9.16.2008

The Struggle Itself Is Enough To Fill A Man's Heart

In his excellent The Art of Fiction, John Gardner makes the argument that:

“To write with taste, in the highest sense, is to write with the assumption that one out of a hundred people who read one’s work may be dying, or have some loved one dying; to write so that no one commits suicide, no one despairs; to write, as Shakespeare wrote, so that people understand, sympathize, see the universality of pain, and feel strengthened, if not directly encouraged to live on.”

I first read Gardner's book in my very-early twenties when I first started trying seriously to write, and that particular passage -- and its argument about one's moral obligation to humankind -- became incredibly important to me. I take Gardner to mean that one has a moral duty to be life-affirming, to suggest ways out of darkness, and to generally echo Albert Camus' solution to the "one truly serious philosophical problem." (This is not to say that art can't be dark, pessimistic, or immoral, or that it can't suggest that evil often wins or that darkness can overcome, only that art -- or in Gardner's rendering, art "with taste" -- ought not leave someone in greater pain or despair. Vonnegut, for example, was no cheerleader for the human condition, but his bleak humor and rationality were fireflies in the gloom.)


David Foster Wallace was a writer who had some impact on me in my Boston years and his death this past weekend has stuck with me. My initial response -- having heard of Wallace's death from a friend's e-mail on Sunday morning -- was probably too crass and dismissive, and tied into the problems I'd developed with Wallace's writing style. An incredibly smart and exacting writer, Wallace was also interested in formal and stylistic innovation which -- at times -- seemed a bit too clever for my tastes. There's a lot of Wallace that's worth reading-- particularly in Girl With Curious Hair and A Supposedly Fun Thing... -- but the cleverness, the syntactic exercises, and his headiness eventually wore out on me. Infinite Jest, while a book I thoroughly enjoyed reading while in the act of reading it, sort of lives up to its title too exactingly.

Since Sunday, though, I've been thinking a lot about Wallace's story "The Depressed Person" , which I read in Harper's Magazine when it was published in 1998 (strangely, it seems a lot fresher in my mind than that -- I would have guessed it appeared in this decade). While not a very dramatic story, Wallace establishes and cements a mindset of a depressed woman; all of the action of the story takes place in its footnotes. Depression, as the story presents it, is a kind of extreme self-centeredness, an obsession with self that washes out the rest of the world (including, within the story, the illness and death by cancer of the depressed person's closest friend). Wallace's story -- and the idea that depression is a malady of solipsism -- drew some heat in Harper's letters pages, but I think it ultimately adheres to Gardner's definition of writing with taste. It's idea is one that has helped me out of a dark spot or two, now somewhat complicated by Wallace's apparent suicide.

At an important time in my life, the right person gave me the right book. That book says:

At that subtle moment when man glances backward over his life, Sisyphus returning toward his rock, in that slight pivoting he contemplates that series of unrelated actions which become his fate, created by him, combined under his memory's eye and soon sealed by his death. Thus, convinced of the wholly human origin of all that is human, a blind man eager to see who knows that the night has no end, he is still on the go. The rock is still rolling.

As Lou Reed said, my life was saved by rock and roll.

4 comments:

Trevor said...

I know a woman who once said something along the lines of "Nobody enjoys a good funk like Brian".
At the time I thought this was her way of saying, 'Cheer up Dumb-Ass, you don't know how good you have it.'. It may be, however, that she understood that in order for you to to unlock your creative potential as a writer, that you had to dwell in that state of extreme self-absorbtion that you tried to pass off as depression.

I enjoyed this entry. I think it is easily one of the most thought-provoking pieces you have done in a while. (Even more so than the DNC Drinking Game.)

Brian Hinshaw said...

I don't mean to suggest that depression is only a matter of "getting over it" or mere self-absorbtion. Obviously, depression in its clinical form has something to do with brain chemistry, etc. And wondering why one can't just get over it can add a crippling aspect to depression, as Wallace's story also demonstrates.

But you're right, Trevor: I do enjoy a good funk. I recommend Sly and the Family Stones records or early 70's Stevie Wonder.

Trevor said...

I realize that isn't what you were suggesting. Nevertheless, please make sure that you don't end up like Wallace after one of your self-indulgent funks.

We can discuss it further when my family and I are in Milw. the weekend of October 3,4,5. We are looking forward to seeing you and yours.

Shana said...

I also remember that article in Harper's and considered writing a impulsive response about how the author had completely missed the point about true clinical depression. Apparently there was more to that story in Wallace's personal life. Anyway, if I were to read one of DFW's books, which would you recommend?