Title: James Agee 1909 1955
1James Agee 1909 - 1955
- poet, critic, essayist, fiction writer,
experimental writer, journalist - A writer first and foremost a born, sovereign
prince of the English language
2John Hersey describes Agee
- HE HAD blue-gray eyes, which seemed to change
color with the tones of his talk - the bulging bags of an all-night writer under
them - a deep woundlike dimple in his right cheek when
he laughed - a big brave nose and
- expressive lips over tobacco-stained and badly
snaggled teeth. - The second incisor on the left was missing,
leaving a gap through which tobacco smoke jetted
and curled. - Yet he was somehow, all in all, wonderfully,
passionately handsome.
3Birth and Education
- Born in Knoxville, Tennessee
- Father died from a car accident when he was six
- Episcopal School in St. Andrews
- Philips Exeter Academy
- Harvard 1928
4Harvard years
- President of Advocate
- (Hersey) There he stamped out the patterns of
his whole life became a nocturnal animal by
choice - a maverick, rebellious against the conventions of
his habitat, too fond of the release of alcohol - a nonstop talker a bonfire of tobacco an
amorist and a wizard with perfectly unexpected
words. - First wife Olivia Saunders
5Fortune Magazine
- German enlisting France
- (Letter to Fitzgerald) It varies with me from a
sort of hard, masochistic liking to direct
nausea at the sight of this symbol and this
and this biggest and this some blank billion But
in the long run I suspect the fault, dear
Fortune, is in me that I hate any job on earth,
as a job and a hindrance and semi suicide.
6Boss Luce
I CANT ACCEPT THIS!! (rip!)
Go to hell
GET A DEGREE FROM HARVARD BUSINESS SCHOOL
No
WATCH IT! Dress better!
7Assignment on Sharecroppers
- With Walker Evans
- Agee was stunned, exalted, scared clean through,
and felt like impregnating every woman on the
fifty-second floor.
8Working on Let Us Now Praise Famous Men 1936 - 41
- Impossible in any form and length Fortune can
use and I am now so stultified trying to do
that, that Im afraid Ive lost ability to make
it right in my own way. - Fortune rejected and abandoned his draft. He
began to freelance - Met and married second wife Alma Mailman. (with
12 dollars and 52 cents left in his pocket) - Begin to review books for Time
- Met and married third wife Mia Fritsch
Im in a bad period incertitude and
disintegration on almost every account
9Publications
- Books
- Permit me Voyage (1934)
- Let Us Now Praise Famous Men (1941)
- The Morning Watch (1951)
- A Death in the Family (1957) - Pulitzer
- Agee on Film (1958)
- Film scripts
- The African Queen (with Humphrey Bogart
and Katherine Hepburn, adaptation of CS
Foresters novel) - The Night of the Hunter
10Walker Evans
I dont like to use tricky angles or stolen
shots. I gives my subject time to arrange
themselves however they wish, sitting down or
standing up, change clothes, so they feel at
home, at ease I strive for precision and clarity
in a humbled mode.
11Dorothea Lange Vs Walker Evans
12let us now praise famous men
- There had never been, and there never will be,
anything quite like this book. - The documentary book to end all documentary
book - the unknowable human divinity - (The book) is indescribable anyway. One must
read it.
13General Representation of the Southern Tenant
Farmers
- Popular, exploited, obsolete topic
- Common styles dramatism or calm social
scientific record
14What is truth?
- Through this non-artistic view, this effort to
suspend or destroy imagination, there opens
before consciousness, and within it, a universe
luminous, spacious, incalculably rich and
wonderful in each detail, as relaxed and natural
to the human swimmer, and as full of glory, as
his breathing. - For in the immediate world, everything is to be
discerned, for him who can discern it, and
centrally and simply, without either dissection
into science, or digesting into art, but with the
whole of consciousness, seeking to perceive it as
it stands
15Can truth be told? How?
- The book is about the impossibility to
communicate what has been experienced - It seems further curious that realizing the
extreme corruptness and difficulty of the
circumstances, and the unlikelihood of achieving
in any untainted form what they wished to
achieve, they accepted the work in the first
place. - A piece of body torn out by the roots may be
more to the point - If complications arise, that is because they are
trying to deal with it not as journalists,
sociologists, politicians, entertainers,
humanitarians, priests, or artists, but
seriously.
16Limitation I
- Limitation must not be concealed if the writer is
interested to speak as carefully and as near
truly as possible.
I can only tell you of him only what I saw, only
so accurately as in my terms I know how
17Essence
- This is a book only by necessity. More seriously,
it is an effort in human actuality, in which the
reader is no less centrally involved than the
authors and those of whom they tell. - an exhaustive a reproduction and analysis of
personal experience, including the phases and
problems of memory and recall and revisitation
and the problems of writing and of communication,
as I am capable of, with constant bearing on two
points To tell everything possible as accurately
as possible and to invent nothing. It involves
therefore as total a suspicion of creative and
artistic as of reportorial attitudes and
methods, and it is likely therefore to involve
the development of some more or less new forms of
writing and observation.
18(No Transcript)
19The text was written with reading aloud in mind
- It is suggested that the reader attend with his
ear what he takes off the page for variations of
tone, pace, shape, and dynamics are here
particularly unavailable to the eye alone, and
with their loss, a good deal of escapes. - Fitzgerald
The talk, in the end, was his great
distinguishing feature. He talked his prose, Agee
prose. It was hardly a twentieth century style
it had Elizabethan colorsIt rolled just as it
reads but he made it sound natural...you would
have blinked, gaped, and very likely run from
this same talk delivered without his mysterious
ability.
20Imaging with infinite accuracy
Balance of exactness
Hypersensitivity consciousness
Ageenesses
The monumental fleeting moments
Subtle metaphor
Additive Description
Setting the stage
21The recalled moment had been as if chiseled on a
monument, yet it was as fleeting as the notes of
a bugle at a ceremony when the body of the person
remembered elsewhere (Fitzgerald)
22Hypersensitivity consciousness
(Near a Church) The girlwhose heart I could
feel, though not hear, blasting as if it were my
whole bodyI could not bear that they should
receive from me any added reflection of the
shattering of their grace and dignity, and of the
nakedness and depth and meaning of their fear,
and of my horror and pity and self-hatredand so
distressed that I wanted only that they should be
restored, and should know I was their friend, and
that I might melt from existencethe least I
could have done was to throw myself flat on my
face and embrace and kiss their feet.
23Fine balancing
- The woman spoke to him sharply though not
unkindly doing most of the talking,
corroborative and protective of the young man,
yet always respectful toward him. (p.35-6) - We spoke and nodded, smiling as if casually they
spoke and nodded, gravely, as they passed, and
glanced back once, not secretly, nor long, nor in
amusement. (p. 39)
24Description
- (Near a church) They were young, soberly
buoyant of body, and strong, the man not quite
thin, the girl not quite plump, and I remembered
their mild and sober faces, hers softly wide and
sensitive to love and pleasure, and his
resourceful and intelligent without intellect and
without guile, and their extreme dignity, which
was effortless, unvalued, and undefended in them
as the assumption of superiority which suffuses a
rich and social adolescent boytheir swinging
hands touched gently with their walking, stride
by stride, but did not engage. (p. 40)
He seemed to model, fight, stroke his phrases as
he talked
25Break.
26Exact imaging
- The bed, between the hall door and the front
wall, in the angle of the two walls, the head
toward the wall, about six inches out from each
wall, the foot at the window
27Setting the stage
- On the Porch Flow of Mississippi River
Technological society - A Country Letter
- Setting the time (mood) The Light in this room
is of a lamp. (p. 51-2) (remember earlier we
have All over Alabama, the lamps are out) - Setting the perspective Small wonder how
pitiably we love our home, cling in her skirts at
night, rejoice in her wide star-seducing smile,
when every star strikes us sick with fright do
we really exist at all? (p. 53-54) - Setting the connection Each (individual) is
intimately connected with the bottom and the
extremest reach of time the sleeping bodies (p.
55-7) - Story of Emma (p. 59 69)
- Getting ready for bed (p. 69 73)
28Emma object of affection
- and indeed Emma is rather a big child, sexual
beyond propriety to its years, than a young
women - Each of us is attracted to Emma, both in sexual
immediacy and as symbols or embodiments of a life
she wants and knows she will never have If only
Emma could spend her last few days alive having a
gigantic good time in bed, with George and with
Walker and with me - They add an (unspeakable?) layer of emotions that
richens and elucidate the significance of their
farewell.
29Subtle (hidden) metaphor
- The pillow was hard, thin, and noisy, and
smelled as of acid and new blood the pillowcase
seemed to crawl at my cheek there was an odor
something like that of old moist stacks of
newspaper. I tried to imagine intercourse in this
bed I managed to imagine it fairly wellI began
to feel a sharp little piercings and crawlings
all along the surface of my body I struck a
match and a half dozen bedbugs broke along my
pillow I caught two, killed them, and smelled
their queer rankness. They were full of my blood.
30Book Reviews
- First major review by Ralph Thompson in NYT Agee
was arrogant, mannered, precious, gross and the
book was the choicest recent example of how to
write self-inspired, self-conscious, and
self-indulgent prose. - Selden Rodman the excesses of the book make
reader throw down the volume in rage, and curse
the author for a confused adolescent, and
Ezra-Pound-in-Wolfes clothing, a shocking snob,
or a belligerent mystic posing with a purple
pencil on the Left Bank of Fortune. - John Jessup (Time) The most distinguished
failure of the season. - A year later, Lionel Trilling (American critic)
I feel sure that this is a great bookAgee has a
sensibility so precise, so unremitting, that it
is sometimes appalling. - Mrs. Burroughs I read it plumb through.and
when I read it plumb through I gave it back to
her (daughter) and I said, well everything in
theres true. What they wrote in there was true.
31And Their Children After Them (1989)
32(No Transcript)
33(No Transcript)