-- Point Omega
Reading Don DeLillo
This blog is dedicated to understanding, analyzing, critiquing, and, of course, enjoying Don DeLillo -- his novels, his plays, his short stories, and his essays. While a particular focus will be given to the interpretive approach known as affect theory (providing, I hope, a new way of looking at his work), all readers of DeLillo will benefit from this site.
Sunday, December 16, 2012
Registers of Affect #14: being alive to the "smallest registers of motion"
This
was the point. To see what’s here, finally to look and to know you’re looking,
to feel time passing, to be alive to what is happening in the smallest
registers of motion.
Saturday, December 15, 2012
DeLillo Book Reviews: Point Omega
Willey observes that we once associated DeLillo with "oversaturation," but now "we find him at his most empty." Yet instead of lamenting the loss of DeLillo's old style, Willey acknowledges that "DeLillo is breathing deeply now, and it suits him well." He even speculates on what may have actuated these formal changes in DeLillo's prose:
It is almost as if his subjects crossed a failsafe line. Perhaps it was no longer possible for him to write honestly about America in 2010 in the same voice he'd used in 1990.
This speculation is something that we could use a little bit more of right now. I applaud Willey for reviewing DeLillo's latest novel on its own terms, something that other, more "reputable" critics have had a tough time doing for the past decade or so.
Personally, I think we've yet to realize the full implications of DeLillo's "formal transformation," but I have suspicions that this period could turn out to be the most important one of his career. (Of course, some critics would certainly disagree with me. See, for example, Michiko Kakutani's review of Point Omega for The New York Times.)
Personally, I think we've yet to realize the full implications of DeLillo's "formal transformation," but I have suspicions that this period could turn out to be the most important one of his career. (Of course, some critics would certainly disagree with me. See, for example, Michiko Kakutani's review of Point Omega for The New York Times.)
Thursday, December 13, 2012
DeLillo Interviews: NPR radio interview with DeLillo about Point Omega
"DeLillo's Man in the Desert, Up Against the Wall"
Above I have provided a link to a 2010 radio interview with DeLillo. Listen to DeLillo as he talks about many of the familiar themes in his work (war, images, death, mass media, etc.) and a few that are perhaps not so familiar (time as anxiety and the sublime).
In addition, he also speaks about being a writer and about his attraction to people in small rooms (Lee Harvey Oswald in Libra, Bill Gray in Mao II, etc.).
Finally, in another self-referential moment, he comments on "living in dangerous times."
DeLillo was nearly 75 at the time of the interview, so one can't help but smile when he says, "I'm still 22 in my mind."
Above I have provided a link to a 2010 radio interview with DeLillo. Listen to DeLillo as he talks about many of the familiar themes in his work (war, images, death, mass media, etc.) and a few that are perhaps not so familiar (time as anxiety and the sublime).
In addition, he also speaks about being a writer and about his attraction to people in small rooms (Lee Harvey Oswald in Libra, Bill Gray in Mao II, etc.).
Finally, in another self-referential moment, he comments on "living in dangerous times."
DeLillo was nearly 75 at the time of the interview, so one can't help but smile when he says, "I'm still 22 in my mind."
Wednesday, December 12, 2012
Favorite Passages: "It's all about time"
What more could be said about the relationship between contemporary existence and literature?
It's all embedded, the hours and minutes, words and numbers
everywhere, he said, train stations, bus routes, taxi meters, surveillance
cameras. It's all about time, dimwit time, inferior time, people checking
watches and other devices, other reminders. This is time draining out of our
lives. Cities were built to measure time, to remove time from nature. There's
an endless counting down, he said. When you strip away all the surfaces, when
you see into it, what's left is terror. This is the thing that literature was
meant to cure. The epic poem, the bedtime story.
-- Point Omega
Sunday, December 9, 2012
Registers of Affect #13: those familiar yet rousing and shaping scenes of life
These were scenes that normally roused him, the great rapacious flow, where the physical will of the city, the ego fevers, the assertions of industry, commerce and crowds shape every anecdotal moment.
-- Cosmopolis
Sunday, December 2, 2012
Friday, November 30, 2012
DeLillo News & Notes: has Jonathan Franzen learned anything from DeLillo?
An early exchange was typical of the entire interview.
Franzen asked how important meaning was to DeLillo’s writing. “Not much,” the
older writer deadpanned. “I’m a writer of sentences … I don’t know where meaning
comes from.” Franzen was visibly chastened by this anti-response.
---
---
I recently came across this story on Artforum, which interests me insofar as it provides insight into the relationship between Jonathan Franzen and DeLillo, from whom Franzen claims influence. Although I have already published a few posts on the relationship between DeLillo and DFW (see "commemorating the four-year anniversary of DFW's suicide" and "DFW's 'miglior fabbro'"), I'll admit that I haven't spent any time heretofore discussing the relationship between him and Franzen. Partly, this is because I haven't much read Franzen -- though, this news story has me itching to do so.
Now, I'll say up front that I'm not sure if the writer of this story, Andrew Hultkrans, has some sort of bias against Franzen, but frankly, I don't care, as he offers enough good points to make up for it.
The best of these points, about the notion of "overexplaining," Hultkrans borrows from the critic James Wood (I've read Wood, yet I'm not exactly sure where this notion springs from -- perhaps a review of Franzen?). According to Hultkrans, Wood has criticized Franzen and other young writers as being "overexplainers." Adding his own two cents to this debate, Hultkrans writes that Franzen will "have to stop worrying so much about meaning and learn how to be coy when interviewed. [...] It's hard to continue the striptease when you're already naked."
While I can only say so much about Franzen, I can comment on how DeLillo has evaded this charge of overexplaining. In short, DeLillo has remarked on his work by saying that it shouldn't much be remarked on -- at least, not by him. By using DeLillo's first published interview, with Tom LeClair in 1982, we can clarify what he means. Responding to the very first question that LeClair asked -- "Why do reference books give only your date of birth and the publication dates of your books?" -- DeLillo offered this deft response:
Silence, exile, cunning, and so on. It's my nature to keep quiet about most things. Even the ideas in my work. When you try to unravel something you've written, you belittle it in a way. It was created as a mystery, in part. [...] If you're able to be straightforward and penetrating about this invention of yours, it's almost as though you're saying it wasn't altogether necessary. The sources weren't deep enough. Maybe this view is overrefined and too personal. But I think it helps explain why some writers are unable or unwilling to discuss their work.
In answer to a later question, DeLillo built on the above point:
There's an element of contempt for meanings. You want to write outside the usual framework. You want to dare readers to make a commitment you know they can't make. That's part of it. There's also the sense of drowning in information and in the mass awareness of things. Everybody seems to know everything. Subjects surface and are totally exhausted in a matter of days or weeks, totally played out by the publishing industry and the broadcast industry. Nothing is too arcane to escape the treatment, the process. Making things difficult for the reader is less an attack on the reader than it is on the age and its facile knowledge-market. The writer is driven by his conviction that some truths aren't arrived at so easily, that life is still full of mystery, that it might be better for you, Dear Reader, if you went back to the Living section of your newspaper because this is the dying section and you don't really want to be here.
While he may be incapable of being "straightforward and penetrating" about his own work, DeLillo is very much so about writers overexplaining their writing: Don't do it. Instead, DeLillo says, simply cherish and trust the fact that "life is still full of mystery." A writer fails to recognize this truth when he or she attempts to overexplain his or her work.
With this information in mind, perhaps we can better understand why, according to Hultkrans, "DeLillo's eyes widened" when he heard that he "meant more to [Franzen] than any other writer": Franzen, it seems, does not understand the role of the novelist in the same way as DeLillo.
Now, I'm not a novelist myself, so I can't exactly comment on which is the better method, but I can at least say this: If DeLillo, as Hultkrans writes, did indeed designate Franzen as "'the future of the novel,'" then let's hope that Franzen starts coming to class and taking some notes because it's evident that he really hasn't learned anything from DeLillo.
At least, not yet.
Wednesday, November 28, 2012
Favorite Passages: "soccer in history"
Another humorous yet insightful comment from DeLillo about the world's most famous sport and its relationship with America.
I thought about soccer in history, the inspiration for
wars, truces, rampaging mobs. The game was a global passion, spherical ball,
grass or turf, entire nations in spasms of elation or lament. But what kind of
sport is it that disallows the use of players' hands, except for the
goalkeeper? Hands are essential human tools, the things that grasp and hold,
that make, take, carry, create. If soccer were an American invention, wouldn't
some European intellectual maintain that our historically puritanical nature
has compelled us to invent a game structured on anti-masturbatory principles?
-- "Hammer and Sickle,"
The Angel Esmeralda
The Angel Esmeralda
Sunday, November 25, 2012
Registers of Affect #11: bodily forces
She felt the uneasy force, the strangeness of seeing a man who had lived in her mind for years as words alone--the force of a body in a room.
-- Mao II
Friday, November 23, 2012
DeLillo News & Notes: a DeLillo-esque moment: Mitt Romney pumping his own gas
We knew that nothing is too absurd to happen in America.
-- End Zone
"It is pretty amazing that in such a short period of time you can go from missing becoming the leader of one of the most powerful countries in the world by a couple % to pumping your own gas like everyone else."
Image and passage reproduced from Reddit. See more HERE.
Thursday, November 22, 2012
11/22/12: in commemoration of Libra
I think every emotion we felt is part of that film, and certainly confusion is one of the larger ones, yes. Confusion and horror. The head shot is like some awful, pornographic moment that happens without warning in our living rooms--some truth about the world, some unspeakable activity people engage in that we don't want to know about. And after the confusion about when Kennedy is first hit, and when Connally is hit, and why the president's wife is scrambling over the seat, and simultaneous with the horror of the head shot, part of the horror, perhaps--there's a bolt of revelation. Because the head shot is the most direct kind of statement that the lethal bullet was fired from the front. Whatever the physical possibilities concerning impact and reflex, you look at this thing and wonder what's going on. Are you seeing some distortion inherent in the film medium or in your own perception of things? Are you the willing victim of some enormous lie of the state--a lie, a wish, a dream? Or, did the shot simply come from the front, as every cell in your body tells you it did?
-- Don DeLillo
Sunday, November 18, 2012
Registers of Affect #10: the affective power of small rooms
Men in small rooms. Men reading and waiting, struggling with secret and feverish ideas.
There is a world inside the world.
There is a world inside the world.
-- Libra
---
See: DeLillo, "The History of the Writer Alone in a Room" (I'm still struggling to find a link to this essay)
Friday, November 16, 2012
DeLillo News & Notes: Don DeLillo is DFW's "miglior fabbro"
In a recent review of DFW's new collection of nonfiction essays, Both Flesh and Not, D.T. Max -- staff writer for The New Yorker and author of Every Love Story is a Ghost Story: A Life of David Foster Wallace -- makes several references to Don DeLillo.
Specifically, Max mentions the DD-DFW correspondence, which I plan to sift through in the spring when I visit the Harry Ransom Center in Austin. (This correspondence, I'm sure, has yet to receive the attention it deserves.)
This review is also particularly interesting to me because Max, drawing on T.S. Eliot's dedication to Ezra Pound in The Waste Land, refers to DeLillo as Wallace's "miglior fabbro."
Here's the link:
Enjoy!
Thursday, November 15, 2012
DeLillo Interviews: a seminal interview (1993)
"Don DeLillo: The Art of Fiction No. 135"
In 1993, Adam Begley put together what may just be the best interview with DeLillo to date. Here DeLillo discusses everything from language and the process of writing to literature and film. Because there is really no way to boil this interview down, I have opted to reproduce the highlights from this interview into four sections below:
---
Process of Writing:
A young writer sees that with words and sentences on a piece of paper [...] he can place himself more clearly in the world. Words on a page, that's all it takes to help him separate himself from the forces around him, streets and people and pressures and feelings. He learns to think about these things, to ride his own sentences into new perceptions.
You want to control the flow of impulses, images, words, faces, ideas. But there's a higher place, a secret aspiration. You want to let go. You want to lose yourself in language, become a carrier or messenger. The best moments involves a loss of control. It's a kind of rapture, and it can happen with words and phrases fairly often--completely surprising combinations that make a higher kind of sense, that come to you out of nowhere.
But the basic work is built around the sentence. This is what I mean when I call myself a writer. I construct sentences.
But I'm aware of the fact that time is limited. Every new novel stretches the term of the contract--let me live long enough to do one more book. How many books do we get? How much good work?
Language:
I'm completely willing to let language press meaning upon me.
But before everything, there's language. Before history and politics, there's language. And it's language, the sheer pleasure of making it and bending it and seeing it form on the page and hearing it whistle in my head--this is the thing that makes my work go.
The State of Literature Today:
[...] I think we need to invent beauty, search out some restoring force. A writer may describe the ugliness and pain in graphic terms but he can also try to find a dignity and significance in ruined parts of the city, and the people he sees there.
We have a rich literature. But sometimes it's a literature too ready to be neutralized, to be incorporated into the ambient noise. This is why we need the writer in opposition, the novelist who writes against power, who writes against the corporation or the state or the whole apparatus of assimilation. We're all one beat away from becoming elevator music.
Today, the world has become a book--more precisely a news story or television show or piece of film footage. And the world narrative is being written by men who orchestrate disastrous events, by military leaders, totalitarian leaders, terrorists, men dazed by power. World news is the novel people want to read. It carries the tragic narrative that used to belong to the novel.
Film:
Kennedy was shot on film, Oswald was shot on TV. Does this mean anything?
The [Zapruder] film represents all the hopefulness we invest in technology.
Film allows us to examine ourselves in ways earlier societies could not--examine ourselves, imitate ourselves, extend ourselves, reshape our reality. It permeates our lives, this double vision, and also detaches us, turns some of us into actors doing walk-throughs. [...] This is the world narrative, so they play it until everyone in the world has seen it.
In 1993, Adam Begley put together what may just be the best interview with DeLillo to date. Here DeLillo discusses everything from language and the process of writing to literature and film. Because there is really no way to boil this interview down, I have opted to reproduce the highlights from this interview into four sections below:
---
Process of Writing:
A young writer sees that with words and sentences on a piece of paper [...] he can place himself more clearly in the world. Words on a page, that's all it takes to help him separate himself from the forces around him, streets and people and pressures and feelings. He learns to think about these things, to ride his own sentences into new perceptions.
You want to control the flow of impulses, images, words, faces, ideas. But there's a higher place, a secret aspiration. You want to let go. You want to lose yourself in language, become a carrier or messenger. The best moments involves a loss of control. It's a kind of rapture, and it can happen with words and phrases fairly often--completely surprising combinations that make a higher kind of sense, that come to you out of nowhere.
But the basic work is built around the sentence. This is what I mean when I call myself a writer. I construct sentences.
But I'm aware of the fact that time is limited. Every new novel stretches the term of the contract--let me live long enough to do one more book. How many books do we get? How much good work?
Language:
I'm completely willing to let language press meaning upon me.
But before everything, there's language. Before history and politics, there's language. And it's language, the sheer pleasure of making it and bending it and seeing it form on the page and hearing it whistle in my head--this is the thing that makes my work go.
The State of Literature Today:
[...] I think we need to invent beauty, search out some restoring force. A writer may describe the ugliness and pain in graphic terms but he can also try to find a dignity and significance in ruined parts of the city, and the people he sees there.
We have a rich literature. But sometimes it's a literature too ready to be neutralized, to be incorporated into the ambient noise. This is why we need the writer in opposition, the novelist who writes against power, who writes against the corporation or the state or the whole apparatus of assimilation. We're all one beat away from becoming elevator music.
Today, the world has become a book--more precisely a news story or television show or piece of film footage. And the world narrative is being written by men who orchestrate disastrous events, by military leaders, totalitarian leaders, terrorists, men dazed by power. World news is the novel people want to read. It carries the tragic narrative that used to belong to the novel.
Film:
Kennedy was shot on film, Oswald was shot on TV. Does this mean anything?
The [Zapruder] film represents all the hopefulness we invest in technology.
Film allows us to examine ourselves in ways earlier societies could not--examine ourselves, imitate ourselves, extend ourselves, reshape our reality. It permeates our lives, this double vision, and also detaches us, turns some of us into actors doing walk-throughs. [...] This is the world narrative, so they play it until everyone in the world has seen it.
Wednesday, November 14, 2012
Favorite Passages: "the simplest greeting"
So true.
What pleasure in the simplest greeting. It's as thought one friend says to another, "How good is it to say 'How are you?'" The other replying, "When I answer 'I am well and how are you,' what I really mean to say is that I'm delighted to have a chance to say these familiar things--they bridge the lonely distances."
-- The Names
Sunday, November 11, 2012
Registers of Affect #9: the "heaving and breathing" of systems
"Systems heaving and breathing all around you. Tell us. That sort of essence in the air. That sort of underbreath of powerful thrilling systems."
-- Valparaiso
Friday, November 9, 2012
DeLillo News & Notes: ALA 2012: DeLillo and Film
The Don DeLillo Society will be hosting a session at the ALA (American Literature Association) Conference in Boston in May of 2013. The topic is "DeLillo and Film." As described by the DD Society:
Topic: DeLillo and Film. David Cronenberg’s _Cosmopolis_ marks the long awaited adaptation of a Don DeLillo novel. But DeLillo has long been interested in film, from his screenplay for _Game 6_, use of real and imagined films throughout his novels (_Americana_, _Running Dog_, _Underworld_, _Point Omega_), references to filmmakers in interviews (“I began to understand the force that movies could have emotionally and intellectually in what I consider the great era of the European films: Godard, Antonioni, Fellini, Bergman . . . Kubrick and Howard Hawks”), and use of cinematic technique in the novels themselves. Papers may develop these or other topics related to DeLillo and film.
Please send a title, abstract (300 words), AV needs, and brief bio to Jesse Kavadlo, Maryville University, at jkavadlo@...<mailto:jkavadlo@...> by January 1, 2013.
More information can be found HERE.
Topic: DeLillo and Film. David Cronenberg’s _Cosmopolis_ marks the long awaited adaptation of a Don DeLillo novel. But DeLillo has long been interested in film, from his screenplay for _Game 6_, use of real and imagined films throughout his novels (_Americana_, _Running Dog_, _Underworld_, _Point Omega_), references to filmmakers in interviews (“I began to understand the force that movies could have emotionally and intellectually in what I consider the great era of the European films: Godard, Antonioni, Fellini, Bergman . . . Kubrick and Howard Hawks”), and use of cinematic technique in the novels themselves. Papers may develop these or other topics related to DeLillo and film.
Please send a title, abstract (300 words), AV needs, and brief bio to Jesse Kavadlo, Maryville University, at jkavadlo@...<mailto:jkavadlo@...> by January 1, 2013.
More information can be found HERE.
Sunday, November 4, 2012
Registers of Affect #8: the "secret" energies of television
Weary as he was, blanked out, bored by all these posturing desperadoes, he could easily have watched through the night, held by the mesh effect of television, the electrostatic glow that seemed a privileged state between wave and visual image, a secret of celestial energy.
-- Players
Friday, November 2, 2012
DeLillo News & Notes: 125 Boxes of DeLillo at the Harry Ransom Center in Austin, TX!
Doing early preparation for my trip to the Harry Ransom Center in the spring, I came across this interesting article in The New Yorker written by D.T. Max, who recently published a biography on DFW. The middle-third of the article provides a nice description of the DeLillo collection. For my own part, I'm excited to see and touch the pages of the drafts themselves, especially given DeLillo's penchant for emphasizing the importance of the visual nature of his typewriter-produced manuscripts.
Here's the link: "Final Destination: Why do the archives of so many great writers end up in Texas?"
Enjoy!
Here's the link: "Final Destination: Why do the archives of so many great writers end up in Texas?"
Enjoy!
Wednesday, October 31, 2012
Favorite Passages: "The true life"
Just another reason why I think that this novel is a masterpiece.
The true life is not reducible to words spoken or written, not by anyone, ever. The true life takes place when we're alone, thinking, feeling, lost in memory, dreamingly self-aware, the submicroscopic moments.
-- Point Omega
Sunday, October 28, 2012
Registers of Affect #7: events
He
felt they shared something, we three, that’s what he felt. It was the kind of
rare fellowship that singular events engender, even if the others didn't know
he was here.
Sunday, October 21, 2012
Registers of Affect #6: sex
Sex finds us. Sex sees through us. That's why it's so shattering. It strips us of appearances.
-- Cosmopolis
Friday, October 19, 2012
DeLillo News & Notes: DeLillo receives the Carl Sandburg Literary Award
On October 17, 2012, both DeLillo and Walter Isaacson (author of Steve Jobs, Einstein: His Life and Universe) received the Carl Sandburg Literary Award (DeLillo for fiction, Isaacson for nonfiction).
According to the article that I read, the Carl Sandburg Literary Award "is presented annually to an acclaimed author in recognition of outstanding contributions to the literary world and honors a significant work or body of work that has enhanced the public's awareness of the written word."
Congratulations to DeLillo!
According to the article that I read, the Carl Sandburg Literary Award "is presented annually to an acclaimed author in recognition of outstanding contributions to the literary world and honors a significant work or body of work that has enhanced the public's awareness of the written word."
Congratulations to DeLillo!
Wednesday, October 17, 2012
Favorite Passages: "not a crash but a crash landing"
The way in which we use language to envelope ourselves from danger. One can almost hear the echo of Derrida ("I SHALL SPEAK, THEN, OF A LETTER ...").
-- White Noise
Monday, October 15, 2012
DeLillo Interviews: "Living in dangerous times"
DeLillo recently gave an interview about "Living in dangerous times."
There are a few reasons why I chose this interview for the month of October. Not only is it recent, but DeLillo also talks a little bit about his upcoming novel (though he doesn't reveal much). Above all else, this interview amazes me precisely because it tells us almost nothing new. In fact, it's amazing to compare the responses here with the responses that DeLillo has given in previous interviews. In the "Introduction" to Conversations with Don DeLillo, editor Thomas DePietro calls attention to this fact: "[DeLillo] often repeats himself and even quotes himself" (ix).
I can't explain why, but this almost self-referential quality of his interviews doesn't surprise me in the least.
---
DePietro, Thomas, ed. Conversations with Don DeLillo. Jackson: UP of Mississippi, 2005. Print.
There are a few reasons why I chose this interview for the month of October. Not only is it recent, but DeLillo also talks a little bit about his upcoming novel (though he doesn't reveal much). Above all else, this interview amazes me precisely because it tells us almost nothing new. In fact, it's amazing to compare the responses here with the responses that DeLillo has given in previous interviews. In the "Introduction" to Conversations with Don DeLillo, editor Thomas DePietro calls attention to this fact: "[DeLillo] often repeats himself and even quotes himself" (ix).
I can't explain why, but this almost self-referential quality of his interviews doesn't surprise me in the least.
---
DePietro, Thomas, ed. Conversations with Don DeLillo. Jackson: UP of Mississippi, 2005. Print.
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