最简单的地平线贾梅尔-布林克利的 "巴托车站"

IF 0.1 4区 文学 0 LITERARY REVIEWS
Garth Greenwell
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It’s comprised of three interwoven strands: the narrator’s new job as a delivery man for UPS; his strained, would-be relationship with a youngish woman, Zoelle; and the defining relationship of his life, his bond with his cousin, Troy, who died some years before the summer the story recounts. One of Brinkley’s great subjects, in both of his books, is the way men—brothers, friends, fathers, and sons—relate to one another, the way certain models of masculinity give form to and so, maybe necessarily, <em>de</em>form expressions of love, both love between men, and love between men and women. One <strong>[End Page 18]</strong> way of thinking about “Bartow Station”—and this is true of other of Brinkley’s stories, like “A Family” and “Clifton’s Place” from <em>A Lucky Man</em>, “The Let-Out” and “Comfort” in <em>Witness</em>—is as a narrative of a present relationship cut across, impeded, in “Bartow Station” finally made impossible, by a relationship from the past.</p> <p>We don’t learn all that much about the story’s unnamed narrator, though after twenty pages we’ll feel we know him deeply; one of the marvels of Brinkley’s work is how economical he can be with backstory, how our knowledge of his characters—who are often folded in on themselves, curled around some hidden grief—comes from inhabiting the experience of their lives, not from the delivery of facts. The story opens on the narrator’s first day as a delivery man for UPS; he’s sitting on a bench in the locker room getting razzed by Jimmy, a more experienced driver who will train him. The narrator’s shoes are all wrong—Oxfords that will destroy his feet—and so are his socks (white, not regulation black or brown); he’s sure to get reamed out by the bosses. More important, his attitude is all wrong; a “unicorn,” Jimmy says, “hired off the street,” he takes for granted a job that others covet. “This is just a gig, man,” the narrator says. “I’m not here to collect a pension.” We’ll learn that he has dropped out of college, twice; there’s the slightest hint, late in the story, that maybe he thinks of himself as an artist, or would like to. (“I had no ambitions then of being an artist,” he will say of his younger self; my sense of his current ambitions hangs on that <em>then</em>.) In any event, something has knocked him off course, into a job he feels is beneath him.</p> <p>It’s a great job for a protagonist, though, since it keeps him in motion, bringing him into contact with an endless stream of others, any of whom might spark a story. The narrator finds himself frequently making deliveries to a flower shop, something he comes to enjoy; in the early mornings, the mirrored interior makes him feel <strong>[End Page 19]</strong> like he’s stepping into a meadow. He flirts with one of the women who works there, at first casually, courteously—and then “my courtesy starts getting away from me, growing bit by bit into something else, something I don’t know how to control.” It’s largely this woman—her name (she will prod him into asking it) is Zoelle—who pushes things along, coaxing the narrator into playfulness, giving him a flower and telling him it’s a ticket. “All that flirting . . . and you actually have no idea what to do,” she teases. The narrator’s response is to feel, literally, bewildered, “swept up, engulfed,” utterly estranged from himself. “So deeply lost in the meadow,” he thinks, recalling his earlier impression of the shop, “you surrender all sense of not only where you are but also, briefly, who.” Brinkley’s work is...</p> </p>","PeriodicalId":43824,"journal":{"name":"SEWANEE REVIEW","volume":"98 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.1000,"publicationDate":"2024-02-08","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"The Barest Horizon: Jamel Brinkley's \\\"Bartow Station\\\"\",\"authors\":\"Garth Greenwell\",\"doi\":\"10.1353/sew.2024.a919133\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<span><span>In lieu of</span> an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:</span>\\n<p> <ul> <li><!-- html_title --> The Barest Horizon: <span>Jamel Brinkley’s “Bartow Station”</span> <!-- /html_title --></li> <li> Garth Greenwell (bio) </li> </ul> <p><strong>O</strong>ne of my questions about “Bartow Station,” from Jamel Brinkley’s second collection, <em>Witness</em>, is what makes the story seem so bottomlessly deep, since really it’s quite simple, quite contained in its materials. Narrated by an unnamed, youngish man, it takes place over a few months, a single summer, with a couple of important excursions into the past. It’s comprised of three interwoven strands: the narrator’s new job as a delivery man for UPS; his strained, would-be relationship with a youngish woman, Zoelle; and the defining relationship of his life, his bond with his cousin, Troy, who died some years before the summer the story recounts. One of Brinkley’s great subjects, in both of his books, is the way men—brothers, friends, fathers, and sons—relate to one another, the way certain models of masculinity give form to and so, maybe necessarily, <em>de</em>form expressions of love, both love between men, and love between men and women. 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The narrator’s shoes are all wrong—Oxfords that will destroy his feet—and so are his socks (white, not regulation black or brown); he’s sure to get reamed out by the bosses. More important, his attitude is all wrong; a “unicorn,” Jimmy says, “hired off the street,” he takes for granted a job that others covet. “This is just a gig, man,” the narrator says. “I’m not here to collect a pension.” We’ll learn that he has dropped out of college, twice; there’s the slightest hint, late in the story, that maybe he thinks of himself as an artist, or would like to. (“I had no ambitions then of being an artist,” he will say of his younger self; my sense of his current ambitions hangs on that <em>then</em>.) In any event, something has knocked him off course, into a job he feels is beneath him.</p> <p>It’s a great job for a protagonist, though, since it keeps him in motion, bringing him into contact with an endless stream of others, any of whom might spark a story. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要: 最基本的地平线:贾梅尔-布林克利的 "巴托车站" 加斯-格林威尔(Garth Greenwell)(简历) 我对贾梅尔-布林克利的第二部作品集《见证》中的 "巴托车站 "的一个疑问是,是什么让这个故事看起来如此深邃无底,因为它其实非常简单,材料也非常简单。故事由一位不愿透露姓名的年轻男子讲述,发生在几个月的时间里,也就是一个夏天,其中有几段重要的往事。故事由三条相互交织的线索组成:叙述者作为 UPS 送货员的新工作;他与一位年轻女子 Zoelle 之间紧张的、即将发生的关系;以及他生命中决定性的关系--他与表弟特洛伊之间的纽带,后者在故事讲述的那个夏天之前几年去世。在这两本书中,布林克利的一个重要主题是男人--兄弟、朋友、父亲和儿子--相互关系的方式,以及某些男性气质模式赋予爱的表达形式的方式,因此,也许必然会使爱的表达变形,无论是男人之间的爱,还是男人与女人之间的爱。思考《巴托车站》的一种方式--这也适用于布林克利的其他故事,如《一个幸运的人》中的《一个家庭》和《克利夫顿的地方》,《证人》中的《放任》和《舒适》--就是将其作为一种叙述,讲述一种被过去的关系割裂、阻碍的现在的关系,在《巴托车站》中,这种关系最终变得不可能。我们对故事中的无名叙述者了解不多,但二十多页之后,我们就会觉得对他有了深刻的认识;布林克利作品的一个奇妙之处在于,他对背景故事的处理是如此经济,我们对他笔下人物的了解--这些人物经常被自己折叠起来,蜷缩在某种隐秘的悲伤中--来自于对他们生活经历的体验,而不是事实的传递。故事的开头是叙述者成为 UPS 送货员的第一天;他坐在更衣室的长椅上,被吉米奚落,吉米是一位更有经验的司机,将对他进行培训。叙述者的鞋子和袜子(白色,而不是黑色或棕色)都不对,会毁掉他的脚。更重要的是,他的态度也不端正;吉米说自己是 "独角兽","从大街上雇来的",他认为别人梦寐以求的工作是理所当然的。"这只是一份工作,伙计,"叙述者说。"我不是来领养老金的"我们将了解到,他曾两次从大学辍学;在故事的后期,有一丝暗示,也许他认为自己是一名艺术家,或者愿意成为一名艺术家。(他在谈到年轻时的自己时会说:"我当时并没有成为艺术家的野心。)无论如何,有些事情让他偏离了方向,做了一份他觉得配不上他的工作。不过,对于主人公来说,这是份很棒的工作,因为这份工作让他不停地奔波,让他接触到无穷无尽的人,任何一个人都有可能引发一个故事。叙述者发现自己经常去一家花店送花,他开始喜欢上了这种工作;在清晨,镜面的室内装饰让他感觉 [第19页完] 就像走进了一片草地。他与店里的一位女店员调情,起初很随意,很有礼貌--然后 "我的礼貌开始远离我,一点一点地变成别的东西,变成我不知道如何控制的东西"。主要是这个女人--她的名字(她会催促他问)是 Zoelle--推动了事情的发展,她哄着叙述者玩,给他一朵花,告诉他这是一张票。"她取笑说:"调情调了这么久......你居然不知道该怎么做。叙述者的反应是感到困惑,"被卷入,被吞噬",完全与自己疏远。他想,"在草地上迷失得如此之深,"他回忆起自己早先对这家商店的印象,"你不仅放弃了对自己身在何处的所有感知,还短暂地放弃了对自己是谁的所有感知"。布林克利的作品...
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Barest Horizon: Jamel Brinkley's "Bartow Station"
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

  • The Barest Horizon: Jamel Brinkley’s “Bartow Station”
  • Garth Greenwell (bio)

One of my questions about “Bartow Station,” from Jamel Brinkley’s second collection, Witness, is what makes the story seem so bottomlessly deep, since really it’s quite simple, quite contained in its materials. Narrated by an unnamed, youngish man, it takes place over a few months, a single summer, with a couple of important excursions into the past. It’s comprised of three interwoven strands: the narrator’s new job as a delivery man for UPS; his strained, would-be relationship with a youngish woman, Zoelle; and the defining relationship of his life, his bond with his cousin, Troy, who died some years before the summer the story recounts. One of Brinkley’s great subjects, in both of his books, is the way men—brothers, friends, fathers, and sons—relate to one another, the way certain models of masculinity give form to and so, maybe necessarily, deform expressions of love, both love between men, and love between men and women. One [End Page 18] way of thinking about “Bartow Station”—and this is true of other of Brinkley’s stories, like “A Family” and “Clifton’s Place” from A Lucky Man, “The Let-Out” and “Comfort” in Witness—is as a narrative of a present relationship cut across, impeded, in “Bartow Station” finally made impossible, by a relationship from the past.

We don’t learn all that much about the story’s unnamed narrator, though after twenty pages we’ll feel we know him deeply; one of the marvels of Brinkley’s work is how economical he can be with backstory, how our knowledge of his characters—who are often folded in on themselves, curled around some hidden grief—comes from inhabiting the experience of their lives, not from the delivery of facts. The story opens on the narrator’s first day as a delivery man for UPS; he’s sitting on a bench in the locker room getting razzed by Jimmy, a more experienced driver who will train him. The narrator’s shoes are all wrong—Oxfords that will destroy his feet—and so are his socks (white, not regulation black or brown); he’s sure to get reamed out by the bosses. More important, his attitude is all wrong; a “unicorn,” Jimmy says, “hired off the street,” he takes for granted a job that others covet. “This is just a gig, man,” the narrator says. “I’m not here to collect a pension.” We’ll learn that he has dropped out of college, twice; there’s the slightest hint, late in the story, that maybe he thinks of himself as an artist, or would like to. (“I had no ambitions then of being an artist,” he will say of his younger self; my sense of his current ambitions hangs on that then.) In any event, something has knocked him off course, into a job he feels is beneath him.

It’s a great job for a protagonist, though, since it keeps him in motion, bringing him into contact with an endless stream of others, any of whom might spark a story. The narrator finds himself frequently making deliveries to a flower shop, something he comes to enjoy; in the early mornings, the mirrored interior makes him feel [End Page 19] like he’s stepping into a meadow. He flirts with one of the women who works there, at first casually, courteously—and then “my courtesy starts getting away from me, growing bit by bit into something else, something I don’t know how to control.” It’s largely this woman—her name (she will prod him into asking it) is Zoelle—who pushes things along, coaxing the narrator into playfulness, giving him a flower and telling him it’s a ticket. “All that flirting . . . and you actually have no idea what to do,” she teases. The narrator’s response is to feel, literally, bewildered, “swept up, engulfed,” utterly estranged from himself. “So deeply lost in the meadow,” he thinks, recalling his earlier impression of the shop, “you surrender all sense of not only where you are but also, briefly, who.” Brinkley’s work is...

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来源期刊
SEWANEE REVIEW
SEWANEE REVIEW LITERARY REVIEWS-
CiteScore
0.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
44
期刊介绍: Having never missed an issue in 115 years, the Sewanee Review is the oldest continuously published literary quarterly in the country. Begun in 1892 at the University of the South, it has stood as guardian and steward for the enduring voices of American, British, and Irish literature. Published quarterly, the Review is unique in the field of letters for its rich tradition of literary excellence in general nonfiction, poetry, and fiction, and for its dedication to unvarnished no-nonsense literary criticism. Each volume is a mix of short reviews, omnibus reviews, memoirs, essays in reminiscence and criticism, poetry, and fiction.
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