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Blanche Boyd's avatar

I think this is a smart and articulate piece about the limitations of memoir. I write narrative nonfiction as well as fiction, and I taught narrative nonfiction for many years, and my own work is not memoir, other than indirectly. My collection “The Redneck Way of Knowledge” was published in 1982, reissued in 1997 with an Introduction by Dorothy Allison, and is being reissued again in 1996, probably with another Introduction by someone else. My work has stayed relevant because I am not the subject, I am the lens.

The self as the lens, using what is autobiographical as a way to look at subjects that are not the lens, is imho much more powerful than attempting nonfiction that posits ‘objectivity’, a notion that seems false everywhere but in science and math. Using one’s own experience as a lens makes looking at ‘the other’ or what is not the self more accurate (and possibly quite moving and even funny), not less.

But simply writing about the self, about one’s own life and experience, may be helpful for the writer. However, it has to reach beyond itself to matter. Read Sloane Crosley’s “Grief Is for People” for a wonderful example of autobiographical work that reaches beyond her own experience. She is the lens, not the subject. There are many examples of this, and I may write a piece about it in my own substack, Blanche.substack.com, which is free and always will be.

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Jan johnson's avatar

I have a friend, a playwright, who created a character Creates a Path While Walking, who is, at his best self, fully in the present—lessons from many spiritual traditions, but particularly Buddhist and Native Americans. It seems to me if we create our path while walking through our days at best we are naming/seeing our experiences and feeling our way to integrating and sharing. Memoir can take many forms. Some of the earliest were religious, i.e. St. Augustine, Catherine of Sienna, etc. Certainly poetry. A book I particularly love is Joe Brainard’s I REMEMBER.’ Muriel Rukeyser’s THE LIFE OF POETRY. I also highly recommend to my clients and co-travelers to be ready to tell the truth as best you can, and if you can’t maybe you’re not ready to write this particular memoir yet. Mary Karr, whose amazing book THE ART OF MEMOIR, says it like it is in a blunt and honest recollection from her own life and from her teaching and other people’s memoirs. Her book taught me you have to be ready. I just want to reiterate that you have to tell your readers the truth and you have to have found a truth beyond or with the pain that buoys the reader. Whatever the form—poems, chronological narrative, your own story in non-chronological order, reporting with narrator/observer/reporter being also character. It’s a big tent.

Brooke, thanks as always for sharing your thoughts. I’m beginning a six week class teaching memoir in person in White Bear Lake MN at the Center for the Arts. I will be sure to share your writing and your intensive with the writers there.

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