A Hot-Eyed Moderate: Essays
By Jane Rule
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About this ebook
Jane Rule shares her insights into the creative process, sexual fidelity, feminist politics, and the transformative power of love. Part I—“On Writing”—dispenses advice (writing is “a craft that has to be practiced”); offers observations (“The creative process in any art takes time”); and dissects the writer-publisher relationship, both feminist and traditional. Part II—“Writing for the Gay Press”—discusses, among other things, what it means to be a lesbian writer. With chapters like “The Myth of Genital Jealousy” and “You Cannot Judge a Pumpkin’s Happiness by the Smile Upon Its Face,” this collection shatters common myths such as why you should always write about what you know. There are also moving pieces about Rule’s grandmother, artists who have influenced Rule, and what it is to be human and female in your time. From censorship to morality in literature to how men and women can live together in peace, A Hot-Eyed Moderate is Jane Rule at her provocative best.
Jane Rule
Jane Rule was born in New Jersey in 1931 and came to Canada in 1956, where she later taught at the University of British Columbia. Her first novel, Desert of the Heart (1964), in which two women fall in love in 1950s Reno, Nevada, was successful as a 1985 feature film titled Desert Hearts. Rule emerged as one of the most respected writers in Canada with her many novels, essays, and collections of short stories, including Theme for Diverse Instruments (1975). She received the Canadian Authors Association best novel and best short story awards, the American Gay Academic Literature Award, the U.S. Fund for Human Dignity Award of Merit, the Canadian National Institute for the Blind’s Talking Book of the Year Award, and an honorary doctorate of letters from the University of British Columbia. In 1996, Jane Rule received the George Woodcock Lifetime Achievement Award for an Outstanding Literary Career in British Columbia. She passed away in 2007.
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A Hot-Eyed Moderate - Jane Rule
PART I: ON WRITING
The Practice of Writing
THOSE QUESTIONS ABOUT CREATIVE process which deal with the mechanics of writing have always bored me. Whether I use a pencil, pen, or typewriter is not determined by what is objectively effective but by left-handedness, a bad back, lack of funds, and anyway, who really cares? A far more interesting mechanical question than how each of us gets words onto the page might be why so many writers refuse to drive cars, but that investigation would lead away from the point, which is what aspects of the creative process might be usefully shared with other people.
Two of the most important problems for any writer are locating material and conceiving form. As a very young writer my passion for form served my need to learn the rudiments of my craft and also distracted me from what I felt—wrongly it now seems to me—was my lack of experience. What I really lacked was simply enough distance from my experience to know how to use it. Instead I invented material of a sort that can still make me blush. I wrote about ironically wise talking Minah birds who broke up marriages, black men with yellow hair and green eyes who raped sheep. (After that particular story was read aloud to a writing class, my fellow students burst into We are little black sheep who have gone astray
every time they saw me.) The only way I can explain those choices is to suppose I was grafting my new sexual edginess onto such reading as Lassie, Come Home and Black Beauty. At sixteen I simply had no taste. But my appetite for every literary device, every theory of language was enormous. Questions about point of view, symbolism and time occupied me at my desk and away from it. The more complex the form of anything, the more I admired it whether in my own work or in Faulkner’s, Joyce’s or Virginia Woolf’s. In fact, philosophy and aesthetics were more interesting than fiction because principles could be isolated, the human clutter evident in even the purest fiction done away with. There are very young writers who come to their own material guilelessly and learn their craft by simply serving more and more accurately what they have to say. Many more of us, influenced by the academy or not, practice ablative absolutes, archaic synonyms, periodic sentences, points of view entirely beyond us, symbolic structures to rival Dante before we make any attempt to come to terms with what is ours to say. In what can sometimes seem a discouragingly pretentious process, technique is learned.
Writing is, more than is often acknowledged, a craft that has to be practiced, like tennis or the flute. Just as an athlete or musician works long hours in solitary repetition of the hardest techniques of the craft before performing them in game or concert, so a writer needs to concentrate, particularly at first, on what is most difficult. The skill is so complex that a great many of its requirements must become, through dogged repetition, nearly automatic. Otherwise writing a novel would be impossible. In much the same way that any speaker of the language knows how to make subject and verb agree without thinking about it, a writer must develop higher and higher automatic skills so that a choice of sentence structure is rarely mistaken even the first time, so that the dozens of minor technical choices involved in each scene can be made almost without thought. The questions for the beginning writer are often ones too mundane for any teacher of literature ever to raise: how do I stop my characters talking and get into the narrative voice again? How do I get through three months in a paragraph? How do I find words for a sexual experience which will illuminate rather than offend? How do I stop this skateboard of a story going down hill except by crashing into a light pole? These are questions answered not by fine theories but by practice, by being there over and over again until the solution occurs as simply as the familiar way home.
Because we all use language every day, there is an illusion that anyone with adequate intelligence and something to say ought to be able to sit down and write a book about it. But speakers of the language do not practice language as a writer must in order to be prepared to solve the problems that arise. That is why even a second-rate writer can, disappointingly, write a more engaging book than someone with a great deal more to say. That is also why a writer deprived of time to practice the craft continually will rarely emerge as a major voice late in life. We are not as bound to childhood opportunity as ballet dancers, nor as limited by our bodies as any of the performing artists, but we still share with all of them the need to be practicing artists. The creative process in any art takes time.
Time is, however, not enough. No matter how many hours of the day, years of a life, one practices language, there is still the question of what to write about. Though books can be a source of all kinds of technical help, they are rarely a place for discovering subject matter or insight. Those who find their subject matter early are usually autobiographical writers. Both the inventors of fantasy and the realists for whom social, political and moral questions are paramount may take longer. Whatever the choice, a certain detachment, aesthetic distance is necessary. Without it, the courage and ruthlessness of the autobiographical writer can become nothing more than vengeful self-indulgence. The clever inventions of fantasy must serve a deeper insight or be found empty tricks. The social realist can turn shallow propagandist. No matter is safe from mean use. None is beneath wonder. All choices are personal and justified only after they have been proven.
As a writer, I have discovered my subject matter in the world we share in common, that is, what we all may experience as distinct from what I experience either in my unique life (autobiography) or my unique imagination (fantasy), though there are certainly elements of both in my work. When I present a character, I neither take a real person I know nor invent a being out of an ideal concept; rather I take half a dozen people I’ve known who similarly have faced circumstances I want to write about—the loss of a parent, rivalry among siblings, political defeat—and draw even more widely than that on physical attributes, inheritance, social circumstances to make up the character I need for the experience I have designed. If that character slips easily into the slot I have made, I am suspicious, wonder if I have been superficial or glib. A character should, like a real human being, resist categorizing, resist simple-minded solutions. The characters I trust I have usually the hardest time with, for they are often conceived in enough complexity to foil my less interesting plots. I have fairly often written about characters I don’t much like but never about characters I don’t care about. A subjective quirk of mine is to give each of my characters something of my own. It may be a habit or fear, a cough or a favorite word, an old jacket or a childhood landscape. Whatever it is, however small, it is a kind of talisman against any petty or vindictive treatment. I don’t like killing characters even when the structure of a story obviously requires it. I refuse to belittle them.
A circumstance and its resolution are harder for me to come upon than characters to inhabit the experience. Plot often seems to me over-judgmental. It caters to the righteous indignation in us to see characters punished by fate if not by law. I am more interested in insight than in judgment; therefore, I tend to work on circumstances with modest resolutions, which must not be as morally or psychologically simple as they might seem at first glance. I write a fiction of reversed or at least reserved judgment. More and more I have found myself working with novels because I am interested in writing about groups of people and need that much room. The long tradition of fiction with a central character around whom all others must find their secondary place supports hierarchies I don’t find interesting, promotes an egotism that is positively boring. Though it is a common enough fantasy, it is simply not true that any one of us is center of the world. Why should novels perpetuate a false view? In choosing the world we share as my subject matter, my authenticity is more exposed and my compassion more required than either would be in autobiography or fantasy. Those are safeguards important to me as a writer.
Where I live seems to me a question like how I get words on paper, not really relevant to the question of creative process. We live as we can, hoping for that balance of nourishment and peace which will sustain us in our work. I live where I can be sure I am free to practice writing rather than being a writer.
The Canadian Climate
BECAUSE I WAS BORN and raised in the United States and came to Canada for the first time when I was twenty-five and have now lived over half my life here, I should feel more self-consciously Canadian than a native of the country, more defensively Canadian, if you like. I have written a defense for The Globe and Mail called, Canadian Enough
having to do with what I see as my right to be known as a Canadian writer. What really distinguishes me from native writers is my lack of defensiveness about Canada.
I was not raised to think that anything Canadian is second-rate. I was, like most Americans, entirely ignorant of Canada. My geographic insight was limited to the certain knowledge that I lived in the greatest country on earth. Living in England and travelling in Europe shortly after the Second World War, I discovered large numbers of people who did not feel simple gratitude for America’s having won the war and having provided the Marshall plan for Europe’s recovery. Nor were people generally convinced that the threat of world communism justified the purges McCarthy was initiating in the United States. I was asked a number of embarrassing cultural as well as political questions about the rights of native Indians and blacks, about the incarceration of Japanese Americans during the war.
When I returned to my own country, I didn’t any longer feel at home there. The patriotism which required citizens to be proudly, blindly loyal seemed a peculiar American vice which I no longer shared. In England, though I had not been particularly welcomed as an American, I had been encouraged as a young writer, met with others like me to discuss work, talked with published writers who offered introductions to their publishers. In the States I was, because I hadn’t published, dealt with as someone deluded, shut out of the jealously guarded, narrow professionalism of publishing. At the Stanford Writing School, where I expected to meet others like me, I found instead a focus on commercialism and negative competition. We were not being groomed for the long apprenticeship required of a writer but expected to emerge out of the head of Zeus, with best sellers as noisy as the atom bomb.
After teaching on the east coast for two years and saving enough money to take a year off for my own writing, I returned to California to visit my family and incidentally took a trip north with a cousin who had never seen the redwoods. We drove as far as Vancouver only because an English friend of mine had been hired at UBC, and I thought I might scout out an apartment for him.
We arrived on a clear August day in 1956, and there before us was a city of human scale (the only two high rises were B.C. Hydro and the Vancouver Hotel) defined by thirty miles of accessible beaches and the mountains of the north shore rising abruptly into forest wilderness. As we drove along the tree-lined streets, seeing gardens as loved as English gardens, then out through the grant lands to a university on cliffs overlooking the sea, I kept wondering why nobody had ever told me of this place, so rarely beautiful, on a coast I’d known all my life. Until that day, that coast had ended for me at Seattle.
It was a good time in the city’s history for its aspiring young. The university was expanding by thousands each year. The CBC was in a period of regional assertiveness. The first really professional selling gallery, The New Design, had just been established. From the beginning of my life in Vancouver there was work to do, marking papers and tutoring students for the UBC English department, reading tv scripts for CBC, free-lance broadcasting. When I again needed a full-time job, I was Assistant Director of International House the year the new building was opened. Then I taught in the English department, for, though I had only an honors BA in English and a casual year’s graduate work in England, the university needed more teachers than they could find for the hugely expanding enrollment. The four-month-long summer holidays gave me free time to get on with writing.
In those early years the McConnells hosted a writers’ group where I met Bob Harlow, Phyllis Webb, and Maria Fiamengo. Bob Patchell, a producer for CBC, was also a member of that group and bought a story of mine he’d heard there for Anthology. The McConnells founded their own publishing house, Klanak Press, and brought out an anthology of our short stories, Klanak Islands.
A group of artists of all sorts gathered to form The Arts Club. I was on its first board of directors with Geof Massey, architect, Tak Tanabe, painter, Alvin Balkind, director of New Design Gallery. When we rented a building in downtown Vancouver, even Lawren Harris, one of the Group of Seven painters, came down to help clean it up and redecorate it with us. Nearly all the painters belonged, John Korner, Jack Shadbolt, Gordon Smith. Arthur Erickson was a member and gave a wonderful lecture on the process of designing his legendary Comox house. The writers gave readings. I first heard Dorothy Livesay’s poetry there. In the early days we didn’t have the money which was later available to turn the Arts Club into a theatre club as well, but it gave us all a meeting place, provided us with a community of friends as well as an audience.
Though I published very little in my first half dozen years in Vancouver, I felt supported by that community of artists. The university provided me with a living, but no university is a very good climate for a young writer since academics need to distinguish between literature,
so worthy of their devotion, and creative writing,
practiced by dabblers without PhDs or by themselves in semi-secret. Among other artists, my calling was considered neither silly nor pretentious but the hard, long, lonely work it was. We celebrated when any one of us had a show, a performance, a building, something published. And a remarkable number of us survived to take our places not only on the local and national scenes but to international accomplishments and recognition, far more than any people I had known in the States or England.
So for me Vancouver was a remarkably rich and nourishing place, and increasingly I felt I belonged there. More gradually I began to have a sense of British Columbia. As a university chaperone, I toured the province with the Players’ Club, presenting Tennessee Williams’ Glass Menagerie to places as isolated as Bralorne, the gold mining town, as far north as Smithers and Prince George, all through the Okanagan. We were billeted and entertained by local people. Still populated by immigrants, it was a west much younger than the western United States. In British Columbia a dozen cultures mingled uncertainly in towns, in small towns isolated by great reaches of wilderness, mountains, deserts, lakes and rivers, and I felt the more a part of it because I was an immigrant, too.
It took longer for me to have a sense of Canada as a country. When I traveled, I went either south to see my family and friends or to Europe which went on offering me insights into art, history, my own experience. My first published novel, Desert of the Heart, was first accepted by Macmillan of Canada. In the early 60s it was still nearly unheard of for a novel to be published in Canada alone. Mine was accepted on the condition that I find either an American or English publisher to share the costs. Since the book was set in Nevada, it seemed sensible to look for an American publisher. Nearly two years later, when it had been rejected by twenty American firms, I took the manuscript to England where it was accepted by Secker and Warburg, the first publisher to see it. When the book came out and was reviewed across Canada as well as England, I felt welcomed by the country as I had not been by my own, which took yet another year to publish the book to a silence so familiar to first novels there.
If I hadn’t been living in Canada, my long apprenticeship might never have come to an end. Yet the native Canadian writers all around me were more often bitter at the lack of opportunity in Canada, the necessity of commanding a market either in England or the States before they could be heard here. They felt cut off from the rich markets to the south, claiming that American publishers weren’t interested in Canadian material. My own experience made me think that American publishers weren’t interested in American material either but only in success; for, once I’d been published in England and Canada, American magazine editors began to accept my work. They didn’t seem to me prejudiced against Canadian settings, only against unknown writers.
Redbook once asked me to name the city a thousand miles from Seattle from which one of my characters was driving and suggested Winnipeg. Winnipeg? The city a thousand miles away from Seattle is San Francisco, but Redbook thought of me as Canadian and therefore chose Winnipeg. After my initial surprise, I happily concurred.
When I exchanged my envied and disliked American citizenship for Canadian, I did not take on the defensive bitterness that seemed to be a Canadian birthright. At first I felt modestly guilty when I traveled in Europe, enjoying a friendly welcome I hadn’t received as an ugly American. Though living in Canada had changed me, had given me a sense of citizenship I’d never felt in the States, I knew that I had not really become someone else. It helped me to remember that one set of my great grandparents had gone from Nova Scotia to northern California to settle. I was named for that great grandmother. I had personal roots to claim in Canada.
I had never applied for an American grant. Educated in the west, I had a notion that without any connection with the eastern establishment, I had no chance of success. I had to apply four times for a Canada Council grant before I was given one, but it was extended for another remarkable year during which I could continue to confirm myself as a professional writer and serve my craft with the intensity of attention that is essential for its maturing.
I have since served on juries for Canada Council. Though women and westerners are not fairly represented either on juries or as successful candidates, it is a quite remarkably good system for supporting artists in Canada. Canada Council is not a patriarchal charity as some of the big American foundations seem to me. It is an organization susceptible to change and improvement.
The Writers’ Union of Canada is another institution envied by