{"id":3444,"date":"2009-06-03T09:15:32","date_gmt":"2009-06-03T14:15:32","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/?p=3444"},"modified":"2012-02-21T00:39:41","modified_gmt":"2012-02-21T05:39:41","slug":"3444","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/2009\/06\/03\/3444\/","title":{"rendered":"dfw his legacy"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><strong>DEATH IS NOT THE END:<br \/>\nDavid Foster Wallace: His Legacy and his Critics<\/strong><br \/>\nBy <a href=\"http:\/\/www.thepointmag.com\/death1.html\" target=\"_blank\">Jon Baskin <\/a><\/p>\n<p>David Foster Wallace, who hanged himself in his home last September, wrote about authenticity, self-consciousness and the pursuit of happiness in America. It became a commonplace and then a clich\u00e9 and then almost a taunt to call him the greatest writer of his generation, yet his project remained only vaguely understood when it was understood at all. With the benefit of time, it will be recognized that Wallace had less in common with Eggers and Franzen than he did with Dostoevsky and Joyce. Against what he believed to be the outmoded theoretical commitments of his predecessors and contemporaries, he labored to return literary fiction to the deep problems of subjective experience.<!--more--> For those of us who came of age in the 1990s, his fiction was a relief and a gift. Confused, alienated and inauthentic though it might be, subjective consciousness still existed\u2014and it was still the business of the novelist to describe it.<\/p>\n<p>Wallace\u2019s method was rooted in the conviction that literature ought to address the paradoxes and confusions of its moment. His moment was late capitalist America, which he knew from his own life manufactured nothing so surely as a sense of fraudulence and despair. This was especially true for the young and jaded readers of literary fiction, a demographic whose acute discomfort with meaning, emotion and value Wallace considered symptomatic of a broader unease in the culture. He saw how we despised ourselves for being persuaded by the same advertisements we parodied and ridiculed; how we settled for pleasure in lieu of fulfillment; how our achievements tended to multiply our dissatisfaction. Of all the people writing fiction in the 90s, only Wallace spoke directly to us. His characters, like his readers, were educated, affluent, dissatisfied and lonely. Articulate to the point of catatonia, they seemed incapable of saying what they meant. Likewise, Wallace\u2019s prose rambled over and through meaning like a sputtering motor trying to compensate for some broken inner part. Though he once complained he could \u201cnever seem to get the clarity and concision\u201d he wanted, this failure held the key to his fiction\u2019s uncanny impersonation of the educated American mind\u2014a mind choked with manipulative jargon and self-conscious prattle.<\/p>\n<p>Wallace had several narrative voices, all fashioned out of contemporary idioms. His early stories feature sentences beginning \u201cand but so\u201d and \u201cyes and but,\u201d which mystified critics and comforted young readers. His later fiction is crammed with the technical jargon of the modern professions. In a story told from over the shoulder of a \u201cdepressed person,\u201d he assumed the formal clinical rhythm of therapeutic discourse:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p><span style=\"color: #000000;\">The depressed person\u2019s therapist, whose school of therapy rejected the transference relation as a therapeutic resource and thus deliberately eschewed confrontation and \u201cshould\u201d-statements and all normative, judging, \u201cauthority\u201d-based theory in favor of a more value-neutral bioexperiential model and the creative use of analogy and narrative (including, but not necessarily mandating, the use of hand puppets, polystyrene props and toys, role-playing &#8230; and in appropriate cases, whole meticulously scripted and storyboarded Childhood Reconstructions), had deployed the following medications in an attempt to help the depressed person find some relief from her acute affective discomfort and progress in her (i.e., the depressed person\u2019s) journey toward enjoying some semblance of a normal adult life: Paxil, Zoloft, Prozac, Tofranil, Welbutrin, Elavil, Metrazol in combination with unilateral ECT \u2026 None had delivered any significant relief from the pain and feelings of emotional isolation that rendered the depressed person\u2019s every waking hour an indescribable hell on earth&#8230;<\/span><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Critics would label the writer of such passages a \u201cshow off,\u201d a \u201ctin man\u201d and a \u201chysterical realist\u201d turning parlor tricks with his prose. But this said more about the wariness and suspicion with which some segments of American culture viewed what they (mistakenly) believed to be Wallace\u2019s postmodern pedigree than it did about Wallace himself. A close reading of any passage in his mature fiction reveals a concentrated attack on the plague of irresponsible intellect\u2014and especially the kind of irresponsible intellect he associated with the generation of American artists that had preceded him. It is no coincidence that the therapist, in the passage above, rejects methods relying on \u201cnormative\u201d authority in favor of a \u201cvalue-neutral\u201d approach. Nor that the list of meta-narrative games and drugs she offers the depressed person do nothing to salve her \u201cpain and emotional isolation.\u201d The therapist is a caricature of the morally noncommittal fiction writers Wallace would align himself against. Her experiments are stand-ins for the alienating and dysfunctional strategies Wallace attributed to mid-twentieth-century avant-garde theory and art. The story is ultimately about the failure of such strategies to satisfy the needs of a depressed person.<\/p>\n<p>What the depressed person wants to do, she tells her therapist, is \u201csomehow really truly literally \u2018share\u2019\u201d her pain; Wallace wanted to \u201cshare\u201d too. Great fiction, he once said, engaged its reader in a \u201cdeep, significant conversation with another consciousness,\u201d a formulation that can seem vague or even trite if not considered in relation to Wallace\u2019s primary intellectual influence, Wittgenstein. Commentators\u2014including Marshall Boswell in an entire chapter of his book-length study <em>Understanding David Foster Wallace<\/em>\u2014have lingered over Wallace\u2019s undergraduate infatuation with analytic philosophy, and in particular his thematic affinity with Wittgenstein. But the degree to which the Austrian philosopher supplied Wallace\u2019s fundamental self-conception as an artist has been under-appreciated. It was above all Wittgenstein\u2019s technique that was of interest\u2014particularly his style in the<em> Philosophical Investigations<\/em>, in which he revived, through the figure of an imaginary interlocutor, the ancient conception of philosophy as dialogue. For Wittgenstein, the point of the philosophical \u201cconversation\u201d was to address confusions intrinsic to his reader\u2019s language and way of life. Rather than one \u201cphilosophical method,\u201d he advanced in the <em>Investigations<\/em> a variety of techniques for addressing various confusions, \u201clike different therapies.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Wallace attempted to enact such a conversation in his art. He would borrow from the <em>Investigations <\/em>not only themes\u2014solipsism, language, meaning\u2014but also the theoretical bulwark for a literature that was simultaneously challenging and <em>therapeutic<\/em> in the Wittgensteinian sense. The therapy was necessary and even urgent for a readership which, Wallace believed, had internalized not only postmodernism\u2019s theoretical prejudices but also its involute habits of thought. The millennial subject was addicted to the same pathologies he was desperate to escape; nowhere was this more evident than in the difficulty literary critics had in responding meaningfully to Wallace\u2019s books. What Wallace wanted to \u201cshare\u201d most was a way out. But he would start with his readers, in the middle. The maze of contemporary thinking would have to be dismantled from within.<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"http:\/\/www.thepointmag.com\/secbr.gif\" alt=\"\" border=\"0\" \/>The generation of novelists that followed Beckett pursued what may one day be known as a series of incredibly interesting dead ends. At the beginning of the twentieth century, Joyce, Woolf, Stein and Faulkner had developed experimental narrative techniques to explore what they took to be the new facts of human experience. They announced that the fragmented and self-conscious modern subject should be represented by a fragmented and self-conscious prose. Yet by the time Wallace arrived on the scene in the 1980s, writers were turning the techniques developed by the modernists against the idea of the modern subject, as well as most experiences we would conventionally call \u201chuman.\u201d For the advanced artists of the 1960s and 70s, alienation was not a subjective experience but a social fact. It was no accident that their hostility to what had formerly been considered the novelist\u2019s chief task\u2014depicting subjective consciousness via the convention of character\u2014had culminated in a \u201cLiterature of Exhaustion\u201d charting the imminent death of the novel.<\/p>\n<p>Though he admired John Barth, Don DeLillo and especially Thomas Pynchon, Wallace was critical of what he believed to be two dangerously antiquated aspects of their fiction. Philosophically, he took issue with what had become the habitual postmodern announcement that there were no longer any subjects. Barth, Pynchon, DeLillo\u2014as well as Wallace\u2019s popular contemporaries, Brett Easton Ellis and Mark Leyner\u2014all sought to demonstrate how culture subsumed subjectivity. In place of characters, they presented mechanized or commercially determined automatons. Even the great novels of Pynchon and DeLillo treated subjectivity as <em>at most<\/em> a product of nostalgia for an epoch past saving. This made for insightful cultural commentary and a fiction so consistently alienating that the alienation itself became familiar. In early interviews and stories, Wallace indicated he would take a different tack. What deserved the novelist\u2019s attention was the persistence of subjectivity, not its extinction. \u201cIf you operate, which most of us do, from the premise that there are things about the contemporary U.S. that make it distinctively hard to be a real human being, then maybe half of fiction\u2019s job is to dramatize what it is that makes it tough,\u201d he said in an interview. \u201cThe other half is to dramatize the fact that we still \u2018are\u2019 human beings, now. Or can be.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Wallace became the chronicler of a world where it was \u201ctough\u201d to be human, but not impossible. This was the subjective world of his readers, themselves animated by an anxious consciousness of their limitations and contingency. It was an article of faith for him that the educated person still came to serious literature for answers to the desperate questions of existence. If literature\u2019s response was that this person, despite all appearances, no longer existed in any meaningful sense, this was a way of ending a conversation, not starting one. Wallace did not shrink from depicting an inhuman world in his novels, but he returned to the problem of what it felt like to carry on a human life in such a world. This is why it is a mistake to connect his own textual experiments\u2014jump cuts, essayistic digressions, endnotes\u2014with the distancing techniques characteristic of his postmodern predecessors. They are more appropriately linked with Wittgenstein\u2019s language games, deployed to help the author mimic, explore and ultimately expose the confusions of a demographically distinct reader.<\/p>\n<p>Wallace\u2019s second critique was stylistic; rhetorically, too, he believed the advanced writers of his time had fallen into obsolescence. The problem received its clearest expression in the influential 1993 essay-cum-manifesto, \u201cE Unibus Pluram: Television and U.S. Fiction.\u201d The thesis of the essay was that a once-subversive postmodern rhetoric predicated on \u201cirony and ridicule\u201d no longer qualified as an appropriate challenge to a culture which had assimilated rebellion, cynicism and irony into its crassest popular forms: game shows, Pepsi ads, <em>Married With Children<\/em>. It was up to artists, Wallace believed, to offer counsel on questions of judgment, emotion and truth. Most troubling was the possibility that his contemporaries were failing at this task, instead contributing unwittingly to the ruling obsession with hip nihilism, \u201cvalue-neutral\u201d morality and an essentially <em>ironic <\/em>response to life\u2019s challenges. The essay concluded with Wallace\u2019s memorable vision of what would count as <em>truly<\/em> counter-cultural art. In contrast to \u201cthe old postmodern insurgents [who] risked the gasp and squeal: shock, disgust, outrage, censorship \u2026 the next real literary \u2018rebels\u2019\u2026 might be artists willing to risk the yawn, the rolled eyes, the cool smile, the nudged ribs, the parody of gifted ironists, the \u2018Oh how <em>banal<\/em>\u2019.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>While \u201cE Unibus Pluram\u201d inspired an assortment of earnest millennial fiction, (most of it published in <em>McSweeney\u2019s<\/em>), critics like Michiko Kakutani, A.O. Scott and Walter Kirn would later chastise Wallace from precisely what they considered to be the essay\u2019s point of view. They pointed out that his fiction\u2014including <em>Girl With Curious Hair<\/em>, the collection of short stories he had published two years prior\u2014contained plenty of irony and cynicism, not to mention a battery of pop references and authorial interruptions. In fact, neither <em>Girl<\/em> nor any of Wallace\u2019s mature writing was at odds with the argument in \u201cE Unibus Pluram,\u201d which most critics seemed to have stopped reading halfway through. Wallace believed irony and ridicule had to be recognized as regnant, and potentially destructive, American norms. But since American literature \u201ctends to be about U.S. culture and the people who inhabit it,\u201d the contemporary writer had to acknowledge those norms in and through his fiction. Wallace might have wanted to tackle the fundamental questions head-on, like Dostoevsky\u2014he even expressed such a desire in a late essay. The cultured postmodern reader, however, was programmed to tune out forms of address that did not rise to a certain level of self-consciousness or sophistication. It was neither possible nor desirable for contemporary fiction to eschew the ironic entirely, although there might, Wallace hinted, emerge a writer who recognized it as a means rather than an end.<\/p>\n<p>The broader ambition of Wallace\u2019s early stories was to explore how it felt to live in the world of <em>Jeopardy<\/em>, <em>The David Letterman Show<\/em>, McDonald\u2019s, <em>The Sot-Weed Factor<\/em>, <em>Gravity\u2019s Rainbow<\/em> and <em>White Noise<\/em>. And how it felt was: lonely. The opening story in<em> Girl <\/em>takes place on the set of <em>Jeopardy<\/em>, where one of the producers intones about \u201cthese lonely or somehow disturbed people who\u2019ve had only the TV all their lives.\u201d The collection\u2019s concluding novella, \u201cWestward the Course of Empire Takes its Way,\u201d concerns three young adults, all consumers of literary fiction, and all incapable of carrying on significant conversations with anyone but themselves. No less \u201clonely or somehow disturbed\u201d than the TV-watchers, the aspiring intellectuals are the distressed products of what Wallace clearly considered irresponsible or immoral art. One is \u201cfascinated with the misdirecting pose of bloodless abstraction.\u201d Another thinks: \u201cTo be a Subject is to be Alone. Trapped. Kept from yourself\u201d; the third that \u201ccynicism and na\u00efvet\u00e9 are mutually exclusive.\u201d For Wallace, these characters are deluded by a false theory\u2014what Wittgenstein would have called a \u201cpicture.\u201d According to the theory, the<em> authentic <\/em>contemporary subject, just like the real artist, sacrifices sincerity and fellow feeling for the deeper truths of abstraction, alienation and cynicism.<\/p>\n<p>The artist cannot afford to be deceived about the nature of his historical moment. Given the dialectic of escapism and conformity that had characterized mid-century popular culture, ironic alienation may have once qualified as an appropriate artistic strategy. The children of what Wallace once called \u201cprobably the single most self-absorbed generation since Louis XIV\u201d faced new and opposite \u201chorrors.\u201d Chief among them: \u201canomie and solipsism and a peculiarly American loneliness: the prospect of dying without once having loved something more than yourself.\u201d Alienation was for these Americans a way of life, not a confrontational art form. The writer for <em>this <\/em>generation would have to know his readers well enough to detain them with the appropriate challenge. The challenge would also be the therapy. The novel for our times would compel its reader to confront the limitations of his intellectual commitments.<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"http:\/\/www.thepointmag.com\/secbr.gif\" alt=\"\" border=\"0\" \/>Long, allusive and multivocal, <em>Infinite Jest<\/em> made Wallace a literary celebrity in 1996, and now looks like the era\u2019s only heartbreaking work of staggering genius. Although it was immediately compared to encyclopedic postmodern landmarks like <em>Underworld <\/em>and<em> Gravity\u2019s Rainbow<\/em>, <em>Jest\u2019<\/em>s refrain is disarmingly traditional. In interviews, Wallace said he wanted to write about a \u201cstomach-level sadness\u201d and \u201clostness\u201d he saw in his American friends, which he blamed on \u201cthe intellectualization and aestheticizing of principles and values in this country.\u201d The theme was a familiar one in Western literature from <em>Hamlet<\/em> to <em>Ulysses<\/em>, but it augured an attack on prevailing high-cultural assumptions. Consolidating and expanding upon Wallace\u2019s early criticisms of irony and alienation as ends-in-themselves, <em>Jest<\/em> emerges as a powerful counterstatement against what he perceived to be a na\u00efvet\u00e9 at the heart of the postmodern project.<\/p>\n<p><em>Jest <\/em>is often described in terms of its formal characteristics, but the novel\u2019s significance is inseparable from a content that\u2014as we will see\u2014ultimately works against the grain of the form. The story is anchored in the asymptotic narratives of teenage tennis prodigy Hal Incandenza and recovering Demerol addict Don Gately, who represent inverse notches on the bell curve of American achievement. When we first encounter them, Hal is a gifted student-athlete, about to set off a recruiting war between top colleges, while Gately is a burned-out former football star, now an orderly at a shabby recovery center down the hill from Hal\u2019s school. The setting is a dystopic near-future America where the years are sponsored by multinational corporations (\u201cThe Year of the Whopper,\u201d \u201cThe Year of the Depend Adult Undergarment\u201d), the president is a big business stooge, and terrorists, bitter at having their land and culture polluted by America, attack with a weapon of potentially mass destruction. Meanwhile, the shell-shocked American public plays sports or indulges its addictions in a vast, corporately mediated \u201cconfusion of permissions.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The great question is how, given such circumstances, one can live a human life. Hal\u2019s answer is a tragic one. Preceding the frame of the novel is the suicide via microwave of Hal\u2019s father, an avant-garde filmmaker, world-class alcoholic and the founder of Ennett Tennis Academy. Hal discovers what is left of his dead dad in the kitchen, but refuses to speak about it with his mother or therapist. As the novel progresses, he withdraws from family and friends, taking solace in a secretive daily marijuana-smoking ritual under center court. In fact, Hal had begun to sink into his anomic malaise even before his father\u2019s death, which was why the elder Incandenza had left his son a message in the form of a film. He had hoped the film, named \u201cInfinite Jest,\u201d would be a \u201cmagically entertaining toy to dangle at the infant still somewhere alive in the boy, to make his eyes light and toothless mouth open unconsciously, to laugh. To bring him \u2018out of himself\u2019 as they say.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The father\u2019s intent was concomitant with Wallace\u2019s own ambition to carry on a significant conversation that brought his readers out of <em>themselves<\/em>. But, underscoring the delicacy and risk involved in such a project, the \u201centertainment\u201d crafted by Hal\u2019s father turns out to be too entertaining, immediately paralyzing its viewer with insatiable desire. Intercepted by wheelchair-bound Quebecois separatists planning to disseminate it en masse to the American public, \u201cInfinite Jest\u201d never reaches Hal, who, in the book\u2019s opening sequence\u2014chronologically, its end\u2014reports that he is no longer able to make himself understood. What he means is that the link between his ability to think and his ability to express has been broken; when he <em>thinks<\/em> he is talking, his listener registers chaotic animal grunts. The condition figures as the logical terminus of a hyper self-consciousness that transforms the head into a cage.<\/p>\n<p>Hal is a member of a literary species traceable from Shakespeare\u2019s melancholy Dane down through Ivan Karamazov and Stephen Daedalus; David Amsden has called it the \u201cgrieving white male of high education and questionable maturity.\u201d These protagonists\u2014stand-ins for many of <em>Jest\u2019s<\/em> readers, if not its author\u2014are young, brilliant, introverted and depressed. In almost every case, they lack a father. They either drive themselves insane, or are rescued by an ersatz father who has lived more and thought less. <em>Jest<\/em> suggests Gately might have saved Hal. But unlike Joyce, Wallace never brings his two heroes together. The reader is more fortunate. As Hal fades from the second half of the novel, Gately and his grizzled peer group of survivors at Ennett Recovery Center increasingly command the page. The truly<em> radical <\/em>thing about the book is Wallace\u2019s un-ironic assertion that Alcoholics Anonymous offers a series of wisdoms about life. And that AA\u2019s seemingly banal bromides (\u201cA Day at a Time,\u201d \u201cHang In,\u201d \u201cAsk for Help\u201d) may be essential not just for down-and-out addicts like Gately, but for sophisticates like Hal.<\/p>\n<p>An appropriately skeptical reader wonders when and how the author will puncture the balloon of respect he inflates around AA, but Wallace finally means to suggest that AA\u2019s \u201ccorny slogans\u201d are deeper than the condescending witticisms with which we might dismiss them. As a response to despair, the program turns out to be both more serious and more effective than the high-concept entertainment created by Hal\u2019s father. The precocious teens at Hal\u2019s tennis academy are addicted too, some to substances and almost all to the individualistic, irony-soaked culture Wallace had described in <em>Girl <\/em>and \u201cE Unibus Pluram.\u201d The Recovery Center\u2014an \u201cirony-free zone\u201d devoted to openhearted sharing\u2014offers an alternative path.<\/p>\n<p>That this is a path likely to be denigrated as na\u00efve, silly and uninteresting by many of those who read novels by David Foster Wallace was a fact hardly lost on the author. <em>Jest<\/em> challenges its readers most directly not with endnotes, long paragraphs, or obscure references to post-structuralist critics (we were ready for all those things), but by validating a life-approach that cuts against everything we\u2019ve learned is worthy of our attention. Many people in America already knew that AA worked; Wallace, however, was the first to propose it as a solution to the problem of postmodern thinking. This problem had the structure of addiction, he suggested. That was why it took a sophisticated, difficult novel like <em>Infinite Jest<\/em> to make the people who tend to read sophisticated, difficult novels think hard about things that were meaningful and true.<\/p>\n<p>But it was not only a question of rhetorical appeal. The opposition between <em>Jest<\/em>\u2019s form and its content speaks to our contemporary paranoia about earnestness. One of our great screenwriters, Charlie Kaufman, shares with Wallace an artistic commitment to complication in the service of sincerity. Both have been misunderstood as excessively cold or calculating. Both are engaged in the essentially modernist task of addressing what they perceive to be the current facts of subjective experience. Although both want to help their audience break out of the postmodern labyrinth, their art expresses the insight that, today, there is nothing simple about being sincere, open, or un-ironic. To be an adult in America means to be implicated in a convoluted network of attitudes and concerns. Na\u00efvet\u00e9 is no escape. \u201cPure\u201d emotion or grace lies on the far side of self-consciousness, not prior to it. Recent revelations about Wallace\u2019s unfinished last novel only emphasize his devotion to this formula. According to <em>The New Yorker<\/em>\u2019s D.T. Max, <em>The Pale King<\/em> was to be a meditation on boredom as an antidote to the frenetic onslaught of American life, set in the Byzantine bureaucracy of the IRS. It would begin with an author\u2019s introduction in the metafictional spirit of Nabokov\u2019s <em>Pale Fire<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>As such, it is critical for Wallace that AA is a product of the complexity of the present. Its seemingly simplistic insights proceed from an extremely sophisticated grasp of addiction, which Wallace presents as <em>the <\/em>millennial American affliction. From the standpoint of AA, the addict seeks refuge in his substance from the pain of contemporary life. But his worst addiction is not to his substance, but to a highly reflexive and indulgent way of <em>thinking<\/em>. Ironically, this unites Wallace\u2019s addicts both with the metafictionist and the metafictionist\u2019s theoretical partner, the post-structuralist critic. Deleuze, Jameson and especially Lacan show up in <em>Jest<\/em> in various capacities. For Wallace, the significance of such theorists lay less in their theories than in their endorsement of a pattern of thought that tended to bend back on itself. In a central passage of \u201cE Unibus Pluram,\u201d he had criticized the \u201cfrankly idealistic\u201d postmodern belief that \u201cetiology and diagnosis pointed toward cure, that a revelation of imprisonment led to freedom.\u201d The belief actually goes back at least to Freud. Wallace did not buy it. The point in <em>Jest<\/em> is that theories built on the search for causes and the exposition of symptoms provide no medicine for a person in pain. A potent AA slogan, designed especially for the Recovery Center\u2019s reluctant intellectuals, is, \u201cMy Best Thinking Got Me Here,\u201d a companion to the complementary admonition to \u201cCheck Your Head at the Door.\u201d In Wallace\u2019s AA, pain is acknowledged and treated; \u201cunderstanding\u201d is a potential intruder better left out in the cold.<\/p>\n<p>The full radicality\u2014or conservatism, depending on your point of view\u2014of the stance expressed by <em>Jest <\/em>can be stated as follows: a good theory does not amount to a good life; self-examination should take place only within rigorous limits; true therapy helps the subject <em>escape<\/em> from his head. The whole novel brings Gately to the revelation that \u201ceverything unendurable was in the head,\u201d a point confirmed by Hal\u2019s cerebral imprisonment (which <em>is<\/em> \u201cunendurable\u201d). Thus do AA\u2019s grim practical maxims become a hammer to pound on some of the basic presumptions of late twentieth-century high culture. Wallace was often accused of fashionable postmodern pretension, which inverts his potential vulnerability. Critics could more accurately fault Wallace for the kind of reactionary dogmatism associated with the late Tolstoy, whose turn to folk Christianity had a similar structure and motivation as Wallace\u2019s valorization of AA.<\/p>\n<p>But for Wallace the need for a new approach was as urgent as the pain and trauma the novel\u2019s depressed characters continuously struggle to describe. A chief merit of <em>Jest <\/em>is its meticulous documentation of the varieties of contemporary pain. Hal himself is sunk in \u201canhedonia\u201d\u2014a \u201ckind of spiritual torpor in which one loses the ability to feel pleasure or attachment to things formerly important.\u201d He is fortunate in comparison to the novel\u2019s Ophelia, Kate Gompert, a recovering marijuana addict depressed past the point of \u201cnumb emptiness.\u201d As is almost axiomatic in Wallace\u2019s fiction, the pain ascribed to Gompert is simultaneously literal (it hurts) and literary (it hurts not being able to describe how it hurts). She knows the feeling simply as <em>It<\/em>:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p><span style=\"color: #000000;\">It is an unnumb intuition in which the world is fully rich and animate \u2026 and also thoroughly painful and malignant and antagonistic to the self \u2026 Its emotional character, the feeling Gompert describes It as, is probably mostly indescribable except as a sort of double bind in which any\/all of the alternatives we associate with human agency\u2014sitting or standing, doing or resting, speaking or keeping silent, living or dying\u2014are not just unpleasant but literally horrible. It is also lonely on a level that cannot be conveyed.<\/span><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>It is impossible to understand <em>Jest<\/em>\u2014and Wallace\u2019s fiction more generally\u2014without taking seriously Wallace\u2019s ambition to write a novel that would not only document but also respond to these kinds of pain. \u00b9 Modern art, he believed, too often treated pain as corresponding to some existential truth, converted it into an abstraction, or glared at it for amusement. Wallace\u2019s therapeutic art <em>always<\/em> treated pain as a symptom of distress, confusion and isolation. Within the novel, the variously damaged characters turn to the common cultural palliatives: drugs, sports, entertainment, therapy\u2014as well as what are familiar resources for Wallace\u2019s readers: cynicism, theory, avant-garde art. Through this maze of failures some are led to AA, while others go quietly insane or kill themselves with ghastly creativity. These \u201cothers\u201d are privileged and suffering intellectuals like Hal and his father. For them, and readers like them, Wallace\u2019s sincere prescription is the novel itself. The father\u2019s failed communication with his son, the film \u201cInfinite Jest,\u201d is transformed into what the author hoped would be a successful communication with his readers: the novel,<em> Infinite Jest<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"http:\/\/www.thepointmag.com\/secbr.gif\" alt=\"\" border=\"0\" \/>In his 1969 essay \u201cMusic Discomposed,\u201d Stanley Cavell pointed out that twentieth-century art criticism shared with twentieth-century art an obsession with \u201cthe dangers of fraudulence, and of trust.\u201d That is, said Cavell, \u201cfraudulence, and the experience of fraudulence,\u201d was endemic to the experience of modern and postmodern art, and it was also the axis along which such art was dissected by critics. In the 1960s and 70s this meant questions like: \u201cIs Pop Art art? Are canvases with a few stripes or chevrons on them art? Are the novels of Raymond Roussel or Alain Robbe-Grillet? Are art movies?\u201d<\/p>\n<p>The critical response to Wallace demonstrates that we have hardly moved beyond such questions. It would be difficult to imagine a writer more committed and sincere in our time, yet during his life a formula with wide public currency insisted that Wallace\u2019s talent was unmitigated by purpose. Superficial debates over his footnotes, quixotic sentence structure and reluctance to tell a straightforward story almost always circled back and were reducible to the question: what was \u201cauthentic\u201d and what \u201cfraudulent\u201d in Wallace\u2019s art?<\/p>\n<p>To restrict ourselves to the example of <em>Jest<\/em>, commentators praised the novel\u2019s ambition, length and erudition. In the introduction to the ten-year commemorative edition, Dave Eggers said we should continue reading it \u201cbecause we\u2019re interested in genius.\u201d But who could distinguish length and genius from sloppiness and pretension? Kakutani called <em>Jest<\/em> a monstrous \u201cword machine,\u201d mainly an excuse for Wallace to \u201cshow off\u201d his knowledge and skills. To A.O. Scott, the novel was marred by \u201cfast-fading pyrotechnics \u2026 impressive in the manner of a precocious child\u2019s performance at a dinner party, and, in the same way, ultimately irritating.\u201d The same sentiment was amplified in James Wood\u2019s widely-read essay on \u201chysterical realism.\u201d <em>Jest<\/em>, Wood proclaimed, was a shell game of distraction where \u201cbright lights\u201d should not be mistaken for \u201cevidence of habitation.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>I have argued that what were taken for \u201cpyrotechnics\u201d by critics were conscious tactics that helped Wallace depict a certain kind of experience and hold the attention of a specifically informed reader. But Wallace\u2019s reception raises broader questions about the capacity of an American writer who has not lived through a war, endured racial or sexual prejudice, or emigrated from abroad to transcend the authenticity\/fraudulence binary. According to our current conception, there remains such a thing as a \u201cpure\u201d artist, but he is always found elsewhere. The biographically familiar writer, a product of the same milieu as his critics and readers, is a perpetual suspect. If he is really like us, we decide, he must be conflicted in his motives, hungry for our acclaim, at all times potentially insincere. He does not go wrong but \u201cshows off\u201d; he is not bad but \u201cirritating.\u201d We suggest and even assume that his chief ambition is to seem original and become famous. Not only that, but that such an ambition, if it could be proved, would supersede all others. Whatever we don\u2019t know about real artists, we know they aren\u2019t frauds.<\/p>\n<p>The irony is that such a critical framework has been applied with special fervor to a succession of writers whose great theme has been the complicated problem of fraudulence and authenticity in modern secular life. On the back cover of <em>Jest<\/em>, Sven Birkerts invites readers to \u201cThink Beckett, think Pynchon, think Gaddis.\u201d Birkerts does not elaborate on what these names should make us think <em>about<\/em>. Beckett, Gaddis, Pynchon and Wallace all wrote about the problem of self-consciousness, which is also the problem of how to have and express an <em>authentic <\/em>self. Beckett impressed on us the naked terror of self-consciousness stripped of ulterior justification. Gaddis, in <em>The Recognitions<\/em>, asked how we could know what was original and what forged\u2014in art, but also in ourselves. Pynchon suggested that self-consciousness was nothing more than a cherished illusion (Tyrone Slothrop could have no self-consciousness, because he had no self). Wallace wanted to return to the subjective consideration of self-consciousness, repudiating what seemed to him a self-defeating trajectory. Yet Wallace\u2019s characters, like his readers, were haunted by Pynchon\u2019s denial. \u201cThe task of the modern artist,\u201d as Cavell put it, is also the \u201ctask of the modern man \u2026 to find something he can be sincere and serious in; something he can mean. And he may not at all.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>This last warning\u2014that the modern artist, like the modern man, may not find something he can mean \u201cat all,\u201d was an important motif in Wallace\u2019s entire oeuvre and the anguished keynote of his late essays and fiction. The \u201chideous men\u201d in his 1999 collection <em>Brief Interviews With Hideous Men<\/em> are sophisticated modern misogynists whose grossest manipulations begin with \u201chonest\u201d confessions. Wallace\u2019s 2000 <em>Rolling Stone<\/em> article on John McCain\u2019s \u201cStraight Talk Express\u201d turned into an interrogation of the contradictory uses of \u201copenness\u201d and \u201cspontaneity\u201d in American politics. (Just months before he died, Wallace was commissioned to write what could have been a similar story about Barack Obama). And in a metafictional set piece called \u201cOctet,\u201d also published in <em>Brief Interviews<\/em>, a literary fiction writer worries that he might come off as \u201cthe type of real-world person who tries to manipulate you into liking him by making a big deal of how open and honest and unmanipulative he\u2019s being all the time,\u201d but who\u2019s really \u201cjust <em>performing<\/em> in some highly self-conscious and manipulative way.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>By depicting various figures attempting to argue their way out of fraudulence, Wallace brings his readers to what might be a depressing realization: \u201ctrue authenticity\u201d can always be forged. His writing has value, specifically <em>for us<\/em>, because it actualizes and confirms our suspicion that, across the categories of American culture\u2014in social life, television, politics, art and criticism\u2014our obsession with fraudulence and authenticity has acquired the configuration of neurosis. The more fervently we demand authentic expression, the less capable we are of identifying it. We can no longer agree on standards, or whether we should have standards. Postmodernism has not succeeded in eradicating the distinction between what is real and what is fake, but it may have deprived us of any vocabulary for speaking meaningfully about that distinction. Irony, satire and ridicule, masked as coping mechanisms, become the ongoing symptoms and restatements of our condition. Wallace draws a line from the Frankfurt School to the metafictionists to <em>The Simpsons <\/em>to <em>The Daily Show<\/em>. He drives us to acknowledge the AA maxim that not just our worst, but also our \u201cBest Thinking\u201d got us here, where we are free to say anything but what we mean.<\/p>\n<p>Wallace\u2019s last great story, the O. Henry Award-winning \u201cGood Old Neon,\u201d was published in his 2004 collection <em>Oblivion<\/em>. It is told mostly from the retrospective point of view of a deceased advertising executive, who begins with a confession: \u201cMy whole life I\u2019ve been a fraud. I\u2019m not exaggerating. Pretty much all I\u2019ve ever done all the time is try to create a certain impression of me in other people.\u201d Good-looking, successful and socially skilled, he ultimately drives his car off a bridge \u201csomeplace isolated enough that no one else would see it, so that there would be as little an aspect of performance to the thing as I could manage and no temptation to spend my last few seconds trying to imagine what impression the sight and sound of the impact might make on someone watching.\u201d Not surprisingly given his occupation, the advertising executive had lived his whole life from the point of view of \u201csomeone watching.\u201d And, from the point of view of that someone, he had always been a fraud. Like the contemporary artist, he could never be sure he meant what he said or did\u2014even his death might be nothing more than a performance.<\/p>\n<p>But death is not the end of \u201cGood Old Neon.\u201d The story concludes with the intrusion of the writer, \u201cDavid Wallace,\u201d who tells us the character of the ad executive was based on a college classmate who always seemed \u201cimpressive and authentically at ease in the world.\u201d Yet this person had never stopped comparing his performative social self to the \u201cinfinities\u201d he could \u201cnever show another soul.\u201d The writer offers him therapy:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p><span style=\"color: #000000;\">You think it makes you a fraud, the tiny fraction anyone else ever sees? Of course you\u2019re a fraud, of course what people see is never you. And of course you know this, and of course you try to manage what part they see if you know it\u2019s only a part. Who wouldn\u2019t? It\u2019s called free will, Sherlock.<\/span><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>The ad executive\u2019s problem was not his fraudulence, but his thinking. He set one unreachable standard\u2014100 percent authenticity\u2014and judged all his actions according to it. Therefore all his actions meant only one thing: that he was inauthentic, a fraud.<\/p>\n<p>Such a condition appears too often in Wallace\u2019s fiction not to suggest a tortured personal acquaintance; nevertheless we may be thankful that, before he left us, he found some things he could mean. One of the things he meant was that the question of whether we can mean is a trap, and also an addiction. A sense of fraudulence, of falling short of authenticity, is endemic to contemporary man, just as it is endemic to contemporary art. But it is not the only thing that is endemic to him or his art. It can exist alongside generosity, freedom and truth. Was Wallace a genius or a fraud? He cannot but have been both. What made him a great artist was his demonstration of the poverty of this question, and of the deleterious strategies we have depended on to avoid moving beyond it. All our satire, theory and reflexive sophistication have not added up to an exit strategy. There can be a literature beyond exhaustion. The way out is out. Go.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>DEATH IS NOT THE END: David Foster Wallace: His Legacy and his Critics By Jon Baskin David Foster Wallace, who hanged himself in his home last September, wrote about authenticity, self-consciousness and the pursuit of happiness in America. It became a commonplace and then a clich\u00e9 and then almost a taunt to call him the &hellip; <a href=\"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/2009\/06\/03\/3444\/\" class=\"more-link\">Continue reading<span class=\"screen-reader-text\"> &#8220;dfw his legacy&#8221;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[67],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-3444","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-journal"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/3444","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=3444"}],"version-history":[{"count":7,"href":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/3444\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":8806,"href":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/3444\/revisions\/8806"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=3444"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=3444"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=3444"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}