Sunday, November 17, 2013

Walter and Richard




         In Freedom by Franzen, the characters all seem to be incredibly similar, yet none of them appear to understand or like anyone else. They are so focused on their own motivations for doing things that they do not comprehend why other people do what they do. However, the two characters that are entirely different from one another are the two that appear to connect to the point of understanding each other.
            For instance, Patty cheats on Walter with Richard, and Walter considers cheating on Patty with his assistant. However, when Walter throw’s Patty out of the house, it can be inferred that it is due to her affair. The narrator states “‘I’ve been evicted,” she [Patty] said with a sad meek smile. “Thanks to you [Richard],”’ (404). Therefore, it is clear that while Patty and Walter are similar because neither of them is entirely happy in their marriage, Walter does not understand Patty’s motivation for actually cheating on him. Walter believes that he is a better person because he has only considered cheating on Patty.
            Walter and Richard appear to be complete opposites. Walter is a hardworking man who has only ever wanted a family, as is obvious with his comment “Kids have always been the meaning of life” (236), and Richard is a womanizer who “had intended to return to the East by the end of May, but … was still working on the deck in mid-June,” (165). However, Walter and Richard seem to be the only two characters thus far in the novel that comprehend the other’s motives. When Richard takes time off from his musical career, Walter states “You can’t just stop because people happened to like one of your records,” (219). This shows his insight into how Richard thinks and what he believes Richard values.
            While reading I found it interesting that none of the characters understand each other, even though the majority of them are inherently the same. Then, I was surprised upon realizing that Richard and Walter more or less understood each other, even though they are entirely different. They have a different sort of relationship than any of the other characters in the novel. Because their understanding of one another is so unusual, I believe that their relationship is one of the most significant in Freedom. 

Mind Games

     Patty's negativity throughout the reading is astounding because in the first part of the novel, she is much more positive and overall a nicer person.  She also is almost childish in some of her exchanges with people and extremely sarcastic.  She did have some characters flaws in the way she would think about different things, but not to the extreme she exhibits later in the book.

     Often times, she is negative towards herself and is looking for attention.  For example, when she is talking to Joey on the phone, he asks how she is and her response is, "Oh, well, it's nice of you to ask, but you don't really want to know" (259).  Instead of being bottom line polite she chooses to make a statement out of an entirely common question.  Even when he asks her again she has to deny him and not give a straight answer.  

     She has taken to playing games, especially with Walter, and asks as though she is uninterested in him and what he does and basically does things to make him mad at her.  She bold faced tells him that he can sleep with Lalitha as a sort of test of hers to see how he will react (322).  Then when she does not receive the reaction she was hoping for, goes and cries and continues to question Walter and his motives.  Her own motives for doing these things are not quite clear.  Patty does not seem to even try to be supportive of Richard anymore.  When he calls her about the story that leaked she is very insensitive and cold.  Then when he states they are "heading for a catastrophe" she immediately jumps to the conclusion that he is speaking of their marriage instead of his business issues.  Why would she do these things?

     One theory is that she really is trying to push Walter away and be with Richard, instead.  She knows he will not commit to anything while they are still married and so she is trying to solve the problem herself.  She reinforces this theory by being very nonchalant when Richard is visiting them in Washington and never being in the house when he is there.  She tries to twist everything on him and say it was his fault because she does not like that she rather be with Richard and feels guilty.  It also hurts her that Walter has found someone else, too.  In the end, she still goes to Richard as she had always wanted.      

Freedom and Confinement


The more that I read Freedom, the more I ask myself just what freedom means within the context of the novel.  I have slowly come to realize that the answer to this question may be different for the various main characters and for the various sets of circumstances in which they find themselves.  Yet, it seems that, most often, what is described or viewed as freedom in the novel is more of a false escape from situations or consequences—an escape that is ultimately more enslaving than liberating.  For example, when Joey moves to Virginia to attend college, Connie tells him that he should feel free to sleep with other girls while he is away (272).  While this may appear to be freedom at first glance, as it would allow Joey to forget about his tumultuous relationship with Connie, being unfaithful to her is doomed to bring him a flood internal conflicts and muddled emotions. The same is true when Patty is unfaithful to her husband and sleeps with Richard.  While this may seem to suggest that Patty and Richard are demonstrating their freedom through this act, it only serves to make them both miserable once they part; it also enhances the discontent they both feel for their everyday lives.
This escapist mentality does not only apply to characters who stress their freedom through sexual acts.  When Richard briefly contemplates suicide, he relishes in the appeal of being free of his complicated relationships with Patty and Walter, free of “the bother of being a bother” (402).  When Patty emphasizes that she loves the freedom that she possesses to make trips to Nameless Lake, it is no mystery that this freedom is appealing because it provides a refuge from her unhappy marriage and home life.  In fact, the novel reads, “There was a more general freedom that she could see was killing her but she was nonetheless unable to let go of” (190). 
To me, this connects to a political idea expressed in the novel:  freedom often comes with conditions.  This raises the important question:  is freedom that comes with conditions freedom at all?  This reminds me of a scene in the movie The Duchess during which Georgiana, the Duchess of Devonshire, is surrounded by her husband’s comrades as they discuss women’s rights.  They note that “freedom in moderation” is their party’s approach to the matter.  At this, Georgiana points out that the concept of freedom is an absolute; just as one cannot be moderately loved or moderately dead, one cannot be moderately free.  This rings true for me, and with this in mind, I am anxious to see how characters’ ideas of freedom continue to evolve.  

Jessica's role in the novel

Up until this point in the novel, Jessica’s character has not been given a voice of her own. She is portrayed through other character’s eyes, but has not been portrayed through her own thoughts and feelings. The reader does not get a real sense of who she is; the reader only sees her through her family, who aren’t entirely reliable. Her mother does not connect with her the way most mothers connect with their daughters. They lack that female bond that mothers and daughter typically share. Instead, her mother chooses to bond with her brother and, in turn, sort of neglects Jessica. The one time she visits her at college her interaction with Jessica and Jessica’s boyfriend is so odd she seems to have no emotional connection with her own daughter. Jessica’s father sees Jessica to be more like him than Joey and connects with her more than her mother. But, he doesn’t “favor” her so that he won’t seem unfair. They talk everyday and he even says that she “looked after him that way” (337.) Her relationship with Joey is so not sibling-like and full of hatred it is hard to read about. Most siblings fight with each other but then get over it and continue being brother and sister, having that familial bond that differs from the bond they have with their parents. Joey and Jessica, on the other hand, seem to have never even remotely liked each other. When Joey talks about the time when his parents were gone and he had sex with Connie right next to Jessica, he did so because he wanted to get a rise out of his mother (264.) His motives seem to be driven from spite towards his mother and not towards Jessica.
Jessica, however, has not been given the chance to state her own opinions of her family members. Personally, I think it would be very beneficial and interesting to hear her views on her family from her own thoughts. She is the only semi-normal character in the novel and her opinions would be very interesting and insightful. She seems like she would be able to give a more reliable account of the emotions within the family.
The author gives some insight into the workings of Jessica’s mind when she is talking to Richard in D.C. She believes her parents still love each other (376.) She doesn’t say this from their actions and the way they treat each other, but because she knows who they are she can just tell they still love each other. Also during her conversation with Richard, the reader gets the first real look at who she is. Before this point in the novel the reader doesn’t really know who she is through narrative, but instead through the opinions and voices of the other characters.

I would love to hear Jessica’s side of the story through her thoughts and emotions. Hopefully this happens later in the novel, because it would round out the story better and make it less biased. It is probably the intention of the author to not include her story, but I believe it would be incredibly interesting.