The Art of Percival Everett
KEITH B. MITCHELL AND ROBIN G. VANDER
So we must keep trying anything and everything, improvising, borrowing from others, developing from others, dialectically using one text as comment upon another, schematizing, using the incentive to new wanderings, returning from these excursions to schematize again, being oversubtle when the straining seems to promise some further glimpse, and making amends by reduction to some very simple anecdote. —KENNETH BURKE
To say that Percival Everett is one of the most accomplished and prolific contemporary African American writers is also to say that Percival Everett is one of the most accomplished and prolific American writers. He is the author of eighteen novels, three collections of short fiction, three collections of poetry, and a children’s book. Born in 1956 in Fort Gordon, a small military base in Augusta, Georgia, he was primarily raised in South Carolina. Everett received his M.A. in fiction from Brown University in 1982, and was an associate professor at the University of Kentucky from 1985 to 1988, and a full professor at the University of Notre Dame from 1988 to 1991. He is currently Distinguished Professor of English at the University of Southern California. Since the publication of his first novel, Suder, in 1983, he has been the recipient of numerous awards and accolades. These include the New American Writing Award for Zulus in 1990; the Hillsdale Award; the Fellowship of Southern Writers (2001); the Hurston/Wright Legacy Award for Erasure (2002); the American Academy of Arts and Letters Literature Award (2003); the PEN USA Literary Award (2006–2007); and the Dos Passos Prize in Literature, the Charles Angoff Award, the Premio Vallambrosa Gregor von Rezzori Prize (Italy), the Hurston/Wright Legacy Award, and the Believer Book Award, all received in 2010. Everett’s literary production has been impressive; on average, he has managed to publish at least one novel per year since 1983. One would imagine that most writers who might produce such a large body of creative work would suffer from a decline in imaginative and innovative faculties; however, this is not the case with Percival Everett. Everett never crosses the same river twice. He has experimented with and mastered the art of creative expression in many different literary genres that sends the reader on rollicking rollercoaster rides: dizzying and thrilling, and ultimately immensely satisfying. One need only read his work to see the topical, stylistic, and narrative range of his literary output: Suder, about an ageing African American baseball player on an existential quest for wholeness; Zulus (1990), a post-apocalyptic, satirical novel that echoes Lewis Carroll’s Alice in Wonderland; The Water Cure (2007), a subtle indictment of post-911 American politics during the Bush administration; I Am Not Sidney Poitier (2009), a narrative that interrogates the very nature of subjectivity; and Assumption (2011), a mind-bending detective story that questions our reliance on inductive and deductive reason to explain and understand the world; the wellspring of his imagination runs deep, indeed.
Despite, however, the praise and overwhelmingly positive critical reception that Everett and his work have garnered, there has been an astounding dearth of critical and scholarly examination of his fiction. The lack on the part of scholars in African American and American literary and cultural studies has been nothing less than scandalous. Indeed, it is safe to say that Everett’s work is arguably better known in Europe than here in the United States. To date, scholars in France have published two collections of essays on his fiction: Percival Everett: Transatlantic Readings (2007), edited by Claire Maniez and Anne-Laure Tissut, and Reading Percival Everett, European Perspectives: Symposium de Tours (2007), edited by Claude Julien. At this date, only the Maniez and Tissut collection remains in print. Neither in Europe nor the United States has there been a monogram published on his work. This collection of essays, we feel, is a necessary and timely intervention and is an important critical starting point for scholars both familiar and unfamiliar with his work.
If, as Jon Woodson claims, black poetry, specifically, and black literature, generally, in artistic representations of black experiences in the past enacted a “resubjectification of the black self,” Everett and other post-civil rights authors have enacted a revision of the resubjectification of the black self in which identifacatory multiplicity is the sociopolitical aim (Spencer 72–73). We have seen this in the case of writers as diverse as Toni Morrison, Clarence Major, Charles Johnson, John Edgar Wideman, Gloria Naylor, Edward P. Jones, Colson Whitehead, Jerome Beatty, and Martha Southgate, among others. Many of these writers deal with middle-class black experiences as much as experiences of the folk. Moreover, many of these writers have built upon and expanded the African American literary tradition by taking up narrative forms and subject matter that have heretofore not been readily advanced in the literature. Often literary critics have attempted to categorize these African American writers as “experimental writers,” which at best meant that they employ innovative narrative techniques to portray black experiences in their fiction and at worst that these innovative narrative techniques somehow make their work “less black” due to the work’s supposed difficulty and black “inauthenticity.” The latter charge is meant to imply that because the work was “avant-garde” (whatever that is supposed to mean), African American readers could not identify with the characters and/or situations rendered in these texts. This often meant that black and white critics alike were quick to dismiss these “experimental writers’” literary efforts as perhaps too indulgent to suit the tastes of the general (black) reading public or to satisfy black and white critics’ expectations for “authentic” black fiction. It has only been in the last ten years that serious critical work has begun to appear on African American “experimental writers” like Major and Wideman, and it is only now that younger writers such as Beatty, Whitehead, and Southgate are beginning to receive serious critical attention; much more needs to be done. The dearth of scholarly work on African American writers who do not necessarily fit certain prescribed formal or thematic categorizations deemed as “black” are often relegated to the margins of African American literary history, tradition, and critical engagement (we see this in the poetry and the fiction). Perhaps what problematizes Percival Everett’s writing for readers and critics, even more than his formal narrative innovation, is his refusal as an African American writer to be categorized at all. Despite the experimental nature of Morrison’s, Johnson’s, Major’s, and Wideman’s creative work, their art is rooted in arguably more readily identifiable black experiences and black expression. For example, unlike the aforementioned African American writers, Everett rarely employs African American vernacular speech patterns in the delineation of his characters. This is perhaps where one finds Everett’s unique authorial voice majorly departing from other African American writers of his generation and of the past. In an interview Everett points out that he simply wants to be viewed as a writer who happens to be black and not an African American writer, per se, with all of the historical, cultural, and racial baggage that accompanies the term. This, ironically, he feels, allows him a much wider imaginative latitude in his artistic expression of black experiences. In an interview with Anthony Stewart, Everett castigates the commercial manipulations of the publishing industry and the imperceptive vision of the average reader that often forces African American writers to write about subject matter and render character types that have been deemed “blacker” than others:
PE: Being black in America, you’re exotic in certain places and certain times. You’re exotic if you’re in New York and you’re brown and you happen to be a Cheyenne Indian. But if you’re black, “you’re not exotic, we’re used to you.” You’re exotic in that awful way if you show up at a fancy party and you’re the only black person there. But on the street, you’re not exotic. And the same would be true of white Americans who wander into a party full of black people. But they’re not exotic. They’re simply out of place. And that’s how it’s perceived, by everyone. It’s a wonderfully fucked up culture we live in.
AS: The difference between being exotic and of being out of place. Being exotic is something that somebody else can put to good use. Right? You can sell exoticism in a way that maybe you can’t sell out of place.
PE: Exactly, which is why the easy road for American publishing has been to publish novels about black farmers or inner-city, you know …
PE: And slaves. Because these are pictures [of blackness] that are easily commodified. But if it’s the black middle class, and it’s so different from someone else’s, then what’s exotic about that? (Stewart 299)
Thus as counternarratives to what he sees as the myopic vision of mainstream publishers and the reading public, the protagonists in Everett’s novels, racially identified and otherwise, are ranchers, hydrologists, baseball players, doctors, romance writers, Vietnam veterans, cowboys, Greek gods, child savants, and serial killers. This, however, is not to advance that Percival Everett rejects his African American roots; rather, Everett has made a career of writing against proscriptions of black representations in his fiction—that black writers have to represent a kind of universalized, monolithic black experience in order for their art to be considered legitimately black. Thus, we see with Everett instances where race, subject matter, narrative form, and other innovations appear not to have much of anything to do with the lives of African Americans. We emphasize “appear” because if one closely interrogates Everett’s oeuvre, as the extraordinary contributors to this collection have, one would find themes, images, motifs, and inter-textual references that connect his fiction well within as well as outside of the African American literary tradition. Everett’s fiction invariably speaks b(l)ack to innovative fiction writers such as Jean Toomer, Zora Neale Hurston, George Schuyler, Richard Wright, and Ralph Ellison, often through biting parody and satire. Everett signifies, again often through parody and satire, upon numerous Euro-American writers, artists, philosophers, and literary theorists to show that what might appear not to be of any value to nor concern for African Americans has absolutely always preoccupied African American artistic, social, and political expression. And in doing so, Everett raises even more complicated questions concerning African American identity and culture in the twenty-first century. As this collection proves, Everett’s work is more than black enough; his work embraces the universality of what it means to be human, regardless of race. In short, like his literary ancestor, Ralph Ellison, to whom he owes much, Everett’s extraordinary body of work demonstrates what Ellison figured out over sixty-five years ago in the writing of Invisible Man (1947); that in the creation of “authentic” African American fiction, “black is an’ black ain’t….”
Perspectives on Percival Everett is but one measured reflection on Everett’s career as an accomplished and prolific writer of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, and of the author’s own critiques of identity politics and race situated at the intersection of literary theory and creative writing. In this collection Everett’s novels, short fiction, and poetry are analyzed and given thoughtful consideration as to their representation of physical bodies socially defined as “black” yet transcending, disturbing, and interrogating any and all meanings and meaningful applications of the term and its purported markers. Herein, the essays reflect upon Everett’s critique of social discourse and his immersion in theoretical praxis, the place and displacement of definitions in constructing identity. If we are to state, emphatically no less, that Percival Everett is one of the most accomplished and prolific writers of his generation, then Perspectives on Percival Everett intimates the limitless theoretical lenses one might appropriate in reading his work and the myriad intersections that continue to reveal themselves to us: from Russian Formalism to Structuralism, Psychoanalytic to Critical Race Theory, Performance-based Analysis and Reader-Response. Throughout the collection, Everett’s interest in identity as formed through language and the materiality of the body, form the foundation for how contributors discuss the author’s engagement with proposed cinematic adaptations of his work, the evolution of interpretive communities for his work and those imagined within, and how racial and cultural reality take shape.
In “‘knowledge2 + certainty2 = squat2’: (re)Thinking Identity and Meaning in Percival Everett’s The Water Cure,” Jonathan Dittman discusses the Russian Formalist technique of “defamiliarization” and the performative act of naming. The role of language as a signifier for culture and cultural identity is interrogated by Dittman’s analysis of the novel’s protagonist, Ishmael Kidder, an African American male romance writer who appropriates a woman’s name and identity. The essay also examines the novel’s postmodern critique of absolute truths.
Sarah Mantilla Griffin extends the considerations of language and identity in the essay “‘This Strange Juggler’s Game’: Forclusion in Percival Everett’s I Am Not Sidney Poitier,” providing a psychoanalytic reading of the novel I Am Not Sidney Poitier (2009) through the use of Lacan and the absent signifier. Moving beyond a mere analysis of lacking the father figure, Mantilla Griffin addresses the importance of naming within African American culture and the complexities that arise through the disconnection of the linguistic concept and sound-image.
Literary and cultural theories are inherently at work in Everett’s writing and are continuously reflected throughout his writing. Ronald Dorris acknowledges Everett as a scholar by introducing a new means of textual analysis in his discussion of the novel Frenzy (1997). The essay, “Frenzy: Framing Text to Set Discourse in a Cultural Continuum,” entails a close reading of Everett’s use of Euripides’s The Bacchae as a narrative frame in order to make insightful cross-generic connections, on a literary and cultural continuum, between Afro-Asiatic and Greek mythopoesis.
With “The Preservationist Impulse in Percival Everett’s ‘True Romance,’” contributor Frédéric Dumas shifts attention from novels to short fiction and begins to expand the discussion of how the African American community traditionally has been depicted in literature, particularly, in regards to the issues and concerns that have garnered the community’s attention and resources. In his essay, Dumas highlights Everett’s illustration of African Americans’ interests in environmental concerns and the author’s situating the community along the landscape of the American Southwest. While these representations clearly exhibit an expansion of how readers might view the community, Dumas still discusses archetypal tropes in Everett’s works including the author’s use of the male figure enlisting a female identity for a pseudonym, a similar analysis found earlier in Dittman’s discussion of The Water Cure (2007). Another recurring theme in Everett’s work will be that of the author’s critique of the contemporary publishing world and other modes of artistic production that Everett believes seek to pigeonhole and stifle broader and more inclusive African American artistic expressions.
“The Mind-Body Split in American Desert: Synthesizing Everett’s Critique of Race, Religion, and Science” problematizes racial determinism and essentialism by exploring the post-Cartesian split. Critiquing religion, government, corporations, and media, contributor Richard Schur analyzes discursive formation and the role institutions assume in shaping reality and identity within societies. Arguing for the limitations of knowing through science and media, Schur’s essay thoughtfully considers the consequences when institutionalized ways of knowing fail to explain what it means to be alive.
Uzzie Cannon and Anthony Stewart exemplify differing interpretive communities through their respective readings of Everett’s novel, Suder (1983). Placed back-to-back in Perspectives on Percival Everett, the two essays simultaneously remind readers of the limited scholarship on Everett, particularly regarding this first novel and the complexity of Everett’s work where two highly individualized readings occur. In “A Bird of a Different Feather: Blues, Jazz, and the Difficult Journey to the Self in Percival Everett’s Suder,” Cannon writes of Everett’s movement through the blues and jazz aesthetics as a means of African Americans moving from being defined to having experienced the freedom of defining themselves, while Stewart uses his essay, “‘Do you mind if we make Craig Suder white?’: From Stereotype to Cosmopolitan to Grotesque in Percival Everett’s Suder,” to argue that the protagonist, Craig Suder, employs the grotesque in order to release himself from the burdens of universal representations of the black experience.
Though scholarship on Everett has been limited thus far, and what has been produced has primarily focused on his works of fiction, Sarah Wyman provides a thoughtful and theoretical analysis of Everett’s latest collection of poetry, re: f (gesture) (2006). “Charting the Body: Percival Everett’s Corporeal Landscapes in re: f (gesture)” emphasizes the author’s interest in the body witnessed in both written and visual form, and resumes the structuralist critique of Everett’s work found earlier within this collection noting the relationship between the concept of the sign and its representation. Doing so, Wyman situates Everett within a broader collective of writers and theorists than heretofore understood.
Editor and contributor Robin G. Vander concludes Perspectives on Percival Everett with a performance-based reading of Everett’s retelling of the Greek tragedy, Medea. In “When the Text Becomes the Stage: Percival Everett’s Performance Turn in For Her Dark Skin,” Vander explores Everett’s enlistment of performance writing praxis for developing the narrative. As with many of the essays throughout the collection, Vander’s concluding essay connects with earlier contributors’ reflections on the performative aspect of Everett’s work including those provided by Dittman and Wyman.
Inarguably, it is impossible for any one source to exhaust the possibilities for reading and interpreting the meanings and significance of the writings of Percival Everett. It is our collective hope that here, within these pages, these essays help to illuminate the breadth and intellectual depth of Percival Everett’s published works and will inspire established and emerging scholars to begin reading his works or to renew their interests—deservedly. Scholar, novelist, essayist, poet, artist. Accomplished and prolific— Percival Everett. To be continued.