Sylvie is not knowledgeable about houses. Her inexperience
is understandable, as she lives a transient lifestyle, never staying in one
place for too long. As a newcomer to domestic life, she experiences a steep learning
curve for housekeeping. She often goes through the motions of homemaking
without understanding why or how to do it well.
The best analogy I can imagine for
Sylvie’s housekeeping is the music of a band called The Shaggs; Sylvie is to
housekeeping what The Shaggs are to music. Sylvie is a transient, forced into
domestic life by circumstance, and The Shaggs were three sisters forced into
music by their father. Sylvie has a surface understanding of the things people
do to maintain their houses, does not understand what purposes they serve. As a
result, she attempts to keep the house, but often does things that seem
bizarre. For example, she understands that houses are supposed to be swept, but
not where or why sweeping occurs, so she sweeps half of the ceiling and a door.
She also understands that people collect and organize things in their houses,
but not what they collect or where, so she stacks tin cans in the kitchen.
Similarly, The Shaggs had a surface understanding of how pop bands made music,
but not the precise things that made pop music sound good. For example, they
were aware that most bands had a rhythm guitar, but they did not fully grasp
the concept of rhythm. Many of their songs sound like they have no time
signature, and the guitar simply strummed whenever a word was sung. They also understood
that bands had multiple takes of their songs in recordings, and started over
when they made mistakes. When they stopped and began again during recording sessions,
the production staff was often baffled as to what they thought the mistake was.
However, The Shaggs are now beloved
by many for their unconventional, outsider approach to music. Some might
compare their music to a movie like “The Room:” so hilariously bad that it’s
good. Personally, I would compare their music to a child’s drawing: while it isn’t
“good” in the conventional sense, it can be an unusual and intriguing insight into
their mind. For example, the song “Who are the Parents?” with its strange
call-and-response lyrics, could tell the listener about the personal lives of
The Shaggs. Perhaps Sylvie’s housekeeping might also be praised for its
outsider approach. Though her work doesn’t effectively clean anything and would
give my mom a stroke, it is a fascinating and unique use of a house. Sylvie
eats in the dark, preferring to watch the sun rise and only let natural light
in. She opens the windows and lets in the elements, keeping neat piles of leaves
in the corners. She doesn’t understand that houses are meant to keep the
elements out, and she strives to make the house closer to nature. Ruth compares
Sylvie in a house to a mermaid in a ship, letting in the element the vessel was
designed to exclude.
The Shaggs predate artists like
Captain Beefheart, who intentionally made music which broke all the rules of
how to sound “good,” and whose seminal work “Trout Mask Replica,” was one of
the most critically acclaimed albums ever made. Frank Zappa infamously declared
that they were “better than The Beatles.” Similarly, could Sylvie’s housekeeping
be considered great in its creativity? It defies every rule of good
housekeeping. At a glance it appears to be a disaster, but perhaps it’s
secretly a masterpiece.
While I have never listened to the Shaggs music, I understand the sentiment of something being so bad it's good such as the room. For me, the thing about Sylvie that was so appealing was how she was so unconventional and not afraid to break societal norms at all. I think that by being an outsider to conventional society, Sylvie was able to critique society and its notion of permanence.
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