Allmark-Kent 55
in
Communion
, however, the animal’s actions are often violent. As I have
discussed,
Bear
demonstrates the human protagonist Lou’s failure to interpret
the actions
—or rather the
inaction
—of a male bear: “she mounted him. Nothing
happened. He could not penetrate her and she could not get him in. She turned
away. He was quite unmoved” (Engel 122). As Gwendolyn Guth remarks in her
chapter in
Other Selves
, “the bear remains a bear, a mystery, an inscrutable
other. He is neithe
r toy nor ogre but ‘lump,’ placidly unmoved by Lou’s attempts
to dance with him or mount him” (37). I argue that, like Felix, Lou is unable to
decipher the animal’s inaction as a form of communication. Rather than
understanding their stationary bodies on t
he animal’s
own terms
, Lou and Felix
see them as blank states upon which they can inscribe their own fantasies.
When the husky and the bear act unexpectedly, Felix and Lou begin to
comprehend the errors in their perceptions, yet both remain unable to
under
stand the animal’s meaning:
Slowly, magestically, [sic] his great cock was rising. […] She took her
sweater off and went down on all fours in front of him, in the animal
posture. He reached out one great paw and ripped the skin on her back.
At first she felt no pain. She simply leapt away from him. Turned to face
him. He had lost his erection and was sitting in the same posture.
She
could see nothing, nothing, in his face to tell her what to do
. (Engel 131-
2, emphasis added)
Significantly, however, Gibson and Engel do not provide insights into the husky
or the bear’s perceptions of these human-animal relationships. They remain
unknowable to both human characters and readers.
I suggest that
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