********************  POSTING RULES & NOTES  ********************
#1 YOU MUST clip all extraneous text when replying to a message.
#2 This mail-list, like most, is publicly & permanently archived.
#3 Subscribe and post under an alias if #2 is a concern.
*****************************************************************

Against the Current



May/June 2016, No. 182



Michael E. Brown

block quote

The Cutting Edge

By David Lansky (George Snedeker)

Xlibris LLC, 2014 (200 pages). 

 

THIS SATIRICAL NOVEL brings to mind our present reality: It may be that what is 
happening to universities around the country is so bold in its neoliberal

modeling of the corporate enterprise, and its neoconservative tendency to 
condemn anything remotely connected to critical thinking, that it can only be

made comprehensible in a work of fiction.

 

This has partly to do with the cultural marginalization of education itself in 
favor of the STEM (Science/Technology/Engineering/Math) curriculum and 
consequent

administrative demands that all disciplines establish quantitative, computable 
standards for judging academic performance. Dissenting voices are less likely

to be heard, and critical scholars are increasingly forced to attempt to 
recover a sense of the importance of critical work within the same 
organizational

forms that reject it - perhaps in the hope of being able at least to argue 
against the contexts and powers that sustain those forms.

 

The Cutting Edge is a compelling and original work that brings these and other 
aspects of academic life together as a subtext to the life and times of

its main characters. Its originality lies in the ways in which what academics 
do reveals the uncertainty of their desires and the limitations they accept

and eventually take for granted. It also lies in the form of this novel, 
largely composed of a series of revelatory but hopeful "essays" by a student at

Old Windsor, Jenny Delight, that comment on campus life with special regard to 
the admirable wisdom of "our sociology professor."

 

One of the many pleasures of this book lies in the humor that emerges from the 
mix of innocence and guile in Jenny's writing - with consequent alternations

of confusion and idealism - and the inconsistency of college life with whatever 
might be anticipated after graduation. On the one hand, Jenny knows that

life is not like college, yet she hopes for a future that allows her to enjoy 
the fruits of having learned that the good life requires living "outside

the box."

 

Jenny finds in her sociology professor an ideal model, despite the 
institutional limits to every ideal she stumbles on during her participation in 
the

student life committee.

 

Her first essay, entitled "Why I Love Old Windsor," begins with a passionate 
reference to Professor Fred Snyder: "Let me get down to the point. I love

my Sociology Professor because he is so cool that he chills me down to the 
bone. Every time I go to his class, I get moved to inspiration by something

he says. He's what you call 'outside the box.' And I'm the kind of student who 
hates the boxes folks keep their minds locked up in." (23)

 

Nevertheless, a certain irony runs through Jenny's essays. Consider the way in 
which she resolves her ambivalence about attending college: "Well, it's

back to my studying. It's midterm time and I have to keep my GPA up so I can 
get into law school and get rich and keep my ass out of prison. I've also

got to go to the Broadway Mall to buy some more Makedown to keep the boys hot 
for me. Well, as I always tell anyone who'll ever listen: 'you have to keep

keeping on. It's a hard road we students have to travel.'" (24)

 

Ambiguities and Moral Hazards

 

For Jenny, even the most serious of events at Old Windsor must be approached to 
some extent ironically, as if she is constantly reflecting on the ambiguity

of her student existence even as she presents those events as if they had a 
life of their own. The book also incorporates this attitude in Professor 
Snyder's

autobiographical essay and in remarks by other teachers and administrators.

 

For faculty, academic life is portrayed in part as a pretense that most 
professors can tolerate only in a persistent attitude of self-conscious irony 
and

occasional self-denigration. For the reader, there is another source of irony. 
The novel never settles the identities of the main characters, which raises

the difficult question of whether it is possible to imagine academic life being 
known from within.

 

Snyder, who is eventually murdered by an insane student, is a semi-tragic 
protagonist who represents the possibility of being authentic in the midst of

so many temptations toward inauthenticity. The fact that David Lansky is a 
pseudonym for the book's author, himself a prominent critical theorist, raises

the question of exactly who or what "Snyder's" own narrative voice represents.

 

The identity of Jenny herself ultimately comes into question, so that the 
reader finds herself forced to recognize the academy as a whole, its aspirations

and self-defeating compromises, in what otherwise might appear to be 
idiosyncratic accounts of anecdotes and comments on the life and times of 
specific

individuals.

 

The most individually self-reflexive voices of various officials, who 
condescendingly praise Snyder at his memorial service, reflect the ambiguity and

moral hazard of hypocrisy that, we are bound to surmise, characterize 
administration as an occupational condition. The President, Provost and Dean 
clearly

despised him, either for his accusations of official malfeasance or his 
resistance to certain policies, yet reverted to a self-satisfying display of 
piety

and civility at the service

 

President Prime allowed that Snyder was entitled to "voice his opinions" when 
he accused the president of being "more of a real estate speculator than

a college president."

 

Even the department chair, who apparently liked Snyder, could not disguise a 
degree of cowardice. He concludes his own comments with a mention of the 
reactionary

chief of police, who "would have turned Old Windsor into a police state if 
people like Fred Snyder had not stood up to him. This was no easy job. I'm very

happy that it was Fred who took on Danniello and not me." (200)

 

It is no wonder then that Jenny, the student as an altogether believable type, 
is willing to respect thinking and acting "outside of the box" while apparently

remaining indifferent to the consequences of doing so.

 

Her account of Snyder's murder is understandably dispassionate: She concludes 
her terse, almost journalistic description of the murder and the police response

by "This is how it all ended: the life of the Professor, the Student Life 
Committee and my college experience at Old Windsor. It was all over. Everything

was now over as far as I was concerned."

 

>From one point of view, The Cutting Edge is more than a novel. It is also 
>about "higher education," about the complex and often contradictory roles it

encourages and the ways in which it suppresses its own ostensible values of 
openness, creativity, experimentation, critically rational thought, and the

appreciation of difference.

 

This is why readers may find Jenny, the Professor, and the university 
administrators, so familiar and no less problematic for their familiarity. From 
another

point of view, it provides many pleasures, not the least of which is the voice 
of Jenny Delight - a Salinger-like mix of innocence, realism, and wile that

pervades The Cutting Edge as an account of academic life and as a source of the 
humor that is never absent from it.

 

This is a wonderful book, which engages the reader by the humor that animates 
the writing and its achievements of narrative plausibility, and a sense of

realization without an overarching plot. In these latter aspects, we see an 
original piece of writing and an unusual and altogether compelling form of

the novel.

 

It does not attempt to settle anything except by showing unmistakably how 
unsettled academic life is, but each passage provides something of a 
provocation.

One feels that there will be a punch line, a point of rest, only to find that 
nothing is completed and that all of these contradictory existences are destined

either to remain contradictory or to take refuge in the self-satisfaction 
provided by their offices or the delusions provided by their dreams.

 

Yet the novel leaves us with at least some degree of hope. Snyder's courage and 
determination suggests what thinking "outside of the box" is like, and

the fact that Jenny is not altogether fooled by pretense, are some of what we 
are brought to recognize in a context that, without this novel, we might

be willing to discount or ignore.

 

May/June 2016, ATC 182

 

Source URL:

https://www.solidarity-us.org/site/node/4658
_________________________________________________________
Full posting guidelines at: http://www.marxmail.org/sub.htm
Set your options at: 
http://lists.csbs.utah.edu/options/marxism/archive%40mail-archive.com

Reply via email to