A Companion to the American Short Story

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A Companion to the American Short Story Page 18

by Alfred Bendixen


  form for a comic – though important – story, Chesnutt stays true, I think, to the

  rhetorical intentions of traditional slave narratives. While Douglass, Bibb, Jacobs, and

  other authors of “ literal ” slave narratives tried through their writings to convince

  presumably reasonable white readers to reconsider their views of slavery (and blacks

  in general), “ The Passing of Grandison ” asks later generations of white readers to do

  much the same, especially in terms of their regard for African Americans. For here ’ s

  a story in which a stereotypically acquiescent and dim

  -

  witted slave

  –

  Chesnutt

  ’

  s

  depiction of Grandison for much of the story might make modern readers distinctly

  uncomfortable – ultimately outwits his “ superiors ” by engineering his escape and that

  of his family. Thus, while “ The Passing of Grandison ” certainly amuses, it also sug-

  gests that readers might have to reevaluate their views of African Americans. In the

  story, both the plantation owner and his son, relying on racial stereotypes, misread

  Grandison – Chesnutt seems to offer this story in the hope that it might convince his

  readers not to fall into the same trap.

  In addition to stories about the South or escaping from the South, roughly half of

  Chesnutt ’ s stories focus on the lives of Northerners, primarily, but not exclusively,

  African Americans and those of mixed blood. Indeed, two of his best works, “ Her

  Virginia Mammy

  ”

  and

  “

  The Wife of His Youth,

  ”

  focus on characters living and

  working in “ Groveland, ” Chesnutt ’ s fi ctionalized twin of Cleveland.

  Typical of Chesnutt ’ s “ Northern ” stories is “ Her Virginia Mammy, ” a tale that,

  while in many ways an apparently conventional sentimental love story, is infused with

  such controversial topics as miscegenation, passing, and the consequences of slavery.

  First published in The Wife of His Youth and Other Stories of the Color Line in 1899, the

  story recounts a period in the life of Clara Hohlfelder, the adopted daughter of German

  immigrants who refuses to marry her fi anc é , John, until she can verify the worthiness

  of her “ blood ” family. Clara ’ s postponement of the marriage to a man of “ pure ” heri-

  tage – his genealogical roots include “ the governor and the judge and the Harvard

  professor and the Mayfl ower pilgrim ” ( Wife 82) – derives from her fear that her origins

  won ’ t favorably compare with his. During the course of the story, though, readers

  Charles W. Chesnutt

  75

  learn that the light - skinned Clara doesn ’ t come from a poor white family, as she fears;

  rather, we and two of the three main characters discover (although Clara never does)

  that her

  “

  blood

  ”

  mother is an ex

  -

  slave. When the two women meet and Clara

  ’

  s

  mother, Mrs Harper, learns of her daughter

  ’

  s predicament, she and Clara

  ’

  s fi anc

  é

  choose to withhold the genealogical truth from her, thus insuring a “ happy ” ending

  – a marriage, but one between a white man and a black woman. The story thus seems

  to endorse miscegenation, a precarious position for a turn - of - the - century black writer

  to take.

  Although not at all provocative in tone or mood, “ Her Virginia Mammy ” offers

  some of Chesnutt ’ s most daring messages – that “ blood ” (and race) don ’ t matter much

  and also that, perhaps, one ’ s racial identity is not quite as secure as he or she may

  think. For Clara ’ s happiness at the end of the story – now that she “ knows ” her ancestry

  – comes at high cost: her continued ignorance about the one issue she considers most

  important. Chesnutt thus seems to minimize the importance of “ blood ” and “ heritage ”

  and even the past, at one point having Clara ’ s fi anc é dismissing her concerns by saying,

  “ For the past, we can claim no credit, for those who made it died with it. Our destiny

  lies in the future ” ( Collected Stories 118). Even more provocatively, though, Chesnutt

  seems to mock the very idea of a secure racial identity, as the story implicitly calls

  into question the unexamined assumptions about race and the past that his readers

  may have had.

  Also set in “ Groveland, ” “ The Wife of His Youth ” offers a similarly complicated

  view of the remaking of America at the micro, or family, level. In that story, Mr.

  Ryder – the “ dean ” of a society of socially and fi nancially successful “ individuals who

  were … more white than black ” (Duncan, Northern Stories 65) and who look down on

  those of darker complexion

  –

  has decided to marry a young, very light

  -

  skinned

  woman. But he must reconsider those plans when his slave wife, who has been search-

  ing for him for twenty

  -

  fi ve years, unexpectedly arrives on the day he intends to

  propose. Thus, Ryder must choose between reconnecting with his (slave) past and

  beginning a new life in the North with a new (younger, paler, and prettier) wife. Like

  so many of Chesnutt ’ s works, “ The Wife of His Youth ” has at its core the very notion

  of storytelling, as Ryder ’ s long - lost wife, ‘ Liza Jane, tells of her search for him in a

  long, uninterrupted narrative. Here, then, an ex - slave has the chance to articulate her

  life story as an embedded narrative in the midst of a story about the “ New ” North.

  Chesnutt thus uses this narrative arrangement to explore issues one fi nds throughout

  his short fi ctions: the ongoing consequences of slavery, the formation and re - formation

  of the American family, and the implications of race – which, in this case, have to do

  with intra - racial prejudice. In this and so many others of his Northern fi ctions –

  “ A Matter of Principle, ” “ Mr. Taylor ’ s Funeral, ” and “ White Weeds, ” to name only

  a few – Chesnutt examines race not as an abstraction but as it pervades the lives of

  Americans living in a nation struggling to redefi ne itself in the midst of a profound

  and ongoing “ reconstruction. ”

  Given the central, even defi ning role the issue of race plays in the author ’ s short

  fi ctions, it ’ s almost startling to fi nd that perhaps Chesnutt ’ s best short story, “ Baxter ’ s

  76

  Charles Duncan

  Procrustes, ” makes no explicit mention of race whatsoever (although it ’ s certainly

  possible to interpret the story as a racial allegory). “ Baxter ’ s Procrustes ” traces the arc

  of a fi nely wrought practical joke perpetrated on snobbish book collectors who value

  the accoutrements of book publishing – wide margins, fi ne lettering, and exquisitely

  embroidered covers – far more than the textual contents. When Baxter, a poet whose

  biography very much resembles that of Chesnutt, decides to turn the pretensions of

  the Bodleian Club – a fi ctitious twin of the Rowfant Club, a society of book co
llectors

  in Cleveland to which Chesnutt belonged – against it, the resulting story offers a

  wide - ranging satire of book collectors, literary critics, and the reading public. Given

  absolute control over the publishing of his epic poem, The Procrustes , a publication

  the members of the Bodleian hope to profi t from, Baxter instead publishes a volume

  of blank pages. The resulting ecstatic reviews – by club members who refuse to “ cut ”

  (or actually read) their copies of the book and thus reduce the profi t they might realize

  – offer a hilarious send - up of a culture all too eager to value the trappings of a book

  (including the race of its author) over its content. While the story seems initially to

  mock a pompous subset of late nineteenth - century culture without having anything

  to do with race, one can nevertheless appreciate Chesnutt ’ s satire on other levels as

  well; for Baxter is an author who, like Chesnutt, refuses to submit willingly to the

  Procrustean bed that his readers seem to insist upon. Like Chesnutt, Baxter can only

  try to redirect (and occasionally subvert) the expectations of readers far too comfort-

  able with their preconceived notions of “ America ” and its stories.

  It

  ’

  s tempting, fi nally, to assume that Charles W. Chesnutt

  ’

  s importance as an

  American short story writer derives primarily from the seeming oppositions he both

  embodied and addressed in his short fi ction. A self - identifi ed African American author

  (but of “ mixed ” heritage) who was born in the North but grew up in the Reconstruc-

  tion South, Chesnutt did use his short fi ction to explore, in intricate and complex

  ways, our national obsession with race. Most of his best short stories tended to focus

  on race both in broad, sociological terms – the outcomes, intended and unintended,

  of Reconstruction, the ongoing consequences of racialized thought, etc. – and its

  effects on individuals and, especially, families in an America trying to put itself back

  together following the Civil War. Ultimately, though, Chesnutt ’ s depiction of our

  national reconciliation, while delivered through the prism of race, had more to

  do with his unique vision of an America – a country well schooled in invention –

  re - inventing itself all over again.

  References and Further Reading

  Andrews , William L. The Literary Career of Charles

  Brasch , Walter M. Brer Rabbit, Uncle Remus, and

  W. Chesnutt . Baton Rouge : Louisiana State Uni-

  the “ Cornfi eld Journalist ” : The Tale of Joel Chandler

  versity Press , 1980 .

  Harris

  .

  Macon, GA

  :

  Mercer University Press

  ,

  — — — . To Tell a Free Story: The First Century

  2000 .

  of Afro

  - American Autobiography, 1769 – 1865 .

  Chesnutt , Charles W. “ Baxter ’ s Procrustes . ” Atlan-

  Urbana : University of Illinois Press , 1986 .

  tic Monthly 93 (June 1904 ): 823 – 30 .

  Charles W. Chesnutt

  77

  — — — . Collected Stories of Charles W. Chesnutt . Ed.

  Short Fiction . ” North American Review 173

  and Intro. William L. Andrews . New York :

  (December 1901 ): 872 – 88 .

  Mentor , 1992 .

  Kaplan , Amy . “ Nation, Region, and Empire . ”

  — — — . The Conjure Woman . Boston : Houghton

  Columbia History of the American Novel . New

  Miffl in , 1899 .

  York :

  Columbia

  University

  Press ,

  1991 .

  — — — . The Conjure Woman and Other Conjure

  240 – 66 .

  Tales .

  Ed.

  and

  Intro.

  Richard

  Brodhead .

  Keller , Frances Richardson . An American Crusade .

  Durham, NC : Duke University Press , 1993 .

  Provo

  :

  Brigham Young University Press

  ,

  — — — . “ The Goophered Grapevine . ” Atlantic

  1978 .

  Monthly 60 (August 1887 ): 254 – 60 . Rpt. in

  McElrath , Joseph R. , Jr. , ed. Critical Essays on

  Conjure Woman . 1 – 31.

  Charles W. Chesnutt

  .

  New York

  :

  G. K. Hall

  ,

  — — — . “ Her Virginia Mammy . ” Collected Stories.

  1999 .

  114 – 31 .

  McElrath , Joseph R. , Jr. , and Robert C. Leitz III ,

  — — — . “ The Wife of His Youth . ” The Wife of His

  eds.

  “

  To Be an Author

  ”

  : Letters of Charles W.

  Youth and Other Stories of the Color Line . Boston :

  Chesnutt, 1889 – 1905 . Princeton, NJ : Princeton

  Houghton Miffl in , 1899 . Ann Arbor: Univer-

  University Press , 1997 .

  sity of Michigan Press, 1968.

  McElrath , Joseph R. , Jr. , Jesse Crisler , and Robert

  Chesnutt , Helen . Charles Waddell Chesnutt: Pioneer

  C. Leitz III , eds. Charles W. Chesnutt: Essays and

  of the Color Line . Chapel Hill : University of

  Speeches . Stanford, CA : Stanford University

  North Carolina Press , 1952 .

  Press , 1999 .

  Davis , Charles T. , and Henry Louis Gates , Jr. , eds.

  — — — . An Exemplary Citizen: Letters of Charles W.

  The Slave ’ s Narrative . Oxford : Oxford University

  Chesnutt, 1906 – 1932 . Stanford, CA : Stanford

  Press , 1989 .

  University Press , 2002 .

  Duncan , Charles . The Absent Man: The Narrative

  McWilliams , Dean . Charles W. Chesnutt and the

  Craft of Charles W. Chesnutt . Athens : University

  Fictions of Race . Athens : University of Georgia

  of Ohio Press , 1998 .

  Press , 2002 .

  — — – . The Northern Stories of Charles W. Chesnutt .

  Olney , James . “ ‘ I Was Born ’ : Slave Narratives,

  Athens : University of Ohio Press , 2004 .

  Their Status as Autobiography and as Litera-

  Fraiman , Susan . “ Mother - Daughter Romance in

  ture . ” In Davis and Gates , eds., The Slave ’ s Nar-

  Charles W. Chesnutt ’ s ‘ Her Virginia Mammy. ’ ”

  rative , 148 – 75 .

  Studies in Short Fiction 22 . 4 (Fall 1985 ):

  Sundquist , Eric J. To Wake the Nations: Race in the

  443 – 8 .

  Making of American Literature . Cambridge, MA :

  Howells , W. D. “ Mr. Charles W. Chesnutt ’ s

  Belknap Press , 1993 .

  Stories . ” Atlantic Monthly 85 (May 1900 ):

  Warren , Kenneth . Black and White Strangers: Race

  699 – 701 .

  and American Literary Realism . Chicago : Univer-

  — — — . “ A Psychological Counter - Current in

  sity of Chicago Press , 1993 .

  6

  Mark Twain and the American

  Comic Short Story

  David E. E. Sloane

  As America ’ s premier humorist and literary comedian, Mark Twain ranks among the

  great short story writers in the world. He is not the fi rst great writer
of comic short

  fi ction in America; even Washington Irving, despite his importance, could not make

  that claim. Nor is he the last, if we recognize William Faulkner ’ s use of the tradition

  or Woody Allen, more generally, but he is the focal point. Almost every critic sees

  Twain as a unique culmination of nineteenth - century American traditions of humor,

  as he will be treated here. In his writing, he gathers together comic modes from before

  his time, and his infl uence radiates down to current humor writers. To understand

  the tradition of the comic short story in America, then, we need to look back in

  American literary history and even to Europe. Mark Twain, however, is a central refer-

  ence point for a historical view of the medium and the American context. Twain and

  the tradition represent national characteristics embodied in a broad generic form

  which was recognized as unique as early as the 1830s, if not before. Often, his

  expanded burlesques of townsfolk and roughhouse antics are accounted for by the

  Southwestern tradition, but his intellectual exaggeration and more sophisticated

  ethical ideas owe a great deal to the tradition of Northeastern humor, and the result

  is truly national.

  British and European models for the comic short story or humorous episodic

  adventure abound. The Travels and Surprising Adventures of Baron Munchausen bulks

  large in references to Twain, to offer a single reference to a larger fi eld of study.

  First among equals for British infl uences on American comic writers would be the

  episodic classic, Laurence Sterne ’ s Life and Adventures of Tristram Shandy, Esq. , and

  from that we move easily to Rabelais, Cervantes, Montaigne, and Swift, among

  others. Dickens and Thackeray follow. The Spectator and Vanity Fair each had a role

  in developing the American satiric tradition, beginning with the sarcasm in Colonial

  and early Federal sources. On our own side of the Atlantic, Benjamin Franklin has

  to be recognized as one of our earliest comic storytellers. Whether in the neoclassic

  mode of “ The Ephemerae ” written for Madame Helvetius, or in the newspaper style

  Mark

  Twain

  79

  of “ The Witch Trial at Mount Holly ” in 1730, his attitude and materials are dis-

  tinctly American.

  The fi rst major recognition of the comic American short story by a British source

  was in 1830. Mary Russell Mitford , indefatigable English sketch writer and antholo-

 

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