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Authors: Angela Carter

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And she throws that away in the course of a description of a butcher's shop. She is so thoroughly in tune with the surreal poetry of America that when you read her you can hear America singing, the discordant choruses of its multitude of voices, its rough music, its requiems for disappointed dreams.

(1987)

•   29   •
Grace Paley:
The Little Disturbances of Man
and
Enormous Changes at the Last Minute

What can put you off Grace Paley's stories is their charm. ‘An Interest in Life' in the collection called
The Little Disturbances of Man
begins: ‘My husband gave me a broom one Christmas. This wasn't right. No one can tell me it was meant kindly.' It is so scrupulously disarming an intro that it is bound to put people who like Joan Didion very much on their guard. And it is alarmingly easy to fall into the language of the Martini ad when writing about Grace Paley – wry, dry, tender, ironic, etc.

The snag is, her work
has
all these qualities: it is an added irony that, since the
fin
has come a little early this
siècle
and anomie is all the rage, wry, dry tenderness is a suspect commodity. Not that Paley appears to give one jot for psychosocial hem-lengths. She is, as we used to say, ‘for life', and clearly cannot imagine why anybody should be against it. Not that the wonderful world of Grace Paley is all sunshine: the heroine of ‘An Interest in Life' is kept from despair only by a Micawberesque sustaining illusion that the broom-giver, now defected, will return. (It's obvious that, if he does, she'll really be in trouble.)

But the charm is a problem, though, both infuriatingly irresistible and, since couched in the
faux-naif
style, verging dangerously on the point of cloy. The title story of the collection called
Enormous Changes at the Last Minute
almost goes over the top. A middle-aged social worker, Alexandra, is surprised into bed with a feckless hippy. ‘That's my bag. I'm a motherfucker,' he crows complacently. He impregnates her. Her aged father is justifiably enraged. ‘After that, Alexandra hoped every day for her father's
death, so that she could have a child without ruining his life at the very end of it when ruin is absolutely retroactive.'

But Paley contrives to transcend this Shirley Maclainesque scenario completely. Alexandra reorganises her apartment as a refuge for pregnant teenagers, setting an interesting precedent in social work. Her father falls, bangs his head, clears his brain, begins again ‘with fewer scruples'. The hippy composes a celebratory anthem about parent–child relationships that is a hit from coast to coast and is ‘responsible for a statistical increase in visitors to old-age homes by the apprehensive middle-aged and the astonished young'.

That single adjective, ‘astonished', is sufficient to illuminate retrospectively this everyday story of marginal folk. We see that it is not a quaint tale of last-minute motherhood so much as an account of that reconciliation with old age and kinship which is, in itself, a reconciliation with time. Extracted from the text, the characters are patently emblematic: an old man, his daughter, a young man, a chorus of girls, a boy child. There is even an offstage cameo guest appearance by Alexandra's ex-husband, the Communist Granofsky. (‘Probably boring the Cubans to death this very minute,' opines her father.)

As in the
News of the World
, the whole of human life is here, and, indeed, many of Paley's plots would not disgrace that journal. Other stories feature a man shot by a jealous cop, his neighbour's husband; a White runaway raped, beaten, dead, in a Black neighbourhood – Paley extends tenderness and respect even to the rapists. There are shot-gun marriages and catatonic boys. But do not think that, Ophelia-like, Paley can turn hell itself to favour and to prettiness. In
Enormous Changes at the Last Minute
, two stories – ‘Gloomy Tune' and ‘Samuel' – are done as straight as case-histories. ‘Gloomy Tune' is an analysis of social deprivation. The problem children ‘never stole. They had a teeny knife. They pushed people on slides and knocked them all over the playground. They wouldn't murder anyone, I think'. They are doomed. ‘Samuel' is probably one of the great works of fiction in our century, although it is but four pages long. He is a bold child killed at dangerous play on the subway. His mother is young and soon pregnant again. ‘Then for a few months she was hopeful. The child born to her was a boy. They brought him to be seen
and nursed. She smiled. But immediately she saw that this baby wasn't Samuel.'

I love to think how Joan Didion would hate Grace Paley. If a continent divides Paley's seedy, violent multi-ethnic New York from Didion's neurasthenic vision of LA as a city of the plain, their sensibilities are those of different planets. But, then, the poor always have an unfair moral edge on the rich, and most Paley characters are on Welfare.

Those who manage to keep their heads above water tend to come from good socialist stock. Even in retirement with the Children of Judea, one old man plots to organise the help. Ex-husbands constantly send committed postcards from developing countries. Ex-husbands are far more frequent on these pages than husbands, though, as in ‘The Used-Boy Raisers' and ‘The Pale Pink Roast', often turning up again like the refrain of an old song – mysterious, irrelevant, yet never quite consigned to oblivion.

Paley does not efface herself from the text. A homogeneous, immediately recognisable personality pervades everything she writes. Nevertheless, she is a ventriloquist
par excellence
, and speaks the American that has been moulded by Russian, Polish, and Yiddish as eloquently as she can personate the speech of Harlem. She can change sex, too: as a first person, she credibly becomes a man, young or old. Shape-shifting is no problem – thin, fat. ‘I was popular in certain circles, says Aunt Rose. I wasn't no thinner then, only more stationary in the flesh.' This is ‘Goodbye and Good Luck', in
The Little Disturbances of Man
, the only one of all these stories that has a strong flavour of another writer. In this case, Isaac Bashevis Singer, with whom Paley shares a tradition and an idiom.

All the same, all the narrative roles Paley undertakes are those of the same kind of marginal people, with essentially the same exhausted, oblique tolerance as those child-besieged women, usually called Faith (she has a sister, Hope), who seem most directly to express the real personality of the writer. One of them describes her own marginality: ‘I was forced by inclement management into a yellow-dog contract with Bohemia, such as it survives.' And perhaps the continuous creation of this fictive personality, whom we are always conscious of as the moving force behind the narratives, is the real achievement of these two
marvellous collections. As if, somehow, this omnipresent meta-narrator is, finally, more important than the events described. I think this meta-personality is, in fact, something like conscience.

The charm turns out to be a stalking-horse, a method of persuasion, the self-conscious defensive/protective mechanism characteristic of all exploited groups, a composite of Jewish charm, Black charm, Irish charm, Hispanic charm, female charm. It is part of the apparatus of the tragic sense of life.

Technically, Grace Paley's work makes the novel as a form seem virtually redundant. Each one of her stories has more abundant inner life than most other people's novels; they are as overcrowded as the apartments they all live in, and an enormous amount can happen in five or six pages. Her prose presents a series of miracles of poetic compression. There are some analogies for her verbal method – e. e. cummings, perhaps, also a smiler with a knife, but she rarely plumbs his depths of cuteness. She has the laconic street eloquence of some of the Beats. This is not
English
English; scarcely a Wasp graces these pages. Yet the cumulative effect of these stories is that of the morality of the woman of flexible steel behind them; most of all, because of her essential gravity, she reminds me, strangely enough, of George Eliot. But, within its deliberately circumscribed compass, Grace Paley's work echoes with the promise of that sense, not of optimism, but of
inexhaustibility
, which is the unique quality of the greatest American art.

(1980)

LA PETITE DIFFERENCE

Vive la petite différence!

Old French saying

•   30   •
Charlotte Brontë:
Jane Eyre

In 1847, a young woman of genius, vexed at publishers' rejections of
The Professor
, the first novel she had completed, on the grounds that it ‘lacked colour' and was too short, sat down to give the reading public exactly what she had been told they wanted – something ‘wild, wonderful and thrilling', in three volumes. Rarely, if ever, has such a strategy proved so successful. The young woman's name was Charlotte Brontë and the novel she produced,
Jane Eyre
, is still, after a century and a half, ‘wild, wonderful and thrilling'. It remains the most durable of melodramas, angry, sexy, a little crazy, a perennial bestseller – one of the oddest novels ever written, a delirious romance replete with elements of pure fairytale, given its extraordinary edge by the emotional intelligence of the writer and the exceptional sophistication of her heart.

Charlotte Brontë lived during one of the greatest periods of social change in English history. In all her novels, she is attempting to describe a way of living that had never existed before and had come into being with the unprecedented social and economic upheavals of England in the early industrial revolution. Jane Eyre herself is the prototype Charlotte Brontë heroine – a woman on her own for whose behaviour there are no guidelines. This woman is not only capable of earning her own living but also must and needs to do so; for her, therefore, love is a means of existential definition, an exploration of the potentials of her self, rather than the means of induction into the contingent existence of the married woman, as it had been for the previous heroines of the bourgeois novel.

I don't think for one moment that Charlotte Brontë knew she was doing this, precisely. When she wrote
Jane Eyre
, she thought she was writing a love story; but in order for Charlotte Brontë, with her precise configuration of class background and personal history, to write a love story, she had, first of all, to perform an analysis of the operation of erotic attraction upon a young woman who is not rich nor beautiful but, all the same, due to her background and education, free to choose what she does with her life.

The clarity and strength of Charlotte Brontë's perception of her heroine's struggle for love is extraordinary. Yet, of all the great novels in the world,
Jane Eyre
veers the closest towards trash. Elizabeth Rigby, writing in the
Quarterly Review
, 1848, makes the exact point that the novel combines ‘such genuine power with such horrid taste'. She went on, a touch petulantly: ‘the popularity of
Jane Eyre
is a proof how deeply the love of the illegitimate romance is implanted in our nature.' In order to do something new, in order to describe a way of being that had no existing language to describe it, Charlotte Brontë reverted, to a large extent, to pre-bourgeois forms.
Jane Eyre
is the classic formulation of the romance narrative, with its mysteries of parentage, lost relatives miraculously recovered, stolen letters, betrayal, deceit – and it fuses elements of two ancient fairytales,
Bluebeard
, specifically referred to in the text when Thornfield Hall is compared to Bluebeard's castle, and
Beauty and the Beast
, plus a titillating hint of
Cinderella
. The archaic sub-literary forms of romance and fairytale are so close to dreaming they lend themselves readily to psychoanalytic interpretation. Episodes such as that in which Rochester's mad wife rips apart the veil he has bought Jane to wear at his second, bigamous wedding have the delirium of dream language. As a result,
Jane Eyre
is a peculiarly unsettling blend of penetrating psychological realism, of violent and intuitive feminism, of a surprisingly firm sociological grasp, and of the utterly non-realistic apparatus of psycho-sexual fantasy – irresistible passion, madness, violent death, dream, telepathic communication.

The latter element is so pronounced that it gives the novel a good deal in common, not with
Emma
or
Middlemarch
, but with certain enormously influential, sub-literary texts in which nineteenth-century England discussed in images those aspects of unprecedented experience for which words could not, yet, be found: Mary Shelley's
Frankenstein
, Bram Stoker's
Dracula
. ‘There
are times when reality becomes too complex for Oral Communication,' says the computer in Jean-Luc Godard's 1967 movie,
Alphaville
, ‘but Legend gives it a form by which it pervades the whole world.'
Jane Eyre
has this quality of legend and, like
Frankenstein
and
Dracula
, has proved infinitely translatable into other media: stage, screen, radio. As a child, I first encountered
Jane Eyre
in a comic-strip version. The text easily secretes other versions of itself. Jean Rhys'
Wide Sargasso Sea
, restores the first Mrs Rochester, Jane's predecessor, to the centre of the narrative. One of the great bestsellers of the mid-twentieth century, Daphne du Maurier's
Rebecca
, shamelessly reduplicated the plot of
Jane Eyre
, and went on to have the same kind of vigorous trans-media after-life.

Nevertheless, if Jane Eyre arrives, like Bluebeard's wife or Beauty, at an old, dark house, whose ugly/beautiful master nourishes a fatal secret, she arrives there not as a result of marriage or magic, but as the result of an advertisement she herself had placed in a newspaper. She has come to earn her own living and the fairytale heroine, as she travels to the abode of secrets and the place of initiation, is fully aware of her own social mobility, which is specifically the product of history. ‘Let the worst come to the worst,' she ponders, ‘I can advertise again.'

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