by Douglas Messerli
Gertrude Stein The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas (New York: Harcourt, Brace, and Company, 1933)
Among the most devoted of Stein’s readers, particularly
those who recognize the greatness of difficult texts such as The Making of Americans, How to Write, and Stanzas in Meditation, there is the notion that Stein’s more
popular works, particularly The
Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas and Everybody’s
Autobiography are lesser writings, what Stein scholar Edward M. Burns
describes as her accessible “audience” writing as opposed to her “real” or
experimental pieces.
There is no
question that The Autobiography is
seemingly accessible; and Stein herself claims to have written the book in just
sixty days, writing for only a few hours each day. Certainly Stein’s brother
Leo found the book to demonstrate no writing talent, describing its many
admirers as “fatuous idiots who go to hear her silly twaddle.” And, indeed, the
very popularity of this work cannot help by chafe those of us who equally enjoy
or even prefer her many “unpopular” works. Without a doubt, The Autobiography is a far less complex
work that any of the three I have named above. Yet, I think too much has
commentary has been devoted to its normalcy rather than its various
experimental aspects.
So, although we
can easily perceive that there is a great deal of autobiographical material in
this book, we cannot as readily determine whose autobiography it truly is. And
that inevitably threatens the authenticity of the narrative we are reading.
One’s own memory cannot ever be that of another. Perhaps Toklas would have
remembered these events, moreover, in an entirely different manner. Most
certainly she might have recalled entirely different events, people, and places
upon which to focus. So in a real sense, this book is neither Toklas’s nor
Stein’s autobiography, but something in between, perhaps, a kind of
fictionalized autobiography of their life together.
Stein further
normalizes the work by describing events as if they were chronologically
presented. “Before I Came to Paris” presumably describes the time before Toklas arrives and enters the
Stein household, covering events of her own and Stein’s life before their time
together; the “Arrival in Paris,” suggests that the chapter covers Toklas’s
coming to Paris and meeting Gertrude Stein, etc. Yet even in these first two
chapters, we recognize that the there is something a skewed about the focus of
these sections. Although the work begins with the quite typical statement “I
was born in San Francisco, California,” by the fifth paragraph of the first
chapter, Stein as Toklas is already describing how Stein has described Toklas
in “Ada” in Geography and Plays, a
work published in 1922, fifteen years after these women met. And although the
chapter covers the time “Before I Came to Paris,” by the last paragraph Toklas
has already met Stein, been shown her paintings, and told stories of Stein’s
life in Paris. If she is not actually in
Paris yet, she has already, by the work’s ninth paragraph, been intimately
involved with Stein.
By the second
chapter, purportedly devoted to Toklas’s “arrival in Paris,” everything is
quite centered on Stein’s publishing activities, and by the second paragraph
the narrative has jumped ahead to describe the atelier of 1914. In short, as
any reader quickly recognizes, the chronology is not one of focused upon the
passage of time, one year followed by another, but by the associations of
memory. And that memory is not Toklas’s.
Combined with
the radical disjunction of events I have mentioned above—in several chapters,
for example, the text returns to Alice’s arrival in Paris when she begins to
type up Three Lives—we soon discover
that even though Stein purports to be writing an autobiography of Toklas, she
is, in fact, spending far more time on the reactions she has to others than in
presenting the events of her own, of Alice’s, or even “everybody else’s” lives.
Although The Autobiography is never
as linguistically radical as her “portraits,” it is more related to that genre
than it is to standard autobiographical or even biographical writing.
At several
points, moreover, Stein-Toklas gets so ahead or behind the narrative that we
are told information about events which she never reaches. At other times, we
are told that the narrator will later describe events which seem to be
forgotten. And at one point, the narrator even breaches the walls of the text
itself, reaching out to a kind of future reality which could not possibly exist
in the process of the writing itself. Describing Alice’s reaction to her
portrait called “Ada,” the narrator writes (on pages 94-95 of my text):
I can still see the little tiny pages of the note-book written
forward and back. It was the portrait called Ada, the first
of Geography and Plays. I began it and I thought she was
making fun of me and I protested, she says I protest now
about my autobiography. Finally I read it all and was terribly
pleased with it. And then we ate our supper.
For in many
respects, The Autobiography of Alice B.
Toklas is not at all a work of autobiographical writing or even a fiction
about an autobiographical work, but a text about how a writer lives and
survives. For me, some of the most moving moments in this work are not those
about the now-legendary figures with whom Alice and Gertrude dined, but Stein’s
desperate need to be read and loved—the forces that, in fact, led her to pen
this composition. As Stein herself puts it, one may be writing for strangers,
but one must also be able to have books that those strangers might read. What
Stein purports Aaron Copeland to have said to the young Paul Bowles—“if you do
not work now when you are twenty when you are thirty, nobody will love
you”—reveals as much about the narrator, it seems to me, as about the composer
or the young author to whom it was said. And the touching image of Stein
passing the French-American bookstore time and again just to glimpse the book
Alice published in her Plain Editions, Lucy
Church Amiably, in the store window, tells me more about the author and her
companion than any remembered conversation between Toklas, Stein, and anybody
else.
Los Angeles,
September 10, 2008
Reprinted from Green
Integer Blog (October 2008).
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