Educating the Clients - Readers
by Michael Bryson
Once upon a time I sat in on a meeting of the I.T.
Group of a major corporation. The question of the day was: "How do
we get our clients to understand our needs?" The I.T. Group's
clients expected more from the Group than the Group was able to provide.
The Group asked itself: "How do we educate our clients so that they
work with us to get quality results? If our customers would only allow
us to do our work the way we like to do it, they wouldn't be calling
back us later to fix what we didn't have time to prepare in the first
place."
For months after this meeting I wondered if there was
a way to apply the questions raised by the I.T. Group to my own field:
the production of literary fiction. Like the group of frustrated I.T.
Artists (bear with me), I had often wondered if there was a way to
educate my clients (readers, editors, critics), so that I could be more
free to produce my own kind of quality results. The relationship between
corporate clients and a bunch of computer techies may seem a long way
away from the relationship of writer, reader and critic, but the issues
are strikingly similar. In the same way that corporate clients tend to
see short-term needs while their I.T. Professionals are focused on
longer-term goals, readers, critics, booksellers and publishers often
have their eye on short-term pleasure or simply the bottom line while
writers like to think they are flirting with immortality.
A recent book review by Andrew Pyper (Globe and
Mail, Sept. 18, 1999) of Michael Turner's new novel, The
Pornographer's Poem, provides a useful example of this gap in
perception and purpose. Turner, of course, is the Vancouver-based writer
who has blossomed in the 1990s as the author of novels like American
Whiskey Bar and the poetry collection (later movie) Hard Core
Logo. He is widely recognized as one of the most daring (read
"experimental") Canadian writers to emerge this decade. Pyper
brings to his review the short-term point of view of the corporate
client. The final sentence of his opening paragraph reads:
"Narrative pleasure in even the best experimental writing can
sometimes underwhelm the intellectual cargo of its formal intent."
For Pyper, reading experimental prose is like a
"wrestling match between 'straight story' and 'pure idea'."
Pyper's use of the term "narrative pleasure" is a hint about
the assumptions he brings to reviewing (and his own fiction, like the
recent popular novel, Lost Girls). Another hint is the false
conflict he sets up between "story" and "idea".
Contrary to the assumption in Pyper's argument, stories and ideas are
rarely, if ever, separated. Stories have been embodying ideas for
millennia. In fact, it could easily be said the stories with the deepest
ideas are the ones that survive the sands of time, while "narrative
pleasure" reeks of Hollywood blockbusters, special effects,
manipulative music scores, and plotting rigged to trigger the
heartstrings of the sentimental.
As playwright Tom Stoppard recently wrote in The
New York Times Review of Books (Sept. 23, 1999): "When it comes
to mystery stories I am with Edmund Wilson - 'Who cares who killed Peter
Akroyd?'"
Novelist Douglas Glover takes this argument to another
level in his essay in the summer issue of the Canadian literary journal,
The New Quarterly. Glover talks about "two kinds of
writers". One group follows the critic Percy Lubbock, who wrote an
influential book called The Craft of Fiction in 1921. The other
group follows novelist E.M. Forester, who published an influential book
called Aspects of the Novel in 1927. If this sounds like an
esoteric tangent, please remember that this essay began with questions
about how to "educate our clients."
Educating clients (that is, readers and, in
particular, critics) is exactly Glover's goal. He provides a prescient
example of how his novel, The Life and Times of Captain N., was
misread by critics who knew how to read like Lubbock and were less sure
what to do with a product that more closely followed the values of
Forester. Writers like to be understood, not to have their work woefully
misread, as was Glover's experience. Unfortunately, the literary
education of generations of readers has been malformed by parents,
schoolteachers, talk show hosts and book reviewers in the popular press,
all of whom are well meaning but too often strangers to literature.
For example, anyone who follows the advice of Oprah's
Book Club (and millions do) would think Anton Chekhov a crank when he
said literature doesn't provide answers, only the right questions. And
who can make sense of the quip by Ezra Pound (also a crank) that art
that stays news is art in which the question "what does it
mean?" has no correct answer? From almost the first time we pick up
a book, we are asked to paraphrase its narrative content. "What
does it mean?" is a question commonly dropped from the lips of
caregivers. Another is even more prevalent in every reader's early
years: "What is the moral of the story?"
These are symptoms of a mis-education that has been
perpetuated in our homes, schools and newspapers. The good news is
corrective forces exist. Clients, as the I.T. Group learned, can be
educated with persistence and a proper plan. The first step is to resist
over simplistic notions like Pyper's separation of "story" and
"idea."
As Tom Stoppard wrote in his article in The New
York Time Review of Books: "Every narrative has, at least, a
capacity to suggest a metanarrative, and art that 'works' is highly
suggestive in this sense, as though the story were really a metaphor for
an idea that has to be almost tricked out of hiding into the audience's
consciousness."
Do you know what that means? Any idea? |