Campus Caper
BOERNER, MARGARET
Campus Capers David Lodge does what he does best. BY MARGARET BOERNER David Lodge's latest novel, Thinks..., explores the long-deplored and still-continuing divide between the "two cultures" of...
...BY MARGARET BOERNER David Lodge's latest novel, Thinks..., explores the long-deplored and still-continuing divide between the "two cultures" of Britain, science and the humanities...
...He nails us all in our middle-class, middle-brow, earthly muddle...
...Most accessible to the lay reader are the short articles he wrote on fiction for the London Independent newspaper, which were collected in The Art of Fiction: Illustrated from Classic and Modern Texts...
...The Picturegoers strongly recalls Joyce's Dubliners with its symbolic artifacts and ironic choices...
...But it is not very amusing, because Lodge basically cannot write well in any style but his own...
...Or Fulvia Morgana, the hard-core Communist and rich Paduan academic in Small World, who justifies her extravagant and swinging life as one that will make the revolution come sooner...
...What David Lodge does best is satire, after all: high satire that exposes all our foibles...
...Lodge's point of view was almost exclusively male until late in his writing career...
...The old symbols reassert themselves over the new artifacts, so to speak, and the novel ends as its protagonist prepares to enter the priesthood...
...I suppose that's why people read novels...
...If you ever wonder what you were thinking at a certain stage in your life, go read David Lodge...
...But, unbeknownst to them— well, unbeknownst to them, their author is unfolding in Thinks...
...Social life would be difficult otherwise...
...Or the American professor Morris Zapp (said to be modeled on Stanley Fish) and the paper he gives on Jane Austen at an academic conference, "Textuality as Strip Tease...
...His novels reflect his own progress from lower-middle-class, adolescent South Londoner, to young soldier doing his national service, to young husband, father, and graduate student, and finally to English professor at the University of Birmingham...
...Even if they choose to tell us, we can never know whether they're telling the truth, or the whole truth...
...He may have come to think he looked antiquated...
...This definition of the novel is too broad to be useful, but "Menippean satire" is an effective term with which to understand Lodge, for (invented by the Hellenistic Greek Menippus) it "presents people as mouthpieces of the ideas they represent," as Northrop Frye put it half a century ago...
...He comes to believe—which causes him to lose his lust...
...Therapy (1995), about a television scriptwriter who is so full of anxiety and dread that he forces Lodge to put him through as many types of therapy (analytical, cognitive, sexual, water) as Lodge can bring himself to satirize...
...And through the device of tape recorders and diaries (Ralph dictates, Helen writes in longhand, and each comes upon the other's record), David Lodge does indeed let his characters— and his readers—find out what goes on in another person's head...
...And then there are the satires written at the top of his form: the academic comedies Changing Places (1975), Small World (1984), Nice Work (1988), and this year's Thinks...
...One would think that this would matter greatly, but it doesn't...
...He wants to have an affair with her (a violation of his unspoken pledge to his wife not to womanize on her home turf...
...Who can forget the proud mother of Nice Work who says of her page-three daughter's bare breasts on an "art" calendar, "Nice, aren't they...
...The novel used Graham Greene's The Quiet American as its model, but it was not convincing in its depiction of the stubborn idealist...
...she wants to contemplate her grief at her husband's death...
...The classical form of Menippean satire uses a narrator-searcher-traveler as addlebrained as the persons he encounters—which pretty much gives us the benign farce that Lodge makes of our pretensions, for he writes the type of satire that "deals less with people as such than with mental attitudes...
...At the end, our hero exerts control over his life by joining the enemy...
...The picture-goer of the title is a young student of English literature who rediscovers his lapsed Roman Catholic faith through his longing for the daughter of the large Catholic family with whom he boards...
...The students write in the style of Samuel Beckett, et al., and it is amusing...
...He becomes a book buyer for an American who plans to buy the British Museum for the express purpose of moving it to Colorado and making it an American institution...
...where a male, rationalistic academic is set against a female, expres-sionistic novelist...
...But even in this first, highly derivative work, Lodge proved his talent at close observation of the fashionable cant we use to justify ourselves and rationalize our behavior...
...He will tell you, as he does again in this delightful novel...
...to Helen, a lapsed Catholic, it is a repository for the soul (although a soul that seems at times to have left home...
...he loves her and regains his faith...
...It must be conceded that Lodge cannot write voices...
...But he has not lost his ability to nail character types and to keep us turning pages to see what new lunacy will come next...
...four loosely interconnected "campus" novels about the sexual and intellectual obsessions of the professoriate...
...To find out what goes on in other people's heads...
...He didn't find the proper setting for his talent, however, until he turned to comedy—a comedy that often approaches farce...
...His second novel, Ginger, You're Barmy (1962), took up the cant and folderol of the British peacetime army with a story of two young draftees, one a passive observer and the other prepared to endure hardship in order to keep his integrity in the face of official deceit and betrayal...
...Lodge's first novel, The Pictu-rego^^s (1960), published when he was twenty-five, is a "sensitive" novel about a young man's anguish at his sexual longing and his alienation from his family...
...For the prose artist," Bakhtin wrote, "the world is full of other people's words, among which he must orient himself and whose speech characteristics he must be able to perceive with a very keen ear...
...Intuition is represented by Helen Reed, a novelist suffering from writer's block caused by the recent death of her husband...
...who blackmails her womanizing professor into nominating her for an important academic conference and signs her disingenuous e-mails with the typo "Your fiend...
...Indeed, Lodge has made the art of character-typing so much his own that in his pages one recognizes one's colleagues, neighbors, lawyers, brokers, professors, baby-sitters, secretaries, and relatives...
...Without writing autobiography, Lodge has always stuck close to the world he knows—the world of England's postwar Baby Boomers whose opportunities were far more expansive than those available to their parents...
...There followed over the next three decades a set of exceptional, pyrotechnic novels: How Far Can You Go...
...1980), a novel about Catholic friends going through the changes in theology and popular thought in the 1960s after Vatican II...
...Ralph recollects his conquests...
...It necessarily deals in types and stereotypes—the obsequious servant, the braggart, the sexpot, the bat-tleaxe, the mother-in-law, the foreigner...
...In the event, he very successfully made a liberal female academic the antithesis of his conservative male businessman in Nice Work...
...Lodge started out writing under the influence of modernist fiction, particularly James Joyce, another rebellious, questioning Catholic...
...She loves him and loses her faith...
...And why not...
...Lodge is a master organizer of plot and an unerring dissector of diseases of the intellect...
...But Lodge has never been convincing in his depiction of spiritual anguish and conversion, even though he uses them often...
...What Lodge had to realize is that he is more effective as farceur than as narrator of serious tragedy—a realization he made with his next novel, The British Museum Is Falling Down (1965...
...an entirely conventional, almost melodramatic plot...
...The scientist Ralph regards the fundamental problem of consciousness as the fact that "we never know for certain what another person is really thinking...
...To Ralph, an atheist, the mind is a "virtual machine...
...Of course, one does not expect the sort of comedy which Lodge writes to examine character and inner life...
...Lodge's zest for nailing pedantry has somewhat abated...
...As a professor of literature, Lodge is the author of some serious and very good academic criticism...
...His satiric masterpiece came later in his classic Small World, but The Picture-goers already showed signs of his bent for witty observation...
...It was with this book that Lodge came into his own...
...More than one of his novels sees its protagonist end by undertaking a pilgrimage, to the disbelief of the reader...
...It was through his critical work that he came to the notion that his novels could—in "pastiche, parody and travesty"— explore the farcical possibilities of "the very kind of discourse" he uses seriously and without a blush in his "capacity as an academic critic...
...Margaret Boerner teaches English at Viillanova University...
...Scientific investigation is represented by Ralph Messenger, womanizing professor and director of the prestigious "Holt Belling Center for Cognitive Science" at the very new University of Gloucester...
...It is fiction populated by "pedants, bigots, cranks, parvenus, virtuosi, enthusiasts, rapacious and incompetent professional men of all kinds...
...Helen recollects her marriage...
...Lately, it has become fashionable, under the influence of Bakhtin, to call almost all novels "Menippean satire," because in the novel the centrality of the author to the interpretation of the work breaks down...
...To which his beloved Helen replies, "Just as well, perhaps...
...Predictably, his obsession with the cinema and its depiction of "life"—he is a dedicated moviegoer—turns out to be "a substitute for religion...
...She comes to love—which causes her to lose her piety...
...Is she pregnant or just "late...
...The same kind of divide is made in Thinks...
...A major influence is Mikhail Bakhtin, whose "postmodern" observations struck Lodge with the "same effect, as that of a light bulb being switched on in one's head...
...When Lodge ended The British Museum Is Falling Down in this fashion, he signaled that he had finally given up his ambition to write the "serious" novel, and he entered the world of satire—liberating his talent and thoroughly improving his fiction...
...Using the structure of Joyce's Ulysses, The British Museum Is Falling Down follows its young graduate-student protagonist through a single day full of ordinary events with symbolic meaning—each chapter in the style of a modern writer such as Conrad, Joyce, Hemingway, and Woolf...
...Or the graduate student in Thinks...
...Intrigued by Ralph's machine analysis of thinking, Helen sets her creative writing students to writing in the style of a modern author an answer to Thomas Nagel's famous paper about consciousness, "What Is It Like to Be a Bat...
...He is called upon by the institutions in his life to be a good graduate student, a good Catholic, and a good husband...
...Or the two middle-aged couples who have exchanged academic positions in America and England and also exchanged spouses, staring at each other at the end of Changing Places and wondering how the author is going to resolve the plot they are in...
...He worries continually about his wife (as Bloom worries about Molly), especially about her menstrual cycle...
...The dancer teases the audience as the text teases its readers, with the promise of an ultimate revelation that is infinitely postponed...
...Paradise News (1991), about an ex-priest finding a difficult new life in Hawaii...
...the narrator discovers that he "means more than one thing," and truth becomes a possibility that arises from the conflict of ideas— the banging of ideas against each other makes the novel a kind of pinball machine of conceptual possibility...
...As the daughter resists his physical advances, her faith dampens the fire of his ardor, just as she becomes interested and starts to find justification for having a sexual relationship with him...
Vol. 6 • July 2001 • No. 40