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On June 16th, The Hogarth Press published The Frenzy: Stories , Joyce Carol Oatesโs 49th collection. The same day, โAmericaโs foremost woman of lettersโ posted and reposted 40 odd times on X, commenting on, among other things, Dick Cavett, tiger lilies, cats, and, repeatedly, police brutality. A volume of exceptional short stories, The Frenzy has already received appreciative reviews, yet Oatesโs tweets will likely garner more attention. With nearly 200,000 followers, the celebrated author commands a social media audience that usually exceeds her reading public.
Stephen King (6.7 million), Margaret Atwood (1.7 million), Gary Shteyngart (487,000), and a few other novelists have more followers on Xโbots includedโthan Oates. Yet Oates has a far greater talent for going viral on the increasingly conservative social media site. In 2022, critics condemned Oates for her infamous tweet asserting the unrecognized value of โyoung white male writersโฆ who may, in fact, be brilliant, & critical of their own โprivilege.โโ Three years later, she basked in online acclaim for a brutal takedown of Elon Musk, the first of several critiques.
โSo curious that such a wealthy man never posts anything that indicates that he enjoys or is even aware of what virtually everyone appreciates,โ wrote Oates. โThe poorest persons on Twitter may have access to more beauty & meaning in life than the โmost wealthy person in the world.โโ Offering scrollers and twitterers a lively mixture of snark, wit, and empathy, Oates consistently attracts an enviable number of views.
Not to everyoneโs liking, of course. Troubled by some early tweets, Gawker โs Michelle Dean urged the deletion of @JoyceCarolOates, while Lit Hub โs Eric Thurm worried that the posts would detract from Oatesโs literary reputation. Recently, the writerโs anti-MAGA posts have garnered praise with Sophie Lee of Culture Magazine dubbing Oates a โGen Z Twitter memeโ and Mary Kate Carr of AV Club celebrating her as perhaps the most dangerous โgunslingerโ in the wild West of X.
But what of Oatesโs fiction? How do her roughly one hundred novels and collections bear upon her online celebrity? Oatesโs โsocial feedโ is not her โgreatest contribution to literature,โ as the Guardian โs Patrick Lenton cheekily claims, but her writing may have informed her surprising Internet popularity. Like so many 21st-century posters and influencers, Oates has long found in troubling news the material integral to her work. The National Book Award-winnng them (1969) depicts the Detroit riots of 1967; Black Water (1992) draws on the Chappaquiddick incident; Zombie (1995) is based on the story of serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer; Blonde (2000) reimagines the life and death of Marilyn Monroe; and Sacrifice (2015) centers on the Tawana Brawley case. Long before Twitter and Instagram, Oates devoted herself to the graphic representation of unsettling figures and events.
This urge to draw onโand sometimes fuelโpublic controversy continues in The Frenzy , not with the fictionalization of a headline story, but with the representation of a more nebulous phenomenon: the crisis of selfhood in the digital age. With this volume, as in recent publications like โSubaqueousโ (2021) and โThis is Not a Drillโ (2023), Oates highlights the dispiriting effects of technology on contemporary life, calling our attention to the alienation and anomie endemic to our cell-phone era. Yet, perhaps unsurprisingly, the literary queen of X also emphasizes that computer platforms have no special claim on human self-destruction. For all their ubiquity, Oates indicates that these devices are hardly the only cause of our problems.
Oates doesnโt indulge in the predictable condemnation of social media. She may have claimed that Twitter is โlargely a waste of time,โ but she also recognizes that we sometimes scapegoat technology to avoid confronting our own limitations and failures.
The titular story suggests as much. The frenzy cited alludes to protagonist Matthew Cassidyโs experience witnessing a cannibalistic orgy of fish off the New England coast (โwrithing silvery bodies in the dark water, savagely feedingโ) but itโs not hard to understand the bloody scene as an allegory for the viciousness of American capitalism. Keenly attune to economic inequalityโher novels attest to thisโOates knows full well that in our society the big fish usually consume the small.
This insight also applies to the frenzied world of X, but Oates doesnโt indulge in the predictable condemnation of social media. She may have claimed that Twitter is โlargely a waste of time,โ but she also recognizes that we sometimes scapegoat technology to avoid confronting our own limitations and failures. Dedicated to his own midlife crisis, Matthew has no qualms about cheating with Brianna, the nineteen-year-old daughter of family friends, but he finds objectionable her inability to stop โscrolling through emails. Or Instagram, TikTok,โ and commit herself to their Jersey Shore tryst.
Furious that Brianna seems to have forgotten his โvery existence, totally immersed in her damned phone,โ Matthew throws his young loverโs iPhone into the ocean. Brianna treats this act as a complete betrayal, and she responds in kind. Yet Oates hardly suggests that we should side with Matthew. His desire to be โoff the grid,โ like his aggressive response to Briannaโs behavior, reveals far more about his selfishness than it does his critical relation to communication technology. In this storyโperhaps Oatesโs finest short fiction since โWhere Are You Going, Where Have You Beenโ (1966)โthe cell phone serves not so much as an obstacle to meaningful human connection as a mirror reflecting a middle-aged manโs infidelity.
Oatesโs fascination with dynamics of self and other persists in โThe Fear,โ a wrenching narrative about Janette and Juliet, two near identical cousins, the latter of whom develops jaw cancer and then has multiple surgeries. The title of the story refers to the fear of physical difference that underwrites demonization and violence. As the narrator puts it when describing the reaction of teenage boys to Julietโs atypical face, her mouth and eye marked by multiple operations: โLike looking into a mirror. Seeing in your own (familiar) face something profoundly unfamiliar, unexpected. Unfathomable.โ Terror over the vagaries of human embodiment leads to mob-like behavior, and Oates is, as usual, extraordinarily sensitive to the brutal treatment of young women in modern America. Centering mainly on how Janette wrestles with her failure to accept her sick cousin, this beautifully crafted narrative asks us to consider how we reject the other in a panic over our own alterity. โThe Fearโ teaches the reader that deep-rooted human anxieties over being seen and objectified, isolated and dissected, exist within and without the world of digital technology.
Oates is also very much aware of the loneliness of contemporary life, and she comments in various stories on what it means for humans to interact primarily through cell phones. Maud, the first-person narrator of โThe Return,โ understands that her widowed friend Audra yearns for real contact, to โnot speak at her, coolly detached as in an emailโ but to โspeak with her.โ Seeing someone โon a computer screen, in an email or text message, had no ring of intimacy,โ Maud informs the reader. Indeed, if one reads โThe Returnโ in light of Oatesโs long experience with X, the story seems to imply that the solipsism of a world dependent on online communication necessarily leads to the desperate need for recognition typical of social media.
Yet Oates also makes evident that any attempt to escape this dilemma is doomed to failure. In โThe Refuge,โ Marcus, a self-loathing techie intolerant of his wife Loreneโs interest in computers, goes โoff the gridโ in search of enlightenment. He visits a local Buddhist shrine, but instead of finding wisdom and peace, he ends up mentally unstable, and then homicidal. For Marcus, jettisoning โidiotic devices like cell phonesโ degenerates into something far worse than the isolation and cruelty of online culture: the human capacity for physical violence. In the world of โThe Refuge,โ the viciousness of even the nastiest post pales before the terrifying prospect of bloodletting.
Throughout The Frenzy , Oates doesnโt so much indict as attempt to apprehend, dialectically, our culture of cell phones and social media, of Apple and X. She forces the reader to confront, like Matthew, the discomfiting reality that our use ofโand response toโtechnology says significantly more about us than it does the software and hardware integral to our lives. Digital culture, even oligarch-controlled digital culture, isnโt the problem; itโs what human beings say on and through platforms that is for Oates the real cause for concern. Machines are only what we make of them, and, thanks to this talented writer, we are reminded that sometimes we can make them speak subversively indeed.
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