|
|
|
Behind the Singer Tower |
作者Author /  Willa Cather 維拉•凱瑟 |
|
Behind the Singer Tower
|
|
Introduction
Structure
The Fire
The
Foundation
Significance
of Title
|
|
|
Introduction |
|
Published in 1912, when Cather was
working in New York for McClure's magazine, "Behind the Singer Tower"
addresses questions that are still relevant a hundred years later: Why
do we build taller and taller skyscrapers? Do the excitement,
spectacle, and ideals associated with tall buildings justify their
hidden costs and risks? Although the 35-story Mont Blanc Hotel, the
story's focus, would be dwarfed by the Taipei 101 of today, it provides
no less cause for reflection on the meaning of urban life. Cather's
concern with such urban problems shows her in a phase of
"muckraking"—that is, exposing social problems and injustices through
writing. Still, like "Paul's Case," this story is a work of art that
attains a complex synthesis of realism and idealism. |
|
Structure |
|
The story is narrated by a journalist
who—along with Johnson (also a journalist), the engineer Fred Hallet
and his draftsman, a lawyer, and the Jewish doctor Zablowski—are on a
boat ("launch") off the island of Manhattan. It is nighttime, and these
men are talking about the disaster of the previous night: the burning
of the Mount Blanc Hotel, which has resulted in the deaths of over 300
people. While the "framing" narrator reflects upon the Mont Blanc fire,
Fred Hallet, the internal narrator, tells the story of an earlier,
unnoticed disaster that occurred when the Mont Blanc was being built.
This structure shows the probable influence of Joseph Conrad's 1902
novel Heart of Darkness, in which a framing and an internalnarrator are
also assembled with a group of male listeners on a boat off shore of a
great city (London). |
|
The
Fire |
|
According to the framing narrator,
the fire in the Mont Blanc seems to challenge "the New York idea" of
tall buildings:
Those incredible towers of stone and steel seemed, in the mist, to be
grouped confusedly together, as if they were confronting each other
with a question. They looked positively lonely, like the great trees
left after a forest is cut away. One might fancy that the city was
protesting, was asserting its helplessness, its irresponsibility for
its physical conformation, for the direction it had taken. (44)
Certainly the most chilling detail the narrator mentions about the fire
is that of "a man's hand snapped off at the wrist" discovered on the
fifteenth-floor window ledge (45). The hand belonged to the famous
Italian tenor Graziani, who had jumped from the thirty-second floor.
This grotesque image represents generally the fragmenting of human
lives caused by the fire—lives of mostly wealthy and famous people like
Graziani. |
|
The
Foundation |
|
The internal narrator Fred Hallet
shifts attention from the fire in the hotel's tower to something that
happened when the building's foundation was being dug. Hallet was
foreman of a crew of immigrant laborers digging the enormous hole. His
story concerns his friendship with one of these men, an Italian
immigrant named Caesarino, and his rivalry with the project manager,
the ambitious and unethical engineer Stanley Merryweather, who believes
that "men are cheaper than machinery" (51). Caesarino is crushed to
death, along with numerous coworkers, by a piece of machinery dropped
from the weak cabling that Merryweather refused to replace. Caesarino,
an anonymous immigrant, is a foil for the famous Italian Graziani: the
building takes both their lives, but only Graziani appears in the
newspapers. As Hallet observes: "There's a lot of waste about building
a city. Usually the destruction all goes on in the cellar; it's only
when it hits high . . . that it sets us thinking" (53). |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Significance
of Title |
|
The title "Behind the Singer Tower"
is a bit misleading because the Singer Tower is not the story's main
concern. The Singer Tower was an actual skyscraper standing 612 feet
(187 meters) tall, completed 1908 and demolished in 1968. It was the
tallest building in the world in 1908-09. In the story it is discussed
as having a particularly foreign look—Jewish, or Persian, or Asian. It
seems to represent the alien quality of tall buildings in general—and
the suspicion that they are infecting American life, even as they
attract foreign laborers to build them. At the end of the story, Hallet
mentions "a new idea of some sort" that will arise from all these new
buildings, an idea that the Singer Tower itself will someday bow down
to worship (54). This emerging idea is what the engineer Hallet thinks
is "behind" the Singer Tower, the Mont Blanc Hotel, and other such
urban constructions. But there are questions that linger after Hallet's
narration: What is this idea? Is it worth the cost? Along with these
questions lingers the more poignant question in Italian that Hallet
remembers as Caesarino's last words: "ma, perche?" ("But, why?"). Does
Hallet answer this question?
|
|
The Singer Tower. Picture from
http://www.nyc-architecture.com/GON/GON003.htm
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|