Sunday, April 26, 2020

Vignettes: An English Girl in Hong Kong, 1970


Well, Tim, here i am flat on my back. No, i don't mean i've succumbed to the pleasures Wanchai. It's just that i've been laid low with food poisoning. Quite infuriating it is as there's a super party on tonight and I'm just going to have to miss it. Also it is Chinese New Year's day, so gong hei fat choy! Thus commences the year of the dog, a very bad year for marriage, so you might as well leave it another year before you think of sending me one of your telegrams!


Monday, April 20, 2020

"Conduction" by Ta-Nehisi Coates As Political Allegory

Ever since I read "Conduction" by Ta-Nehisi Coates in The New Yorker of June 10 & 17 of 2019, I've been wondering if it should be viewed as political allegory, in this case a story set in the age of slavery illuminating current circumstances.

Allegory involves the representation of abstract ideas by a specific narrative.  In this instance, the idea in question is where should blacks look for betterment?


Sunday, April 19, 2020

Some Ideas About The Use of Sex in Fiction

Probably one of the first things writers learn, or get told, is sex sells. But if one incorporates it in a story simply for that reason, problems often arise.

How can one depict it, or impart it with significance, in a manner that is not derivative?  All too often, the answer seems to be: make it even more transgressive than has previously been the case.  Contemporary fiction is riddled with that sort of thing -- and one has to grudgingly admire the imagination or enterprise of some authors.

But I ran across another option when reading a review of Julian Barnes latest book, "The Man in Red Coat."  Therein, the reviewer, Parul Sehgal, says that in Barnes case, "Desire -- sexual jealously -- lies at the core of much of his work, not just as dramatic engine, but as a spur to moral thinking." He then goes on to quote Barnes as having said: "Sex is the area where moral decisions, moral questions, most clearly express themselves. It's only in sexual relationships that you come up against immediate questions of what's right and wrong."

Well, that may be overstating the case, but you get the point. And in Barnes' case, his own experience may be one place in which he ran up against the issues in question.  According to Seghgal, the author's life has been characterized in part by "his attachment to a charismatic and congenitally unfaithful woman."