Re: Of carnal, bloody, and unnatural acts


Subject: Re: Of carnal, bloody, and unnatural acts
AntiUtopia@aol.com
Date: Fri Feb 18 2000 - 07:52:47 EST


Just for the sake of my own sanity, let me repeat myself :)

I don't think Seymour's suicide was an evacuated idea strung with literary
devices.

I do think the later gloss thrown over the whole thing -- that Buddy wrote
Bananfish -- could well be. And that it is just that if we try to use
Buddy's authorship as an interpretive device for Bananafish.

Jim

<< I don't find it helpful to look at "Bananafish" as an evacuated idea
 strung with literary devices like so many glowing plastic chili peppers
 on a bald Christmas tree. Sounds too much like a separation of form and
 content. Indeed, all of JDS's dead poet stories are shot through with
 the platonic form of death-of-a-genius-seer, but the fact is, in each
 case, the literary devices are exactly what distinguishes one from
 another. The "idea" of "Bananafish" and the story itself are two
 entirely different things. So which are we looking at--firewood, or a
 Christmas tree?
 
 As I said, the list of reasonable interpretations shrinks the more one
 knows about Salinger and the Glass family. It is the virgin reader who
 is confronted with the richest collection of interpretive choices.
 
 And now, Louise Z., lest the list welcoming committee seem too frigid, I
 offer this, by way of atonement: Branagh's adaption of _Love's Labor's_
 opened in Germany a few days ago to rabid enthusiasm and the finest of
 early reviews.
 
 Glass family deaths come not upon thee,
 
 --
 Matt Kozusko >>
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