lesbian magazine Lesbian Magazine  lesbian personals
lesbian dating
Subscribe Shop Advertise CommercePersonals Travel Stories Community DVDS
  lesbian personals  lesbian magazine
 lesbian personals Home : stories : big issues : Dorothy Allison: The Value of Redemption

Dorothy Allison: The Value of Redemption
 
Written by: Kathleen Wilkinson

Dorothy Allison says it astonishes her when people pay attention to our stories--queer stories, working-class stories, stories of the abused, despised and disenfranchised. "The world don't wanna know...it's fucking America."

For Allison, it is the poor and reviled women of small Southern towns that beckon her. Still many of her fans want her to write stories about more familiar lesbian characters. "I'm completely aware that people would like me to write a love story. It's just that when I write a love story you probably are not goin' to be able to tell. I don't believe in romance in that sense. I actually believe romance is almost as much work as raising children."

Allison, 48, is committed to both--she has a son, Wolf, and a 10-year relationship with her partner Alix. "I'm the longest married woman in my family. I guess it was serious when we put them rings on. I put one in her left nipple and she put one in my pussy and ever since then we felt like we owned a piece of each other."

But her life in the Russian River area of Northern California and now San Francisco has not been the focus of Allison's novels so far. "It's an illusion that writers have a lot of choice about what they write," she explains. "Your stories are your stories. They're the only ones you can really tell, and if you try telling ones the world would like you tell, you'll do it badly."

The stories that she tells so masterfully hark back to the brutality of her childhood in the rural South and the women who loved but could not protect her from her violent stepfather. Allison made that world jump off the page in her much-acclaimed, best-selling novel Bastard Out of Carolina. Her newly published novel, Cavedweller, already on the New York Times bestseller list, moves forward in time, but is still very much an effort to understand the struggles of women--young and old--trying to make their way in the rural South. "I write who I can write--people I can understand. I can understand deeply wounded, hidden kinds of girls," she says.

Delia Byrd, the main character in Cavedweller, has committed an "unforgivable sin"--she's a mother who abandoned her children. She does not find herself in the same grinding poverty as, say, the Boatwrights in Bastard. "She has a whole lot more possibility than most working class girls," Allison says. "Delia's sources of being despised are distinct from her birth."

Despite society's judgment, Delia attempts to earn her daughters' forgiveness and to forgive herself. "I grew up in the Baptist South where the notion of redemption is, 'Jesus speaks to ya heart and ya washed clean,'" she drawls. "I do not think it's that simple. I think Jesus can speak to your heart a whole bunch and it might not make no difference at all."

A self-described Zen Baptist atheist, Allison says that her idea of redemption comes from seeing people close to her recovering from alcoholism. "I've watched people redeem their lives. It's actually cleaning up behind yourself. It's a lot of hard work and you have to do it every day. You gotta keep workin' on it, which is how I think about Delia. Delia sets out to redeem herself. It ain't easy. She has to pay a huge cost. She's the cavedweller. She buries herself alive to save her girls and it's worth it to her. It ain't simple."

To the contrary, the idea that salvation comes from a single moment of divine intervention infuriates Allison. "It's such a con job. I knew men and women who were geniunely evil, who had this little secret--on their deathbed they would embrace Jesus and it would all be okay. It ain't okay."

It's also not okay with Allison that so many poor young women don't have a chance in this society. "I think if you look at Dede, Dede has no way out. She's clawing at her own skin to get out of Cayro and do something, but she doesn't have her mother's talent. She's not no gorgeous lil' thing that's going to run off an' be Miss America. She's just a hard-headed, practical girl, sharp enough to see how much trouble she's in, but not sharp enough to do a whole lot about it. Dede is most of the girls I grew up with, and a piece of me. I managed a convenience store," she laughs. "I had sharp eyes."

A long-time feminist, Allison sees sexism as part of the problem. Dede loves to drive. "You give her a truck, she could do anything. But nobody's going to give her a truck. Christ, I know women who would have given their teeth to have been able to drive, that was what they knew they were meant to do. And it's only in the last few years that it's even been possible. Most of the women long-haul drivers are married or else they're pair-bonded with men. Sexist is not enough of a word for how that industry runs--we're talking patriarchy of engines."

While the world doesn't recognize the talents of women like Dede, it's quick to judge their shortcomings. "Dede has this little weakness of the flesh that causes her to be held in contempt--she never saw a boy she didn't wanna try. I never saw a girl I didn't wanna try," Allison adds with a devilish grin.

Allison's ardent love for women isn't entirely left out of this novel, either. Like Bone from Bastard, the youngest daughter, Cissy, is a budding dyke, and like Bone, Cissy doesn't understand herself or her own lesbianism. "I think one of my jobs is to show people different kinds of lesbians," she says. In some ways, Cissy's future beyond the end of the novel provides the greatest promise for the book. "I have this whole fantasy of Cissy going to UCLA, especially since the novel ends basically in 1991, and things are going to be so different when she finally hits California....I find that deeply satisfying."

Allison actually wrote much more about these characters than was included in the novel, but the arc of this book is Delia and redemption, she says. When she's finishing a book Allison totally immerses herself in writing. "I work two or three days at a stretch," she says. "I just pull the curtains and work, but I hate being alone, so I leave the TV on with the sound off." At the end of her work on Cavedweller, "one night, way in the middle of the night, the movie [Bastard] came on. I went up to turn it off, because I can't watch it, and instead, I wound up [turning] the sound on. It's not as bad as I first thought."

Allison had originally sold the rights to Bastard because she needed the money and she thought that, as people told her often happens in the industry, the movie would never be made. "This is a story that if done badly I'da had to kill somebody...the whole possibilty for gratuitous violence, the eroticization of the beaten child, [which] is deeply offensive to me."

Allison was reluctant to talk about Bastard when the film first came out because Ted Turner objected to the graphic depiction of child abuse and refused to air it on TNT, nearly preventing its release. "When the whole shit hit the fan and Ted Turner threw his little hissy fit, there was no way I was going to talk about where the movie had its shortcomings."

Overall, Allison is generous with director Anjelica Houston's work. "Actually, considering who she is and where she came from I think she did a damn fine job." And she has high praise for some of the actors. "The kid was terrific and Daddy Glenn was terrific, and any movie that makes me related to Lyle Lovett is all right."

Allison was also suprised at the passion of the people working with Houston. "I don't think I talked to anybody in that production company that didn't cry on me. They were just so sincere, and they loved the book so much, and \they were trying to do so good, and they didn't have a clue where they were falling short," she laughs.

But fall short they did. Not in the depiction of the incest--"she got that beautifully. You can't watch that rape scene without the hair on the back of your neck comin' up, and she did it in a way that it's never been done before. She made it completely plain what was going on. This is not sex; this is about destroying that child."

Where the movie failed was in its typically Hollywood, sentimental view of poverty--which is exactly the perception that Allison is trying to change. "[Houston] didn't get the family. She didn't understand about working-class people. In fact, she has a romantic notion of it." A good example is the opening scene with the Boatwrights riding in a beautiful, classic '50s car. "Where's the one with the bumper tied on?" Allison laughs.

At one point while they were scouting for location, Houston called Allison. "She said she couldn't believe it, 'You go in and the women are as large as easy chairs and they have couches that have the indentations from the women's butts.' She should've shot that!" Allison exclaims. "She had to shoot all them skinny women."

Allison was also disappointed by the large sections of the book that were omitted, including the lesbianism. "I miss desperately the parts they didn't use. They left out all the parts where Bone has agency, where she's not a victim. I complained about that with the script, but they didn't get it. I kept thinking I must not've done the book good enough if they didn't get it, so I'll try harder next time."

Despite this personal disappointment, more and more people seem to be "getting it." As her commercial success grows and her work with Dutton continues, her view of the world has shifted. About corporate publishing, she admits, "I expected that they'd all be evil or else why are they there, and I was wrong. Some of them will look at you and only see a line on an adding sheet. How many books can she move in which market? But the people I work with on a daily basis, my editor, I adore." The biggest surprise for her is that some of the corporate executives have actually talked with Allison about her books with real passion, she says. "It's kind of startling. It means that what I used to believe about the world being so divided up and entrenched is not as accurate as I had thought."

Still, Allison has not come so far from her roots that she completely trusts her success, either. She swears she won't sell the movie rights to Cavedweller as long as she can afford not to. But she hastens to add that one never knows. "I keep it in mind that I have certain skills I can always go back to," she says, though she confesses she can't work as a waitress anymore. "My back's just not strong enough, and I'm too damn old."

One finds it hard to believe that Allison would have to go back to waitressing. Her talents are many, but perhaps it is her refusal to pay lip service to the status quo that is her greatest gift--especially for those who have felt society's contempt because they are lower class or somehow different. "Being queer is a piece of it. And there's all kinds of queer, not just lesbian and gay, but essentially strange, like Nolan [in Cavedweller]. He ain't no faggot, but he's essentially queer, and comfortable with it in a way this culture doesn't understand--and fears."

Her love for the stubborness and perverse determination of women who've had to struggle to find "a way out of no way" is validation for many. "There are only supposed to be certain people who are worth the trouble and you basically have to be middle class or exceptional in some way, really beautiful or really smart or be kissed by Jesus for god's sake--the rest of us, we're background noise and our stories aren't important. And I just don't believe that. I think the working class is the story of this country. The rich and the upper class have been riding on our asses for hundreds of years, and I don't want to see us made over into a story that glorifies them. Our stories are glory enough."

» Subscribe Today!


Search Curve      
search our shop and forums, too!


more in this category
Our Fashion Issue Buyer’s Guide
L Word Creator Ilene Chaiken Dishes on Dinah
A Q&A with Groundspark's Debra Chasnoff
A Queer Three-way
A Sweet Time at Chicago's World of Chocolate
a wo’mn called sir
Ali Liebegott's Beautifully Worthless
All Bettes Are Off for Jennifer Beals
An Embodied Politic: Queer Performance Artists with Disabilities Get Sexy
Are You Marriage Material?
Arty Fishal: King of Daytime TV
Atlanta Pride Gets a New Time and Place
Author Louise Sloan Gives Some Mothering Advice
Author Shelley Halima's Diverse Dramas
Babes Kicking Balls
Back to School: 100 Great Books to Buy
Behind the Scenes of Dante's Cove
Beyond the Women's Room
Books to Give Thanks For
Breaking Free of Hierarchies
Bringing the Holiday Cocktails Home
• Bringing Up Baby
Business Books: Your Money, Your Career, Your Life
Butch by any Other Name
California Lifts Ban on Gay Marriage
Can Love Bridge the Gap?
Can’t Keep Melissa Etheridge Down
Celebrities Support the Trevor Project
Cha-Cha-Changes: 15 Years of Curve
Check out Our New Look
Confessions of a Doggie Dyke
Court Says:
Crime Writer Val McDermid on What Makes Her Books Tick
CURVE Editor Diane Anderson-Minshall Wins Award from POWER UP
Curve Rocks Peach Pride
Dangerous Mix
Day Trips from Mecca
Detective Story: P.I. Digs Up Dirt on Murderers, Cheats and Girlfriends
Diana Cage Tackles the Humorless Lesbian Myth
Dinah Heads to the Lakeshore
Director’s Cut
DIY Holiday Ornaments Make Excellent Gifts
Do as We Say, Not as We Do!
Don’t Cha Wish Your Girlfriend Was Hot Like Me
Dorothy Allison: The Value of Redemption
Drive Like the World Is Ending
Ethel Smyth's The Wreckers
Evening the Playing Field
Fantasy Author Kerrigan Valentine Enchants Us
Fear of a Black Lesbian Planet
Fifth Annual Gender Odyssey Addresses Families
Fighting to Keep the Faith
Finding Her Inner Stripper
Follow the Leader
Get Your Drink On
Gifts They Won’t Forget
Girls Who Love Boys (Clothing, That Is)
Going Small-town for Pride
Happier Holidays
Happy Freedom to Marry Day
Has Jodie Foster Come Out?
Have a Gay Valentine's Day!
HomoRevoluton Tour Wraps in Ohio
Inside Girl Bar and Dinah Shore with Sandy Sachs
Inside the Director’s Studio
Inside the Director’s Studio
Inside the Director’s Studio
Interview With Author Lauren Sanders
Interview with Poet Amy King
Is Marrying a Man the Answer?
Janet Jackson Exclusive Interview
January 2006 Book Reviews
Joan Nestle Rocks!
Just Married
Keeping the Faith
Kittredge Cherry Presents Controversial Art in New Book
l.a. Eyeworks’ Founders Make Specs Cool
Laurel Holloman Gets Personal About Tina
Lesbian Activists the First to Wed
Lesbian Choreographer Anne Bluethenthal Explores Carino
Lesbian Phenomenology
Lesbian Rights Activist Del Martin Dies
Lesbian Undercover
Making School Safe for Queer Kids
Mean Girls on the Internet
Michelle Tea Talks About the Next Generation of Sister Spit
Micia Mosely’s Hilarious “Where My Girls At?”
No Wave Pioneer Lydia Lunch Talks About her Latest Book
Not Like Everyone Else
Our Fight for the Right to Marry
Peach: The Official Women's Events of Atlanta Pride
Queer Books Bloom in Spain
Raising the Bar: How the Venerable Lesbian Bar Got Us From There to Here
Readers Wanted: Meet Our Editor
Remembering Jane Rule
Riding a Bi-Cycle
Romantic Leads
Ruth Ellis
Saving Our Herstory
Screenwriter Guinevere Turner Talks About Her Latest Work
Sexual Healing: Staci Haines
Sexual Revolutionary
Sheryl McDougald Takes on Many Forms
Show Me Your...Hands?
Sister Outsider Revisited
Skip the Gym, Work Out at Home
Steakout
Strip Artist
Team G.L.A.M — America Fireball Run
Tell Us Why You Think Harry Potter Is Gay and Win a Copy of The Order of the Phoenix
Telling Herstories
Ten Powerful Lesbian Doctors
Ten Reasons We Love Vermillion Lies
The Best Books for Valentine’s Day
The Clothes That Make the Wo/Man
The Exorcist
The Invisible Queer Muslim
The Man for Us?
The Top 15 Companies for Lesbians in 2004
The Wedding Dance: Your Guide to Being a Dancing Queen
Theater Books Sure to Get Your Inner Thespian Revved Up
Too Much Drama? Never. More of the Best Lesbian Theater
Top Ten Reasons We Love Holly Riddel
Vote for Curve’s Founder and Publisher Frances Stevens and SF’s Fillmore District
Warm up Your Winter
We Love Monica Nolan’s Pulp Fiction
What If I Don't Like Anyone?
What Type of Lesbian Are You?
When We’re 64
Where to Find Her
Why Lesbians Love La Lucha
Why McCain Shot Himself in the Foot with Palin
Why You Should be Watching The Wire
Without Reservations: Native American Lesbians Struggle to Find Their Way
Women Helping Women
Women’s Work
Youth Camp Says It's OK to Be Gay


spacer
in our shop

Subscribe to Curve
Order back issues
Lesbian videos
Pride t-shirts & caps


spacer





curve personals
curve personals
Meet her on Curve personals.

Sign up for our FREE Email Newsletter
Email:

Email Marketing you can trust



Try looking online for the woman of your dreams, on Curve's lesbian personals.

Email Newsletter    Link to Us    About Us    Contact Us    Search

© Curve Magazine 2000 All Rights Reserved.
The content on this website is copyrighted by Curve Magazine and may not be reproduced in any manner
without written permission of Curve Magazine.