Tools
Change country:

In Defense of Marital Secrets

Is bad behavior in marriage back? In fictional marriage, I mean. For years, heterosexual matrimony in American novels has seemed rather like it’s become a trap for the female protagonist: Unhappy or misunderstood by her spouse, she may act out or seek retribution; whatever her behavior, though, readers are meant to see that it’s attributable to her environment—in other words, that she’s not really in the wrong. For this plotline to work, the wife must be attuned, sometimes newly so, to herself, her unhappiness, her desires—a fictional extension of the powerful, if reductive, idea that women can protect themselves from harm by understanding their own wants and limits.

In daily life, of course, human desires and boundaries are changeable. The feminist philosopher Katherine Angel writes, “Self-knowledge is not a reliable feature of female sexuality, nor of sexuality in general; in fact, it is not a reliable feature of being a person. Insisting otherwise is fatal.” Self-awareness has certainly killed sex (and sexiness) in a lot of novels; it’s killed a lot of novels, in fact. A story without badness isn’t much of a story, and a story whose hero has perfect self-knowledge is a story utterly devoid of suspense.

Stories about marriage are no exception to this rule. There’s an unbearable flatness to any book whose protagonist is always justified in her actions—or, for that matter, always able to justify them to herself. After years of reading such dead tales, I found both delight and hope in the critic and memoirist Lauren Elkin’s debut novel, Scaffolding, a tale of two slippery adulterers who consider understanding oneself an impossible—or, at best, incompletely possible—task. Its protagonists, Anna and Florence, are psychoanalysts who live in the same Parisian apartment nearly five decades apart, in the 2010s and 1970s, respectively. Both women have crises of faith in language, in intellectualism, in their role as a therapist and as a wife. Neither wants to leave their marriage, but both launch intense, clandestine affairs.

Anna and Florence don’t totally understand their motivations for cheating. They act on impulse—in Anna’s case, for what seems like the first time in her life—and yet each seems to recognize that her affair is a voyage of discovery. Elkin writes these events as complicated adventures in wrong decisions—which, crucially, she neither justifies nor condemns. She lets her characters be bad yet ordinary, bad yet sympathy-inducing, bad yet worthy of a good life. In a sense, their badness improves their situation. Their lack of self-awareness, their tendency or ability to submit to their id, gets them closer to what they consciously want: some privacy within their marriage. Just as Scaffolding argues that we can’t know ourselves fully, it makes plain that we can never completely know one another—and that there’s nothing fundamentally wrong with that, even when it leads to bad behavior; even when it breaks our hearts.

Scaffolding is about feminism as much as it is about marriage. Florence, its ’70s protagonist, is a psychoanalysis student who spends her free time with consciousness-raising groups. She commits herself to flouting convention, even though her marriage is fairly traditional: She cooks and cleans, and is busy redecorating the apartment that she and her husband, Henry, inherited from her grandmother, who survived the Holocaust. Elkin swiftly makes apparent to readers that Florence’s feminist rebellion is also a rejection of the (largely Christian) “Franco-Français” society that deported her family—something Florence herself seems not to notice. She’s too busy thinking about the affair she’s having with one of her professors. Anna, in the 21st century, is less rebellious and much less happy. She’s suffering from depression after a miscarriage, spending hours immobile in bed, “as if a large sheet of cling film were pinning me in place.” Sexually, she’s shut down; her husband, David, is working in London, and she declines to go with him and struggles to engage in any intimacy when he visits her in Paris. Her only live connection—very live, it turns out—is with Clémentine, a feminist artist in her 20s who grows determined, and successfully so, to draw Anna out of herself and into the world.

[Read: How should feminists have sex now?]

But even as Anna begins recovering from her depression, its effect on her career is devastating. Formerly devoted to her analysis practice, she’s now stopped valuing her profession. “Why look in other people’s narratives for the metaphors, the gaps, the gaffes, the subtexts, that point you to what they themselves may or may not realise?” she asks herself. “Maybe the words merely point to themselves.” Readers see her apply this feeling to her own life, expending less and less effort on making sense of her behavior. Florence follows a similar trajectory, though as a result not of trauma but of going to Jacques Lacan’s lectures and having an affair with a Lacanian psychology professor. (Don’t worry: Although Lacan famously deconstructed language, which led, in his case, to highly abstruse writing, Scaffolding does not. Elkin’s prose is elegant and straightforward, with just enough experimentation to suit its ideas.) “We have to absorb what we’re learning without passing it through language,” she tells a friend—no easy job for a shrink. But both Florence and Anna learn to see conscious thought as a scaffold, with impulse and desire as the real, substantial building it encases and supports.

Florence tries and fails to explain the intensity of her feelings for the professor she’s having an affair with; she tells herself he’s a stand-in for something but has no idea what. At the same time, she’s mystified by the fact that the affair is a “big, big deal” to her when she’s out and about in the daytime, but the moment she returns to her “evening life” with Henry (a cheater himself, not incidentally), thoughts of her lover either vanish or fuel the sex life that is the core of her marriage. Secrecy and deception as aphrodisiac—this may not be moral, and yet, Florence decides, it’s “exactly how [marriage] should work, and exactly not how it is supposed to work.”

Anna, for her part, keeps more secrets from herself than from David. She nurtures an attraction to her neighbor Clémentine without permitting herself to notice, though the reader can’t miss it: Anna, otherwise cut off from her body, is so physically attuned to her friend’s presence that she describes her as “her own charged atmosphere.” It’s through Clémentine, in fact, that Anna reencounters an ex whom she desires so intensely, she sleeps with him almost instantly, even though doing so means betraying both David and Clémentine. Unlike Florence, Anna doesn’t attempt to explain her feelings or actions to herself. She knows her behavior is wrong, yet she also knows how alone she’s been, how solitary and isolated from her husband her depression has made her. Having an affair punctures her cling film. It might be bad, but it also returns her to her marriage and her life.

Scaffolding isn’t really suggesting that adultery and secrecy are good for a marriage. Rather, the novel treats these things as bad but normal and manageable—and preferable to a total loss of connection. When Clémentine cheats on her boyfriend, she tells Anna the cheating is a disruption that can be “absorbed back into the relationship.” Novels that leave wrongdoing out of their worlds imply that no transgression, marital or otherwise, could be that small, and that for a character to do something genuinely harmful would bring their whole life crashing down. Our broader cultural impulse toward hyperconsciousness is rooted in the same idea. It reflects an inability or unwillingness to tell the difference between big bad things and the small bad ones—and, by extension, to forgive the latter.

[Read: A grim view of marriage—and an exhortation to leave it]

Elkin puts some big badness in Scaffolding to draw out this distinction. Clémentine is part of a brigade of women who graffiti anti–domestic abuse messages on Paris’s walls. Their work presents a vision of feminism very different from the one in Florence’s consciousness-raising groups, which are all about knowing oneself: For Clémentine, protest is the only way women can resist misogyny. Anna’s first positive emotion in the novel is a response to the graffiti: “Aren’t they incredible?” she says, pointing one out to David on one of his visits from London. Florence, meanwhile, isn’t just involved in raising her own consciousness. She also keenly follows the Bobigny trial, France’s equivalent of Roe v. Wade. Both characters are highly aware of how dangerous life can be for women. Compared with unsafe clandestine abortions or spousal violence, some cheating means nothing; but compared with the flatness of Anna’s day-to-day life and the conventionality of Florence’s marriage, their affairs have immensely high stakes.

Scaffolding strikes this balance well. Elkin is deft but clear in reminding readers that there’s a distinction between badness and evil, or badness and hate. She writes Florence’s and Anna’s marriages as immensely loving ones, despite their holes and wobbles; in such relationships, the novel seems to argue, it is conceivable—though not guaranteed—that almost anything can be forgiven or absorbed.

Neither Florence nor Anna knows why they cheat on their husband. Perhaps more important, neither of them knows why they love their husband. In a novel less invested in psychological mystery, this would signal crisis for the fictional marriage. In life, it’s the most normal thing there is. Complete self-awareness is both an unattainable standard and a false promise, as is complete transparency with someone else, no matter what your wedding vows say or suggest. Accepting this fact is terrifying. It turns commitment into suspense. In reality, many of us prefer not to acknowledge that, which is more than reasonable: Who goes into their marriage wanting deception and drama?

Novels, though, are built to let us test-drive uncertainty—to feel it without living it. Where marriage is concerned, this is an important option for many of us to have. Marriage stories whose protagonists never slip up don’t give readers this option; if anything, they flatten our views of intimacy rather than letting us expand them through imagination.


Read full article on: theatlantic.com
Islanders have pieces to emerge among crowded Metropolitan Division
The perception that the Islanders are a franchise stuck in neutral is well-hardened after another season without winning a playoff series and another offseason without an overhaul of the roster.
7 m
nypost.com
Enraged Biden called Netanyahu ‘a f–king liar’ over Rafah invasion, told him he had ‘no strategy’: new book
President Biden privately raged that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was a “f--king liar” when Israel invaded Rafah — and seethed to the PM’s face that he had “no strategy,’’ a blistering new book says.
9 m
nypost.com
Addams Family Reunion! Stars of 1991 blockbuster gather at LA Comic Con 2024 — see the photos
Stars from the 1991 blockbuster movie "The Addams Family," reunite at the 2024 Los Angeles Comic Con.
nypost.com
Vapid Kamala Harris’ ‘60 Minutes’ sitdown shows why she’s avoided the press
Kamala Harris gave us a glimpse into her mind, and there’s not much there.
nypost.com
NHL Opening Night predictions: Odds, picks, best bets for Bruins-Panthers, more
Here are our Opening Night best bets to help celebrate the return of the NHL on Tuesday.
nypost.com
Kamala Harris Hits Trump Hard Over Hurricane ‘Lies’ on ‘The View’
ABC/screengrabKamala Harris pulled no punches on Tuesday when she went after Donald Trump for what The View co-host Ana Navarro characterized as blatant “lies” about the Biden administration’s efforts to help hurricane victims.“It’s profound and it is the height of irresponsibility and frankly callousness,” Harris said on the show in her first live interview since accepting the Democratic Party’s nomination for president. “This is so consistent about Donald Trump,” she added, “He puts himself before the needs of other [people].”Trump has said repeatedly on the campaign trail that the Biden administration was redirecting relief aid from Florida to pay for migrants. “Kamala spent all of her FEMA money—billions of dollars—on housing for illegal migrants,” he said at a Michigan rally. “They stole the FEMA money just like they stole it from a bank so they could give it to their illegal immigrants who they want to have vote for them.”Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
JetBlue drops hot meals from menu for coach passengers on transatlantic flights
The airline is dropping the temperature on food served to economy-class passengers on all transatlantic flights.
cbsnews.com
Joy Behar Claims Donald Trump Is Too “Scared” To Go On ‘The View’
"He doesn’t go on any interviews now because he’s afraid they’re gonna fact-check him."
nypost.com
Jenna Bush Hager Shares Hilarious Photo Of Herself Clubbing With LeBron James With A “Credit Card Tucked Into The Boob” On ‘Today’
"My mom might be embarrassed by that," she confessed.
nypost.com
Roblox shares slide after short-seller Hindenburg accuses platform of ‘lying to investors’
It is the latest target of Hindenburg, whose reports have knocked shares of companies owned by billionaire-investor Carl Icahn and India's Gautam Adani.
nypost.com
Gno kidding! How gnocchi became like Chipotle as the hottest grab-and-go food in NYC
These days, you can find some of the best gnocchi at a takeout-only spot in the East Village — no white tablecloths in sight. In fact, no tables at all.
nypost.com
Oklahoma amends request for Bibles that initially appeared to match only version backed by Trump
The request for proposal no longer requires the Bibles include U.S. historical documents such as the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution.
latimes.com
Trumpchella? Why he's holding a rally in the California desert, weeks before election day
Former President Trump is holding a rally Saturday at a polo field in the Coachella Valley, even though he will likely lose California by millions of votes.
latimes.com
Kamala Harris tells ‘The View’ there’s ‘not a thing’ she’d change about Biden’s record
The Trump campaign has tried to tie Harris to the Biden tenure, with the 46th president averaging 41.3% job approval, according to RealClearPolitics.
nypost.com
We found the best prices on Eagles Las Vegas Sphere tickets
Welcome to Sphere, such a lovely place.
nypost.com
2024 College football predictions, odds: Sam Houston will win Conference USA
So, which CUSA team has emerged from the non-conference portion of its schedule with momentum?
nypost.com
Fans, pundits believe Aaron Rodgers was behind Robert Saleh’s Jets firing
It didn't take long after Robert Saleh's stunning Jets firing Tuesday for the finger-pointing to begin.
nypost.com
Stream It Or Skip It: ‘Ranma 1/2’ on Netflix, Where A Martial Arts Prodigy’s Gender Swapping Curse Gets Him Into Hot (And Cold) Water
Decades after it aired on Japanese TV from 1989-1992, Ranma 1/2 returns with a fresh adaptation ready to make a splash with viewers old and new.
nypost.com
Floridians prepare for Hurricane Milton as enormous storm takes aim at Sunshine State
Ginormous Hurricane Milton is churning toward Florida’s Gulf Coast, where it’s expected to have a devastating impact when it makes landfall. Meteorologists are warning the monster storm could be one of the biggest hurricanes in history.
nypost.com
Hurricane Milton’s ominous growth leaves meteorologist emotionally upset: ‘Just horrific’
A Florida meteorologist and hurricane specialist became emotional on air while reporting on Hurricane Milton’s monstrous growth just days before expected landfall. Storm expert John Morales had to briefly pause in the middle of an NBC broadcast while discussing the storm raging over Yucatan, Mexico, and other states along the Gulf of Mexico.
nypost.com
Newly constructed $19.2M waterfront Nantucket home that sold last year may be demolished: ‘It seems like it’s kind of a waste’
A Nantucket mansion that sold for $19.2 million just months ago might soon be demolished now that it's in the hands of a new owner.
nypost.com
DeSantis urges Floridians to prepare for Hurricane Milton: ‘Time is running out’
Florida Governor Ron DeSantis on Tuesday told Florida residents to have a safety plan for Hurricane Milton that’s expected to make landfall with devastating impact. Milton was downgraded to a Category 4 with maximum sustained winds of 155 miles per hour — after topping 200 mph as a Category 5 on Monday. But Milton is...
nypost.com
NBA player R.J. Hampton admits he put ‘bruises’ on the mother of his child in shocking new video
“Shut the f–k up talking to me, bitch! Please!” the Delaware Blue Coats player told his ex, as their toddler son climbed a set of stairs nearby.
nypost.com
70% of bus riders in D.C. area don’t pay. Here’s what Metro is doing about it.
The transit agency is proposing a new funding model where jurisdictions will get more money for cracking down on fare evasion.
washingtonpost.com
Evidence that proves key witness in Adams case lied turned over by the feds: defense attorney
Federal prosecutors have turned over evidence showing that a key witness in the criminal case against Mayor Eric Adams lied, his defense attorney said. High-profile lawyer Alex Spiro, in a breathless statement released Monday night, accused the feds of slow-rolling the disclosure of so-called “Brady material” — evidence that could be favorable to a defendant....
nypost.com
Chris Olave’s brother complains about lack of usage during ‘MNF’ loss to Chiefs
Chris Olave's brother had the same thought as anyone hoping the Saints' No. 1 receiver would hep them win any fantasy matchups Monday.
nypost.com
Why King Charles is making the surprising decision to pause his cancer treatments
Doctors told the king that he could take 11 days off from treatment for the Australian tour, according to reports.
nypost.com
Australian woman accused of chopping up husband over love triangle, placing body parts in public bins
Sydney woman Nirmeen Noufl has been accused of committing one of the city’s most horrific crimes, with police alleging she murdered and dismembered her husband over a suspected love triangle.
nypost.com
I was shamed for taking my baby to a kid-free wedding — and was even told my daughter ‘doesn’t fit the family’
A 19-year-old mum said she brought her two-year-old daughter, Amelia, to her friend's child-free wedding and was taken aback by the groom's mother's comments. 
nypost.com
A$AP Rocky says son RZA inherited Rihanna’s ‘big forehead’
"I love my boy's big forehead! I loved it on his mother. Listen to 'Jukebox Joints,'" the rapper said of his 2015 song in a new interview with W Magazine.
nypost.com
Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce get cozy in suite after Chiefs’ fifth straight win
Monday's game was the third Chiefs contest Taylor Swift attended this season.
nypost.com
Harris and Trump's positions on Iran and Israel as tensions flare
The next president will have to manage a delicate situation as the threat of an all-out war escalates.
cbsnews.com
Biden Postpones Foreign Trip to Oversee Hurricane Milton Response
President Biden had been scheduled to leave for Germany and Angola on Thursday.
nytimes.com
MI5 spy chief says Russia and Iran are behind a 'staggering' rise in deadly plots
The head of MI5 says Britain is facing a staggering rise in attempts at assassination, sabotage and other crimes backed by Russia and Iran.
latimes.com
Melissa McCarthy Hilariously Crashes ‘Only Murders in the Building’
HuluAfter six episodes of mounting insanity, “Valley of the Dolls” offers its characters a much-needed reprieve. There are no gunshots or death threats here; there’s just the trio hanging out in the doll-infested home of Charles’ sister Doreen (Melissa McCarthy). Granted, this is arguably even scarier.(Warning: Spoilers ahead.)Like a lot of McCarthy’s comedic characters, Doreen is unhinged. She veers wildly from one emotion to another, is quick to resort to violence, and her horniness for Oliver manages to nearly ruin (and then save?) his relationship with Loretta (Meryl Streep). She’s a fun character, and her final heart-to-heart with Charles provides some heartwrenching insight to both of their dysfunctional childhoods. Still, it’s hard to get too invested, because she feels like a filler character. We’ve got a big murder to solve, so why are we spending so much time on a character who’s clearly not a suspect?Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
Chris Cuomo says ‘radicalized left’ Dems could sink brother Andrew if he runs for NYC mayor
Chris Cuomo, who was fired by CNN in late 2021, told his NewsNation audience on Monday that perhaps his sibling should pass on being Big Apple mayor.
nypost.com
Hungary’s Orban interrupted, accused of 'selling out' country to Russia, China during EU news conference
Hungary's Prime Minister Viktor Orban was interrupted at a news conference by an activist and municipal councilor from the opposition Democratic Coalition party.
foxnews.com
How Democrats Lost Ground on Voter Registrations Where It Matters Most
Democrats may have frittered away their edge in states they need to win
time.com
Former ‘Great British Bake Off’ Co-Host Sandi Toksvig Dishes On Her 2020 Exit: “Three Of The Longest Years Of My Life”
"I walked away from the biggest paycheck of my life, but that’s fine."
nypost.com
Horseback rider disappears in Montana as investigators find horse, cellphone
Meghan Rita Rouns, 27, was last seen alive on Friday before she went riding in near Bozeman, Montana. Although her unaccompanied horse and phone have been recovered, she has not.
foxnews.com
Kamala Harris tells 'The View' she can't think of anything she would have done differently from Biden
Vice President Kamala Harris told "The View" that she couldn't think of anything she would have done differently than President Biden in the last four years.
foxnews.com
Woody Johnson: Why I fired Robert Saleh as Jets coach
Woody Johnson had seen enough.
nypost.com
Chappell Roan savagely calls former teacher a ‘bitch’ onstage after backlash for canceling shows
Chappell Roan went in on her former theater teacher in an explicit intro during her song, "My Kink is Karma," at the 2024 Austin City Limits Music Festival.
nypost.com
My Stay-at-Home Wife Was Supposed to Go Back to Work. Instead She’s Upending Our Family.
It’s like every bit of reason has left her head.
slate.com
Megyn Kelly Rages at ‘Call Her Daddy’ in Sexist Rant: ‘Need to Shower’
Brendan McDermid/ReutersConservative pundit Megyn Kelly raged over Vice President Kamala Harris’ controversial decision to appear on the women-oriented podcast Call Her Daddy this week, calling the press tour stop the “presidential equivalent of a visit to the Amsterdam red light district.”Kelly kicked off the unhinged rant Monday edition of her SiriusXM show with strong words for the Democratic nominee, who would be the first woman to sit in the White House if she wins in November.“I want to start today with the total abandonment of American women,” Kelly said, repeating in a howl: “Total abandonment.”Read more at The Daily Beast.
thedailybeast.com
Kamala Harris Blasts “Selfish” Donald Trump For His “Lies” On ‘The View’: “People Are Exhausted” 
Harris said Americans are "ready to turn the page and chart a new way forward."
nypost.com
How Donald Trump Ignites His True Believers
There is a logic to Donald Trump’s dangerous pattern of false vilification, writes Jeffrey Sonnenfeld.
time.com
Dodgers' Walker Buehler target of robbery at Santa Anita Park
Los Angeles Dodgers star starting pitcher Walker Buehler was reportedly the target of a robbery at Santa Anita Park in California. His watch was stolen.
foxnews.com