But Enough About Me
A brief
history and reflection on the (un)popularity of the memoir. I liked this part in which the author
talks about the effect changes in technology have had on the outpouring of personal narrative:
So if we're feeling assaulted or overwhelmed by a proliferation of personal narratives,
it's because we are; but the greatest profusion of these life stories isn't to be found
in bookstores. If anything, it's hard not to think that a lot of the outrage directed
at writers and publishers lately represents a displacement of a large and genuinely
new anxiety, about our ability to filter or control the plethora of unreliable
narratives coming at us from all directions. In the street
or in the blogosphere, there are no editors, no proofreaders, and no fact-checkers--the
people at whom we can at least point an accusing finger when the old-fashioned kind
of memoir betrays us.
File under new yorker/
Tue May 25 19:30:13 CT 2010
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