10 August 2006

God is dead? No!
A zombie, resuscitated by factmongers,
he terrorizes Americans who are caught reading “shit!”

Dimtri Anastasopoulos asked me to post the following piece on the state of so-called fiction and "non-fiction" in the U.S., and, well, it's all my pleasure.

Lance

==

This is a long diary (part of my ranting of late on non-fiction) which casts an eye at differences in genres and reading in the US and Europe.

Recently I’ve been god-talking with a lot of friends, and we’ve been wondering, why is it a huge swath of Americans seem more intent on propping up God than ever before? The fact that this is happening alongside the dominance of non-fiction in the publishing world is NOT a coincidence, I offered. And then I set to trying to explain what the hell I could possibly mean by this. So I decided to write a diary.

Religion is not really a problem, nor are the religious a problem, nor is God a problem. Instead it's our certitude in the knowledge produced by religion that is a problem. When God is a zombie, when he's been resuscitated and forced to feed on our brains, he’s a problem. As well, I’d venture to say, if religions or religious beliefs didn't exist, we would very likely have groups of people who gravitated toward the kind of “certified” knowledge that religion produces anyway. I'm talking about dogmas of all kinds, ideologies, cold hard facts, man. I'm talking about politicians, gurus, hell even historians.

I'll try to bring together a lot of my reading over the last few months into this one diary to explain a cultural difference regarding how Americans deal with information (or facts) in comparison to others, notably Europeans.

Last summer, the novelists VS Naipaul and Ian McEwan were quoted in the NY Times as saying that fiction is dead, that they no longer read fiction, that they always turn to non-fiction first because in this day and age--post 9/11, Iraqi War--what we need most is to come to grips with facts, with the truth, we need knowledge, and delving into unreal fictional realms is just a waste of time. All counterarguments to these statements in letters-to-the-editor (from some well known American literary types) took the Naipaul/McEwan argument head-on. In other words, they tried to preserve a space for fiction even in these harrowing times. Me, my response was to take VSN/IM at face value, and ask, “OK, just what KIND of information are you interested in? In other words, what do you want to know? And why?”

The basic idea behind the recent assaults on fiction and poetry in America (more on this below) is that, in terms of facts and information, fiction and poetry are valueless. They provide very little of either. Clearly, even famous novelists like VSN/IE were looking for a little certitude, knowledge of the so-called world. So, I asked myself, is there a kind of knowledge that fiction can be responsible for? What kind of information can fiction provide us? Does it fill the gaps that other disciplines can't? Surely, I’ve never read a case study as intriguing as the psychoanalysis of Richard Nixon I found in Robert Coover’s “A Public Burning,” or the look into Hitler’s young adulthood that I discovered in Beryl Bainbridge’s “Young Adolf.” This was a form of knowledge, wasn’t it?

And what of Bruno Latour’s “Aramis, or the Love of Technology”? What was this book? I saw memos cobbled together into a weird narrative about a personalized subway system for Paris. This is science-fiction, no? What kind of information does this “novel” provide me? What about JG Ballard and his use of a medical paper on plastic surgery? Ballard’s plastic surgery chapter in “The Atrocity Exhibition” produced a truly gruesome and horrific fiction that sets the horror genre on its ears.

Mostly I asked myself, what is this so-called category “non-fiction” which has usurped the province of fiction in America?

JM Coetzee was in my town recently and he offered an anecdote about the American literary scene which was very telling. He informed the audience (well, his intention wasn’t to inform, he was just talking) that “non-fiction” is a very unnatural and strange genre indeed. Coetzee said that the trilogy that was being marketed in the US as his autobiography was being sold elsewhere around the world as his novels. Fictions, in other words, or autofictions as some in the literary world have come to know them. His explanation for this was simple. The non-fiction category as a genre doesn’t exist anywhere else.

There’s a very good reason for this. The category of “non-fiction” writing is an academic category born in the MFA creative writing programs in American universities in the 1960s. When fiction writers and poets moved into the academy after the GI Bill, they were immediately accosted with the demand that they had to have at least one “toe” in the real world. The Harvard critic, Roman Jakobson, upon hearing that Harvard was hiring a writer to teach writing, remarked, “What’s next? Are we going to hire elephants to run the zoo?” Writers quickly discovered that the newborn genre “non-fiction” would satisfy the academic powers that be. In my opinion, this move vouchsafed our reason for being at all. You can’t employ people who are only good at making “shit” up. In fact, the very designation derives from Truman Capote’s pronouncement that “In Cold Blood,” his recounting of the horrific slaughter of a Kansas family by two drifters, was a Non-Fiction Novel. The writing programs in the US took this idea and ran with it. 40 years later, the publishing industry in the US is dominated by so-called non-fiction works. The term has become naturalized in the US. No one remembers the time before non-fiction, no one remembers its roots. Non-fiction is a kind of new religion here. No one even questions its very awkward designation. Non-what? Just come out with it man, what is your genre all about? Don’t pussyfoot around by telling me what you are NOT. Tell me who you are. You see, behind this Non, there’s a very subtle deceit which has come to dominate American culture, and that deceit is that someone has a certitude of knowledge which--while it can’t be called the “truth,”--we can just the same pretend that it’s very close to the God-awful truth, simply because--at the very least--it’s NOT a lie. That’s what this category of non-fiction reading has become in the US. A sly way of saying, this is not a lie. Initially, it was only supposed to designate a form of writing that presented real events through the use of literary writing techniques which were until then limited to the genre of fiction. If you look at American writing pre-Capote and post-Capote, there’s a sea change in style. There is no history, essay, or news reporting that incorporated fictional techniques the way that Capote’s form of non-fiction did. Here and there we might find such narrative techniques being used in literatures around the world, but elsewhere such writing is never categorized as “history” or “news.” Genet’s “Miracle of the Rose” or Von Rezzori’s “Memoirs of an Anti-Semite” or even Henry Miller’s “Tropic of Cancer” are treated as works of literature. Not “real events.” This, in a nutshell, is the categorical mistake the publishing world is making in the US.

This must be significant, no? That Coetzee is publishing his trilogy in Europe as a novelist but in the US he’s writing about himself, supposedly? Two continents of people are reading the same text differently, apparently, or so I’m told by the marketing/publishing industries on either continent. I imagine this is true of a lot of books. For instance, an American who reads Peter Handke’s “A Sorrow Beyond Dreams” (a fiction about Handke’s mother’s real-life suicide) may have a very different understanding from it than a reader who is not repeatedly asking the question--in knee-jerk fashion as an American probably would--“did this really happen?” Instead, the latter reader would probably be more interested in the question, “how does a sensitive writer like Handke perceive his mother’s suicide?” Another example: in the late 1940s, a small novel was published in Italy titled “Kaputt.” It was written by Curzio Malaparte, pseudonym of one Kurt Erich Suckert, the Italian Ambassador to Croatia during the Ustashe period. In the novel, several gruesome events were described, events which would resound in the Balkans as historical facts for the next 50 years. Suckert used the real names of leaders and generals he encountered in Croatia, and thus, the events in this novel--as it is labeled--bore the weight of a form of evidence to atrocity. Clearly, given the experiences of Yugoslavians under the Nazis, no one was really in a mood to ask about genre differences, whether the events described were fictional or not. Instead, “Kaputt” became a form of testimony to all the brutalities that had actually occurred, a general record of the era, rather than a record of specific events.

Again, compare this manner of reading to recent scandals and controversies in the USA. The Oprah-Frey scandal in which an autobiographer on the Oprah show, James Frey (author/victim of “A Million Tiny Pieces”) was found to have lied about a great many events in his book. JT Ellroy, the author of an autobiography of his life as an abused young boy, was discovered to be a female author in her latter years. Oprah’s initial response to the scandal, “So what, it’s still a great story,” was, in my opinion, the proper one. She quickly backtracked, however, as the scandal caught fire. America would have none of it. You do not LIE to Americans when you are telling your personal story, apparently. You see, despite our cognitive dissonance when it comes to WMDs, we don’t want evidence that we are being lied to exposed so baldly. At least with WMD, there’s still a chance Saddam hid them somewhere near the earth’s core. But with Frey, he lied to us. So, we have incident after incident in which Americans are hung up on the question, “Is it real?” “Is it real?” “Is it real?” That’s all we care about. That events happen is an uncontested fact (or, as Pynchon recently put it, “Contrary-to-the-fact occurrences occur.”) But the retelling of these events proves problematic again and again, and the constant refrain of “Is it real?” quickly becomes an obstruction to our critical capabilities, one that prevents us from examining the literary work for its information content. In fact, the question prevents us from examining any set of information at all. We are quickly satisfied with the certitude of the real. And we forget to ask, Is this logical? Does it educate? Is it probable? Who is the source? Or, even, what are the counterarguments to this theory?

No, I’m an American, I can’t ask these questions until I get to the bottom of the one and only God: “is it real?” I’m guessing that Naipaul and McEwan can’t get over that question. “Is it real?” I argue that this quest for certitude prevents us from examining information for what is. It prevents us from putting the information before us to the test of logic and functionality, and it exposes us to certain propagandistic beliefs which become dogma all too quickly.

The NYTimes Sunday Book Review recently announced that it will no longer review works of literary fiction. Instead, the new editor has been tasked with reviewing works of “non-fiction” only. Autobiography, Biography, History, News Reporting, etc. The new editor, in fact, was asked what he had against fiction. His reply, “Fiction is shit.” The new editor is Steven Erlanger. Erlanger, a veteran reporter in the Balkans during the 90s (I remember, as someone who read daily about Balkan events, Erlanger’s reports as being excellently balanced, with plenty of anecdotes, he had a real energy toward getting the full story, he and Kinzer, both were really good reporters). Obviously, his statement opened up a firestorm since the NYT is the biggest paper for fiction reviewing in the USA. Many writers bombarded his rather sensational statement without realizing the game was over. When the editor says, “You are Shit,” that pretty much says it all, no? Me, I was happy as hell because the New York Times was suddenly putting an emphasis on reporting, on getting to know more about other countries, in the culling of balanced information, and it was my hope that this trend begun by the Arts Editor would quickly catch fire to the rest of the paper. The hope was that ethics in journalism would return to the home of Judy Miller, David Brooks, Jason Blair, and the like. Maybe the NYT would become the paper of record again, instead of behaving like a propaganda organ.

You see what I’m getting at? The lowest level of reportage seems to be generalizing and propaganda. If this important newspaper wants to improve its reporting by getting rid of the review of a literary genre I love, then I’m all for it. Improve thyself.

But the fact is, Erlanger’s insistence that the non-fictive is more valued than the fictive can only lead to trouble. It propagates the same categorical mistake which inevitably makes American readers highly susceptible to propaganda. It emphasizes the “this happened” over the specific significance of the actual event itself, the power of an event to chasten us and realize our place in the world. As William H. Gass puts it (I’m paraphrasing), it’s not good enough to write about things because they actually happened. “People stand in lines at the bank and they cut cabbage.” But Gass doesn’t want to read about it. It happened. So what?

I have to clarify: I’m not at all arguing against news reporting, histories, etc., I’m merely criticizing the mania for them. The mania for certified knowledge, the mania for the real.

Most of all, I’m concerned that the USA is trashing a genre of writing which I find immensely valuable for building critical thinking skills. I’m worried that we’re replacing it with a genre that will easily become a vessel for propaganda, and the public will have disarmed itself of critical capabilities to know the difference. Genres are good things, I love them. They tell me how to read, they tell me which reading skills I need to bring to any particular text, they save me time even when I’m reading the Now What Blog! But when genres become dictatorial habits, the reader is in trouble. Why must we make a tyranny of our knowledge? Why must the category always wag the tail of the specific? God is not dead. He’s the lazy being in my head that says, you don’t have to read that shit. Read this instead.

8 comments:

Ted Pelton said...

Dimitri,

As coincidence would have it, I was just tackling the same issue in my report on the &Now conference back in April for electronic book review (indeed as reflection at the end of my description of your "Fiction Machines" panel there). Here is what I wrote in draft this afternoon (without giving away too much of a piece which has yet to appear, or be delivered to (!), another online forum):

"It is now a kind of common currency to say that fiction is no longer as pertinent as nonfiction. Here, Rachel Donadio, in the New York Times: 'Like painting, the novel isn't dead; it just isn't as central to the culture as it once was. In our current infotainment era, in which the line between truth and "truth" is growing ever more blurry, readers thirst for a narrative, any narrative, and will turn to the most compelling one.' But Donadio and others of a mainstream bent quickly substitute 'fiction' with unproblematic 'narrative': in other words, assuming realistic tale-telling. Here, a quote by Gass is appropriate: 'The dominant form of the 20th century novel is the 19th century novel?' (qtd. in Tomasula, 'Is the Bible Postmodern,' ebr). Let me stray away from my usual attack on how mainstream publishing favors more transparent, easier narratives, and instead question what is meant by this idea of nonfiction at all. If, as Berry has it, the role of innovative or experimental fiction is to lead us directly to contemplation of the fictive operations all around us – selection, editing, narrative position and bias, naming, the structures of the world we are asked to accept as givens, etc. – where then do these things go, the very nature of how discourse is made, when so-called 'fiction' disappears? The presumption that 'nonfiction' somehow rids us of all the complications attendant to the making of any assertion is naive at best and at worst a recipe for How to (Continue to) Be Oppressed. Innovative fiction writers contend that the making of fictions responsive to Naipaul’s demands (that writing reflect the complexity of today’s world) may well require making complex fictions. When fiction is seen primarily as an escape, a form of entertainment, then its ability to be relevant will indeed be questionable. Much small press writing deliberately configures its function as a serious one, involved with the national psyche, indeed perhaps with disabusing us of greater fictions which have gripped us as a nation. Spuyten Duyvil has taken to using the slogan, 'Literature is not what a society pretends,' which simultaneously points to a great deal of fictionalizing, or pretending, going on in the culture at large, and to an antidote in the art of fictionalizing, the making of literature. A true literature invents out of the materials of culture and endeavors not to participate in but to reveal the fictions that are foisted upon us for reasons of power and profit."

Peace, brother...

mark wallace said...

I'd like to add, however, that the current (and sometimes relatively hysterical) insistence on the greater value of "non-fiction" and "documentary" doesn't by any means simply come from the political and literary mainstream. The insistence on the primacy of a documentary Marxist/post-Marxist critique of real world conditions has also been voiced by left-wing critics like Terry Eagleon, who has for instance denounced postmodernism for its giving up of the truth value of realist and documentary modes, and is very popular as well in the world of contemporary, alternative poetry and poetics, where interest in innovative structures and linguistic play has been rejected in the name of a much more documentary, on some levels anti-structural approach to poetry that can be seen in the work of writers like Keston Sutherland, Susan Schultz, or Juliana Spahr. I'm not at all denying the value of these "documentary" and "non-fiction" approaches, but I do think it's pretty clear that it's not simply a conservative literary mainstream that has been advocating this approach in recent years.

Anonymous said...

I think what may be most depressing is that the non-fiction writers are necessarily great stylists. So reading them is a slog. You get "the facts," I suppose, but without any style, without language doing any more than a plodding vehicle of providing that information.

Ted Pelton said...

Fair enough, Mark, but there are also assumptions particular to fiction markets wherein nonfiction (said to be synonymous with "truth") is valued against a false image of what fiction is, based upon the types of fictions that are these days most frequently published. (Google Rachel Donadio in NY Times August of last year, "Truth is Stronger Than Fiction" for the other side of the controversy that Dimitri's panel responded to at &Now this past April.) Hell, I enjoy documentaries as much as anyone, but are we really ready to sit around while art is labelled an inferior means of structuring truth than so-called documentary modes? Doesn't that seem rather symptomatic of the lack of subtlety that generally is operative in our cultural discourse?

mark wallace said...

I hear what you're saying, Ted, and I agree with your basic premises. But what I'm suggesting is that the insightful argument you're making can't be taken up solely relative to the world of the NY Times, whose assumptions and biases, I agree, are rather easily dismantled on the grounds of "lack of subtlety." The idea that documentary (in both film, poetry, and narrative) is the way to go also has a lot of power right now in avant garde artistic communities, among grass roots politicans, and in leftist theory. I'm not saying they're right, ultimately, for the very reasons you suggest. But I do think the urge, problematic though it may be at times, comes from deeper roots than a lack of subtlety. The issue for me--and I believe both you and Dimitri are insisting on this as well--would be not so simply a defense of fiction, but an insistence on the interrelationship of structure, imagination and historical fact in all writing worthy of serious consideration. I appreciate the ways in which this blog allows us to highlight such complex problems.

jdeshell said...

Good post Dmitri, and interesting discussion all around. I’m forced to agree with Mark Wallace: I think non-fiction, or as he calls it, “documentary,” has a great deal of energy in a number of different communities, perhaps even, dare we say it, this one. Some of this has to do with impatience: we are so sickened by the world and the role our society is playing in its various forms of destruction that we hope/pray that (our) literature can do something, anything to effect the world. And the quickest way to do this, the least mediated (in all senses of the word, or at least in the sense of Hegelian and temporal) is the “truest,” i.e. the least fictional.
From Blanchot again:
“Criticism is almost always important, even if it omits and misrepresents a great deal. However, when straight-away it becomes warlike, this is because political impatience has won out over the patience proper to the ‘poetic.’ Writing, since is persists in a relation of irregularity with itself—and thus with the utterly other—does not know what will become of it politically: this is its intransitivity, its necessarily indirect relation to the political. This indirection, the infinite detour which we try o understand a writing’s being, so to speak, out of phase or belated—as incertitude or chance (and also as invention—makes us unhappy. We would like to proceed in a straightforward way toward the goal—the social transformation which it is in our power to affirm.”

Is it any different now than it has always been? Have we ever been a predominantly literary culture?

Jeffrey

jdeshell said...

Dmitri,
No, I don't read Blanchot's tone as one of regret or sadness (at least here). It's important for him that literature does not 'work' in the world, that it doesn't function like other culturally activity, because cultural activity (discourses of power, or discourses of resistance to power)gets implicated and absorbed into the dialectic, where they become phenomenal or ontological. And the discourses end up reinforcing the power they were designed to resist. Blanchot, following Levinas (who's no friend to literature)sees literature as pre-ontological or prephenomenal, what they would call 'ethical.' I, personally, have lots of trouble with that word. You probably know all this.
I was glad to see the Handke mentioned. There's an interesting wrieter when it comes to 'ethics.'
Cheers, J

Anonymous said...

May I make a couple of factual comments after reading the section of this post dealing with The New York Times Book Review? I think my facts are correct, and that the posting is rather misleading, but I'm certainly willing to be corrected.

First, the alarm over the Times supposedly doing away with fiction reviews dates back to early 2004, when the arguably misguided comments underlying that ultimately misplaced fear were prominently discussed on, among other places, the Poynter web site:

http://www.poynter.org/column.asp?id=57&aid=59576

Any reader of the Sunday book review section or the daily reviews can see that the Times has not, since then, stopped reviewing fiction. So the discussion should focus on the kind of fiction it reviews; this is beyond my scope, but I think the Times still reviews literary fiction.

Then there are several other factual errors, or at best, pieces of outdated information.

Steve Erlanger is a foreign correspondent these days, based in Israel, and has nothing to do with the Times book reviews.

Sam Sifton is the culture editor; that was Steve's job a couple of years ago.

Sam Tanenhaus was named editor of the Book Review in 2004, at the time that this discussion was pertinent. He is the author, maybe 20 years ago, of the book "Literature Unbound," which may be worth reading.

For a discussion of his ambitions coming into the job, see the San Francisco Chronicle:

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2004/04/13/DDG08637CN1.DTL

I think that the Review's attitude toward fiction is a fine subject for discussion -- and that the proof of the pudding will be in the eating, rather than in alarmism based on misinformation.

Thanks for letting me join the discussion!