TDR Interview: Douglas Glover
Douglas Glover was born and raised on a tobacco farm in southwestern Ontario
and now lives just outside Saratoga Springs, New York. He is the author of
three novels, four short story collections, including 16
Categories of Desire, and a book of essays, Notes Home
from a Prodigal Son. His book of stories, A Guide to Animal Behaviour, was a
finalist for the Governor General's Award. His stories have appeared in Best
American Short Stories, Best Canadian Short Stories, and The New Oxford Book
of Canadian Stories. His criticism has appeared in the Globe and Mail,
Montreal Gazette, New York Times Book Review, Washington Post Book World and
Los Angeles Times. He has a background in philosophy and journalism, and
attended the University of Iowa's Iowa Writers Workshop. Michael Bryson interviewed
Douglas Glover by e-mail in Summer 2001. |
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TDR: Your novel The Life and Times of Captain N. (Knopf, 1993) has just
been released in trade paperback by Goose Lane Editions (2001). Are you
self-consciously placing your work with (and/or moving your work to) smaller
presses? Or does this move say something about your original publisher's
support of this work? In your book of essays, Notes Home from a Prodigal Son
(Oberon, 1999), you mention that your agent once warned you about the fate of
your career. I wonder what the move of Captain N. from Knopf to Goose Lane
says about how your work fits into the literary marketplace. Perhaps you
could comment on your experience working with both large and small presses.
GLOVER: The Life and Times of Captain N. I sold myself, without an agent, to
Alfred A. Knopf in New York. McClelland and Stewart later bought the Canadian
rights from Knopf. And the way I sold the book went like this: Gordon Lish
took a story of mine for THE QUARTERLY. I included that story in A Guide to
Animal Behaviour (published by Goose Lane). At some point, I sent Lish a copy
of the book to see if he could help bring that out in the U.S. He responded
with his usual astonishing speed, asking me if I had a novel instead. I sent
him the first fifty pages of The Life and Times of Captain N., and he bought
it.
While my book was coming out, Lish's wife was dying of Lou Gehrig's
disease and his son had assaulted him and he was on the outs with Knopf and
its parent Random House. Soon after his wife died, Knopf fired Lish. I had no
editor there; the book languished. I fell into my own period of desuetude
going through a divorce and re-establishing myself afterwards. When I poked
my head up again a few years later, I couldn't get a publisher or an agent
interested in me. I'd become a middleaged, midlist pariah living on the wrong
side of the border.
At this point old friends rallied round my bloody, tattered standard.
John Metcalf at Porcupine's Quill, Karen Mulhallen at Descant, Philip
Marchand, Liz Philips at Grain, and Kim Jernigan at
The New Quarterly were
most encouraging in a dark time. Dilshad Engineer offered to do my book of
essays at Oberon Press. And Susanne Alexander took my book of stories and has
now reprinted The Life and Times of Captain N. at Goose Lane Editions. I am
grateful to them all. As a writer, I seem to be doing fine--books are coming
out--though I notice I still don't have a career or an agent, and there is a
marked scarcity of money in the environs.
TDR: I have been reading backwards through your catalogue, and it seems to
me that your narratives often articulate the boundaries of different
conflicts political, aesthetic, sexual, sociological, etc. simultaneously.
You seem to be both seeking the appropriate terms to define a certainty and
also never arriving at one. For example, in Notes from a Prodigal Son, you
say about East German writer Christa Wolf: "She is saying that to be oneself,
to feel oneself, to discover oneself, amongst all the conflicting messages,
prescriptions and prohibitions of contemporary culture, is difficult, if not
impossible, anywhere" (62). Similar sentiments repeat in The Life and Times
of Captain N., which takes place in the context of the backwoods warfare of
the American Revolution ("We Rebels & Tories & Whites & Indians are having a
violent debate whose Subject is the Human Heart" (162). Your approach appears
to be both sensible and relatively unique on the Canadian literary scene,
which often frames its purpose in sociological terms (i.e., Canadian culture
is necessary for national identity). Are you self-conscious about working
against popular conceptions about what it means to be a Canadian writer? Is
Canadian literature all it's pumped up to be?
GLOVER: The setting up of opposites as a mode of conjecture is, of course,
the form of the aphorism. Kant uses a version of this in the sections of the
Critique of Pure Reason called the Antinomies and the Paralogisms, where he
juxtaposes apparently true but contrary propositions about the nature of
reality and argues for both. Nietszche wrote aphorisms. Adorno's gorgeous
Minima Moralia is all aphorisms. The aphorism is an ancient ironic form,
highly artificial, but with a bite. You can only write aphorisms in the
attack mode, with a tone of arrogance. Here's one I wrote to a student who
was complaining about having to learn aphorisms: There are two kinds of
readers--the adventurers who glory in the breathtaking audacity and risk of a
well-turned aphorism and the wienies who, lacking courage themselves, find
it an affront in others. The Life and Times of Captain N. contains passages of
extended aphorism called "Oskar's Book about Indians" in which oral cultures
and literate cultures are opposed on a variety of verbal torsion points: e.g.
history, memory, names, ritual, story-telling, books. Nietszche called his
aphorisms "Versuch"-- "trials" or "experiments"--much the way Montaigne
called his essays "essais". I think a person who writes from this rhetorical
position is always on the outside of received opinion and traditional
knowledge because nothing is taken for granted and all thought is conjectural
rather than descriptive.
Whether Canadian literature is all it's pumped to be is not a question
that interests me. On the other hand, there are some books written by
Canadians I love.
TDR: In The Art of the Novel and elsewhere, Milan Kundera has argued that
novels ought to do what only novels can do. He has argued that movies have
made the 19th century-style realistic novel redundant, and claimed that most
contemporary novels are a sub-genre of journalism. None of this, I think,
pertains to your work, since you seem (like Kundera) to be interested in the
history of ideas and their place, overt or subterranean, in forming
individual identities and life-stories. For example, in Notes from a Prodigal
Son, you return a number of times to the different ways readers approach
literary works and how those approaches are often the cause of mis-readings.
In particular, you're fond of Vladimir Nabokov's distinction between reading
for aboutness and reading for artistic appreciation. Kundera might say that
aboutness is what the movies are good at, and what serious novelists should
somehow transcend. Could you explain Nabokov's aboutness/artistic
appreciation distinction in the context of your own work particularly in
terms of how you approach your writing both in the process of production and
when you are attempting to explain it to readers/editors/critics?
GLOVER: I used Nabokov's distinction in an early essay though I find it a bit
over-simplified and misleading. And even in that essay I built on the
distinction to say that good novels deploy a wide variety of technical
structures some of which promote verisimilitude (i.e. they seem to be about
something) and some of which are more purely formal (structures of
repetition, image patterning, subplotting, etc.) which tend not to be
realistic at all. Every novel contains elements of both in a rough tension
with each other. Experimental novels foreground structural elements or some
playful or inverted version of them; so-called conventional or realistic
novels foreground elements that promote verisimilitude. My argument is mostly
against anyone who takes one or the other as being definitive--how sick I am
of all those turgid, log- rolling arguments about whether novels should have
ethical messages or whether they should be purely aesthetic confections. Most
writers strike a balance that somehow suits their particular temperament. Why
some feel called upon to climb on soap boxes and campaign for the primacy of
their particular brand of novel-writing is beyond me.
My own work is tilted toward the foregrounding of repetitive structures.
It's a kind of Ciceronian or embellished style, though occasionally I write
something in the plain style, too, and I am always delighted. But I am also
pretty sure I am writing about something when I write. The Life and Times of
Captain N. is clearly about a set of ideas and a group of people during the
American Revolution and some of these people really existed and even did some
of the things I imagine them doing. But when you get caught up in arguments,
especially critical arguments, you find yourself having to explain things to
benighted individuals who want to oversimplify and make categorical
statements, and you're forced to try to disabuse these people, not by
responding in kind, but by being complex and ironic.
TDR: At the height of the Y2K anxiety a couple of years ago, American
academic and media critic Neil Postman released a book called Building a
Bridge to the 18th Century. In that book, he claimed that most of the ideas
we should carry forward with us into the new millennium originated in the
18th century and that we should return our focus there before blindly rushing
into the future. You had already done that years earlier in The Life and
Times of Captain N., which contains quotations like: "I do not believe in God
(old Europe, the King, loyalty, and authority) or reason (Locke's blank
slate, history, atoms, laws, freedom, and democracy). To think that men can
govern themselves is as idiotic as thinking they will forever bend the knee
to someone better" (158). What was it about the 18th century that attracted
you? Is Postman right to say that the conflicts of the 18th century still
frame our debates today? You seem to concur with some of Postman's
assumptions in Notes from a Prodigal Son, when you write, "literary feminism
is the last gasp of the 18th century liberation philosophies" (37). Briefly,
please explain.
GLOVER: If you look closely at the quotation you cite (which is in a
character's head in a novel), it says Hendrick doesn't believe in either set
of ideas, a state of mind which, to my way of thinking, is a sign of wisdom
or madness though no external observer would be able to tell which. The
succeeding sentences refer to the mystery of the human heart which, the text
implies, is not accurately described by either set of ideas.
My sense of the history of ideas is that ideas thread through cultures
and individual minds in hugely complex and playful ways. Human beings being
what they are, we try to catch onto a set of ideas here and there, hold onto
a branch as we float by (to mix my metaphors). The 18th century itself didn't
attract me because I thought the 18th century ideas were appealing. It
attracted me because there was a moment in history when narrative and
aphorism seemed to combine in a way that I could write about in a novel. Also
these ideas are still operative in the culture into which I was born so in
seeing how they originated I was reliving something of my own mental makeup
ab ovo. Perhaps that is what Postman means, but I wouldn't say these ideas
frame our present debates any more than Plato or Aristotle or Duns Scotus or
Augustine frame them. The idea of a frame is reductive. It implies the
existence of something beyond the picture that explains the picture. I like
those writers, historians of ideas, who track the threading of an idea
through history or structuralists like Foucault who find traces of old social
structures in the new.
TDR: In Notes from a Prodigal Son, you write: "My apprenticeship ended
with the realization that the goal of literature is not simply truth, which
is bourgeois and reductive, but a vision of complexity, an endless forging of
connections which opens outward into mystery" (166). Perhaps you could
briefly chart the progression of your apprenticeship, including the role
"Mikhail Bahktin and his ideas about discourse and the dialogic imagination" (Prodigal
Son, 37) play as an ongoing literary influence in your work.
GLOVER: My life has been an apprenticeship for whatever comes next, though I
do periodically think I have reached some more definitive threshold of
existence only to find later that it was just another painful learning
experience (a lot of these). But in the process I find certain writers and
thinkers to be companionable. Bakhtin, when I read him, seemed to be saying
things that made sense of what I had been trying to puzzle out about writing
and my life. As he says, language is war. Most of my life I've been fighting
a war against the discourse of rural Tory provincialism, the Ontario miasma
of my youth, and the various discourses that seemed allied with it: all sorts
of conventionalisms, including all those perky new ones that keep popping up
in the little villages of academic criticism and literary journalism. So much
of what I say can be viewed as a moment in a battle: I am saying this is me
and I am against that. It was a relief to read Bahktin who seemed to imply
that I wasn't so dumb to feel embattled, that my sense of struggle, my
dissatisfaction, even boredom, with certain ways of doing things, was
natural. Bakhtin didn't show me something new, but he said everything again
in a succinct and elegant way.
He also tied the notion of language as a battle of discourses directly to
the form of the novel. This seemed like a very useful way of thinking about
form. I don't mean that I think it's the only way of thinking about novel
form. But it's very useful sometimes to look at form from a different angle.
Instead of talking about characters, one can sometimes usefully talk about
the habitual language games a character uses. Two characters using different
language games will clash over everything including just how to describe
their realities. They will fight over words. And then words like "love" and
"translation" might begin to have interesting parallel definitions.
TDR: Who are some contemporary writers and/or books you're hot on? Why?
GLOVER: I don't read much newly published work. I have two children, two
dogs, two rats, a cat, several money-making jobs, and I read what is
necessary to keep me excited. I am reading David Copperfield to my boys. We
just got to the lovely, sad part where David marries Dora and then realizes
she is just a "child-wife" and not the "counsellor" and companion he had
dreamed of marrying. Oh, my heart. I love Leonard Cohen's Beautiful Losers
and the novels of Hubert Aquin and Elizabeth Smart's By Grand Central Station
I Sat Down and Wept and Robert Kroetsch's The Studhorse Man and much of Alice
Munro and Leon Rooke's stories and John Metcalf's Adult Entertainment and his
new Ford stories and Karen Mulhallen's (a fellow southwestern Ontario
refugee) poetry, her brave and brittle romanticism. There are a lot of new
Canadian writers I come across reading for Best Canadian Stories, some
individual stories I admire immensely. I admire Milan Kundera, Christa Wolf,
Peter Handke, Max Frisch, and Witold Gombrowicz. Which means, I guess, that I
like literature that deploys a complex of ideas and inquiries about the
nature of modern life and has already taken into account a good deal of
current and historical philosophical debate. I also like Jeanette Winterson
and Angela Carter--my love of the baroque and bloody whimsy, I guess. Then
there are a number of so-called Third World or colonial or peripheral writers
I admire--Narayan, Rushdie, Carey, Ruolfo, Tutuola, Cortazar--because I feel
they are coming from a socio-political and imaginative universe parallel to
my own. Any list here is incomplete, dodgy at best: I have a bookcase full of
what I think of as important books, maybe a hundred. They keep changing.
POST-INTERVIEW INTERVIEW
BRYSON: I thought it was interesting that you said "Most of my life I've been
fighting
a war against the discourse of rural Tory provincialism," but when I asked
you about being self-conscious about working against popular conceptions of
being a Canadian writer, you didn't tackle it from this angle. Maybe it's
too simple to say the two are connected. Do you see those things as
connected at all?
GLOVER: Actually, it never occurred
to me to connect the two ideas because the "rural Tory provincialism" I grew
up with didn't even acknowledge the existence of writers and art, or so it
seems to me. In other words, it operated somewhere beneath or beyond "popular
conceptions of being a Canadian writer." In the world of my youth, a writer
was someone like my great-grandfather who wrote patriotic limericks for the
Mail and Empire or doggerel in a French accent in the style of William
Henry Drummond while he managed the family store in St.
Williams. That's why Hubert Aquin rings so true with me. I forget which book
of his it's in, but he has a line about this country not being able to
produce any real writers at all, just notaries and sickies like himself.
Canada today is lucky in that it even possesses "popular conceptions of being
a Canadian writer." I don't know if the philistinism I grew up with somehow
threads its way through some of these popular conceptions. That might be an
interesting idea to explore. But a lot of these debates amount to
journalistic or academic log-rolling and aren't very useful in the long run.
The struggle I was talking about in my case is much more personal and has to
do with the place and time I was born into.
BRYSON: I see I haven't asked you anything about your most recent short story
collection 16 Categories of Desire (Goose Lane, 2000). The way I read it,
that book seemed to be an exploration of the different connotations of the
word "desire" - but most significantly an exploration of the cultural
inheritance of Romanticism. In a review in The Danforth
Review, I called Mary
Shelley a precursor. If 16 Categories is an exploration of desire in all its
connotations, what did the process reveal to you?
GLOVER: When I was touring the Soviet Union in 1988 as a guest of the Soviet
Writers Union, I met an older writer named Daniel Granin, who said, through
my interpreter Alexei (who otherwise made his living delivering tapes for an
underground video store in Moscow), "All my life has been an effort to
liberate myself from love." This struck me as an odd idea at the time, though
gradually it began to obsess me. Some version of this sentence recurs in
three of the stories in 16 Categories of Desire. I wrote these stories as
narrative experiments on the nature of love and desire. I don't think I am
done with the subject yet, but in writing that book I began to see desire as
dark stream of want pouring out of the abyss of the unconscious (the empty
pit at the centre of the self). I don't claim this idea as original -- I know
it comes to me partly from reading Schopenhauer years ago.
Putting Schopenhauer and Granin together in my own head, I imagined
desire as an endlessly unsatisfied craving eating its way through life; each
of us is only a particular moment of the World Desire. Most of the
conventional ways we talk about ourselves and love are cheery little fairy
tales or dark, romantic hero stories meant to make us feel better as we
pursue this course of metaphysical gluttony. By the logic of grammatical
substitution, you get all sorts of interesting equivalents and paradoxes out
of this: The Unconscious is unknowable and is thus equivalent to Death, so
Desire originates in Death, and Love, which is an expression of Desire,
originates in Death. To fall in Love is, in one sense, to devour the
loved one. I could go on, but I think you can begin to see how some of the
ideas in the stories develop. (Also, as you can see, my formulations run to
the gothic. Your intuition about Mary Shelley was astute. But Robert Louis
Stevenson is also iconic for me: the gentle, cultured doctor trying to ride
herd on the shambling beast of desire he has created out of himself.)
The book also explores some of the ways particular expressions or styles
of desire are created. For example, in "Lunar Sensitivities" I was thinking
about the triangulation of desire, the way we acquire certain desires by
watching what other people desire. In a way, the self is created by imitating
the desires of others (who are imitating others). This is the way modern
advertising works; it treats us all as if we were servants of Death, and what
we like to romanticize by calling it personality is really just a copy of
someone else's copy of....
Is there any escape from this? I don't think Schopenhauer really thought
so. Nor did Freud. But in my own small way, I am a mystic. One begins by
understanding the situation (Wittgenstein's fly in the fly bottle) and one
begins to imagine modes of departure. Then oddly and paradoxically the word
love comes back into play because love, in some constructs, is about
leaving desire behind and simply attending (paying attention to, gazing at,
looking at) to the loved object. Language, which itself sometimes seems to be
part of the trap of life, contains words which exist on the edge of language
looking out: love, gift, prayer, goodness, beauty, courage. In this vast
nostalgia for what is beyond desire, there is some glimmer of redemption.
The idea of redemption keeps coming back. In The South Will Rise at
Noon,
Tully Stamper is comically redeemed in a mythic re-enactment of the death and
rebirth of ancient gods. Phoenix imagery runs through the book. I know I was
thinking then of the idea of grace, the idea that a god, for whatever
mysterious reason, could reach down and touch a man so eminently unworthy as
Tully. In The Life and Times of Captain N., Hendrick says that becoming an
Indian would be like entering a swarming madness, but it might redeem you. He
doesn't mean "going Indian" in any stupid back-to-the-land,
romance-of-the-noble-savage way; he means having the courage to go right out
of your self (personality, culture) and into the other. This is a kind of
perfect love; the one ethical injunction espoused in the novel is "Love
difference." And in the story "My Romance" in 16 Categories of Desire, there
is a moment when the protagonist and his wife, destroyed by grief over the
death of their son, fuse and redeem themselves in an act of love.
BRYSON: What are you working on now?
GLOVER: I'm writing a novel based loosely on the suicide of my great-grandfather who killed himself in 1914 in St. Williams, Ontario, ostensibly
because he had been accused of sleeping with someone else's wife. He kept a
store in St. Williams, called himself the village bard, wrote mediocre
poetry, had two teenage daughters and a dog named Gyp, and I can't for the
life of me figure out why he killed himself. In the Ontario Archives, I found
the letter books belonging to the lawyer who was suing my great-grandfather
for Criminal Conversation (what they called it in those days). There doesn't
seem to have been any credible evidence of misconduct. So I am making up what
happened. Like my earlier work, it contains threads from at least a
half-dozen ongoing investigations: desire, love, redemption, Canadian
history, myth and folklore, the nature of language. The working title is The
Speaking of the Dead, but my working titles rarely make it to the cover of
the actual book. |