As Patricia Waugh
points out, "Metafiction is a term given to fictional
writing which self-consciously and systematically draws attention to
its status as an artifact in order to pose questions about the
relationship between fiction and reality" (2).
Metafiction blurs the boundary between life and art, fiction and
criticism, and fiction and reality.
Housekeeping doesn''t show the elements of metafiction in
its form but in its content. The centric issue of Housekeeping,
as the main characteristic of metafiction, is blurring
boundary. In Housekeeping,
the boundaries such as life and death, inside and outside, nature and
domestic place, and past and present are all blurred. Here, I am going
to use water image, the lake in this novel, as an example to show how
the boundary between life and death is blurred.
I. The passage about
the lake in Housekeeping:
It is true that one is always aware of the lake in Fingerbone, or the
deeps of the lake, the lightless, airless water below. When the ground
is plowed in the spring, cut and laid open, what exhales from the
furrows but that same, sharp, watery smell. The wind is watery, and all
the pumps and creeks and ditches smell of water unalloyed by any other
element. At the foundation is the old lake, which is smothered and
nameless and altogether black. Then there is Fingerbone, the lake of
charts and photographs, which is permeated by sunlight and sustains
green life and innumerable fish, and in which one can look down in the
shadow of a dock and see stony, earthy bottom, more or less as one sees
dry ground. And above that, the lake that rises in the spring and turns
the grass dark and coarse as reeds. And above that the water suspended
in sunlight, sharp as the breath of an animal, which brims inside this
circle of mountains. (9)
Explanation:
The lake, which has four levels, is changeful.
(Actually, in this novel, nothing is fixed; even the house cannot be
kept in the end).
I. The first level of the lake:
the deepest level, the old lake where the dead are. (The grandfather
and Helen, Ruth and Lucille''s mother are dead in this lake.)
2. The second level
of the lake: Fingerbone itself, the lake of human life and memory, the
town can be a lake, the town is a lake and part of the lake. When there
is a flood, the town is immersed in the lake.
3. The third level of the lake:
it also touches life because the plants and grass absorb water from the
soil.
4.The last level which is on the
surface of the lake: the dampness in the air, water suspended in
sunlight, the lake can rise and turn into air.
II. Boundary between
life and death
- As for the lake itself: There
are levels of death and life of the lake. Since the air and the soil
are watery (and the circulation of water and air), the boundary between
life and death is blurred. Thus the lake itself can be seen as all of
human existence (include life and death) are unstable and changeful as
the lake presents.
- As for the town and the lake:
Through flood, there is no boundary between the town and the lake;
again, no boundary between life (the town) and death (the lake).
[Actually, the flood also makes no distance between Sylvie''s house and
the town (inside and outside)]
- There is no boundary between
life and death, furthermore, no boundary between absence (the dead) and
presence.
III. The characters who long
for rootless are more akin to the lake.
- The grandfather who is anxious
about "foreshortened" perspective pioneers the descent into the lake.
- Sylvie who likes the freedom of
nature often spends her time at the lake and returns home "with fish in
her pockets" (136).
- Ruth who also
inclines for transient life likes go to the lake either for escaping
human society or for remembering her mother.
A Summary of Robinson''s Housekeeping
The two young girls, Ruth and Lucille are abandoned by a series of
caregivers because their father leaves and their mother commits
suicide. Thus, they are under the care of a series of family
members: grandmother, two great ants and finally their ant,
Sylvie.
The family house is in the small town on
a glacial lake in West. The lake is where their grandfather
died in a train wreck and their mother drove off a cliff to
death. Then, The two sisters gradually become different after
Sylvie comes. Sylvie is a transient so her way of keeping
house is also different from the conventional ones that are emphasized
on a clean and order house. For example, Sylvie likes keep
the door and window open in order to break the boundary between nature
and her house. Actually, Ruth and Lucille have
different views toward Sylvie and her housekeeping. Finally,
they develop different subjectivity: Lucille follows her home-economic
teacher to join the conventional and stable way of female life; Ruth
chooses to follow Sylvie to be a drifter. In the end of the
story, Ruth and Sylvie fire the house and begin their wandering life of
being transients. Therefore, the house which the
grandmother tries to keep for her whole life cannot be kept at all. |
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