La borra del cafe.
Nash, Susan Smith
In seemingly effortless and transparent prose, Mario Benedetti
foregrounds how the Kunstlerroman (a novel which involves individual
struggle to become an artist) explores the limits of representation. In
doing so, he creates a narrative which suggests that the novel's
traditional connections to the projects of constructing a personal
world, an intensely private space in which to question or reinforce the
culture's dominant beliefs and values, are overshadowed by the
writer's own struggles with the intractabilities of language, and
how, as Wittgenstein put it in Lectures and Conversations (1938),
"There is a constant surprise at the new tricks language plays on
us when we get into a new field."
La borra del cafe opens in Montevideo, where in a somewhat nostalgic
voice the narrator, Claudio, immediately defines the unstable space that
formed his conception of his world: "Mi familia siempre se estaba
mudando." However, the constant changes and disorientations did
not, as one might expect, instill profound angst or alienation. Instead,
young Claudio found the constant moving to be a source of entertainment.
At this point the narrative begins to take on metonymic qualities: the
processes of packing and unpacking, breaking down and reordering the
household, become emblematic of Benedetti's approach to
constructing a narrative.
Within the narrative, the events of Claudio's life are ordered
and reordered, with structural elements--repetitions and
resonances--emerging at each reordering. This is one way the author
creates meaning within the novel. Furthermore, this technique suggests
that the basis of Benedetti's development as an artist (a writer of
essays, poetry, fiction, and plays) is the fluid manner in which he is
able to redefine and rename the situations in his life. For example,
when Claudio and his friends discover a corpse (Dandy), they define and
name the situation by speculating about the crime and the nature of the
dead man. In doing so, they effect a reification process: they build a
narrative that brings into existence the dead man and all potential
stories. This includes the Sherlock Holmes--style exercises in deductive
reasoning in which Ciaudio and his friends engage with relish.
The reordering and renaming occurs later in the novel, when
subsequent incidents in Claudio's life remind him of Dandy (the
corpse) and he connects the experience of discovering a dead body to
later events. Benedetti builds analogues when he suggests a later event
contains similarities to the first discovery of the corpse; he also
posits equivalences and suggests that the history of one's life can
be constructed in a cyclical manner. Cycles predominate the narrative of
La borra del cafe, and they help build a sense of continuity. Still,
there is a tension between history as linear and history as cyclical. If
history is cyclical, and the Kunstlerroman as well, then is there an
amount of determinism at work? What is the role of choice, and where can
one see the manifestation of the action of will?
The answer may lie in the relation of language to narrative. The
limits of self-constructivism are the limits of language: when language
breaks down into its intractable elements and chaos and indeterminacy intrude, the artist must intervene and impose order. If that requires
"abrir y cerrar cajones, baules, grandes cajas, maletas" and
struggling, time and time again, to rearrange and reorder moving boxes
and materials, then so be it. Benedetti orders the history of a young,
struggling artist, and in doing so, he represents how the artist learns
to organize his mind, his consciousness, and his ways of knowing.
Susan Smith Nash University of Oklahoma