My experience of a novel depends as much on a sympathetic response as anyone else's. The question is: with whom, exactly, do I need to sympathize? Readers of Wayne Booth's The Company We Keep: The Ethics of Fiction (1988) know where I'm going, even though I was well aware of everything I'm about to say before I read Booth, I swear.
When I read Wuthering Heights, I encounter a fine assembly of weirdos, misfits, idiots, and monsters, a few of whom deserve my pity, but none of whom deserve much more. Yet there is one character with whom I sympathize strongly: I care about what happens to her, and I wish her well in her goals. She's not much like me, so there's little identification with her, but I appreciate and benefit from the offer of friendship she makes me, and enjoy the opportunity to get to know her better.
Her name, of course, is Emily Brontë. She is not the real Emily Brontë, but one I have invented in collaboration with the actual author. Booth calls her the "implied author." When "EB" and I get together, she offers to show me this wonderful thing she made, this novel, or perhaps one of her poems. We look at it together. She points out the bits she's particularly proud of. We have a good laugh whenever a book is abused, or when Catherine is bit by a bulldog. We hunt for fairies and ogres. We perhaps discuss why Heathcliff is the way he is, and why Catherine is like she is. I ask her if she has read John Galt. She unfortunately does not answer.
It's kind of a one-sided friendship. But as Booth says (I'm in Chapter 6, "Implied Authors as Friends"), we have many different kinds of friends, some close and wide-ranging, some best met on specific occasions. Lunch-every-week friends, lunch-every-year friends, and lunch-every-decade friends. The analogy with books is clear enough, so I'll move on.
Maybe what I do want to emphasize is that before I can really accept or reject an implied author's friendship, I have to have some sense of what she's trying to do. Emily Brontë did not botch her attempt to create a genial romance. Her goals were entirely otherwise, and quite interesting; she achieved them admirably, mostly; and her book allows me certain emotional and artistic experiences that I still don't think can be found anywhere else.
Booth never discusses one case: what if the author is not my friend, but my enemy? Sometimes that relationship is valuable, too. Emily Brontë (my Brontë, the one I made up) is weird enough that I understand how plenty of people will not be able to accept her friendship so easily, and may even want to fight it out with her. They should.
So, OK. That's Sympathetic Character Week. That's why I don't particularly care about sympathetic characters. They're a literary device useful for achieving specific goals. Other devices are useful for achieving other goals. Sympathetic attention to the book will point us in the right direction. Then we can puzzle over whether the goals were achieved, or whether they were worth trying in the first place.
Thanks for all of the useful comments. I thought this all worked pretty well, for such a misguided idea. For the next two weeks, another bad idea: Who is John Galt?
Showing posts with label BOOTH Wayne. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BOOTH Wayne. Show all posts
Friday, October 30, 2009
The Company I Keep - the objects of my sympathy
Labels:
BOOTH Wayne,
BRONTË Emily,
characterization,
reading
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