One very interesting choice Ann
Daum made in “Those Who Stay and Those Who Go” was her utilization of
lists. This technique happens quickly,
appearing as early as paragraph four, and continues throughout the piece. These lists always include mundane, unglamorous
facts or circumstances.
Take, for instance the list of
trivial jobs the high schoolers have access to: “Kids can work at the truck
stop, waiting tables, pumping gas, or washing dishes, through high school and
beyond.” This list is boring, long, and
monotonous, not unlike the quality of employment kids who select those jobs
would experience. In other words, this
list imitates the way of life for the townsfolk of Murdo, South Dakota.
Lists also come in a paragraph of
small sentences, short and definite in composition, like a tyrant’s
declaration: “Loneliness is just another
disease here. Its symptoms are
sicknesses, too. Depression. Alcoholism.
Parochialism. Suicide.” This list is boldly laid out, harshly
punctuated, again, mimicking the tone those words are supposed to convey.
Perhaps the most interesting duty
served by Daum’s lists is the way they perform as a sort of character in the
midst of her story; their personality dark, weathered, and stubborn, their
activities repetitious and wearisome, just like every other citizen of Murdo. Her lists create a tone and atmosphere that
allows the reader to understand the bleakness of the story’s setting, because
in our reading we experience a repetition and exhaustion all our own.
Excellent work. This is the right balance of quotation and analysis, and though you might be going a little far--is Murdo really as terrible as you show it?--the points you're making show the kind of passionate interpretation I'm after.
ReplyDeleteHead-turning line about a tyrant's declaration. Sounds more like an old aunt's cynical resignation to me.
Still, there's this: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PTyJ8ZjMThY
DW