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SEPTEMBER 24, 2010 2:43PM

Why Franzen is the Wrong Face for "Franzenfreude"

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Having finally released three different but related books back into the wild of the Brooklyn Public Library system -- Freedom, Catching Fire, and The Passage -- I feel the time is right to weigh in on the literary meme of the moment, Franzenfreude, a term that, loosely defined, indicates that Jonathan Franzen represents all that is wrong with the contemporary high-brow book world.

Is that stupid? Quite! Except there's a caveat. The phenomenon referred to by "Franzenfreude," that the high-brow book world restricts its highest praise and most fawning attention for the works of men, is absolutely true. It just happens that Jonathan Franzen is a terrible poster boy for that problem.

Franzen writes gorgeous women. Fleshed-out, interesting, three-dimensional, vivid women, women with brains. He writes for them, too, and perhaps most importantly of all, he READS THEM. When, at a Brooklyn Book Festival panel, someone asked him what he was reading, he replied, "Edith Wharton." To the follow-up question of what should we, his audience, be reading, he listed several books, all by female authors, including the Ms. Hempel Chronicles, of which, up to that point, I hadn't even heard. (Then I read it. It was good!)

A friend and I cornered him after the panel to ask whether he'd realized he'd been promoting work by ladies. He blinked for a moment, then laughed and said it honestly hadn't occurred to him.

Thus: "Franzenfreude" is the wrong label for this particular can of worms. (As a language nerd points out, it's also stupid for other reasons.)

That said, let's address the can of worms itself. Yes! Fiction by women is customarily and routinely dismissed by the intelligentsia in favor of fiction by men. Because why should fiction be any different than anything else? The most exalted spaces in any pantheon are reserved for men. So it has been, so it will be. This is because women can have babies, whereas men can only have egos, and also testicles, or something.

However! The less important the pantheon, the more likely it is that you can find a woman at the top of it.

The high-brow book world also dismisses almost all genre fiction. Genre fiction is where women reign supreme or, at the very least, hold their own: romance, mystery, young adult, sci fi, fantasy. Having just ingested the Hunger Games trilogy, a sci-fi YA extravaganza that took not just me but America by storm, I feel particularly drawn to this point right now.

Even in most genre fiction, there remains an idea that boys won't read books about girls. Hence the sad-but-true fact that J.K. Rowling couldn't publish under the name "Joanne" for fear of frightening off huge numbers of young male readers. But this to me feels wrong. Step on the NYC subway right now and look around -- I guarantee you that someone on that car is reading, not Freedom, but the Girl with the Dragon Tattoo. About, as you've perhaps heard, Lisbeth Salander, one of the most kick-ass female characters in any book of any genre. The Golden Compass books didn't suffer for focusing on Lyra, another quite impressive young woman. Even Dan Brown's idiot bestseller the Da Vinci Code was a FEMINIST conspiracy theory.

Best of all, perhaps, is Suzanne Collins, whose hugely popular Hunger Games books center around Katniss, who doesn't want to get married and doesn't understand why having leg hair is bad. Written by a lady! Starring a lady! Yet everyone's reading them. Hopefully the next J.K. Rowling can be inspired by this and publish under her full name.

This doesn't, of course, solve the problem of the white male taste-makers -- and the sufficient numbers of female taste-makers who concur -- giving all the plaudits that matter to white male authors. As Adam Gopnik, a New Yorker author I admire, put it just this year in his tribute to Salinger: "In American writing, there are three perfect books, which seem to speak to every reader and condition: 'Huckleberry Finn,' 'The Great Gatsby,' and 'The Catcher in the Rye.'"

What Gopnik meant to say, no doubt, was, "Here are three books I really dig!" He's hardly the first intellectual to fall into the tar pit of generalizing from his own experiences. But it's a disturbingly prevalent trend among white male taste-makers: assuming that what they relate to and find meaning in, the rest of us must as well, AND that those books must be "the best."

It's bullshit, and I'm glad people are finally beginning to realize that. But leave Jonathan Franzen out of it, would you? He's one of the good ones.

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Ester, you've written the post I wanted to write myself. Franzen's always been a huge champion of great women writers. Though some people disagree with me, I find his women characters really interesting. My mother, a now retired university professor, who taught women studies, adores Franzen. And I'm sure most serious women writers like him too.
Those bellyaching sisters are just looking for their 15 minutes of fame. I have to agree that Franzen's deeply felt and complicated charactizations of women are what drew me into his fiction. Enid of The Corrections is Every-MIL, and he brings so much humanity to her.

At the Santa Cruz book reading, Franzen called on four people from the audience, then as he was about to wrap up the Q&A, realized he hadn't taken any questions from women, and made a point to field another question. Only wish he had picked me!
Don't forget Agatha Christie, whose work had more to say than she got credit for about psychological insight via Poirot, although, maybe that proves the point.
Part of it is that men in the end value physical demonstrations as the real test.
This is why geeks get beaten up in high school, and the funny thing is, it never ends, this desire of the Jocks to just pound on the geeks, even when they would lose, they can't help it, and it is what it is, and will never change. But interesting post.
I thought Corrections was fabulous in the beginning, but kind of, I don't know, lost me later.
I'll add that having spent an evening listening to Franzen read from "Freedom" and answer questions from the crowd that he indeed loves his female characters, as well as his female readers. Simply speaking, he's a complicated great guy.

And I agree, all the haters have latched onto the wrong whipping boy.
Franzen is a GREAT writer. I loved The Corrections and am looking forward to reading it again. I just purchased Freedom and can't wait to devour every page. Women have gotten the short end of the stick as of late. Was it just last year that the NYT top books didn't even include any female writers? Salon even did a piece on it. Too bad people are trying to make Franzen pay. His female characters are wonderful.
Thank you for this, Ester. This is something of an epiphany for me.
Excellent post! I particularly liked the comment that women can have babies, and men can have egos. True dat.
That is a waste of a good pun. Off the top of my head, I can't think of an apt one it would apply to whose name can be mutated with schadenfreude. I trust it is out there.

I just randomly picked up a book from the library, primarily because the cover caught my eye. It turns out it is a wonderfully written tale by a new author named A.M. Dellamonica. This author is a woman, and I find it interesting that she, along with J.K. Rowling, concealed her name to appear androgynous, if not male. That is sad.
On Jonathan Franzen:

It's hard to decipher the difference between a sincere entertainer and an honest swindler.
-Kurt Cobain