A Companion to the American Short Story

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A Companion to the American Short Story Page 65

by Alfred Bendixen


  Out - of - Individuality Sexual Work . ” Journal of

  Short Story . 1963 . Rpt. New York : Harper

  Contemporary Thought 7 ( 1997 ): 91 – 106 .

  Colophon , 1985.

  Warren , Robert Penn. “ The Love and the Separate-

  Pitavy - Souques , Dani è le. “ A Blazing Butterfl y:

  ness in Miss Welty. ” 1944 . Rpt. in Turner and

  The Modernity of Eudora Welty . ” Mississippi

  Harding, eds., Critical Essays , 42 – 51 .

  Quarterly 39 ( 1986 ): 537 – 60 .

  Welty , Eudora. The Collected Stories of Eudora Welty .

  — — — . “ Technique as Myth: The Structure of The

  New York : Harcourt Brace Jovanovich , 1980 .

  Golden Apples . ” Eudora Welty: Critical Essays . Ed.

  — — — . The Eye of the Story: Selected Essays and

  Peggy Whitman Prenshaw . Jackson : University

  Reviews . New York : Random House , 1978 .

  Press of Mississippi , 1979 . 258 – 68 .

  — — — . One Writer ’ s Beginnings . Cambridge, MA :

  Polk , Noel . “ Welty, Hawthorne, and Poe: Men of

  Harvard University Press , 1984 .

  the Crowd and the Landscape of Alienation

  . ”

  Weston , Ruth D. “ Eudora Welty as Lyric Novel-

  Mississippi Quarterly 50 ( 1997 ): 553 – 65 .

  ist: The Long and the Short of It

  .

  ”

  The Late

  Pollack , Harriet. “ Words Between Strangers: On

  Novels of Eudora Welty . Eds. Jan Nordby

  Welty, Her Style, and Her Audience . ” Missis-

  Gretlund and Karl - Heinz Westarp . Columbia :

  sippi Quarterly 39 ( 1986 ): 481 – 505 .

  University of South Carolina Press

  ,

  1998

  .

  Pollack , Harriet , and Suzanne Marrs , eds. Eudora

  29 – 40 .

  Welty and Politics: Did the Writer Crusade? Baton

  — — — . Gothic Traditions and Narrative Techniques

  Rouge : Louisiana State University Press , 2001 .

  in the Fiction of Eudora Welty . Baton Rouge :

  Prenshaw , Peggy Whitman , ed. Conversations with

  Louisiana State University Press , 1994 .

  Eudora Welty . 1984 . Rpt. Jackson : University

  — — — .

  “ Intimacy

  Between

  Strangers:

  The

  Press of Mississippi , 1998.

  Sensual Texts of Eudora Welty

  .

  ”

  Journal of

  — — — . More Conversations with Eudora Welty .

  Contemporary Thought 7 ( 1997 ): 79 – 89 .

  Jackson : University Press of Mississippi , 1996 .

  — — — . “ Reticent Beauty and Promiscuous Joy:

  Schmidt , Peter. The Heart of the Story: Eudora

  Textual Framing in Eudora Welty ’ s The Bride of

  Welty ’ s Short Fiction . Jackson : University of

  the Innisfallen and Other Stories . ” Southern Literary

  Mississippi Press , 1991 .

  Journal 32 ( 2000 ): 42 – 58 .

  Turner , W. Craig , and Lee Emling Harding , eds.

  Wright , Austin M. “ Recalcitrance in the Short

  Critical Essays on Eudora Welty . Boston : G. K.

  Story. ” In Lohafer and Clarey, eds. Short Story

  Hall , 1989 .

  Theory , 115 – 29 .

  19

  The Short Stories of F. Scott

  Fitzgerald: Structure, Narrative

  Technique, Style

  Kirk Curnutt

  It has become something of an unfortunate obligation when writing about the 160 -

  plus short stories that F. Scott Fitzgerald published during his lifetime to acknowl-

  edge his tenuous place in the canon of American short fi ction. Although “ Babylon

  Revisited ” (1931) is a staple of high - school and undergraduate anthologies, and while

  the expired copyrights on his earliest and most popular tales have resulted in a slew

  of new editions of Flappers and Philosophers (1920) and Tales of the Jazz Age (1922),

  Fitzgerald remains at best a tangential presence in most histories of the form. From

  Henry Seidel Canby and Alfred Dashiell ’ s A History of the Short Story (1935 ) through

  Austin Wright ’ s The American Short Story in the Twenties (1961) to Arthur Voss ’ s The

  American Short Story: A Critical Survey (1973 ) and, most recently, Charles E. May ’ s

  Short Story Writers (2008 ), he either goes unmentioned entirely or is referenced as a

  counterpoint to Ernest Hemingway ’ s more central contributions to the genre ’ s devel-

  opment. This is not to deny, of course, that there have been excellent full - length

  examinations of Fitzgerald ’ s stories. Alice Hall Petry ’ s Fitzgerald ’ s Craft of Short Fiction

  (1989 ) and Bryant Mangum ’ s A Fortune Yet: Money and Art in the Short Stories of F.

  Scott Fitzgerald (1991 ) are but two sterling examples of the nuanced thematic analysis

  that the short fi ction can inspire, while collections such as Jackson R. Bryer ’ s two

  volumes on neglected efforts ( 1982, 1996 ) rightfully remind us that “ Babylon ” is by

  no means his lone tale to reward repeated close readings. Unfortunately, however, the

  infl uence of these secondary sources tends to resonate most loudly in the rather cir-

  cumscribed world of Fitzgerald studies and not necessarily among short - story histo-

  rians and theorists. As a result, what the late Matthew J. Bruccoli wrote in the

  introduction to The Short Stories of F. Scott Fitzgerald: A New Collection (1989 ) is as true

  today for genre specialists as it was twenty years ago for authorial enthusiasts: “ F.

  Scott Fitzgerald ’ s short stories remain a misunderstood and underrated aspect of his

  career ” (xiii).

  The reasons for this perpetual undervaluing are many. For starters, a mere forty - six

  of Fitzgerald ’ s stories were collected in book form before his 1940 death, the other

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  Kirk Curnutt

  two - thirds of his output left to languish for decades in periodicals like the Saturday

  Evening Post that, however originally popular at newsstands and via subscription, were

  far too ephemeral a medium upon which to build a critical reputation. Additionally,

  as Martin Scofi eld adds, “ None of the [four] short story collections ” that Fitzgerald

  did publish during his lifetime – the other two are All the Sad Young Men (1926) and

  Taps at Reveille (1935) – “ as a whole is as signifi cant as his achievement in the genre

  of the novel, particularly his masterpiece, The Great Gatsby (1925) ” (150). As far as

  the American short story goes, this reality puts Fitzgerald at a distinct disadvantage

  to contemporaries such as Sherwood Anderson, none of whose longer works can hold

  a candle to Winesburg, Ohio (1919). This same is arguably true of Hemingway, whose

  In Our Time (1925), to many critics, packs a more concise, dramatic punch than either

  A Farewell to Arms (1929) or For Whom the Bell Tolls (1940). Then there is the problem

  of Fitzgerald ’ s own dismissive attitude toward his short fi ction. Even a cursory reading

  of his correspondence reveals the constancy of his derogatory comments, most famously

  his claim to Hemingway that his economic dependency on the Post rendered him a

  prostitute – albeit one handsomely paid several grand per turn ( Life in Letters 169).

&nb
sp; Nor has his habit of mining passages from stories that earned such extravagant sums

  for use in his novels helped matters. Tender Is the Night (1934), for example, contains

  “ strippings ” from more than three dozen stories, from 1922 ’ s “ The Popular Girl ” to

  1933 ’ s “ I Got Shoes. ” Except for a handful, these rifl ed efforts rank among Fitzgerald ’ s

  most critically ignored, in large part because their reputation as workshop exercises

  for the long - delayed follow - up to Gatsby have tainted perceptions of any intrinsic

  merit they might possess.

  These debilities are well known and have been attributed to the author ’ s belief

  that while the novel was the medium in which he must make his critical reputation,

  the short story was good for little more than paying his bills. Yet there is a larger if

  less acknowledged reason why Fitzgerald is relatively marginalized: in such decisive

  criteria as structure and form, narrative perspective, and style, his short fi ction simply

  does not fi t the paradigm of the modernist short story as it has traditionally been

  constructed. As Dominic Head argues, several parallels between the attributes of the

  defi ning artistic movement of the early twentieth century and the formal properties

  of the short story made the genre especially attractive to European and American

  writers, from James Joyce, Virginia Woolf, and Katherine Mansfi eld to Hemingway,

  William Faulkner, and Katherine Anne Porter. First, the constricted space of short

  fi ction appealed to the modernist desire to intensify drama through techniques of

  foregrounding – what Head calls “ the cultivation of expression through form ” (7) –

  that do away with exposition and immerse the reader in narrative immediacy. Addi-

  tionally, the genre facilitated modernists ’ interest in breaking the requisites of the

  well - developed plot by abandoning the obligatory temporality of narrative sequence

  in favor of a spatiality that Joseph Franks has compared to that of the plastic arts

  (60). The modernist reliance upon fi gural patterns and motifs to convey thematic

  signifi cance provides a third point of comparison, for “ the short form often implies

  the typicality of a specifi c episode, while narrative limitation demands oblique

  F. Scott Fitzgerald

  297

  expression through image and symbol ” (Head 7). Finally, while a great deal of short -

  story theory reiterates Edgar Allan Poe ’ s claim that short fi ction is superior to the

  novel in its ability to enable a “ unity of effect or impression ” (570 – 1), Head makes

  a persuasive case that its brevity actually encouraged the modernist preference for

  fragmentation and discontinuity. While his paradigmatic example is Mansfi eld

  ’

  s

  “ Bliss ” (1918), one can nominate a range of contemporaneous American authors who

  defy the organicism presumed by Poe ’ s defi nition: aside from Hemingway, Faulkner,

  and Porter, one thinks of Gertrude Stein, Djuna Barnes, and Jean Toomer, to name

  but one eclectic trio.

  The contiguities that Head discusses are by no means the only ones shared by

  modernism and the short story. What is striking from even a basic overview of his

  study, however, is how absolutely inapplicable the characteristics he outlines are to

  Fitzgerald ’ s short fi ction. Whereas the canonical modernist story tends to eschew

  plot, even Fitzgerald ’ s most famous ones – “ Babylon Revisited ” is a prime example

  – are constructed according to the classical Aristotelian structure that begins with

  complicating action, rises to a climax, and ends with a denouement. And while

  modernists developed innovative points of view to convey new theories of phenom-

  enology (stream of consciousness, most famously), Fitzgerald was prone to that most

  grievous storytelling foible of post

  -

  Flaubertian prose, the omniscient narrator.

  Finally, while many modernists disparaged emotion, arguing that feeling corrupted

  art by appealing to the sentimentality with which the mass market supposedly

  pandered to general readers, Fitzgerald ’ s Romantic affi nities inspired a propensity

  for lyric expressionism whose central tenet was its lush appeal to pathos. Compared

  to experimental writers who forged their reputations in obscure but infl uential liter-

  ary magazines such as the Little Review, Transatlantic Review, and transition , Fitzger-

  ald ’ s stories cannot help seeming a bit old - fashioned. This putative traditionalism

  is especially intriguing given that his themes generally address mainline modernist

  concerns: like his peers, Fitzgerald was fascinated with the psychological displace-

  ment of expatriation, with Freudian neuroses and the relationship between dreams

  and reality, and the ruptures of historical change that the Great War imposed upon

  his generation.

  And yet one senses that the differences that distinguish self - consciously modern

  short fi ction from the popular marketplace for which Fitzgerald wrote are as much a

  matter of degree as of kind. Even the most abbreviated of modernist stories, for

  example, has a plot. However compressed, the interchapters of Hemingway ’ s In Our

  Time still revolve around a central dramatic action, be it the wounding of Nick Adams,

  the execution of the King of Hungary, or the hanging of Sam Cardinella. As such,

  each fragment is more akin to a traditional story than to the verbal statuary of imag-

  istic poems such as Ezra Pound

  ’

  s

  “

  In a Station of the Metro

  ”

  or William Carlos

  Williams ’ s “ The Red Wheelbarrow. ” Similarly, to whatever degree modernists might

  preach against the intrusive narrative garrulity of nineteenth - century predecessors

  such as Nathaniel Hawthorne or Herman Melville, it was not unheard of for some of

  them – Woolf in particular – to resort to omniscience to evoke a communal sensibility

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  Kirk Curnutt

  (Levitt 99 – 100). Finally, despite the sneers of modernists toward sentimentality, the

  type of intricately cadenced, exclamatory passages that signal the rhapsodic climax of

  “ Winter Dreams ” (1922) has its counterpart in Joyce ’ s “ The Dead ” (1914 ), Porter ’ s

  “ Flowering Judas ” (1931) or Faulkner ’ s “ Delta Autumn ” (1942) – in such examples,

  the emotion simply unfurls within devices that represent the inner workings of an

  agonized mind instead of directly addressing the audience. Because Fitzgerald ’ s char-

  acteristic habits of structure, perspective, and style are nowhere near as different from

  his contemporaries ’ as critics have traditionally assumed, his stories allow us to qualify

  the conventional defi nition of the modernist short story while suggesting the ways in

  which his short fi ction is more modernistic than heretofore recognized.

  Structure, Form, Plot

  According to Bruccoli, Fitzgerald proved a prolifi c story writer because “ his best story

  ideas came to him as complete structures, and by writing them in concentrated bursts

  of effort, he was able to preserve the spontaneity of the narrative ” ( Epic Grandeur 131).

  The author ’ s term for structure was “ jump, ” as in the “ three - jump story, �
� a reference

  not to any tripartite division within the plot but to the number of successive days a

  good effort should take to complete. (It is a sign of Fitzgerald ’ s fl ippancy toward his

  stories that early in his career he liked to brag about how quickly he could churn

  them out, such as the single day required by “ The Camel ’ s Back ” or the lone night

  spent on “ The Four Fists ” [both 1920]. He would later regret such boasts when they

  earned him a reputation as a “ facile ” writer.) But while Fitzgerald was apt to measure

  the unity of a story according to the time required to realize it, one could argue that

  his profi ciency was enabled by his savvy use of a basic story structure that has come

  to be known as Freytag ’ s Pyramid. Named after German novelist Gustav Freytag

  (1816 – 95), the form expands upon the terminology Aristotle defi ned in Poetics (335

  bce ) to prescribe the fi ve basic parts of a plot: exposition, rising action, climax, falling

  action, and denouement. Freytag proposed his model in his study Technique of the

  Drama (1863, translated into English in 1895), intending it for use in understanding

  the unity of classical drama. Despite its utter inapplicability to modern literature

  (something Freytag himself admitted), the schema had been widely adapted by the

  1920s to illustrate the internal cohesion of a range of narrative prose forms, including

  the short story. Several story

  -

  writing handbooks of the 1920s offer variations on

  Freytag, often without explicitly acknowledging their debt, while advising tyros on

  how to produce salable short fi ction. There was good reason for their emphasis on the

  pyramidal arrangement: the high - circulation “ slicks ” that paid the best showed a

  marked preference for short fi ction with a clear - cut climax and defi nitive conclusions.

  For litterateurs, the market ’ s fondness for well - wrought plot meant that form had

  eroded into formula. As early as 1915, Henry Seidel Canby alluded to Freytag when

  complaining of the predictable structure into which short fi ction had devolved, spe-

  cifi cally singling out for attack the complicating action that will “ move, move, move

  F. Scott Fitzgerald

  299

  furiously, each action and every speech pointing directly toward the unknown climax ”

 

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