Sensational Kim Todd (popular books to read .txt) đ
- Author: Kim Todd
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In Cold Blood begat a New Journalism, tinged with amnesia, and not just in the reuse of an old journalistic term. It relied on many innovations of the late nineteenth-century reporters without acknowledging theyâd even existed. In a 1972 article for Esquire (âThe Magazine for Menâ), reporter Tom Wolfe expressed his frustration with an establishment journalism promoted by journalism schools with their focus on distanced objectivity. He found it staid and boring. The writers he liked, by contrast, were taking on what literary novelists of his day avoided: the social life of the great cities. They seized the mantle of realist authors like Dickens to capture the popular imagination: âBy trial and error, by âinstinctâ rather than theory, journalists began to discover the devices that gave the realistic novel its unique power, variously known as its âimmediacy,â its âconcrete reality,â its âemotional involvement,â its âgrippingâ or âabsorbingâ quality.â The writing he most admired could be termed âstuntsâ: John Sack going through army infantry drills, George Plimpton training with the Detroit Lions, Hunter S. Thompson hanging out with the Hells Angels. But Wolfe did what the stunt reporters could never doâcalled this kind of work literature, called it good. In his nonfiction manifesto the next yearâThe New Journalismâhe outlined the attributes he thought of as central to this formâa story told in scenes, a distinct point of view, ample dialogue, and use of status detail (which he defined in the Esquire piece as âthe everyday gestures, habits, manners, customs, styles of furniture, clothing, decorationâ that his subjects used to mark their social rank). It was the kind of writing Bly did so well.
One of the authors he held up as an example was Joan Didion, whose reporting on the Haight in San Francisco during the late 1960s had similarities to that of Nelson and Valesh as they visited tenements in New York and New Bedford. The stunt reportersâ language isnât as richâDidion pens an unmatched sentenceâbut the approach is similar. In 1895, in one of her first stories for the New York Journal, Winifred Black wrote of a five-year-old dying of alcoholismâa ruined liverâin the hospital: âLucia stood and watched the nurse with lack-lustre eyes. When I rose to go she held out her little hand. It shook like the hand of a man in the palsy.â Black then visited the family in their tenement home and summarized the conversation. The parents said, about the children: âWhy should they not have a little sup of good wine now and then, eh, to warm the blood? . . . Too much, that is bad, but who would give a baby too much whiskey? A drop now and again to soothe it? Ah, yes, that was without a doubt, the best.â In âSlouching Towards Bethlehem,â Didion wrote about a California five-year-old: âI see a child on the living-room floor, wearing a reefer coat, reading a comic book. She keeps licking her lips in concentration and the only thing off about her is that sheâs wearing white lipstick.
âFive years old,â Otto says. âOn acid.ââ
The quiet shock and condemnation are the same.
The voice-driven first-person narration that Wolfe championed in the 1970s, though not as new as he claimed, combined with effects of the womenâs movement and the civil rights movement to form another strand of this narrative-based nonfiction writing. The personal was political and, thus, worthy of notice. People who were not famous began to write about their lives. These works tended to be distinct from traditional âautobiographiesâ in that they skipped the parade of accomplishments in the lives of great menâcollege, marriage, careerâand focused on telling stories. They were memoirs. Maxine Hong Kingston wrote about the ghosts of the past that haunted her Chinese American childhood. Maya Angelou wrote about navigating racism and being assaulted as an eight-year-old. Annie Dillard described a year spent looking closely, ecstatically, at Tinker Creek in rural Virginia. Many of these memoirists were women, and so memoir became another ânot quiteâ literary form. It was too popular, too feminine. In Francine Proseâs New York Times review of The Glass Castle by Jeannette Walls, she described the âsensibility, the tonal range, the lyrical intensity and imaginative visionâthat distinguish the artist from the memoirist,â and concluded, âThe Glass Castle falls short of being art, but itâs a very good memoir.â
In the 1990s, building on New Journalism and increasing interest in memoir and personal essay, MFA programs began offering, in addition to degrees in fiction and poetry, degrees in âcreative nonfiction.â In his scathing article about the upstart genre, James Wolcott in Vanity Fair complained of the âslow drip of petty disclosureâ and the âbig, earnest blob of me-first sensibility.â He dubbed Lee Gutkind âthe Godfather behind Creative Nonfictionâ after Gutkind started an MFA track in creative nonfiction at the University of Pittsburgh, one of the first in the country. Once again, those credited with launching the genre were male, though many of the most successful practitioners were female. Meanwhile, muckraking had turned into investigative journalism, the most hard-hitting, respected form, generally coded as manâs work. Textbooks cited novelist Upton Sinclair and other male writers as its progenitors.
For example, in his book of interviews (and declaration of a new genre), The New New Journalism, Robert S. Boynton critiqued Wolfe for ignoring the debt of New Journalism to the reporting of the late 1890s. The introduction of The New New Journalism gave an overview of journalism history, praising nineteenth-century writersâ âartfully told narrative stories about subjects of concern to the masses,â ability to draw an âaccurate, sympathetic portrait of the âvicissitudesâ of city life,â experiments with dialogue and perspective, and âmuckraking exposĂ©s.â Who gets credit for all
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