Mark Rubinstein's Blog - Posts Tagged "stream-of-consciousness"
"Next" fabulous stream-of consciousness writing
I am re-reading "Next" by James Hynes. This novel is worth every second of the time spent to read it, and then some. On the surface, it's a story about a man named Kevin, a middle-aged editor living in Ann Arbor, Michigan, who has flown to Austin, Texas without telling his live-in girlfriend about his one day trip for a job interview. Yes, Kevin, in middle-age, may yet change the direction of his life.
The story starts out simply enough as you traverse the inner canyons of Kevin's mind: his thoughts, ruminations, regrets and memories of his life over the years. He has a few hours to kill while waiting for the interview, and in a moment of hormone-driven impulsivity, decides to follow through the streets of Austin, a young woman who had been sitting next to him on the plane. It's benign enough, except that during this travelogue through Austin's streets, Kevin's life story (and all his foibles) emerge in this interior novel, and some strange (and revealing) things happen.
I never throw spoilers into the mix but let me say Kevin's few hours in Austin turn into quite an adventure with the book's climax coming out of nowhere like a freight train on steroids.
This is a wonderful read, and the reader gets not only a penetrating view of the workings of Kevin's mind-all his mistakes and regrets, his loves and losses-but luxuriates in an hilarious dissection of the culture in which we live . A true gem of a novel. Five well-deserved stars!
The story starts out simply enough as you traverse the inner canyons of Kevin's mind: his thoughts, ruminations, regrets and memories of his life over the years. He has a few hours to kill while waiting for the interview, and in a moment of hormone-driven impulsivity, decides to follow through the streets of Austin, a young woman who had been sitting next to him on the plane. It's benign enough, except that during this travelogue through Austin's streets, Kevin's life story (and all his foibles) emerge in this interior novel, and some strange (and revealing) things happen.
I never throw spoilers into the mix but let me say Kevin's few hours in Austin turn into quite an adventure with the book's climax coming out of nowhere like a freight train on steroids.
This is a wonderful read, and the reader gets not only a penetrating view of the workings of Kevin's mind-all his mistakes and regrets, his loves and losses-but luxuriates in an hilarious dissection of the culture in which we live . A true gem of a novel. Five well-deserved stars!
Published on July 25, 2012 02:40
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Tags:
interior-novel, stream-of-consciousness, the-culture-of-our-times
Getting Those Creative Juices Flowing
Recently, I read an article describing a study that confirmed something I'm quite certain I knew intuitively.
A Stanford University study indicated that walking on a treadmill at "an easy, self-selected pace" while facing a blank wall helped generate 60 percent more innovative ideas when the subjects were tested psychologically for creative thinking. These results were reported to have applied to almost every student tested.
The article also said, "Walking markedly improved people's ability to generate creative ideas, even when they sat down after the walk."
The volunteers who walked produced significantly more and subjectively better ideas than in their pre-exercise testing period.
These results were duplicated when the subjects walked outdoors, though the creativity index, while higher than before walking, was less than that measured while on a treadmill facing a blank wall. Walking may ignite creative thoughts, but doing so without distractions may enhance the process. One of the study's coordinators said, "It really seems that it's the walking that matters" in spurring creativity.
While this is not a shattering discovery, it lends an empirical component to what many creative people have known intuitively. I've talked with writers who claim to experience a surge in creative impulses while walking, bicycling, swimming laps, jogging, hiking or using an elliptical machine. These relatively non-strenuous exercises can certainly improve mood and may bring about subtle physiologic brain changes dampening down our minds' rational filters. In other words, certain brain functions may be altered, allowing almost dreamlike thoughts and images to surface and eventually achieve expression as a play, poem, novel or solution to business and life dilemmas. Exercise may simply open a window to stream-of-consciousness thinking and imagination.
While more research must be done before this is definite, empirical evidence suggests that exercise may enhance creative impulses and problem-solving for anyone.
I'll have to think about this, but meanwhile, as a writer, I'm going out for a stroll. Or maybe I'll hop onto a treadmill.
A Stanford University study indicated that walking on a treadmill at "an easy, self-selected pace" while facing a blank wall helped generate 60 percent more innovative ideas when the subjects were tested psychologically for creative thinking. These results were reported to have applied to almost every student tested.
The article also said, "Walking markedly improved people's ability to generate creative ideas, even when they sat down after the walk."
The volunteers who walked produced significantly more and subjectively better ideas than in their pre-exercise testing period.
These results were duplicated when the subjects walked outdoors, though the creativity index, while higher than before walking, was less than that measured while on a treadmill facing a blank wall. Walking may ignite creative thoughts, but doing so without distractions may enhance the process. One of the study's coordinators said, "It really seems that it's the walking that matters" in spurring creativity.
While this is not a shattering discovery, it lends an empirical component to what many creative people have known intuitively. I've talked with writers who claim to experience a surge in creative impulses while walking, bicycling, swimming laps, jogging, hiking or using an elliptical machine. These relatively non-strenuous exercises can certainly improve mood and may bring about subtle physiologic brain changes dampening down our minds' rational filters. In other words, certain brain functions may be altered, allowing almost dreamlike thoughts and images to surface and eventually achieve expression as a play, poem, novel or solution to business and life dilemmas. Exercise may simply open a window to stream-of-consciousness thinking and imagination.
While more research must be done before this is definite, empirical evidence suggests that exercise may enhance creative impulses and problem-solving for anyone.
I'll have to think about this, but meanwhile, as a writer, I'm going out for a stroll. Or maybe I'll hop onto a treadmill.
Published on May 16, 2015 09:44
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Tags:
brain-functions, creativity, exercise, imagination, stream-of-consciousness