Page 14- The Michigan Daily - Monday, January 16, 1989 MQR: Dueling canons Michigan Quarterly Review prints Morrison speech BY LISA MAGNINO 1 had planned to call this paper 'Canon Fodder,' because the terms put me in mind of a kind of trained muscular response that appears to be on display in some areas of the recent canon debate. But I changed my mind (so many have used the phrase) and hope to make clear the appropriate- ness of the title I settled on." These words should bring back memories of "Unspeakable Things Unspoken: The Afro-American Pres- ence in American Literature," the electrifying speech Toni Morrison gave at the Tanner Lecture on Human Values last fall. All of those in at- tendance left knowing that they had seen a woman who has and will con- tinue to change not only contempo- rary literature but also contemporary thought, and it was disturbing to think that Morrison's provocative ideas would be laid to rest in the halls of Rackham. Now, thanks to the current issue of the Michigan Quarterly Review, Morrison's observations have found new life in a 34-page transcription. The first portion of the three-part lecture centers on the debateramong academics over the literary canon, and Morrison fashions aclever metaphor out of the battle. She writes, "The guns are very big; the trigger-fingers quick. But I am convinced the mech- anism of the defenders of the flame is faulty. Not only may the hands of the gun-slinging cowboy-scholars be blown off, not only may the target be missed, but the subject of the conflagration (the sacred texts) is sacrificed, disfigured in the battle. This canon fodder may kill the canon...." Instances like these make the lecture seem as if it were written for print rather than for speech. Morrison's ideas come through as loud and clear in print as at the lec- ture. Though she writes, "...it is to my great relief that such terms as 'white' and 'race' can enter serious discussion of literature," her title suggests otherwise. She elaborates, "...in spite of its implicit and ex- plicit acknowledgement, 'race' is still a virtually unspeakable thing, as can be seen in the apologies, notes of 'special use' and circumscribed definitions that accompany it - not the least of which is my own defence in surrounding it with quotation marks.... In trying to come to some terms about 'race' and writing, I am tempted to throw my hands up." Morrison suggests several strate- gies that may help overcome the ex- clusion of Afro-American works and puts the one that she labels "A search... for the ghost in the ma- chine" (a re-examination and interpretation of the American canon of 19th century works) to good prac- tice. She takes a refreshing look at Moby Dick, taking her lead from Michael Rogin's essay on the social commentary within Melville's work. Morrison's strategy works bril- liantly. She argues that the white Midler retraces steps in Beaches BY JOHN SHEA Like a gifted but obnoxious child star who doesn't know how to exit the' stage gracefully after her scene is over, Bette Midler demands your ever-last. ing attention. You can't help but give it to her. She attacks the senses, go; ing first after the eyes with her outrageous, larger-than-life persona, and then: the ears with her squeaky, little-mouse voice that roars without the slightest, of warning. Her appeal can be found directly underneath the thin veil of- daintiness she likes to project, where a delicious mean streak of self-indul-, gence lives. "I'm a bitch," she seems to say in all her films. "What are your going to do about it?" The temptation exists to say her new film, Beaches, deviates from her standard image. After all, it is a drama; the Divine Miss M has not dipped, her big toe in the murky waters of this genre in ten years, not since her suc- cess in The Rose. And she looks and feels comfortable in her role of C.C.- Bloom, a struggling actress from the Bronx whose one-day childhood en- counter with Hillary Whitney (Barbara Hershey) on the beach in Atlantic, City in 1957 leads to the beginning of a life-long friendship. Beaches plays, in essence, as an updated version of The Odd Couple, chronicling the twos protagonists' lives over a 30-year span. Hillary is shy, quiet, proper; C.C, brash, loud-mouthed, true-to-herself. Screenwriter Mary Agnes Donoghue relies on the reliable for plot struc- ture. They are weary of each other at first (of course), they come to accept- each other for what they are (of course), they have their share of serious. problems (of course) but in the end they are resolved, more often than not, in the warm glow of the fading sun (you bet). Within the predictable frame- work, however, one can find some nice moments from all parties involved. Donoghue writes good dialogue and Midler and Hershey work well together. Midler would like you and the Academy of Motion Picture, Arts and Sci- ences to believe that her performance is not autobiographical. While I am' not Midler's best friend, I can tell you: her personal history superimposes,. comfortably over C.C's. C.C. has a hard time getting work because she's not beautiful, despite her talent ("My face is my fortune," C.C. sings:' "That's why I'm totally broke."); Midler has said the same happened to her. C.C gets her big break on Broadway, singing lead in a trampy musical; so, did Midler, in 1974, with "The Divine Miss M." C.C. can't find work again; despite her success; Midler had a six year lull in her career whenno one' wanted her, from her Oscar nomination in 1979 for The Rose until her signing of a lucrative contract with Touchstone Pictures in 1985 (does any- one remember her lone picture in the interim, Jinxed?) As was the case in The Rose, Midler's passion is convincing but its ori- gin comes from referring back to her own personal experiences; it is less acting and more recall. She shows a flair for drama but to date her credits in' the genre read like a one-note song; two outings, playing two troubled per- formers. Hershey has, by nature, a broader spectrum of roles she can play. (and has the ability to play well) but this particular role brings with it great' limitations. Hilary carries a fragile soul within a papier-mach6 body, and she never finds the courage to take more than two steps outside the shell she's k' been living in all her life. Instead of growing as a person, as one would hope.* for and expect, she shrinks even more. The best that can be said for Hershey is that she plays a meager character well. The principle problem of Beaches lies in the five song-and-dance num-4 bers which populate the story. The songs stop whatever dramatic momentum had been acheived previously. It's hard to tell whether the story is too small or Midler's presence too big, but you can hear the screeching of the brakes being applied every time she comes out and sings. She stops the show, literally, to its own detriment. That the screen only seems truly filled when Midler is singing suggests Beaches' story might be better off within the smaller confines of television. 'Those who claim the superiority of Western culture are entitled to that claim only when Western civilization is measured thoroughly against other civilizations and not found wanting, and... owns up to its own sources in the cultures that preceded it.' -Toni Morrison, printed in the Michigan Quarterly Review *1 whale represented Melville's realiza- tion of the time in America when whiteness became ideology and that Ahab's monomania is the manifesta- tion of this ideology. She writes, "The trauma of racism is, for the racist and the victim, the severe fragmentation of the self .... Ahab then is navigating between an idea of civilization that he renounces and an idea of savagery he must annihilate, because the two cannot co-exist." This is what Morrison calls the "unspeakable" meaning of Moby Dick - and it is this re-interpreta- tion that "points a helpful finger to- ward the ways in which the ghost drives the machine." The final part of Morrison's lec- ture was a dissection of the first line of each of her novels; spoken, her dense explications, though extraordi- nary, were difficult to follow. Now that they are in print, however, they are essential reading. MQR has packaged Morrison's words well. Immediately following the transcription are two essays re- sponding to her thoughts. The first, by Hazel Carby, associate English professor at Wesleyan College, agrees that Morrison's strategy of re- examining and re-interpreting the lit- erary canon is a good one, but that it does not extend far enough. She ar- gues that trying to represent inequal- ity by including certain books on a syllabus is not enough to overcome the inherent hierarchies of society; moreover, these books will soon be- come part of the problem that they are supposed to be solving - they cannot represent all of Afro-American culture. Instead, Carby, in a succinct, effective closing, illustrates her overriding goal: "It is the possibility that we can develop cultural analyses that are directed toward the complex- ity not the purity of culture that can free us from the limitations of canonic debates." Counterposed to this view is the second essay, "The Canon and American History," by Eric Foner, professor of history at Columbia. An unexpected irony arises by this placement since Carby takes a shot specifically at Columbia and its "new" canon, but Foner takes a more historical look at the development of the canon. He believes that the best American historical writing of the last 20 years has come from students of slavery and emancipation - and that much is worthy of inclusion in the canon. However, Foner's canon would not include Morrison's Pulitzer Prize-winning Beloved, which he criticizes at length for its pessimistic depiction of Black life during the Reconstruction. Foner's essay is followed by a portfolio of art and an accompanying, accessible essay, "Abstraction and Figuration in Afro-American Art," that provides a good sense of the history present in Black visual arts. It is unfortunate that the theme of Afro-American culture stops with the portfolio, but the short fiction and poetry - works by Raymond Carver, Joyce Carol Oates, and Ur- sula LeGuin are featured - are of the high quality that one expects from MQR. This edition is to be treasured for the transcription of Morrison's work. However, one hopes that the thoughtful handling and packaging of writings on the debate surrounding the literary canon is not overlooked - the Michigan Quarterly Review should stand as one of the first publications to successfully examine what Morrison calls the "contemp- orary battle plain." Garry Marshall (Nothing in Common) pushes a lot of emotional buttons and at times he is overbearing. You can feel almost feel his heavy hand reach; for the heartstrings. For example, near the end, Hillary is dying. She and C.C. travel to a beach house for the summer and at Beaches' climax, they are] sitting in lawn chairs at the beach, watching the sunset. Marshall's camera lingers on this scene for several seconds too long, and in case you don't get the metaphor, he slowly zooms in on the sun. So much for subtlety. E w. Still, Beaches works, in a limited sort of way. We come to feel for thes characters and their relationship, despite the almost-crippling structural flaw and excess of virtues. Beaches' urgent message - that the bonds of friend- ship often grow from the most unlikely of places and that life is too shor'f and too hard not to nuture them - pounds its way through the film's hol-, low metaphors with a poignant clarity. Let Them Know How You FeelIlI DAILY PERSONALS 764-0557 SUPPOR T YOUR TEAM! , Advertise for Any Sport Under New Classification A k () IA 4 °.+ v . r. c i :i #y ti i , 1 r9 k! VASI A 10 Aft MM U U "Hold fast to dreams for if dreams die life is a broken winged that cannot fly." 764-0557 SPORTS! SCORESI SIGN-UPSI TRIPSI bir d ghes dream -Langston Hu January 16, 1989: A day to East Quad AGENDA: Rev. Joseph E. Lc Keynote Address Rev. Lowery worked extensively with Martin Luther King, Jr. in founding the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. 10am - East Quad Auditorium owery JO STNS A M E R I C A S C O L L E G E R I N G7- LI: Stop by and see a Jostens representative, January 16th and 17th 11a.m. to 4 p.m. to select from a comnIte line of nold rinn. -Film: Eyes on the Prize 11am - East Quad Auditorium -Dream Into action: Stick an apple on a tree :Helo build the future