.jpg)
In an article in the New York Times Book Review last month, Paul Elie ponders why Christian belief figures, “as something between a dead language and a hangover,” in current fiction. He observes that the literary heirs of Flannery O’Connor and Walker Percy are strangely absent from the present class of MFA-credentialed young novelists now in vogue. And while Elie is right that it is a strange development, he misdiagnoses the reasons why.
“The current upheavals in American Christianity—involving sex, politics, money and diversity—cry out for dramatic treatment,” he writes. While Christian writers, “who do draw on sacred texts and themes see the references go unrecognized,” other novelists are, “depicting the changing lives of American Jews and Muslims with great success.”
But is the ultimate purpose of fiction to depict the changing lives of certain demographics, or give dramatic treatment to sex and politics in the church? One hopes not, for the sake of fiction. Maybe the absence of faith or even a curiosity about it among contemporary novelists has more to do with a basic misunderstanding of the point of both fiction and Christianity than with the perceived “upheavals” of the latter. After all, fiction that is interested in Christianity (or any other religion) primarily as a way to explore identity or politics is really not all that interesting. In fact, it’s rather boring.
A glibly-named NPR series that ran last week, Losing Our Religion, ponders why a fifth of Americans now choose not to identify with an “organized” religion. As you might imagine, the program does not delve very deep. But it is notable—not for what it thinks it reveals about American society, but for what it unintentionally reveals about a growing tendency in the American character, especially among young people. Listening to the interviewees talk about God, one gets the impression that their views are the result of ignorance and apathy, not a rejection of religion on its own terms. Simply put, they seem like they are bored of God—bored and blasé and for the most part unconcerned.
In an essay published a few years ago in the Los Angeles Times Book Review, Jonathan Lethem responded to a negative review James Wood had written of his novel, The Fortress of Solitude, some eight years before, in which Wood complained that the reader never saw Lethem’s protagonist thinking about God or the meaning of life. Lethem’s response is telling, and helps explain why we don’t see more novelists taking religion seriously:
As for “thinking about God,” was there ever a more naked instance of a critic yearning for a book other than that on his desk? Can Wood’s own negative capability not reach the possibility that in some life dramas “God” never made it to the audition, let alone failed to get onstage? Pity me if you like, but I can’t remember even considering believing in either God or Santa Claus. The debunking was accomplished preemptively, preconsciously.
There’s not much reason to work out how you feel about religion if the question of God’s existence is preemptively decided in the negative. Perhaps the growing numbers of Americans who consider themselves religiously unaffiliated feel like Lethem; they didn’t have much interest in God to begin with. No wonder they have little stomach for grappling with the questions and contradictions of faith.
Same for novelists. If the question of God isn’t taken seriously, why bother exploring it in any depth? Let faith be a prop, a way to talk about politics, or just another aspect of one’s identity.
But part of why religion was always a compelling, even essential, aspect of literature is that novelists used to take it seriously—even those who didn’t, in the end, believe. The struggle to keep one’s faith, even in the face of suffering, and to be transformed by it, is one of the hallmarks of human experience: working out the inherent tensions between body and spirit, judgment and mercy, right and wrong—this is interiority par excellence, and exploring that interiority, making it come alive, is what fiction is supposed to do.
It is also, in a larger sense, what the practice of religion is supposed to do. But the prerequisite is to understand religion as a lifelong undertaking that obliges, and in fact requires, believers to grapple with their faith and fears and doubts. To do that, you have to believe there’s more at stake than your own identity or experience. If that were all there was to religion, it would be very boring indeed.
John Daniel Davidson’s writing has appeared in n+1, The Morning News, The Claremont Review of Books, The Millions, and elsewhere.
Become a fan of First Things on Facebook, subscribe to First Things via RSS, and follow First Things on Twitter.
Comments:
There are several propositions: The idea that the Christian life or Christian perspective is not worthy of modern fiction is one answer. Writers of Christian/Catholic fiction cannot write well. The stories are not interesting to the modern reader. Christian/Catholic fiction won't sell. Or as stated above, the writers don't believe and therefore cannot write about faith.
There are about 70 million Catholics in the US, with about 75% of the US population identifying themselves as Christians. I think their perspective is worthy of fiction.
In fact, I started a company to find and publish Catholic Fiction. I called for Catholic Fiction manuscripts, and before the end of the first week with a simple website I had manuscripts -- and over the next three months I had hundreds. We go to press in the next few months with our first books, we will find out if Catholic Fiction has a place - and answers the questions.
Peter Mongeau, Tuscany Press, LLC www.tuscanypress.com
1. At my father's funeral, after the mass, a friend (@35 yrs old) asked why (and how) I could still believe in something like Catholicism.
"How many of your parents have you buried?" I asked. "How many close friends?"
"None" she said, kinda stunned. But she understood. By genetic luck and modern medicine, she had not ever really looked into the void, never felt the desperate, fragile need for grace.
2. I showed my students a youtube video of a Faulkner scholar discussing the writer's life. When it was over I asked a student, "did you like that?"
"It was interesting," she said. "But I was so bored. He (the scholar) just stood there talking. There was no excitement, not enough movement, no explosions. Something like that can't keep our (modern teens') attention. We need cool graphics."
Perhaps we as a society have achieved such surface excitement and success that religion seems, to many, trite, droll or just not stimulating enough.
http://www.dominicanablog.com/2012/09/05/restless-for-good-art/
Real art works differently. The artist plunges himself into the stuff of the world and grabs hold of some one reality that he can’t let go; he then lifts it out from the undifferentiated morass of his experience and contemplates it in the light of all he knows. Artistic creation occurs when he gives his encounter with that reality a form that allows it to speak to others—be it the composition of a painting, the plot of a novel, or the narrative of a movie.
When this encounter is genuine and its artistic expression is lucid, the viewer is led to experience a new dimension of the world around him, to see afresh some facet of the truth. Because God is himself Truth, the artistic encounter with the world’s truth is, while not itself a religious event, inherently open to being elevated by grace. But art becomes truly religious when the reality the artist expresses acts as a prism for some facet of the Divine Truth; then to understand the work of art is to be open to the God whose beauty it refracts into human symbols.
God is not dead in Cormacs work, and he's about as major as you get today!
I have two posts on Flannery O'Connor on my blog, one exploring her book reviews ('St. Flannery--Not!') and one the short story "Revelation" in terms of its catholicity ('Ruby Turpin is the Church Triumphant, and Flannery Takes Her Down'). If you just google the titles provided, I think you'll get there (curious this site doesn't link to a participant's blog). I have a link on the whitelily blog to my fiction blog, but it isn't developed yet, although there are several pieces there vying for a place in Catholic fiction. I'm too busy working on a novel, about Catholics on the first space colony when the One World Religion is promulgated. (They revolt, of course. And run for the border.) I sure would benefit from feedback from good readers!
Good luck to Tuscany Press. I have bookmarked it already (handsome site!).



Still, the message of that old film - its disturbing images - comes uncomfortably to mind more often than I would like. Places and people are not changed in appearance. Certainly atheism and materialism are not new. Political turmoil is not a modern development.
Perhaps it is a growing loss of understanding of the human person as an "acting person" in the sense used by John Paul II - perhaps of a general sense that the moral thought of the past has something valuable to offer. Whatever the cause, a fundamental change in general perspective is upon us.