Zen and Salinger
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Transcript of Zen and Salinger
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Title Zen Buddhism in selected works of J.D. Salinger
Author(s) Chung, Kwok-wai, Michael.; .
Citation
Issue Date 2005
URL http://hdl.handle.net/10722/40169
Rights The author retains all proprietary rights, (such as patentrights) and the right to use in future works.
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DEPARTMENT OF ENGLISH
FACULTY OF ARTS THE UNIVERSITY OF HONG KONG
ZEN BUDDHISM IN SELECTED WORKS OF
J.D. SALINGER
by
Chung Kwok-wai Michael
Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for
M.A. in English Studies 2005
Supervisor Dr. Otto Heim
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DECLARATION
I hereby declare that this dissertation represents my own work undertaken
as a candidate for the M.A. degree in English Studies and that it has not
been previously submitted to this University or any other institutions for
admission or publication purpose.
Chung Kwok-wai Michael
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Contents
1. Introduction (P.4 - P.7) 2. The Catcher in the Rye (P.7 - P.16) 3. Nine Stories (P.16 - P.41) 4. Conclusion (P.41 - P.42)
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1. Introduction
The Catcher in the Rye, written by Jerome David Salinger, American writer born
in 1919, has won critical acclaim and many devoted admirers, especially among the
Post World War Two generation of university students. Frederick L. Gwynn and
Joseph L. Blotner in The Fiction of J.D. Salinger describe The Catcher in the Rye as
the only Post-War fiction unanimously approved by contemporary literate American
youth(56). It is true to say that The Catcher in the Rye is the most representative of
all the works of J.D. Salinger even though it may not be the best. Critics of J.D.
Salinger have largely focused on his only novel The Catcher in the Rye. Warren
French in J.D. Salinger also points out the strong desire of many of his contemporary
critics to find out what in the novel actually appeals to the people of the time.
Very few critics are interested in dealing in detail with the general features of
Salingers works. It is largely due to Salingers limited production. J.D. Salinger is
indeed in no way a prolific writer. His entire repertoire consists of 1 novel and 21
uncollected short stories altogether. Many critics are more interested in analyzing in
detail each single text of Salinger rather than giving a comprehensive analysis of
some common features of his works.
One common feature in Salingers works that critics have brought up is the idea
of innocence as represented in children. Critics, however, seldom compare in detail
the representation of children in different works of J.D. Salinger in order to give a
detailed discussion of this remarkably common feature in J.D. Salingers works.
This also applies to another major feature of J.D. Salingers works - the
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presentation of the ideas of Zen Buddhism. As Bernice and Sanford Goldstein
mention in their study of the close relationship between J.D. Salingers works and
Oriental thought, Salingers use of Zen and related Eastern experiencecannot be
dismissed as pedantic and obtrusive, but emerges we believe as a driving force behind
much of his writing Salingers Zen is not that of a faddist or a dilettante(70). Many
critics, like Bernice and Sanford Goldstein, have pointed out the close relationship
between Oriental thoughts/Zen Buddhism and Salingers works. Very few of them,
however, really go into detail to talk about how each piece of Salingers work is
related to Zen Buddhism or Oriental thoughts. One exception is James Lundquist who
committed one whole chapter, Zen Art and Nine Stories, in his work J.D. Salinger
to give a detailed analysis of how the ideas of Zen Buddhism are embedded and
presented in some of J.D. Salingers works. According to James Lundquist, Zen
attitudes toward art and human experience are consciously being used by Salinger in
dealing with and expressing such major themes as the survival of the despairing
individual in a mass society, the redeeming possibilities in a lonely benevolent,
intuitive kind of love, and the necessity of overcoming the pervasive obscenity of life
by passing through the boundaries of personality to enlightenment, liberation, or
satori(70).
My research here is to look in detail at how the ideas of Zen Buddhism are
presented in The Catcher in the Rye and Nine Stories, as observed by different critics
at different levels and from different perspectives The purpose of my research is not to
prove or to argue that there is a close relationship between the ideas of Zen Buddhism
and Salingers works. The main purpose of my research is to find out how the critics
think that Salingers works are related to Zen Buddhism. It is noteworthy that none of
the critics covered in my research denied the relationship between Zen Buddhism and
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Salingers works. They, however, all suggest the connection between Zen Buddhism
and Salingers works at different levels and from different perspectives. The major
reason that the above two texts are chosen is that they are the most representative
among all the works of J.D. Salinger.
The Catcher in the Rye is of course the most representative with its popularity
among young American college students. It has in fact later become a must-read book
for every American in junior high school. It is interesting that a book which almost
every American must have read or at least know about in the materialistic and
capitalist society embraces many important and remarkable ideas of the Zen art in the
east. The strong wish to break away from materialism (a major theme in Zen) has in
fact been a strong force in the field of American literature with earlier examples
dating back to some Transcendentalist writers like Henry David Thoreau (Walden),
Ralph Waldo Emerson (Nature) and Nathaniel Hawthorne (Scarlet Letter). It is also
noteworthy that a novel which was regarded as obscene and vulgar (the use of foul
language and the issue of sex) has at the same time embodied many of the Zen
concepts which stress peace and serenity. The story of Holden Caulfield, often
compared with Mark Twains The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn and James Joyces
Ulysses, is in fact in many ways similar to the Journey of the Buddha, as James
Lundquist suggests in J.D. Salinger. This argument is further explored by Bernice and
Sanford Goldstein who look in detail at the implications of the people and things
Holden comes upon in the story and those that feature in Buddhas journey before he
comes to the moment of satori under the Bo-tree.
As for Nine Stories, its famous epigraph is a Zen Koan. It is noteworthy that the
ideas of Zen Buddhism are prevalent throughout the nine short stories. The reason that
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Nine Stories is chosen is because the collection, according to some critics, embraces
the best works of J.D.Salinger. As James Lundquist says, Salinger is undoubtedly a
better short story writer than he is a novelist. Lundquist even pinpoints that Nine
Stories is in fact a collection of his finest work and a startling blend of West and East
in its aesthetic assumptions(69). Each of the nine stories is able to differentiate itself
from another independently and at the same time link up with one another in the
colors of Zen Buddhism.
The ideas and concepts of Zen Buddhism will be based on the works by the late
Daisetz Teitaro Suzuki, Professor of Buddhist Philosophy at the Otani University,
Kyoto. He was acclaimed to be the greatest authority on Zen Buddhism. He has
published numerous works both in English and Japanese on the subject of Buddhism.
Many of Salingers critics, including John Wenke, Warren Franch and James
Lundquist, cite D. T. Suzukis works in illustrating the ideas of Zen Buddhism while
examining the relationship between Zen Buddhism and Salingers works.
2. The Catcher in the Rye
The most significant representation of the ideas of Zen Buddhism in The Catcher
in the Rye is undoubtedly Holden Caulfields journey throughout the story. According
to James Lundquist, Holden Caulfields long digression is a pilgrimage to find
meaning, one he has doubtless encouraged others to follow on the path back to a
revitalized sense of inner direction.(67) Here Holdens wanderings through the
course of his story is compared to the journey of Gautama, the Buddha. Suggesting
that both share similar backgrounds, James Lundqusit pinpoints three major
similarities between the journey of Holden and that of Gautama. Firstly, Gautama is
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married to a beautiful and devoted princess named Yasodhara. Lundquist suggests that
Holden also initiates into adulthood with the same element. Holden, according to
Lundquist, has a sexual jealousy(67) over Jane. He says that such sexual jealousy is
so possessive as to make marriage almost a necessary institution. Secondly, both
Gautama and Holden come from pretty well-off family. Gautama lives in the palace
while Holdens parents are fairly wealthy. Holden is therefore able to go to an
expensive school and owns expensive luggage. In search of an answer to human
suffering, both Gautama and Holden break away from their wealthy privileged
background to set on their journeys.
Thirdly, both Gautama and Holden encounter some form of human suffering for
which they decide to find a solution and which they seek to overcome. Gautama
spends many years wandering up and down the valley of Ganges trying to find the
truth of life. He, however, concentrated on seeking the truths, finds himself even more
confused. When Gautama finally comes to the Bo-tree, he suddenly experiences a
perfect state of clarity and understanding. He feels liberated from the everlasting
round of birth and death. Holden also experiences a similar form of enlightenment or
epiphany in the final scene where he and Phoebe are together in the zoo. Holden feels
so damn happy(211) all of a sudden when he sees Phoebe kept going round and
round(211). Holden says he didnt care(212), just as Gautama liberating himself
through letting go of his life and the surroundings and thereby brings self-frustration
to an end. All these three parallels show to us the similarity between the journey of the
Buddha and that of Holden Caulfield.
Gerald Rosen also compares the journey of Siddhartha Gautama and that of
Holden Caulfield in his critical essay A Retrospective Look at The Catcher in the
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Rye. He believes that their journeys are similar in that they are both confronted with
old age, sickness and death in the course of the journey. The Buddha chooses to leave
his family and wander in the world in order to search a guide which would lead him to
come to terms with old age, sickness and death. I would suggest that, in rough line,
and without the Buddhas final conscious mature understanding, this is the form of the
story of Holden Caulfield(95), Gerald Rosen says, just as in the story of the
Buddha, it is sickness, old age, and death, which we the readers, along with Holden,
encounter when we begin our journey through the pages of The Catcher in the
Rye(95). Rosen suggests that Holden meets sickness and old age in the form of Mr.
Spencer, Holdens teacher. He describes in detail the appearance of Old Spencer as a
sick old man: pills and medicine all over the place, the smell of Vicks Nose Drops,
old guys in their pajamas and bathrobes, bumpy old chests, white and unhairy
legs of an old guy(7). Holden is also, like the young Buddha who contemplates life
and death, obsessed with the idea of death. For example, he talks about how the
Egyptians wrapped up dead people when answering an examination question which
has nothing to do with mummies. Holden is also troubled by the death of his brother
Allie. The idea of death is everywhere in Holdens life. For example, while watching
the game between Saxon Hall and Pencey, he comments, It was the last game of the
year and you were supposed to commit suicide or something if old Pencey didnt win
(2). All these parallels again serve to tell the close relationship between the story of
the Buddha and the story of Holden Caulfield.
According to D.T. Suzuki in An Introduction to Zen Buddhism, Zen is decidedly
not a system founded upon logic and analysis(33). Zen Buddhism puts special
emphasis on seeking enlightenment through introspection and intuition. James
Lundquist suggests that the Catcher in the Rye also embodies this key feature of Zen
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Buddhism. In J.D. Salinger, Lunquist points out that Holdens own story is not
unified and simplified; it is in itself an extended digression leading in fits and starts
toward a moment of illumination/disillusion that is not the result of logical, ordered
thought(48). Apart from the story structure, Lundquist also mentions the
conversations between Holden and his teacher Mr. Vinson. Holden admits that he
cannot unify(68) and simplify(68) all the time as Mr. Vinson always asks him to
do. Holden even maintains that he likes a speech better when someone digresses.
According to Ihab Hassan, a critic who has conducted comprehensive studies on the
Catcher in the Rye and other works by Salinger, Salinger constantly attempts to
reach out from his isolation and disrupts our habits of gray acquiescence and
revives our faith in the willingness of the human spirit(123). In line with the
Buddhist rejection of logic and reason, Salinger portrays Holden as a spontaneous
person who always follows his own will.
James Lundquist also brings up another major feature in Zen Buddhism when he
talks about how Holden goes through his journey and comes to the moment of
enlightenment. Lundquist reminds us that Buddha nature is within oneself and is
not to be sought outside. This is supported by the authoritative Zen master D.T.
Suzuki, who stresses that Zen most strongly and persistently insists on an inner
spiritual experience(34). Suzuki further explains that Zen is possessed by everybody
and one should look into ones own being and seek it not through others. So how is
this idea presented in the Catcher in the Rye? Lundquist suggests that what he
(Holden) is actually praying for is a means of saving himself from himself through
himself(49). As Holden walks up Fifth Avenue, he feels this great anxiety that he
starts to pray for help from his younger brother Allie. Holden, however, finds that all
those anxieties were embedded in the memories of Allie and the sacrilege of his death
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as well. In order to save himself, Holden realizes he has to look back at himself.
Holden can therefore understand the roots of his sadness (his own attitude and
emotions) and get rid of it by himself.
The use of Koan is not restricted to Nine Stories. According to James Lundquist,
Koans, or Zen riddles, are also used in The Catcher in the Rye. Koans are often used
by Zen masters to test their students. Koans are asked to enlighten Zen students on
some questions or problems related to life and values. They often enlighten students
that the Koan itself is not be grasped. For example, Holden says, I mean how do you
know what youre going to do till you do it?(276), when he replies to his doctors
question how he is going to apply himself as he goes back to school. The second
example is when Holden replies to D.B. what he thinks of the story he has finished
telling, Holden says, If you want to know the truth, I dont know what I think about
it(276-277). The third one is Dont ever tell anybody anything. If you do, you start
missing everybody(277) after he himself was beaten up by the pimp. Through
contemplating koans students are to realize that life itself can never be grasped.
Letting go of life is therefore the acceptance of life as life. Lundquist points out that
this insight is the illumination that Holden has reached by the time the story is over.
Gerald Rosen, however, believes that there is no absolute answer in the story that
we can hold on to. He explains that, As Salinger certainly knows, tradition has it that
when the Buddha was dying he was asked for one final piece of advice and he replied,
Work out your own salvation with diligence(96). He believes that, as a koan has no
right answer, the readers should also read the story as a koan and find the truth on
their own. Rosen suggests that the frequent use of koans in Salingers works reveals
its support of the Buddhist idea- absence of absolutes.
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James Lundqusit suggests that there are at least four phases in Salingers career.
Salingers early stories portray characters estrangement as a result of World War Two.
His third and fourth phases are represented by two different works Nine Stories and
Franney and Zooey respectively. Lundquist mentions that the second stage is
represented by The Catcher in the Rye, and Salingers attempt in that book to deal
with estrangement and isolation through a Zen-inspired awakening and lonely
benevolence(2). Estrangement, isolation, loneliness are typical human sufferings in
the modern world. Going through these sufferings offers Holden the experience to
taste what life is about. This is exactly the process each Zen practitioner (including
Gautama himself) must go through in order to attain satori.
In the final chapter, Holden has come to the essential question What is the
nature of reality? James Lundquist points out that the answer resides in the dynamic
relationship between childhood and maturity, between the static and the changeable,
between thought and action, and between the outer and inner worlds a reality that is
an existentialist datum of physical and emotional experience. This datum, which has
its immediate basis in Christian thought, finds its ultimate rationale in Buddhism(4),
Lundquist suggests that the ending of the Catcher in the Rye actually points directly to
life an essential element in Zen Buddhism. Holden says, If you want to know the
truth, I dont know what I think about it(213-214). Here Holden questions the reality
of life, though he claims it is only a stupid question(213) when he asks, I mean
how do you know what youre going to do till you do it. The answer is, you dont. I
think I am, but how do I know?(213).
To build on what Lundquist suggests we can see that The Catcher in the Rye
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even goes further to suggest how Zen Buddhism sees reality. Holden in fact dislikes a
realism that is too strictly realistic. For example, in the play with the Lunts, Holden
says the trouble was it was too much like people talking and interrupting each
other(112). Holden sees the surroundings as neither real or unreal. Oftentimes
Holden is telling us what he thinks rather than what he really sees. This viewpoint is
very much in common with the Buddhist idea that everything is empty, as suggested
in Wisdom of the Buddha the Unabridged Dhammapada. In Buddhsim, there is no
such thing as real or unreal. It very much depends on how you see it rather than how it
exists. Buddhist practitioners are taught to get rid of their desires by learning to see
the world as an empty world where nothing exists..
Many other critics have been more interested in discussing the representation of
innocence thorough children in The Catcher in the Rye. Very few of them, however,
have correlated the idea with Zen Buddhism. In fact, Holdens strong wish to return to
childhood very much reflects the close association between Salingers works and the
ideas of Zen Buddhism. Zen Buddhism stresses the idea of simplicity and the
spontaneity of the self. According to D.T. Suzuki, the ordinary logical process of
reasoning is powerless to give final satisfaction to our deepest spiritual needs(59).
He also adds that the truth and power of Zen consists in its very simplicity,
directness(36) Against all phoniness and hypocrisy of adulthood, Holden has a strong
wish to return to the very innocence which only a child can possess. Holdens love for
his sister Phoebe and his memories of his childhood both reveal his craving for
simplicity and the ultimate peace of mind.
The scene where Holden sees Phoebe riding around and around the carousel has
been considered by many critics as one of the most important pictures in the story.
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According to Warren French in J.D. Salinger, Salinger even recalls this scene in his
story The Inverted Forest by naming the title of Fords second book of poems Man
on a Carousel. According to Warren French, the name is a further indication of the
poet (Ford)s rejection of the busy world of news magazines and cocktail parties
where people are constantly preoccupied with getting somewhere(84). In fact,
referring to another poem by Ford in The Inverted Forest, French suggests that
Salinger is very much influenced by Zen Buddhsim as he (the narrator) says what
beauties the world possesses are all underground, one need not be able to see them
in any material sense. One can live entirely within his imagination(84). This very
much accords with the Zen idea that one should feel with intuition and imagination
rather than by material senses or logic. Warren French even goes further to suggest,
This absorption (the reaction of a child or adolescent to the disillusioning discovery
of the phoniness of the adult world) was to culminate in Holden Caulfields
recognition, in the final version of The Catcher in the Rye, that children cant be kept
from grabbing for the gold ring(85).
It is also noteworthy that Holden is very much suspicious of any form of
organized religion. He is always against the worship of any form of God. In Zen
Buddhsim, there is no one single god to worship. Every Zen practitioner should look
to himself for directions to enlightenment. Even Gautama is never considered a God
by the Zen Buddhist practitioners (different from some Buddhist sects which pay
respects to the Buddha statute in the temple). Gautama himself is also a human being
like you and me who goes through all types of real-life sufferings and finally achieves
the stage of enlightenment under the Bo-tree. Buddhist practitioners are reminded that
the Buddha is never an idol. Any Zen practitioner can achieve what Gautama
achieves.
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According to D.T. Suzuki, the object of Zen discipline consists in acquiring a
new viewpoint for looking into the essence of things(P.88). Holden also presents to
us his belief in this very concept throughout the story of The Catcher in the Rye.
Holden keeps questioning the things and values surrounding him in the story. He is
always eager to find himself a different perspective when looking at the things around
him. He always bears with himself this intense wish to break away from conventional
education. He always longs for returning to naturalness and un-self-consciousness.
Warren French also considers Holden Caulfield as a non-conformist. He cites Ihab
Hassan and Paul Levine, who examine Salingers works chronologically in order to
study his concentration upon a type of Non-conformist that Levine labels the misfit
hero (111).
In addition, Zen Buddhism is never considered to be a religion. Zen Buddhism is
not a religion because, according to D.T. Suzuki, it does not have a set of philosophies
or rules for its practitioners to follow. There are, however, some values and standards
that practitioners can realize through contemplating many koans and riddles that Zen
masters give them. In the following Koan, the very idea of Zen Buddhism that the
world can be perceived as empty is presented. :
The Bodhi (True Wisdom) is not like the tree;
The mirror bright is nowhere shining:
As there is nothing from the first,
Where does the dust itself collect?
(P.48 Chapter 3 Is Zen Nihilistic? An Introduction to Zen Buddhism)
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Zen Buddhism tells its practitioners that they should not feel any anxiety over
any matters related to fame and fortune. Zen believes that if one does not see money
as fortune or name as fame, but rather money as simply money and name as just name,
then there would not be any things to feel unhappy about (same as where does the
dust itself collect if there is nothing from the first?). If there were no desires, we
would not feel unhappy as a result of disappointment. In The Catcher in the Rye,
Holden never takes money and fame into account throughout the story. It is only
through children (like Phoebe) who represent the very idea of innocence that he finds
happiness and satisfaction again in his life.
3. Nine Stories
According to James Lundquist, the closest analogue to Salingers religious
thought is, of course, Zen Buddhism, which is essential to an understanding of Nine
Stories. Nine Stories is particularly well-known for its epigraph
We know the sound of two hands clapping,
But what is the sound of one hand clapping?
A Zen Koan
According to D.T. Suzuki, koan denotes some anecdote of an ancient master, or
a dialogue between a master and monks, or a statement or question put forward by a
teacher, all of which are used as the means for opening ones mind to the truth of
Zen(99). Suzuki also adds that the koan is used as a starter and it gives an initial
movement to the racing for Zen experience(99). As James Lundquist suggests,
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Salingers stories are often thought of as riddles and the question that prefaces Nine
Stories is an example of a koan. He further suggests that readers should contemplate
the riddle which is designed to force the mind to the point where reason is unable to
divide, separate, and categorize, a point at which enlightenment or satori should
occur(77). In Zen Buddhism, practitioners should learn to take away reason in their
mind. Contemplating koan is a good way to help them develop the ability to think out
questions without reasoning. Frederick L. Gwynn and Joseph L. Blotner, in The
Fiction of J.D. Slinger, add the comment that the koan makes a perfect epigraph for a
writer who wishes to entitle his book nine stories. The title Nine Stories itself does
not tell what these stories are about. The koan serves as another hint to the readers
that these stories are open to interpretation, just like a koan which inspires a person to
come to an understanding without reasoning. Gwynn and Blotner base their argument
on the fact that koans of Zen Buddhism are to stimulate ones mind to go forward to
the point which is beyond sense. They add that the reader has not to apply the
quotation to the tales but simply to be thereby aware that the tales present problems
which he may or may not solve for himself by suprasensory perception(42).
Looking at Salingers short stories from a way suggested by the Zen koan that
prefaces the collection, Lundquist believes they become calligraphic paintings, reach
their artistic high point in a tea ceremony, and have the arrangement of a Japanese
garden(112). With this rather picturesque analogy, Lundquist points out that the
purpose of a Salinger story is reached at the moment of epiphany (as in the short
stories of Chekhov and Joyce)(70), when the character comes to the true nature of a
situation (the moment of enlightenment or satori). John Wenke also notes that in
contemplating the koans the characters will achieve the Zen enlightenment in many of
the stories in the collection. In J.D. Salinger A Study of the Short Fiction, he says,
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Many of the nine stories turn on a characters apparently stunning realization(31).
This realization is like a moment of epiphany or satori where a person is suddenly
disillusioned. He names a number of examples: the intoxicated Eloise weeping over
her daughters eyeglasses, Sergeant X beginning to regain his faculties after
unwrapping the gift from Esm, etc.
Salinger relies heavily on the child as a symbol in Nine Stories. Lundquist
believes that the children in Nine Stories are used to symbolize unlimited freedom.
Lundquist believes that the Zen Koan that prefaces Nine Stories leads us through a
number of questions. Questions like Can someone hear something where there is no
sound?, Can any sound be made by a hand which had nothing to hit against? The
most important one is whether one can obtain knowledge of his own real nature
Can the mind hit against itself? Lundquist provides an answer to the koan by
quoting a description by Dumoulin he who lifts one hand and while listening
quietly can hear a sound which no ears hear, can surpass all conscious knowledge. He
can leave the world of distinctions behind him; he may cross the ocean of the karma
of rebirths, and he may break through the darkness of ignorance. In the enlightenment
he attains to unlimited freedom(76). In order to present this unlimited freedom,
Salinger relies on children to symbolize this idea as freedom is most easily
symbolized in children to the western mind. Bernice and Sanford Goldstein in their
critical essay Zen and Nine Stories believe that children have the imaginative
machinery which has not yet been broken by demanding parents; Children do not
yet rationalize every action and in them spontaneity comes as easily as breath and
whose minds have not yet dichotomized language, persona, places, things(160).
Lundquist also suggests that the ending of Salingers stories also shows signs of
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Zen ideas. He says Salingers stories often end in a puzzling way. Readers are then
forced to ask what happened and what it actually meant. When readers are trying to
answer those questions, they will find themselves in the same dilemma as the student
of Zen(34). Through this process, the student and the readers can try to vomit up
the apple of logic as the Zen master and the author guide us toward the Way of Zen.
Here Lundquist fails to give any concrete examples about how the endings of the
stories lead us to think like a Zen practitioner.
Puzzling as they are, the endings of Salingers stories often involve characters
undergoing moments of epiphany. Characters often come to a moment where they
start to realize something (what it actually is may be puzzling), particularly when they
come upon children in the story. These moments of epiphany are very much in
common with the Zen enlightenment/satori the students attain after their master have
guided them through contemplation of koans and disposal of logic. Warren French
also supports this view saying he (Salinger) sympathizes with those who learn
through blinding revelations (like Lois Tagget and Eloise and Holden Caulfield and
De Daumier-Smith) rather than through methodical thinking(36).
Lundquist also suggests that each of the stories can be seen as a verse which
serves to comment on the koan with which the book begins. Lundquist says that the
Zen master would usually require that the student present a verse from Zenrin Kushu,
an anthology of some five-thousand two-line poems, compiled by Toyo Eicho
(1429-1504), or from some other book which expresses the point of koan just solved.
Each story gives puzzles to the readers that leads us closer to the Buddhist view of the
Universe. These puzzles often echo with the koan that also aims at getting rid of all
logic from our minds and leading us to the Way of Zen.
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The most obvious relationship between Zen art and Salingers writing is of
course between the wordless poetry of the haiku and the careful use of language in
the stories(111), Lundquist says. Haiku is a form of Japanese poem that consists of
seventeen syllables only. Through the use of empty space, it tries, through a single
image, to convey the same effect as Zen painting does. Zen paintings often gives a
quiet and simple impression with their light colours and simple lines. According to
Lundquist, the same effect is also achieved by Salingers stories it is the sound that
we feel as much as anything at the end of A Perfect Day for Bananafish, The
Laughing Man, and Teddy, a silence that is the sound of one hand clapping(111).
Though hearing no sound after reading the stories, readers do hear the sound that
strikes their minds to think about them.
Lundquist even compares Salingers stories with Chinese calligraphy which has
strong Zen ideas behind. Lundquist thinks the impression left by each of Salingers
stories is similar to the feeling left by the calligraphic style of painting done with
black ink on paper or silk that was practiced by Chinese artists in the eighteenth
century. The objective of these Chinese paintings is unhesitating spontaneity(111),
and where a single stroke is often enough to give away ones character(111).
Lundquist believes that the stories are just like the pictures themselves designed to
bring about satori. Lundquist also suggests that Salingers stories and other Zen art are
very much alike as Zen art cannot not be prolific by its very nature. Salinger is of
course not a prolific writer. Lundquist, however, does not establish the point that Zen
is the only reason behind Salingers rather limited production. Lundquist fails to go
into details as to why Zen art cannot be prolific. Salinger is also so much inside his
own stories that these stories become an interior monologue(111) in which the
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writer moves toward satori just like a Zen garderner who keeps caring for his plants
so that he becomes part of the garden himself. In other words, Lundquist suggests that
Salinger gets himself immersed in the stories that he himself is undergoing the same
process as the characters are in attaining satori. Here Salinger is also like a painter
painting bamboos. The painter has to observe the bamboos for ten years so that he can
become a bamboo himself. Only through this process can the painter forget
everything and simply paint without logic but spontaneity.
A Perfect Day for Bananafish
Similar to other stories by Salinger, a child character plays an essential role in
representing the idea of innocence in A Perfect Day for Bananafish. The
ten-year-old child, Sybil Carpenter, also possesses the spontaneity and simplicity that
Salinger carefully develops and represents in most of his other child characters in
Nine Stories. This quality of simplicity, spontaneity and directness are the very
fundamental elements of Zen Buddhism. It is through these child characters that
Salinger brings to his readers the importance of the very intuitive kind of love. James
Lundquist compares the playful question-and-answer conversation between Seymour
and Sybil with the Zen master-student relationship while John Wenke in J.D. Salinger
A Study of the Short Fiction sees that the conversations juxtapose two competing
frames of reference: a normative adult world of materialistic concerns and a childs
world of imaginative play(34). Both Lundquist and Wenke support the fact that Zen
ideas are embedded in the story as shown through the relationship between an adult
and a child characters. Warren French even names his quest for a childs spontaneity
as the major cause for Seymours suicide. In his view, he (Seymour) believes that the
world of well-composed people which Muriel represents has lost the child-like
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exuberance that reading Rilke and romancing about bananafish might restore. His
feelings have been intensified by Sybils response to his fantasies, so that he returns to
his room in the tensest possible state of excitement(35).
Bernice and Sanford Goldstein go further to suggest the Zen idea of innocence
is presented not only through the child character Sybil but Seymour as well. They
believe, Seymour is so attuned to the world of Sybil that he can respond with almost
perfect spontaneity to the spontaneous overflow of joy, of seriousness, of destruction
even, of Sybils own verbal agility(86). Examples can be drawn from their lively
conversation. When Sybil tells Seymour she likes to chew candles, Seymour replies;
Who doesnt?(10) immediately. When Sybil corrects Seymour saying there are only
six tigers going round the tree, Seymour says Only six! Do you call that only?(10)
Seymour also responds to Sybil enthusiastically when Sybil tells him she sees a
bananafish. Their dialogues show that they are perfectly attuned with each other and
there seems no line of separation between the world of children and the adult world.
Many critics comment that A Perfect Day for Bananafish is the most enigmatic
and perplexing story among Salingers works in Nine Stories. Perplexing as it is, the
ending of the story is in fact a clear representation of the koan. The ending of the story
in fact echoes with the epigraph at the beginning of the collection But what is the
sound of one hand clapping? The suicide of Seymour at the end of the story is like
one hand clapping conceptually as the author presents Seymours suicide in such a
subtle way that we cannot even hear the pistol shot. The suicide of Seymour is in no
way portrayed as tragic or sad. It is presented to the readers as a fact that Seymour
simply, fired a bullet through his right temple(12). Here the ending of the story
serves as a koan for the readers to contemplate ones own real nature. This koan
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inspires us to get rid of some conventional values or standards, namely the horror of
death.
Lundquist also brings to us another important koan in the story Did you see
more glass?(6) Sybil keeps repeating this question when her mother puts sun-tan oil
on her shoulders. Lundquist points out that the glass here can mean a mirror and a
window. Lundquist, however, suggests that a reflected image is false and unreal.
Trying to understand oneself through a mirror is wrong as the reflected image is
merely vanity. On the other hand, one can see through oneself and thereby gain a
better understanding of oneself though a window. Here the koan serves to lead the
readers to the point that the glass of illusion is shattered.(82)
Another important idea of Zen Buddhism is presented in the story as Seymour
and Sybil are discussing the story of Little black Sambo and the six tigers who run
around the tree until they turn into butter. The picture that the tigers are running
around the tree in fact connotes the Great Round of existence, the wheel of life, in
Zen Buddhism. Buddhism advocates that one should not get oneself immersed in the
endless round of existence. Seymour says I thought theyd (the tigers) never
stop(10). Those tigers which keep running around the tree finally melt into butter.
This inspires us not to get trapped in the endless round of existence like the tigers
which ended up melting into butter.
The suicide of Seymour is symbolically related to the idea of Nirvana in Zen
Buddhism. Nirvana is in fact the third truth among The Four Noble Truths in
Buddhism. The Four Noble Truths were set forth by the Buddha in The Fire
Sermon. The first truth involves an inescapable fact of human life suffering. The
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second truth relates to the cause of suffering thinking that one can grasp ones life
and control it. The third is Nirvana, the ending of self-frustration. The fourth is the
Eightfold Path which is a method by which self-frustration is brought to an end and
Nirvana is realized. The Eightfold Path involves the attainment of complete view,
complete understanding, complete (truthful) speech, complete action, complete
vocation, complete application, complete recollectedness, and complete
contemplation. According to Lundquist, Seymours letting go of his life is like the
concept of blowing out a flame as in Nirvana. The discussion of Little Black Sambo
and the parable of the bananafish shows that Seymour has realized the cause of
suffering and he seems to have completed the Eightfold Path. Nirvana is a stage
where there should not be any desire, motivation or acquisition. Nirvana can never be
attained as it is a state of infinity. As Lundquist puts it, the apparent lack of
motivation in Seymours suicide is thus tangentially justifiable(86). Seymours
suicide comes rather unexpectedly at the end of the story. He did not show any
intention or motivation to kill himself throughout the story.
Warren French, though not directly pointing out its relationship with Zen
Buddhism, does mention the tragedy of the bananafish which can only kill themselves
in order to end their desire, the cause of their sufferings. The bananafish in the story
have such an insatiable desire for bananas (they behave like pigs) (11) that they all
swim into a small hole and eat as many bananas as they can. They even end up losing
their lives for their desire as they cannot get out of the hole as they are just too fat.
This is in line with the Buddhist concept that From lust comes grief, from lust comes
fear; he who is free from lust knows neither grief nor fear(26), according to Wisdom
of the Buddha The Unabridged Dhammapada. Referring to William Wiegand
(Seventy-Eight Bananas, Chicago Review, 1958), Warren French says Salingers
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major heroes have banana fever, a spiritual illness characterized by the individuals
inability either to distinguish between important and unimportant experiences or to
realize that he cannot retain all of them(87). Such a banana fever is in fact a
symbol of insatiable lust that Zen Buddhism advocates that people should get rid of.
Uncle Wiggily in Connecticut
Similar to Sybils Whirly Wood, the heroine Eloise lives in a suburb that is
also in symbolic association with the Everlasting Round. Lundquist believes the
fact that the story takes place on a darkening winter day is a direct reminder of
Seymours bananafish hole in A Perfect Day for Bananafish. This reiteration of
ideas from one story to another, Lundquist suggests, is a technique that continues
throughout the collection of short stories and serves to reinforce the Koan-structure of
the book. This further tells that the koan in the epigraph not only prefaces the book
but also serves as a major theme throughout the book.
Child characters, as in other stories by Salinger, play an important role in this
story. Ramona, Eloises daughter, has problems with her eyes and has to wear very
thick glasses. Here this thick pair of glasses serves as a symbol of a different
perspective as in the previous story. Ramona is a figure of imagination and
spontaneity. John Wenkes description of Ramona serves as a good proof of her
spontaneity: afflicted with myopia, peers at the world through thick lensesshe
picks her nose, scratches herself, and uses faulty grammar(39) It is not until Eloise
sees through the thick glasses of her child Ramona (she picks up Ramonas glasses
and begins to cry as she says Poor Uncle Wiggily over and over again) that she
begins to come to the moment of enlightenment. Zen masters lead their students to
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forget about logic and to stop relying on their senses. Here the pair of thick glasses is
even better than the healthy naked eyes in understanding ones true self. In John
Wenkes words, Ramonas glasses connect her (Eloise) to her own innocent and lost
world of Walt Glass, a connection reinforced by the association with the childrens
story of Uncle Wiggily(41). Bernice and Sanford Goldstein also refer to Eloises
replacing Ramonas glasses shown at the end of the story as a symbolic gesture(83).
The pair of glasses being folded neatly and laid stems down in fact reveals the lack
of vision of the adult whose perpetual conflict is her marriage to her husband and the
death of the spontaneous Walt(83).
In fact, though not a positive comment, Warren French also supports the idea that
Salingers stories very much concern the innocent, illogical world of the children
(supported by Zen) and the phony world of the adult. He concludes that these basic
concepts of the perishability of the nice world and the phoniness of the persisting
world provide the warp on which Salinger weaves with an increasingly deft hand the
intricate, colorful patterns devised by the fancy of a conscientious craftsman(46).
Eloise recollects her happy days with Walt before he got killed by a stove which
blew up. She remembers one time, when she and Walt were riding on a train, he
placed his hand on her stomach and said it is so beautiful he wished some officer
would come up and order him to stick his other hand through a window(20). James
Lundquist suggests that, in saying this, Walt is in fact expressing a koan of sorts.
Lundquist says it actually reflects the Buddhist conception of the duality of opposites,
that there are pleasures so great that the only way they can be comprehended is
through contemplation of pain that would be equally great.(88)
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Bernice and Sanford Goldstein even believe that Walt is in fact well on the road
to awareness of this Zen idea when Eloise says Walt wanted to do what was fair(20).
To be fair in Zen means recognizing that beauty, pain, death or sorrow are not
separated. Walt did not think being a general in the army is anything special or noble.
Instead, he describes it as nakedness with a small infantry button stuck in the navel.
Walt is able to realize the Zen viewpoint that one has to reduce the self to its barest
quality of identity with all things, all beings (21), as suggested by D.T. Suzuki.
At the end of the story, Eloise leaves Ramona in the room upstairs. She goes
back downstairs, wakes up Mary Jane and asks her I was a nice girl, wasnt I?(27)
This reveals s strong longing for the innocence and simplicity that only a young child
can possess. Eloise wishes to return to childhood and forget about the logic in the
adult world. To Lundquist, this question is deemed to be a plea in the form of a
koan(89). Here Eloise seems to achieve satori where she understands more about
herself. Warren French also supports the view that there is a moment of enlightenment
that Eloise experiences at the end of the story. In the third (scene), we witness
her(Eloise) sudden recognition of what has happened to her(40). His viewpoint is
similar to Lundquists. He describes Eloise as a character in Dantes Inferno who
cannot escape but who has just discovered where he really is(40). Bernice and
Sanford Goldstein, however, do not suggest full enlightenment at the end of the story.
Rather, they point out that Eloise is unable to solve the puzzle of her existence and
she is almost on the verge of a nervous breakdown(84). Like Franny and Zooey,
characters in Franny and Zooey These are two stories by J.D. Salinger, Eloise has
reached the stage of partial enlightenment only.
I t is noteworthy that again at the end of the story the enlightenment that Eloise
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goes through is not presented in words but by images. According to Lundquist, it is in
the tradition of Zen that the real message always remains unspoken and that what
cannot be conveyed by speech can nevertheless be communicated by direct pointing.
An example is quoted which says the Buddha actually transmitted the meaning of
awakening to his chief disciple by holding up a flower and saying nothing. It is in the
Buddhist tradition that a Buddhist practitioner should learn by their own senses rather
than being taught to follow guidelines.
Warren French also gives a good example to support the representation of
innocence in the story. In his view, Uncle Wiggily was borrowed by Walt from
Howard Garis Childrens stories about a whimsical rabbit. Eloise treasures very much
the memory that once, when she twisted her ankle, Walt called it Poor Uncle
Wiggily. This again shows Eloises strong wish to return to the innocent world of
children as opposed to the phony world she is living in as an adult.
Just before the War with the Eskimos
Franklin in this story is very much immersed in the round of pain and suffering.
He is very disheveled and repulsive looking. He keeps complaining about cutting his
finger on some razorblades while reaching into a wastepaper basket. However, as
Lundquist suggests, Franklin is suddenly moved by Ginnie at one moment in the story.
Franklin says he doesnt like his finger when it stings while he is holding his bleeding
finger. Obviously Franklin wishes to get rid of the pain in his finger. He, however,
finds no way to deal with his pain at the beginning. Ginnie replies to him that he
should stop touching it. At this very instant Franklin sort of stumbles into awakening
that he did not know how to respond to As though responding to electric
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shockSelenas brother pulled back his injured hand. He sat up a trifle straighter or
rather, slumped a trifle less. He looked at some object on the other side of the room.
An almost dreamy expression came over his disorderly features(32). It seems that
Franklin has realized the cause of his sufferings. He seems to realize to stop the pain
one has to stop touching it. He realized that suffering is, in a sense, its own cause.
According to Chapter 14 Pleasure in Wisdom of the Buddha The Unabridged
Dhammapada, Not to see what is pleasant is pain. And it is pain to see what is
unpleasant(26).
The traits of a child can be traced through the character of Franklin as well.
According to Bernice and Sanford Goldstein, like Holden Caulfield, Franklin hangs
suspended between adolescence and adulthood(42). When Franklin works at the
airplane factory, be becomes friends with a young man called Eric who manifests
cartoonish, effeminate affectations(42).
Franklin is not the only one who experiences satori in the story. Ginnie also
undergoes enlightenment as she takes a bite of the half of the chicken sandwich
extended to her by Franklin. Franklin insists that Ginnie takes a bite of the sandwich.
The sandwich takes on a sacramental quality and suggests the underlying fable of
incarnation the revelation of spirit through matter that runs through this story and
most of the others in Nine Stories(91). Lundquist explains. By taking a bite of the
sandwich, Ginnie is able to get a taste of Fanklins life. By tasting Frankins life,
Ginnie is able to better understand her own self. She discovers her own phoniness and
her being too self-centred in her relationship with Selena. She finally decides to return
the money to Selena and even suggests going out with Selena on the night. Lundquist
does not explain why he comes up with such an interpretation. It is, however, clear
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that Ginnie decides to make up with Selena after she has taken a bite of the sandwich.
It is also true that there should never be any logical process leading to enlightenment.
Taking a bite of sandwich can well be a moment of enlightenment for Ginnie.
Though both Ginnie and Franklin have reached enlightenment at the end of the
story, the extent of liberation they achieve is in fact rather limited. According to
Lundquist, both Ginnie and Franklin are caught in an endless round of things
she(Ginnie) in her pettiness, he(Franklin) in his awareness of his own suffering and
his tendency to feel sorry for himself(92). In fact, Lundquist suggests that the title of
the story Just Before the War with the Eskimos has already underscored the extent
of liberation with which it ends. Both of the characters are trapped in this endless
cycle of mortal foolishness where people are bound by their own desires and
sufferings. Franklin even prophesies that the next war will be against the Eskimos.
War oftentimes springs from desires of human beings. Human beings are very much
trapped in their desires that they lost their directions. They would even go to fight
with the Eskimos from whom they have nothing to get.
The Laughing Man
The process of awakening also occurs at the end of the story. The revelations
involved, however, are rather chilly. They can even seem like punishment at the
moment they occur. However, Lundquist believes this time round the character of the
Chief is moving away from enlightenment. The Chief has in fact given up trying to
hear the sound of one hand clapping. The Laughing Man represents the
spontaneous, irrational and imaginative world of childhood. At the end of the story,
however, the chief decides to strip away the Laughing Mans mask. In so doing, the
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Chief is in fact destroying his own belief in the value of irrational exuberance(94).
According to Bernice and Sanford Goldstein, the Chief in fact, strips away the mask
of laughter, of irrational exuberance, of the transitional jerk where one can cross the
border from China into France, where in effect one can hear the sound of a single
hand(122).
Warren French, however, has a quite different viewpoint in this respect. He
suggests the epiphany takes place after the narrator leaves the bus and sees the piece
of red tissue paper flapping against the lamppost. It is because, as he believes, it is
the sight of this discarded paper that recalls the laughing mans mask and not the
abrupt ending of the story in the bus that sets the young narrators teeth chattering,
events in both Gedsudskis story and real life have combined to rip away a childs
illusions about the world(46). Though different from Lundquists version, Frenchs
interpretation of the epiphany in the story may well serve to support Lunquists point
on the dire consequences the way to Zen can lead to.
The story of the Laughing Man plays a key role in delivering the Zen messages
in the short story. According to Lundquist, The Laughing Man provided him (the
narrator) with an objective correlative of his own original face, the perception of the
self beyond the self that is more possible in the Zen world of children than it is in the
conventional world of adulthood(93). The narrator has been longing for the Zen idea
of the innocent and carefree life or the true identity, the natural laughter as he himself
describes. As he says, I was not even my parents son in 1928, but a devilishly
smooth imposter, awaiting their slightest blunder as an excuse to move in preferably
without violence, but not necessarily to assert my true identityBut the main thing
I had to do in 1928 was watch my step. Play along with the farce. Brush my teeth.
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Comb my hair. At all costs, stifle my natural hideous laughter(45). Many critics
believe the Laughing Man story is in fact an autobiography for the Chief himself. For
example, John Wenke suggests that The Laughing Mans story exists not only as a
wild escapade but also as veiled autobiography(45). In that case, the Chief also
mentions his own wish to return to the innocent childhood as well as the simplicity of
nature. In the forest, the Laughing Man befriended any number and species of
animalsMoreover, he removed his mask and spoke to them, softly, melodiously, in
their own tongues. They did not think him ugly(43).
The Laughing Man is in fact a story about the Chiefs attempt to try to discover
his own original face. However, according to Lundquist, the reason that the chief
finally achieves the opposite of liberation is because he has just tried to hard.
Lundquist adds that the koan exercise toward satori is by no means a simple process.
It is because of the fact that, as Lundquist says, the Chief is too caught up in the
conventional world (the Chief is, after all, a law student) that he fails to better
understand his real self through imagination and spontaneity. The Way of Zen is never
easy and the process toward the Way of Zen can in fact lead to disaster. Lundquist
bases his argument on Heinrich Dumoulins interpretation in History of Zen Buddhism
that The unnatural suppression of reason is a gamble. It may destroy the psychic
structure of a person permanently and irremediably.(96) This point is also shared by
Bernice Goldstein and Sanford Goldstein who suggest that the struggle with a
particular insoluble problem may lead to mental breakdown or enlightenment, satori.
Down at the Dinghy
As in many other stories by Salinger, the moment of enlightenment again comes
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at the end of this story. This story includes another of Salingers precociously
symbolic children. Again there is this child-adult conversation between Boo Boo and
her four-year-old son Lionel. Same as many other Salingers stories in the collection,
Boo Boo comes to the moment of enlightenment when she is moved by the innocence
and spontaneity found in her kid. BooBoo asks her son Lionel if he knows what the
word actually means after her son tells her he has overheard Sandra telling Mrs. Snell
that his father is a big sloppy kike(63). What he replies to his mother is that Its
one of those things that go up in the air, with string you hold(63). Boo Boo is
extremely touched as she sees, as Lundquist puts it, how absurd the problems of the
obscene adult world are when viewed through the mind of the child(97). Again the
Zen idea of innocence come through a child figure in the story. John Wenke also asks
the readers to listen for the sound of one hand clapping(47) when Lionel answers
his mothers question. John Wenke believes it is Lionels unwitting declaration of
innocence that reunites him with his mother.
Warren French, however, tells us not all stories in the collection serve to
illustrate the Zen enlightenment. He suggests that it (Down at the Dinghy) provides
an example not of the story built around an epiphany but of the more complex
theories of tragic or dramatic emotion (97) The characters in the story do not
come to a moment of disillusionment. Rather, they are still suffering as they are all
struck with pity and terror as a result of failure of communication in the adult world.
Warren French does not show his stance in this respect in relation to Zen Buddhism.
He does not dispute the storys association with Zen Buddhism with the absence of
epiphany. It could, in fact, still be seen that the characters are in the course of getting
rid of their sufferings but they have yet to reach the stage of satori.
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For Esm with Love and Squalor
This story ends with a moment of liberation when Sergeant X opens a package
on his desk and finds a note from Esm along with her fathers wristwatch. Here the
moment of enlightenment again involves the interaction of a child and an adult (Esm
is only a thirteen-year-old girl). According to James Lundquist, this moment of
liberation involves the human exchange of beatific signals(100). Lundquist believes
that, though the crystal of the watch is broken and the watch may no longer be
water-proof, it is what the watch points to in the Zen sense that is important. The
watch here acts as a signal, just like the Buddhas flower, or the thick glasses in
Uncle Wiggily in Connecticut and the chicken sandwich in Just before the War
with the Eskimos, that prompts his (Sergeant X) awakening(100). The glass in the
watch can be penetrated and seen through as the crystal is broken. Sergeant X is able
to get in touch with the world of innocence and naivet again.
A koan can be found at the center of the story. Charles asks the Sergeant a riddle
- What did one wall say to the other wall?(75). The Sergeant fails to give an answer.
Charles then gives the Sergeant the answer Meet you at the corner (75) and later
on Charles asks him again. The Sergeant simply gives him the same answer. James
Lundquist suggests that Charles, as a symbol of the Zen idea of innocence, is angry
because a Zen student should work out the answer himself. According to Lundquist, a
koan can be expressed only indirectly through citing a verse from scripture or a
passage from literature that complements its meaning(100).
Based on Lunquists argument, another reason as to why Charles stalks away in
anger can be added. According to D.T. Suzuki, Zen abhors repetition or imitation of
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any kind, for it kills(71). It is because Zen Buddhism advocates spontaneity and
originality which both repetition and imitation lack. The Sergeant repeats Charless
answer rather than working an answer on his own is against the Zen idea that one
should find its way to Zen with spontaneity rather than by repetition or imitation.
According to D.T. Suzuki, Their (Zen masters) intention is to set the minds of
their disciples or of scholars free from being oppressed by any fixed opinions or
prejudices or so-called logical interpretations(78). Warren French points out that the
story puts great emphasis on ones spontaneity and passion. He says, one point of
the story is surely that one should not be put off by disciplined exteriors that conceal
compassionate hearts, for they bring what love there is to a world made squalid by
those, like Corporal Z, who conceal a spiritual void beneath a smiling, photogenic
surface(101). Warren French believes that Esm is in a double struggle to keep the
spontaneity for Sergeant Xs soul as well as for her brother Charless. She sees herself
as a keeper of her brother. For example, she asks her brother to return to kiss the
Sergeant. And later in the story, she writes a compassionate letter to the Sergeant
which leads him to disillusionment.
As Bernice and Sanford Goldstein suggest, This unlimited freedom, at least in
the Western meaning of the phrase, seems best reached by children(88). Children
again play an important role in the story to deliver the Zen ideas of spontaneity,
irrationality and imagination. According to Bernice and Sanford Goldstein, the story
finds Sergeant X surviving the devastating squalor of war through the irrational
response of not a Sibyl, but an Esm, certainly an emerald in the rough in spite of
Esms attempts to enter the phony class(88). Esm is so childlike as to put down the
exact time she and Sergeant X met and the elapse of time since they met in the letter.
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The Goldsteins even add that she is so childlike as to note that she had not even
observed if the soldier in question had a watch.
Pretty Mouth and Green My Eyes
James Lundquist believes that this story does function within the collection much
like The Laughing Man. It, however, presents the dangerous side of the Zen
experience through characters who do not work their way through lifes essential
koan(102).
Warren French adds that Pretty Mouth and Green Eyes also presents the Zen
idea of unhesitating spontaneity again through the representation of child. He pays
special attention to the title of the story. The title of the story actually comes from a
poem that the husband had once written about his wife as he idealized her, but now
he realizes that she doesnt even have green eyes she has eyes like goddam sea
shells(131) Green eyes in fact have a special meaning not only in this story but
throughout the whole collection. According to Warren French, green eyes are also
mentioned in Uncle Wiggily in Connecticut and For Esm with Love and
Squalor as attributes of a lovable child(131).
De Daumier-Smiths Blue Period
The painting drawn by M.Yoshoto is in fact a typical example of Zen art. The
Japanese artist made this piece of memorable work which features a certain white
goose flying through an extremely pale-blue skythe blueness of the sky, or an ethos
of the blueness of the sky, reflected on birds feathers(103). Here the blueness of the
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sky symbolizes the Zen vision of innocence, simplicity and pureness. On the contrary,
the blues brought by Daumier-Smith are the deception and phoniness of the adult
world. According to Lundquist, Daumier-Smith must overcome the blues and
exchange them for the blueness of the sky(103).
Sister Irma serves as a beatific signal in the story as the glasses and chicken
sandwich do in other stories in the collection. Sister Irma, according to Lundquist,
becomes a sign to him (Daumier-Smith), in her very Zen-like simplicity a beatific
signal(104). Daumier-Smith is very much attracted to Sister Irmas simplicity as she
encloses no photograph in her application, does not tell her age and leaves all of her
work unsigned. However, later on, a letter from the Mother Superior of Sister Irmas
convent saying the nun would not be allowed to continue her study at the academy
deals a big blow to Daumier-Smith. Similar to other characters in the collection,
Daumier-Smith ponders over his life on his way back home. He experiences a
realization about himself and this new vision of life, involving his conception of the
nature of human suffering and the horrible frustration of trying to control things(105),
as Lundquist points out, that prepares him for the letting go that must precede
awakening(105).
Like other stories in the collection, De Daumier-Smiths Blue Period, as
Lunquist says, features a first-person narrator who recollects s traumatic period in his
life that ends with the most vivid account of Zen experience we find anywhere in
Salinger.(105) When Daumier-Smith reaches out to prevent the woman shop
assistant from falling down, he hits his fingertips on the glass and all of a sudden he
experiences a flash of insight. According to Lunquist, at the instant, Daumier-Smith,
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his desire to reach out through the invisible wall that separates them, enables him to
experience self-transcendence and the ugliness of mans mortal nature as its worst
turns into beauty(105). Later on Daumier-Smith realizes he should give Sister Irma
her freedom to follow her own destiny. Daumier-Smith finally understands that
everyone should try to discover the path of spiritual awareness as everyone is a
nun(105) and one can only be illuminated when the point of letting go (105) is
reached. Frederick L. Gwynn and Joseph L. Blotner think that it is more than a
statement of release. They believe it is in fact a declaration of independence from the
pure image he has subconsciously tried to preserve of his mother(39). According to
D.T.Suzuki, If there is anything Zen strongly emphasizes, it is the attainment of
freedom; that is, freedom from all unnatural encumbrances(41). Freedom is a central
theme in Zen Buddhism. Not only does it free ones physical existence, but also ones
mind in understanding the ultimate truth.
Bernice and Sanford Goldstein also suggest that Daumier-Smith is already on
the way toward a religious conversion of his own(92) as M. Yoshoto asks him at
dinner whether he would prefer a chair in his room. Daumier-Smith replies, I said
that the way the floor cushions were set right up against the wall, it gave me a good
chance to practice keeping my back straight(105). Sitting straight on the floor and
practicing meditation is an essential task for every Zen practitioner.
Teddy
Different from the way that Zen ideas figure in all of the earlier stories in the
collection, Zen ideas are presented rather directly through the main character Teddy, a
child prodigy who is a fervent believer in the Vedantic theory of incarnation, in this
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story. Through the conversation between Teddy and Bob Nicholson, a young
professor of education, we can see that Teddy believes he was a holy man in India in
his last incarnation and that he almost reached Brahma or escaped from the round of
birth and death except that he met a lady, andsort of stopped meditating(127). He
also believes that he had his first mystic experience at the age of six when he saw his
sister drinking milk and all of a sudden he realized his sister was God and the milk
was God and everything was God.
Teddy has the belief that all matter has no reality by itself. He believes that it is
the mind which perceives the matter that gives it meaning. For example, when
looking at orange peels, Teddy posits that they have actually started floating inside
his mind. According to John Wenke, Teddy most clearly initiates Salingers serious
preoccupation with displacing American culture in favor of an approach to experience
that honors simplicity, spirituality, intuition, and egolessness(61). Wenke believes
that Salinger is in support of a philosophy of antimaterialistic transcendence(61).
Though not directly pointing out its Zen inclination, Wenke suggests that Salinger
does apply the means of eventual spiritual salvation, or nirvana, (61) to transpose
the myth of childhood innocence(61) into the Zen-related philosophy he advocates.
Teddys vedantic beliefs are very much in line with the ideas advocated by Zen
Buddhism. In the story Teddy says that logic is the first thing you have to get rid
of(134). Lundquist suggests that Logic and intellectual stuff have to be vomited
up, Teddy argues, if we want to see things correctly(107). Lundquist believes that
Teddys disapproval of logic is in line with the Zen idea of intuition and spontaneity.
Teddy even has his own theory of education. He believes he should show the children
how to meditate so that they could find out who they are. Id just make them vomit
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up every bit of the apple their parents and everybody made them take a bite out of
(147). Teddys beliefs very much reinforce the rationale of the koan with which the
book begins that truth eludes every attempt to catch it by logic (143). Teddy here
also functions as a conclusion to the whole collection. The story serves to answer the
opening koan which says What is the sound of one hand clapping? According to
Bernice and Sanford Goldstein, Teddy serves to show us the importance of moving
beyond the easy laws of logic(92) and being raised to a higher level of awareness of
the real worlds of tension, contradiction, paradox, humor, love and squalor(92).
Teddys viewpoint of life and death, his action and activity are all beyond reason and
logical interpretation. To hear the sound of one hand clapping one must first discard
the laws of logic.
Teddy has a strong zeal in presenting many of the ideas of Zen Buddhism. This
viewpoint is very much supported by Warren French who says that, He (J.D.
Salinger) had also begun to develop the enthusiasm for Zen Buddhism that has often
been reflected in works like Teddy and Seymour(134). French, however, adds the
following, even though there is no indication that Salinger really grasps the
principles of this paradox-ridden Oriental cult(134). James Lundquist, on the other
hand, has a strong belief that Salingers works are heavily loaded with Zen ideas.
Warren French, however, insists the ideas in Salingers works are Zen-related rather
than establishing any solid relationship between them.
The strong inclination to the Zen idea of naturalness and simplicity is again
featured in the story. Teddy has once said that in the story that he would prefer just to
be like an elephant, or bird, or trees. According to Warren French, his (Teddy)
longing is an example of the nostalgia for a return to the uncorrupted life of
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uncivilized creatures which colors the party held in La Dolce Vita by Steiner (who
later kills his children) and which is also exhibited by Holden Caulfields dream of
being a catcher in the rye(134). This strong inclination towards nature is also
echoed by the Laughing Mans close connection with animals in the collection.
Frederick L. Gwynn and Joseph L. Blotner also draw to our attention that
through Teddy an important Zen idea is put across to the readers knowing that
things are what they are and that living and dying are neither good nor evil(41). A
very significant Zen idea is that birth and death are no longer important, as D.T.
Suzuki says, for there are no such dualities anywhere; we live even through
death(60). Besides, in Zen one should recognize facts as facts as one should never
get entangled in intellectual subtleties. Under Zen Buddhism one should deal with
facts with direct simplicity, freedom and originality. In The Fiction of J.D. Salinger,
they conclude: He (Teddy) is a mystic who receives his inevitable death with a
spiritual equanimity that contrasts starkly with the logical and emotional egocentricity
of everybody else in the story(42).
4. Conclusion
There are no better conclusions to sum up the above research than quoting
Bernice and Sanford Goldstein in Zen and Salinger, The importance of the present
moment; the long search and struggle in which reason, logic, cleverness, and intellect
prove ineffectual; the inadequacy of judgment and criticism which reinforce and
stimulate the artificial boundary between self and other; and some degree of
enlightenment which results from the non-rational and spontaneous blending of
dualities, an enlightenment which permits experience that is complete and
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unadulterated and makes the moment and, in effect, life non-phoney all these
aspects of Zen can be found in Salingers world(93).
It is noteworthy that no critics are against the point of view that Salingers works
are in one way or another associated with the ideas of Zen Buddhism. Critics mainly
focus on three main areas in suggesting the relationship between Zen Buddhism and
Salingers works. They are the comparison between the journey of Gautama and that
of Holden, the Zen idea of innocence and spontaneity as well as the moment of
enlightenment or satori. Critics, however, tend to be careful in establishing
relationships between Salingers works and Zen as it is very hard to find evidence
from the author himself due to J.D. Salinger notorious seclusion. Their arguments,
therefore, are mostly based on the text itself and the their interpretation of Zen
Buddhism through D.T. Suzukis works. It is also worth to discuss why Salinger is
interested in presenting the above three Zen ideas. This, however, would require some
detailed analysis of the authors earlier works and, if possible, his personal
background.
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