Fiction in Fact and Fact in Fiction in the Writing of Joyce Carol Oates

Joyce Carol Oates draws extensively on news stories, as well as on elements of her own family’s past, to find inspiration for her works of fiction. She has written about the Chappaquiddick incident involving Ted Kennedy and the JonBenet Ramsay murder case. She has worked the Niagara Falls Love Canal...

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Main Author: Tanya L. Tromble
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of San Francisco 2015-01-01
Series:Bearing Witness: Joyce Carol Oates Studies
Online Access:http://repository.usfca.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1006&context=jcostudies
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spelling doaj-c1affba40ac444ba9d49633f4060d3c32020-11-24T21:39:04ZengUniversity of San FranciscoBearing Witness: Joyce Carol Oates Studies2373-275X2015-01-01210.15867/331917.2.2Fiction in Fact and Fact in Fiction in the Writing of Joyce Carol OatesTanya L. Tromble0Aix Marseille Université, LERMA EA 853Joyce Carol Oates draws extensively on news stories, as well as on elements of her own family’s past, to find inspiration for her works of fiction. She has written about the Chappaquiddick incident involving Ted Kennedy and the JonBenet Ramsay murder case. She has worked the Niagara Falls Love Canal environmental scandal into the framework of The Falls and taken inspiration from sordid events from her own family’s past in the beginning of The Gravedigger’s Daughter. However, in none of these examples does Oates purport to relate the precise real-life “facts” of the historical events. Indeed, for an author who believes in the multiplicity of truths such a task would be superfluous, if it was in fact possible, given what she perceives as the inherently “error-prone” nature of our species. “Language,” she writes in her essay “On Fiction in Fact,” “by its very nature tends to distort experience. With the best of intentions, in recalling the past, if even a dream of the previous night, we are already altering – one might say violating – the original experience, which may have been wordless and was certainly improvised.” In response to what she sees as the problematic nature of language, memory and the artificial nature of writing, Oates has cultivated a self-described “psychological realism” that seeks to depict a greater realm of truth beyond the world of facts, that is to say the truth of emotion and felt experience, “states of mind [which are] real enough – emotions, moods, shifting obsessions, beliefs – though immeasurable.” This article compares both fiction and non-fiction works by Oates – notably, A Widow’s Story, Sourland, The Falls – in a discussion of the fluctuating frontier between the two genres and the notion of psychological Truth that this tenuous relationship reveals.http://repository.usfca.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1006&context=jcostudies
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tanya L. Tromble
spellingShingle Tanya L. Tromble
Fiction in Fact and Fact in Fiction in the Writing of Joyce Carol Oates
Bearing Witness: Joyce Carol Oates Studies
author_facet Tanya L. Tromble
author_sort Tanya L. Tromble
title Fiction in Fact and Fact in Fiction in the Writing of Joyce Carol Oates
title_short Fiction in Fact and Fact in Fiction in the Writing of Joyce Carol Oates
title_full Fiction in Fact and Fact in Fiction in the Writing of Joyce Carol Oates
title_fullStr Fiction in Fact and Fact in Fiction in the Writing of Joyce Carol Oates
title_full_unstemmed Fiction in Fact and Fact in Fiction in the Writing of Joyce Carol Oates
title_sort fiction in fact and fact in fiction in the writing of joyce carol oates
publisher University of San Francisco
series Bearing Witness: Joyce Carol Oates Studies
issn 2373-275X
publishDate 2015-01-01
description Joyce Carol Oates draws extensively on news stories, as well as on elements of her own family’s past, to find inspiration for her works of fiction. She has written about the Chappaquiddick incident involving Ted Kennedy and the JonBenet Ramsay murder case. She has worked the Niagara Falls Love Canal environmental scandal into the framework of The Falls and taken inspiration from sordid events from her own family’s past in the beginning of The Gravedigger’s Daughter. However, in none of these examples does Oates purport to relate the precise real-life “facts” of the historical events. Indeed, for an author who believes in the multiplicity of truths such a task would be superfluous, if it was in fact possible, given what she perceives as the inherently “error-prone” nature of our species. “Language,” she writes in her essay “On Fiction in Fact,” “by its very nature tends to distort experience. With the best of intentions, in recalling the past, if even a dream of the previous night, we are already altering – one might say violating – the original experience, which may have been wordless and was certainly improvised.” In response to what she sees as the problematic nature of language, memory and the artificial nature of writing, Oates has cultivated a self-described “psychological realism” that seeks to depict a greater realm of truth beyond the world of facts, that is to say the truth of emotion and felt experience, “states of mind [which are] real enough – emotions, moods, shifting obsessions, beliefs – though immeasurable.” This article compares both fiction and non-fiction works by Oates – notably, A Widow’s Story, Sourland, The Falls – in a discussion of the fluctuating frontier between the two genres and the notion of psychological Truth that this tenuous relationship reveals.
url http://repository.usfca.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1006&context=jcostudies
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