Monday, June 3, 2024

everything in a being is always repeating - reading Gertrude Stein's The Making of Americans

Since I actually read the thing for some reason I will write some notes on Gertrude Stein’s enormous The Making of Americans: Being a History of a Family’s Progress (1925).  It is a monster.  Why did I read it?  No, that is not the right questions.  There are good reasons to read it.  Why did I read all of it?  Let me defer that question.

The Making of Americans is 925 big, big pages of avant garde novel-adjacent text.  Stein wrote it over several years, mostly after Three Lives (1909), when it quickly evolved from a relatively conventional family narrative with a plot and characters and the usual thing into a more purely stylistic work of conceptual art.  It is a bit like James Joyce’s move from Dubliners to A Portrait of the Artist to Ulysses to Finnegans Wake, each time paring away more of what is conventional to fiction and emphasizing what is stylistically new.  Except that Stein’s started with Portrait and moved straight to Finnegans Wake, all before Joyce published anything.

Stein finished writing, and Alice Toklas finished typing, the beast in 1911, but no one wanted to publish any of it until Ernest Hemingway brought some of it to Ford Madox Ford in 1924.  The world had caught up with Stein; Modernism had happened.  Not too much later Stein would write a big bestseller.

The Making of Americans is nominally about three siblings, Martha, Alfred, and David Hersland and the people around them, parents, spouses, and friends.  Here Stein begins a new section, about Alfred Hersland and his wife Julia Dehning:

I have been giving the history of a very great many men and women.  Sometime I will give a history of every kind of men and women, every kind there is of men and women.  Already I have given a history of many men and women.  Sometime I will be giving a history of all the rest of them.  This is now pretty nearly certain.  I have been already giving the history of a very great many men and women, I will now be giving the history of a number of more of them and then of a number more still of them and then still of some more of them and that will be a long book and when I am finished with this one then I will begin that one.  I have already begun that one but now I am still writing this one and now I am beginning this portion of this one which is the complete history of Alfred Hersland and of every one he ever came to know in living and of many others I will be describing now in this beginning. 

On p. 479, halfway through, this passage was discouraging.  I have added some bold emphasis to aid skimming.  Perhaps the important thing to note, aside from some evidence that Stein has a sense of humor about what she is doing, is that the repetition of words and phrases and even entire sentences is the basic compositional principle of the passage – of the entire novel – going far beyond the repetitionsfar beyond the repetitions of Three Lives.  The repetition is part of the metaphysics of the novel:

Always from the beginning there was to me all living as repeating.  This is now a description of my feeling.  As I was saying listening to repeating is often irritating, always repeating is all of living, everything in a being is always repeating, more and more listening to repeating gives to me completed understanding.  (291)

Maybe another thing to note is that, for all of the “many men and women,” the only character in these passages is the narrator.  She has a voice and an attitude; she has motivation.  She is arguably the only real character in the book, and the plot might be her writing of the book.  The only plot, really.  Martha Hersland marries a philosophy professor who leaves her for another professor.  Alfred and Julia divorce and he remarries.  David, the younger brother, dies young.  But almost all of this is presented abstractly.  I doubt there are ten pages in the book, more than one percent of it, made up of any kind of scene.  Five year-old Martha angrily throws her umbrella in the mud.  The specificity of this action, the time and place and presence of a material object, was a shock.  It is “repeating,” I guess, but psychologically.

That second passage emphasizes the aspect of the book I will save for tomorrow’s grammar lesson: the “-ing” words, the endless flow, or flowing, of “-ing” words.

8 comments:

  1. Fascinating, I know so little of Stein. I have Alice B on the TBR but it's a Kindle edition, which is why I forget to read it.

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  2. I have not read Toklas but now hope to get to it soon. My interest in the whole Stein project has been heightened by this preposterous monster of a novel.

    The way Stein goes from an unreadable book printed in 500 copies to, just a few years later, a genuine bestseller is quite a surprise.

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  3. Might be worth pointing to this edition: https://www.librarything.com/work/1744044/book/94030181 – titled From The Making of Americans, which is a 200-page plot-focused edit of the book by D. Sorensen. That makes it surprisingly comprehensible plot-wise, though it maybe loses the feeling?

    This book did have a much larger life in the visual arts world. The Fluxus artist Dick Higgins's Something Else Press published a (bootleg) edition of The Making of Americans in the 1960s. That led to a series of readings of the whole book in New York, which have been resurrected from time to time – there was another one last month, I imagine there's probably some documentation online. It is a very nice book to listen to!

    I'd also recommend the much lesser-known sequel to The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas, Everybody's Autobiography, which chronicles Stein's return to the United States when she'd become famous and everyone wants to see her but no one is actually interested in her ideas.

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    1. Oops, that was from me, and I messed up the tags!

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  4. Tags are the worst.

    Yes, I should look at the abridgment sometime.

    Funny you mention Fluxus, since in my new post, just up, I gesture towards a contemporary, Frederic Rzewski and his magnificent piece "Coming Together."

    The Paula Cooper Gallery used to do a massive marathon reading of The Making of Americans every year for 25 years! Those were the days. The 2024 return is desribed here. 52 hours! "there is a bathroom"

    I will write a bit more about Stein's novel as conceptual art today. It is genuinely influential.

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  5. Man, just reading that paragraph tells me I have no desire to read the book. As with most conceptual art, my reaction is to say "OK, got the concept, moving on."

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  6. ...And I see you cover that response in your later post. I should add that I'm not a Stein hater; like everybody else, I love Three Lives and The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas. I don't even begrudge her writing a monstrous, unreadable book; artists have to do what they have to do. But I don't have to experience it. I honor your dogged insistence on finishing what you started!

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  7. Yes, you get it. There are not so many novels as conceptual as this one. It is certainly not like the visual art world where conceptual art has practically taken over.

    Three Lives seems more remarkable the more I learn about it. The dominant strain of the 20th century American literary prose style is directly traceable to that book.

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