{"id":1660,"date":"2011-05-13T14:40:40","date_gmt":"2011-05-13T20:40:40","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/booklifenow.com\/?p=1660"},"modified":"2012-03-23T17:06:24","modified_gmt":"2012-03-23T23:06:24","slug":"against-story","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/booklifenow.com\/2011\/05\/against-story\/","title":{"rendered":"Against Story"},"content":{"rendered":"

What do people want? “A good story.” How do we know? People can barely say anything else. When editors describe the sort of material they’re looking to acquire, they want “a good story.” Readers are always on the hunt for “a good story.” Good stories are also useful for shutting down a variety of discussions. Are there not enough women being published, or people of color? Who cares<\/em> who the author is, so long as he or she writes a good story? Can writers do different things with their stories\u2014create new points of view, structure words on the page differently, work to achieve certain effects not easily accessible with more common presentations? Why bother\u2014a good story<\/em> is the only important thing.<\/p>\n

Now, when some people talk about a good story they mean a good reading experience. A good reading experience doesn’t necessarily involve a story at all. But many people, when they say a good story, mean a good plot<\/em>, and want all the other elements of fiction subsumed to the plot. And not just any old plot, but the plot as detailed in the famous triangle of that old anti-Semite Gustav Freytag. (The anti-Semitism is why he’s pretty much known for his geometry rather than his creative writing, these days.) Rising action caused by a sequence of attempts and failures, while concurrently a set of revelations slowly illuminate the original cause of the dramatic action. Then there’s a climax, and a brief unwinding of the emotional tension caused by the conflict’s resolution.
\n
\nIt’s a great little structure. I use it, I teach it. We’ve been so thoroughly exposed to it in what we’ve read and watched for all our lives we almost confuse it for what comes naturally. But nothing comes naturally. Freytag’s triangle is an invention, not a discovery.\u00a0 (And Aristotle didn\u2019t discover anything either; he issued a prescription.) However it is an invention that has become hegemony and hegemony always contains the potential for tyranny. There are plenty of writers avoiding \u201cgood story\u201d and plenty of editors who publish these stories. And they receive plenty of hate mail. Every Donald Barthelme story in The New Yorker<\/em> led to a flood of angry letters and threats to cancel subscriptions. Good thing there was no Internet for the magazine to be published on at the time; the bigwigs would have taken a look at page hits and visit lengths and cut ol\u2019 Don loose right away. We can\u2019t sell acai berry juice with this shit!<\/em><\/p>\n

Hegemony is the normalization of the particular. There are many other ways to tell stories and many other ways to structure a plot. An avant-garde almost by definition predates a rearguard. The tricks of what we call \u201cpostmodern\u201d literature can be found in seminal works of literature such as Don Quixote<\/em>. Hell, you can find most of them in the Old Testament, if you know where to look and read it as a work of fiction\u2014a task ably accomplished by Stephen Moore in his survey of ancient literature, The Novel: An Alternative History: Beginnings to 1600.<\/em> (You can tell he\u2019s into postmodernism because he has two post-colons in his title!)<\/p>\n

The normalization of \u201cgood story\u201d allows for a particular sort of obnoxious criticism. The stuff that isn\u2019t a \u201cgood story\u201d is inevitably a \u201cbad story.\u201d Forget the obscurity of, say, second person point of view\u2014there are people, would-be writers even, who are deeply suspicious of first person point of view. They see it as some kind of latter-day fancydancing, and that despite the fact that all of us, all the time, speak in the first person when we tell the stories of our lives to one another. Well, I suppose The Rock and other professional wrestlers might comprise a significant exception…<\/p>\n

Any writer actually interested in squirming out from under the boot of the \u201cgood story\u201d has few first-person narratives. I was called a Nazi\u2014literally\u2014for defending first person. I was just reading a review the other day in which the critic detailed a conversation she had with a graduate of the Clarion writers\u2019 workshop. He denounced Flannery O\u2019Connor as a \u201cterrible writer\u201d because in her stories she was “telling, not showing, the reader.” I gave a reading once along with another writer, and during the Q\/A session this Hugo winner declared that fiction about the act of fiction was a new thing. (It\u2019s actually a couple thousand <\/em>years old.) One of my favorite rejection letters\u2014this was for a collection of short fiction I was trying to place with an independent publisher\u2014explained to me, sadly, that the book wouldn\u2019t do because of the seventeen pieces only three of them were stories. The rest were \u201cother things\u201d that were confusing and weird.<\/p>\n

There is a faux populism that goes along with this suspicion\u2014hegemony leads to normalization, but it also leads to tyranny. People writing things other than \u201cgood stories\u201d are fakes, frauds, interlopers into genre, poseurs and \u201cartistes.\u201d\u00a0 A single successful strange book, such as House of Leaves <\/em>leads people to demand, \u201cWhatever happened to good old-fashioned storytelling!\u201d The answer, that it\u2019s in most of the other twenty thousand novels and stories in the bookstore, is unsatisfying because the existence of anything other than \u201cgood stories\u201d are an affront. If people like stories that aren\u2019t the \u201cgood stories\u201d then…maybe not all good stories are good!<\/p>\n

And indeed they ain\u2019t. But good stories are plentiful enough, so there are sufficient excellent ones to satisfy any reader for a lifetime of any natural length. There\u2019s no need to war against the stories that flout Freytag and his march through jeopardy and toward orgasm…uh, I mean climax. There is a need to war against \u201cgood story\u201d though. \u201cGood story\u201d pushes the issue of who gets published off the table. \u201cI don\u2019t care if you\u2019re white, black, yellow or green<\/em>,\u201d people say, \u201cI just want a \u2018good story.\u2019\u201d You should always be wary when the green people are marched out in defense of \u201cgood story\u201d\u2014also, purple polka-dots. \u201cGood story\u201d keeps writers chained to their desks, extruding consistent product for lesser sums each time around. That\u2019s the thing about \u201cgood story\u201d\u2014it\u2019s easy to learn and do. Supply increases faster than demand, so price sinks. And \u201cgood story\u201d limits readers. Even the dumbest, most obscure, and worst writers will occasionally proclaim themselves champions of the ordinary working stiff who just wants to escape into a \u201cgood story.\u201d Who would declare, \u201cWell, I don\u2019t want \u2018good stories\u2019 then! Give me something else!\u201d It\u2019s nearly impossible to conceive of saying, or thinking. That\u2019s the ultimate power of \u201cgood story.\u201d<\/p>\n

And yet…as writing loses its audience to television and the Web, Freytag\u2019s triangle is in retreat. Reality TV doesn\u2019t offer rising action and climaxes, and the revelations last only so long as the contestants do. Learning how we live now, or how the other half lives, through Twitter and blogging, doesn\u2019t involve a march up one side of the triangle and a quick slide down the other. More of a forced march through a desert. And then there\u2019s fiction itself\u2014try mapping the many seasons of Lost<\/em> onto the dictates of \u201cgood story.\u201d Were Lost<\/em> a novel, it would be 2000 pages long, with dozens of dropped plot threads, the introduction of a major and heretofore unknown character 1200 pages in (with new minor ones showing up on page 1945!), a couple more 1700 pages in, and then a bunch of alternative histories littering the interstices between chapters. Which wouldn’t be labeled chapters. Or interstices. Readers do want strange and new narratives\u2014trapezoids and single rays stretching off into the horizon, and denouements that never finish their unwinding, a three dimensional snowflake with dozens of dendrites that are only beautiful from a distance\u2014it\u2019s just that \u201cgood story\u201d is all they\u2019re ever offered.\u00a0 So they watch TV, and play video games, and read endless fanfiction where the same characters change radically with every writer and circumstance, and blog their own lives one sandwich and missed bus at a time, and they do what writers refuse to. So kill story now, before it\u2019s too late. Before it kills you.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"

What do people want? “A good story.” How do we know? People can barely say anything else. When editors describe the sort of material they’re looking to acquire, they want “a good story.” Readers are always on the hunt for “a good story.” Good stories are also useful for shutting down a variety of discussions. Are there not enough women being published, or people of color? Who cares who the author is, so long as he or she writes a good story? Can writers do different things with their stories\u2014create new points of view, structure words on the page differently, work to achieve certain effects not easily accessible with more common presentations? Why bother\u2014a good story is the only important thing. Now, when some people talk about a good story they mean a good reading experience. A good reading experience doesn’t necessarily involve a story at all. But many people, […]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":7,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":[],"categories":[1],"tags":[14],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/booklifenow.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1660"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/booklifenow.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/booklifenow.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/booklifenow.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/7"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/booklifenow.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=1660"}],"version-history":[{"count":10,"href":"https:\/\/booklifenow.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1660\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":1895,"href":"https:\/\/booklifenow.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1660\/revisions\/1895"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/booklifenow.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=1660"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/booklifenow.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=1660"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/booklifenow.com\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=1660"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}