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The Situation and the Story: The Art of Personal Narrative The Situation and the Story: The Art of Personal Narrative by Vivian Gornick
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The Situation and the Story Quotes Showing 1-17 of 17
“If you don't leave home you suffocate, if you go too far you lose oxygen.”
Vivian Gornick, The Situation and the Story: The Art of Personal Narrative
“What happened to the writer is not what matters; what matters is the large sense that the writer is able to make of what happened.”
Vivian Gornick, The Situation and the Story: The Art of Personal Narrative
“In all imaginative writing sympathy for the subject is necessary not because it is the politically correct or morally decent posture to adopt but because an absence of sympathy shuts down the mind: engagement fails, the flow of association dries up, and the work narrows. What I mean by sympathy is simply that level of empathic understanding that endows the subject with dimension. The empathy that allows us, the readers, to see the "other" as the other might see him or herself is the empathy that provides movement in the writing.

When someone writes a Mommie Dearest memoir - where the narrator is presented as an innocent and the subject as a monster - the work fails because the situation remains static. For the drama to deepen, we must see the loneliness of the monster and the cunning of the innocent. Above all, it is the narrator who must complicate in order that the subject be given life.”
Vivian Gornick, The Situation and the Story: The Art of Personal Narrative
“The subject of autobiography is always self-definition, but it cannot be self-definition in a void. The memoirist, like the poet and the novelist, must engage with the world, because engagement makes experience, experience makes wisdom, and finally it's the wisdom—or rather the movement towards it—that counts.”
Vivian Gornick, The Situation and the Story: The Art of Personal Narrative
“Man is free only when he is doing what the deepest self likes, and knowing what the deepest self likes, ah! that takes some diving.”
Vivian Gornick, The Situation and the Story: The Art of Personal Narrative
“Penetrating the familiar is by no means a given. On the contrary, it is hard work.”
Vivian Gornick, The Situation and the Story: The Art of Personal Narrative
“The presence in a memoir or an essay of the truth speaker - the narrator that a writer pulls out of his or her own agitated and boring self to organize a piece of experience - it was about this alone that I felt I had something to say; and it was to those works in which such a narrator comes through strong and clear that I was invariably drawn.”
Vivian Gornick, The Situation and the Story: The Art of Personal Narrative
“SUGGESTIONS FOR FURTHER READING Judith Barrington, Writing the Memoir: From Truth to Art; Annie Dillard and Cort Conley, eds., Modern American Memoirs; Patricia Hampl, I Could Tell You Stories: Sojourns in the Land of Memory; Anne Lamott, Bird by Bird: Some Instructions on Writing and Life; Phillip Lopate, ed., The Art of the Personal Essay; Jane Taylor McDonnell, Living to Tell the Tale: A Guide to Writing Memoir; and William Zinsser, ed., Inventing the Truth: The Art and Craft of Memoir.”
Vivian Gornick, The Situation and the Story: The Art of Personal Narrative
“A memoir is a work of sustained narrative prose controlled by an idea of the self under obligation to lift from the raw material of life a tale that will shape experience, transform event, deliver wisdom. Truth in a memoir is achieved not through a recital of actual events; it is achieved when the reader comes to believe that the writer is working hard to engage with the experience at hand. What happened to the writer is not what matters; what matters is the large sense that the writer is able to make of what happened.”
Vivian Gornick, The Situation and the Story: The Art of Personal Narrative
“Agnes Smedley also knows what the century knows: that we become what is done to us.”
Vivian Gornick, The Situation and the Story: The Art of Personal Narrative
“In 1907 Edmund Gosse thought he had to leave his father to become himself; seventy years later Geoffrey Wolff knows he cannot leave his father because he has become his father.”
Vivian Gornick, The Situation and the Story: The Art of Personal Narrative
“it is the narrator who is the “agent”: he himself is the unifying idea. Not through what he tells us about himself or even through what he sees as he travels, but through the way he sees what he sees. It is the character of the persona’s perspective that provides the narrative its striking inner life.”
Vivian Gornick, The Situation and the Story: The Art of Personal Narrative
“The unsurrogated narrator has the monumental task of transforming low-level self-interest into the kind of detached empathy required of a piece of writing that is to be of value to the disinterested reader.”
Vivian Gornick, The Situation and the Story: The Art of Personal Narrative
“Men should discover their past. I admit to this. It has been my profession. Only so can we learn our limitations and come in time to suffer life with compassion. Nevertheless, I now believe there are occasions when … to tamper with the past, even one’s own, is to bring [on] that slipping, sliding horror which revolves around all that is done, unalterable, and yet which abides unseen in the living mind … [and makes] us lonely beyond belief.”
Vivian Gornick, The Situation and the Story: The Art of Personal Narrative
“The essay becomes an exercise in the meaning and value of watching a writer conquer their own sense of threat to deliver themself of their wisdom.”
Vivian Gornick, The Situation and the Story: The Art of Personal Narrative
“She leans into the memory. She stares. She concentrates. What IS it that's she's looking for, trying to get straight at last?”
Vivian Gornick, The Situation and the Story: The Art of Personal Narrative
“In Edmund Gosse, Agnes Smedley, Geoffrey Wolff, we have a set of memoirists whose work records a steadily changing idea of the emergent self. But for each of them a flash of insight illuminating that idea grew out of the struggle to clarify one's own formative experience; and in each case the strength and beauty of the writing lie in the power of concentration with which this insight is pursued, and made to become the the writer's organizing principle. That principle at work is what makes a memoir literature rather than testament.”
Vivian Gornick, The Situation and the Story: The Art of Personal Narrative