Making a spectacle: Welty, Faulkner, and Southern gothic.
Donaldson, Susan V.
By the time Eudora Welty published A Curtain of Green and Other
Stories in 1941, the term "Southern Gothic" had become
something very like a synonym--or a cliche--for modern Southern
literature. Louise Bogan even titled her review of Welty's
collection "The Gothic South."(1) Other reviewers of A Curtain
of Green tended to use the catch-all category of Southern Gothic
interchangeably with the grotesque--or in the words of the reviewer for
Time Magazine, "the demented, the deformed, the queer" (quoted
in Peterman, p. 107). No doubt these reviewers were reassured in their
easy reference to the term Southern Gothic by Carson McCullers's
remarks in her 1941 essay, "The Russian Realists and Southern
Literature," in which she declared that Southern writers shared
with nineteenth-century Russian writers a vision of "the cheapness
of human life" and a strikingly similar technique for vividly
evoking that vision--"a bold and outwardly callous juxtaposition of
the tragic with the humorous, the immense with the trivial, the sacred
with the bawdy, the whole soul of man with a materialistic
detail."(2)
Considering the stereotypes and the cliches associated with
Southern Gothic and the whole host of myths defining the image of
"the benighted South," as George Tindall aptly calls it, I
think it's quite understandable that Welty herself has often
resisted being categorized as a writer of Southern Gothic. "They
better not call me that!" she abruptly told Alice Walker in an
interview.(3) Following her lead, Welty scholars, Ruth Weston most
recently, have often argued against placing Welty in the same category
of Southern Gothic as Carson McCullers or the Faulkner of "A Rose
for Emily" and As I Lay Dying.(4)
I would like to take issue with this reluctance to couple Southern
Gothic and Welty in the same breath and with our tendency, for that
matter, to take those hoary old terms Southern Gothic and Southern
grotesque for granted--terms, we often argue, that were all too readily
applied to William Faulkner himself in the 1930s when critics found
themselves perplexed with works ranging from "A Rose for
Emily" to As I Lay Dying. Patricia Yaeger has already undertaken
the task of examining versions of the grotesque in the writing of modern
Southern women writers. Her series of essays on O'Connor and Welty
and her forthcoming book Dirt and Desire promise to recast our whole
conception of the grotesque in Southern literature in distinctly
feminist terms. And if we take heed of the wealth of scholarship
emerging on the gothic and gender in the last twenty years, we might
learn in particular that the peculiar propensity of modern Southern
writers to evoke the gothic, the macabre, and the grotesque might very
well have a good deal to do with regional anxiety about rapidly changing
gender roles in the first half of the twentieth century. Anxiety about
the New Woman in the South--and the way both Faulkner and Welty
responded to the implications of her presence--might also tell us a good
deal about the intertextual relationship between Faulkner's frieze
of gothic women in his short fiction of the 1920s and 1930s--especially
"A Rose for Emily," "Dry September," "There Was
a Queen," and "That Evening Sun"--and Welty's own
parade of monstrous women in A Curtain of Gram What we discover, I
think, is something like an intertextual debate on women and the
disruption of tradition in the twentieth-century South. Half sympathetic
toward and half horrified by the spectacle of women betwixt and between tradition and change, Faulkner creates short stories about dangerous
women who serve as disrupters of male narratives and as signifiers of
the breakdown of cultural narratives of traditional manhood and
womanhood. Welty's gothic heroines, though, suggest not so much the
fragmentation of traditional narratives as the emergence of narratives
to come--female stories about hysterics whose bodies provide expression
in the absence of appropriate language. The difference, ultimately, lies
in the politics of spectacle and vision--issues that have long concerned
the genre of the gothic.
As Susan Wolstenholme notes, the gothic has usually been
characterized as having a peculiarly "visual quality"
precisely because so many scenes in gothic fiction are framed as scenes
and because characters often present themselves as scenes in themselves
or as spectators of scenes.(5) And as a good many commentators have
noted, reading a gothic novel often takes on strikingly voyeuristic
connotations. After all, what Michelle Masse calls the
"Ur-plot" of gothicism focuses on a suffering woman--a
titillating twist on the "Richardsonian courtship narrative in
which an unprotected young woman in an isolated setting uncovers a
sinister secret." Not for nothing, then, does Masse pronounce the
gothic novel "a peep show of terror"--one that seems to ensure
the distinction between observers and the observed.(6)
More to the point, Masse argues that the gothic stages, in her
words, "what Freud calls the beating fantasy, in which a spectator
watches someone being hurt by a dominant other" (p. 3). In this
respect, she draws from Freud's famous 1919 essay, "A Child Is
Being Beaten," in which the master speculates on the stages of a
childhood fantasy entertaining the scenario of a child being beaten and
the peculiar pleasure accompanying that fantasy. Noel Polk has already
pointed out the relevance of this essay for a host of Faulkner texts,(7)
but I would like to probe the gender implications of this beating
fantasy a little more deeply. For it is with a certain grim
determination that Freud catalogues the slippery transformations marking
the beating fantasies of little girls in particular:
In the first and third phantasies the child who is
being beaten is always someone other
than the subject; in the middle it is always
the child herself, in the third phase it is
almost invariably only the boys who are being
beaten. The person who does the beating
is from the first her father, replaced later on
by a substitute taken from the class of
fathers. (p. 196)
Even the girls themselves seem to experience metamorphosis within the
realm of fantasy. "Another fact, though its connection with the
rest does not appear to be close," Freud adds with a certain
uneasiness and obliqueness, "is that between the second and third
phases the girls change their sex, for in the phantasies of the latter
phase they turn into boys" (p. 196). As Masse shrewdly notes, the
closer Freud looks at the mutations of the fantasy, the more it blurs
and mutates, and the more Freud himself suspects the difficulty of
pinning down the fantasy once and for all. "Like the voyeur,"
Masse declares, "Freud contemplates the scenario again and again,
seemingly unsure of the source of his dis-ease, `an uneasy suspicion
that this is not a final solution to the problem'" (p. 65).
Faulkner's and Welty's versions of Southern Gothic, I
would argue, evoke something of this dis-ease and suspicion in part
because some of their most prominent stories, like classic gothic tales
of heroines under siege, bring attention to the spectacle of a woman, in
Masse's words, "being hurt by a dominant
other"--sometimes by a male character, sometimes by the community
at large, and sometimes, unsettlingly enough, by the audience Of the
story itself. Whether Nancy in "That Evening Sun" or
Welty's eponymous character Clytie in A Curtain of Green, these
women find themselves in various forms of confinement and entrapment,
and quite often their imprisonment is signified by the boundaries of the
stories that enclose them and by the communities and readers who
scrutinize them.
In some of Faulkner's most famous short stories, like "A
Rose for Emily" and "That Evening Sun," explicit
attention is brought to the activity Of watching the suffering of
confined women. We watch along with Quentin, Caddy, and Jason as they
survey with interest Nancy's increasing fear, evidenced in her
keening and moaning, as the black maid anticipates the return of her
husband Jesus and her own murder. Similarly, the narrator of "A
Rose for Emily" underscores the intense scrutiny by the town under
which Emily falls and by implication the reader as well by suggesting
that Emily lies trapped in the collective gaze like a fly in amber:
"We had long thought of them as a tableau, Miss Emily's
slender figure in white in the background, her father a spraddled
silhouette in the foreground, his back to her and clutching a horsewhip,
the two of them framed by the back-flung front door."(8) And we
watch along with the cook Elnora in "There Was a Queen," as
she scornfully meditates on the comings and goings of Narcissa Benbow
Sartoris, desperate to retrieve stolen obscene letters now in the
possession of a Federal agent.
These stories are uncomfortable and vaguely salacious, I would
argue, because they do evoke something of Freud's beating fantasy,
posing a triangular relationship between the woman who is beaten, the
figure or figures who do the beating, and the spectators who stand aside
and watch. But they are also uncomfortable stories precisely because
they suggest a rogues gallery of women who have stepped out of line,
transgressed the boundaries of their traditional roles, and served as
disruptive forces in male narratives or perhaps even threatened to usurp narratives in general. It is significant, after all, that Narcissa
Sartoris in "There Was a Queen" feels a certain freedom to
pursue whatever course necessary to acquire those stolen letters because
she lives in a world singularly empty of white male authority. With the
deaths of all the Sartoris men except her own son, "the quiet was
now the quiet of womenfolks" (p. 727). It is also significant that
Nancy, in "That Evening Sun," is implicitly seen by her white
employers as a black woman gone wrong, one who prostitutes herself to
white men, demands payment due her, and elicits beatings from irate
clients and angry jailers. "[I]f you'd just let white men
alone," the children's father tells her (p. 295).
Such representations were reminders that even in the early
twentieth-century South the roles of women were rapidly changing as the
True Woman of piety, submissiveness, and purity began to give way, in
Carroll Smith-Rosenberg's words, to "the single, highly
educated, economically autonomous New Woman." Quite simply, the New
Woman, whether the flapper of the twenties or the professional woman
resisting marriage, "challenged existing gender relations and the
distribution of power" and as such, Smith-Rosenberg argues, became
a "sexually freighted metaphor for social disorder and
protest."(9) And if this sense of threat seemed pronounced in the
nation as a whole, it bore a special weight in the South, where, as
Bertram Wyatt-Brown has argued, the subordination of women was required
for the maintenance of a white elite culture of honor and shame,
intertwining the identity of an individual white male with the esteem of
the community at large. For white women to step off the pedestal, for
black women to take off their aprons, was to shake the very foundation
of white Southern culture.
Hence if Faulkner's short-story portraits of women being
beaten in one form or another evoke the kind of imprisonment for women
often associated with the gothic, it is partly because his stories
suggest something of Foucault's "spectacle of the
scaffold" in a culture of shame and honor. Faulkner's gothic
women--characters like Nancy, Emily Grierson, Narcissa Sartoris, and
Minnie Cooper in "Dry September"--undergo narrative trials
uncomfortably similar to the public executions suffered by criminals
before the penal reforms of the late eighteenth and nineteenth
centuries. Confined in their stories and subject to the scrutiny and
sometimes the brutality of other characters, their communities, and even
their readers, they face ritualistic punishment: the inscription of
their culture's judgment upon their bodies so that, in
Foucault's words, "the sentence [would be] legible for
all."(10) In a word, we watch them being punished--by being
exposed, confined, and figuratively beaten (and sometimes
literally)--for not being the Southern women they are supposed to be.
The problem, though, is that the cultural narratives of discipline
and punishment inscribed on their bodies are not quite successful, the
sentence not quite legible, in part, I think, because Faulkner himself
was so profoundly ambivalent about traditional definition of Southern
womanhood and manhood. Narcissa, for one, remains distinctly unrepentant
for bedding the Federal agent as the price to pay for getting her
letters back, and though Jenny Du Pre seems to die from the pure shock
of learning what Narcissa is capable of, her death can be read as much
as a pungent commentary upon the overdue demise of the Old Order as it
can a condemnation of Narcissa's actions.
But more unsettling by far is the curious interweaving in
"Dry September" of Minnie Cooper's gothic tale of
incarceration in small-town life with the narrative of white honor and
vengeance culminating in the lynching of an innocent black man. The tale
begins with a male narrative--men in a barbershop arguing about how to
respond to "the rumor, the story, whatever it was. Something about
Miss Minnie Cooper and a Negro" (p. 169). That this is an issue
crucial for defining and asserting one's manhood in public is
demonstrated in the charges of unmanliness hurled at the barber who
counsels caution. The momentum of this tale of offended white male
honor, though, is interrupted periodically by the story of Minnie
Cooper's own background--the "furious unreality" of
"her idle and empty days" and her own reaction to the way the
town responds to her accusations of assault (p. 175). Our last sight of
her, followed by a brief vignette about one of the lynchers, is of
Minnie laughing hysterically, unable to articulate what she feels but
nevertheless posing a disturbing counterpoint to the tale of white male
vengeance--a counterpoint, moreover, hinting that there is more than one
way to tell the tale of what happened to Minnie Cooper. And that hint in
turn suggests a great deal about the tentativeness and fragility of the
white male narrative in which Minnie's own fragmented tale is
framed.
The figure of Minnie laughing, avidly eyed by the community,
unable to talk, making her body talk for her, echoes with a peculiar
force throughout the whole of Welty's first collection of short
stories--A Curtain of Green. For Welty's volume is full of
figures--the poor, the black, the marginal, the deformed, but especially
women--like Minnie in particular, who make spectacles of themselves, and
they do so in a strikingly panoptic world defined by a merciless
collective gaze surveying the odd, the bizarre, and the marvelous. Like
staffage in nineteenth-century landscape painting, her observers direct
our attention time and time again to the collective gaze and to the
spectacles luring that gaze: Lily Daw displaying a zinnia in her mouth;
sideshow attractions like the Petrified Man and Keela the Indian Maiden;
a deaf couple animatedly discussing in sign language their miraculous
discovery of a key; "loud, squirming, ill-assorted" bathers at
a park; Clytie Farr and Mrs. Larkin, whose private agonies render them
conspicuous; the farm couple that the salesman R. J. Bowman wistfully
ponders; and the jazz pianist Powerhouse, avidly watched by his white
audience.(11)
No wonder, then, that Ruby Fisher in "A Piece of News"
suddenly feels herself under scrutiny when she discovers her name in a
discarded newspaper: "What eye in the world did she feel looking in
on her?" the narrator asks (p. 13). No wonder, too, that Mr.
Marblehall in "Old Mr. Marblehall" strolls about under a
public gaze so glaring that his house windows and the candle burners of
his carriage resemble nothing so much as eyes, and that Howard in
"Flowers for Marjorie" feels so exposed in the public,
impersonal setting of the city that he is not at all surprised to be
told four times on a subway wall "God sees me" (p. 103).
Much like Welty's characters, we as readers are encouraged to
scrutinize these representations of the strange and the marvelous. But
we are also urged to consider those who do the scrutinizing and the act
of scrutiny itself. As a result, reading A Curtain of Green is roughly
akin to looking at an exhibit and being vaguely uneasy about the
possibility of being on exhibit oneself.
Some of this uneasiness, interestingly enough, can be detected in
contemporary reviews of the collection bringing attention to the
horrified fascination with which one gazes upon the spectacles
populating A Curtain of Green. Albert Devlin speculates that the volume
probably caught the interest of a good many Northern reviewers precisely
because the stories seemed to confirm the notion of the South as
something of a spectacle itself--benighted, grotesque, peculiar.(12) In
her review for The Nation Louise Bogan noted that the characters could
have originated in "some brokendown medieval scene ruled by its
obscure and decomposing laws" (quoted in Devlin, pp. 5-6). A
particularly perceptive British reviewer remarked upon the book's
"fondness for the afflicted in mind or body and for strange
violence of behaviour" but also took note of Welty's ability
to "penetrate beneath the surface of the harsh or unprepossessing
spectacle with quick, passionate sympathy" (quoted in Peterman, p.
106). If, in short, Welty's Mississippians appear peculiar and
strange, veritable spectacles, these reviews suggest, so too is the
experience of reading about those peculiarities.
Chief among those spectacles in A Curtain of Green are women whose
antics and words suggest that there is something peculiarly feminine
about making a spectacle of oneself, and in this respect Welty's
spectacles hearken back to Minnie Cooper herself. I would argue, in
fact, that Welty appropriates the figure of Minnie and other gothic
women in Faulkner's short stories to explore their potential for
subversiveness. For like Medusa and the Sphinx in stories of Perseus and
Oedipus, Minnie and Welty's women are unsettling presences because
they offer threats, in Teresa de Lauretis's words, to
"man's clear vision, and their power consists in their . . .
`to-be-looked at-ness' . . . , their luring of man's gaze into
the dark continent,' as Freud put it, the enigma of
femininity."(13) In traditional male narratives such monstrous
spectacle-obstacles are ordinarily conquered and swept aside if the
hero's story is to proceed with a clear view of the narrative
ending. What happens, though, if such spectacles stubbornly resist this
sort of expulsion, if they persist in making spectacles of themselves in
the public gaze?
Mary Russo, for one, suggests that being too much in the public
eye can be unsettling for all concerned. Looking back on her own
childhood and admonitions by her mother, she observes:
For a woman, making a spectacle out of herself had more to do with
a kind
of inadvertency and loss of boundaries: the possessor of large,
aging, and
dimpled thighs displayed at the public beach, of overly rouged
cheeks, of a
voice shrill in laughter, or of a sliding bra strap--a loose,
dingy bra
strap especially--were at once caught out by fate and blameworthy.
It was
my impression that these women had done something wrong, had
stepped, as it
were, into the limelight out of turn--too young or too old, too
early or
too late--and yet anyone, any woman, could make a spectacle out of
herself
if she was not careful.(14)
In short, going too far, stepping over clearly defined boundaries,
seems to be key in making a spectacle. It's not quite enough simply
to be gazed upon, for we've been taught by feminist film critics
and art historians just how gender-bound the activity of looking and
being looked upon are in our culture. Stepping into the spotlight
suggests the possibility of stepping into a designated site of
femininity, a ready-made plot for the gothic heroine, but what happens
when one essentially tries to take control of the spotlight and
aggressively seeks the gaze of onlookers? What happens when women's
bodies in particular become conspicuous, disorderly, disruptive--and in
public spaces at that? We might discover, as Russo suggests, that
". . . women and their bodies, certain bodies, in certain public
framings, in certain public spaces, are always already
transgressive--dangerous, and in danger" (p. 217). We might also
discover the slippery world of shifting boundaries, roles, and genders
that baffles and irritates Freud in "A Child Is Being
Beaten"--a slipperiness that appears to be part and parcel of that
fantasy and implicit in gothic and Southern Gothic texts.
It is, I think, precisely this slippery, transgressive, dangerous
possibility that Welty has inherited from Faulkner and has expanded to
its fullest in story after story in A Curtain of Green, stories in which
those who are usually marginal--the poor, the deprived, the retarded,
but in particular white women and blacks--make spectacles of themselves
by being excessive, transgressive, odd, disturbing, disruptive. Lily Daw
unsettles her three lady friends and the entire town of Victory,
Mississippi, by deciding to many a xylophone player instead of accepting
a ready-made plot of allowing herself to be put away at the Ellisville
Institute for the Feeble-Minded. Ellie and Albert Morgan, so used to
living in the shadows, take center stage in "The Key" where
they silently but eloquently discuss their lives before a mesmerized
hearing audience in a train station. Little Lee Roy in "Keela, the
Outcast Indian Maiden" briefly relives his career as a geek in a
sideshow with the two men who visit him and thereby underscores how he
has changed the life of one of them forever. The narrator of "Why I
Live at the P.O." is able to turn her entire family upside-down
simply through the momentum of her ever-accelerating monologue. A
"common" family of bathers in a park disrupts the daydreams of
the narrator of "A Memory" by virtue of their outsized and
grubby physical presence. Clytie Farr in "Clytie" disturbs the
small community of Farr's Gin with unaccountable vigils in the
rain, cursing sessions in her garden, and a suicide in a rain barrel.
The despairing and unemployed Howard in "Flowers for Marjorie"
inexplicably stabs his wife and then finds himself a prizewinner for
entering Radio City Music Hall as the ten millionth person. Mrs. Larkin
in "A Curtain of Green" obsessively over-plants her garden
until it offers "the appearance of a sort of jungle" and she
herself seems an appropriate inhabitant--"over-vigorous,
disreputable, and heedless" (pp. 108 and 107). And perhaps most
spectacular of all is Powerhouse, the jazz musician who is "so
monstrous" with his huge feet and "vast and obscene"
mouth that he sends his white audience "into oblivion" (pp.
132 and 131).
These all are figures that M. M. Bakhtin would group with the folk
tradition of carnival and humor, with ritual spectacles, verbal comedy,
and billingsgate finding their heyday in Roman saturnalias and the
Middle Ages. But in particular he would link these figures with the
grotesque, with material bodies that have become, in Bakhtin's
words, "grandiose, exaggerated, immeasurable." They find their
exemplar in the famous Kerch terra cotta figures of laughing pregnant
hags, combining "a senile, decaying and deformed flesh with the
flesh of new life, conceived but as yet unformed." Such images,
Bakhtin asserts, serve as "the epitome of incompleteness," and
that, he adds, "is precisely the grotesque concept of the
body." Perhaps even more to the point, he notes that the grotesque
body does not stand apart from the rest of the world but persists in
growing, expanding, and ultimately transgressing its own boundaries.
"The stress is laid on those parts of the body," he remarks,
"that are open to the outside world, that is, the parts through
which the world enters the body or emerges from it, or through which the
body itself goes out to meet the world. This means that the emphasis is
on the apertures or the convexities, or on various ramifications and
offshoots: the open mouth, the genital organs, the breasts, the phallus,
the potbelly, the nose."(15)
For our purposes, Bakhtin's grotesque bodies have two
important implications for helping us make sense of the spectacles
created in story after story in A Curtain of Gram Precisely because
Welty's grotesque bodies do make spectacles, pursue excess, and
transgress the boundaries of the expected and the ordinary, they serve
as potent figures of women's anger protesting constrictions and
limits. As Peter Schmidt, Ruth Weston, and Albert Devlin have shrewdly
observed, the stories in A Curtain of Green are filled with narrow,
confining spaces usually associated with women--kitchens, interiors,
gardens, bedrooms, beauty parlors, and even the rain barrel in which
Clytie drowns herself.(16) These are settings, Schmidt emphasizes, that
underscore the restrictive narrative plots available to women, what
Schmidt calls "the either/or choice between conformity and
madness" tormenting so many of the female characters in A Curtain
of Green (p. 31). What better way, then, to question and undermine the
boundaries of those narrow settings than with bodies that protrude,
exceed, threaten to expand endlessly? We see Clytie's legs
protruding from the rain barrel, Powerhouse opening his mouth as if to
engulf his white audience, Mrs. Larkin, disheveled and frantically busy
in her garden, the narrator of "Why I Live at the P.O."
virtually drowning everyone around her in words.
Indeed, so excessive and exaggerated are Welty's own
grotesque bodies that a sudden recognition of their own strangeness
appears to liberate them momentarily from restricted plots and to enable
them to envision alternative stories for themselves. Thus Ruby Fisher in
"A Piece of News" is lifted out of the ordinary by her
encounter with a newspaper article about a woman named Ruby Fisher who
is shot by her husband. Suddenly she can imagine herself in alternative
scenarios--a deathbed scene' for instance--and because she is able
to conjure up these other stories, she and her husband are briefly
transformed: "Rare and wavering, some possibility stood timidly
like a stranger between them and made them hang their heads" (p.
16). Similarly, the key that Albert and Ellie Morgan discover in
"The Key" makes them feel that they "were in counter-plot
against the plot of those things that pressed down upon them from
outside their knowledge and their ways of making themselves
understood" (p. 34).
These are bodies that serve as half-formed articulation, protests
that find tentative expression not in language but in the body itself.
This sort of semi-articulation is akin to hysteria as Catherine Clement
sees it, "the only form of contestion possible in certain types of
social organization"--that is, language "not yet at the point
of verbal expression restrained within the bond of the body."(17)
That these bodies do struggle with the effort of articulation says a
good deal about the difficulties women in particular face in finding
their own voices. "Women's power under patriarchy,"
Helena Michie notes in The Flesh Made Word, "comes only at great
and psychic cost; its transformation into language, as the halting lines
and gaps between the words indicate, is equally painful--the gaps
themselves are scars and ruptures in the text." For women's
entrance into language, Michie adds, is painful precisely because such a
threshold moment involves "a shattering of the silence which
enshrouds women's physical presence."(18)
The struggle to articulate inscribed on the bodies populating A
Curtain of Green suggests something of Welty's own battle to find
an appropriate idiom of expression. Elizabeth Bowen's perceptive
remarks about that battle in The Golden Apples (1949) can also be
applied to Welty's first volume:
With her, nothing comes out of stock, and it has been impossible
for her to
stand still. Her art is a matter of contemplation, susceptibility,
and
discovery, it has been necessary for her to evolve for herself a
language
and to arrive, each time she writes, at a new form.(19)
Welty herself once noted in an interview: "[I]n those early
stories I'm sure I needed the device of what you call the
`grotesque.' That is, I hoped to differentiate character by their
physical qualities as a way of showing what they were like inside--it
seemed to me the most direct way to do it."(20)
Indeed, the more grotesque the bodies in A Curtain of Green, the
more likely they are to reverberate with scarcely repressed anger
seeking articulation, the kind of rage, for instance, that inspires
Clytie's cursing and Mrs. Larkin's near-act of murder--raising
her hoe and almost directing it onto the head of her garden helper,
Jamey--in her extravagantly overplanted garden. "Was it possible to
compensate? To punish? To protest?" Mrs. Larkin asks herself, for
she seemingly has no words to express the grief she feels for the death
of her husband and for "the workings of accident, of life and
death, of unaccountability," of her confinement in her garden and
widowhood (pp. 111 and 110).
But Welty's grotesque bodies are more than inscriptions of
suffering and rage. Their very outrageousness, their grotesqueness as
Bakhtin would define it, blurs the boundary between those who watch and
those who are being watched, between those who suffer and those who
inflict the suffering, so that we are never quite sure, to return to
Freud's scenario of the beating fantasy, just who is being beaten
and who is doing the beating. From Bakhtin's perspective, the
grotesque body, "composed of fertile depths and procreative convexities, is never clearly differentiated from the world but is
transferred, merged, and fused with it. It contains, like
Pantagruel's mouth, new unknown spheres." And because the
grotesque body does suggest the possibility of different worlds,
different orders, different perspectives, it is able to dismantle what
Bakhtin calls "the confines of the apparent (false) unity of the
indisputable and stable" (pp. 339 and 48).
In short, the very grotesqueness of bodies in A Curtain of Green
brings into question the detachment usually linked with the activity of
looking, an activity that at once engrosses Welty's onlookers and
renders them increasingly uncertain. Like Clytie Farr in
"Clytie," Welty's observers look "purely for a
resemblance to a vision," and like Clytie again, they seem to
discover that the more they look the less familiar everything around
them is (p. 86). Those who gaze upon the strange and marvelous, like Tom
Harris in "The Hitch-Hikers," anticipate the sort of certainty
they feel as children: "standing still, with nothing to touch him,
feeling tall and having the world come all at once into it round shape
underfoot" (p. 62). What they discover, though, like Bowman in
"Death of a Traveling Salesman," is an odd blurring between
those who appear to look and those who are looked upon. "Now we are
all visible to one another," Bowman thinks unexpectedly after Sonny
returns with borrowed fire (p. 128). Even more unexpected is the
deceptiveness of things to be seen, for the two farm folk Bowman studies
are not an elderly mother and son, as he initially thinks, but a fairly
young couple expecting a baby. Worse yet, Bowman, who originally thinks
of the couple as odd and country-quaint, is himself the oddity, barred
by his solitude from "the ancient communication between two
people" (p. 129).
The stories of A Curtain of Green explore this sort of reversal
between grotesque and norm, between gazers and gazed upon, again and
again, and the result is a world in which the politics of the gaze and
spectacle is problematicized and boundaries between binary oppositions,
between normal and abnormal, classic and grotesque, insider and
outsider, community and outcast, are thoroughly disrupted. In story
after story, the possibility of alternative gazes, alternative
perspectives, alternative narratives, is raised repeatedly, often by
underscoring the limitations of the collective gaze leveled upon those
labeled as strange, marvelous, grotesque, and suffering. Precisely
because the raptly staring crowd in the train station has no inkling of
the private story of Ellie and Albert Morgan in "The Key," the
third-person narrator's direct address to a second-person audience
pondering the interior lives of the Morgans is especially poignant.
Similarly, we're told pointedly that there is more than one way to
view a sideshow attraction, like Little Lee Roy in "Keela, the
Outcast Indian Maiden," and it is the mystery of multiple views
that is contemplated by the baffled and horrified young man who tells
the story of Little Lee Roy's rescue.
Strikingly enough, the volume's two concluding stories,
"Powerhouse" and "A Worn Path," focusing on two
central (and suffering) black figures, evoke the limitations of a
collective gaze with the most acidity. The white audience that avidly
stares at Powerhouse, watching him playing, watching him suffering in a
sense, has smug assumptions about capturing the musician's very
essence in its gaze--"of course you know it is with
them--Negroes--bandleaders--they would play the same way giving all
they've got, for an audience of one . . ." (p. 133). A similar
smugness characterizes the whites who encounter Phoenix Jackson on her
journey in "A Worn Path." "I know you old colored
people!" a young white hunter tells her (p. 145). But the truth of
the matter is, of course, that they know neither Powerhouse nor Phoenix
Jackson, whose individual stories exist outside those collective gazes.
And more disconcerting still is the way both Powerhouse and Phoenix
Jackson look back at their white onlookers with unsettling directness.
"Somebody loves me," sings Powerhouse, staring back at his
audience, and adds, in a phrase erasing the boundary between spectacle
and spectator, ". . . Maybe it's you!" (p. 141).
Most unsettling of all is the disruption of the
spectator-spectacle relationship, and for that matter, of the beating
fantasy as well, in "A Memory," the story that serves in a
sense as the key to the collection. For the narrator of "A
Memory" recalls an earlier sense of self when she was a highly
imaginative young girl very much an artist in the making and perhaps
even more to the point an obsessive watcher and judge of others who
never quite seem to meet her own high standards. "When a person, or
a happening," the narrator notes, "seemed to me not in keeping
with my opinion, or even my hope or expectation, I was terrified by a
vision of abandonment and wildness which tore my heart with a kind of
sorrow" (p. 75). Nevertheless, she ponders each sight that comes
before her, for she is convinced that anything she sees might reveal
"a secret of life. . . . for I was obsessed with notions of
concealment, and from the smallest gesture of a stranger I would wrest
what was to me a communication or a presentiment" (p. 76).
The sense of power she feels simply from obsessive watching is
heightened, she adds, "by the fact that I was in love then for the
first time: I had identified love at once" (p. 76). Never passing a
word with the boy at school who is the object of her infatuation, the
young girl feels, she says, "a necessity for absolute conformity to
my ideas in any happening I witnessed" (p. 76). Accordingly, she
sits all day in school unceasingly apprehensive, "fearing for the
untoward to happen" (p. 76). When the young boy drawing her
attention unexpectedly suffers a nosebleed in class, the narrator feels
a genuine sense of shock and horror. Having safely categorized the young
boy as a dream of perfect love, the young girl now fears that he will
not measure up, that his house and his family may be
"slovenly" and "shabby" (p. 76).
But it is in the park one day, by the lake beach where she often
obsessively watches, framing her vision with a square made with her
hands, that she suddenly finds all her judgments and observations
disrupted and thoroughly unsettled. Framing her view as always, the
narrator sees more than she bargains for when that "group of loud,
squirming, ill-assorted people who seemed thrown together only by the
most confused accident" comes before her eyes (p. 77). Watching
them with her usual stern sense of judgment, the narrator sees an
overweight woman in the group unexpectedly pour great globs of sand out
of her bathing suit. "I felt a peak of horror," the narrator
declares, "as though her breasts themselves had turned to sand, as
though they were of no importance at all and she did not care" (p.
79). So outsized is the moment that the narrator's framing vision
is exposed for the fragile fiction that it is. Even after the group of
bathers has gone, the narrator continues to lie there, "feeling
victimized by the sight of the unfinished bulwark where they had piled
and shaped the wet sand around the bodies, which changed the appearance
of the beach like the ravages of a storm" (p. 79). It would be, she
concludes, her "last morning on the beach," and the
implication is that the narrator will never again be able to conjure up
the power of watching and easy categorization, of sharp distinctions
between the ideal and the grotesque.
Decades after writing "A Memory," Welty would write of
that story in One Writer's Beginnings (1984): "This is not, on
reaching its end, an observer's story. The tableau discovered
through the young girl's framing hands is unwelcome realism. How
can she accommodate the existence of this view to the dream of love,
which she carried already inside her?" Rather ominously, Welty
adds: "The frame only raises the question of the story."(21)
The result, I think, is a version of Southern Gothic that does
indeed raise the question of the story, mark its terrain as highly
contested, unsettle the politics of vision. If Faulkner's short
story portraits of women reverberate with the effort--only partially
successful--to inscribe cultural narratives of Southern femininity upon
women's bodies, Welty's gallery of women evokes the implicit
but logical conclusion of Faulkner's tales by posing scenarios of
women who break out of haunted houses and narrow confines, abruptly
change places with other participants in faint echoes of beating
fantasies, and explore the full potential of just what it means to be a
spectacle. The dis-ease we discover in Faulkner's portrait gallery
of gothic women becomes in A Curtain of Green a full-fledged carnival of
gothic and grotesque heroines running amok, resistant to placement in
traditional plots and roles. Welty's women, in fact, are more often
than not characters in search of stories that have yet to be
articulated. And therein, perhaps, lies the crucial difference between
their two versions of Southern Gothic. Faulkner may display for us
sights that are at times all too painfully familiar--the frustrated
spinster, the hypocritical widow, the utterly oppressed black woman--but
Welty makes spectacles that are often so outrageous and
boundary-breaking that we are never quite sure what we are looking at or
where to place ourselves as spectators. Ultimately, if Faulkner's
tales of gothic women allude uncomfortably to the spectacle of the
scaffold, Welty's stories testify to nothing so much as the
scaffold's dismantling.
(*) A shorter version of this essay appeared as "Dangerous Women
and Gothic Debates: Faulkner, Welty, and Tales of the Grotesque,"
in Faulkner's Short Fiction, ed. Hans Skei (Oslo, Norway: Solum Forlag, 1997), pp. 106-116.
(1) Gina D. Peterman, "A Curtain of Green: Eudora Welty's
Auspicious Beginning," Mississippi Quarterly, 47 (Winter
1992-1993), 104.
(2) Carson McCullers, "The Russian Realists and Southern
Literature," in Friendship and Sympathy: Communities of Southern
Women Writers, ed. Rosemary M. Magee (Jackson: University Press of
Mississippi, 1992), pp. 21-22.
(3) Quoted in Alice Walker, "Eudora Welty: An Interview,"
in Conversations with Eudora Welty, ed. Peggy Whitman Prenshaw (New
York: Pocket Press, 1984), p. 152.
(4) Ruth Weston, Gothic Tradition and Narrative Techniques in the
Fiction of Eudora Welty (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press,
1994), p. 4.
(5) Susan Wolstenholme, Gothic (Re)Visions: Writing Women as Readers
(Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1993), p. 6.
(6) Michelle A. Masse, In the Name of Love: Women, Masochism, and the
Gothic (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1992), pp. 10, 40.
(7) Noel Polk, "`The Dungeon Was Mother Herself': William
Faulkner: 1927-1931," in New Directions in Faulkner Studies:
Faulkner and Yoknapatawpha, 1983, ed. Doreen Fowler and Ann J. Abadie
(Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1983), p. 65. See in general
Sigmund Freud, "`A Child Is Being Beaten': A Contribution to
the Study of the Origin of Sexual Perversions (1919)," in The
Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud,
vol. 17, trans. and ed. James Strachey (London: Hogarth Press, 1955),
pp. 175-205.
(8) William Faulkner, "A Rose for Emily," in Collected
Stories of William Faulkner (New York: Random House, 1950), p. 123.
Subsequent references to short stories in this collection will be cited
parenthetically within the text.
(9) Carroll Smith-Rosenberg, Disorderly Conduct: Visions of Gender in
Victorian America (New York: Oxford University Press, 1985), pp.
245-246.
(10) Kate Ferguson Ellis, The Contested Castle: Gothic Novels and the
Subversion of Domestic Ideology (Urbana: University of Illinois Press,
1989), p. xiv. See also Michel Foucault, Discipline and Punish: The
Birth of the Prison, trans. Alan Sheridan (New York. Random-Vintage,
1977), p. 43.
(11) Eudora Welty, "A Memory," in A Curtain of Green, in
The Collected Stories of Eudora Welty (1941; rpt. New York: Harcourt
Brace Jovanovich, 1980), p. 77. Subsequent references to the stories in
A Curtain of Green will be cited parenthetically within the text.
(12) Albert J. Devlin, Eudora Welty's Chronicle. A Story of
Mississippi Life (Jackson: University of Mississippi Press, 1983), pp.
5-6.
(13) Teresa de Lauretis, Alice Doesn't: Feminism, Semiotics,
Cinema (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1984), p. 110. For an
examination of Welty's critique and inversion of the male heroic
narrative, see Rebecca Mark, The Dragon's Blood: Eudora
Welty's "The Golden Apples" and Feminist Intertextuality (Jackson: Univesity Press of Mississippi, 1994).
(14) Mary Russo, "Female Grotesques: Carnival and Theory,"
in Feminist Studies/Critical Studies, ed. Teresa de Lauretis (Madison:
University of Wisconsin Press, 1986), p. 213.
(15) Mikhail Bakhtin, Rabelais and His World, trans. Helene Iswolsky
(Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1984), pp. 5, 19, 25, and 26.
(16) Peter Schmidt, The Heart of the Story: Eudora Welty's Short
Fiction (Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1991), p. 4; Weston,
Gothic Traditions, pp. 10 and 134; and Devlin, Eudora Welty's
Chronicle, p. 16.
(17) Quoted in Michele Richman, "Sex and Signs: The Language of
French Feminist Critiscism," in Language and Style, 13 (Fall 1980),
69.
(18) "Helena Michie, The Flesh Made Word. Female Figures and
Women's Bodies (New York: Oxford University Press, 1987), pp. 139
and 74-75.
(19) "Elizabeth Bowen, review of The Golden Apples, in Books of
Today (September 1950); rpt. in Bowen, Seven Winters: Memories of a
Dublin Childhood & Afterthoughts: Pieces on Writing (New York:
Alfred A. Knopf, 1962), p. 216.
(20) "Quoted in Linda Kuehl, "The Art of Fiction XLVII:
Eudora Welty," in Conversations with Eudora Welty, p. 93.
(21) Eudora Welty, One Writer's Beginnings, William E. Massey,
Sr., Lectures in the History of American Civilization (Cambridge:
Harvard University Press, 1983), p. 89.