Conversations with Tyler - Mary Gaitskill on Subjects That Are Vexing Everybody
Episode Date: November 2, 2022Mary Gaitskill's knack for writing about the social and physical world with unapologetic clarity has led to her style being described both as "cold and brutal" and "tender and compassionate." Tyler co...nsiders her works The Mare, Veronica, and Lost Cat to be some of the best and most insightful American fiction in recent times. And lately she's taken to writing essays on Substack, where she frankly analyzes "subjects that are vexing everybody," including incels, Depp v. Heard, and political fiction. She joined Tyler to discuss the reasons some people seem to choose to be unhappy, why she writes about oddballs, the fragility of personality, how she's developed her natural knack for describing the physical world, why we're better off just accepting that people are horrible, her advice for troubled teenagers, why she wouldn't clone a lost cat, the benefits and drawbacks of writing online, what she's learned from writing a Substack, what gets lost in Kubrick's adaptation of Lolita, the not-so-subtle eroticism of Victorian novels, the ground rules for writing about other people, how creative writing programs are harming (some) writers, what she learned about men when working as a stripper, how her views of sexual permissiveness have changed since the '90s, how college students have changed over time, what she learned working at The Strand bookstore, and more. Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links. Recorded September 26th, 2022 Other ways to connect Follow us on Twitter and Instagram Follow Tyler on Twitter Email us: cowenconvos@mercatus.gmu.edu Subscribe at our newsletter page to have the latest Conversations with Tyler news sent straight to your inbox.
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Hello, everyone, and welcome back to Conversationsations.
with Tyler. Today I'm very pleased to be chatting with Mary Gateskill, who is one of my very
favorite contemporary writers. I love her books, Mare, Veronica, A Lost Cat, her essays, her short
stories. Mary, welcome to Conversations with Tyler. Thank you. Thank you for having me.
One thing I find so intriguing in your writing is your understanding of people who just seem to
not want to be happy flat out, such as Belved's mother in your novel mayor. These people, what's
understanding of why aren't they happy or why can't they be happy? Why do they process everything so
negatively? Well, could we talk about one character? Because I think they're all different.
Sure. Like, what is that told story? All happy families are the same. All unhappy families are different.
I don't think all happy people are families are the same either. But I think the reasons that people are
unhappy are why they seem to just kind of go to that place really easily are quite buried.
I think if I could come up with a general reason, not talking about my characters right now, but talking about people.
I think people who seem like they just want to be unhappy or incurably unhappy, it doesn't have to do with what they want.
It's usually because they've been hurt very early on.
And not just once or twice, there's a kind of persistent pattern of them encountering enormous adversity.
It doesn't have to be social.
It can be in their family.
I guess that is kind of a social.
Basically, they're very injured. And so their strategy for life becomes how to protect themselves
or how to cope with what they sort of see is a just nonstop barrage of shitty experiences.
And so that kind of puts them in a posture that they without, certainly without intending to,
invite that. In terms of Velvet's mother, that's not what's happening. She really truly has
had a rough life. I mean, if you're in a foreign country and you cannot speak the language and you're in a
dangerous neighborhood and you don't even understand the social signals they're being sent by the
people around you. And you're in a social group that's really looked down on and you don't even
know how to respond to that or you have no means to respond to that. That's hard. And if you put on top
of that that she's come from a very rough circumstance, I mean, there's a little about her backstory
there. You're going to be in a posture of real defensiveness and just locked in. And that makes it very
hard to move with any kind of joyous energy, which is what our daughter learns in the
book in riding horses, that that's her exposure to a kind of free and joyous energy, which she doesn't
get anywhere else. So in the general case, is it a desire to be preemptive so you feel in control
of the pain? Partly, yeah, but it's not even that thought out. It's just, have you ever seen
cats? Like, I've had situations where I'm introducing a new cat to a household where there's
going to be three other cats. And I've had the situation where, like, two of the host cats are aggressive
and they're ready to fight with the new one.
And I've seen two different responses.
One, I had a fairly confident dominant cat.
She knew she couldn't bite two cats.
So her strategy was just to sit down, stretch out her paws and look the other way and yawn.
That defused the aggression.
But another cat was just super reactive, just howling and fear and don't come near me.
Don't come near me.
I'll scratch your eyes up.
They always went for that cat.
because of her response, it magnified the aggression.
So it's something like that.
It's like getting yourself into a position of being prepared to be attacked that can
draw not only from people, but it almost like supercharges any negative situation.
Not that I'm blaming the people.
Like David Smother, like I said, is in a bad situation objectively.
If we're trying to understand such people, there are literal answers to the question of why they're unhappy.
and then there are what you might call fictional portrayals of why they're unhappy.
Do you think we need both to understand those people, and do the fictional portrayals add to the literal answers?
When you say the fictional portrayals, you mean in the heads of the unhappy people or literally fiction like somebody like me would write?
Someone like you would write a character out.
Does that add to our literal explanation of why these people are unhappy?
Or is it just mirroring what you might say?
I mean, part of what I want to do in writing about some characters, not so much Velvet's mother,
but also people like Ginger, the other woman in this story, who seems to have a much better life,
who actually does have a much better life, she's kind of a lost soul in a way.
And with somebody like that, I'm not trying to literally tell people how they should understand them.
But what I want is to acknowledge that many people like that exist.
Like also I think part of Velvet Smothers' problem is that she doesn't fit in with her own community.
She in a way is like Ginger. They're both kind of oddballs. They're both very sensitive people in their
own ways. And there are many, many people like that on earth that for whatever reason have a great
deal of trouble fitting into their world around them. And even if it's not a bad world,
and that's really hard. And it's not that I'm trying to say, here are the reasons why and you should
understand. But it's more like I want you to feel those people. I want the reader to feel them.
That's something that's more unconscious almost.
But I think I want to create almost a feeling that you're in the room with that person.
And instead of dismissing them quickly, you open your psyche and just feel them.
That's ideally what I'm wanting to achieve.
Why are we all to be pitied?
I don't know that.
You said that in the New Yorker once, I believe.
It's hard to remember the context.
Perhaps I meant because we're all weak little creatures finally.
Even the strongest of us is going to either.
die violently or age and get sick and become face to face with our weakness and, you know,
the fact that we have no idea who we are, what we're doing here. We're not aware of that most
of the time because we're just moving around in the world. But on the deathbed, things we think
were really important may not matter very much. Our personality may not matter very much.
Everybody is very connected to their personality. Well, I guess maybe a few people are not,
either by design, either because they want to look past their personality or they're crazy,
and their personality is disintegrative. But most of us are really into our personalities.
And I think at certain points in life, even say we're really sick or we're really disadvantaged,
we've been beaten badly by somebody or something. We realize our personality is actually quite
fragile and it's just a construct, really. And I think that's scary for people. I hope I'm not
answering it to great length. It's just a big question. So I'm doing the best I can.
I was once with the woman is in her house and her son was there and he was a big strong kid like 21 or something and really worked out and it was a strong guy and she was trying to tell him to be careful about something and, you know, bad people in the world.
I'd like to see somebody who could, he used the F word, fuck me up.
And I didn't say anything, but I'm like, all I take is somebody with a gun and you're dead.
And he doesn't know that and he doesn't feel that.
He probably knows it in his head because he's so strong in the moment.
He's not always going to be like that.
Sometimes in your self-accounts, you claim to be confused by social situations.
Yet your novels, I would say your remarks, are extremely insightful into character and into the human condition.
How do you put all that together into one unified theory of Mary Gateskill?
I don't have what unified theory of Mary Gaystall.
Do you have a disunified theory?
No, it's too complicated.
That's too big a question.
But it's certainly true that I'm often confused in social situations.
Those are very different from sitting by yourself in writing.
I can have a great deal of clarity if it's either a character I've completely invented or I'm writing partly from life, partly from fiction, or it's a essay about something that really happened. I'm just completely in my own point of view. I understand my own point of view, usually pretty well. But that's very different if you're in a room, even with two other people and you're dealing with other people's not just their point of view, but their whole psyche and presence and how the tone of voice. And plus then on top of that, if you don't know them, there's social rules and convention.
Those are what I have trouble with. I often don't read those correctly, though I'm much better at it than I used to be. So anyway, there are two different things. So that's how I may come off as in fact may be very knowing in my own writing, but it takes me a while to understand what's going on socially sometimes. As you know, many 19th century novels, they focus on social structures rather than individuals. Could you ever imagine writing such a novel? I'm not sure because of that very reason that I
don't think I understand, say the education system. That's the one I understand the best because I've
taught in universities. But even that, I don't pay much attention to the bureaucracies of those things.
I could learn about them. But in a profound level, they don't interest me. And I wouldn't want
to write a story about that world probably anyway, or a whole novel, a story maybe. But other settings
like I simply don't know enough about them. And it would take a very long time to research them
adequately. And I have seen people write about things like that that I don't think they know about them either and it doesn't stop them. But I think that would be the main difficulty I had with that. And to me, it's not the highest possible goal. I mean, it's a high goal. And there are people who do it brilliantly and I admire those people. But I don't feel like you must do it if you want to be, you know, a valid writer.
Here's a question from a reader, and I quote. She has an amazing attention to the physical. You might say to sensual deed.
detail, the smoothness of a seashell, the hairiness of a horse's leg, the inherent virtue of a
beautiful pair of flip-flops. How did she develop this quality? End quote. Well, thank you for one,
for the observation. It comes naturally to me. It's the way I do understand the world. And I understand
people that way, too, like by looking at them that way. Not entirely. I understand them by their
words and actions as well, but I think people tell the truth with their face much more than they do
with their words and their tone of voice and the way they move their body. But also to me, that's a
bigger world than the social world in a sense. It's a very mysterious world that we come from
this sort of raw matter. And the social world is certainly important, but it exists in that bigger
world. So to me, that's where I'm more naturally attuned. The social world comes out of that,
in my opinion. And I feel like I claim to understand that natural world. I don't understand
that is like a biologist would, certainly, but I'm just very natural for me to go there,
although I have developed it as well. I have consciously developed it as well.
And how do you practice that?
Just by looking at things and asking myself, how does that look?
And then do you draft and redraft, or it just flows out and then it's there on the page,
and you've got it?
I usually have to draft and redraft.
It's very rare that I don't.
You once quoted your therapist as saying, and I quote,
I'm quoting him here.
People are just horrible.
And the sooner you realize that, the happier you're going to be.
What's your view?
I thought that was a wonderful remark.
But it's important to note the tone of voice that he used.
He was a southern queer gentleman with a very lelting soft voice.
I was complaining about something or other.
And he goes, people are horrible.
The stupid and they're crazy and they're mean.
And the sooner you realize that, the better off you'll be.
the more you're going to start enjoying life. And I just laughed because partly it was obviously
he was being funny. It was a very gentle way of allowing my ranting and raving and acknowledging
the truth of it. I mean, gee, I don't know how anybody could deny that. I mean, look at human
history and some of the things that people do. But it was being very spacious about it and just
saying, look, you have to accept reality. You can't expect people to be perfect or to be your idea of
good or moral all the time, you're probably not either. This is what it is. So I thought that was
kind of wisdom, actually. At the margin, what should we be doing more of to help troubled teenagers?
More therapy, more medication, something else. Well, you like to ask big questions. I did answer
that if you presented me with an individual. I can't answer that. I mean, I'm not, that's not my field for one
thing, but even if it was, I don't know. I mean, I think the broadest answer that a lot of people,
including professionals, would agree with this. Problem is this can't be implemented.
minute. If there was a way to limit social media, I think that would help. If there was a way to get people
more physically active and more grounded in their body. But you know, you can't like have mass
meditation classes for teenagers. I can't picture that at all. You could try. But you see,
people are so different. Like some kid might be very amenable to the idea of learning some kind of
meditation technique or breathing technique or get interested in martial arts or something like that. But
you can't sort of say this is what everybody needs to do. I think if there was a
a way to get people more grounded in their bodies. That would help and not so fixated on social media,
but the problem is that I think no one can figure out how to implement something like that on a
mass basis. A very specific question. For how long will you look for a lost cat?
It depends. Again, on the situation. I looked for the one cat that I lost for months, probably
about a year, possibly even more than that. No, I think I actively looked for maybe nine months,
I was still keeping my eye out for months after that.
There was another cat I lost.
Most of my cats, when I lose them,
that I find that they come back.
But there was one I didn't,
and that was really terrible,
and I looked for a long time.
Then there was another one.
I didn't look as long for him,
and I'm not sure why.
Maybe a couple months.
At what point do you feel justified in replacing the lost cat?
You might still be looking,
but you say, well, I need to move on.
I'm going to get another cat.
If this one comes back,
I'll have an extra.
I wouldn't justify it.
It's just further what I feel compelled to do.
What do you think of the people who clone their dead or missing cat to produce a replacement?
This happens in South Korea fairly often, right?
Put it this way.
It's not something I understand.
It's just not something I understand.
Well, but if you miss your cat and you're attuned to the visual cues of your cat especially,
and you want what you think will be the same cat all over again, you clone it.
I could not understand that as the same cat.
I just know. It's because it looks like the cat is it's not the same thing. It's just, I can't grasp how anyone can see that as the same animal.
Is it worse that it looks like the same cat? I don't know. It's just incomprehensible to me.
Should socially awkward people focus on writing online? Again, that would depend on the person. I think for some people, it might actually be very helpful to them for a while. If it helps them connect eventually to a physical world, then I think it's great.
think some people that might be, say somebody who lives in a place where they, there's no one who shares
their sexual orientation and their sexual orientation. Say they're queer and that's really, it's not a
accepted thing to be where you live. So you go online, you find people like yourself and you realize
if I go to a different place, here's some people I could know ahead of time. That's great. Or even if you're,
you know, in a more subtle situation where you don't belong in some discrete category that's looked down on,
but you are just really awkward and you have a hard time meeting people and fitting in.
It might be good for you to be online for a while to, you know, just to feel like, oh, there's other
people here I can connect with. I can connect with other human beings. If that supports you in somehow
getting out in the world, then I think it's excellent. But if like you're like many people we
read about that, that becomes the only thing you do and it actually makes it harder for you to
connect with real people, obviously that is a disaster. And apparently that,
that happens a lot.
What are the dangers in getting such rapid feedback on your writing all the time, if you're writing online?
I am.
Sure, but what's the danger of the rapid feedback?
It drives you crazy, you get too upset, you always feel you have to respond, you can just ignore it, or for you?
For me, it's that I feel like I have to respond.
It's not even that I feel I have to.
I know I don't have to, but if somebody says anything at all interesting, I want to respond.
It's very difficult for me not to respond.
because I'm curious, especially if it's somebody who's saying something that is very different from people I know in life.
Like, I have a couple of people on my sub-stack who comment every now and then.
They don't usually speak in a political way, but occasionally they do.
And I learn they're actually Trump supporters.
I know very few.
Well, I know one person who may be sort of a Trump supporter-ish person.
But I know very few people like that.
So I'm right away quite curious about that person.
and I don't engage them politically, usually once I did.
It's interesting to me if I don't know a type of person to have that opportunity to connect with them a little bit that way.
And what have you most learned about yourself, your own writing, from having started a substack?
I have learned something, but I'm not sure I can articulate it quickly.
It's been refreshing to me to be in a writing situation where I'm not so careful about what I say.
I go over it sometimes and see I've made ridiculous mistakes in terms of dropped word.
or incorrect grammar, but it's worth it because it's freeing to have that kind of uninhibited
flow with people. And I don't know if I can say exactly what I've learned, but it's definitely
been something. And also, it's been interesting for me to see how social media can be very
positive in some ways. I've always been extremely wary of it. It's the first time I've been on
anything like social media. But there's a kind of politeness to it. Like the thing about social
media that everybody knows is that allows people to be really awful in a way they wouldn't in person
because it's, you know, it's easy to be really insulting and gross if you don't even have to look
at the person's reaction or, you know, deal with the fact they may want to punch you in the face.
But it's also, there's another thing I've learned that people can also be much more polite for
exactly that reason. You don't really know who you're talking to. So you don't want to quickly
assume something about what they're saying. Like if I'm with the person and they say something,
one, I feel like I have to respond quickly. Two, I may jump to conclude.
conclusions based on old habits or old ideas about the type of person I'm looking at. If I don't
have any of those cues, it's just something they're typing. First, I don't have to respond quickly.
And two, I've sometimes started to be really sarcastic in my responses to people. And then I've
looked at it and realized, I don't know if this person is meaning to be sarcastic to me. I don't know
if this person is joking. Like somebody said something, I almost typed, I hope you're joking.
You're joking, right? And then I looked at it again and realized, I don't know that he is. So I want to clarify. I'll ask a question first before I come in with an immediate response. And I've noticed other people, most people are very polite, maybe for the same reason. So that's been really interesting.
And why did you recently pause your substack? Here's the down part of it. To get the quick responses does sort of supercharge my mind in a way that's both good and bad. It's stimulating. But sometimes it's stimulating in a way.
that's weird. Like it's kind of jangling. Like it's almost like your brain electricity is crossed with
other people's and it's just kind of like it's too much. And it doesn't have the grounding quality
that it would if you were actually seeing those people and talking over drinks or something.
There's a physical reality that comes from just being with people. Even if there's a lot of
stimulation, there's something that's hard to articulate that's an animal quality of comfort
if you're really with them. Even if you're quarreling with them, it's still that
grounded real quality, and you don't have that when you're just communicating online. And it's just
this kind of electrical connection, which is to me a little jarring. And I think it is for a lot of
people. Like, I thought maybe it's just because I was old and not used to it. But when I published that,
I need to stop because I'm getting over-stimulated. A lot of younger people, like former students,
emailed me and said, yeah, that's how I feel. That surprised me. Why is Lolita such an
intriguing novel for you? Probably the same reason it's intriguing for a lot of people. It's one thing.
It's incredibly beautiful and the beauty is not simply decorative.
It's to take you to a really deep place, again, like that physical reality that I've talked about before.
He has an extraordinary ability to render the complexity of the physical world and to deepen whatever his story is about by really drawing you into that and making you understand the vastness of the world and also how it's informing all of the people and the feelings that the weirdness of the complexity, like,
the yearning of, say, Mrs. Hayes and Humbert and Lolita for some kind of profound connection
and why it's leading them to behave in the horrible ways. Loita's innocent. She's a kid.
She's not developed enough to be horrible. But the adults, what they're doing and what their
needs are that's drawing them into these intricate ways of just evil, actually, and get
enabling you to feel their humanity in the way they respond to the world around them.
And also the way it makes you feel in this extreme case, like Humbert is a monster, but he also has
elements that we can recognize. Like, I can't say a developed answer quickly, but I wrote about it,
how I feel that it makes us, again, in that very subtle, subliminal way, without thinking it out,
unless you have to write an essay about it, that it makes you understand the relationship of
pure feelings of love with all the terrible things that people are, too, that that, that
rapaciousness, the jealousy, the cruelty, the greed, the selfishness, all of those things that
human beings have can also be at very close proximity to our desire for love and our drive to
love other people. And it can be really hard for everybody, whether you have a pedophiliac
impulse at all. And it can be whether your sister, with your brother, with your friend,
with your parents, this really complex relationship of feelings of love with all these other
really dark elements. I think that's ultimately what makes it so powerful. Do you agree that the
Kubrick movie of Lolita is quite disappointing? You know, I haven't seen it for a long time. It's
certainly not as good as the novel. I think it's very hard to put that novel in film because so much
of it is about such precise internal observations that you just can't put on film. It doesn't work.
Fran Kovka's story in the penal colony, why is it interesting to you and how do you read it?
Gosh, I need to really think these things out before I can answer them well. But I think it's very much about, again, for those of you haven't read it, it's a terrible story in a lot of ways. It's a totally fantastical idea of someone from another country coming to visit a penal colony with absolutely bizarre society seemingly, although it's quite recognizable if you think about it. It's quite real. But the prisoners there have a set of impossible rules. They're governed by an elite set of people who have plenty of money and leave.
And if they break any rule, which, for example, if you're supposed to sit outside an officer's door and wake up every half an hour and salute him, and if you fail to do that, then you have to be strapped face down onto this machine, which will very slowly over a period of 12 hours or something, write with needles on your back, the rule that you've broken. And sometimes they'll just write it. And other times they'll write it until your debt, until your body is basically broken. And the main character is a guy who,
who just loves this machine, thinks it's the most beautiful, holy thing in the world. And he's enraged
because the liberals in his society are trying to banish the punishment. And he's trying to persuade
the visitor to write something or to say something that will make them realize we must maintain
this sacred institution of torturing people to death in front of a crowd, including children.
And, I mean, that sounds familiar right away when you think of like medieval times or, you know,
times in history when people have been tortured to death, including in this country, lynching,
and witch burning for the amusement of a crowd or the edification of a crowd. And what's amazing is he makes
the officer who's pushing for this weirdly sympathetic. That's one of the amazing things about it,
that even though he's evil in some way, he believes in something in a way that nobody else
seems to. And the prisoner and the guard, the person who's guarding him, are oafish figures,
stupid oafish figures, like animals almost. And you'd have to read it to see how he accomplishes this.
it's quite remarkable. But it also, to me, it's such a complex story. It's almost like a dream,
that it almost exists outside any kind of rational thinking. And it comes from that deep place
that where nature comes from almost. But it's also to me about how people, really, not all
people, but there's a big part of humanity that craves irrational authoritarian governance.
That's part of what I think makes it powerful. I think it's why people vote for dictators and why
people support dictators. Some people crave that it's beyond dominance. It's just someone telling them
what to do and having a heavy hand that will govern them in a way that's truly brutal. Some people
want that. And it isn't about masochism in a sexual way. It's beyond that. It's very weird.
Which do you think are the best Norman Mailer writings? Well, I haven't read all of them.
I haven't read, for example, the executioner song, which some people think is his best,
although other people think he actually got somebody else to write that. I have no idea.
The first half is amazing, I think, but then it somewhat falls apart.
But I think it's a real mailer and it's worth reading.
Yeah, I should.
I'm very poorly read for a writer, actually.
I actually love The Naked and the Dead.
It's nowhere near as sophisticated as just other writings or as weird,
but it's quite powerful and beautiful, especially the opening,
in a sense of this soldier who's getting off the boat
and has no idea what he's walking into and get shot within moments.
Anyway, I really liked Armies of the Night.
and it's a horrible book in some ways,
but I really have enjoyed American Dream.
It's so kooky.
Some other ones that I'm finding difficult to call it.
Oh, the fight I thought was very interesting.
I don't know if I think it's great.
It's interesting and has some great moments.
Harlot's ghost is surprisingly good, I think.
You feel it has to be too long, but somehow it isn't.
Yeah.
If you think about your own writings, there's some kind of inner body to them
that makes them appealing to other people.
Do you have a self-conception of what that inner body is?
You mean a strong character?
There's some kind of strength on the page or vividness of feeling that I think sets you apart from any other writers.
What's your self-understanding of that?
I don't know because it's something that I would take for granted.
So it's hard to understand it really.
I think you're talking about what I described on one of my substack essays is sort of an inner weave that I think good work has.
It's almost like a vision of life that the right.
writer isn't even aware of when they're writing it because it's so integral to them. But if they
are connecting their vision of life with their actual style, the words they choose, it can be quite
strong like Nabokov has that incredibly. So almost all great writers have it and even good writers
have it. Now, when some of your writing, there is sex, not sexual scenes explicitly. But if you
think about Victorian novels, they pretty much always avoid the sex. Does that make them
inherently flawed? No. And I think that even Victorian novels,
He's there. Like, first thing that pops into mind is Bleak House. You don't think Dickens is a sexual
writer at all, but he is. He doesn't do it explicitly, but Lady Deadlock. Have you read that book?
Sure, I love that book. It's one of my favorites.
Lady Deadlock is a very erotic figure. Her intense female strength, her intense masking,
the idea that she's always hiding something. She's like a Diana Rig figure in the Adventures.
Emma Peel. You know, older people might get that reference. She's super elegant. And the lawyer
the guy, Tulkinghorn, I think his name is, who decides to expose her.
Like, their conversation is quite highly eroticized in a kind of S&M way.
Or I'm trying to think of somebody else.
The name is escaping me.
Edith Wharton, one of her books, I remember House of Mirth, the interplay between the male
characters and the female heroine, definitely get a sense of masculine power and feminine response.
I remember being subtly eroticized Henry James.
Oh, my goodness.
everybody knows the turn of the screw is heavily eroticized. So I think there's quite a lot you can do
with very subtle means without overly referring to sexuality. Do you ever read children's books?
Yes. Young adult fiction? Sometimes. Like a few years ago, I read the entire His Dark Materials
trilogy, and I really enjoyed that. What do you think is your most unusual yet successful
reading habit? I don't think I have any unusual reading habits.
general questions. At what age is it too old to get a tattoo? I've never thought about that. I don't
have a tattoo. Nor do I. I feel I'm too old for one also. Yeah, I mean, the problem is,
as you get older, you're probably going to be covering more of your body. It would be less
visually appealing on old skin, but if you want to get it just purely for yourself and no one else
will ever see it, I guess you're never too old, but I don't really have an opinion.
What do you think should be the ground rules for when you should be able to write about other people in fiction without their permission?
So we all know Canauss Guard, right? A lot of his family got quite mad at him. Some of them were not talking to him because he wrote about them so openly.
It's a fictional work, but it's fiction and it's not fiction, right?
Well, my own personal ground rules are, well, it depends if you're speaking to the person or not, or also if you know how to find them.
I've once at least, and I've probably done it more than once, wrote about somebody who they were in my past, and I actually didn't know how to locate them. It would be easier now, but I'm not even on Facebook, and also they may not be on Facebook either. So I went ahead and wrote about her, and she got in touch with me later, really hopping mad. And I felt bad, but I explained it to her. To me, the character wasn't really you, which is people never believe it when you say that. But in this case, it was actually true. Yes, she was based.
on you, but also I didn't know how to reach you. Also, she'd changed her name legally, so that made it
even harder. But normally what I would do, if I'm on speaking terms with them, if I'm not, it's a
different story, is I write it first. I don't ask their permission first. That's a can of worms.
But I write it first, and then I show it to them. And I ask, is there anything you really want me to
change? And normally, people are quite reasonable. They appreciate it that you ask them.
They'll say this and this and this. And usually it's been things I'm okay changing. I don't
think anyone's ever asked me to change something that I just absolutely felt it would ruin the
piece. So those are my ground rules. How much do you miss the New York City of the 1980s?
Sometimes I do. I don't think about it mostly, but sometimes, you know, I'll walk by a place I was
familiar with and be like, oh, I wish things were like that still. I wish I could go back to that time,
maybe 10% of the time. What do you think of the Master of Arts and creative writing? Is it a waste? Is it
ruining American writers? Is it helping them? Is it irrelevant? Well, it depends on the person. I hate to
keep saying that, but I really believe that. I've come to have a more negative opinion than I used to.
And I first was aware of it in the late 80s, early 90s. I thought it was fine. I thought my basic
attitude is if you are going to be a writer, a writing program isn't going to hurt you. It may not help
you that much either. But it's, you know, if you're going to be a writer, why not? It's sure,
it's not going to ruin you or may not help you that much. But, you know, but, you know, but, you know, if you're going to be a writer, but,
But I always thought it was silly people saying it's going to ruin American writers. It's going to make it uniform. They're going to be grinding out people, cookie cutter. That I don't think is true at all.
Writers who work in these programs, you're not interested in making people write like you. You couldn't. Why would you want to do that? It's impossible and it would be exhausting to try. And people are going to respond to your comments differently. That's ridiculous to think that. First, I do want to say that also my basic feeling about them at the beginning was some people do not belong in the.
those programs. It's not going to help them. It just confuses them. I would not have liked a writing program
when I was younger. It would have simply confused me. Some people do not thrive in a workshop
environment. It intimidates them. There are certain people who will dominate the workshop just
naturally. Some people kind of fade in the background. Some people don't like that. Some people, though,
it's great. They love it. They love the quick feedback. It focuses them on their work really well.
they thrive. So some people, it's great for. But what I have come to think is negative about it is the fact that people think they've got to do it. And even some editors, I think, expect the people have gone through this program. And that I think is quite destructive because of the reason I just said for some people, they don't do well in it and it doesn't help them. And it's expensive. And even if it's not expensive, a lot of programs do have a lot of leeway. They let people in with a lot of stipend and a lot of help. But still, it's going to cost them money.
they're not going to be working while they're in that program or they're going to be teaching to
to make up for the fact that they're not paying. That's hard. The best case scenario, they learn a skill
that they can later use. But if they're not a person who ever wants to be in academia,
they never get a teaching job. That's a worthless skill. It's a demanding of their energy. And again,
they're going to get into debt one way or the other. And they may get nothing out of this. And they've
gone into debt and basically wasted two or three years of their life. That's a danger. And I think a lot of
people don't realize that I may not be a person who can get something out of this, and I do not
have to go through this program. You don't have to do that to be a writer. And I think many people,
I've heard people say this. You've got to do this if you want to be a writer. That I think is
really destructive. As an undergraduate, why didn't you fit into University of Michigan?
What makes you think I didn't? Oh, I think you said somewhere and you left, right?
No. So you just finished, and you were happy there?
No, it was mainly because I was older. I didn't share the experiences like I had gone to community
college first and even then I got into it older because I didn't graduate from high school.
And so I came with a different background than most people. I had lived on my own for years.
I had had experiences that most people undergraduates, I didn't hang out with most undergraduates at all.
I was friends with older people who were either graduate students or were people who were just hanging out in Ann Arbor.
because they'd graduated and they hadn't figured out what else they wanted to do. But even them,
I just came from a completely different place. I had worked as a stripper. I had had just a very
different experience. I didn't come from, you know, high school and coming right from my
parents' house to the university. But some of the people who were living, you know, in Ann Arbor,
didn't come from that either. They had also been supporting themselves in the world for a while as well.
So it wasn't like I was radically different from those people. But, yeah,
They were differences.
Working as a stripper, what do you think you learned about men?
Well, first I should say that the kind of strip club I was working in was quite different from
what people most think of now.
It wasn't like a lap dancing place.
There was only one woman on stage at a time.
So it wasn't like they were three women and they were moving through the audience and,
you know, having a lot of physical contact with men.
There was no pole dancing, which I think is awesome, by the way.
Pole dancing can be quite amazing.
The women didn't have to do that.
It was nowhere near as demanding.
They just basically went up on stage by themselves, walked back and forth, smiled at people or didn't, and created a persona.
And what I learned, I guess, in this very particular setting, this would not apply in kind of a lap dancing venue, that men can be quite romantic about women in that situation, that they sometimes would fall in love with a persona that a certain woman would have.
And the women would create, not all of the women.
Some women just went on there.
They danced around, did their thing.
That was it.
But the most popular strippers, it wasn't about being beautiful.
nobody had artificial breasts. The most popular women were women who were either very flirtatious. Some of them were very plain. They weren't that pretty, but they clearly loved being there. They loved the attention. They would look at the men. They would smile at them. And the men would feel like, you know, she's a girl I could date. She likes me. And they really enjoyed that. They enjoyed the fact that she enjoyed what she was doing. And then there were the beauties. There were some beautiful women who weren't so flirtatious, but they cared about what they were doing. There was one girl really beautiful.
like really just gorgeous woman. And she didn't make eye contact. She didn't flirt, but she was really
obviously into creating this mystique. She put a lot of effort into her show. She used feathers and
feathery boas. And she thought about her music. And the men loved her because they made me
and they felt she was really into what she was doing and she wanted to do it for them. And I learned that,
that men could be really, they weren't just about tits and ass. They wanted to have this kind of romantic fantasy.
set forth and they wanted to know that the woman cared about it or that she was just in it
because she was really into it and liked them. And I didn't know that. And some of them could be
really crude and gross, like at late night if they came in drunk and they could be horrible. But that
I already knew. I knew that men could be ugly and gross and really disrespectful. Those men often
got thrown out, by the way. They were too much. There was bouncers there. But I didn't know
about the other side of it. That really romantic longing side of masculinity. I hadn't really known that yet.
On an individual basis, yes, but not on a kind of group level.
How have your views about sexual permissiveness change since the 1990s?
Social views have changed a great deal.
In your case?
I guess I've seen the downside of it, how confusing it can be.
I actually started to see that in the 90s.
I didn't see that in the 70s and 80s.
I was very into permissiveness and, you know, the more freedom the better.
Not that I didn't recognize they were dangers always.
But I began to see that in the 90s, it was beyond physical.
danger that it could be very confusing to some people. And even to me, I began to see how it had been
confusing to me. It took me a while to understand. And I'm also seeing now how repulsive it can be
to younger people. There's always a matter of balance. Like for my generation, it was so uptight and so
rigid and so locked in to tradition that it was awful. So that's how the kind of extreme permissiveness
happened. But then I think there's been a reaction to the extreme permissiveness. And wait a minute,
this is not okay to just be saying whatever you want and grabbing people. And there's a real
downside to that. The most powerful people are not even socially powerful, but physically powerful,
take advantage of that. And, you know, not everybody is going to be able to deal with that.
So like, wait, put the brakes on, I don't like this. We don't like this. So I think that's a natural
reaction. What did you learn working in the Strand bookstore in New York City?
That there's a lot of different ways to be in the workplace. That there was a workplace that
allowed people to be themselves in a big way to dress however they wanted and that that can really
work for some people. And it can work for some customers. Some customers like that kind of environment
where you walk in and you might be dealing with somebody dressed in their pajamas and their hair
standing out to there and weird makeup and he's going to say, go find it yourself.
And what was your job in the Strand? I was a typist. I was in the basement typing up orders.
What are your favorite parts about now living in the Hudson Valley?
Oh, just the sheer beautifulness of it. It's a beautiful place.
How long have you lived there?
Off and on since 98.
What would be your self-account of how you have kept your curiosity and intellectual vitality for so long?
I don't know if I have kept it.
It feels like it's sagging down to my knees.
The people who have lost it don't feel that way, I would note.
Really?
I think so.
Well, by the fact that I, up until recently, I just quit teaching, but up until recently
teaching and having to clarify my thoughts about why I think something is important or why I think a piece of
writing is working or not or writing about writing, you know, just the writing. You have to, you know,
use your mind quite a lot. How did you observe your students changing over the years as groups?
Oh, my God. Well, they've gotten really, they're upset. They're really sometimes quite aggressive
and they really need you to express things in a very conformist way. A lot of people, not all
students. Some students really are still very open-minded and questing and want to.
know a lot about a lot of different ways of looking at things. But some of them are very rigid now.
And really, like I handed out a piece of writing by an African-American critic, very well-known named Hilton Al's.
He was writing about Flannery O'Connor, who he loves. And in the first page, you see the N-word.
And they didn't know that he was African-American right away. And they saw the N-word. And one of them says,
on the first page, there's the N-word. And I'm like, I mean, honestly, I think in fiction, personally, I don't have a problem.
with anybody using that word. But, you know, my God, he ought to be able to use that word. And they were just so
rattled by seeing it. And they didn't quarrel with it eventually. As I, you know, explained, read the whole piece. There's a lot of
context to this. But they're so reactive to certain words, or even the word retard, it appeared in a story. And they were upset by that. And I'm like, it's a story about kids. They would use that word. And it's just like they want everything to be so, I don't know what they're at policed. They're so afraid of the use of
of certain words and terms and exploring certain mindsets that is very difficult for me.
I mean, if you present it in the right way, they're usually okay, but you have to go through so
much presentation that I just find I don't understand why they think that's going to make
the world a better place.
I understand the impulse.
I respect the impulse to want to make the world a better place and to stop insulting and
attacking people who are already being insulted and attacked.
I understand where it came from.
There used to be a lot of unchecked gross racism sometimes in.
schools. I could tell you stories about that, so I understand the impulse. But this sort of really
nitpicking, minute over-policing of language is just a nightmare. And also, you know, the idea that
most trans students are not like this. Most trans students, if you use the wrong pronoun, they're like,
they'll correct you, but they don't really care of them. They get it. You just forgot. But one person I had
recently didn't actually clarify, you get a piece of paper with their picture, how they want to be
referred to in terms of pronouns, how they identify. She did not identify as a trans person. She
identified as non-binary and she did not specify what pronoun. So some people who identify that way
aren't particular about it. They're fine with how you're responding to them, how they present.
She presented as a female. So I called her that and she didn't correct me. In her student
evaluation, she was really angry that I didn't support her trans identity. Well, she didn't,
she didn't identify that way. So it's like, that is a very strange mentality to me.
And also she could have. If she'd emailed me and said for her to be called they there, I would have done it.
She said she was afraid to do that because I was just such an aggressive person. I don't understand that.
She didn't even try. And I don't believe she was pringing in terror before my incredibly aggressive personality because she would know that if she complained about that to the administration, they would have been all over me.
So that's a mentality that I see a lot now that it's not just that they want to be called the different pronoun than has been the norm for a long time.
It's that somebody like that person will act as if they have no power in the situation and that they're too afraid to say anything to you or unable for whatever reason.
That is bewildering to me.
And I encountered that type, not just in terms of pronouns, but just generally, people who don't seem to feel they can express themselves and then blame you for it.
That is very new.
And that is what I find more disturbing than anything.
Closing question.
What will you do next?
Just continue to write.
A novel, short stories, essays?
I'm working right now on an essay and a story.
Great.
And readers that they want to find out about you,
they can go to Amazon, Barnes & Noble,
Google your name, independent booksellers,
Mary Gateskill Substack, anything else?
You actually, Substack is probably,
it's more labor-intensive,
but that would be a quick way to get to know me,
picking one of them and reading that.
Mary Gateskill, thank you very much.
Thank you.
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