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Creative nonfiction

Creative nonfiction (also known as literary nonfiction, narrative nonfiction, literary journalism or verfabula[1]) is a genre of writing that uses literary styles and techniques to create factually accurate narratives. Creative nonfiction contrasts with other nonfiction, such as academic or technical writing or journalism, which are also rooted in accurate fact though not written to entertain based on prose style. Many writers view creative nonfiction as overlapping with the essay.

Characteristics and definition edit

For a text to be considered creative nonfiction, it must be factually accurate, and written with attention to literary style and technique. Lee Gutkind, founder of the magazine Creative Nonfiction, writes, "Ultimately, the primary goal of the creative nonfiction writer is to communicate information, just like a reporter, but to shape it in a way that reads like fiction."[2] Forms within this genre include memoir, diary, travel writing, food writing, literary journalism, chronicle, personal essays, and other hybridized essays, as well as some biography and autobiography. Critic Chris Anderson claims that the genre can be understood best by splitting it into two subcategories—the personal essay and the journalistic essay—but the genre is currently defined by its lack of established conventions.[3]

Literary critic Barbara Lounsberry, in her book, The Art of Fact, suggests four constitutive characteristics of the genre: the first is "Documentable subject matter chosen from the real world as opposed to 'invented' from the writer's mind".[4] By this, she means that the topics and events discussed in the text verifiably exist in the natural world. The second characteristic is "Exhaustive research",[4] which she claims allows writers "novel perspectives on their subjects" and "also permits them to establish the credibility of their narratives through verifiable references in their texts".[5] The third characteristic that Lounsberry claims is crucial in defining the genre is "The scene". She stresses the importance of describing and revivifying the context of events in contrast to the typical journalistic style of objective reportage.[6] The fourth and final feature she suggests is "Fine writing: a literary prose style". "Verifiable subject matter and exhaustive research guarantee the nonfiction side of literary nonfiction; the narrative form and structure disclose the writer's artistry; and finally, its polished language reveals that the goal all along has been literature."[7] Essayist and critic Phillip Lopate describes 'reflection' as a necessary element of the genre, offering the advice that the best literary nonfiction "captures the mind at work".[8]

Creative nonfiction may be structured like traditional fiction narratives, as is true of Fenton Johnson's story of love and loss, Geography of the Heart,[9] and Virginia Holman's Rescuing Patty Hearst.[10] When book-length works of creative nonfiction follow a story-like arc, they are sometimes called narrative nonfiction. Other books, such as Daniel Levitin's This Is Your Brain on Music and The World in Six Songs, use elements of narrative momentum, rhythm, and poetry to convey a literary quality. Creative nonfiction often escapes traditional boundaries of narrative altogether, as happens in the bittersweet banter of Natalia Ginzburg's essay, "He and I", in John McPhee's hypnotic tour of Atlantic City, In Search of Marvin Gardens, and in Ander Monson's playful, experimental essays in Neck-Deep and Other Predicaments.

Creative nonfiction writers have embraced new ways of forming their texts—including online technologies—because the genre leads itself to grand experimentation. Dozens of new journals have sprung up—both in print and online—that feature creative nonfiction prominently in their offerings.

Ethics and accuracy edit

Writers of creative or narrative non-fiction often discuss the level, and limits, of creative invention in their works and the limitations of memory to justify the approaches they have taken to relating true events. Melanie McGrath, whose book Silvertown, an account of her grandmother's life, is "written in a novelist's idiom",[11] writes in the follow-up, Hopping, that the known facts of her stories are "the canvas on to which I have embroidered. Some of the facts have slipped through the holes—we no longer know them nor have any means of verifying them—and in these cases I have reimagined scenes or reconstructed events in a way I believe reflects the essence of the scene or the event in the minds and hearts of the people who lived through it. ... To my mind this literary tinkering does not alter the more profound truth of the story."[12] This concept of fact vs. fiction is elaborated upon in Brenda Miller and Suzanne Paola's book Tell It Slant. Nuala Calvi, authors of The Sugar Girls, a novelistic story based on interviews with former sugar-factory workers, make a similar point: "Although we have tried to remain faithful to what our interviewees have told us, at a distance of over half a century many memories are understandably incomplete, and where necessary we have used our own research, and our imaginations, to fill in the gaps. ... However, the essence of the stories related here is true, as they were told to us by those who experienced them at first hand."[13]

In the late 20th and early 21st centuries, there have been several well-publicized incidents of memoir writers who exaggerated or fabricated certain facts in their work.[14] For example:

Although there have been instances of traditional and literary journalists falsifying their stories, the ethics applied to creative nonfiction are the same as those that apply to journalism. The truth is meant to be upheld, just told in a literary fashion. Essayist John D'Agata explores the issue in his 2012 book The Lifespan of a Fact. It examines the relationship between truth and accuracy, and whether it is appropriate for a writer to substitute one for the other. He and fact-checker Jim Fingal have an intense debate about the boundaries of creative nonfiction, or "literary nonfiction".

Literary criticism edit

There is very little published literary criticism of creative nonfiction works, despite the fact that the genre is often published in respected publications such as The New Yorker, Vanity Fair, Harper's, and Esquire.[17] A handful of the most widely recognized writers in the genre such as Robert Caro, Gay Talese, Joseph Mitchell, Tom Wolfe, John McPhee, Joan Didion, John Perkins, Ryszard Kapuściński, Helen Garner and Norman Mailer have seen some criticism on their more prominent works. "Critics to date, however, have tended to focus on only one or two of each writer's works, to illustrate particular critical point."[18] These analyses of a few key pieces are hardly in-depth or as comprehensive as the criticism and analyses of their fictional contemporaries[citation needed]. As the popularity of the genre continues to expand, many nonfiction authors and a handful of literary critics are calling for more extensive literary analysis of the genre. The genre of the personal essay is periodically subject to predictions of its demise.[19]

"If, these four features delimit an important art form of our time, a discourse grounded in fact but artful in execution that might be called literary nonfiction, what is needed is serious critical attention of all kinds to this work: formal criticism (both Russian formalism and New Criticism), historical, biographical, cultural, structuralist and deconstructionist, reader-response criticism and feminist (criticism)."[18]

"Nonfiction is no longer the bastard child, the second class citizen; literature is no longer reified, mystified, unavailable. This is the contribution that poststructuralist theory has to make to an understanding of literary nonfiction, since poststructuralist theorists are primarily concerned with how we make meaning and secure authority for claims in meaning of language."[20]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Verfabula".
  2. ^ Gutkind, Lee (2007). The Best Creative Nonfiction, Vol. 1. New York: W. W. Norton. pp. xi. ISBN 978-0-393-33003-8.
  3. ^ Anderson, page ix.
  4. ^ a b Lounsberry, Barbara (1990). The art of fact: contemporary artists of nonfiction. Westport, Conn: Greenwood Press. xiii. ISBN 0-313-26893-2.
  5. ^ Lounsberry, page xiii-xiv
  6. ^ Lounsberry, page xiv-xv
  7. ^ Lounsberry, page xv
  8. ^ Knight, Lania (2008-05-16). "An Interview with Creative Nonfiction Writer Phillip Lopate". Poets & Writers. Retrieved 2021-04-18.
  9. ^ Johnson, Fenton (1 June 1997). Geography of the Heart. Scribner. ISBN 978-0671009830.
  10. ^ Holman, Virginia (February 25, 2003). Rescuing Patty Hearst: Memories From a Decade Gone Mad (1st ed.). Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0743222853.
  11. ^ McKay, Sinclair (28 April 2002). "Life is Sweets". The Telegraph. Retrieved 2012-03-04.
  12. ^ McGrath, Melanie (2009). Hopping. 4th Estate. pp. xiv–xv. ISBN 978-0-00-722365-7.
  13. ^ Barrett and Calvi, Duncan and Nuala (2012). The Sugar Girls. Collins. pp. 337–338. ISBN 978-0-00-744847-0.
  14. ^ "Creative Nonfiction, Issue. 38, Spring 2010". Creative Nonfiction: 7–13. ISSN 1070-0714.
  15. ^ Daniel Ganzfried, translated from the German by Katherine Quimby Johnson. "Die Geliehene Holocaust-Biographie (The Purloined Holocaust Biography)". Die Weltwoche. Retrieved 2010-12-31.
  16. ^ Wyatt, Edward (2006-01-10). "Best-Selling Memoir Draws Scrutiny". The New York Times. Retrieved 2008-01-24.
  17. ^ Gutkind, Lee (1997). The Art of Creative Nonfiction: Writing and Selling the Literature of Reality. New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc. pp. 8. ISBN 0-471-11356-5.
  18. ^ a b Lounsberry, page xvi
  19. ^ "The Personal Essay Book is Over: 18 May 2017". New Yorker. 18 May 2017. Retrieved April 18, 2021.
  20. ^ Anderson, Chris (1989). Literary nonfiction: theory, criticism, pedagogy. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press. xix–x. ISBN 0-8093-1405-3.

Further reading edit

Chronological order of publication (oldest first)

  • Johnson, E. L.; Wolfe, Tom (1975). The New Journalism. London: Pan Books. ISBN 0-330-24315-2.
  • Gutkind, Lee (1997). The Art of Creative Nonfiction: Writing and Selling the Literature of Reality. New York: Wiley. ISBN 0-471-11356-5.
  • Cheney, Theodore A. Rees (2001). Writing Creative Nonfiction: Fiction Techniques for Crafting Great Nonfiction. New York: Ten Speed Press. ISBN 978-1580082297.
  • Associated Writing Programs; Forche, Carolyn; Gerard, Philip (2001). Writing Creative Nonfiction: Instruction and Insights from Teachers of the Associated Writing Programs. Cincinnati: Writer's Digest Books. ISBN 1-884910-50-5.
  • Dillard, Annie; Gutkind, Lee (2005). In Fact: The Best of Creative Nonfiction. New York: W.W. Norton & Co. ISBN 0-393-32665-9.
  • Gutkind, Lee, ed. (2008). Keep It Real: Everything You Need to Know About Researching and Writing Creative Nonfiction. New York: W.W. Norton & Co. ISBN 978-0-393-06561-9.

External links edit

  • Creative Nonfiction a magazine and resource devoted to the creative nonfiction genre
  • Hippocampus Magazine an online magazine focusing solely on creative nonfiction, founded in 2010
  • River Teeth a journal of nonfiction narrative
  • Fourth Genre explorations in nonfiction
  • Shadowbox Magazine a biannual journal of creative nonfiction
  • Poets & Writers a nonprofit literary organization serving poets, fiction and creative nonfiction writers
  • Creative Nonfiction resources for Australian writers 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine
  • Joan Clingan, Prescott College
  • PodLit 2011-07-08 at the Wayback Machine Creative Nonfiction Podcast
  • UC Irvine Literary Journalism Degree Program
  • The Sugar Girls website
  • 1966 - A Journal of Creative Nonfiction a literary magazine devoted to the creative nonfiction genre
  • Resources for CNF Writers - a list of resources for creative nonfiction writers

Audio/video links edit

  • gives a definition of the genre
  • gives examples of authors who write in the genre

creative, nonfiction, this, article, about, genre, magazine, creative, nonfiction, magazine, also, known, literary, nonfiction, narrative, nonfiction, literary, journalism, verfabula, genre, writing, that, uses, literary, styles, techniques, create, factually,. This article is about the genre For the magazine see Creative Nonfiction magazine Creative nonfiction also known as literary nonfiction narrative nonfiction literary journalism or verfabula 1 is a genre of writing that uses literary styles and techniques to create factually accurate narratives Creative nonfiction contrasts with other nonfiction such as academic or technical writing or journalism which are also rooted in accurate fact though not written to entertain based on prose style Many writers view creative nonfiction as overlapping with the essay Contents 1 Characteristics and definition 2 Ethics and accuracy 3 Literary criticism 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External links 7 1 Audio video linksCharacteristics and definition editFor a text to be considered creative nonfiction it must be factually accurate and written with attention to literary style and technique Lee Gutkind founder of the magazine Creative Nonfiction writes Ultimately the primary goal of the creative nonfiction writer is to communicate information just like a reporter but to shape it in a way that reads like fiction 2 Forms within this genre include memoir diary travel writing food writing literary journalism chronicle personal essays and other hybridized essays as well as some biography and autobiography Critic Chris Anderson claims that the genre can be understood best by splitting it into two subcategories the personal essay and the journalistic essay but the genre is currently defined by its lack of established conventions 3 Literary critic Barbara Lounsberry in her book The Art of Fact suggests four constitutive characteristics of the genre the first is Documentable subject matter chosen from the real world as opposed to invented from the writer s mind 4 By this she means that the topics and events discussed in the text verifiably exist in the natural world The second characteristic is Exhaustive research 4 which she claims allows writers novel perspectives on their subjects and also permits them to establish the credibility of their narratives through verifiable references in their texts 5 The third characteristic that Lounsberry claims is crucial in defining the genre is The scene She stresses the importance of describing and revivifying the context of events in contrast to the typical journalistic style of objective reportage 6 The fourth and final feature she suggests is Fine writing a literary prose style Verifiable subject matter and exhaustive research guarantee the nonfiction side of literary nonfiction the narrative form and structure disclose the writer s artistry and finally its polished language reveals that the goal all along has been literature 7 Essayist and critic Phillip Lopate describes reflection as a necessary element of the genre offering the advice that the best literary nonfiction captures the mind at work 8 Creative nonfiction may be structured like traditional fiction narratives as is true of Fenton Johnson s story of love and loss Geography of the Heart 9 and Virginia Holman s Rescuing Patty Hearst 10 When book length works of creative nonfiction follow a story like arc they are sometimes called narrative nonfiction Other books such as Daniel Levitin s This Is Your Brain on Music and The World in Six Songs use elements of narrative momentum rhythm and poetry to convey a literary quality Creative nonfiction often escapes traditional boundaries of narrative altogether as happens in the bittersweet banter of Natalia Ginzburg s essay He and I in John McPhee s hypnotic tour of Atlantic City In Search of Marvin Gardens and in Ander Monson s playful experimental essays in Neck Deep and Other Predicaments Creative nonfiction writers have embraced new ways of forming their texts including online technologies because the genre leads itself to grand experimentation Dozens of new journals have sprung up both in print and online that feature creative nonfiction prominently in their offerings Ethics and accuracy editWriters of creative or narrative non fiction often discuss the level and limits of creative invention in their works and the limitations of memory to justify the approaches they have taken to relating true events Melanie McGrath whose book Silvertown an account of her grandmother s life is written in a novelist s idiom 11 writes in the follow up Hopping that the known facts of her stories are the canvas on to which I have embroidered Some of the facts have slipped through the holes we no longer know them nor have any means of verifying them and in these cases I have reimagined scenes or reconstructed events in a way I believe reflects the essence of the scene or the event in the minds and hearts of the people who lived through it To my mind this literary tinkering does not alter the more profound truth of the story 12 This concept of fact vs fiction is elaborated upon in Brenda Miller and Suzanne Paola s book Tell It Slant Nuala Calvi authors of The Sugar Girls a novelistic story based on interviews with former sugar factory workers make a similar point Although we have tried to remain faithful to what our interviewees have told us at a distance of over half a century many memories are understandably incomplete and where necessary we have used our own research and our imaginations to fill in the gaps However the essence of the stories related here is true as they were told to us by those who experienced them at first hand 13 In the late 20th and early 21st centuries there have been several well publicized incidents of memoir writers who exaggerated or fabricated certain facts in their work 14 For example In 1998 Swiss writer and journalist Daniel Ganzfried revealed that Binjamin Wilkomirski s memoir Fragments Memories of a Wartime Childhood detailing his experiences as a child survivor of the Holocaust contained factual inaccuracies 15 The James Frey controversy hit in 2006 when The Smoking Gun website revealed that Frey s memoir A Million Little Pieces contained experiences that turned out to be fabrications 16 In 2008 The New York Times featured an article about the memoirist Margaret Seltzer whose pen name is Margaret B Jones Her publisher Riverhead Books canceled the publication of Seltzer s book Love and Consequences when it was revealed that Seltzer s story of her alleged experiences growing up as a half white half Native American foster child and Bloods gang member in South Central Los Angeles were fictitious Although there have been instances of traditional and literary journalists falsifying their stories the ethics applied to creative nonfiction are the same as those that apply to journalism The truth is meant to be upheld just told in a literary fashion Essayist John D Agata explores the issue in his 2012 book The Lifespan of a Fact It examines the relationship between truth and accuracy and whether it is appropriate for a writer to substitute one for the other He and fact checker Jim Fingal have an intense debate about the boundaries of creative nonfiction or literary nonfiction Literary criticism editThere is very little published literary criticism of creative nonfiction works despite the fact that the genre is often published in respected publications such as The New Yorker Vanity Fair Harper s and Esquire 17 A handful of the most widely recognized writers in the genre such as Robert Caro Gay Talese Joseph Mitchell Tom Wolfe John McPhee Joan Didion John Perkins Ryszard Kapuscinski Helen Garner and Norman Mailer have seen some criticism on their more prominent works Critics to date however have tended to focus on only one or two of each writer s works to illustrate particular critical point 18 These analyses of a few key pieces are hardly in depth or as comprehensive as the criticism and analyses of their fictional contemporaries citation needed As the popularity of the genre continues to expand many nonfiction authors and a handful of literary critics are calling for more extensive literary analysis of the genre The genre of the personal essay is periodically subject to predictions of its demise 19 If these four features delimit an important art form of our time a discourse grounded in fact but artful in execution that might be called literary nonfiction what is needed is serious critical attention of all kinds to this work formal criticism both Russian formalism and New Criticism historical biographical cultural structuralist and deconstructionist reader response criticism and feminist criticism 18 Nonfiction is no longer the bastard child the second class citizen literature is no longer reified mystified unavailable This is the contribution that poststructuralist theory has to make to an understanding of literary nonfiction since poststructuralist theorists are primarily concerned with how we make meaning and secure authority for claims in meaning of language 20 See also editDocufiction Documentary film Essay Ethnofiction Gonzo journalism New Journalism Nonfiction novel Roman a clefReferences edit Verfabula Gutkind Lee 2007 The Best Creative Nonfiction Vol 1 New York W W Norton pp xi ISBN 978 0 393 33003 8 Anderson page ix a b Lounsberry Barbara 1990 The art of fact contemporary artists of nonfiction Westport Conn Greenwood Press xiii ISBN 0 313 26893 2 Lounsberry page xiii xiv Lounsberry page xiv xv Lounsberry page xv Knight Lania 2008 05 16 An Interview with Creative Nonfiction Writer Phillip Lopate Poets amp Writers Retrieved 2021 04 18 Johnson Fenton 1 June 1997 Geography of the Heart Scribner ISBN 978 0671009830 Holman Virginia February 25 2003 Rescuing Patty Hearst Memories From a Decade Gone Mad 1st ed Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0743222853 McKay Sinclair 28 April 2002 Life is Sweets The Telegraph Retrieved 2012 03 04 McGrath Melanie 2009 Hopping 4th Estate pp xiv xv ISBN 978 0 00 722365 7 Barrett and Calvi Duncan and Nuala 2012 The Sugar Girls Collins pp 337 338 ISBN 978 0 00 744847 0 Creative Nonfiction Issue 38 Spring 2010 Creative Nonfiction 7 13 ISSN 1070 0714 Daniel Ganzfried translated from the German by Katherine Quimby Johnson Die Geliehene Holocaust Biographie The Purloined Holocaust Biography Die Weltwoche Retrieved 2010 12 31 Wyatt Edward 2006 01 10 Best Selling Memoir Draws Scrutiny The New York Times Retrieved 2008 01 24 Gutkind Lee 1997 The Art of Creative Nonfiction Writing and Selling the Literature of Reality New York John Wiley amp Sons Inc pp 8 ISBN 0 471 11356 5 a b Lounsberry page xvi The Personal Essay Book is Over 18 May 2017 New Yorker 18 May 2017 Retrieved April 18 2021 Anderson Chris 1989 Literary nonfiction theory criticism pedagogy Carbondale Southern Illinois University Press xix x ISBN 0 8093 1405 3 Further reading editChronological order of publication oldest first Johnson E L Wolfe Tom 1975 The New Journalism London Pan Books ISBN 0 330 24315 2 Gutkind Lee 1997 The Art of Creative Nonfiction Writing and Selling the Literature of Reality New York Wiley ISBN 0 471 11356 5 Cheney Theodore A Rees 2001 Writing Creative Nonfiction Fiction Techniques for Crafting Great Nonfiction New York Ten Speed Press ISBN 978 1580082297 Associated Writing Programs Forche Carolyn Gerard Philip 2001 Writing Creative Nonfiction Instruction and Insights from Teachers of the Associated Writing Programs Cincinnati Writer s Digest Books ISBN 1 884910 50 5 Dillard Annie Gutkind Lee 2005 In Fact The Best of Creative Nonfiction New York W W Norton amp Co ISBN 0 393 32665 9 Gutkind Lee ed 2008 Keep It Real Everything You Need to Know About Researching and Writing Creative Nonfiction New York W W Norton amp Co ISBN 978 0 393 06561 9 External links editCreative Nonfiction a magazine and resource devoted to the creative nonfiction genre Hippocampus Magazine an online magazine focusing solely on creative nonfiction founded in 2010 River Teeth a journal of nonfiction narrative Fourth Genre explorations in nonfiction Shadowbox Magazine a biannual journal of creative nonfiction Poets amp Writers a nonprofit literary organization serving poets fiction and creative nonfiction writers Charles Taylor Prize for Literary Non Fiction Canada Creative Nonfiction resources for Australian writers Archived 2016 03 04 at the Wayback Machine Creative Nonfiction Bibliography Joan Clingan Prescott College PodLit Archived 2011 07 08 at the Wayback Machine Creative Nonfiction Podcast UC Irvine Literary Journalism Degree Program Stonecoast Main MFA in Creative Non fiction Writing The Sugar Girls website 1966 A Journal of Creative Nonfiction a literary magazine devoted to the creative nonfiction genre Resources for CNF Writers a list of resources for creative nonfiction writersAudio video links edit Audio C SPAN Interview with Lee Gutkind gives a definition of the genre Audio C SPAN Interview with Lee Gutkind gives examples of authors who write in the genre Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Creative nonfiction amp oldid 1198394777, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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