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A
Twist on Tradition
With
a nod to Faulkner, an author creates his own mythic
town
by
MICHELLE ORECKLIN
It is nearly impossible for any southern writer to
avoid the specter of William Faulkner. The world he
created in Yoknapatawpha County, perhaps the best-known
plot of literary real estate, exerts its influence
over the aspirations of the region's writers and the
expectations of readers and critics. It could therefore
be construed as an act of either bravado or foolishness
that Randall Kenan, who lives in Memphis and was raised
in North Carolina, has also constructed a fictional
Southern locale, a swampy speck called Tims Creek,
N.C. "I could have run," says Kenan, 37, of the inevitable
comparisons, "but I'd be spending a lot of energy
in vain. It's like the Bible in that sense. Faulkner's
language is just a part of you."
Kenan does not, however, shy away from reinterpreting
the sacred texts. While Faulkner explored the remnants
of a failed white aristocracy, Kenan is concerned
mainly with Tims Creek's black population, descendants
of the former slaves who founded the town. This network
of working-class families, introduced in his novel
A Visitation of Spirits (1989) and the short-story
collection Let the Dead Bury Their Dead (1992), recurs
in the novel he is currently writing, Fire and the
Baptism, due early next year. It is a community clinging
to the traditions of the past while grappling with
the pressures of the modern-day South. In A Visitation
of Spirits, Kenan writes how a town once bound by
the practice of harvesting tobacco by hand withers
with mechanization.
Not surprisingly, Tims Creek is much like Chinquapin,
N.C., the impoverished outpost where Kenan grew up
"going to hog killings one minute and watching Star
Trek the next." He was sent there at six weeks old
by his parents, who were unmarried and residing in
New York, to be reared by his great-aunt. His upbringing
became the collective endeavor of a group of elderly
relatives with abiding faith in both religion and
folklore who spent endless hours telling fantastical
stories"tales of ghost dogs and people rising
from the dead." The residue of these stories has found
its way into Kenan's fiction. In the short story Clarence
and the Dead, the young title character demonstrates
an unnerving gift of clairvoyance: "He told Sarah
Phillips to stop fretting, that her husband forgave
her for the time she tried to stab him with that hunting
knife; he told Cleavon Simpson his mama despised him
for tricking her to sign all of her property over
to him . . . he told people things a four-year-old
boy ain't had no business knowing the language for,
let alone the circumstances around them. All from
people dead, five, six, ten, twenty and more years."
In Tims Creek, spirits, zombies and mystics are as
real as tobacco fields and televisions.
"One
of the things I have always taken issue with in Southern
literature is that it is almost all rooted in social
realism," says Kenan. "I grew up around people who
took the Bible literally, and still do." So in college,
when Kenan first read such South American authors
as Gabriel Garcia Marquez, he abandoned his plans
to be a physicist and turned to writing. "When I encountered
writers who wrote about spirits like they would changing
a carburetor, I realized you can come at this form
from an entirely different vantage point."
The approach, though, does not result in fairy tales.
Fire and the Baptism, while including ghosts and spirits,
follows the lives of two kidnapping victims, one black,
one white. In A Visitation of Spirits, the teenage
Horace Cross attempts to transform himself into a
bird to escape the ostracism he will face if his homosexuality
is exposed in his religious community. Instead he
unleashes an army of demons that haunt him as he is
haunted by what he sees as his sin. It is with Horace
that Kenan claims the most affinity, and his plight
seems a supernatural rendering of Kenan's experience
of coming to terms with his own homosexuality in a
culture where it was "never talked about but always
a shadow."
Kenan welcomes the passing of certain aspects of that
rigid culture. "The monolith of the black church,
for example, has some outdated ways of thinking that
can hold a people back," he says. At the same time,
he laments the demise of those elements that have
proved so nurturing, particularly Chinquapin's understanding
of family. "Because of slavery, the idea of nuclear
family didn't exist among black Americans," says Kenan.
"So people depended on a network of family, but now
many of those networks are breaking down." Kenan found
his nostalgia echoed across the country as he researched
his most recent book, the nonfictional Walking on
Water: Black American Lives at the Turn of the 21st
Century (1999), for which he interviewed more than
200 people. In places like Alaska and Utah, he found
those who never knew the South firsthand yet had a
yearning for it. "What's true of African-American
identity is true for Southern identity," says Kenan.
"A lot of it is fragile and in danger, and a lot of
it is so much a part of us that we don't even see
it."
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