{"title":"Nowhere Spaces","authors":"Holly Goddard Jones","doi":"10.1353/sew.2024.a919145","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<span><span>In lieu of</span> an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:</span>\n<p> <ul> <li><!-- html_title --> Nowhere Spaces <!-- /html_title --></li> <li> Holly Goddard Jones (bio) </li> </ul> <p><strong>O</strong>ver COVID lockdown, my kids and I got into the habit of watching fantasy cartoons each night before bed. One of our favorites was <em>Hilda</em>, a Netflix series inspired by an also-excellent graphic novel series by Luke Pearson. There’s a lot to love about <em>Hilda</em>, which tells the story of the titular character, a little girl who lives a typical modern child’s existence of school and scouts and growing up in a single-parent household—in a reality that happens to be juxtaposed against high-fantasy elements inspired by Scandinavian folklore. Hilda’s universe, and its populous cast of magical characters, is far too ornate to explain here, but as I began contemplating the topic of negative space in fiction, I found myself picturing some creatures from the series, the Nisse. In Pearson’s interpretation, Nisse are house trolls that occupy forgotten areas of the home called “The Nowhere Space”—pocket dimensions, unused and mostly unnoticed by humans, where the Nisse can live, and where they store the items that humans have misplaced or neglected to the point of forfeiture. A Nisse can also <strong>[End Page 130]</strong> use the Nowhere Space to interdimensionally travel—by entering an opening that’s tucked away behind a heavy bookcase, for example, one can exit from underneath a sofa in another house, or in the crack between the refrigerator and wall in still another.</p> <p>It occurs to me that one reason Hilda’s version of the Nisse so compels me is that the Nowhere Space reminds me of one of my most frequent recurring dreams, a dream that I’ve learned is extremely common: the hidden-room dream. In it, you’re home—or, sometimes for me, in a house I just agreed to purchase—and you realize that your house has extra, unused square footage. I can guess what dream interpretation websites would say about the meaning of the hidden room: that you’re plumbing undiscovered aspects of yourself, something about the subconscious, blah blah blah, but what I always feel, in these dreams, is a simultaneous sense of freedom, possibility, and stupidity. I start thinking of all the things I’ll be able to do with this found space, and I start wondering how I could have been so oblivious as to have missed its existence all along.</p> <p>As I have gotten to be an older and more seasoned writer, I’ve experienced a similar set of emotions as I’ve contemplated the extra rooms or Nowhere Spaces within my own prose. I’ve realized just how much of a story gets told off the page. Now, this obviously isn’t some new or surprising insight. We have a whole host of cliches at the ready to address the Nowhere Spaces in literature: we talk about reading “between the lines,” we scrutinize what occurs “in the white space,” and we analyze, as readers, “subtext”—all that matter and meaning “under the surface.” Metaphors abound, and <em>Hilda</em>’s Nisse aren’t necessarily a new and helpful symbol to add to the catalog.</p> <p>Now, a confession: I’m a writer more inclined to rhapsodize on the joys of decadent expository play than I am on the necessity of austerity. I like elaborate character backstories, trivial ephemera, <strong>[End Page 131]</strong> digressions, and side quests. I often feel more at home tooling around in a character’s abstract thoughts than I do staging a straightforward scene. Having owned this predilection, this sometimes-weakness (or indulgence), I’m going to invite you along as I consider a craft topic that does not come so easily to me: the ways that the material we choose <em>not</em> to put explicitly into words contributes to the texture and meaning of our prose.</p> <p>A good gateway form for exploring this topic, at least as it pertains to prose, is the epistolary story. An epistolary story operates as a found document, often divorced of context, addressed to a character who will only gradually, if at all, assume a concrete presence in the reader’s mind. A writer working in the epistolary form must strike a balance between plausibly representing a portion of...</p> </p>","PeriodicalId":43824,"journal":{"name":"SEWANEE REVIEW","volume":"6 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.1000,"publicationDate":"2024-02-08","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"SEWANEE REVIEW","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1353/sew.2024.a919145","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"文学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"LITERARY REVIEWS","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:
Nowhere Spaces
Holly Goddard Jones (bio)
Over COVID lockdown, my kids and I got into the habit of watching fantasy cartoons each night before bed. One of our favorites was Hilda, a Netflix series inspired by an also-excellent graphic novel series by Luke Pearson. There’s a lot to love about Hilda, which tells the story of the titular character, a little girl who lives a typical modern child’s existence of school and scouts and growing up in a single-parent household—in a reality that happens to be juxtaposed against high-fantasy elements inspired by Scandinavian folklore. Hilda’s universe, and its populous cast of magical characters, is far too ornate to explain here, but as I began contemplating the topic of negative space in fiction, I found myself picturing some creatures from the series, the Nisse. In Pearson’s interpretation, Nisse are house trolls that occupy forgotten areas of the home called “The Nowhere Space”—pocket dimensions, unused and mostly unnoticed by humans, where the Nisse can live, and where they store the items that humans have misplaced or neglected to the point of forfeiture. A Nisse can also [End Page 130] use the Nowhere Space to interdimensionally travel—by entering an opening that’s tucked away behind a heavy bookcase, for example, one can exit from underneath a sofa in another house, or in the crack between the refrigerator and wall in still another.
It occurs to me that one reason Hilda’s version of the Nisse so compels me is that the Nowhere Space reminds me of one of my most frequent recurring dreams, a dream that I’ve learned is extremely common: the hidden-room dream. In it, you’re home—or, sometimes for me, in a house I just agreed to purchase—and you realize that your house has extra, unused square footage. I can guess what dream interpretation websites would say about the meaning of the hidden room: that you’re plumbing undiscovered aspects of yourself, something about the subconscious, blah blah blah, but what I always feel, in these dreams, is a simultaneous sense of freedom, possibility, and stupidity. I start thinking of all the things I’ll be able to do with this found space, and I start wondering how I could have been so oblivious as to have missed its existence all along.
As I have gotten to be an older and more seasoned writer, I’ve experienced a similar set of emotions as I’ve contemplated the extra rooms or Nowhere Spaces within my own prose. I’ve realized just how much of a story gets told off the page. Now, this obviously isn’t some new or surprising insight. We have a whole host of cliches at the ready to address the Nowhere Spaces in literature: we talk about reading “between the lines,” we scrutinize what occurs “in the white space,” and we analyze, as readers, “subtext”—all that matter and meaning “under the surface.” Metaphors abound, and Hilda’s Nisse aren’t necessarily a new and helpful symbol to add to the catalog.
Now, a confession: I’m a writer more inclined to rhapsodize on the joys of decadent expository play than I am on the necessity of austerity. I like elaborate character backstories, trivial ephemera, [End Page 131] digressions, and side quests. I often feel more at home tooling around in a character’s abstract thoughts than I do staging a straightforward scene. Having owned this predilection, this sometimes-weakness (or indulgence), I’m going to invite you along as I consider a craft topic that does not come so easily to me: the ways that the material we choose not to put explicitly into words contributes to the texture and meaning of our prose.
A good gateway form for exploring this topic, at least as it pertains to prose, is the epistolary story. An epistolary story operates as a found document, often divorced of context, addressed to a character who will only gradually, if at all, assume a concrete presence in the reader’s mind. A writer working in the epistolary form must strike a balance between plausibly representing a portion of...
期刊介绍:
Having never missed an issue in 115 years, the Sewanee Review is the oldest continuously published literary quarterly in the country. Begun in 1892 at the University of the South, it has stood as guardian and steward for the enduring voices of American, British, and Irish literature. Published quarterly, the Review is unique in the field of letters for its rich tradition of literary excellence in general nonfiction, poetry, and fiction, and for its dedication to unvarnished no-nonsense literary criticism. Each volume is a mix of short reviews, omnibus reviews, memoirs, essays in reminiscence and criticism, poetry, and fiction.