Skip to main content

In Tribute to Joyce Carol Oates

Still from Smooth Talk, the film adaptation of Joyce Carol Oates’s “Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?”

When Joyce Carol Oates’s canonical story, “Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?” was made into a film in 1985, the author mostly approved. Of its lead actor, Oates later said: “Laura Dern is so dazzlingly right as ‘my’ Connie that I may come to think I modeled the fictitious girl on her, in the way that writers frequently delude themselves about motions of causality.” Oates wrote this in the New York Times in 1986, but I didn’t read it until this year, after I’d written my own story, “Rabbits” modeled on “Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?”, which appears in the Fall 2018 issue of The Paris Review. As Oates observes, writers writing about why they wrote something are not especially reliable.

The original story was based on a Life magazine article about “The Pied Piper of Tucson,” a psychopath who seduced and sometimes killed his teenage female victims; his story later inspired two novels and four more films. Oates says that she never read the complete article about the killer because she didn’t want to be distracted by the real-life details: “I forget his name, but his specialty was the seduction and occasional murder of teenage girls.” This casual statement gets at what is so dazzling about Oates herself as a writer: the ability to treat graphic and even lurid material in a way that is not at all graphic or lurid.  She doesn’t attempt to conceal violent or perverse behavior—on the contrary, she often emphasizes it—but she is interested in those details only for their potential to reveal surprising human truths. In an Oates story, there is no contempt for people who are down-and-out, nor is there any false lionizing of struggle (that flip-side of contempt). If Oates has scorn for any class of people, it’s for the judgmental mainstream—those “who fancy themselves free of all lunatic attractions.”

“Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?” made a huge impression on me when I first read it as a teenager, and I suspect it still has that effect on high school students today. I’ve read the story several times since then, but like Oates (probably like most writers) I didn’t reread my source material before starting to write. I knew I wanted my story to begin with an older man, dressed as a younger one, approaching a teenage girl in a playground, and that the tension between his appeal and the pull of the girl’s family would be what propelled the story; beyond that, I wasn’t sure what I was doing.

When I read something, I’m left with a feeling for the story’s atmosphere, and maybe a good sense of one or more characters, but even with novels I’ve read multiple times, I’m often hard-pressed to relate the plot. I’m embarrassed about this failing, and I’ve only recently started to cop to it.  Because of this, it was interesting to reread “Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?” and see that I had taken details I could never have recalled if I had been quizzed on them beforehand.  Some of them are small things: the way Arnold Friend knows Connie’s name without being told; the descriptive combination of Connie’s shorts and shoes, as she parades around the mall with her friends; Connie’s wet hair when Arnold shows up unexpectedly at her house.  These things I might have expected to linger in my subconscious, but I was surprised by two deeper resonances.  At the moment of greatest danger in Oates’s story, Connie’s house becomes a kind of character; it seems to change and become animated under the influence of the menacing stranger.  This happens in my story, too, although with a different significance, when the heroine’s family is in danger.  In Oates’s story, Connie sacrifices herself for her parents and her sister.  I wrote about a girl two generations removed from Oates’s heroine, from a family with more money and more options, and so it seems fitting to me that the danger they are in is more all-encompassing and inevitable.

Oates also writes tribute stories to writers she loves—as the most prolific great writer alive today, she writes some of almost everything—and what makes these so good are the varied strategies she uses to transform her inspirations. Her stories are never a simple or clever update, a series of in-jokes for fellow devotees, but instead a wholesale reimagining of the original work. In “The Dead,” which takes place in the snowy cities of Detroit and Buffalo, in the late sixties, Oates writes about a young college instructor whose literary success prompts a psychologist to advise her to “fail at something,” in order to save her marriage; without the echo of the title, its relationship to Joyce wouldn’t be obvious until the last scene. In “The Lady With The Pet Dog,” Oates’s story rearranges time, beginning in the middle of a love affair instead of with the couple’s first meeting, as in Chekhov. When I first read it, I expected Oates’s story to play with the different cultural contexts, given the lower stakes of adultery in 20th century Nantucket than in 19th century Yalta.  Instead, the scrambled chronology of Oates’s story emphasizes the cyclical nature of passion, and it seems less a story about the way things have changed than one about the ways they have not.

Oates describes “Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?” as “romantic allegory,” which she calls her dominant mode. A young woman is seduced by the devil, who manipulates her vanity in order to lure her away and ruin her.  Whether this ruination will take the form of a rape or a murder is left unresolved.  We talked a lot in college about the author’s “intention”—we were more than once assigned Oates’s famous essay “JCO and I”—and how much to credit it.  This may be why I still read “Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?” as metafiction. To me, it’s a story about the way that stories often fail us.  It seems at first to be a coming-of-age story, in which a girl meets a mysterious older stranger.  That scenario extends the classic promise of fiction: that the world mirrors us, says something about us, that things happen in order to transform character. The reader isn’t naïve enough to believe that the world works that way, only that fiction does; fiction is a way to make sense of the world. Instead Oates’s story suggests that its heroine with be transformed by an act of random violence, one she’s unlikely to be able to escape or even resist. Not so much coming-of-age as coming-of-death, and for no reason at all.

What I most admire in Oates, I could never imitate. I think it’s some magical combination of her particular experience and her legendary discipline. Once, at a book festival in Miami, a student charged with escorting her to an event whispered to me that the celebrated headline author had requested to be picked up at 2:35, five minutes later than the schedule dictated, because she would be working until 2:30.)  I don’t think writers necessarily emulate the writers whose voices are closest to their own—the easiest targets—but rather the ones whose work activates some element of their own emotional history. In her essay about the story’s adaptation, Oates says that the film left out the element of sexual jealousy between the mother and daughter that was in her story.  Gonna get you, baby, Arnold Friend says to Connie, but the thing that really gets me about “Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been,” has nothing to do with its swaggering villain. It’s Connie sitting at the kitchen table, while her mother nags her over their coffee: “This did not really mean she disliked Connie and actually Connie thought that her mother preferred her to June because she was prettier, but the two of them kept up a pretense of exasperation, a sense that they were tugging and struggling over something of little value to either of them.”  That thing, of course, is Connie’s virtue, and it’s what she sacrifices at the end of the story, perhaps for her family.  The dynamic between mothers and daughters, the advice that is handed down—perhaps with the knowledge that it won’t be heeded, or that it’s useless—was intimately familiar to me. My mother’s background was closer to Connie’s than my own, both in time and circumstances, and in Connie’s relationship with her mother I recognized the way my grandmother reacted to my mother’s prettiness: with a kind of warning envy, as if it was an outstanding debt that her daughter would someday have to repay. Connie and her mother lodged in me for that reason—so much so that twenty years after I first read it, I couldn’t help writing about it.

Nell Freudenberger’s third novel, Lost and Wanted, will be published by Knopf next spring. Her story “Rabbits” appears in The Paris Review‘s fall 2018 Issue



from The Paris Review https://ift.tt/2N9TCHL

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The Sphere

Photograph by Elena Saavedra Buckley. Once when I was about twelve I was walking down the dead-end road in Albuquerque where I grew up, around twilight with a friend. Far beyond the end of the road was a mountain range, and at that time of evening it flattened into a matte indigo wash, like a mural. While kicking down the asphalt we saw a small bright light appear at the top of the peaks, near where we knew radio towers to occasionally emit flashes of red. But this glare, blinding and colorless, grew at an alarming rate. It looked like a single floodlight and then a tight swarm beginning to leak over the edge of the summit. My friend and I became frightened, and as the light poured from the crest, our murmurs turned into screams. We stood there, clutching our heads, screaming. I knew this was the thing that was going to come and get me. It was finally going to show me the horrifying wiring that lay just behind the visible universe and that was inside of me too. And then, a couple se...

DEMOCRACY DAY SPEECH BY PMB; MAY 29 2016

www.naijaloaded.com My compatriots, It is one year today since our administration came into office. It has been a year of triumph, consolidation, pains and achievements. By age, instinct and experience, my preference is to look forward, to prepare for the challenges that lie ahead and rededicate the administration to the task of fixing Nigeria. But I believe we can also learn from the obstacles we have overcome and the progress we made thus far, to help strengthen the plans that we have in place to put Nigeria back on the path of progress. We affirm our belief in democracy as the form of government that best assures the active participation and actual benefit of the people. Despite the many years of hardship and disappointment the people of this nation have proved inherently good, industrious tolerant, patient and generous. The past years have witnessed huge flows of oil revenues. From 2010 average oil prices were $100 per barrel. But economic and security co...

The Private Life: On James Baldwin

JAMES BALDWIN IN HYDE PARK, LONDON. PHOTOGRAPH BY ALLAN WARREN. Via Wikimedia Commons , licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 .   In his review of James Baldwin’s third novel, Another Country , Lionel Trilling asked: “How, in the extravagant publicness in which Mr. Baldwin lives, is he to find the inwardness which we take to be the condition of truth in the writer?” But Baldwin’s sense of inwardness had been nourished as much as it had been damaged by the excitement and danger that came from what was public and urgent. Go Tell It on the Mountain and Giovanni’s Room dramatized the conflict between a longing for a private life, even a spiritual life, and the ways in which history and politics intrude most insidiously into the very rooms we try hardest to shut them out of. Baldwin had, early in his career, elements of what T. S. Eliot attributed to Henry James, “a mind so fine that it could not be penetrated by an idea.” The rest of the time, however, he did not have this luxury, as pub...