Try
as I might, I’ve never connected with Saul Bellow’s prose. My first attempt was The Actual, his penultimate work, and his shortest. A few
pages in and I was lost. Then, The Adventures Of Augie March, the novel that signalled his worth as a writer:
after reading the opening page repeatedly, I knew I couldn’t continue through
the whole book doing so, and abandoned it.
There’s
something about Bellow, though, that makes me persist. It’s probably the
perception of him as one of the best American writers, what with other writers
citing him as their favourite. By not reading him, I’m surely missing out; in
reading him, I’m more than likely missing the point. In order to grapple with
the beast it seemed a logical idea to dismiss his better known novels as an
introduction and to head back to the start, to Dangling Man (1944), under
the impression that his earliest work may offer a way in to his style before it
solidifies him as that great American writer.
Dangling Man is
the journal of Joseph, a young man who resigned his job at a travel bureau
seven months before, expecting to be drafted into the army, instead finding
himself ‘dangling’ due to complications that he describes as “a sort of
bureaucratic comedy trimmed out in red tape.” Rather than get a job for now -
“As a 1A I could not get a suitable one, anyhow” - he opts for staying at home,
living off his wife’s wage, rarely venturing out, and with little company other
than his own thoughts, all jotted down.
In
loneliness and bureaucracy, there are echoes of Kafka’s The Trial, and a Joseph caught up in it all confirms the nod.
Bellow, however, is not so concerned with the situation of bureaucracy, instead
using it as the springboard into a mildly philosophical story about destiny.
Six hundred years ago, a man was what
he was born to be. Satan and the Church, representing God, did battle over him.
He, by reason of his choice, partially decided the outcome. […] But, since, the
stage has been reset and human beings only walk on it and, under this revision,
we have, instead, history to answer to. We were important enough then for our
souls to be fought over. Now, each of us is responsible for his own salvation,
which is in his greatness. And that, that greatness, is the rock or hearts are
abraded on.
Admittedly,
as stories go, Dangling
Man is short on incident, given that
Joseph rarely leaves his room, but there are a number of great set pieces as
the frustration of living within one’s mind - and Joseph’s mind, given his
journal’s literary references and philosophial meanderings, is highly
intelligent - takes its toll and cracks appear. It may not be a metamorphosis
in the mould of Gregor Samsa, but the once easy-natured man he was has found
himself prone to violent outbursts.
There is nothing to do but wait, or
dangle, and grow more and more dispirited. It is perfectly clear to me that I
am deteriorating, storing bitterness and spite which eats like acid at my
endowment of generosity and good will.
In
all his wanderings - physical and mental - Joseph’s problem is destiny. Unable
to live up to the lofty expections of his making and “unwilling to admit that I
do not know how to use my freedom” he not only seeks, but needs solace
in the Army, where he need not think for himself. At the beginning, Joseph’s
choice to keep a journal, in “an era of hardboiled-dom” is a seen as contrarian
to the mores of society:
Do you have feelings? There are correct
and incorrect ways of indicating them. Do you have an inner life? It is
nobody’s business but your own. Do you have emotions? Strangle them.
The
journey from individual thinker, an outcast from society, to one willing to
strangle his own self is an interesting premise. Where one would expect -
perhaps because it’s clichéd - to see someone fight for their
individuality, Dangling
Man talks of belonging. In reading
it, and understanding it to a degree, and even quite enjoying bits of it, I
find that I may just see the case for belonging myself - to those that praise
him, that is.
No comments:
Post a Comment