An
excellent article by novelist Adelle Waldman in The
New Yorker a few weeks ago about depictions of marriages in great
literature led to a second excellent article by Catherine Nichols…. http://jezebel.com/one-weird-trick-that-makes-a-novel-addictive-1757781864
….that zeroed in on the psychologically sophisticated literary techniques of
Jane Austen and Charlotte Bronte in dramatizing the eternal marital dance. I’m
here today to add another layer to Nichols’s excellent analysis of Austen’s
subtle authorial artistry.
The
following is the heart of Nichols’s cogent analysis of what she calls Austen’s
art/technique of “adaptation”:
“Adaptation
is a kaleidoscopic way of understanding human nature, and a novelistic
technique for showing that character isn’t fixed. In real life, people change
constantly, depending on who’s in the room, or what they’ve each understood of
the others’ nature and mood. Character isn’t only a ball rolling down a hill,
these women write it like a game of billiards, with endless potential shifts
and ricochets. These female characters aren’t just judging which man’s mind
will give them the best hope for a respectful marriage; they are describing and
creating a frame for the ways people create themselves in relation to others.
This
is the way adaptation plays out: Person A comprehends some information about
person B’s nature from what B says or does, and that changes how A approaches
her afterward. It sounds simple, but I think it’s very difficult to write and
nearly impossible to write well. Almost no one tries. Jane Austen and Charlotte
Bronte each did this over and over.
Here’s
an example from Pride and Prejudice: The first time Mr. Darcy tries to
express his interest in Elizabeth, he asks her to dance, and she refuses.
Later, he sees her reading, and he comments to other people in the room that
reading is important and his library is huge. Really great library at
Darcy’s house. Elizabeth, however, doesn’t take the hint. Any shy person might
recognize the arrows in his flirting quiver—standing around near her and saying
to his friends that he likes the things that he thinks she likes. It’s
as effective for him as it usually is for the rest of us; she doesn’t know, or
doesn’t want to, that flirting is taking place.
Then,
the next time Mr. Darcy is alone with Elizabeth and his friends, he adapts. He
makes an unflattering observation about Mr. Bingley’s personality, offered to
Elizabeth as a gift. He’s changing his approach based on a comment she made in
the previous scene. He can only change within the range of his own character,
which is shy (he’d never say this in another context), clever (no one fully
gets the insult except for Elizabeth), and sort of mean. It’s an incredibly efficient
scene, and it’s how Darcy, a man with few lines and no third person narration
spilling his secrets, can be as well-developed a character as Elizabeth
herself.
Mr.
Darcy’s original attraction to Elizabeth is described the way Waldman figures
male-authored love stories in general. He notices that she is pretty, has a
nice figure and her eyes seem smart; on this topic, he, via Austen, does not go
into specifics. No physical description can ever be as specific as the way
dialogue telegraphs thought. Austen gives us much more direct access to the
attractions of his character than to the beauty of Elizabeth’s figure.
In
the scene about Mr. Bingley’s character—in which Elizabeth doesn’t buy Darcy’s
diss of a friend—Mr. Darcy speaks with greater meaning than any of his friends.
He sometimes puts covert significance for separate people into a single
statement. The arguments he makes are well-reasoned. From the perspective of a
writer, that’s a real trick: it’s hard to make a character sound smart while
they’re also wrong. Elizabeth counters this with her own style of intelligence,
which makes Darcy adapt as the conversation continues: Austen, here, is doing a
backflip between trapezes.
Instead
of a character being defined at the start and continuing to make his or her
characteristic speech and actions through to the last page, Austen’s characters
change from page to page. The adaptations are shown directly through dialogue
and action, connecting the reader (who has access to these things the way they
generally don’t, to vague allusions to beauty or allure) to the changes and the
reasons for them—as well as the effect among all the characters that these
changes create. This technique makes a romantic plot like a murder mystery; the
readers have the same clues as the detective. When Elizabeth falls in love with
Mr. Darcy, it’s for reasons we’ve experienced ourselves. We’re in the
laboratory of human nature.” END QUOTE
FROM NICHOLS ARTICLE
Nichols
has chosen wisely in her textual examples, and I agree with every single aspect
of them that Nichols so sharply delineates. But I now toss out a question about
a hidden assumption that undergirds her analysis: how do we know that Elizabeth
Bennet—who is, after all, a 20-year old country girl with no formal education
who also (as Austen cleverly slides in during a scene at Rosings) has not even
had a governess to provide organized homeschooling---is as good a “studier of
character” (today, we’d say, an amateur psychologist) as she believes herself
to be?
Yes,
I know you’ll immediately respond: that’s the whole point of the arc of the
story in P&P; that Eliza initially relies too much on her “first
impressions” in quickly hating Darcy and believing Wickham, but then, as the
novel goes along, she learns to wise up and correct her initial errors of
judgment. She morphs from bumbling police inspector to Miss Marple in a matter
of a few months.
But…what
if there’s another turn of the literary screw that Jane Austen has cleverly worked
into her art of adaptation, but has left it entirely implicit, to be discovered
only by readers who remain skeptical long enough to resist being swept up in the
high romantic tide of the latter half of the novel?
I.e.,
what if you turn the screw another revolution, and find that Elizabeth might
just have been right in her “first impressions” of Darcy after all, but Darcy, being
a hardened narcissist who cannot take no for an answer, regroups after her rejection
of his first proposal, and then strategically uses all his considerable resources and skills to stage-manage a series
of experiences for Elizabeth (culminating in her virtual orgasmic response to
seeing Pemberley-both its exteriors and its interiors—and Darcy—both on the
wall and in person) which subtly manipulate this overconfident country girl
into surrendering her initial hostility in favor of abject, despairing yearning
for Darcy to propose again?
I’ve
been saying for 11 years, that P&P, like all of Austen’s novels, is a
double story, like a duck-rabbit figure ground drawing or Holbein’s Ambassadors. In the overt fictional universe
that is universally perceived by Janeites, Darcy does repent and reform,
because, as Nichols correctly observes, people in the real world do change,
adapt, and evolve over time, in response to the shaping feedback they receive
from others.
But
in the shadow story, the alternative parallel fictional universe of the novel,
Darcy does not change, he doubles down, and compels Elizabeth to change and
adapt—not to overcome an erroneous first impression, but to give up an accurate
one in favor of a false self-portrait hastily painted by Darcy.
Put
another way, the overt story of P&P is the ultimate female romantic fantasy:
in a world where men (the horseback riders in Nichols’s metaphor) almost never
adapt to a woman’s needs and wishes, here is a powerful man who does adapt, out
of love for the woman who dares to criticize him. But the shadow story is the
ultimate female cautionary tale: in a world where men almost never respond
positively and humbly to a woman’s criticism, don’t be too quick to believe it
when a horseback rider suddenly morphs into a horse before your eyes, because
what’s too good to be true almost always isn’t true!
So, you
then ask, which is the “real” story? Jane Austen’s answer---both of them are possible, so the only truly
self-protective and pragmatic response of a young vulnerable woman in Lizzy’s
shoes is to hold out as long as possible for more data. I.e., she shouldn’t believe
positive first impressions too quickly, but she also shouldn’t believe positive
second impressions too quickly, either. The wise person embraces the ambiguity
of human relations, especially in matters of romance, and verifies, verifies, and
verifies again before trusting.
There’s
the hard-headed Austen whom Auden famously compared to the man who is generally
considered to have written the world’s greatest novel, the one that supposedly
depicted real life most truly:
You
could not shock her more than she shocks me;
Beside her Joyce seems innocent as grass.
It makes me most uncomfortable to see
An English spinster of middle class
Describe the amorous effect of “brass”,
Reveal so frankly and with such sobriety
The economic basis of society.
Beside her Joyce seems innocent as grass.
It makes me most uncomfortable to see
An English spinster of middle class
Describe the amorous effect of “brass”,
Reveal so frankly and with such sobriety
The economic basis of society.
If
you think about it, it’s the dialectic of the overt and shadow stories of
P&P that fits most closely with Auden’s unshockable Austen. Neither
incurable romantic nor unshakable cynic, she was the world’s greatest teacher
of the deeper art of adaptation.
Cheers,
ARNIE
@JaneAustenCode
on Twitter
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