Wednesday, June 19, 2019

The Function of a Novel


One of my greatest pleasures in life is reading.  Perhaps a close second (although it is ultimately not separate from the first) is discussing books with other people.  As such, when chatting with friends or even acquaintances for long enough, more often than not the topic of books comes up.  What have I read recently? What have you read recently? Although I’m a bibliophile, my most particular and intense love is for fiction, well-crafted narrative.  So I often share about a recent novel I’ve read and enjoyed. As I get into my analysis, I’m often presented the question, “Wait, is this a real story? Oh, it’s not.  Only a novel. OK. Well, I don’t have much time for novels. I can only justify reading useful books.”

The emphasis or word choice might differ from person to person, but the implication is largely the same: reading works of fiction (i.e. fake stories) is at best a neutral filler for a life full of leisure and at worst a distraction from real life.  Novels are purely entertainment, and a serious person, and a serious Christian parent even more so, must limit these frivolities. Unlike a self-help book, there’s no practical purpose of fiction.

A quick word about these friends.  They are well-meaning, hardworking, authentic Christian parents.  Their dedication to their faith and families are primary, and their attitude and actions selfless and often heroic.  Most have lots of children, lots of young children, and they have little time for any leisure.  They are understandably discerning in their use of time.

However, as used as I am to this eventual turn in the conversation, I’m nearly always disheartened.  My frustration is partly with my interlocutor ─ for disregarding the Catholic intellectual tradition on the topic, which runs entirely counter “Puritan” perspectives on art ─ but my frustration is also with my own self, for I have two very different, nearly opposite, avenues for response.  Since they are nearly contradictory arguments, each by itself feels somehow incomplete, false, or misleading ─ but how I can argue both at the same time?

Argument 1:  Yes, literature has no utilitarian purpose, like a self-help book, but that’s what places it in a higher category.  Art, like the human person, is an end in and of itself. It needs no social or cultural justification of its usefulness.  (At this point, I’m assuming some level of distinction between good and bad stories, between art and something that may be just entertainment.  While defining these categories and distinctions is fraught with danger and linguistic subtleties, on a practical level it is easy to observe the difference between pornography as a form of narrative and a Terrence Malik film ─ between Fifty Shades of Gray and a Marilynne Robinson novel.  I have a few things to say on this subject, but later.)

Argument 2:  But reading fiction does have a practical purpose!  Throughout history, art has consistently questioned the status quo, drawing attention to injustices we find difficult to see in our own worlds, but whose reality is more recognizable in and through stories.  Art also opens for us the clearest window in the experiences of another human person, whether that person lived a thousand years ago or is still alive.  While humans are social animals, we are quite literally trapped in our own selves, unable to see the world but through our own eyes and mind. Art, and in particular narrative art, gives a window into another’s lived experience, a snapshot not just of a different opinion on a political or cultural subject, but a window into the very experiences that led to these different opinions.  In short, art provides us with empathy.  Furthermore, art provides solace in our grief, refinement in our joy, peace in our confusion, and wisdom in our ignorance.  Art can change us.

When faced with the statement that a serious Christian doesn’t have time for a novel, I’ve flip-flopped over the years, early in my adult life focusing on the usefulness of art, then the uselessness ─ then back again to art’s engagement in the real work. In real conversations, though, I usually didn’t pursue either argument.  Instead, I fumed on the inside, wishing we were all better read in the Catholic intellectual tradition.  But if I’m being perfectly honest, I usually didn’t respond in any extended fashion simply because I couldn’t balance the two opposing tensions in the two separate argument.  

It was through my reading of Josef Pieper’s Leisure: The Basic of Culture that I found a working model through which to synthesize my two opposing responses.  For Pieper, our contemporary focus on social and cultural productivity and utility is, interestingly, a win for Marxism, or a Marxist view of the world.  In the Marxist perspective, the value of a thing is based on its utility.  Time is well spent when there is a practical, even measurable output.  How do we use our free time? Let us make sure it passes the utilitarian test: Is the output worth the time put in?  Even if we consider things with no practical output, like a “useless” vacation, we’re usually justifying it by its long-term use: Spending seven days not thinking about work at all will make us better workers when we return from vacation.

But Pieper shows us how this is very different from the ancient wisdom of the Greek and Medieval thinkers.  They saw leisure as the heart and mark of a civilization.  Use of time for reflection (not mindless reflection, but true philosophical pursuits) were the highest goods of a culture.  Now, Pieper recognizes that these pursuits do have some practical results but that they shouldn't be justified by these ends.  Leisure is an end in itself and should not be justified by some utilitarian model, which ultimately makes it a means to an end.

Let’s look at prayer in more detail.  Does prayer have practical results? Yes.  Often prayer makes us more at peace; it often makes us better persons.  But do we prayer because of these results?  Pieper says, emphatically, no.  We pray because we should pray. We pray because it is our duty to pray.  We pray because we become more of who we are through our prayer. Does life because “easier” through our prayer?  Maybe sometimes, in the sense that we might find it easier after prayer to accept God’s will in our lives instead of constantly complaining about and fighting the whirlwind of our circumstances.  But should we pray because it might make life easier?  No. In fact, prayer has good effects because it is a good in and of itself ─ not the other way around (as in “it is good because it has good effects”).  

In short, prayer is an end in and of itself, and it shouldn’t be judged according to a utilitarian model.  This doesn’t relegate prayer to a frivolous activity, and it doesn’t even mean that prayer doesn’t have practical outcomes; it simply means that the outcomes are an effect of the goodness of prayer, not the goodness of prayer an effect of its good outcomes.  

Art, in its creation and consumption, is an end in and of itself.  Art is one of the central ways man participates in the ever-present and continuous creative act of God.  Art intigates and develops the communion between individuals that is our truest reality but is often overshadowed by our egoism and fallen nature.  Art is our most sublime expression of what man is, who God is, what human relationships means ─ what beauty is. Art does not need to have a practical outcome to give us a reason for partaking in it, for art is an end in and of itself.

But this doesn’t mean that art doesn’t have good practical results.  I like to say that every good book offers us the possibility of making us better people.  Many a time have I been struck by the beauty of a book ─ beauty sometimes in what the book depicts, and sometimes beauty simply in a book’s language or structure ─ and my mind has been raised to contemplate the beauty of the world, and God.  Many times I have honed the tools of ethical analysis through an evaluation of a novel’s moral dilemma ─ tools ultimately used to better reflect upon and judge myself, as I, like most of us, don’t see my own faults too well directly.  Other times, I have found myself better understanding a person or group of people better because of my encounter with a person in a book.  Too often I have been cut to the core by seeing my own weaknesses so thoroughly portrayed in other characters, mentally cringing as I force myself to read on.  Often I have been emotionally and psychologically awed by the heroism of a character, or a single heroic act of an unheroic character; and this has given me models against which to define and seek to change myself.  

But I need not prove these results in order to justify my reading of novels.  These things are true ─ or can be true ─ only because art is a good in and of itself already.  To return to the original response by my friend, I might venture to say that the highest human activities are those which make us more ourselves ─ those that help us discover a little bit more who we are, how we are loved by God, and how to better love others with whom with have an indissoluble bond.  By no means an exhaustive list, I might begin a sketch of these inherently good and human activities with prayer, friendship, marriage, art, and philosophical pursuit.  Asking the question, “What utility does the reading of this novel provide me today?” is like asking, “So what utility does such-and-such friendship provide me? I’d like to spend time with this person tonight, but can I justify this time spent by a measurable outcome?”

What I am not saying is that we should spend all our free time reading novels.  But we also shouldn’t spend all our free time praying either.  We have practical duties, obligations given to us by God and our vocations; and these must be attended to with our full selves.  But just as we must “carve out time” in our busy lives to spend enough moments on our knees in prayer, so much we find time to partake in other of the most human activities, like spending time with friends, reading a good book, and training our mind to understand theological truths.  

At this point, someone may pose the question, But are all novels art?  One way of approaching this topic is to pose a related question, Are all novels artful?  This seems an easier question: no, not all novels are artful. But I’d like to say a little more on the topic.  I think we intuitively understand the difference between Dante, Agatha Christie, and a poorly crafted romance novel.  I don’t intend to spell out this difference. We don’t need to have an unassailable definition of each category in order to see the differences and act accordingly.  Instead, I’ll point quickly to two texts that speak to or assume important ideas on the topic. I’ll begin first, again, with Pieper’s Leisure.  

Pieper claims that philosophical pursuit is an attempt to see reality as it is; it isn’t an active task, but one of reception.  Analogously, good art, good narrative, is that which allows us to see the reality of the world around us better. Art often works this way by making readers more attune to a sacramental vision of reality, which stands in direct opposition to the materialistic, militant scientism that accompanies most other “descriptions” of reality.  Narratives often let us see the connections between actions, between characters, between ideas, connections that are often difficult to see in real life. Second, Pieper links leisure with festival and joy. Analogously, good art, good narrative, expands our capacity for joy. This doesn’t denigrate sad stories, but rather judges them against the ultimate criterion of joy.  Reading Elie Wiesel’s Holocaust memoir Night poignantly and painfully makes me more aware of the joy of my own life as well as the dangers of ignoring this facet of human dignity.  

Second, I suggest CS Lewis’s Experiment in Criticism, an extended essay in which he proposes that we judge a book not by the book itself (its content or its style) but rather by the type of reading it allows for or promotes.  So if a novel affords us the possibility to see the world anew or increases our capacity for joy, then it is a good book.  In this way, we need not turn our noses down on literature we might consider second-rate but which others gain much from.

I’ll end by considering a central “function” of art, particularly narrative art, that is close to my own heart.  A novel, through the evolution of its narrative voice and perspective, opens up the possibility of revealing to its readers the emotional and spiritual ─ I may go as far as saying transcendent ─ connections between people.  Just as God does not exist in isolation, through the eternal love between the Persons of the Trinity, so do we exist, always, in relationship with others.  Whether through sin or our contemporary culture’s focus on hyper-individualism, this relational aspect of the human person is often muddied. A novel can be an antidote to this crushing sense of alienation in two ways.

First, as we read, we gain access to another human’s consciousness: to their fears, motivations, psychology, conscience, and memories.  Novels can make us understand other human persons in ways that hardly anything else in this world can ─ and this can happen, ironically, in complete isolation!  We can be curled up, alone, in our favorite corner of our favorite couch, the rest of the house asleep, and we can begin to see, through the perspective of the narrative voice and empathy, the sacramental ties that connect all of us.

Second, when we read good books, we want to talk with other people about these books!  I’ve suggested books to people I wasn't entirely sure they would like, simply so I had someone to talk to about them.  In fact, I think I can safely say that the two most common thoughts I have after finishing a particularly powerful book is, first, when will I read this again, and second, with whom can I talk about this book?  There is something inherent about the nature of stories that, even in the case of the most private of storytelling, the novel, we feel compelled to reach out to other people.  Perhaps it is part of the wonder of the story that, in highlighting the connections between people with its sacramental narrative, we are drawn out of ourselves and into the relationships that remind us that we exist not in isolation but in continual relationship to the other.

Friday, May 10, 2019

Epic Easter

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The reading from today's Office is from St. Ephrem the Deacon, and it is awesome:

"Death slew him by means of the body which he had assumed, but that same body proved to be the weapon with which he conquered death. Concealed beneath the cloak of his manhood, his godhead engaged death in combat; but in slaying our Lord, death itself was slain."

And in a passage similar to the great ancient homily for Holy Saturday, St. Ephrem meditates on Christ's descent into hell and his encounter with Eve:

"Death could not devour our Lord unless he possessed a body, neither could hell swalllow him up unless he bore our flesh; and so he came in search of a chariot in which to ride to the underworld. This chariot was the body which he received from the Virgin; in it he invaded death's fortress, broke open its strongroom and scattered all its treasure."

This calls to mind nothing so much as the assaults upon the fearful fortresses of Morgoth, Angband and Thangorodruin, in Tolkien's Silmarillion. These are utterly impenetrable even to the High Elves; at times they succeed in smashing themselves valiantly against its walls, as when Fingolfin challenges Morgoth to single combat and even wounds his foot before being killed, or when Beren and Luthien succeed in breaking in and stealing one of the silmarils from Morgoth's iron crown by means of Luthien's enchantments. My last re-reading of the book made me realize how much of the story is a long and almost despairing defeat for the good guys, and a gradual complete victory for the ancient Dark Lord, Morgoth. Basically the Noldor arrive in Middle Earth at the height of their power and splendor, bound by oath to relentlessly oppose Morgoth. But one by one their fortresses are taken, their lords slain, and their people scattered. The awakening of human beings coincides with the arrival of the Noldor, but you realize that the vast majority are either allied with, or living in abject terror of the Dark Lord. The few tribes or ally themselves with the Noldor share their fate: strongholds, heroes fallen or enslaved. Finally, even the great enchanted kingdom of the Grey Elves, protected by their Queen, Melian (one of the maia, akin to Sauron), is defeated by the powers of darkness, leaving the whole northern world bereft of any protection against Morgoth.

A very similar realization came over me upon reading, in succession, the introductory notes to all the history books in my New American edition of the Old Testament: the history of the Jewish people in the land of promise is, for the vast majority of the time, a long tragedy. There are very few just Judges, and even your good ones, just in the sight of the Lord and anointed by God, often succumb to temptation of one sort or another (like Sampson), wasting all the good they'd achieved. And when God consents to giving the people kings, it is the same story again. Saul turns away, David and Solomon sin, and for much of the reigns of the heirs of David, the rulers of the chosen people do not direct the nation under God's rule. It's a sign of my unfamiliarity with the bible that I was surprised to see that the good rulers and good times for Israel were the exception, while wickedness and punishment for wickedness were not anomalies but the normal course of things.

Here is another similarity: the authors of the history books (Judges, Chronicles, Samuel, Kings, etc), as the introductory notes make clear, were not just recording facts: they were crafting literary artifacts, and the moral of the story often enough is that while the Lord is present in human history and particularly in the history of the children of Abraham, the Jewish people often represented in the person of the king refused for the most part to worship the one true God--refused, that is, not only to follow the right form of liturgy, but also what that liturgy signified for their personal lives and for the whole life of the people, they refused to order their lives according to the Commandments and the wisdom and the Law of God. In the Silmarillion, too, the author makes clear over the course of the book that the long despairing defeat is not only due to the evil and the power of the Dark Lord, but to the ways in which elves and men allowed that evil to enter their own hearts and gave it secret anchorage. Several of the main defeats in battle, including the last serious assault on Thangorodruin and the fall of Gondolin, were the result of jealousies and treachery among the Allies. The same goes for the deaths of several heroes, including the children of Hurin, the elf princess Finduilas, and Beleg Strongbow.

Thus in both stories, the fictional and the historical, all is lost and darkness covers the lands: in other words, things are ripe for eucatastrophe (Tolkien's wonderful coin).

The faithful remnant of Israel still prayed, "Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord." It is interesting to read in Luke how the kin of Mary understood the Covenant given by God long ago to Abraham: "to set us free from the hands of our enemies, / free to worship him without fear, / holy and righteous in his sight all the days of our life." This is not exactly what we find in the book of Genesis, where God tells Abram "you are to become the father of a multitude of nations" and promises him "descendants as countless as the stars of the sky and the sands of the seashore" and that all nations will be blessed through the nation God is to make out of him. Yet Zechariah and Mary profess in their canticles a belief in God's fidelity, that one way or another he will rescue his people, and that the new kingdom to be established will be one in which the people is free to worship God aright. But at present the prayer is one of hoping against hope, for the kingdom and people have been brought low, and they are utterly incapable of saving themselves; . In the same way, every effort, however valiant, of the elves and men to defeat Morgoth ended in disaster, and by the end of the story the faithful remnant is hiding on the edge of Middle-earth, waiting for the end to come. In the Silmarillion, while they are waiting here, Manwë at last receives the command to act and the armies of the Valar come thundering out of the West to fall upon the fortress of Morgoth. In this epic telling, "that combat stupendous" is enacted physically; the whole earth shakes and is changed when the Valar turn Thangorodruin inside out, driving away all the dragons, balrogs, and orcs and finally binding Morgoth himself, to cast him beyond the circles of the world.

In the real story, the battle was not so visibly worked out in physical creation, but St. Ephrem helps us see it as no less epic and dramatic. On the surface indeed it was not noticeable: in a world filled with injustice, who notices one more helpless man unjustly killed? But "concealed within the cloak of his manhood, his godhead engaged death in combat."

When death, with its customary impudence, came foraging for her [the New Eve's] mortal fruit, it encountered its own destruction in the hidden life that fruit contained. All unsuspecting, it swallowed him up, and in so doing released life itself and set free a multitude of men. 

We give glory to you, Lord, who raised up your cross to span the jaws of death like a bridge by which souls might pass from the region of the dead to the land of the living. We give glory to you who put on the body of a single mortal man and made it the source of life for every other mortal man. YOU ARE INCONTESTABLY ALIVE....

Come then, my brothers and sisters, let us offer the Lord the great and all-embracing sacrifice of our love, pouring out our treasury of hymns and prayers before him who offered his cross in sacrifice to God for the enrichment of us all."

Amen!

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