Enculturation, Vol. 3, No. 2, Fall 2001

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"Recoil" or "Seize"?: Passing, Ekphrasis and "Exact Expression" in Nella Larsen's Passing

Part One: Deep Nothing

Mona Lisa's famous smile is a thin mouth receding into shadow. Her expression, like her puffy eyes, is hooded. The egglike head with its enormous plucked brow seems to pillow on the abundant, self-embraced Italian bosom. What is Mona Lisa thinking? Nothing, of course. Her blankness is her menace and our fear.

—Camille Paglia [1]

Camille Paglia's analysis of "Mona Lisa," the "world's most famous painting" (155), plays on the ambiguous meaning of the spectacle—the visual image—in reading and writing practices. "Mona Lisa," for Paglia, is an exemplary instance of the fascination and the anxiety surrounding the menacing power of the visual in Western epistemologies. She is an icon that is not only, as Paglia writes, "eternally watching" (154), she is also eternally watched. The Mona Lisa's enigmatic smile displays but also dissembles the narcissism attributed to the feminised image. The portrait is often read as a nothing in and of itself but a something if it gestures, as the Mona Lisa's smile appears to, towards the unreadable. Traditionally a sign of the "Mona Lisa"'s intangibility, the smile in Paglia's reading autoerotically evokes elusiveness through secrecy and distance ("receding into shadow"). The "Mona Lisa" wallows in this solipsism: she is "self-embraced" and enormous within the enclosure. Characteristically, Paglia's polemic repudiates a more mysterious Mona Lisa beyond the surface of the painting, or a "thinking" woman who possesses an unreadable, interior, depth which transcends the limitations of the body. Her trivialisation of the much studied mysterious smile as hiding "nothing" is contradicted, however, by a close-up reading of the painting's depth; she emphasises the "thin mouth receding into shadow," the "hooded" eyes and the pillowed "brow." The portrait overall evinces a grim determination to efface the representation of the feminine as vagina dentata, the toothed vagina or castrating woman. A disappearing line, the image retains its menacing reputation. For Paglia, the Mona Lisa's threat is that she passes as an enigma.

Paglia's ekphrasis of the famous face is of a partly open, partly closed surface. The description of deep "nothing" threatens the authority of the looking subject and is also thoroughly engaged in the pleasure of reading. According to Susan Stewart, it is an alluring opacity which places the human face at the centre of representations of subjectivity. "Because it is invisible," writes Stewart, "the face becomes gigantic with meaning and significance" (125). The face is only ever visible to the other and it is a visibility that is elusive, revealing "a depth and profundity which the body itself is not capable of" (125). The eyes and mouth create the appearance of "depth," as "openings onto fathomlessness, they engender the fearful desire to 'read' the expression of the face, for this reading is never apparent from the surface alone; it is continually confronted by the correction of the other" (127). The face appears to withhold its full meaning through openings such as the eyes and the mouth, stimulating the reader's questing gaze which is always disrupted and fragmented by the broken surface. The act of looking, for Paglia and Stewart, delineates a process between subject and object which does not get beyond the surface but which generates meaning nonetheless.

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