The essay also has this interesting excerpt from her interview where she compares herself to her fellow Austrian misanthrope Thomas Bernhard:
The extremity of Jelinek's tirades soon won her comparisons with Thomas Bernhard, who had also remorselessly attacked the residual fascism of modern Austria. Seeking, in an interview with Gitta Honegger, a respected theater critic and biographer of Bernhard, to distinguish her approach from his, Jelinek claimed that as a man Bernhard "could claim a position of authority," projecting an identity with which readers could relate and giving a coherent, rhetorically convincing account of Austrian society, whereas, being a woman, even this form of "positive" approach was denied her; a woman working in a man's world and language could not present a coherent identity (a play of Jelinek's has the female parts mouthing words that are actually spoken by male voices, as if women could not really possess the language). Starting from this po-sition of "speechlessness," a woman writer could only work by subversion, exposing the language's prejudices and crassness and attacking its perverse and mindless momentum. As the narrator puts it in Wonderful, Wonderful Times, "everything that's said is a cue for something else."
Also worth reading in the same issue, a letter exchange on the wonderful German film The Lives of Others, Anita Desai on Primo Levi's collection of stories which has just come out in English and an extract from J. M. Coetzee's forthcoming novel.
Me too: I found the Erika of Jelinke's prose unsupportable and the writing itself heated and prolix. The fil said it all much better.
ReplyDeleteAnd about Levi...you mght want to rephrase that? It makes it sound as if he's still alive and has many more collections of stories in him!
Have changed it, yes it sounded a little strange.
ReplyDeleteIf you see the book independently of the film and as an experiment, it works better. She is not interested in coherence, linear narrative, psychological plausibility, conventional "literary" language etc... she will denounce all these as patriarchal and reactionary, as playing by the rules set by men. As that quote about Thomas Bernhard suggests she sees all literature as men's business, women writers can only write through subversion. It is interesting in theory but then one would rather read a polemical essay.