The Mailer Review/Volume 2, 2008/A New Politics of Form in Harlot's Ghost: Difference between revisions

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Mailer’s career-long writings, interviews and public pronouncements and, in my view, form a clear and definable worldview and approach to human existence and human freedom.
Mailer’s career-long writings, interviews and public pronouncements and, in my view, form a clear and definable worldview and approach to human existence and human freedom.


 
With a few notable exceptions, this novel hasn’t fared well among critics and readers because it has been taken as conservative and sympathetic to the CIA, and because of its lack of an ending. These reactions need to be reconsidered. The novel is not a flattering portrait of the CIA, as we shall see, despite the tendency of some commentators to conflate the politics of ''Harlot’s Ghost'' with that of its narrator and protagonist, Harry Hubbard who, at
 
least initially, views the CIA as a noble organization.{{efn|8. Mary Dearborn in her recent biography of Norman Mailer takes this view of the work. She writes, “To Hubbard, America is a country that ‘had God’s sanction’ and he is privileged and honored to serve it” and concludes from her reading of the novel that “Norman’s admiration for the CIA, and his approval of what he takes to be its patrician ways, is obvious in Harlot’s Ghost” (p. 409). This seems to me to miss the ambiguity and tension that drive the novel and represents a too simplistic conflation of the framework of the protagonist with the logic of the novel.}} ''Harlot’s Ghost'' presents a damning vision of contemporary American society that fits into an alternative canon of politically engaged, Cold War literature that find traditional modes of representation inadequate for conditions of late capitalism. The novel’s lack of closure, although frustrating to many readers, reflects an unwillingness to artificially resolve the real historical conditions and conflicts depicted in the novel—even if this is a post-facto explanation. This refusal of premature closure represents a new politics of form for Mailer. To understand the novel’s lack of ending, we need to consider the subtle and unexpected affinities between Mailer’s performance and the Brechtian concepts of how political art should function as elaborated by Walter Benjamin.{{efn|9. See Brecht, “The Modern Theater is the Epic Theater” in Brecht on Theater.}} The novel’s lack of closure is best understood by considering it in light of Walter Benjamin’s famous essay, influenced by Brecht, “The Author as Producer.”{{efn|10. See Benjamin pp. 85–105. I wish to make it clear that I am not suggesting that Mailer was influenced by this essay directly but rather that it helps us understand the functioning and logic of the structure of the novel. While Mailer never cites Benjamin or Brecht, in relation to this novel or in any of his writings (that I know of), his explanation for the structure of the novel, quoted towards the end of this essay (see footnote 45) echoes their approach.}} Benjamin confronts the question that has haunted Mailer for years—namely, how can authors effectively and meaningfully use their writing to expand creativity and human freedom{{efn|11. Benjamin pp. 85–105.}} in the face of the
 
de-personalizing effects of modern capitalism. It is often the case that the politics of a work of fiction is reduced to its explicit political content but Benjamin, in contrast makes the claim, still radical in current circumstances, that “the tendency of a work of literature can be politically correct only if it
 
is also correct in the literary sense,” (86) inextricably linking political content to form. Therefore, by Benjamin’s criteria the politics of ''Harlot’s Ghost'' do not reside in what it overtly tells us about the politics of the CIA, but
 
rather through a more complex dialectic between the novel’s form and content. The justification for Benjamin’s assertion lies in his description of a situation in which,“we are in the midst of a vast process in which literary forms are being melted down, a process in which many of the contrasts in terms of which we have been accustomed to think may lose their relevance” (87), which is more true in the contemporary media and information explosion that accompanies late capitalism than when Benjamin wrote. Mailer’s
With a few notable exceptions, this novel hasn’t fared well among critics
incomplete novel can be taken as coherent if, despite the belief that we live in a post-ideological era where the struggle between capitalism and its challenges are over, the issues at the heart of the Cold War remain unresolved, leaving a final word impossible.
and readers because it has been taken as conservative and sympathetic to the
CIA, and because of its lack of an ending. These reactions need to be reconsidered. The novel is not a flattering portrait of the CIA, as we shall see,
despite the tendency of some commentators to conflate the politics of Harlot’s Ghost with that of its narrator and protagonist, Harry Hubbard who, at
least initially, views the CIA as a noble organization.8 Harlot’s Ghost presents
a damning vision of contemporary American society that fits into an alternative canon of politically engaged, Cold War literature that find traditional
modes of representation inadequate for conditions of late capitalism. The
novel’s lack of closure, although frustrating to many readers, reflects an
unwillingness to artificially resolve the real historical conditions and conflicts depicted in the novel—even if this is a post-facto explanation. This
refusal of premature closure represents a new politics of form for Mailer. To
understand the novel’s lack of ending, we need to consider the subtle and
unexpected affinities between Mailer’s performance and the Brechtian concepts of how political art should function as elaborated by Walter Benjamin.9 The novel’s lack of closure is best understood by considering it in light of
Walter Benjamin’s famous essay, influenced by Brecht, “The Author as Producer.” 10 Benjamin confronts the question that has haunted Mailer for
years—namely, how can authors effectively and meaningfully use their writing to expand creativity and human freedom11 in the face of the
de-personalizing effects of modern capitalism. It is often the case that the
politics of a work of fiction is reduced to its explicit political content but
Benjamin, in contrast makes the claim, still radical in current circumstances,
that “the tendency of a work of literature can be politically correct only if it
is also correct in the literary sense,” ~86! inextricably linking political content to form. Therefore, by Benjamin’s criteria the politics of Harlot’s Ghost
do not reside in what it overtly tells us about the politics of the CIA, but
rather through a more complex dialectic between the novel’s form and content. The justification for Benjamin’s assertion lies in his description of a situation in which,“we are in the midst of a vast process in which literary forms
are being melted down, a process in which many of the contrasts in terms of
which we have been accustomed to think may lose their relevance” ~87!,
which is more true in the contemporary media and information explosion
that accompanies late capitalism than when Benjamin wrote. Mailer’s
incomplete novel can be taken as coherent if, despite the belief that we live
in a post-ideological era where the struggle between capitalism and its challenges are over, the issues at the heart of the Cold War remain unresolved,
leaving a final word impossible.


==III. The Portrait of a Young Man—Hubbard and Mailer==
==III. The Portrait of a Young Man—Hubbard and Mailer==
There is a strange ambiguity within Harlot’s Ghost concerning the novel’s
There is a strange ambiguity within Harlot’s Ghost concerning the novel’s
subject matter. The novel is about real historical events yet it also serves as
subject matter. The novel is about real historical events yet it also serves as
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8. Mary Dearborn in her recent biography of Norman Mailer takes this view of the work.
 
She writes, “To Hubbard, America is a country that ‘had God’s sanction’ and he is privileged and honored to serve it” and concludes from her reading of the novel that “Norman’s admiration for the CIA, and his approval of what he takes to be its patrician ways,
 
is obvious in Harlot’s Ghost” ~p. 409!. This seems to me to miss the ambiguity and tension that drive the novel and represents a too simplistic conflation of the framework of
 
the protagonist with the logic of the novel.
 
9. See Brecht, “The Modern Theater is the Epic Theater” in Brecht on Theater.
10. See Benjamin pp. 85–105. I wish to make it clear that I am not suggesting that Mailer was
influenced by this essay directly but rather that it helps us understand the functioning and
logic of the structure of the novel. While Mailer never cites Benjamin or Brecht, in relation to this novel or in any of his writings ~that I know of!, his explanation for the structure of the novel, quoted towards the end of this essay ~see footnote 45! echoes their
approach.
11. Benjamin pp. 85–105.
12. A notable exception, as mentioned above, is John Whalen-Bridge.
12. A notable exception, as mentioned above, is John Whalen-Bridge.
13. See An American Dream and the episodes of rock climbing in Harlot’s Ghost.
13. See An American Dream and the episodes of rock climbing in Harlot’s Ghost.
88

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