Home » » Too much information? The writers who feel the need to reveal all

Too much information? The writers who feel the need to reveal all

Written By Unknown on Friday, November 27, 2015 | 6:10 AM

Marriage break-ups, a son’s drug addiction, sexual transgression … what makes some writers confess their most painful secrets? Are they just narcissistic, asks Blake Morrison, or is theirs a noble quest for truth?

The confessional memoir is disreputable. Critics tend to dismiss it as the equivalent of a selfie, a look-at-me snapshot, a glorified ego trip. Narcissism, they say, is inscribed in the very word “memoir”: me-moi. But the genre has a long history: Ovid’s Amores; St Augustine, Rousseau and De Quincey; the American poets (Robert Lowell, Sylvia Plath, Anne Sexton, WD Snodgrass, John Berryman) who came to prominence in the 1950s and 60s. And there has been no let-up over the past two decades.

Related: Leslie Jamison: confessional writing is not self-indulgent

Continue reading...











0 comments:

Post a Comment