TDR
Interview: Maggie Helwig
Part
of TDR's feature on Toronto
Books: Spring 2008
Toronto
writer Maggie Helwig’s latest novel is Girls
Fall Down (Coach House, 2008).
She has published six books of poetry,
two books of essays, a collection of short stories and two novels, Where
She Was Standing (2001) and Between Mountains (2004).
A human rights activist as well as a
writer, she has worked for the East Timor Alert Network in Toronto, the
Women in Black network, and War Resisters' International. She lives in
Toronto with her husband and daughter.
(Interview by Leanna McLennan - March
2008)
*
LM: Toronto features prominently in
your novel, which takes the reader (often via public transit) through
various neighbourhoods in Toronto. What kind of portrait of Toronto were
you aiming to create?
MH:
I'm not sure it's so much that I was aiming to create a particular kind
of portrait; though I guess it's almost taken for granted that I have a
pretty dark sensibility, so it was going to come out as a darker and
more strange Toronto than some others might create. But I was really
just trying to work with some of the things about Toronto that interest
me, and places that have particular meanings for me. Something like the
Out of the Cold program for the homeless at the church on College Street
isn't there so much to make a specific point as because it happens to be
a major part of my own life in the city; though it is also about ways
that people live together, how the city as a social body succeeds or
fails.
But there are also things like the PATH or the Cloud Garden that are
just in there because they intrigue me on some aesthetic level or other.
Honestly, the Cloud Garden is there because I think it's pretty, and
it's kind of neat that there are these pretty hidden parks tucked in
around the city that a lot of people don't even know about.
I did also want to incorporate some bits of our civic history that don't
get much attention. There are chunks of the book that are flashbacks to
1989, which was really an overheated year in many ways. Not everything
gets in, but there was a lot of political ferment on many levels, there
was a bit of an explosion of local indie music, there was the impending
end of the Cold War, and at the end of the year there was the Montreal
Massacre; it was a strange time.
It was also -- and this is what I
focused on in the novel -- the year that Operation Rescue really went
after the Morgentaler Clinic in a major way. I was living right near the
clinic at the time, so I was one of the first people on call for clinic
defense during the blockades, and it was quite dramatic, a very
significant period for the whole pro-choice movement, and it's in some
danger of just sliding out of sight. So I wanted that in there, along
with the bands that were playing Sneaky Dee's back then and the whole
feel of that time. It was tempting to include a lot more of 1989, and
there was much more in the early drafts, but ultimately I did have to
discipline that a bit.
I suppose that public transit comes
into it partly because I can't drive, so that's just how I get around
and how I see things. But it's also got something to do with Toronto as
a civic entity that actually does work quite well much of the time,
despite some large failures. It's significant, I think, that we do have
pretty good public transit here, and you see a reasonable class and
ethnic range among the people who are on it, unlike some US cities. As
for the particular significance of subways…
LM: Why the subway? Why a pandemic?
MH:
One of the early germs of this book was reading Haruki Murakami’s Underground,
which is a series of interviews with survivors of the Aum Shinrikyo
sarin attack on the Tokyo subway; I was fascinated with the way the
story emerged in pieces from the different interviews, and with the
strange eccentric human ways that people reacted to a catastrophic
event. But I was also really struck by the cover design, which had a map
of the subway superimposed on a human body. I've always worked very much
with the idea of the city as body, the social body (body politic), and
that design really evoked the role of the subway as a kind of
circulatory system for that body.
So there's a whole symbolic
relationship that emerges between human illness and the urban
problematic; the "poisonings" move through the subway, and
then into the rest of the city, the way that blood moves a whole variety
of chemicals through and into the body. And so you have Alex, whose life
is controlled by the need to regulate the level of glucose in his blood,
and you have Derek, whose neurochemistry is its own catastrophe, you
have the whole issue of how our biochemistry relates to what we think of
as personality and identity, and then you have these girls, and this
fainting that's going on, and this thing that may be poisoning or
sickness or simply fear, and the blood tests that keep coming up
inconclusive, and it's all moving through the systems of the city. Maybe
when the "real" illness emerges in the narrative it's a kind
of crystallization of these things, on some level.
The other thing about subways is that
Toronto is a city that really has a lot going on underground, or at
least below ground level. Philip Marchand wrote a piece in the Star
a little while ago about Toronto literature as defined by the
subterranean. He's quite right, I think. The ravines are absolutely
central and characteristic in the literature of Toronto; the PATH
system, the subways, these are all important in the imaginative Toronto,
in a way that they're arguably not in the imaginary lives of other
cities.
LM: Initially, I was drawn in by
your representation of political issues in Girls Fall Down. Then,
when you mentioned your interest in theological issues, I recalled your
vivid use garden imagery: the girls smell roses before they faint;
people visit community gardens; one of the characters lives in a ravine;
and, of course, the girls are falling. Could you say more about the
theological aspects of this novel?
MH:
People tend to be very aware that there are political underpinnings to
my writing; they tend not to notice that there's also a lot of
theological stuff going on (I have always thought that I have a
theological mind rather than a philosophical mind, in the end). This
book, I discovered as I was working on it, is in some ways a reflection
on ideas about the Fall, which I think is really quite an interesting
story with a fair bit of symbolic value, though it's certainly been
badly used at times.
What I mean is, I'm playing with ideas
about what it means that we are creatures (and as far as we know,
probably the only creatures) who have both a conscious awareness of our
own mortality, and an ability to act with deliberate evil intent; in the
terms of the Bible story, we have eaten the fruit of the tree of the
knowledge of good and evil. What do we do with that, and what does it
mean that we do wrong, conscious wrong, that we want to be good and yet
seem to be propelled in flawed or evil directions by forces that are
inside us, and yet out of our control? Where does this come from?
Neurochemicals? Something we call original sin? Is there a bright-line
difference?
One of the other interesting things
about the story of the Fall in the Bible is that Eve is really the
decision-maker, and yet it's always, traditionally, been treated as
Adam's story. Eve gets treated more as a kind of animal and vaguely
sexual force. One of the things I'm trying to do is look at these
questions with women as the moral decision-makers; for good or ill, all
the important decisions in the book are made by women and girls, it's
women and girls who are grappling throughout with the knowledge of good
and evil and how it plays out, how you make choices, how you shape your
life. Women and choice; which makes it nearly inevitable that the whole
issue of the Morgentaler clinic is going to enter in, but of course
there's many more choices than that going on. The men are pretty
passive, overall; it's the women and girls who drive the narrative.
And they drive it in the face of a lot
of very confused attitudes about female sexuality, some of which come
from particular ways of reading the Fall. The whole femme fatale
narrative that's so pervasive in our culture is really an Eve story, a
particular type of Eve story about how all problems really stem from
those sexy sexy ladies and their sexiness, and that's the filter through
which Alex is reading Susie for most of the book. I think at the end he
is starting to have some understanding of her as an independent moral
actor who has her own life, not just where it intersects his life, her
own desires that don't always align with his; though he's also coming to
more and more of a sense of the inextricability of their moral lives, or
their whole lives really.
The one explicitly religious figure in
the book is a female priest; and then you have the girl who collapses in
the subway, and her encounter in a garden with the knowledge of good and
evil and how that relates to her emerging sexuality, and she's
struggling to make some kind of sense of this, and that's having a
ripple effect that really creates the entire story that I'm telling.
So, now I've pretty much explained the
title, at least.
LM: The protagonist of Girls
Fall Down is a photographer who takes pictures of sick people for a
living but whose true passion is photographing the city. He is also
losing his eyesight due to the advanced stages of diabetes. Could you
talk about your choice to make the central character a photographer who
is losing his sight?
MH:
Yes, Alex's work as a medical photographer is another of ways I'm
playing sickness imagery, body imagery, out through the narrative; and
Alex as the photographer of bodies and of the city is one way of pulling
together some of the themes I talked about earlier. As for Alex himself,
the original decision was to make him diabetic, for reasons I've talked
a bit about already. And maybe it's just this love of tormenting
fictional characters that writers seem to have, so that when you have a
diabetic photographer you immediately think, wait, one of the common
side effects of diabetes is vision problems! Let's do that! That'll
really mess him up!
So that's probably the order of the
decision-making, but once I'd settled on that, it certainly had an
effect on how Alex's character emerged; it explained some of his
obsessiveness, some of his self-isolation. He's always felt sort of
contingent or temporary -- which we all are, but he's more aware of it
-- but the vision loss is obviously reinforcing that in a major way.
LM: You describe Alex as "part
of that strange elite in Western society, one of the witnesses." He
is very open to different kinds of people, yet there is "still
always something between [him] the world." You simultaneously
render this distance and bridge it with your compassionate
characterization. Do you see an inherent distance in the role of the
witness: the activist, the photographer, the writer?
MH:
Well -- to some extent there's an inherent tension in the roles of
people whose work is to capture and portray the lives of others. This
novel is, in some small part, a tribute to a photographer friend of mine
who died a few years ago, and that was a problem he was always wrestling
with, how far the camera separated him from the real world, from
engagement, and at what point you put down the camera and just react, or
act.
But Alex has really pushed himself
quite far in one direction. He's deliberately using the camera as a
barrier, as a distancing mechanism, and he's actually inhabiting the
tension rather less than he might, because he's put himself so much on
one side of the problem. I wouldn't say that he's exactly
"open" to people, actually. He's certainly accepting of
different sorts of people in the sense of having neutrality about nearly
everything -- he sees himself as an observer, an outsider, and he's
quite non-judgmental in that role, but he doesn't really connect very
much with anyone. He's interested in the outside world to the extent
that he can make interesting pictures of it, but he's really sometimes
astonishingly self-absorbed.
That's part of why Susie-Paul is such a
disturbing presence in his life, because she's someone who can immerse
herself in issues and in other people's lives, she's got a history as an
activist and also a history of multiple complex emotional engagements.
If Alex has exceptionally high and sturdy boundaries, Susie's problem
tends to be in drawing appropriate boundaries at all. She's chosen to
work as an academic studying an area in which she already has a direct
and intense emotional involvement, she doesn't really segment parts of
her life off at all, and that's another sort of problem, but it is part
of what makes her both fascinating and frightening to Alex.
LM: A number of Canadian writers—Margaret
Atwood, Dionne Brand, Russell Smith and many others—have set novels in
Toronto. How do you see this novel in relation to other writers’
representations of Toronto?
MH:
There's been a fair bit of Toronto literature recently, hasn't there?
When I started working on this, I felt like Toronto was really
underimagined; that's less the case now. But I don't think it's much use
thinking about where I stand in relation to these other writers while
I'm writing. Inevitably I'm going to have my particular Toronto as
they'll have theirs.
It's not an easy city to write about,
you know, and I think the subterranean nature of it has something to do
with that. There's a kind of muffling and suppression to Toronto --
which, by the way, I think is not wholly negative, it actually has both
good and bad aspects. But writing about mass hysteria in Toronto almost
feels like an absurd thing to do, because we're ... not like that. Other
places have mass hysteria. We have politeness. And I ended up with this
really oddly restrained and subdued kind of mass hysteria which I think
is frankly mysterious to people from other countries.
So any novelist who's writing about
Toronto is going to have to reckon with that burying and muffling, and
how you make your way down to some of the underlying conflicts without
falsifying the nature of the place. And I think you can see that in the
other writers you've named, as well, though the underlying conflicts
we're working towards are probably quite different in each case. |