in
a theater lineup, unexpectedly I catch that scent in the air, that
exact perfume.
And even though I could not describe it, I recognize it instantly,
"first by the . . . rapid pace of [my] heartbeat,"[20]
and only after that by any conscious realization. And out of that
suddenly kindled presence erupt her voice and tenderly mocking laugh,
her tentative reach for my hand in the dark, her long hair gathered
up and turning auburn in the lamplight, the warm evening taste of
her mouth, all these memories and a hundred more in the space between
two breaths, and yet every one of them impossibly exact and irresistible.
My head comes up of its own and with dread I search the faces around
me, but in that same moment I realize that perfume is really not the
same, but only familiar: the same perfume, but worn by some other
woman; the same scent, but inflected by someone else's skin. The recognition,
and, close and heavy on its heels, the realization, are too immediate
and tangible to be mere matters of the mind. They are the body dealing
in its own mute and precise memories.
- When
that woman in the bookshop or theater passes by, those memories ebb
away even as her perfume fades, until at last they all disappear.
And when they're gone, they're gone. Some of them might be brought
back one by one, or even severally, by will, if I concentrate, and
there is enough pleasure and pain in such individuated remembrances.
But the immense, incomplete invocation of her, that is no more at
my command than the elusive memory of perfume. Like certain reactions
of chemistry, it cannot come to pass without the provocation of a
particular catalyst--which is precisely why such remembrances of love
past are so intractable. Subject to neither command nor possession,
they make mockery of the hope that they might be "managed." We do
not remember, and make the convenient mistake of thinking that we
have forgotten. But the unremembered are always waiting to come home
again, and there is good reason to crave and fear their unheimlich
homecoming.
- Rilke
calls this "blood remembering." He says that
One
must have memories of many nights of love, none of which was like
the others, of the screams of women in labor, and of light, white,
sleeping women in childbed, closing again. But one must also have
been beside the dying, must have sat beside the dead in the room
with the open window and the fitful noises. And still, it is not
yet enough to have memories. One must be able to forget them when
they are many and one must have the great patience to wait until
they come again. For it is not yet the memories themselves. Not
till they have turned to blood within us, to glance and gesture,
nameless and no longer to be distinguished from ourselves--not till
then can it happen that in a most rare hour the first word of a
verse arises in their midst and goes forth from them.[21]
- She
keeps a box of love letters hidden behind the linens. They were written
for her almost two decades ago, by someone she left behind. She's
married now, to a man she cherishes and loves, and she has a beautiful
home and a family, a girl and three boys. If you ask her, she'll tell
you she has no regrets about the choice she made long ago, and she
won't be dissembling. But, once in a while, when everyone else is
asleep, or away from home, on those rare occasions when she's by herself,
she retrieves that box, and she reads those letters once more, even
though she's read them so many times that she can recite many of the
lines by heart.
- Perhaps
she's reading them at this very moment. And if she is, I know she's
handling those fragile leaves with more care than even their advancing
age would warrant. But I don't know if she's smiling, or not.
The
Problem With Autobiography and True Feelings: A Postscript
- "Remembrances
of Love Past" arises from two motivations: my grandiose ambition to
work love through a poststructuralist grid and my uneasiness with
the recent proliferation of autobiographical research writing. This
conjunction is neither completely manufactured nor utterly accidental.
Rather, it frames an ongoing problem whose seriousness I can only
outline here.
- Let
me begin with autobiography. This may seem self-defeating, given the
autobiographical resonances of "Remembrances," but I have no quarrel
with autobiography per se, either as the object of analysis
or as a mode of writing. Neither would I ever denigrate autobiography
for not being "serious enough"--whatever that could possibly mean.
Nor am I concerned with tired old recriminations about objectivity.
At its best, it attains a remarkable and even singular power and felicity,
which may be why it is enjoying such a flourishing. Unfortunately,
most autobiographical research writing--and certainly almost all autobiographical
theses that I have read falls critically short of the best. A certain
fundamental problem recurs again and again, like some textually transmitted
disease. It starts when autobiography gets presented as the ultimate
in politically correct non-appropriation, that is, as the quintessential
textual grounding in an author's own "real-life experiences."
- The
problem with any such grounding is that it is the nature of ground
to slip away. If we believe the astrophysicists, the solid ground
that we stand upon each day is not only spinning at supersonic speeds
about the axis of the earth and simultaneously revolving about the
sun, but also arcing through a galaxy that is racing towards the ends
of the universe. Cosmologically, ground is always carrying us away
from where we are, in ways we cannot ultimately know, so its solidity
is more a production of desire than fact. If we truly accept the metaphor,
grounded autobiography can only settle upon the continual and unending
displacement of life.
- This
is where love and other difficulties make their signal entry, for
the telltale of grounded autobiography is emotional confession--inner
turmoil, hope, frustration, anger, joy, sadness, satisfaction, crisis,
even heartbreak. Emotion is often written in this way to supposedly
demonstrate the radical limitations of "intellectualized" writing,
but in doing so, it also materializes a simplistic and totalizing
epistemology: "I feel it, therefore it is real." In other words,
emotion writing aspires to the performative assumption of impossible
solid ground: true feelings are posited as the guarantors of truth
itself. Weeping on the page has become the new metaphysics of presence.
This cries out for some seriously Derridean sobering up.
- Such
textual failing is made all the more acute by its political fallout,
for the epiphanic equation of feeling and "what's real" all too frequently
parades itself as the very embodiment of radical democracy. In this
way, the epistemological presumption to solid ground returns in universalized
and individuated claims to truth: "I feel it, so it is real, and
I have as much right to the truth of my feelings as anyone else."
This has such a nice egalitarian, anti-elitist sensibility. Should
we not honor the right of every person to her or his own feelings?
- In
a word, no.
- Daniel
Cottom writes that "there is more to liberation than the feeling of
release--fascists have orgasms too."[22]
Likewise, fascists have sincere feelings, including genocidal hatred.
What is reprehensible about the familiar and vacuous piety about "not
one truth, but a truth among many truths" is how it slithers
away from the ethical imperative to distinguish homicidal racists
from those who oppose them. To put it another way, race hatred should
garner no credit for being either genuine or honest. If this heavy-
handed invocation of the Holocaust seems overmuch, consider the problematics
of the simple ubiquity of our valorization of love. Because
love is so celebrated, it is the place where bigotry of any stripe
appears acceptable. While you can't place a newspaper ad for an employee
of a certain race or ethnic group or religion, there is nothing to
stop you from advertising in the same paper for a mate or lover according
to precisely those discriminations. One of the special things about
that special someone is that s/he is isn't Chinese or Jewish
or First Nations or white or . . . .
- My
point is not to take away the "right" of people to have their feelings,
but to refuse to honor them, if honoring means elevating them
above interrogation, critique, or ethical evaluation or reproach.
It seems to me that one of the purposes of the academy is to deny
any such privileging. This is not to assert any transcendental status
for "intellectualized" work (although I am perplexed by new-ageist
aversion to thinking that is implicit in most claims to the truth
of one's feelings), nor to impose a single overarching standard upon
all texts, but simply to maintain that all human work and play, whether
intellectual or emotional or something not reducible to either, should
always be open to being opened up. Every
human life, however textualized or autobiographed, is susceptible
to a shifting of its purported ground of lived or felt experience.[23]
It is my conviction that one measure of academic writing, including
the autobiographical, is how it works towards that shifting.
Portions of this paper came out of conversations with Aruna Srivastava
and Alexandra Best, at that time both of the Department of English
at U.B.C. It also benefited from the acute reading by Lucy De Fabrizio.
This paper was made possible in part by a fellowship from the
Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, whose
assistance is gratefully acknowledged.
|
 |
|
End
Notes
- Staring
at the Sun (Toronto: Random House, 1987), 142. [back]
- Without
venturing into the treacherous complications of love and desire, compare
this metonymy of loss and heartbreak with Lacan on metonymy and desire
(and lack):
Metonymy is, as I have shown you, the effect made possible by the
fact that there is no signification that does not refer to another
signification, and in which their common denominator is produced,
namely the little meaning (frequently confused with the insignificant),
the little meaning, I say, that proves to lie at the basis of the
desire, and lends it that element of perversion that it would be
tempting to find in this case of hysteria.
The truth of this appearance is that the desire is the metonymy
of the want-to-be.
("The
direction of the treatment and the principles of its power," in Ecrits:
A Selection, Jacques Lacan, trans. Alan Sheridan (New York: Norton,
1977, 259) [back]
- Catherine
Lutz makes some acute comments on how the rhetorical medicalization
of emotions has critical social consequences, including the valorization
of control and legitimation of the intervention by medical and quasi-medical
professionals, like psychologists and psychiatrists. Hence her concern
for the "mental politic." (Catherine Lutz, "Engendered emotion: gender,
power, and the rhetoric of emotional control in American discourse,"
in Language and the politics of emotion, eds. Catherine Lutz
and Lila Abu-Lughod (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1990), 72-4).
[back]
- Jonathan
Cook, "discourse," in A Dictionary of Modern Critical Terms,
revised edition, ed. Roger Fowler (London: Routledge & Kegan Paul,
1987), 64. In "Truth and Power," Foucault says
Truth
isn't the reward of free spirits, the child of protracted solitude,
nor the privilege of those who have succeeded in liberating themselves.
Truth is a thing of this world: it is produced only by virtue of
multiple forms of constraint. And it induces regular effects of
power. Each society has its regime of truth, its 'general politics'
of truth: that is, the types of discourse which it accepts and makes
function as true.
("Truth
and Power," in Power/Knowledge: Selected Interviews & Other
Writings, ed. Colin Gordon (New York: Pantheon, 1980), 131) [back]
- Hayden
White, "'Figuring the nature of the times deceased': Literary Theory
and Historical Writing," in Future Literary Theory, ed. Ralph
Cohen (New York: Routledge, 1989), 27. [back]
- Cited
by James Clifford, "Partial Truths," in Writing Culture: The Poetics
and Politics of Ethnography, eds. James Clifford and George E.
Marcus (Berkeley and Los Angeles: Univ. of California Press, 1986),
8. The quote is (ironically) not attributed by Clifford, beyond a
vague description of a "Cree hunter" testifying in Montreal about
the huge James Bay hydroelectric project that threatened his hunting
grounds. In fact, Clifford qualifies the quote as possibly apocryphal,
by prefacing it with a parenthetical, "the story goes." [back]
- Nora
Ephron, Heartburn (New York: Knopf, 1983), emphasis in original,
177-8. Ephron adapted this novel for an unsuccessful feature of the
same name, and subsequently mined it for her screenplay for the very
popular When Harry Met Sally. This quote closes her book; earlier,
she sets it up with a rather different perspective:
"You
picked the one person on earth you shouldn't be involved with."
There's nothing brilliant about that--that's life. Every time you
turn around you get involved with the one person on earth you shouldn't
get involved with. Robert Browning's shrink probably said it to
him. "So, Robert, it's very interesting, no? Of all the women in
London, you pick this hopeless invalid who has a crush on her father."
Let's face it: everyone is the one person on earth you shouldn't
get involved with.
And what is all this about picking, anyway? Who's picking?
When I was in college, I had a list of what I wanted in a husband.
A long list. I wanted a registered Democrat, a bridge player,
a linguist with particular fluency in French, a subscriber to
The New Republic, a tennis player. I wanted a man who wasn't
bald, who wasn't fat, who wasn't covered with too much body hair.
I wanted a man with long legs and a small ass and laugh wrinkles
around the eyes. Then I grew up and settled for a low- grade lunatic
who kept hamsters. At first I though he was charming and eccentric.
And then I didn't. Then I wanted to kill him. Every time he got
on a plane, I would imagine the plane crash, and the funeral,
and what I would wear to the funeral, and flirting at the funeral,
and how soon I could start dating after the funeral. (83, emphasis
in original) [back]
- Julian
Barnes, Flaubert's Parrot (London: Pan, 1985), 161. I am taking
some unsubtle liberties with Barnes here, whose original text concerns
the death of a wife, and therefore makes the Flaubert reference less
mediate. [back]
- Barnes,
Flaubert's Parrot, 161. [back]
- Herb
Wiener, Wally Gold and John Gluck, Jr., "It's My Party and I'll Cry
If I Want To" (World Song Publishing Inc., 1963). [back]
- Toni
Morrison, Beloved (New York: Plume, 1987), 221. The passage
continues,
So he held his wrists. Passing by that woman's life, getting it
and letting get in him had set him up for this fall. [back]
- Barnes,
Staring at the Sun, 124. [back]
- Louise
Erdrich, Love Medicine (New York: Bantam, 1989), 73. [back]
- Barnes,
Flaubert's Parrot, 161. [back]
- Of
course, the subject-as-agent yet thrives in those sectors of the academy
which remain comfortably and vociferously un-postmodern, and making
a comeback, albeit in unfamiliar forms, in post-colonial and other
recent theory. [back]
- Lila
Abu-Lughod and Catherine Lutz, "Emotion, discourse, and the politics
of everyday life," in Language and the politics of emotion,
eds. Lutz and Abu- Lughod, 1. [back]
- In
Lacanian terms--at least as read by Slavoj Zizek-the Symbolic register,
compact of language and social relations, presents as being systematic,
reliable, and complete--but it fails at some point to conceal its
own insufficiency, its own ineluctable lack. It is there that something
very other intrudes, the Real, utterly resistant to symbolization
and domestication, and therefore palpably terrifying. See Zizek, Looking
Awry: An Introduction to Jacques Lacan Through Popular Culture
(Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1991), 133-46. [back]
- John
Fowles, The French Lieutenant's Woman (New York: Signet, 1970),
29. [back]
- Clifford,
"Partial Truths," 12. [back]
- Jerzy
Kosinski, Passion Play (New York: Arcade, 1979), 209. [back]
- Ranier
Maria Rilke, The Notebooks of Malte Laurids Briggs, cited and
trans. in Rilke on Love and Other Difficulties: Translations and
Considerations of Rainier Maria Rilke, John J. L. Mood, (New York:
Norton, 1975), 94. [back]
- Daniel
Cottom, Text & Culture: The Politics of Interpretation (Minneapolis:
Univ. of Minnesota Press, 1989), 15 [back]
- There
is a parallel problem when autobiography gets characterized as "telling
one's story," for most such narrations betray an alarmingly naive
understanding of narration. Storytelling in the social sciences and
education generally seems ignorant of the sophisticated and diversified
theoretical armature of literary criticism. [back]
|
|