NEW YORK, NY.- Nobody likes the comic who explains his own material, but writer John Barth, who died Tuesday, had a way of making explanations of gags, of stories, of the whole creative enterprise sing louder and funnier and truer than punchlines. The maxim Show, dont tell had little purchase with him. In novels, short stories and essays, through an astoundingly prolific six-decade career, he ran riot over literary rules and conventions, even as he displayed, with meticulous discipline, mastery of and respect for them.
He was styled a postmodernist, an awkwardly fitting title that only just managed to cover his essential attributes, like a swimsuit left too long in the dryer. But it meant that much of what Barth was doing cheekily recycling dusty forms, shining klieg lights on the artificiality of art, turning the tyranny of plot against itself had a name, a movement.
For many years, starting in the 1960s, he was at the vanguard of this movement, alongside writers like Thomas Pynchon and William Gaddis. He declared that all paths for the novel had already been taken, and then blazed new ones for generations of awe-struck followers. He showed us how writing works by letting us peer into its machinery, and reminded us that our experience of the world will always be dictated by the instruments we have to observe and record it. While never abandoning narrative, he found endless joy in picking apart its elements, and in the process helped define a postwar American style.
Were Barth the author of this article, for example, he might pause here to point out that the lines above constitute what journalists like to call the nut graf, an early paragraph that provides larger context for the topic at hand and tries to establish its importance and is sometimes wedged in last-minute by a harried writer or editor ordered to elevate a story or give it sweep. Then Barth might explain why this one is lousy, why the whole business of nut grafs is more or less absurd.
The constructive disruption, the literary public service announcement: It became something of a signature for Barth, and its best expressed in his story collection Lost in the Funhouse (1968). The title piece, a masterwork of metafiction, follows a teenage boy lurching about the revolving discs and mirrored walls of an amusement-park fun house, where he realizes, dolefully, that he is better suited to construct such contrivances than experience them.
Throughout, a comically pedantic narrator critiques the very tale hes telling by identifying the flashy tricks of the funhouse that is fiction: symbolism, theme, sensory detail, resolution. The story is simultaneously a rigorous analysis, vivid example and ruthless dismantling of how literature operates.
Is anything more tiresome, in fiction, than the problems of sensitive adolescents? the narrator asks, in his fiction about a sensitive adolescent. And its all too long and rambling.
David Foster Wallace called the collection a sacred text, even drafting one of his stories in the margins of his copy. Although he later, in an act of literary parricide, denounced his hero as a stagnant has-been, Barths influence is unmistakable in Wallaces work, as it is in that of so many others, including Zadie Smith, Jonathan Lethem, Jennifer Egan, George Saunders and David Mitchell writers who hauled postmodernism off its ivory tower, who integrated Barths fourth-wall breaches, parodic masquerades or typographical pyrotechnics into more accessible, more sincere and, fine, more marketable narratives.
Barth himself was a writer who wore his influences on his sleeve, though he was careful to make his tributes his own, often with an awl-sharp irony. You do not mistake your navigation stars for your destination, he said in a 2001 interview with critic Michael Silverblatt. These are compass points that you steer by, but youre not trying to be Joyce or Beckett or Nabokov or Calvino or Borges just because you steer by those stars. They help you fix your own position.
In 1967, he wrote an essay called The Literature of Exhaustion, a state-of-the-union address for Western letters that would come to be known, to Barths befuddlement, as a manifesto for postmodernism. It is one of those loosely read, perennially misinterpreted early-career works that both forge their writers reputations and drive them nuts for the rest of their lives.
In it, he points to the used-upness of literary forms, the exhaustion of creative possibilities, as a rousing opportunity for new methods based on pastiche and revival by no means necessarily a cause for despair, he insisted. But many readers still took it as a death knell for the novel. Barth had to write a follow-up years later to set the record straight.
Much of Barths raw material actually came from writers of classic texts, not the modern and postmodern navigation stars he steered by. He was Dante reworking the Aeneid into The Divine Comedy if Dante were a shiny-pated, bespectacled Marylander with a police-detective mustache. The Sot-Weed Factor (1960) is an epic imitation of the 18th-century bildungsroman, something AI bots might aspire to if the prompt were, say, Tom Jones plus Tristram Shandy, but hornier. (Its great.) His 2004 story collection, The Book of Ten Nights and a Night, is a Decameron set in the days after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. Scheherazade, whom Barth called his literary patron saint, is a regular presence in his work.
And, of course, theres Barths opus Giles Goat-Boy (1966), a bonkers Cold War allegory that draws from the Bible, Oedipus Rex, Don Quixote and Ulysses, among other works. I tried to summarize its many forking paths for a curious bartender once and started to feel dizzy midway through. A bitterly divided college campus is overrun by a tyrannical computer system called WESCAC, and the only one who can save humanity is a boy named George Giles, who was raised as a goat and somehow turns out to be the offspring of WESCAC and a virgin named Lady Creamhair. (Its great.)
Giles tries his best to live up to the mythic hero archetype, but soon learns, over and over, that simply being human is complicated enough. For all of Barths outrageous experiments, he always seemed to find his way back to the basic moral question that every great fiction writer has tried to wrangle: How should one be?
His second novel, The End of the Road (1958), is a profound deliberation on the dominant Western philosophy of its time, existentialism, which Barth, in a Camus-like story of a marital affair, first seems to value and then exposes as obscenely inadequate. Anchoring even his most arcane metafictions are recognizable characters who try to commit to a principle or an identity and often fail spectacularly.
In this way, Barth was closer to the comforts of traditional fiction than he was given credit for. A true postmodernist, he wrote in 1980, keeps one foot in fantasy, one in objective reality.
His books are long the novels tend to gallivant far past the 500-page mark and laborious. But like an abstract painter proving he still has some realist portraiture left in him, he could sometimes play it straight and write fiction that, as he put it, just tells itself without ever-forever reminding us that its words on paper. Take a peek at Ambrose His Mark (from Lost in the Funhouse) and Toga Party (from his 2008 collection The Development) for superb examples.
But Barths most memorable writing remains the stuff that works on both levels: the gently rising and falling slopes of narrative and the zany mirror maze of self-reflexivity. You get the sense that he found the latter a wearying realm to read in, let alone write in, but couldnt help veering into it, that the phoniness of the whole endeavor, including his own persona as the artist, had to be accounted for. Its particularly disquieting to suspect not only that one is a fictional character, he wrote, but that the fiction ones in the fiction one is is quite the sort one least prefers.
Reading Barth is like taking a cross-country flight while sitting in the cockpit with the pilot, a journey made more thrilling by our observation of the mechanisms that make it possible: We can stare in awe at the instrument panels, or just look out the window. But, through it all, his impossible desire to be his own reader, a naive experiencer of his own narrative, never waned. One imagines the maestro himself snapping his fingers impatiently at the text. Enough with the diversions, he might say. On with the story!
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.