Today's blog post comes to us from the Ernest J. Gaines Center's Summer Research Fellow from Cal State LA Katharine Henry. She will be with us at the center helping to transcribe manuscripts, conduct research, and encounter Gaines's works. In today's post, she speaks about her initial encounters with Gaines and his work.
Katharine's Picture of the Miss Jane Pittman Oak |
My first encounter with Ernest J. Gaines’s literary work was
earlier this year with A Lesson Before
Dying (1993). In my undergraduate
and graduate studies, I deeply admired the works of William Faulkner who became
a gateway for my strong desire to explore more literature written by Southern
authors, especially in Louisiana, a place whose astounding natural beauty was
quite different from my native California desert and immediately captured my
admiration. During my frequent travels from one “LA” (Los Angeles) to another (Louisiana),
I was captivated by the unique culture of Acadiana and thrilled to discover another
treasure in the region: a profound and extraordinary writer living near New
Roads, Louisiana. Born and raised in Louisiana until he left at the age of 15
for California, Gaines returned decades later following what he stated as, “this
Louisiana thing that drives me” (Rowell 87). I thought it special that I might
have this small fact in common with Mr. Gaines, that we have moved back and forth
between California and Louisiana. Turning the pages of A Lesson Before Dying, I was immediately drawn to its deceptively
simple narration, vernacular dialogue and its compassion, each ingredient
endowing the work with poetic power. Hungry for more stories like these, I
pursued Gaines’s masterful storytelling through Catherine Carmier (1964), Of
Love and Dust (1967) and Bloodline (1968).
When I consider one of the most powerful underpinnings of Gaines’s
works thus far, I recall Reverend Mose Ambrose in A Lesson Before Dying. Concerned with the soul of Jefferson, a
young death row inmate whose execution is set the second Friday after Easter, Rev.
Ambrose emerges out of the darkness of Miss Emma’s kitchen to ask Grant Wiggins
about Jefferson. He asks Grant, “What’s he thinking? What’s he thinking deep in
him? Deep in you, what you think?” (100). There are levels of depth, not just
deep, but deep deep, and those
private ideas and desires that dwell within Grant, Jefferson and so many of
Gaines’s characters are frequently in conflict with their community’s immediate
needs for security. In Of Love and Dust, Marcus
Payne is at war against the world once he is bailed from jail by a wealthy
plantation owner and exchanges the imprisonment of his cell for indentured
servitude. In return, Marcus seeks revenge on his unyielding Cajun overseer
Sidney Bonbon and for whomever else may suffer in that scheme, he cares not.
But when his vengeful plans to take Bonbon’s wife, Louise, materialize, his impulse
towards her evolves immediately into a feeling the novel challenges us to accept
as love. Marcus imagines and plans for a life lived with and for Louise, her
daughter Tite and himself as husband and father. With Marcus we find that isolation
is not the means to self-validation. Stripping ourselves from all people and
things to recover a bare, authentic, solitary self is a fiction. Rather, getting
to the soul, ‘deep in you,’ requires community with others so that Rev.
Ambrose’s challenge to Grant, “You think a man can’t kneel and stand?”, proves
itself true (A Lesson Before Dying 216).
The mode through which many of Gaines’s characters take a
stand in their newfound dignity is through acts of love. While violence is at
the start of Jefferson’s and Marcus’s journeys, Jefferson’s movement towards a love
of self allows him to recognize that he is no hog and that he can stand, walk
to and sit in the electric chair, fulfilling his godmother’s insistence, “I
want a man to go to that chair, on his own two feet” (A Lesson Before Dying 13). The possibility of transforming the
rules that place Jefferson in jail, Grant in the schoolhouse, Marcus on the
plantation, and Louise on the porch into circumstances of love underlie
Gaines’s self-described interest in exposing how one endures—and might still
find possibilities to flourish—under pressure (Rowell 91).
Communities and individuals under an almost intolerable
pressure are at the core of Gaines’s dramas. His work illustrates how the ways
society sees us, and forces us to see each other, fails to be a language in
which we can accurately describe a human person. One particularly powerful
example is the mystifying and unsettling relationship between Bonbon and his
black mistress Pauline Guerin in Of Love
and Dust. Their affair begins forcefully and violently but Bonbon and
Pauline quickly fall in love and have been in love for years. Marcus is
baffled, as readers are, asking how she could love him. His anger that he cannot
have Pauline for himself and his inability to understand her feelings manifests
itself in savagery, he knocks her to the ground and denunciates her, “You white
man bitch” (Of Love and Dust 98). Reenacting
a denial of her agency akin to Bonbon’s initial cruelty, Marcus’s denunciation
of Pauline is echoed twenty-eight chapters later when he recounts his youth
where he observed that white man have their “number one nigger” who receives
special treatment at the expense of other black men and women (250). For
Marcus, Pauline holds this role as Bonbon’s mistress and mother to his twins. And
she leverages their relationship and is promoted from a field hand to a more
comfortable duty as cook in the big house. Her advancement results in the
firing of Marcus’s godmother, Miss Julie Rand, who worked on the plantation for
40 years.
Pauline is Bonbon’s pawn and yet this coincides with the
uncomfortable acknowledgement that the novel tells us in so many ways that the
couple really is in love. Jim Kelly, the young narrator who is trusted and
respected within the community, observes how intimate their feelings are. We
can be skeptical of each character’s perspectives while simultaneously
acknowledging that Marcus simplifies Pauline and Bonbon’s bond in ways that the
narrative complicates for readers. In the novel we find that white and black
communities accept that black female bodies are the property of men and
tolerate sexual violence and yet cannot imagine interracial love. The rules dictate
that men can do anything to black women but love them. When Bonbon leaves the
plantation and Pauline follows so that they may live together as husband and
wife, how do we come to terms with Marcus’s paradigm now? It seems insufficient
to working through this complex relationship, especially when Pauline does not
see herself as the passive, abused woman that Marcus demonizes her as. We are witnesses
to what happens when one begins to see themselves as more than what society
first allowed them to be—when Pauline loves Bonbon and endures Marcus’s
violence, when Bonbon loves her and becomes the laughing stock of the town and
when Louise leaves Bonbon to pursue a life with Marcus at the risk of her
father and brothers forcefully dragging her back to her home. Perhaps we might
consider the possibility that each person transforms a relationship that the
rules deemed should have remained wholly exploitative and violent, into one of
care? It’s a challenging and necessary discussion. We become Louise on the
porch of her home, staring out to consider the agency and humanity of others at
the same time they question and consider her own.
Gaines is a brave writer, writing with critique and
compassion in equal parts, asking his readers to think deep about the apparatus
which Jim calls “this big thing that said Yes” (Of Love and Dust 269) and which Munford Bazille in “Three Men”
calls “they” (140). Yet rather than succumb to the doom inherent in facing this
giant, Gaines writes with humanity about the “little people” who endure,
acknowledge their participation in the making of tragedies and learn to kneel,
stand, walk and sit with dignity like Jefferson (Of Love and Dust 258).
Gaines, Ernest J. A
Lesson Before Dying. New York: Vintage, 1994. Print.
---. Of Love and Dust.
New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 1979. Print.
---. “Three Men.” Bloodline.
159-220. New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 1976. Print.
Rowell, Charles. “This Louisiana Thing That Drives Me: An
Interview with Ernest J. Gaines.” Conversations
with Ernest Gaines. Ed. John Lowe. Jackson: University of Mississippi
Press, 1995. 86-98. Print.
Katharine's Picture of Trees Surrounding Area Where The Overseer's House Was on River Lake Plantation |
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