|
Reflection
and Retrospection: A Pedagogic Mystery Story
The
Fourth Genre, Spring 2005
By
Phillip Lopate
In writing memoir, the trick, it seems to me, is to establish a
double perspective, that will allow the reader to participate vicariously
in the experience as it was lived (the confusions and misapprehensions
of the child one was, say), while conveying the sophisticated wisdom
of ones current self. This second perspective, the authors
retrospective employment of a more mature intelligence to interpret
the past, is not merely an obligation but a privilege, an opportunity.
In any autobiographical narrative, whether memoir or personal essay,
the heart of the matter often shines through those passages where
the writer analyzes the meaning of his or her experience. The quality
of thinking, the depth of insight and the willingness to wrest as
much understanding as the writer is humanly capable of arriving
atthese are guarantees to the reader that a particular authors
sensibility is trustworthy and simpatico. With me, it goes
further: I have always been deeply attracted to just those passages
where the writing takes an analytical, interpretative turn, and
which seem to me the dessert, the reward of prose.
So it startled me when I began to discover among my writing students
a fierce reluctance to allow their current, mature reflections to
percolate through accounts of past experiences. When I say writing
students I dont mean only undergraduates, but graduate
MFA candidates in creative non-fiction, who had dedicated themselves,
at great fiscal expense and personal sacrifice, to the lifelong
practice and, often, teaching of literature. Many already possessed
admirable stores of technique, talent and ability to engage the
reader, and I liked them as people; so I was dismayed, Ill
admit, when I found these students resistant to the activity of
retrospective thinking on the page. I had to guard against taking
it personally, as a rejection of my own innermost literary sensibility,
or as an omen betokening one of those generational cultural
divides that threaten to plunge middle-aged professors into
morose speculations that it is time to hang it up. Since most of
my students seemed to return my liking, and to be disposed to learn
from me, I decided to regard this particular reluctance impersonally,
as a curious phenomenon that I needed to understand better.
Over the course of the semester, many of them came around to what
I was pitching, and developed a greater fluency in handling the
double perspective. The only way to demonstrate this would be to
compare their compositions from the beginning of the term to the
endtrust me, it happened. Whether this change was merely a
temporary one, to please their professor, or a permanent shift,
I have no way of knowing. What interests me here is not to show
how some pedagogic method worked in unblocking their resistance,
but to analyze the reasons for that resistance in the first place.
I hope by doing so to reveal something about the current practice
of creative writing instruction, as well as the changing nature
of the memoir, and perhaps the difficulty of thinking itself.
My students wanted to walk the reader through their
experiences as they happened or, I should say, as they relived them
in memory. In the early, rough-draft stages, there are few things
more pleasurable than bringing up a memory and transcribing it directly,
like a wide-awake dream. Some got no further than accumulating these
verbal snapshots, and never did hit upon an overseeing narrative
voice to provide the necessary connective glue or thematic context.
But this is what they liked to do, transcribe memories as they came,
without (as they said) clogging up the narrative with
hindsight. To me, it was not a clogging-up but an essential counter-narrative:
that is, one strand reported on what happened, and another, equally
important, speculated on the meaning of those events, through the
ongoing dialectic between their prior and present intelligences.
But it was interesting in itself that they saw such commentary as
merely an interruption of the action.
This commentating knack is particularly valuable in the set-up,
in which the memoirist ought to tell us what year the story is beginning,
how old he or she was at the time, where the episode was taking
place geographically, and something of the protagonists family
background, class, religion, and dominant mental state at the time.
This crucial information is precisely what the fledgling memoirist
or personal essayist often leaves outostensibly because omitting
it will make the story more universal (the opposite is true: omitting
it will leave the reader frustrated and disoriented). Probably one
reason for the omission is that the fledgling non-fiction writer
does not know how to insert such information gracefully, and so
takes an active dislike to summaries. True, we have all encountered
summaries that can be deadly: the obligatory rehash of facts and
ideas, or the cursory condensation of years. The problem is not
with summaries per se but with badly written ones. The student memoirist
must be challenged to bring the most lively, idiosyncratic style
to bear on these summarizing, telling passages, so that
they will flow with personality, brio and active reflection.
Consistently, students who have taken many workshops, only to
land in mine, will point to just the interpretative, analytical
moment in a fellow-students work as the offending passage,
and assert that they could have intuited the same idea from the
actions and dialogue scenes, without its having to be baldly stated.
This I doubt, by the way; but they have been taught to pounce on
reflective prose as foreign matter. Even if it were the case that
they could have intuited the same insight strictly from scenes,
I still would want to encourage emerging writers to put into words
what they think about an experience being retold.
The non-fiction students reluctance to provide summary and
analysis shows the markings of that nefarious taboo of writing programs
everywhere: Show, Dont Tell. Leaving aside how
much this simplistic precept has validity even in fiction (consider
the strong essayistic tendency in novelists from Fielding, George
Eliot, Balzac, Tolstoy down to Proust, Mann, Musil, and Kundera),
I would argue that literary non-fiction is surely the one arena
in which it is permissible to tell. In personal essays
and memoirs, we must rely on the subjective voice of the first-person
narrator to guide us, and if that voice can never explain, summarize,
interpret or provide a larger sociological or historical context
for the material, we are in big trouble. We are reduced to groping
in a dark tunnel, able to see only two feet in front of us. (The
current fashion for present tense helps writing students sustain
the illusion that they are still in the dreamy trance-state that
a recalled memory resembles, even as it destroys the possibility
of judging its meaning through hindsight.) Now, I dont deny
it can be exciting to grope myopically in the dark, for a while;
but any autobiographical narrative of extended length may need to
vary its handling of time; to alternate here-and-now moments with
synoptic ones.
The objection voiced most frequently to my urging a double perspective
on memoir-writers is: But I didnt know any of that then!
My students seemed to feel they would be lying, or giving themselves
too much credit, if their narrators were to assert more understanding
on the page than their protagonists actually possessed at that period
of their lives. I quickly countered with just the sort of literary
argument you might expect: that their narrator and their protagonist
were two different creatures, and therefore the narrator would
know things the I-character didnt; that all of nonfiction
is an imaginative shaping of facts into a pointed narrative, and
distorts or lies by being highly selective, its object being to
attain a sense of literary, not literal, truth
.No dice. They
had probably heard it a dozen times already; but the kind of students
drawn to creative non-fiction usually retain a taste for the unadulterated
truth, and a naïve hope that here at last they will not have
to lie, so that when you tell them art is a lie or some
such cleverness, they look at you with these large disappointed
eyes.
Beyond that, they seemed convinced that the suspense
in their autobiographical narratives would be ruined if the insights
in their protagonists quest for self-knowledge were leaked
to the reader too early in the game. Students love to justify vagueness
in their writing by saying they dont want to give away the
mystery. I tried reassuring them that there would still be no end
of opportunities for suspense in the manipulation of narrative elements.
They would be exchanging one mystery for another. As in any story
that begins at the end (The Death of Ivan Ilych, say, or
Chronicle of a Death Foretold), the reader may know what
is going to happen, but not how. Besides, in autobiographical non-fiction,
it is more important for the reader to be apprised of the larger
facts of a case from the start, and then be led through the suspenseful
unraveling of what the writer makes of these factsmore important
for the reader to develop trust in a worldly, confiding, forcefully
eloquent narrative voice from the start, than to be placed in the
fumbling hands of a naive. The real danger was to leave the reader
feeling cheated by the writers withholding of key information.
Of course, all literary narratives involve deferring some
information to a later point, when it will have been set up to derive
maximum effect; but, just as mystery writers must obey certain unspoken
rules about how long to suppress evidence, so the diplomacy of the
memoirist is in knowing which facts can be happily deferred and
which will cause the reader to holler Foul!
For example, I had a student who was writing a memoir about living
with a multiple personality disorder (MPD). She claimed that because
she had only been diagnosed as such in her late twenties, she did
not want to kill the suspense by letting the reader
in on the secret before that moment when it would occur chronologically
to her protagonist in the narrativeroughly two hundred pages
in. And so, she had planned to write a series of narrative vignettes
that would show her youthful protagonist acting in bafflingly various
ways, à la Three Faces of Eve, and then provide the
diagnostic key, aha! In this way, she hoped to put the
reader through her own experience. I begged her not to do this.
Should the book ever find a publisher, I argued, the marketing would
give the secret away anyhow. Instead, I suggested she write an introduction
that would explain straightforwardly what MPD was, admit that she
had it, and then, at every step of the way, let her narrator offer
as much insight as she could about the experiences she had undergone,
and how she regards that younger self now.
To her and the others, I issued my challenge: I cannot wait
until page 200 for the intelligent narrator to arrive! The intelligent
narrator must be present from page 1 onward!
I also gave the example of the student writer who is erroneously
criticized in workshop for using words that his 7 or 9-year-old
protagonist wouldnt have known. This common, if primitive,
misunderstanding would have it that stories or memoirs from inside
a childs head must adhere to the age-appropriate developmental
vocabulary and syntax. The truth is that readers easily accept the
convention of a child-narrator using adult vocabulary; even semi-colons.
It would be tedious indeed were we forced to read a long story told
in the 500-word vocabulary and subject-verb-object sentence structure
possessed by a seven-year-old. What is important, in writing about
childhood, is to convey the psychological outlook you had as a child,
not your limited verbal range.
When did the protagonist figure out what she figured out, and
when is her narrator going to tell us? This became the personal
non-fiction workshops central question. One of the workshop
students actually took the trouble to verify what I was saying:
He went to the library, pulled out a dozen highly regarded American
memoirs from Benjamin Franklin to Lucy Grealy, read the first few
pages, and found that they had all employed a double perspective,
making use of intellectual hindsight. I was grateful that he had
not taken my word for it.
Some students were already willing to concede my point, but expressed
uncertainty that they could pull if off. When you ask writing students
to keep reflecting about the meaning of the experiences they are
recounting, they look panicked: You want me to think on
every page? Easy for you to do, but not us. They gravely
doubt that they can produce reflective language. Part of my job
is to try to convince them that they already have these thoughts
in them. They are constantly taking the measure of the distance
between their prior and present selves.
Some of this resistance to retrospection may be rooted in past
instruction. Early on in my own writing career, I was taught to
sneer, as at something impossibly old-fashioned and Victorian, at
the locution What I did not know then, but would learn at
a later date
We were discouraged from letting our narrator
peek ahead, since this semi-omniscient device, like
the address to the reader, might bring excessive attention to the
authorial apparatus and take the reader out of the story.
Post-modernism has since lessened the strictures against displaying
authorial self-consciousness in a text, but remnants of that old
bias against looking forward or back persist. I wonder why, since
there are few mental acts in life more common or natural than retrospection.
My students whimpered that they could not imagine pulling it off
in their own writing; it was hard to do. Granted, it may seem difficult
at first to modulate on the page between ones older and present
consciousness, to direct the mental traffic of a divided self. Taking
pity on my students, I reassured them that there are other ways,
beside reflective commentary, by which they might insinuate authorial
intelligence. They could also tweak the tonefor instance,
by employing a large, formal vocabulary and ornate syntax while
telling a story inside a childs head, or by using irony to
let the reader in on the truth, even when the protagonist doesnt
see it. The narrator might say, I was outraged that my inconsiderate
mama wouldnt buy me every Barbie in the store. Thackeray
employs such irony often in Vanity Fair, while taking us
into Becky Sharps conniving mind.
They were cheered at the prospect of specific techniques
they might learn, that could get them off the hook of having to
think directly on the page. Students are always happy to grasp at
techniques, just as I am often unhappy to give them out. I find
myself at such times in the position of a psychotherapist, waiting
for an analysand to commit to the painful work of self-awareness
and change, without shortcuts.
If students showed willingness to use indirect methods to insinuate
more worldly perceptions, I still wondered why they were so reluctant
to state, from their current intellectual grasp, what they made
of their younger selves. They reverted to the objection that it
would be a falsification of their earlier capacity to understand,
whereas I saw it as much more honest, because it better approximated
their mental outlook nowwhich was, after all, their actual
situation when writing. Could it be, I wondered, that they had a
narcissistic attachment to that ignorant younger self, so fragile,
so guileless, and wanted to protect it from the contamination of
intellectual sophistication?
I often tell my students literary non-fiction is one art that
has no use for naiveté: there are no primitives, no Grandma
Moses of the essay. This limitation causes me no pain since, growing
up, I was in a hurry to lose my innocence and achieve a disenchanted,
worldly wisdom as fast as possible. I sense, however, that many
of my students value innocence more highly than I do: they often
write what are, to me, sentimental essays about wishing they were
kids again, watching Saturday morning cartoons, free of adult cares
and responsibilities. So my eagerness to have them develop the most
adult, self-aware, intellectually ambitious voice on the page has
to contend against their feeling that idealism and sweet-naturedness
are bound up with a lack of acuity. I am thus asking them to be
cynical, to bite the apple from the tree of knowledge.
All literature professors are, to some extent, in this same situation
of trying to awaken their charges from a sentimental optimism about
life to the recognition of reality as a more tragically complex
business, through the study of great texts. We become the bringers
of bad news, connoisseurs of downers, and must seem
sadistic at times in that respect.
What must be remembered, however, is that pure innocence is a
fiction, as Freud taught us. Moreover, every person, no matter how
young, is inhabited by coexisting developmental layers: nine year
olds have moments of precocious cognition and startlingly shrewd
insight into people around them, and teenagers, when not being utterly,
stereotypically adolescent, find within themselves shards of their
forty-year-old mothers weary understanding, alongside fragments
of their doll-playing, six-year old selves.
Students also argued against retrospective reflection by saying
that it would take away from a pieces vulnerability.
They granted my criticism, in one case, that the writer lacked emotional
clarity, and was still in the resentful throes of a recent wounding
experience (being jilted), but they thought this vulnerable rawness
made the piece more interesting. Whatever my own classical, Apollonian
predispositions are, I registered the classs sharp valuing
of emotion over intellect, and their suspicion of intelligence itself
as icy, soul-destroying. They seemed to consider emotional restraint
unhealthy per se: repressive, ulcer-causing. Students often want
to write from and about their feelings. The problem with writing
about feelings is that when you are immersed in a feeling, the analytical
intelligence disappears, along with the context, and the I-character
becomes generic. I tried to offer my conviction that emotion and
thinking are not mutually exclusive but can coexist: passionately
argued thought can have an affective warmth, just as feelings can
be thoughtfully and delicately examined. I dont know if they
believed me or not, but I had to implant the idea.
In the students defenses of raw feeling, I also wondered
to what extent they were clinging to a victim role,
by shutting out the voice of adult judgment. To reflect deeply on
the wounds inflicted on oneself in the past might lead to an admission
of complicity in that suffering. As Kafka advised: In the
struggle between yourself and the world, you must side with the
world. But the impetus for many fledgling writers drawn to
autobiographical narrative is the need to recite a tale of abuse.
They persist in believing that they can claim the publics
attention only if they spoke with the authority of a victimized
outsider, as regards racial prejudice, gender bias, sexual abuse,
physical disability, multiple personality disorder, unloving parents,
and so on. While these existential particulars might be a promising
jumping-off point for the generation of material, there is still
the need on the memoirists part to create a complex, flawed
I-character and a satisfyingly self-aware narrator. I counsel against
constructing a narrative around ones victimizationalways
being in the right, more sinned against than sinningif for
no other reason than that the self-righteous protagonist becomes
repellent. But what if one really is a victim? demanded
an elderly woman graduate student, whose second husband was a philandering
louse. I replied that victim is partly a subjective
status: there are compacts stuck between cuckold and cuckolder;
there are people who overcome horrendous childhoods or bad breaks
to become whole, productive human beings, while others, raised in
relatively serene, loving households, sometimes turn into self-pitying,
psychically maimed adults. We do have some choice in what we make
of our trials, early and late.
Some of my students resistance to retrospective analysis
may have come partly from an unwillingness to relinquish their rage.
Alongside technical advice, I was urging them, I suppose, to move
from resentment and self-hate to self-amusement, or at least stoical
realism. Not that I have any right to rearrange their psyches in
this way, or the power to do so; but being a writing teacher is
never merely a matter of teaching writing. I have hopes for my charges
psychological well-being that go beyond their ability to write clarifying
prose. Still, the victim narrative has deep roots in our culture,
and so there was no way to lop off its head once and for all: it
kept returning.
Another fashionable narrative that I found myself having to do
battle with, in order to coax my students into subtler narrations,
was the Addiction Scenario. In this case, the pre-packaged insights
supplied by Alcoholics Anonymous and its twelve-step program tend
to supplant the impromptu, unorthodox reflections that might have
arisen in the writers mind, and to close down prematurely
skepticism and self-doubt. The memoirist under the sway of the Addiction
Scenario keeps corralling his or her material into the twelve steps,
and the narrative is forced to follow a lock-step progression from
darkness to light. In the first half, the addict is shown unaware
and in denial; then the addict submits to the authority of the detox
group, and the truth that emerges from that leads to illumination,
sobriety and faith. However helpful AA may be in coping with this
terrible illness, as a model for belletristic memoir its template
proves overly rigid. Denial is too crude an explanation
for the way the mind works, in undulating, aqueous layers of awareness
and repudiation of awareness. Humankind can bear very little reality,
T. S. Eliot may have famously warned us; but what scraps of reality
the mind does let in seem to circulate freely with the unreality
bits, rather than getting shunted off to a Denial safe-deposit box.
The addict turns out to be another version of the innocent, protected
from self-knowledge by the monster-substance that dominates the
cerebral cortex. But it was a writing student wanting to hold onto
her guilt who put up the fiercest struggle to my advocacy
of the double perspective. L., a graduate student whose thesis I
was directing, had been writing a memoir about her year of working
on a Native American reservation. When she started the year, she
thought she could make a difference in the kids lives, but
the rez took it out of her, and she left convinced that it was hopeless,
and guilty that she was abandoning the kids to a miserable life.
After the experience was over, she started to gain some theoretical
insight into how arrogant and unconscious she had been
in her initial assumptions, how colonialist were her feelings of
cultural superiority, and how much her disapproval of the adults
bad behavior on the reservation had been conditioned by her own
family history of alcoholism and abandonment. Well and good. She
wanted to tell the story in sequence, conveying her groping from
ignorance to truth. The pages she produced were a fascinating mélange
of powerful scenes and confusing, self-absorbed rants. When I pointed
out that certain of her narrators judgments about the characters
(especially the men, starting with her father) seemed unbalanced
or unfair, or that her protagonist seemed excessively clueless in
many situations, she said she meant it that way. She wanted
the reader to get a picture of her as an unconscious Lady Bountiful.
She was working toward that moment of revelation when the characters
limited insight and later hindsight would come together, in the
last third of the book; and there were some things she wanted the
reader to realize, through the narrative pattern, that the
protagonist or the narrator might never realize. I said this was
tantamount to using an unreliable narrator. She was fine with that.
I repeated the by-now familiar directive that we cannot wait until
P. 250 for the intelligent, worldly narrator to make an appearance.
It seemed to me she was hanging her younger self out to dry, and
not even allowing her narrator the dignity of clear thought, while
operating on the dubious premise that the pattern would deliver
these insights. This may be standard operating procedure for some
fiction, but it is hardly common practice in memoirs, where we do
need to trust that the narrator is leveling with us. I challenged
her to come up with one example of a successful memoir in which
the narrator was blinkered, but the reader got it anyway. She couldnt.
All the models she had been drawing on were, interestingly enough,
novels; but she continued to insist that she be allowed to be experiment
in this way. Far be it from me to squash a literary experiment;
she was welcome to pursue it, but I was not enthusiastic about her
chances of success.
Though perhaps you may feel that she ought to have been applauded
for attempting something so difficult, the problem was that I didnt
think she had the chops to pull it off, and as her teacher I felt
obliged to point out that she was making a much harder road for
herself. Beyond that, I have to admit I was shocked that someone
would so willfully and cavalierly discard what to me were the strengths
of the memoir form. Granted, like all literary forms it is still
evolving, and many elements coexist in several forms; but with L.s
thesis, it seemed to me, we had finally reached the dividing-line.
There are a few hard differences between fiction and non-fiction,
and, to my way of thinking, the intentional telling of ones
past experience in the voice of an unreliable, because less-than-insightful,
narrator was such a difference.
L.s was not the only instance of this practice. I had another
thesis student, M., who wrote a personal essay about his grandfather,
in which the narrator sounded smugly contemptuous of his whole family
and embarrassed by them, until the last page, when he suddenly had
a revelation that they were the salt of the earth and he was a creep.
M. thought he was doing something very hip, very honest,
by portraying himself as an asshole; but to me it was a disingenuous
stunt on his part to suppress his larger self-awareness until the
last page. He was not playing fair. He was creating an unreliable
narrator to make sense of his past, and he was evading the harder
task of convincing us that the narrator is trying as much as possible
to get to the bottom of the matter at hand.
One of the profound changes to have affected serious writing in
recent years has been the spread of fiction and poetry techniques
into literary non-fiction: the show, dont tell
requirement, the emphasis on concrete sensory detail and avoidance
of abstraction, the use of recurrent imagery as symbolic motif,
the taste for the present tense, even the employment of unreliable
narrators. There has always been some crossover between the genres.
I am no genre purist, and welcome the cross-pollination, and have
dialogue scenes in my own personal essays (as did Addison &
Steele). But it is one thing to accept using dialogue scenes or
lyrical imagery in a personal narrative, and quite another to insist
that every part of that narrative be rendered in scenes or concrete
sensory descriptions. A previous workshop teacher had told one of
my students: Creative non-fiction is the application of fictional
devices to memory. With such misguided formulae, is it any
wonder that students have started to shy away from making analytical
distinctions or writing reflective commentary?
The vogue for the new memoir has disguised the fact that that
popularity has been accomplished only through being colonized by
its sister genres, at considerable loss to its essence. Consider
what are the three most influential contemporary memoirs of the
last decade, certainly to my students: Angelas Ashes by
Frank McCourt, The Liars Club by Mary Karr, and A
Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius by Dave Eggers. McCourts
narrative stays within the childs point of view throughout,
conveying with considerable gusto, through dramatic scenes and vignettes,
the hurly-burly of that upbringing, with nary a single pullback
to retrospection. Karr begins her lively memoir in medias res,
at a scene of high drama that could function as a detachable short
story; she then surrounds her parent-characters with a Gable-Lombard
glamorous shimmer of cinematic detail, and ends many fragments in
a deep-image hush, sans explanation or interpretation. Eggers has
no hesitation ruminating, but his reflective passages are hedged
with a tongue-in-cheek air of parody, so the reader is never sure
when to take him seriously; and after the powerful losses detailed
in the first part, the memoir yields to a forlorn logorrhea that
casts about for some equivalent tragedy to give it shape, and, not
finding any, settles for post-adolescent mental hyperventilation.
All three of these memoirs, irresistible and justifiably popular,
re-enact the confusions of childhood and adolescence, offering the
reader entry into the heady, liberating play-space of the young
persons imagination, without much attention to the formation
of the persons intellectual judgment. (Joanne Beards
The Boys of My Youth is another recent, extremely popular
instance of this tendency.) As such, they contrast strongly with
the classic autobiographical literature of Saint Augustine, Michel
de Montaigne, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Edmund Gosse, John Stuart Mill,
Alexander Herzen, Thomas De Quincey, J.R. Ackerly, Virginia Woolf,
George Orwell, James Baldwin, Mary McCarthy, and so on. If McCourt,
Karr, Eggers and Beard represent the contemporary American model
of the memoir, then we are indeed seeing a mutation of the formthe
dramatic disappearance of the adult super-ego from the narrative
voice, and the stylistic take-over by the contemporary short story
and poem. On the other hand, we may note the continuing appearance
of highly reflective, essayistic memoirs in our time by writers
born elsewhere, such as V.S. Naipaul, Lorna Sage, Norman Manea,
and Doris Lessing, which maintain the genres appetite for
thought.
I would not want to speculate on what larger social forces in
our culture may be militating against the willingness to think on
the page. I have no sociological expertise or vantage point from
which to evaluate these large trends, nor any desire to play the
grumpy old professor who laments that his students no longer want
to read or think because television has shortened their attention
spans and pop culture has turned their brains to mush. On the contrary,
it seems to me that my students are often intelligent, certainly
no dumber than those thirty years ago, and touchingly eager to imbibe
whatever reading lists I throw at them. Where they do show hesitancy
is in making judgments. This reluctance may have something to do
with the way judgmental has come to be seen as a negative
trait, meaning: cross, close-minded and elitist. Spiritual advisers
and self-help guides instruct us not to judge our friends, colleagues,
parents, siblings, and (especially) children, because that critical
act will cut us off from empathy. Nevertheless, we continue to make
judgments about the people around us all the timeit could
even be argued that such judgments are a crucial first step on the
road to empathy. But in a culture where making judgmental pronouncements
is frowned upon as anti-social, the fledgling writer feels pressure
to keep these thoughts underground.
There is also an internalized fear of abstract thinking, period.
The initially salutary correction against abstract language (Dr.
Williams no idea but in things) has gone too far,
extending to a virtual gag order in students minds against
abstraction. The greater sensitivity that todays academy brings
to issues of stereotyping seems to have rendered writing students
preternaturally cautious, as though making any generalizations were
invidious. It seems to me obviously desirable for a writing style
to be able to move freely and easily from the concrete to the general
and back. As for debatable generalizations, when a workshop voices
exceptions to this or that generality in a fellow-students
piece, I point out that we are not in a court of law. I would rather
the emerging writer get into the habit of attempting sweeping generalizations,
even if they prove not to be true in every instance, so long as
they are enough true to stimulate thought. When Stendhal delivers
a witty epigram about jealousy, or Oscar Wilde about hypocrisy,
we allow for the standard deviation from the norm, meanwhile applauding
their efforts to think in larger terms about human behavior. What
is such wit, if not the formulation of a behavior pattern in a pithy
sentence? The ability to perpetrate condensed reflection is not
only granted to literary genius; such skills can be acquired by
the apprentice writer as wellfirst by bluffing, perhaps, but
eventually by repetition, the way a muscle is taught to stretch,
until it becomes a reflex. All it requires is for the emerging writer
to give him- or herself permission to try to think in wider terms.
The student memoirists avoidance of retrospection must finally
be seen as part of a larger reluctance to reflect in public. Modesty,
fear of failure and dislike of the stuff all play their part. Most
creative writing students have a surprisingly low estimation of
their intellectual equipment (this is true even of those who write
brilliant critical papers). They also refuse to believe, fundamentally,
that anyone really wants to know what they think. Share their traumas
and abuse stories and feelings, yes, but their thoughts, no. They
are deathly afraid of exposing that their innermost thoughts may
be banal. They imagine I am asking them to turn philosopher and
have Big Ideas, which they already know dont rattle around
in their heads. Frankly, I am not looking for Big Ideas. What I
mean by thinking on the page is something more quicksilver and spontaneous:
to question all that might have been transpiring inside and outside
themselves at the time, and to catch the hunches, doubts and digressive
associations that dart through their brains.
When I ask my students to put more reflective passages in their
autobiographical narratives, what I often get at first are pat sermons,
drawn either from contemporary morality or self-help culture, which
will tie their experience together with a neat diagnostic bow: I
realize now I had entered into a codependent relationship with Madge
or I saw I had intimacy issues. No, no, no, I say, thats
not it! I want you to figure out something on your own, some question
to which you dont already have the answer when you start.
Then you can truly engage the reader in the adventure of following
you, as you try to come up with the deepest and most unexpected
insights, without censoring. You must surprise yourself, and when
you do, it will make you elated and your prose elevated. What I
want, in short, is honestyhonesty that will cut through the
pious orthodoxies of the moment and ring true. There is nothing
more exciting than following a live, candid mind thinking on the
page, exploring uncharted waters.
In attempting any autobiographical prose, the writer knows what
has happenedthat is the great relief, one is given the story
to begin withbut not necessarily what to make of it. It is
like being handed a text in cuneiform: you have to translate, at
first awkwardly, inexpertly, slowly, and uncertainly. To think on
the page, retrospectively or otherwise, is difficult, in
the last analysis. But the writers struggle to master that
which initially may appear too hard to do, that which only the dead
and the great seem to have pulled off with ease, is moving in itself,
and well worth undertaking.
|