Good Books Don’t Have to be Hard

30 08 2009

A novelist on the pleasure of reading stories that don’t bore; rising up from the supermarket racks

By LEV GROSSMAN

A good story is a dirty secret that we all share. It’s what makes guilty pleasures so pleasurable, but it’s also what makes them so guilty. A juicy tale reeks of crass commercialism and cheap thrills. We crave such entertainments, but we despise them. Plot makes perverts of us all.

It’s not easy to put your finger on what exactly is so disgraceful about our attachment to storyline. Sure, it’s something to do with high and low and genres and the canon and such. But what exactly? Part of the problem is that to find the reason you have to dig down a ways, down into the murky history of the novel. There was once a reason for turning away from plot, but that rationale has outlived its usefulness. If there’s a key to what the 21st-century novel is going to look like, this is it: the ongoing exoneration and rehabilitation of plot.

Where did this conspiracy come from in the first place—the plot against plot? I blame the Modernists. Who were, I grant you, the single greatest crop of writers the novel has ever seen. In the 1920s alone they gave us “The Age of Innocence,” “Ulysses,” “A Passage to India,” “Mrs. Dalloway,” “To the Lighthouse,” “Lady Chatterley’s Lover,” “The Sun Also Rises,” “A Farewell to Arms” and “The Sound and the Fury.” Not to mention most of “In Search of Lost Time” and all of Kafka’s novels. Pity the poor Pulitzer judge for 1926, who had to choose between “The Professor’s House,” “The Great Gatsby,” “Arrowsmith” and “An American Tragedy.” (It went to “Arrowsmith.” Sinclair Lewis prissily declined the prize.) The 20th century had a full century’s worth of masterpieces before it was half over.

But let’s look back for a second at where the Modernists came from, and what exactly they did with the novel. They drew a tough hand, historically speaking. All the bad news of the modern era had just arrived more or less at the same time: mass media, advertising, psychoanalysis, mechanized warfare. The rise of electric light and internal combustion had turned their world into a noisy, reeking travesty of the gas-lit, horse-drawn world they grew up in. The orderly, complacent, optimistic Victorian novel had nothing to say to them. Worse than nothing: it felt like a lie. The novel was a mirror the Modernists needed to break, the better to reflect their broken world. So they did.

One of the things they broke was plot. To the Modernists, stories were a distortion of real life. In real life stories don’t tie up neatly. Events don’t line up in a tidy sequence and mean the same things to everybody they happen to. Ask a veteran of the Somme whether his tour of duty resembled the “Boy’s Own” war stories he grew up on. The Modernists broke the clear straight lines of causality and perception and chronological sequence, to make them look more like life as it’s actually lived. They took in “The Mill on the Floss” and spat out “The Sound and the Fury.”

This brought with it another, related development: difficulty. It’s hard to imagine it now, but there was a time when literary novels were not, generally speaking, all that hard to read. Say what you like about the works of Dickens and Thackeray, you pretty much always know who’s talking, and when, and what they’re talking about. The Modernists introduced us to the idea that reading could be work, and not common labor but the work of an intellectual elite, a highly trained coterie of professional aesthetic interpreters. The motto of Ezra Pound’s “Little Review,” which published the first chapters of Joyce’s “Ulysses,” was “Making no compromise with the public taste.” Imagine what it felt like the first time somebody opened up “The Waste Land” and saw that it came with footnotes. Amateur hour was over.

But we don’t live in the Modernists’ world anymore. We have different problems. We’ve had plenty of bad news of our own. Some of which has to do with the book business itself—sales of adult trade books declined 2.3% last year, compared with 2007. Should we still be writing difficult novels? Isn’t it time we made our peace with plot?

After all, the discipline of the conventional literary novel is a pretty harsh one. To read one is to enter into a kind of depressed economy, where pleasure must be bought with large quantities of work and patience. The Modernists felt little obligation to entertain their readers. That was just the price you paid for your Joycean epiphany. Conversely they have trained us, Pavlovianly, to associate a crisp, dynamic, exciting plot with supermarket fiction, and cheap thrills, and embarrassment. Plot was the coward’s way out, for people who can’t deal with the real world. If you’re having too much fun, you’re doing it wrong.

There was a time when difficult literature was exciting. T.S. Eliot once famously read to a whole football stadium full of fans. And it’s still exciting—when Eliot does it. But in contemporary writers it has just become a drag. Which is probably why millions of adults are cheating on the literary novel with the young-adult novel, where the unblushing embrace of storytelling is allowed, even encouraged. Sales of hardcover young-adult books are up 30.7% so far this year, through June, according to the Association of American Publishers, while adult hardcovers are down 17.8%. Nam Le’s “The Boat,” one of the best-reviewed books of fiction of 2008, has sold 16,000 copies in hardcover and trade paperback, according to Nielsen Bookscan (which admittedly doesn’t include all book retailers). In the first quarter of 2009 alone, the author of the “Twilight” series, Stephenie Meyer, sold eight million books. What are those readers looking for? You’ll find critics who say they have bad taste, or that they’re lazy and can’t hack it in the big leagues. But that’s not the case. They need something they’re not getting elsewhere. Let’s be honest: Why do so many adults read Suzanne Collins’s young-adult novel “The Hunger Games” instead of contemporary literary fiction? Because “The Hunger Games” doesn’t bore them.

All of this is changing. The revolution is under way. The novel is getting entertaining again. Writers like Michael Chabon, Jonathan Lethem, Donna Tartt, Kelly Link, Audrey Niffenegger, Richard Price, Kate Atkinson, Neil Gaiman, and Susanna Clarke, to name just a few, are busily grafting the sophisticated, intensely aware literary language of Modernism onto the sturdy narrative roots of genre fiction: fantasy, science fiction, detective fiction, romance. They’re forging connections between literary spheres that have been hermetically sealed off from one another for a century. Look at Cormac McCarthy, who for years appeared to be the oldest living Modernist in captivity, but who has inaugurated his late period with a serial-killer novel followed by a work of apocalyptic science fiction. Look at Thomas Pynchon—in “Inherent Vice” he has swapped his usual cumbersome verbal calisthenics for the more maneuverable chassis of a hard-boiled detective novel.

This is the future of fiction. The novel is finally waking up from its 100-year carbonite nap. Old hierarchies of taste are collapsing. Genres are hybridizing. The balance of power is swinging from the writer back to the reader, and compromises with the public taste are being struck all over the place. Lyricism is on the wane, and suspense and humor and pacing are shedding their stigmas and taking their place as the core literary technologies of the 21st century.

From a hieratic, hermetic art object the novel is blooming into something more casual and open: a literature of pleasure. The critics will have to catch up. This new breed of novel resists interpretation, but not the way the Modernists did. These books require a different set of tools, and a basic belief that plot and literary intelligence aren’t mutually exclusive.

In fact the true postmodern novel is here, hiding in plain sight. We just haven’t noticed it because we’re looking in the wrong aisle. We were trained—by the Modernists, who else—to expect a literary revolution to be a revolution of the avant-garde: typographically altered, grammatically shattered, rhetorically obscure. Difficult, in a word. This is different. It’s a revolution from below, up from the supermarket racks.





The ‘Internet’ is Forlorn

29 08 2009

Mr. Lim’s pet peeves

  1. When you use “the society“, you are using the definite article “the”. This means that you are referring to a specific society. “Society“, on the other hand refers to “all” societies – the world, human civilisation, the population on Earth.
  2. For crying out loud, it is the Internet. Capital I. The Internet, with a capital I. The Internet. Yes, the Internet. The Internet! The Internet! If you cannot spell “The Internet” properly, it will certainly be forlorn and dejected by your repeated mistake.
  3. Definitions are not absolutely mandatory. You can just re-word or provide some contextual information. If your definition is half your introductory paragraph, you are not writing a GP essay. You are answering a structured question in say, Social Studies or Geography. Try not to put your reader to sleep…
  4. Essays devoid of thesis statements. Say no more.
  5. Introductions that do not explain either side or justify their thesis / argument. This is the academic equivalent of a hit-and-run. You must at least have the courtesy to pick poor Mr. Lim up even if you insist on killing him.
  6. Body paragraphs that do not bother with the key words in the question and deal with the issue. Inserting one line at the very end of your paragraph may help it not fail badly. This does not mean it is adequate.
  7. Conclusions that introduce new points at the end.




AQ (Contrasting) Model

19 08 2009

Victoria Sherborne argues strongly in favour of choice, whereas Tim Parks has grave reservations about the benefits it is supposed to bring.

Do you regard the increased degree of choice available to you and your generation as broadly beneficial or harmful?

In your answer, develop some of the points made by the authors and give your own views and some account of the experiences which have helped you to form them.

Note to student: the following answer does not conform to the structure our college has chosen.

[Requirements] Admittedly, my generation of Singaporeans has a wider range of choices than even our parents’ generation. [Explains with author's argument] Such choices, Sherbourne argues, adds variety to our lives and enables us to define ourselves. [Focus Statement] This is a major benefit of the increased choices available to us today and I agree with Sherbourne’s observation that choice gives us the opportunity to “enjoy the pleasures of discrimination and exert our individuality”.

[Requirements] Take the MRT to school or office any day and you will hear a wide variety of ringtones ranging from the latest pop song to overturers of classical music – each ringtone an expression of individuality. This ability to choose ringtones that depict our interests, moods, likes and dislikes has the [Explains idea - link example to 'choice'] benefit of allowing my generation of young people the opportunity to be heard, and most importantly, to young people, of being different and not just one in a crowd.

[Evaluation of Parks' idea] Unlike Parks who thinks that “choice is inappropriate or problematical”, I think that the wide variety of choice available to my generation makes our lives interesting, challenging and meaningful. [Requirements] Unlike many girls in my grandmother’s generation, teenagers today do not need to await the inevitable marriage arranged by the elders, accepting one’s partner “as part of the landscape, something to come to terms with”. [Explains idea] Instead, girls in my generation have the luxury of choice: we can choose to study in any field we like – whether it is biotechnology or jewellery-making; choose to travel; choose to marry or remain single; choose to have children or remain childless – thus fashioning our lives according to our own needs. Thus many of my peers have had interesting experiences such as teaching English in Laos, building huts in Tibet, playing with orphaned children in Sri Lanka – opportunities the women who accepted their fates in the past did not have.

[Evaluates opposing argument] Parks adopts a negative stance on the issue of choice, focusing on examples of freedom of choice gone wrong such as abortion or euthanasia. [More evaluation] What Parks fails to acknowledge is that it is not so much choice that is harmful but choice without accountability or integrity. [Explains evaluation] Choice is beneficial when the person who chooses is willing to accept the consequences of his/her choice. Parks’ question, “And if we have to decide for ourselves, whom shall we blame if things go wrong?” is a childish question that refuses to accept the consequences of a wrong choice. [Requirements + Evaluation of local context] I believe that the young people of my generation have the courage to accept the results of bad choices. Faced with a variety of choices, we know that there is safety in making the choices prescribed by the adults but there is challenge in making our own mistakes.

[Explains further] Choice is beneficial to young people because it builds character. Instead of looking to others or waiting for decision to be made, the young people of our generation make our own decision, choosing our field of study, our life partners, our way of life. Indeed many mistakes are made. [Requirements] I have friends who have studied in the Science stream all their school years, only to read English Literature at the University after realizing science was not their calling. That famous figures in the Singapore arts scene such as Ivan Heng and Neo Swee Lin, both ex-lawyers, provided further inspiration for their switch to a less trodden path.

[Brief conclusion] Yet, the important ability to learn from mistakes and to make the best of adverse situations will not develop unless we have the freedom to choose in the first place. In this way, choice is beneficial.





1T17 Going, Gone, Global

17 08 2009

puma-lift-racer-ss09-1

Click here to download the 6 pages you have dutifully compiled on the assigned readings! ;)





Dinner with Grammar

17 08 2009

- English Grammar and Vocabulary Worksheets (Kit Lee and Lynette Wan, Pri 6) $5.50

- Practical English Grammar for Primary Levels (Dr. Tan Cheng Lim), $2.90

- Grammar Supplementary for Lower Sec 
(Lee Hwee Hoon) $13.90
Shortlist:
Kit Yee, Cindy, Januavi, Xuan Yu, Leslie, Eugene, Brandon

Key areas:
Subject-verb agreement, Simple present tense, simple past tense,





Invisible Wars

15 08 2009

A well-animated video on the need to “redefine” foreign aid.

Invisible Wars: Redefining Aid from James Bartley.





1T11 Goes Global

14 08 2009

A two-part compilation of your research tasks has been attached. 1.9mb each!

Globalisation and Culture (Cultural Resistance Against McD’s and Starbucks, Key facts from Giddens’ Sociology)

Globalisation and Identity (Pico Iyer’s Global Soul, Globalisation and Identity)

09style.2.650





Give Aid, Get AIDS

5 08 2009

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Africa is giving nothing to anyone — apart from AIDS
No. It will not do. Even as we see African states refusing to take action to restore something resembling civilisation in Zimbabwe, the begging bowl for Ethiopia is being passed around to us, yet again.

It is nearly 25 years since Ethiopia’s (and Bob Geldof’s) famous Feed The World campaign, and in that time Ethiopia’s population has grown from 33.5 million to 78 million today.

So why on earth should I do anything to encourage further catastrophic demographic growth in that country? Where is the logic? There is none. To be sure, there are two things saying that logic doesn’t count.

One is my conscience, and the other is the picture, yet again, of another wide-eyed child, yet again, gazing, yet again, at the camera, which yet again, captures the tragedy of . . .

Sorry. My conscience has toured this territory on foot and financially. Unlike most of you, I have been to Ethiopia; like most of you, I have stumped up the loot to charities to stop starvation there. The wide-eyed boy-child we saved, 20 years or so ago, is now a priapic, Kalashnikov-bearing hearty, siring children whenever the whim takes him.

There is, no doubt a good argument why we should prolong this predatory and dysfunctional economic, social and sexual system; but I do not know what it is. There is, on the other hand, every reason not to write a column like this.

It will win no friends, and will provoke the self-righteous wrath of, well, the self-righteous, letter-writing wrathful, a species which never fails to contaminate almost every debate in Irish life with its sneers and its moral superiority. It will also probably enrage some of the finest men in Irish life, like John O’Shea, of Goal; and the Finucane brothers, men whom I admire enormously. So be it.

But, please, please, you self-righteously wrathful, spare me mention of our own Famine, with this or that lazy analogy. There is no comparison. Within 20 years of the Famine, the Irish population was down by 30pc. Over the equivalent period, thanks to western food, the Mercedes 10-wheel truck and the Lockheed Hercules, Ethiopia’s has more than doubled.

Alas, that wretched country is not alone in its madness. Somewhere, over the rainbow, lies Somalia, another fine land of violent, Kalashnikov-toting, khat-chewing, girl-circumcising, permanently tumescent layabouts.

Indeed, we now have almost an entire continent of sexually

hyperactive indigents, with tens of millions of people who only survive because of help from the outside world.

This dependency has not stimulated political prudence or commonsense. Indeed, voodoo idiocy seems to be in the ascendant, with the next president of South Africa being a firm believer in the efficacy of a little tap water on the post-coital penis as a sure preventative against infection. Needless to say, poverty, hunger and societal meltdown have not prevented idiotic wars involving Tigre, Uganda, Congo, Sudan, Somalia, Eritrea etcetera.

Broad brush-strokes, to be sure. But broad brush-strokes are often the way that history paints its gaudier, if more decisive, chapters. Japan, China, Russia, Korea, Poland, Germany, Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia in the 20th century have endured worse broad brush-strokes than almost any part of Africa.

They are now — one way or another — virtually all giving aid to or investing in Africa, whereas Africa, with its vast savannahs and its lush pastures, is giving almost nothing to anyone, apart from AIDS.

Meanwhile, Africa’s peoples are outstripping their resources, and causing catastrophic ecological degradation. By 2050, the population of Ethiopia will be 177 million: The equivalent of France, Germany and Benelux today, but located on the parched and increasingly protein-free wastelands of the Great Rift Valley.

So, how much sense does it make for us actively to increase the adult population of what is already a vastly over-populated, environmentally devastated and economically dependent country?

How much morality is there in saving an Ethiopian child from starvation today, for it to survive to a life of brutal circumcision, poverty, hunger, violence and sexual abuse, resulting in another half-dozen such wide-eyed children, with comparably jolly little lives ahead of them? Of course, it might make you feel better, which is a prime reason for so much charity. But that is not good enough.

For self-serving generosity has been one of the curses of Africa. It has sustained political systems which would otherwise have collapsed.

It prolonged the Eritrean-Ethiopian war by nearly a decade. It is inspiring Bill Gates’ programme to rid the continent of malaria, when, in the almost complete absence of personal self-discipline, that disease is one of the most efficacious forms of population-control now operating.

If his programme is successful, tens of millions of children who would otherwise have died in infancy will survive to adulthood, he boasts. Oh good: then what?I know. Let them all come here. Yes, that’s an idea.

kmyers@independent.ie





The One about Globalisation

2 08 2009

Assuming you don’t want to be like any of these kids, here’s a quick primer on globalisation.

Globalisation Defined
“…(the) integration of national economies into the international economy through trade, direct foreign investment
short-term capital flows, international flows of workers and humanity generally, and flows of technology..” (Bhagwati)

***

Globalisation in parts

  1. Internationalisation of trade & investment
  2. Liberalisation (markets become freer)
  3. Universaliation (cultural interchange.. “global culture”)
  4. Westernisation (Western culture becomes dominant)
  5. Deterritorialisation (compression of time and space.. people become “closer”)

***

Sources of globalisation

  1. Technological revolution (speed and cost of global communication)
  2. Global liberalisation (less economic controls)
  3. Improvements in transportation of goods (container shipping and air freight)
  4. Globalised product structures
    - more corporations are becoming “stateless” (eg. Sony, FedEx, McDonald’s, StarBucks)




Growing underclass in ‘Lion City’

28 07 2009

(Al Jazeera )
05 June 2007     by Hamish MacDonald

Singapore’s government has now acknowledged there is a problem and in this year’s budget it introduced what it calls “bold” new welfare payments.
Long regarded as an economic miracle, Singapore faces a growing gap between rich and poor.

The city-state of Singapore is Asia’s second-richest country after Japan – a high-tech global hub for banking, transport and business.

Modern Singapore has never really had a problem with poverty, but globalisation and an ageing population are changing that.

A growing number of Singaporeans are now struggling to make ends meet – forcing radical changes to social and fiscal policy in a country where welfare remains a dirty word.

Tan Ching Hoo is 62 years old. He used to work as a waiter, but now he collects cardboard for a living.

For every kilogram, he earns the equivalent of 65 cents. “Whether I like or not, I have no choice,” he says. “I have to earn money.”

His son pays the rent of $50 a month for a one room apartment.

‘Dirty word’

Tan Ching Hoo lives in a crowded single room apartment

But Tan is not alone. Eight per cent of Singapore’s population is said to live in poverty and increasing numbers are joining that new class of urban poor.

Sinapan Samydorai of the Think Centre, an independent political research group, says for years Singapore was built around a concept of affluence, and was simply not prepared for the idea of poverty.

“Welfare was a dirty word in Singapore, even now. They don’t encourage welfare.”

Globalisation created Singapore’s economic miracle, reinforcing the self-styled image of the ‘lion city’.

Singapore’s wealth gap

  • GDP $28,077 per person in 2006
  • Economy forecast to grow 7 per cent in 2007
  • Between 2000 and 2005:
  • - Monthly income of Singapore’s poorest workers fell 4.3 per cent to $774 a month.
  • - Monthly income of Singapore’s richest workers grew 2.8 per cent to nearly 11,000 dollars a month
  • Source: UN, Singapore government

But it also brought cheaper migrant labour, and that has made it hard for an ageing population to compete.

While most countries have their disadvantaged, what makes Singapore different is that a country now known as one of the most affluent in Asia is developing what is being described as an underclass.

Singapore’s government has now acknowledged there is a problem and in this year’s budget it introduced what it calls “bold” new welfare payments.

Sylvia Lim, a member of parliament for the opposition Workers Party, says this represents something of a sea change in Singapore’s policy towards welfare.

“This is quite radical for Singapore,” she says.

“We have always lived under this system where you have to earn every cent that you get basically and now the government recognises that there are some people who just can’t earn enough now.”

‘Marginalised’

An ageing population is adding to the numbers living in poverty Singapore’s emerging underclass may be relatively small now, but its growth could threaten the political dynamic in what is effectively a one-party state.

Chua Hak Bin, a Singapore-based economist with Citigroup, says this is the first time the government has acknowledged the issue.

“There will be some social pressures, there will be a group that will be marginalised,” he says.

“I guess what is important though is that it is being recognised and the government is trying to do something to help those people.”

Back at his small one room flat Mr Tan has yet to sign up for any of the government’s new assistance programs.

The paperwork he says is just too complicated.

Even in pragmatic Singapore old habits die hard, and welfare, both giving and receiving, might take some getting used to.