Being and Race: Black Writing Since 1970
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Charles Johnson approaches contemporary black literature through the lens of phenomenology. Drawing on such philosophers as Heidegger, Husserl, Satre, and Dufrenne, Johnson addresses the esthetic and epistemological questions surrounding the black experience as expressed by African American authors. In exploring the works of Wright, Toomer, Bradley, and many more, Being and Race enlarges our vision of what fiction’s purpose is and how it arises from our common experiences.
Charles Johnson
Charles Johnson is a novelist, essayist, literary scholar, philosopher, cartoonist, screenwriter, and professor emeritus at the University of Washington in Seattle. A MacArthur fellow, his fiction includes Night Hawks, Dr. King’s Refrigerator, Dreamer, Faith and the Good Thing, and Middle Passage, for which he won the National Book Award. In 2002 he received the Arts and Letters Award in Literature from the American Academy of Arts and Letters. He lives in Seattle.
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Being and Race - Charles Johnson
Preface
At times, and when I felt it necessary, this book makes use of the method called phenomenology,
a term often misunderstood, like so many in popular use. Many different styles of phenomenology have been developed since mathematician Edmund Husserl, its creator, proposed it as a means for grounding the principal concepts in any field by a return to experience.
Husserl’s own Transcendental Phenomenology
was judged too idealistic by some of his followers, who took, as I have, what they found useful from the master and went their own way. Max Scheler, who was at one time Husserl’s heir apparent, devoted a portion of his phenomenological work to investigating the experiential foundations for morality and religion. Martin Heidegger, Husserl’s real successor in my view, eventually broke with phenomenology, preferring to call his work not even philosophy but instead thought on Being.
Jean-Paul Sartre, whose existentialist commitments often overlap Heidegger’s, infused his tremendous literary outpourings with social theory, such as Marxism, that situated the transcendental ego and this mode of reasoning more firmly in the realm of immediate political and historical phenomena than in the transcendent realm of pure meaning that occupied Husserl. It is Sartre’s associate Maurice Merleau-Ponty, however, who most significantly advances Husserlian thought by developing his central notion of the Lifeworld, and he is distinguished by his own work on dialectical theory, language, perception, and the body as our foundation for all perceptual experience and by avoiding many of the excesses and errors of Sartre’s philosophy. Equally important is Mikel Dufrenne, whose blending of Husserl, Heidegger, Sartre, Merleau-Ponty, and Roman Ingarten focuses some of the more interesting work of the German and French phenomenological movements on the problems of artistic experience broadly considered.
It will be clear from this book that my own quirky variations on phenomenology draw from the work of these esteemed gentlemen, as well as from that of many other philosophers, Eastern and Western. Nevertheless, throughout its long history, and despite its many changes, phenomenology remains a philosophy of experience.
Husserl’s intention was for it to be first a method by which we bracket,
or set aside, all explanatory models for the phenomena we investigate, thereby making possible an intuition of the essence or invariant structures of different forms of experience, specifically in the sciences. His famous call, To the things themselves,
distinguishes phenomenology from previous disciplines of philosophy. Phenomenology is something you do. Yet it does not so much deliver new knowledge as it does a deeper clarification of what we think we already know. And what truth its method delivers must be confirmed in the depths of the reader’s own experience. It is, for Husserl, a radical empiricism.
Whether or not we believe it is possible to disclose the atemporal essences of things, as Husserl hoped, is unimportant. His method of bracketing and descriptively reporting what is given in any encounter with mathematical, fantastical, physical, or fictional objects is useful for a first-person determination of what is before us, and for revealing what we, as culturally conditioned subjects, have brought to each and every encounter with the world. Moreover, it is a method more commonly used than most realize. Painters, as Merleau-Ponty tirelessly pointed out, must retrain their eyes in seeing; musicians, their ears in hearing; and writers, in the being of language. And many art critics instinctively perform various phenomenological operations—free imaginative variation or consideration of the all-important element of intentionality—in order better to grasp their subject and to ground it in their own first-person seeing before moving on to judgment, analysis, condemnation, or approval.
But it is Husserl’s other, more programmatic aim that has forced this work on black writing to fall into a phenomenological mode: namely, his belief that many disciplines and fields of knowing rest on unclarified, naive assumptions that need to be brought forward if these fields are to achieve a securer foundation. Black American fiction, indeed the entire area of creative writing,
has not seen its basic assumptions subjected to this form of discussion. I believe the time for that is now. My deepest hope is that this book will contribute to the dialogue, especially now, when cross-cultural meaning is of such great importance. And it is also my hope that it will be useful not only to teachers and students of Afro-American literature but also to those in philosophy, creative writing, and contemporary literature.
In this task I am indebted to former teachers such as visual artist Lawrence Lariar, who taught me drawing in my teens, and the late John Gardner, who taught me fiction in my twenties; to John Gallman, whose sustained interest made this book possible; to agents Anne and Georges Borchardt; to many friends, among them bookseller Jeff Rice, poet James Bertolino, director Jon Dichter; and to my colleagues at the University of Washington and the University of Delaware, who provided a climate suitable for the book’s composition.
FIRST PHILOSOPHY
1
Being and Race
A novelist blundering into the field of literary criticism should first apologize to his colleagues who analyze fiction for a living and then make some effort to explain why he has briefly left the business of writing stories to talk about them. My credentials for this chore are modest, but my curiosity about how fiction works
is great. It has been so from the first day I took up writing. Life is baffling enough for every novelist, and for writers of Afro-American fiction it presents even more artistic and philosophical questions than for writers who are white. Few writers, black or white, bother with such questions, and in the long run they may have importance only to a few people who wonder, as I have for twenty years, about the forms our stories have taken, what they say about the world, and what they don’t say. These are not idle questions. Our faith in fiction comes from an ancient belief that language and literary art—all speaking and showing—clarify our experience. Our most sacred cliché in contemporary criticism, and also in creative-writing courses, is that writers should write about what they know,
and for the Afro-American author that inevitably means the black
experience. This idea is doubtlessly true, or at least half-true in some narrow sense we have yet to determine. But it leads, I believe, from loose, casual talk about experience
to esthetic and epistemological questions difficult to answer, though I shall try in this book to do so.
It might be helpful to digress a moment to dwell on the artistic impulse itself. Do we begin at the same place, writers black and white? In his study of painting, The Voices of Silence, André Malraux says, What makes the artist is that in his youth he was more deeply moved by his visual experience of works of art than by that of the things they represent—and perhaps of Nature as a whole.
¹
He adds, We have no means of knowing how a great artist, who had never seen a work of art, but only the forms of nature, would develop.
In other words, we encounter art in some form, blunder onto it—or have it placed before us by teachers or parents—as a being different from others in the world. Many black authors confess in interviews that the origin of their artistic journey began when, as children, they heard folktales or ghost stories in the South from elders; and one young American novelist, whom I won’t name, is known to say he decided to write when, after passing an auditorium where a distinguished author was reading, he thought to himself, "I can do that." It helps, clearly, if a novice writer has a healthy sense of contempt for his predecessors, or if one’s first exposure is, let us say, to easy art rather than to something as intimidating as Hamlet or Thomas Mann’s Doktor Faustus. My own students and friends, once polled, reported an array of first impressions or seductions—Nancy Drew novels, picture books of Bible stories, Twilight Zone episodes, Marvel comic books, science fiction, The Little Engine That Could, or stories they were assigned to read from Scholastic magazine. For American kids, it seems to matter little whether they cut their teeth on Louis L’Amour’s westerns or Aesop’s fables before moving on to more complex novels. Novelist John Gardner often cited his primary influences as Walt Disney and Jean-Paul Sartre, and his best-known book, Grendel, seems to bear this out. It’s important to remember that this early seduction of the artist by some artwork, vulgar or distinguished, is experienced as delightful—thrilling as a story or novel or poem, an encounter that pleases one that such a thing as this can be. Now, delight need not be joyful. I daresay we take pleasure in encounters that shake us to the core, terrorize us, or contradict our most cherished beliefs as well as in those that leave us feeling smug. But in many of these earliest encounters we discover we have been changed. More precisely, our perception—or way of seeing—has been shaken, if one is talking about great art, which is all I care to consider here. In a word, writers begin their lifelong odyssey in art with expression or experience interpreted by others, not with, as popular wisdom sometimes has it, an ensemble of events that already mean something.
Going even further, Malraux tells us that artists do not stem from their childhood, but from their conflicts with the achievements of their predecessors; not from their formless world, but from their struggle with the forms which others have imposed on life.
Some of this curious idea can be seen in, for example, figure-drawing classes, where you stand with the canvas to your side and with brush poised as you study the model at the front of the room, and then, miraculously, something happens in the flickerish moment between shifting your gaze from the model, with all his concrete, specific, individual features, to the canvas. You have drawn, you discover, not his hand but instead your idea of how a hand should look, an idea built up doubtlessly from viewing, not hundreds of individual models, but rather other artists’ renditions of the hand. It is precisely this heavily conditioned seeing, this calcification of perception, that figure-drawing classes seek to liberate—we might well call this retraining of the eye the artist’s equivalent to the phenomenological epoché, or bracketing
of all presuppositions in order to seize a fresh, original vision.
Malraux’s point is that often the apprentice artist, thinking about the world of experience transfigured in the text—a novel, painting, poem, or film—says, That’s not so.
Or, He didn’t get it quite right.
He might also say, "How perfectly done. Let me reply with a composition of my own." Whatever the case, fiction—indeed, all art—points to others with whom the writer argues about what is. He cannot begin ex nihilo. He must have models with which to agree, partly agree, or outright oppose, and these can come only from the tradition of literature itself, for Nature seems to remain silent, providing no final text or court of judgment. If any of these ruminations sound reasonable, does it seem possible that the black experience
in literature truly exists only there—in literature—and therefore must vary from one author’s viewpoint to the next, with nothing invariant in the experience
that we can agree on as final?
As a young novelist, I found the problem of what is or is not the black
experience staring at me more steadily than I could stare at it, particularly after I’d written six bad, apprentice novels, three that aped the style of James Baldwin, Richard Wright, and John A. Williams, all fine writers whom I admire, and three that were heavily influenced by what a few critics now call the Black Aesthetic.
The first three of the six were misery-filled protest stories about the sorry condition of being black in America and might be called naturalistic.
I couldn’t read them after they were done. Something was wrong, but I couldn’t jump the problem until years later when I realized how uncritical I’d been about nearly every aspect of fiction, each element in this discipline being somewhat like a thread, which, if pulled, leads on to the unraveling of an entire garment. Surely naturalism in its various strains is suitable for certain kinds of stories, and for a certain social message, but lost in it for a time I ran into artistic restrictions I couldn’t resolve, never realizing that writing doesn’t so much record an experience—or even imitate or represent it—as it creates that experience, and that each literary form, style, or genre is a different, distinct method of reasoning, of shaping what is to body it forth intelligibly.
In hindsight, naturalism seemed to conceal profound prejudices about Being, what a person is, the nature of society, causation, and a worm can of metaphysical questions about what could and could not logically occur in our experience
and conscious life. Its implied physics was dated—or at best only provisional—and, even worse, it concealed a reductionistic model of human psychology, of what motivates men and women (and had no theory of the self at all), that made my characters dull and predictable in their inner lives and perceptions of the world. Like gravity, it held the imagination close to the ground by creating the camera-like illusion of objectivity, of events unmediated—or untampered with—by any narrative presence. Although easy to imitate as a style, it scaled down experiential possibilities and put curious limits on narrative voice and language, as well as on such poetic devices as simile and metaphor, those inherently existential strategies that allow a writer to pluck similarities from our experiences or to illuminate one object by reference to another by saying A is B. We shall soon look more closely at whether metaphor is mere illusion, a mind trick or trap that dangerously anthropomorphizes the world. For now it is enough simply to say that naturalism gained its power, its punch, by strictly controlling what could be said, seen, and shown.
Adopting such means uncritically, I discovered by error what novelist Linsey Abrams seemed to know by instinct, that style is never simply technical choice, but evolves from how a writer sees the world.
In her brilliant essay A Maximalist Novelist Looks at Some Minimalist Fiction
(1985), she says that to embrace a readily identifiable prose style without being aware of its tyranny and inevitability of voice
is to embrace a ready-made point-of-view.
In short, naturalism is clearly a massaging and kneading of life, a style as full of tricks and false bottoms as any other. Of course, none of these observations is new. Philosopher Edmund Husserl (and also Albert Schweitzer) said as much seventy years ago in his criticism of the Natural Attitude.
And so, like the editors who read those three early efforts of mine, I had no interest in revisiting their fictional worlds ever again.
Not much later I foundered again, this time with three novels created under the spell of the Black Arts Movement, the cultural wing
of the Black Power Movement, which was inescapable in the late 1960s and which is more or less alive today as a quasi-philosophical position with its roots deep in Pan-Africanism and race pride. In order to understand black fiction, its problems and promise, and why these last novels I’ve mentioned were artistic failures, you must appreciate some of the pitfalls to be found in the history of black American literature and what confronts a young writer when he considers his place in this still relatively young tradition.
The political and social status of the work of art has been a point of interest since the earliest philosophical reflections on poetry. It is phantoms, not realities that they produce,
Plato’s Socrates says of the artist in the tenth book of The Republic.²
If a preestablished model is assumed for our experience, or for any experience—if meaning is seen as fixed rather than as evolving, changing, and historical, if reality is reified for political or social or even moral reasons—the independent writer who departs from the forms
can only be seen as one who sets up in each individual soul a vicious constitution by fashioning phantoms far removed from reality,
or what is taken to be the objective
model for the Real. And so