Author | Denis Johnson |
---|---|
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Publisher | Farrar, Straus and Giroux |
Publication date | March 5, 1991 |
Media type | Print (hardcover) |
Pages | 256 |
ISBN | 978-0-374-24949-6 |
OCLC | 22309628 |
813/.54 | |
LC Class | PS3560.O3745 R47 1990 |
Resuscitation of a Hanged Man is a novel by Denis Johnson published in 1991 by Farrar, Straus and Giroux.
The story explores the struggles of a private investigator, Leonard English, to become a person of religious faith, and his isolated descent into madness.[1][2][3]
Plot
Critical assessment
In her review for The New York Times, novelist Mona Simpson, testifying to Johnson's "ability to write a gorgeous sentence", registers this critique of Resuscitation of a Hanged Man:
Denis Johnson is an artist. He writes with a natural authority, and there is real music in his prose. Yet in this book he has not found a subject to match the scale of his talent and intelligence. Nor has he found a steady vantage point from which to view that subject.[4]
Theme
Critic David L. Ulin argues that the thematic center of The Resuscitation of a Hanged Man—"the key to the entire novel"—resides in the protagonist Leonard English's inability to distinguish his "brief, intense flashes of the starkest lucency" from his bouts of dementia. The protagonist laments that "our delusions are just as likely to be real as our most careful scientific observations."[5]
"The nature of Johnson's own [religious] beliefs seems to have been inexpressible. Late in life, he'd given up trying to explain: 'If I've discussed these things in the past, I shouldn't have', he said in 2013. 'I'm not qualified. I don't know who God is, or any of that. People concerned with those questions turn up in my stories, but I can't explain why they do. Sometimes I wish they wouldn't.'"—Novelist and critic Aaron Thier in Denis Johnson's God, The Point (2017)[6]
Johnson renders striking descriptions of the real world from which English crafts his delusions which serve to illustrate his character's descent into madness.[7] Ulin offers this caveat:
As Leonard English continues his descent, it is this quality of open-endedness that...becomes Resuscitation of a Hanged Man's one real weakness. For when he begins to focus on the conspiracy he thinks he sees everywhere, English's sense of possibility narrows, although the book does not. The result is a murkiness that affects the final 100 pages, rendering English's thoughts and motivations increasingly unclear.[8][9][10]
Mona Simpson notes that "Roman Catholicism is a persistent theme in Mr. Johnson's work...evincing a deep attraction to the lavish emblems and ritual of the Mass."[11][12]
Johnson "flirts" with the detective genre in this novel—Simpson compares English with the investigator Jake Gittes in Chinatown (1974)—however, the thematic element in The Resuscitation of a Hanged Man is "God", according to critic Aaron Thier: "God the metaphor, God the stylistic trope, God the real and eternal being..."[13][14]
Simpson comments on Johnson's development of his subsidiary characters in a novel in which the protagonist searches for his "doppelgänger":
Almost every character in Resuscitation of a Hanged Man is an extreme type, yet the book doesn't have the exuberant choreographic energy that is necessary to pull off this sort of masked pageant. Denis Johnson wants to write about one man's wrestle with the voice of God. Ultimately, the other characters are merely gorgeously written figures in the landscape behind him.[15]
Footnotes
- ↑ Ulin 1991: "The story of English's quest to become a person of faith, a knight of faith...English drifts into dementia..."
- ↑ Simpson 1991: "...the hero is a Catholic struggling with his belief."
- ↑ Sherez 2014: "Resuscitation of a Hanged Man featured a suicidal PI as the main character."
- ↑ Simpson 1991
- ↑ Ulin 1991
- ↑ Thier 2018
- ↑ Ulin 1991: "...the abstractions in English's mind and the more concrete realities that fuel them...we grasp it in a more immediate way for being shown instead of told."
- ↑ Ulin 1991
- ↑ Simpson 1991: "But Leonard English is so profoundly isolated that by [story's end] he has lost much of his power to affect the reader."
- ↑ McManus 1992: "His prose, especially in... Resuscitation of a Hanged Man, consistently generates imagery of ferocious intensity, much of it shaded with a menacing, even deranged sense of humor."
- ↑ Simpson 1991
- ↑ Miller 2000: "The sources of these characters' neuroses (English is recovering from a horrifying job, a suicide attempt, and conflicts with his Catholicism)"
- ↑ Simpson 1991: "flirtation with the detective genre..."
- ↑ Thier 2018: "In Resuscitation of a Hanged Man, the hero is a Catholic struggling with his belief."
- ↑ Simpson 1991
Sources
- Johnson, Denis (1991). Resuscitation of a Hanged Man. New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux. ISBN 978-0-374-24949-6.
- McManus, James (December 27, 1992). "The Road to Detox". The New York Times. Retrieved September 11, 2022.
- Miller, Michael (July 25, 2000). "Anatomy of Melancholy". The Village Voice. Retrieved September 15, 2022.
- Simpson, Mona (February 24, 1991). "God and Man in Provincetown". The New York Times. Retrieved September 3, 2022.
- Sherez, Stav (November 13, 2014). "Fear and Loathing in Freetown". Los Angeles Review of Books. Retrieved September 2, 2022.
- Thier, Aaron (2018). "Denis Johnson's God". The Point. No. 17. Criticism. Retrieved September 4, 2022.
- Ulin, David L. (April 28, 1991). "The Architecture of Madness". The Washington Post. Retrieved September 11, 2022.