Write What You Know and Be Damned
by Kris Saknussemm, e-mail: krisATvardoger.comTo a life without shooting stars that carry strange life forms, talking animals, sentient machines, mysterious strangers, sudden revelations, words you’ve never heard before—and the thoughts in other people’s minds. You may have to forfeit forever the music of a close range gunshot on a cool morning or the clash of battle-axes at the gates of Mordor (although you may not miss the hiss of the demon who’s taken over your spouse’s body).
But still you stand to lose much more than you gain. In fact, the list is so very long of what you stand to lose by following this stale and unexamined bit of advice (which is offered with relentless frequency in writing programs, workshops, conferences, articles, etc.), it forms a curious index of precisely what so many of us might well consider to be what literature and therefore good writing actually is about.
Yet it seems like such innocent and practical advice, doesn’t it? So, perhaps we should both unpack it and consider a counter-strategy, for the issue at the core is peculiar to writing and separates it decisively from the other arts—and also applies, I’d maintain, to all forms of writing, from fiction and poetry to expository and rhetorical writing as well.
1. Flawed from the Start
The first reason to seriously prosecute this advice, as I’ve already suggested, is that it doesn’t address or apply to some of the most significant and loved works of literary art in the history of civilization, which is one of the reasons why there is such a profound disconnect between literature and the teaching of writing fiction in all but specific genre contexts, such as Fantasy and Science Fiction. Writing of this kind is seen by some highbrow people as somehow “common” and less than literary—and the immense popularity and commercial success of much of this kind of writing only strengthens their certainty. Surely, it can’t be “great” writing if a lot of people like it. That’s an emotionally deadly point of view to have—and these same people often have difficulty with the whole field of Children’s Literature.
But I would more simply say that if you’re going to have a working principle to guide you, than it had better work. Really helpful principles have a reverse-engineering capability whereby they illuminate other examples rather than having to exclude or dodge them.
2. Knowledge Must Be Discovered
To paraphrase the poet Charles Merrill, “I don’t actually know what I think until I write it.” Writing is a process of discovery. If you set out with the proposition that somehow what you have to write about pre-exists and is separate from your writing, you make a ghost of your work from the start and paradoxically also unhaunt it. The magic doesn’t arise, it must be imposed—and it doesn’t like that much.
More dangerously perhaps, you can also imagine you’ve done more actual labor than you have. Writing can fail on the page, but it’s not even born unless it rises up from the page. Every piece of writing is a bootstrap affair whereby you use the crisis of the next sentence to get to the one beyond. When things are really flowing a subconscious process has taken over—best experience in the world many people say. What’s really happening is that you’re allowing yourself to discover what you really do know—what you can prove by what’s on the page. The only way characters and scenes come to life for readers is if there’s a true (and sometimes even worrying) sense of discovery and animation for the writer. When you yourself wonder, where did this come from?…then things are happening.
Interestingly, this sense of writing being not just an iteration of what you know has also been solidly embraced in the expository writing field. The leading rhetoric and composition texts present the nexus of critical thinking and persuasive writing as a unified whole, with the tools of writing being tools to analyze arguments and to identify and refine a position rather than merely advance one. This is a huge evolution from where things were at when I was in school, when the assumption was everyone had to start with a thesis and then deploy arguments in support. Now the concept of an argument is seen first as a means of identifying and refining a thesis. If this can be valid in the context of non-fiction, how much more crucial to a story finder?
3. No One Knows Enough
As Coleridge once said, “I should not think of devoting less than 20 years to an Epic Poem. Ten to collect materials and warm my mind with universal science. I would be a tolerable Mathematician, I would thoroughly know Mechanics, Hydrostatics, Optics, and Astronomy, Botany, Metallurgy, Fossilism, Chemistry, Geology, Anatomy, Medicine—then the mind of man—then the minds of men—in all Travels, Voyages and Histories.” Of course, once he’d accumulated such knowledge, Coleridge would’ve been the first one to argue for the need for integration and dramatization of it through the esemplastic power of the imagination. (Cf. Ecclesiastes 12:12)
There is also the matter of what you may feel compelled to write about lying outside the bounds of acceptable knowledge and experience. For instance sex with large luminous amphibians, or more mundanely, cold-blooded murder. “Knowing” about such things as these is contraindicated.
4. What You Do Know May be Wrong
Whether you ask the cognitive scientists or you go to the courtrooms and police stations, you’ll hear a consistent message. People’s perceptions and memories are suspect. Eyewitness testimony, once so valued, isn’t trusted anymore like it used to be. Hard forensic evidence earns convictions and psychological experimentation continuously shows how fragile what we think we “know” is. The emerging model of cognition is as a sustained act of imagination, and therefore continuously active participation in the consensual hallucination of reality.
5. The Plague of Reality
It’s no coincidence that we live in an era rife with “reality TV” and “memoirs”…while in the world of speculative fiction and film one of the biggest recurring subjects is the very nature of reality—the fact that it may be literally an hallucination, a simulation, a game, a set-up.
Anyone who reads heard of the bust up over James Frey’s memoir A Million Little Pieces. But didn’t memoirs used to be things Winston Churchill would leave behind after half a century of public life? All of the hoopla was in my view a total distortion of the actual issue. It was the death-of-the-imagination people who got that work published in the first place. Why green light a work like that? Oh, because it’s “true.” Oops. Meanwhile, some exceptional voices and minds on the genuinely non-fiction front—from more popular writers like Lawrence Weschler to serious multilingual scholars like Frances Yates, are very open about the imaginative leaps that make their work work
The final reason to take the “write what you know” advice with a huge grain of salt is that very grain. It’s a metaphor, a conceptual-linguistic hierogram and that’s finally the inescapable essence of writing. Painters and visual artists have been on to this for a long time, and Maurice Denis formalized the principle forcibly: “A picture is essentially a surface covered with colors arranged in a certain order.”
Somehow, writers often forget how this applies to the page. And that’s OK. But it’s a question of in what way you forget.
Of course there’s some truth in the expression “You can’t get to it if you haven’t gone through it.” But thousands of men went to sea in mid-19th century America. Only Herman Melville wrote Moby-Dick—and while that story benefits enormously from his in-depth knowledge of the whaling industry of the day, many would also say this is what drags the story down. It’s when Ahab is solemnly passing the chalice around and pointing to the doubloon nailed to the mast, with all the rigging glowing with St. Elmo’s fire and every last man on-board knows, as does the reader, that that ship has sailed clean off all the charts and everyone is in new territory—or very old territory—that’s why people keep finding this story. No 1850’s whaling captain would’ve spoken like a mix of the Shakespearean kings, the King James Bible and a dash of Zoroaster. Writing has always been about magic, illusion, persuasion, circus, trickery, the scam, dreams and nightmares. If you want an honest, sober calling, lay bricks. I say embrace the flim-flam and bamboozle. Seduction. Discovery. Invention. Risk. As Jack London, who had a vast amount of life experience despite a short life said, “I’m merely pretending to be writer. I just pretend very hard.”
Kris Saknussemm is the author of the novels ZANESVILLE and the psychoerotic thriller PRIVATE MIDNIGHT.
www.saknussemm.com
www.myspace.com/saknussemm
www.myspace.com/privatemidnight
www.privatemidnight.com
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I can't stress enough how much I agree with this wonderful article. While I understand the genesis of the debate, advising first-time writers to begin their journey from familiar territory is useful. But, how can you possibly know all there is to know? No one can.
ReplyDeleteI've never really written much for fantasy, staying along the lines of lit/commercial fiction until one day, an idea sank into my head. I had to research, and read, and discuss as I wrote it. And three years later, it's my first novel. I was fascinated with every droplet of information I found, wanting to learn more.
As much reality tv, books, politicians, etc. that we are exposed to, what's wrong with a little fantasy world to escape the fact we have politicians on prime-time dancing shows and celebrity islands? I say nothing. Some of our most celebrated works and films have been labeled fantasy. I simply say they're fantastic.
Great piece!
Kris,
ReplyDeleteA great piece of writing.
If I monitored my writing and limited it to what I actually know, the result would be dull and stale to me.
And probably more than dull to anyone reading it.
I write to explore the unknown things in my own mind, and I often forget about the reader in the process. Thank goodness for editors!
Thank you for this mind-jarring article.
Mary Ann Webber