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George Saunders peoples his stories with the losers of American history-the dispossessed, the oppressed, or merely those whom history's winners have walked all over on their paths to glory, fame, or terrific wealth. Among other forms of marginalization, Saunders's subject is above all the American working class. In the last twenty or more years, however, for reasons that include the fall of the Soviet Union, the impact of poststructuralist theory, conceptualizations of identity that more and more take race and gender into consideration alongside class, and the general cultural turn in class analysis, it has become increasingly difficult to write about class and unclear what value the "working class" has as a concept for social and cultural analysis or for literary representation. Saunders's fiction not only reflects these changed ways of conceiving class but also challenges us to reconsider basic questions of class representation. "Sea Oak," from Pastoralia (2000), is perhaps the most effective expression of Saunders's class constructions and representative of his approach to the formal representation of class. "Sea Oak" attempts to represent the realities of class in an era when the concept has lost its objective determination and has become one coordinate in a differential field of experience and identity that includes race, gender, sexuality, and culture. Moreover, while constructing working-class identity as a complex, differential field, "Sea Oak" intervenes in enduring debates concerning literary form and working-class representation. Subscribing wholly to neither tradition nor avant-gardism, "Sea Oak" provocatively suspends the techniques of realism and postmodernism in tense differential relation. This suspension creates productive incongruities that allow Saunders's fiction to undermine class ontologies, often through powerfully affective moments of formal collision. While few still privilege social class in ways traditionally encouraged by strict economic determinism, critics have fruitfully built upon E. P. Thompson's well-known definition of class as "a relationship, not a thing" (11). As Wai Chee Dimock and Michael T. Gilmore describe, critics now "entertain a range of interactive relations-class and culture, class and race, class and gender-without making causality a one-directional phenomenon, and without attributing to the first term a determinative weight" (3). The result has not only established class as a complex "differential field" but may also expose "varying relays between the economic and the social, and therefore also with multiple points of action, and multiple registers of experiential effect" (8). "Class has been queered," Cora Kaplan observes, because "[i]ts desires, its object choices, and its antagonisms are neither so straightforward nor so singular as they once seemed" (13). If class as a concept has lost its objective appearance and fixed structure, it has gained by becoming a differential coordinate in a system of human relations that also considers other key contributors to ide...
s narrative experiments in Ulysses allow readers to recognize traditional novel narration as alienated labor. In the course of narrating Ulysses, Joyce's notorious Arranger becomes aware of his own alienation from the product of his labor, as the life he has given to the novel finally "confronts him as something hostile and alien," in the words of Marx. The Arranger's alienation, consistent with the forces of capitalism to which Walter Benjamin attributes the death of storytelling, motivates his outrageous narrative behavior. This alienated behavior in turn allows Ulysses to articulate experience in ways that exceed the capabilities and capacities that Benjamin grants to traditional novels. Specifically, the Arranger's labor and death absorb the fragments of living and immediate experience represented in the novel into a scheme of epic memory that transforms modernity's jolts and shocks into something communicable and gives Ulysses its unparalleled sense of life " lived."
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