• Campus United Way Campaign Forges Toward Feb. 15 Deadline
  • Panel Urges Grad Student Aid
  • Faculty Diversity Reported Weak
  • Sedgwick Outreach Lets Kids Revel in Nature
  • Research: Race Awareness Malleable
  • Author Finds Happiness in Talk
  • Regents Set Up Tuition Reduction Program for Certain Nonresidents
  • Civic Activism a Way of Life for Kennedy
  • Campus Contract and Grant Awards
  • Campus Notes
  • Credits
  • Author Finds Happiness in Talk


    By BILL SCHLOTTER

    Kay Young mines playful verbal sparring for a new vein of critical analysis

    There's an almost subliminal current of affection that underlies the words and phrases that make up the day-to-day banter of loving couples. Kay Young, associate professor of English, noticed that these intimate, happiness-creating exchanges have been overlooked by an academic literary culture too focused on pain, exploitation, and power relations.
    Young has used this insight to open up an entirely new domain of literary analysis. The result is "Ordinary Pleasures: Couples, Conversation, and Comedy." It is her first book.
    In the book, Young examines a diverse cast of fictional couples from modern culture--Rochester and Jane of "Jane Eyre," Darcy and Elizabeth of "Pride and Prejudice," Rick and Ilsa of the film "Casablanca," Ricky and Lucy of television's "I Love Lucy," Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers of "Top Hat," and more--to look for narrative representations of such interaction in novels, television, and film.
    To Young, the verbal and physical dialogue between those famous pairs demonstrate--often in comedic fashion--that happiness is not beyond the reach of mortals but is available in no small measure in places as ordinary as daily conversation. The play between lovers reveals, perhaps most of all for Young, the fundamental desire of humans to know another and to be known by another, deeply and fully and passionately, by being alive to one another in everyday life.
    "These figures and the stories they represent shed light on the ways that people really do feel. They model for us ways that couples play together, struggle together, and return to one another to experience what it means to be in a relationship over time," Young believes.
    Young recalls that while listening to adult conversations at her parents' dinner parties, she noticed that couples who enjoyed each other's company seemed to engage in playful verbal sparring. "I would sit and listen to these people who had been married for years talking about themselves and their lives, and I would begin to wonder, 'Why are they together? What's going on between them?'" Young said.
    In writing "Ordinary Pleasures," Young drew on this early insight to combine in new ways diverse critical traditions from philosophy, linguistics, psychology, and narrative theory. She's pleased that 11 years of work is now in material form.