White Noise (novel)
Author | Don DeLillo |
---|---|
Language | English |
Genre | Postmodern novel |
Publisher | Viking Adult |
Publication date | 21 January 1985 |
Publication place | United States |
Media type | Print (hardcover & paperback) |
Pages | 326 pp (first hardcover) |
ISBN | 0-670-80373-1 |
OCLC | 11067880 |
813/.54 19 | |
LC Class | PS3554.E4425 W48 1985 |
White Noise is the eighth novel by Don DeLillo, published by Viking Press in 1985. It won the U.S. National Book Award for Fiction.[1]
White Noise is an example of postmodern literature. It is widely considered DeLillo's "breakout" work and brought him to the attention of a much larger audience. Time included the novel in its list of "Best English-language Novels from 1923 to 2005".[2] DeLillo originally wanted to call the book Panasonic, but the Panasonic Corporation objected.[3]
Plot
Set at a bucolic Midwestern college known only as The-College-on-the-Hill, White Noise follows a year in the life of Jack Gladney, a professor who has made his name by pioneering the field of Hitler studies (though he hasn't taken German lessons until this year). He has been married five times to four women and rears a brood of children and stepchildren (Heinrich, Denise, Steffie, Wilder) with his current wife, Babette. Jack and Babette are both extremely afraid of death; they frequently wonder which of them will be the first to die. The first part of White Noise, called "Waves and Radiation," is a chronicle of contemporary family life combined with academic satire.
There is little plot development in this first section, which mainly serves as an introduction to the characters and themes which will dominate the rest of the book. For instance, the mysterious deaths of men in "Mylex" (intended to suggest Mylar) suits and the ashen, shaken survivors of a plane that went into free fall anticipate the catastrophe of the book's second part. Beyond the Gladney family, another important character introduced here is Murray Jay Siskind, also a college professor and friend of Gladney, who frequently discusses his theories, which relate to the rest of the book.
In the second part, "The Airborne Toxic Event," a chemical spill from a rail car releases a black noxious cloud over Jack's home region, prompting an evacuation. Frightened by his exposure to the toxin, Gladney is forced to confront his mortality. An organization called SIMUVAC (short for "simulated evacuation") is also introduced in Part Two, an indication of simulations replacing reality.
In part three of the book, "Dylarama," Gladney discovers that Babette has been cheating on him in order to gain access to a fictional drug called Dylar, an experimental treatment for the terror of death. The novel becomes a meditation on modern society's fear of death and its obsession with chemical cures as Gladney seeks to obtain his own black-market supply of Dylar. However, Dylar does not work for Babette, and it has many possible side effects, including losing the ability to "distinguish words from things, so that if someone said aloud the words "speeding bullet", I would fall to the floor to take cover."[4]
Jack continues to obsess over death. During a discussion about mortality, Murray hypothesizes that killing someone could perhaps alleviate the fear. Jack decides to test Murray's theory by tracking down and planning to kill the man who had given Dylar to Babette in exchange for sex. After a black comedy scene of Jack driving and rehearsing, in his head, several ways in which their encounter might proceed, he successfully locates and shoots the drug-pusher, Willie Mink, who at the time is in a delirious state caused by his own Dylar addiction.
Jack puts the gun in Willie's hand to make the murder look like a suicide, but Willie then shoots Jack in the arm. Suddenly realizing the needless loss of life, Jack carries Willie to a hospital run by German nuns who do not believe in God or an afterlife. Having saved Willie, Jack returns home to watch his children sleep.
The final chapter describes Wilder, Jack's youngest child, riding a tricycle across the highway and miraculously surviving.
Characters
Jack Gladney is the protagonist and narrator of the novel. He is a professor of Hitler studies at a liberal arts college in middle America.
Babette is Jack's wife. They have four children from previous marriages. She has an affair with Willie Mink, aka Mr. Gray, in order to obtain Dylar.
Heinrich is the fourteen-year-old son of Jack and Janet Savory. He is precociously intellectual, prone to be contrary, and plays correspondence chess with an imprisoned mass murderer.
Dana Breedlove is Jack's first and fourth wife and the mother of Mary Alice and Steffie.
Denise is the eleven-year-old daughter of Babette and Bob Pardee. She suspects her mother is a drug addict and steals the bottle of Dylar to hide it.
Steffie is the nine-year-old daughter of Jack and Dana Breedlove.
Wilder is Babette's two-year-old son, and the youngest child in the family. Wilder is never quoted for dialogue in the novel (however, at one point, it is said that he asked for a glass of milk), and periodically Jack worries about the boy's slow linguistic development.
Mary Alice is the nineteen-year-old daughter of Dana Breedlove and Jack's first marriage.
Murray Jay Siskind is a colleague of Gladney's. He wants to create a field of study centered on Elvis Presley in the same way that Jack has created one around Hitler. He teaches a course on the cinema of car crashes, watches TV obsessively, and cheerfully theorizes about many subjects.
Orest Mercator is Heinrich's friend who trains to sit in a cage with vipers.
Vernon Dickey is Babette's father who visits the family in chapter 33 and gives Jack a gun.
Willie Mink is a compromised researcher who invents Dylar.
Winnie Richards is a scientist at the college where Jack works, to whom Jack goes for information about Dylar.
Analysis
White Noise explores several themes that emerged during the mid-to-late twentieth century, e.g., rampant consumerism, media saturation, novelty academic intellectualism, underground conspiracies, the disintegration and reintegration of the family, human-made disasters, and the potentially regenerative nature of human violence. The novel's style is characterized by a heterogeneity that utilizes "montages of tones, styles, and voices that have the effect of yoking together terror and wild humor as the essential tone of contemporary America."[5]
The novel is an example of academic satire, where the shortcomings of academia are ridiculed through irony or sarcasm. Critic Karen Weekes notes that the professors at University-on-the-Hill “fail to inspire respect” from their students and that “the university itself is ‘trivialized by the nostalgic study of popular and youth culture’”[6] by offering classes on Adolf Hitler, Elvis Presley, and cinematic car crashes. Critic Ian Finseth adds how “the academic profession [of Hitler Studies]...[has a] tendency to divide up the world and all human experience.” [7] DeLillo uses “Hitler Studies” as a way the characters can deal with complex information and enabling them to cope with the intricacy of their society.
Critic Stephen Schryer goes on to note the satirical way the characters in White Noise “lay claim to specialized knowledge that can be transmitted to others, regardless of his or her educational accomplishments or actual income”.[8] According to Schryer, the characters in the novel are using “pseudo-professionalism”, the belief that each person has a professional expertise or outstanding intellect that “[renders] this class dependent on hyper-specialized forms of expertise”.[8] Critic David Alworth suggests that the “pseudo-professional”, noted by Schryer, is the way in which the characters in White Noise deal with unknowns like death by pretending that they are educated to understand it.[9]
Ecocritic Cynthia Deitering had described the novel as central to the rise of "toxic consciousness" in American fiction in the 1980s, arguing that the novel "offers insight into a culture's shifting relation to nature and to the environment at a time when the imminence of ecological collapse was, and is, part of the public mind and of individual imagination".[10]
DeLillo critiques modern consumption by connecting identity to shopping in White Noise. In a 1993 interview, DeLillo states that there is a “consume or die”[11] mentality in America, which is reflected in the novel. Characters in the novel try to avoid death through shopping. For example, Jack goes on a shopping spree where he is described as feeling more powerful with each purchase: “I traded money for goods. The more money I spent, the less important it seemed. I was bigger than these sums.”[4] Postmodern critic Karen Weekes expands on this idea and argues that Americans “consume and die;”[12] Even though Jack tries to avoid death through shopping, he can’t. Life is represented by shopping and death is represented by checking out at the registers. Critic Ahmad Ghashmari addresses the connection between advertising’s influence on shoppers and the world in White Noise by stating, “shoppers are attracted to colors, sizes, and the packaging; the surface is what draws and grips their attentions and ignites their desires to buy items regardless of their need for them.”[13] According to Ghashmari,“the supermarket, with its spectacle of goods has effaced reality and replaced it with a hyper reality in which the surfaces replace the real products.”[13] Additionally, critic Ruzbeh Babaee argues that in the novel, “there is a belief in the produced through media advertising, that one can shop his/her way out of any personal trauma. When shopping, people may define an identity, an idea of who they are.”[14] The characters in White Noise shop in order to create their own identity and escape the fear of death. On the topic of consumerism, DeLillo himself states that “through products and advertising people attain an impersonal identity.”[11] In other words, because shoppers all buy the same products, they can’t be unique.
Through the theme of technology, DeLillo demonstrates the effect media has on human behavior. Most critics agree that White Noise functions as a cautionary tale about high-tech America by focusing on the effects of technology on social relations.[15] Critic Ahmad Ghashmari says, “TV is as important and influential as the protagonist of the novel… TV seems to control all people; they believe nothing but TV.”[16] He points to chapter 6 of the novel, explaining, “Heinrich refuses to trust his senses in observing the weather and chooses to believe the radio instead. He believes that all what is broadcast on the radio is true.”[16] One critic adds that television does not stop at molding the thoughts of DeLillo’s characters, but more invasively, television and its advertising subliminally shape their unconscious behavior.[17] For example, in chapter 21, Jack witnesses television’s influence when he observes his daughter uttering Toyota Celica in her sleep.[17] Critic John Frow connects the theme of technology to the greater postmodern theoretical issues the book addresses.[18] He suggests that a second televised narrative is embedded within the narrative of the novel’s plot through constant references to television’s interjections.[18] The world of White Noise is so overcome with television and other media outlets that “it becomes increasingly difficult to separate primary actions from imitations of actions.”[18] Additionally, the world of White Noise is an unsatisfactory imitation or substitute, also known as simulacra.[19] Thoughts and actions are replaced by programed responses, which have been learned.[19] DeLillo has said that “there's a connection between the advances that are made in technology and the sense of primitive fear people develop in response to it.”[20]
Delillo also portrays the children as being smarter and more mature than the adults in the White Noise. In a 1985 book review of the novel by Ann Jayne Phillips from the New York Times, Phillips says ”Children, in the America of White Noise, are in general, more competent, more watchful, more in sync than their parents”.[21] These children have the composure normally expected of an adult, yet the parents have a constant sense of self-doubt that makes them appear immature and paranoid. A scholar from University of Washington, Tom Leclaire, adds to the argument by saying that children are the center of knowledge: “Gladney’s children are making his family a center of learning”.[22] However, at Georgia State University, Joshua Little provides a different point of view that “the possibility of transcendence through the innocence of children is hinted at in the novel.”[23] According to Little, in the context of the turn of the century, knowledge is connected to having a higher social standing. Adina Baya, a specialist in media communication, supports this idea as she points out that children during the 1980’s had greater access to mass media and marketing than before.[24]
Don Delillo uses religion in White Noise in an unconventional way. Most noticeably, he compares the supermarket to a temple on several occasions. Critic Karen Weekes argues that religion in White Noise has “lost its quality” and that it is a “devaluation” of traditional belief in a superhuman power.[6] According to critic Tim Engles, DeLillo portrays the protagonist, Jack Gladney, as “formulating his own prayers and seeking no solace from higher authority.”[25] On the other hand, in the places the reader would expect to see religion, it is absent. Novelist and critic Joshua Ferris points out that "in a town like Blacksmith, the small mid-western university town of White Noise, the rites and rituals of traditional religion, such as church, bible study, and signs for Jesus, are expected."[26] However, God is largely absent in this suburb. He adds “the absence of religion is obvious, and places the novel in an entirely non spiritual, post-Christian world. In White Noise, not even Catholic nuns believe in God.”[26] However, Professor Majeed Jadwe countered with, “White Noise begins and ends with a ritual. The first is the convoy of station wagons arriving for the new school year, which Jack describes as an event which he has not missed in 21 years. It ends with the public ritual of self-hood perfection.”[27] Professor Jadwe implies that although religion is not presented in the book, the concept of ritual is still present. The society portrayed in White Noise utilizes ritual in other areas such as Jack never missing the convoy. The world of White Noise is still obsessed with ritual despite the absence of religion. Associate Director of Language and Writing, Christopher S. Glover, agreed by stating, “Just after the nun tells Jack that there exists nothing worth believing in and that anyone who does believe in something is a fool, DeLillo dangles this event in front of us, daring us to believe in something—anything—by using religious buzzwords such as “mystical,” “exalted,” and “profound” but countering those words with others like “lame-brained.’”[28] In his interview with the Paris Review's Adam Begley, Don DeLillo stated the religious aspect employed in White Noise by stating that the paranoia of the characters operates as a form of religious awe. He added that "[religion] is something old, a leftover from some forgotten part of the soul. And the intelligence agencies that create and service this paranoia are not interesting to me as spy handlers or masters of espionage. They represent old mysteries and fascinations, ineffable things. Central intelligence. They’re like churches that hold the final secrets.”[29] Don DeLillo claims “Religion has not been a major element in my work, and for some years now I think the true American religion has been ‘the American People.’”[30]
Cultural references
The band Airborne Toxic Event took their name from the novel.[31]
In the Buffy the Vampire Slayer episode "What's My Line, Part 1" (season 2, episode 9), Principal Snyder (Armin Shimerman) tells Xander Harris (Nicholas Brendon), "Whatever comes out of your mouth is a meaningless waste of breath, an airborne toxic event."[32]
The band Clare Quilty included a song entitled "Dylarama", in reference to part three of White Noise, on its 2000 album Strong.[33]
References
- ^
"National Book Awards – 1985". National Book Foundation. Retrieved 2012-03-27.
(With essays by Courtney Eldridge, Matthew Pitt, and Jess Walter from the Awards 60-year anniversary blog.) - ^ Grossman, Lev (11 January 2010). "White Noise (1985), by Don DeLillo". Time. Archived from the original on 9 November 2013. Retrieved 2014-08-04.
- ^ "An Annotation of the First Page of White Noise, With Help From Don DeLillo". Andrew Hearst. 22 February 2005. Retrieved 2014-07-08.
- ^ a b p. 193, original Penguin paperback edition.
- ^ Lentricchia, Frank (ed.). New Essays on White Noise. Cambridge; New York: CUP, 1991.
- ^ a b Weekes, Karen. "Consuming and Dying: Meaning and the Marketplace in Don DeLillo's White Noise." Lit: Literature Interpretation Theory 18.4 (2007): 285-302. Web.
- ^ Finseth, Ian. "White Noise by Don DeLillo." NoveList. EBSCO/NoveList, 2001. Web. 21 Apr.2016.
- ^ a b Schryer, Stephen (2011). "Don DeLillo's Academia: Revisiting the New Class in White Noise". Fantasies of the New Class: Ideologies of Professionalism in Post World War II American Fiction. New York: Columbia University Press. pp. 167–171.
- ^ Alworth, David J. (2014). "Review: Stephen Schryer Fantasies of the New Class: Ideologies of Professionalism in Post–World War II American Fiction". Modern Philology. 111 (4): E479-482.
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(help) - ^ Deitering, Cynthia. 'The Postnatural Novel: Toxic Consciousness in Fiction of the 1980s.' The Ecocriticism Reader. Ed. Cheryll Glotfelty and Harold Fromm. Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1996. p.196-7
- ^ a b DeLillo, Don; DePietro, Thomas (2005-01-01). Conversations with Don DeLillo. Univ. Press of Mississippi. ISBN 9781578067046.
- ^ Weekes, Karen. "Consuming and Dying: Meaning and the Marketplace in Don DeLillo's White Noise". Lit: Literature Interpretation Theory. 18 (4): 285–302. doi:10.1080/10436920701708028.
- ^ a b "LIVING IN A SIMULACRUM: HOW TV AND THE SUPERMARKET REDEFINES REALITY IN DON DELILLO'S 'WHITE NOISE' - Ahmad Ghashmari / Miscelánea". www.academia.edu. Retrieved 2016-04-27.
- ^ "Sketch of Discourse and Power in Don DeLillo's White Noise. International Journal of Comparative Literature & Translation Studies. 2.1 (2014): 30-33 Print". www.academia.edu. Retrieved 2016-04-27.
- ^ Martins, Susan. "White Noise and Everyday Technologies". American Studies. 46 (1): 87–113.
- ^ a b Ghashmari, Ahmad. "Living in a Simulacrum: How TV and the Supermarket Redefines Reality in Don Delillo's White Noise". Journal of Literary and Comparative Literature. 3: 171–85.
- ^ a b Duvall, John. "The (Super) Marketplace of Images: Television as Unmediated Mediation in DeLillo's White Noise". Arizona Quarterly. 50: 127–53.
- ^ a b c Frow, John. "The Last Things before the Last: Notes on White Noise". South Atlantic Quarterly. 89: 413–29.
- ^ a b Wilcox, Leonard. "Baudrillard, Delillo's "White Noise," and the End of Heroic Narrative". Contemporary Literature. 32 (3): 346–65.
- ^ Passaro, Vince (19 May 1991). "Dangerous Don DeLillo". New York Times.
- ^ Phillips, Review By Jayne Anne (1985-01-13). "'White Noise,' by Don DeLillo". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2016-05-03.
- ^ LeClair, Tom (1987). "Closing the Loop: White Noise" (PDF). In the Loop: Don Delillo and the Systems Novel. Retrieved 2016-04-26.
- ^ Joshua, Little, (2011-01-01). "Queering the Family Space: Confronting the Child Figure and the Evolving Dynamics of Intergenerational Relations in Don DeLillo's White Noise". Georgia State University.
{{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires|journal=
(help)CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link) CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Baya, Adina. ""Relax and enjoy these disasters": news media consumption and family life in Don DeLillo's White Noise". Neohelicon. 41 (1): 159–174. doi:10.1007/s11059-013-0196-7.
- ^ Engles, Tim (1999-01-01). ""Who are You, Literally?": Fantasies of the White Self in White Noise". MFS Modern Fiction Studies. 45 (3): 755–787. doi:10.1353/mfs.1999.0050. ISSN 1080-658X.
- ^ a b "National Book Critics Circle: Joshua Ferris on "White Noise" (Part 1) - Critical Mass Blog". bookcritics.org. Retrieved 2016-05-03.
- ^ Jadwe, Majeed (January 2010). "The Politics of Closure in Don Delillo's White Noise". Journal of Anbar University for Language & Literature.
- ^ "Bestsellers in American Popular Culture". www.americanpopularculture.com. Retrieved 2016-05-03.
- ^ Begley, Adam (1993-01-01). "Don DeLillo, The Art of Fiction No. 135". Paris Review. No. 128. ISSN 0031-2037. Retrieved 2016-05-03.
- ^ "An Interview with Don DeLillo | PEN American Center". pen.org. Retrieved 2016-05-03.
- ^ Banks, Brian (16 September 2008). "The Airborne Toxic Event interview". Music Vice. Retrieved 2014-07-08.
- ^ Gordon, Howard; Noxon, Marti (November 17, 1997). "What's My Line, Part 1". Season 2. Episode 9. Retrieved October 1, 2012.
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(help) - ^ "Clare Quilty - "Dylarama" [Official Audio]". YouTube. 6 May 2013. Retrieved 2014-07-08.