Philip Roth at 80: A Celebration: A Library of America Special Publication

Philip Roth at 80: A Celebration: A Library of America Special Publication

Philip Roth at 80: A Celebration: A Library of America Special Publication

Philip Roth at 80: A Celebration: A Library of America Special Publication

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Overview

On March 19, 2013, a distinguished group of writers and critics gathered at the Newark Museum’s Billy Johnson Auditorium in Newark, New Jersey, to celebrate the extraordinary career and lasting literary legacy of Philip Roth on the occasion of his 80th birthday. This keepsake volume gathers remarks from the evening’s speakers, a fitting tribute to the only living novelist whose work is collected in the Library of America series. Here you’ll find Jonathan Lethem, hilariously recounting his first consciousness-raising encounter with Roth’s work through the Kafkaesque novel The Breast; Hermione Lee, tracing the Shakespearian themes in Roth’s books, from Portnoy’s Complaint to The Humbling; Alain Finkielkraut, offering a deep reading of Roth’s final novel, Nemesis; Claudia Roth Pierpont, assessing Roth’s portrayal of women in such books as Sabbath’s Theater and The Human Stain; Edna O’Brien, recalling her long friendship with Roth; and the author himself, offering a quintessentially Rothian valediction.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781598534146
Publisher: Library of America
Publication date: 10/14/2014
Series: Library of America Series
Sold by: Penguin Random House Publisher Services
Format: eBook
Pages: 74
File size: 105 KB

About the Author

In 1997, Philip Roth won the Pulitzer Prize for American Pastoral and in 2002 he received the highest award of the American Academy of Arts and Letters, the Gold Medal in Fiction, previously awarded to John Dos Passos, William Faulkner, and Saul Bellow, among others. He has twice won the National Book Award and the National Book Critics Circle Award and the PEN/Faulkner Award three times. His collected works have been published in a definitive ten-volume edition by the Library of America.

Read an Excerpt

Philip Roth at 80 A Celebration

Remarks delivered on the occasion of Philip Roth's 80th birthday


By Jonathan Lethem, Hermione Lee, Alain Finkielkraut, Claudia Roth Pierpont, Edna O'Brien, Philip Roth

The Library Of America

Copyright © 2014 Literary Classics of the United States, Inc.
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-59853-414-6



CHAPTER 1

Jonathan Lethem

The Counter-Roth

1.

I'D TAKEN the train out to East Hampton, bringing with me to read only the first volume of John Cowper Powys's Wolf Solent. This was an ambiguous mission I was on—I'd been invited to a very nice rich girl's family's summer house, and I'm justified calling her a girl because this was the summer after my first year of college and I was nineteen, a boy of nineteen. We'd been only friends, at college, but might be more, away from college: that was the ambiguous mission. I didn't know what I wanted. On the train I stared out the window, not making it past more than a chapter of the Powys. The girl and her mother picked me up at the station, a five-minute drive there and back, just long enough that by the time we entered the house, through the kitchen, the girl's younger brother was caught in the act of pulling from the broiler two overdone, smouldering lobsters, their red partly blacked. The mother chided him, but affectionately, and insisted the lobsters be dumped immediately in the trash. I thought I'll eat those, but no. This was a period in my life where I was persistently being startled, to the point of violation, by the behavior of the wealthy. No reading—not Powys, nor F. Scott Fitzgerald, nor Karl Marx—could have prepared me to witness such a thing in real life. We ate something other than lobsters. Then I was shown to the guestroom. It was beautifully quiet, with a scattering of books on shelves. An evening seemed to yawn before me—the girl and I would have time to be confused about one another tomorrow, and the next day. Everything was done very graciously in this house, no hurry. Left alone there with ponderous Powys, I reached instead for a book I hadn't known existed: The Breast. I'd at that point in my reading life kept a useless partition against Roth, who, thanks to the intimidating aura generated by a paperback copy of Letting Go on my mother's shelves, I'd decided was a bestselling writer of grown-up realist novels of a sort that couldn't possibly interest me. Oh judgmental and defended youth! But wait, now I had to consider the claims of the book's dust jacket, that Roth worked in the realm of morbid fantasy, too. The realm of Kafka. This wasn't fair, I thought. Kafka should belong to me. Alone in the East Hampton guestroom, I gobbled The Breast in one gulp. That's how it came about, that's how I began taking Roth aboard, the first tiny dose a kind of inoculation to make me ready for the long readerly sickness I still endure. For it is a sickness, most especially for a reader who wants to be a writer, to open oneself to a voice as torrential and encompassing, as demanding and rewarding, as that of Roth. I am therefore here to address you all as my fellow sanitarium inmates, gathered jubilantly and defiantly in the presence of the source of our sickness himself.


2.

My situation in the East Hampton summer house was the stuff of Jewish comedy, if I'd had my Jewish antennae up. Had the brother been played by Christopher Walken, I was in a scene from Annie Hall. But I not only didn't have my Jewish antennae up, I didn't know I possessed any. By chance, and unlike a majority of Jews, I'd been raised so as not to take being Jewish, or in my case half-Jewish, in any way personally. I'd have to acquire those antennae elsewhere, by my reading. It took overtly Jewish-American writing—by Bernard Malamud, who'd retired but was still lingering, thrillingly, around at the college the girl and I attended, and Saul Bellow, and yes, sometimes Roth, who is in general overt, and is sometimes, when it serves the cause of the writing, overtly Jewish—to illuminate and make unmistakable what I knew only semi-consciously from the writing of the lessovert, like Nathanael West or Barry Malzberg or Norman Mailer, as well as from sources like Groucho Marx and Abbie Hoffman and my uncle Fred. What was it that was illuminated? That something aggravated and torrential in my voice, or perhaps I should call it my attempt at having a voice, was cultural in origin, even if aggravated and torrential frequently in the cause of disputing or even denying that point of origin. As Roth points out, the books aren't Jewish because they have Jews in them. The books are Jewish in how they won't shut up or cease contradicting themselves, they're Jewish in the way they're sprung both from harangue and from defense against harangue, they're Jewishly ruminative and provocative. Roth once said of Bellow that he closed the distance between Damon Runyon and Thomas Mann—well, given the generation of readers I'm from, Roth, in turn, closed the distance between Saul Bellow and Mad Magazine. That's to say, once I'd gained access to what he had to offer, Roth catalyzed my yearnings to high seriousness with the sense that the contemporary texture of reality demanded not only remorseless interrogation but remorseless caricature and ribbing. Contemporary reality, including perhaps especially the yearning to high seriousness, needed to be serially goosed.


3.

Speaking of caricature, I'm aware that having accepted the honor of batting lead-off in this highbrow's lineup I may appear to have lapsed into opening-act schtick—a conflation of potted Rothian syntax and shameless confession. My only defense is that I'm employing tools Roth helped instill in me, tools that may in fact be all I've got: a reliance on the ear, for devising a voice and then following where the voice insists on going, and a helpless inclination to abide with the self—with one's own inclinations and appetites—as a lens for seeing what's willing to be seen, and as a medium for saying what wants to be said. If I'm a poor literary critic, well, you'll get a real one soon enough. If I'm a poor man's Roth, well, you'll get the real Roth soon enough. Call me instead a Counter-Roth. For it is the fate of a Roth, being the rare sort of writer whose major phases sprawl across decades, whose work encompasses and transcends modes of historical fiction, metafiction, memoir, the maximalist (or putters-in), the minimalist (or takers-out), the picaresque and counterfactual, etcetera and so forth—being the sort of writer who in his generosity half blots out the sky of possibility for those who come along after—to generate in his ambitious followers a sort of army of Counter-Roths. I'll say it simply: the one certainty in my generation of writers, not otherwise unified, is that we all have some feeling about Roth. We can't not. Mostly it involves some kind of strongly opinionated, half-aggrieved love.


4.

So, another confession: more than ten years after that encounter in East Hampton, I'd become a published novelist invited, for the first time, to a residence at the artist's colony called Yaddo. By this time I'd pursued my Roth obsession to both ends of his bookshelf, as it existed at the time, as I was to continue following it, right up to the present. On my arrival at Yaddo, a fellow writer who helped me to my room at West House mentioned famous personages who'd written masterpieces behind the various windows—Sylvia Plath here, John Cheever there—and then, opening the door to what was to be my residence and studio both, unveiled a circular turret featuring a smooth domed ceiling: "The Breast Room," he announced. I laughed, thinking he referred only to the shape. Then he explained that Roth, inspired by dwelling within the room's contour, wrote The Breast there. As with many circumstances in a young writer's life, I was exalted and humbled simultaneously-having been delivered by the Yaddo invitation into what I thought was my maturity, it turned out I was again to suckle at the fount of apprenticeship. Incidentally, if this story isn't true, I don't ever want to find out.


5.

Of course I'm beyond my apprenticeship now, and no longer even remotely young. In fact, as a college professor, it's sometimes my duty to counsel other young aspirants navigating an overwhelming encounter with Roth. I'm chagrined to admit that a quite brilliant English major under my care recently quit work on a thesis, on My Life as a Man, in despair. With his permission, I quote from the email he sent when, like Nixon, he resigned. "What can I say about Philip Roth that Philip Roth hasn't already said (and denied) (and said again) himself? It's farcical how much My Life as a Man exemplifies this tendency. I was being pretty arrogant: if established literary critics cannot produce the kind of scholarship I feel is worthy of Roth's fiction, how could I possibly think myself capable of rising to that challenge, without even reading the work my work would supposedly surpass? I feel like a guy taking on the Marines with a single pocketknife. Going forward, here are the options, as I see them: 1) Write as much of a shitty first draft of this chapter as I can and send it to you, then come back to school next semester and write chapters three and four while taking a fuller course load than I did this semester and applying for jobs so that I have somewhere to live and something to do when I graduate. Or, 2) Tolerate the 'Incomplete' on my transcript and take Prof. Dettmar's 'Irony in the Public Sphere' instead. My gut is strongly telling me to choose the latter. I know I fucked up. If I had done the substantial work I should have done earlier this semester, I would either have made this decision at a better time or not made it at all. But here I am. This is okay with me. I'm not going to grad school and I won't be any less fascinated by Philip Roth in letting go of my academic obligation to his books." I quote at length here simply for the pleasure of hearing how the disease has taken hold of the e-mail itself, in its controlled panic bubbles with Rothian verve, even arriving at the key phrase, Letting Go.


6.

I only ever made Philip Roth laugh twice, to my knowledge. That's weak recompense for the thousand hilarities Roth's bestowed on me—bitter snorts of recognition, giggles of astonishment at narrative derring-do, sheer earthy guffaws. Of course, I've only ever met him a couple of times, and I'm hoping to add to my score tonight. The first time I made Roth laugh was in recounting a conversation I overheard while on line for a hot dog between innings at Shea Stadium, between two boorish men confessing to one another their preference for a glimpse of tight Spandex even over that of bare skin; I mention this if only for the pleasure of bragging that Roth and I suffer the same fannish encumbrance, for anyone who knows the inside of Shea Stadium has earned whatever joy can be salvaged on the hot dog line. The second time I made Roth laugh is more important to me: we stood together in the late stages of an Upper West Side brunch party, where I dandled my infant son while Roth looked quite reasonably impatient to be elsewhere. In a quiet panic, bobbing up and down to soothe the six-month-old, I found myself monologuing to Roth's increasingly arched eyebrows. Finally, straining for a reference that would interest my hero, I turned the boy's head slightly to the side, displaying the fat curve of his cheek, and said, "It resembles one of those disembodied unshaven cigar-smoking heads in a Philip Guston painting, don't you think?" The juxtaposition of my pink son and the grotesques of Guston, like the earlier juxtaposition of Shea and Spandex, did the trick. And this was another lesson from Roth: In putting across what wants putting across, in seeking a rise from the listener, do whatever it takes, grab any advantage, employ even the baby in your arms. I would have juggled the baby if it would have helped.


7.

To finish, then, with a final confession, according to the Rothian principle of crypto-confessional storytelling: the principle being that though you may in fact hold your cards quite close to your vest, it is best to create the thrilling illusion of having laid oneself generously bare, of having told all. That's simply to say, I don't want to leave you hanging in that East Hampton guestroom. Did I get anywhere with the very nice rich girl? The answer is no. I saw as little action in East Hampton as I'd seen of those lobsters on their voyage from the broiler to the kitchen garbage pail. Less, even, than I'd seen of the lobsters. The only breast I fondled in East Hampton was Roth's.

CHAPTER 2

Hermione Lee

WHEN I was asked to speak at this birthday celebration, I had the not very good idea of collecting together some 80- or 80-something-year-olds from Philip Roth's books, and of talking about the resilience and energy of old age. I thought of Herman Roth in Patrimony, and then I thought—however wonderful that book is, perhaps a talk about a dying 86-year-old father is not the best celebration for a birthday. Then I thought of Murray Ringold, teacher, brother, mentor, at the end of I Married a Communist. But when I turned to that magnificent ending I realized that I'd misremembered and that Murray is actually 90. So I was not getting on well.

But re-reading that final conversation between Nathan Zuckerman and Murray Ringold, in which the old English teacher has come to the end of telling Nathan the story of his brother Ira, and is about to leave Nathan alone, with the indispensable stars, my eye snagged on the passage in which Nathan remembers Murray teaching Macbeth to his high school class, in about 1948. Murray reads to the class the scene in which Macduff is told of the slaughter of his wife and all his children by Macbeth. The class is sitting very still, here in Newark, waiting for the moment that Macduff will fully understand what has happened. "Outside, a 14 bus is grinding up the Chancellor Avenue hill." But all the class is listening for is the moment when Macduff will grasp the incomprehensible: "Did you say all? ... All / At one fell swoop." Malcolm says to him, roughly: "Dispute it like a man." "Then" (Nathan remembers) "the simple line that would assert itself, in Murray Ringold's voice, a hundred times, a thousand times, during the remainder of my life: 'But I must also feel it as a man.'" "Ten syllables," says their teacher, "that's all. Ten syllables, five beats, pentameter ... eight monosyllables and one word of two syllables, a word as common and ordinary and serviceable as any there is in everyday English ... and yet, all together, and coming where it does, what power! Simple, simple—and like a hammer."

So this small scene and that plain, simple, powerful line of Shakespeare, which sums up a central theme in Roth's work, settled in my mind as my subject for today. How often, how dramatically, and how usefully, Roth invokes Shakespeare in his comic tragedies of feeling it as a man. How often a performance, on a domestic or internal stage, acts out and embodies the urgent, extreme, inner life of his fictional characters. It's not just Mickey Sabbath in Sabbath's Theater, Prospero and Falstaff and Lear and the Fool all rolled into one, who brings Shakespeare into the heart of Roth's fiction.

Macbeth is used again for the title of Exit Ghost (2007), when Nathan Zuckerman, haunted by the ghost of E. I. Lonoff, makes his own ghostly return and positively final appearance. The title, Exit Ghost, faintly echoes a wild Shakespearean riff of fourteen years earlier, in Operation Shylock, where a narrator called Philip Roth has to listen to a lecture about Shylock, in Israel, given by Mr. Supposnik, a Tel Aviv rare-book-dealer and member of the Secret Police. In the lecture, entitled "Who I am," Mr. Supposnik airs his fantasy of being the director of the Supposnik Anti-Semitic Theatre Company, and draws attention to the terrifyingly prophetic stage-direction in The Merchant of Venice, "Exit Jew."


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Philip Roth at 80 A Celebration by Jonathan Lethem, Hermione Lee, Alain Finkielkraut, Claudia Roth Pierpont, Edna O'Brien, Philip Roth. Copyright © 2014 Literary Classics of the United States, Inc.. Excerpted by permission of The Library Of America.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

A Note from the Publisher,
Jonathan Lethem,
Hermione Lee,
Alain Finkielkraut,
Claudia Roth Pierpont,
Edna O'Brien,
Philip Roth,
Notes on the Contributors,
The Library of America Philip Roth Edition,
The Library of America E-Books,

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