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Professor Amy Hungerford: In light of the
fact that I have just sent you paper topics,
my lecture today is going to do two things.
It is going to give you a way into Franny and Zooey,
but it's going to actually give you more than a way into
it. It is really going to give you
a whole packaged reading of Franny and Zooey.
We have just the one day on this novel, and what I'm going
to be doing for you is modeling the way literary critics use
evidence to advance an argument. It's useful to you when you
think about writing a paper to remember, if it's been a long
time since you've written an English paper,
or even if it isn't a long time since you've written an English
paper, that the facts that we, literary critics,
and you, writers on literature, the facts that we deal with are
the details of the text itself. You may have noticed that I am
very fond of reading aloud to you from these novels.
I'm very fond of reading out passages.
I do it a lot. Why do I do it?
Well, there are two reasons, one because I want you to hear
literary art. Literary art is a verbal art,
and I think too often we only read it silently;
probably not since you were children that people read to you
so much. So, to get a sense of that,
you have to have it in your ear and feel the sound and the
rhythm and the quality, the timbre, the expression of
the voices that we have in these novels.
Our writer for today thinks so highly of that capacity of
literature to embody the human voice that he imagines a whole
religious world around him. That's going to be the gist of
my argument today. But then, there is a second,
sort of, less mystical reason, and that's that these are the
facts of a literary argument, these words that I give to you.
It's like, if you're in an astronomy lecture,
they're going to give you some facts about the composition of a
planet, or its atmosphere, or whatever.
Those are the facts for that field.
For this field, these are the facts.
So, in your papers, if you find yourself writing
and you get to the end of a page and you look back,
you scan back over your page, and you see that there are no
quotation marks, you are not using any of the
facts of the novel to produce your argument,
to support your claims. So, that's like the eye test,
the glance test. Are you supporting your claims?
If you have very few quotations, chances are you are
not. So, think of this lecture,
as I go through it, as a kind of model.
Pay attention to what I'm doing in using these textual bits and
pieces and putting them together and making claims for them.
I do it every week. It just so happens that this
argument is more closed, more settled,
in my own mind. It's less of an opening
argument than it is something that I want to convince you of.
So, there's a reason for that and that is that I'm writing
about this novel. It's in the introduction to a
book that I'm writing about the literature of this period,
and so it's very present to my mind as a sort of piece of a
larger argument about religion and the American novel in this
period, so that's what I'm giving you.
When you approach any novel to make an argument about it,
if you want to be ambitious, the first thing to think about
is well, what's obvious about the novel?
What can you observe at first glance about its style,
about its form, about its setting,
about its character, about its presuppositions?
In Franny and Zooey, what did you notice?
Tell me what you noticed, at first bat,
if any of you have read it. What did you notice about the
novel? Uh huh.Student:
It doesn't move around very much.
It just stays in a limited space.Professor Amy
Hungerford: Absolutely. Confined settings,
very confined settings, absolutely.
Yes. What else?
Yes.Student: A lot of
dialog?Professor Amy Hungerford: Lots of dialog,
yes. What else?
Uh huh.Student: [inaudible]Professor
Amy Hungerford: Yeah, yeah.
Absolutely. Yeah.
There's a back story. You can feel that back story to
the novel. Yeah.
What else? What else did you notice?
Yes.Student: There's a lot of focus on
like little motions that people do,
like picking up cigarettes and dropping things.Professor
Amy Hungerford: Yeah.
A lot of attention to physical detail and physical movement,
and that's connected to this point about confined spaces.
It's the movement of bodies within confined spaces that
really preoccupies this novel. What about the style of the
novel? You talked about dialog.
Is there anything else about the style that you noticed?
Yes.Student: There's a lot of
italics.Professor Amy Hungerford: A lot of
italics. What does that connote to
you?Student: Trying to convey
feeling.Professor Amy Hungerford: Yeah.
Absolutely. A lot of emphasis,
a lot of variation in tone, and the italics are part of the
representation of that. Yeah. What else?
Yes.Student: A lot of the dialog seems
to be combative. There's arguing between two
people. Professor Amy
Hungerford: Yes. This is a book about arguments,
absolutely. What are they arguing about
most of the time?
All right. Well, that's where I will pick
up. Oh, Sarah.
Do you want to say? Student:
There are a lot of abstract ideas.Professor Amy
Hungerford: Yeah. Yeah.
Absolutely. They are talking about abstract
intellectual ideas, often religious or
philosophical ones, and that, plus its setting:
I hope you noticed the sort of New Havenish setting of Franny's
breakdown. We're told that Lane isn't
exactly a Yale man, but he sure looks a lot like a
Yale English major, dare I say, such an unpleasant
character, and so, so pompous.
What you do, when you write a paper or try
to advance an argument, is try to write an argument
that will attend to all those things that you guys just said,
that you take the obvious things, and when you craft an
argument, the best thing, the most ambitious thing,
to do is to come up with something where,
in the end, you can say something about
those major aspects. You don't have to do it in the
paper, but it should be an argument that has something to
say back to those obvious things.
Why is the style this way? Why is the plot working this
way? Why are these particular
characters behaving in this way? Why use those confined spaces?
So, my argument today is going to try to have something
to say back to all those obvious aspects that you pointed out so
rightly. But I'm going to start from a
much more pointed and local question.
And this is the other thing that a good short paper
especially does, is that you don't get at all
that big stuff by, kind of, taking it head on.
You have to come down to the facts that I was talking about,
the bits of text, the text itself,
the words that author chose; that's where you begin.
And part of the genius of a strong paper is choosing the
place in the text to begin that pointed analysis.
So, my choice for this is that odd introduction in-between the
two stories, and this is on 48 and 49.
This is, we come to find out, Buddy, Zooey's older brother,
narrating the story, and Buddy gives us a little
preamble telling us how the real characters in the story,
the real people who are then characters in his story,
how they felt about the story and what their objections to it
were (and this is on 48).
We find out that Franny objects to the story's distribution in
the world or the movie, the prose home movie as Buddy
calls it, because it shows her blowing her nose a lot.
His mother, Bessie, objects because it shows her in
her housecoat. But Zooey has a more
substantive objection. It's the leading man,
however, who has made the most eloquent appeal to me to call
off the production. [This is in the middle of page
48.] He feels that the plot hinges
on mysticism or religious mystification.
In any case, he makes it very clear,
a too vividly apparent transcendent element of sorts,
which he says he's worried can only expedite,
move up, the day and hour of my professional undoing.
People are already shaking their heads over me and any
immediate further professional use on my part of the word "God"
except as a familiar, healthy American expletive will
be taken or rather confirmed as the very worst kind of name
dropping and a sure sign that I'm going straight to the
dogs. And then, he speaks back to
Zooey. He says, "Well,
I'm going to still distribute my story.
I still want to tell this story," and he does it in a kind
of roundabout way. And this is on page 49.
Somewhere in The Great Gatsby, which was my Tom
Sawyer when I was twelve, the youthful narrator remarks
that everybody suspects himself of having at least one of the
cardinal virtues and he goes on to say that he thinks his,
bless his heart, is honesty. Mine, I think,
is that I know the difference between a mystical story and a
love story. I say that my current offering
isn't a mystical story or a religiously mystifying story at
all. I say it's a compound or
multiple love story, pure and complicated.
What Buddy does, in this passage,
is set up this opposition between his own reading of his
story and Zooey's. Now, why are we given these
objections? I think it's to give us a
dynamic sense of the family conversation going on between
them, but it also addresses one of those obvious things.
They talk a lot, as Sarah said,
they talk a lot about abstract questions, and this puts the
meaning of the story in that abstract register.
Is it a love story, or is it a religious story,
a mystifying story? Which is it?
I am going to argue that it's both.
And I'm going to advance that argument by going straight to
the theological question that Zooey is so intent on solving
when Franny is having her breakdown in the living room.
So, just to review: Franny has her breakdown when
she comes into what I suspect is New Haven to attend the
Yale-Harvard football game with her boyfriend,
Lane. So, Franny when she sees Lane,
affects great enthusiasm, and so on, but this is what we
hear about Lane from the narrator.
This is on page 11. Lane was speaking now as
someone does who has been monopolizing conversation for a
good quarter of an hour or so and who believes he has just hit
a stride where his voice can do absolutely no wrong.
[I always read this and I think, "I'm lecturing."]
"I mean, to put it crudely,'" he was saying,
"the thing you could say he lacks is testicularity.
You know what I mean?" He was slouched rhetorically
forward toward Franny, his receptive audience,
a supporting forearm on either side of his martini.
"Lacks what?" Franny said.
She had had to clear her throat before speaking.
It had been so long since she had said anything at all.
Lane hesitated. "Masculinity," he said.
"I heard you the first time." "Anyway, it was the motif of
the thing, so to speak, what I was trying to bring out
in a fairly subtle way," Lane said, very closely
following the trend of his own conversation.
"I mean God. I honestly thought it was going
to go over like a *** lead balloon and when I got it back
with this *** A on it in letters about six feet high I
swear I nearly keeled over." Franny again cleared her throat.
Apparently, her self-imposed sentence of unadulterated good
listenership had been fully served.
"Why?" she asked.
Lane looked faintly interrupted. "Why what?"
"Why did you think it was going to go over like a lead balloon?"
"I just told you. I just got through saying this
guy, Brughman is a big Flaubert man or at least I thought he
was." "Oh," Franny said.
She smiled. Franny is disgusted by his
pomposity. This experience,
combined with her experience in a religion seminar with this
man, Professor Tupper,
at school, has convinced herself that the world is
superficial, that it's impossible to find
anything meaningful in the academic discussion of these
pseudo-intellectual problems, the "testicularity" of one
writer or another. And Lane's engagement with
literature, specifically, is all about his ego inflation.
So, he can't wait to tell Franny that the professor said
he should try to publish it, and then my favorite thing:
he wants to read it to her over the football weekend.
"Hey, come, let's read my English essay."
Hello. Student: Hi.
Can I interrupt? We have a couple of singing
valentines. Can we deliver them
now?Professor Amy Hungerford: No,
you can't. Sorry.
Student: Thank you.Professor
Amy Hungerford: And I'm worried about
e-mail!
Talk about pricking my pomposity.
All right. So, she starts saying the Jesus
prayer, which is, "Lord Jesus Christ,
Son of God, have mercy on me, a sinner."
Now, she has taken this prayer from a book called The Way of
the Pilgrim. It's a Russian Orthodox
religious classic, a very old text,
and it depicts the life of a pilgrim.
And we get the summary of this a little bit in the novel,
as Franny explains it, or tries to explain it,
to Lane, who is entirely uninterested.
It is about a man who tries to take seriously the Bible's
injunction to pray without ceasing, and the prayer for
Franny becomes a kind of mantra. She is trying to say it over
and over again as she goes about in this world that is so
disappointing to her, feels so false to her.
And so, finally, the strain of trying to hold
out this kind of religious awareness in the face of Lane
and his English paper is just too much,
and she faints. Now, Zooey has a big
problem with her use of this prayer, and this is what gives
the book that sort of combative tone that we were talking about
a little earlier that somebody mentioned.
So, if you look on page 169, my question now is,
in my argument: What is Zooey's critique of
Franny's use of the prayer? What constitutes that critique?
What's wrong with it?
So, on 169, he says to Franny as she's sniveling on the couch:
"God almighty, Franny," he said.
"If you're going to say the Jesus prayer,
at least say it to Jesus and not to Saint Francis and Seymour
and Heidi's grandfather all wrapped up in one.
Keep Him in mind if you say it, and Him only,
and Him as He was and not as you'd like Him to have been.
You don't face any facts. This same damned attitude of
not facing facts is what got you into this messy state of mind in
the first place, and it can't possibly get you
out of it." And then, this argument goes on
for a couple of pages, and I'm just going to pick up
the end of it here, on the bottom of 171.
He is explaining who Jesus was. "If you don't understand
Jesus, you can't understand His prayer.
You don't get the prayer at all. You just get some kind of
organized cant. Jesus was a supreme adept,
by God, on a terribly important mission.
This was no Saint Francis with enough time to knock out a few
canticles or to preach to the birds or do any of the other
endearing things so close to Franny Glass's heart.
I'm being serious now, goddamit. How can you miss seeing that?
If God had wanted somebody with Saint Francis's consistently
winning personality for the job in the New Testament,
He'd have picked him, you can be sure.
As it was, He picked the best, the smartest,
the most loving, the least sentimental,
the most unimitative master He could have possibly picked.
And when you miss seeing that, I swear to you,
you're missing the whole point of the Jesus prayer."
So, Zooey's critique is that Franny is not being specific in
her use of the prayer. She's paying no attention to
who Jesus was and what it means to actually pray to that figure.
But, to anyone paying attention to the other things that Zooey
says and the other things that he does in this novel,
this is kind of odd, and it's hard to square.
So, my next kind of question is: How does that very
doctrinally specific understanding of the Jesus
prayer relate to the whole religious education that Buddy
and Seymour gave him, and that he seems to be
thinking so hard about as he reads that letter in the
bathtub? The letter in the bathtub tells
us about that education, and let's look on 61.
Sorry. That's not exactly the right
page. This is 65.
I'm sorry.
In this letter Buddy explains to Zooey what he and Seymour
have been trying to do. "Much,
much more important though," [Buddy says in the middle of 65]
"Seymour had already begun to believe,
and I agreed with him as far as I was able to see the point,
that education by any name would smell as sweet,
and maybe much sweeter, if it didn't begin with a quest
for knowledge at all, but with a quest,
as Zen would put it, for no-knowledge.
Dr. Suzuki says somewhere,
that to be in a state of pure consciousness,
satori, is to be with God before He said,
'Let there be light.' Seymour and I thought it might
be a good thing to hold back this light from you and Franny,
at least as far as we were able, and all the many lower,
more fashionable lighting effects--the arts,
sciences, classics, languages--'til you were both
able at least to conceive of a state of being where the mind
knows the source of all light."
So, the religious education that Zooey's response to Franny
comes out of, is precisely not a doctrinally
specific Christian education. Rather, it's something more
like a Buddhist tradition, a syncretic,
mystical tradition. The idea is that there is some
state of being with God. Knowledge, all the arts and
sciences, literature, all of the religious writings
of the world are manifestations of that voice that at its origin
is God saying, "Let there be light."
It's the voice of creation. Seymour and Buddy want Franny
and Zooey to rest at that origin, undistracted by the
manifestations of the creation, and know some kind of
consciousness of God in that place.
So, Zooey, pretty much, subscribes to these tenets,
and you can see it especially on page 175, when he goes into
his brother's old room. Now, let me explain a
detail that I think is important, but I think a little
lost to us in today's world of technology.
There's a phone in Buddy and Seymour's old room that is a
private internal line, and it just goes from one room
to another in the apartment; it's not an outside phone line.
And what's interesting about it, and what indicates its
importance to Buddy, is that Bessie gets on about
him getting a phone where he's teaching in upstate New York;
he's teaching writing as a visiting writer at a college in
upstate New York. And Bessie, his mother,
keeps saying, "Well, why won't you get a
phone, Buddy? You're paying to maintain this
interior line in our apartment, and yet you won't get a phone."
For Buddy, the phone that's within the family compound,
so to speak, family apartment,
is the more important line of communication.
So, when Zooey goes upstairs to use that phone,
it's freighted with all the significance that Buddy has put
upon it. But there's a whole ritual
involved in Zooey's entrance into this place.
This is on 175.
At the far end of the hall he went into the bedroom he
had once shared with his twin brothers,
which now, in 1955, was his alone,
but he stayed in his room for not more than two minutes.
When he came out, he had on the same sweaty
shirt. There was, however,
a slight but fairly distinct change in his appearance.
He had acquired a cigar and lighted it, and for some reason
he had an unfolded white handkerchief,
draped over his head, possibly to ward off rain,
or hail, or brimstone. So, why does he do this?
What's the meaning of this little detail of Zooey's
appearance? Well, one thing that a literary
argument can do is take something small like this and
try to give an account for it, so that's what I'm going to do.
He's venerating the room that Seymour and Buddy occupied.
He's covering his head in a traditional religious fashion,
so in order to enter this holy place he covers his head.
(The cigar? I don't have an account of that.
You guys figure that out. That's the other nice thing
about literary arguments. There are always little details
that they don't account for, and that's the loose thread
that you can pull to make your own.) And so,
what does he find when he goes in to this holy space?
Well, he finds two panels of beaver board,
on 178,179, and they have the quotations that Seymour and
Buddy have collected from all their favorite religious,
philosophical, mystical, literary reading,
and I'd like you just to think about one of them.
So this is the bottom of 178. This is from Sri Rama Krishna.
"Sir, we ought to teach the people that they are doing
wrong in worshipping the images and pictures in the temple."
Rama Krishna: "That's the way with you
Calcutta people. You want to teach and preach.
You want to give millions when you are beggars yourselves.
Do you think God does not know that He is being worshipped in
the images and pictures? If a worshipper should make a
mistake, do you not think God will know his intent?"
This is, I think one, of the best examples of that
syncretic view of religion, that basically all worshippers
are worshipping the same god. They may do it in different
forms; they may make mistakes;
they may be mistaken about where God resides.
But, in this view, God is so powerful and so
transcendent that God will know the heart of the worshipper.
So, if you apply that back to Franny, why does Zooey have this
difficulty? Why does he have this
difficulty in the specificity of her prayer?
What is it that is bothering him?
Well, I think you begin to get an answer to this tension
between specific doctrine and syncretic religion when Zooey
gets to the subject of acting, which is what this second
attempt at speaking to Franny, this time over the phone,
is concerned with. There is a detail here of
course that Zooey, in making a second attempt to
converse with Franny about this, impersonates his brother,
Buddy, on the phone. Now I'm just going to leave
that observation, remind you of that.
I have a way to account for that, but it's going to take to
the end of my argument to do that,
so I'm going to argue that that's significant,
but I'm not going to talk about why it's significant yet.
But let's look at that theology of acting.
This is on page 198.
This is coming towards the climax of their conversation.
Part of what's been bothering Franny is her frustration with
acting, and that's one of the things that Lane is so surprised
she has given up; it was the only thing she was
passionate about. And we know--from reading
Buddy's letter over Zooey's shoulder in the bathtub--we know
that Zooey had similar concerns about his own acting career,
his own commitment to acting that Buddy tried to persuade him
out of. "You can say the Jesus
prayer" [Zooey says to Franny], "from now 'til doomsday,
but if you don't realize that the only thing that counts in
the religious life is detachment,
I don't see how you'll ever even move an inch.
Detachment, buddy, and only detachment,
desirelessness, cessation from all hankering.
It's this business of desiring. If you want to know the goddam
truth, that makes an actor in the first place.
Why are you making me tell you things you already know?
Somewhere along the line in one damn incarnation or another,
if you like, you not only had a hankering to
be an actor or an actress, but to be a good one.
You're stuck with it now. You can't just walk out on the
results of your own hankerings. Cause and effect,
buddy, cause and effect. The only thing you can do now,
the only religious thing you can do, is act.
Act for God if you want to, be God's actress if you want
to. What could be prettier?"
Zooey has this understanding of the cosmos that suggests that
strong, specific human desires actually change the course of
cosmic futures. So somewhere,
maybe in pre-incarnational time before Franny became Franny,
she wanted to be an actress. The religious thing Zooey says
is to inhabit that, to honor that,
to follow up on the results of that prior desiring.
But why is it acting? Why specifically acting and why
this weird comment at the end, "What could be prettier?"
What does prettiness have to do with this?
Well, if you look at the description, for instance,
of Zooey's face, there's a beautiful description
of how his face is beautiful, in what way his face is
beautiful. We know that Franny is an
attractive young woman. We know that she worries about
beauty, and especially in poetry.
When she's trying to explain what's wrong,
part of what's wrong is that when she learns poetry in the
classroom none of it seems beautiful to her;
it all seems like some other kind of production,
not the production of beauty. So prettiness,
beauty, the aesthetic is at the heart of the spiritual practice
that Zooey is urging upon Franny, the spiritual practice
of acting. And I would remind you,
looking back to that passage on page 65 and into the 66,
that specifically among the figures that Buddy mentions,
the religious and literary figures,
we find Shakespeare. And I think Shakespeare in this
train of figures represents the literary that is also the
dramatic. So, in our tradition
Shakespeare is the literary name above all others.
It's important for Salinger that Shakespeare was a
dramatist. It's important for this novel
that Shakespeare was a dramatist, not just because
Zooey wants Franny to inhabit acting fully as her desire and
as her religious practice as opposed to saying the Jesus
prayer. Acting has a deeper relation to
the novel and here's where we get back to that question of
being in closed spaces and the lack of movement.
If you think about this novel, it has the structures of
drama. It takes place in small rooms.
If you begin to think about it, you can almost see the set
changes: in the diner, on the train station.
That's about the most open place, on the train platform.
That's about the most open place we see.
In the diner, in the apartment:
all you do in the apartment is move from one room to another.
These are dramatic spaces. Moreover, the bathroom:
completely a dramatic space. It even has a curtain hiding
Zooey from his mother. Acting becomes a religious
practice for much more than Franny, not just for Franny and
for Zooey 'cause Zooey's an actor too.
It's a religious practice for the novel itself.
And that, I would suggest to you, is where we can begin to
bring some of those obvious things: the prevalence of
dialog, those enclosed spaces,
the tone, the exaggerated tone, the somewhat histrionic
quality, the combativeness of that
conversation, its sheer style.
These are great talkers! But, I would suggest to
you, Salinger is trying to balance something very
carefully, that relates back to this
question of doctrine versus syncretism in the religious
sphere of the novel, in the religious thematic
material of the novel. And, for this,
I'd like to look at the very end of the novel.
Zooey finally suggests that it's attention to the audience
that makes an actor really a special actor,
a religious actor, and he points back to advice
that Buddy gave him about--sorry,
that Seymour had given him--about performing on a radio
show. So, they were all radio show
*** kids, and one day Zooey had not wanted to shine his shoes
and says--this is on page 200--that:
"The announcer was a moron, the studio audience were
all morons, the sponsors were morons,
and I just damn well wasn't going to shine my shoes for
them, I told Seymour. I said they couldn't see them
anyway where we sat. He said to shine them anyway.
He said to shine them for the Fat Lady."
Now, why the Fat Lady? It's this mythical,
incredibly humanly embodied-- whenever you see a fat lady in a
novel, one of the first things you
want to ask is: why does that person need to be
excessively embodied? That's what fatness is in a
novel like this. It's excessive embodiment,
the human. That's what this woman
represents, the human. Connect to the human audience;
respect the human audience. Act for them, to them.
Don't act as if they are just some bunch of Philistines out
there who can't appreciate your art.
And then he says to Franny: "I'll tell you a terrible
secret. Are you listening to me?
There isn't anyone out there who isn't Seymour's Fat Lady.
That includes your Professor Tupper, buddy,
and all his *** cousins by the dozens.
There isn't anyone anywhere who isn't Seymour's Fat Lady.
Don't you know that? Don't you know that ***
secret yet? And don't you know--Listen to
me, now. Don't you know who the Fat Lady
really is? Ah, buddy.
Ah, buddy, it's Christ Himself, Christ Himself,
buddy." This seems like a completely
Christian answer to Zooey's problem, and we're back on the
horns of that dilemma. Is this a syncretic religious
vision, or is it a Christian one?
But look what follows. This is not the last word.
For joy, apparently, it was all Franny
could do to hold the phone even with both hands.
For a foolish half minute or so there was no other words,
no further speech, then "I can't talk anymore,
buddy." The sound of a phone being
replaced on its catch followed. Franny took in her breath
slightly but continued to hold the phone to her ear.
A dial tone of course followed the formal break in the
connection. She appeared to find it
extraordinarily beautiful to listen to, rather as if it were
the best possible substitute for the primordial silence
itself. The dial tone is that state of
awareness of the divine that Buddy speaks of when he says-
when he speaks of being with God before God said,
"Let there be light." Zooey's voice breaking that
dial tone in the beginning in his phone call,
and then the resumption of it afterwards,
that dial tone encases Zooey's voice, so that what Zooey says
to her is one of the rays of light of God's creation,
one of those things, like Shakespeare,
that is part of the whole created world,
but what Franny can tune into, after hearing his voice,
is that very essential divine sound,
meaningless sound. And so, this is how Salinger
balances the syncretic, the sort of empty mysticism of
Seymour and Buddy, with the embodied,
doctrinal, specific insistence that we see from Zooey,
from the insistence on human specificity,
the Fat Lady, the very material human fleshly
person. Salinger's own novel performs
in this way, and that's how you would want to think about
moments like on the bottom of 180.
This is describing the bedroom of Seymour and Buddy as Zooey
walks in. A stranger with a flair
for cocktail party descriptive prose might have commented that
the room, at a quick glance,
looked as if it had once been tenanted by two struggling
twelve-year-old lawyers or researchists.
And then if you flip back to--let's see--172 describing
Zooey's sweaty shirt, "His shirt was,
in the familiar phrase, wringing wet."
And there are lots of moments like this, self-conscious
moments of style. So, "in the familiar phrase,
'wringing wet,'" he's saying, "I'm about to use a
cliché. Here it is. There it is."
He says someone with a flair for cocktail party conversation,
a witticism, would say this.
He gives it to us, but he frames it as an
affectation of style. So, what Salinger,
I think, shows us is that affectation, without something
like love, is just affectation, and that's what Lane
represents. That's the affectation of
literature without any human connection.
That's why when he talks on and on, it's as if Franny isn't even
there listening to him. He's been going on a quarter
hour, and he's just hitting his stride.
Franny, Zooey, Buddy, Bessie:
they all try to speak directly to each other.
The family language is what makes them very human;
they embody this very specific family language.And so,
I would argue to you that Salinger imagines literature as
a performance of this kind, a performance of a language of
family love that is nevertheless also an aesthetic language.
And I think, actually, probably the best
image of that is in Seymour's diary.
When Zooey sits down to make that phone call,
he opens up Seymour's diary and he sees Seymour's account of his
birthday celebration, where the family had put on a
vaudeville show right in their living room.
Remember, his parents are vaudevillians.
And that description, which I won't read just because
we're running out of time, it's on 181 and 182.
You can look at it yourself. It's brimming with pleasure and
love. This is why Buddy really can't
insist that Zooey is wrong about this being a religious novel,
because being a religious novel and being a love story are
finally for Salinger the same thing.
It's the performance of human connection.
That's the phone line; that's conversation;
that's letters. The performance of family
conversation is like acting, and that is why Zooey
impersonates Buddy; he's acting.
But Franny can hear the specific voice,
and this is when you know that Franny is not just a sort of
empty air head. She may be mistaken about who
she's praying to in the Jesus prayer, but she damn well knows
the timbre of her brother's voice and his particularity of
speech. And so, when he tries to
imitate Buddy, she finds him out very quickly.
And this is when you know that Franny really does benefit from
Seymour and Buddy's religious education in the same way that
Zooey has. And so, if we step back for
a minute now from my reading, there are a couple of things I
want to say. First of all,
I hope you can see, using that as a model,
how I went from big claims about the novel into specificity
to support those claims. That's the structure of any
good literary argument. The attention moves from the
very small to the large and back again.
There is a kind of rhythm to that, that folds in those
obvious parts of the novel to a more thematic set of concerns,
in this case about the religious philosophy of this
novel. So, as you think about writing
papers, go through that two-step process of thinking about the
large picture of what a novel is doing as a piece of literary
art, and then thinking about a
focused set of concerns. And, in the final development
of your paper, making sure that those two can
relate to one another. The second thing I want to say
is less about paper writing, and more about the trajectory
of this course and what we're seeing in common between these
novels. So, you can read this very
closely to On the Road. If Dean cared for "nothing
but for everything in principle," you could say,
conversely, that Salinger cares for everything in particular,
and in principle, nothingness.
It's nothingness that is the mystical state rather than
everythingness. And it's interesting to think
about whether those two are really opposites.
I think these novels imagined them to be opposites,
but it's something for you to think about, about whether they
really are. So, Zooey's specificity is the
specificity of doctrine, but it's also the specificity
and more importantly the specificity of person.
So that's the everything that he cares about,
person. I will stop there,
and please bring both On the Road and Franny and Zooey
to section this week. And, by the way,
one last thing: If you've been sketchy about
your section attendance, I suggest that you try to pull
up your socks and go. We will be talking about papers
in the section. It will be helpful to you,
and it will also give you a chance to talk about these
books, so please do go. Subtitles End: mo.dbxdb.com