Sometimes it seems that everyone is writing a memoir. It
makes some sense. You are supposed to write about what you know. What do you
know better than you?
This applies most especially to young people. In their
Facebook postings young people often talk about themselves. One suspects
that they find themselves to be utterly fascinating. More power to them.
If you compare what they know about themselves and what they
know about anything else, it’s no contest. Writing about themselves is a
default position for people who know very little about anything else.
Not that there’s anything wrong with that.
At the opposite extreme are those who have held high office
and who write memoirs to fill out the historical record. Often enough, these
writers are trying to make themselves look good. If they have provided
service to a nation, they have the right to tell their stories in whatever way
they wish. We leave it to historians to separate the fact from the self-serving swill.
Writers should know that there is no right or wrong about
including personal experience. If details about your personal life will keep
your readers interested and allow them to understand larger points, why not do
it.
But if a memoirist includes salacious and sordid details in
order to generate publicity and sales, his work will have no redeeming value.
Self-indulgent exhibitionism can obviously be harmful. When
you advertise your shamelessness, the world might well believe that you are
untrustworthy and unreliable. If you cannot keep your own confidence, how can
you be expected to keep anyone else’s?
Worse yet, when celebrity tell-all memoirs confer fame and
fortune on their authors allow other people to believe that exhibitionism is
morally desirable.
As you know, we moderns believe that we have invented the
memoir. In fact, we did not even invent the modern vulgar variety. It’s sad to
say it but we like to think of ourselves as utterly original, a life form that
has never before existed.
We really need to be disabused of that notion. Not only does
it remove us from history, but it means that we cannot even profit from the
wisdom of past generations. There is nothing quite as sad as people who believe
that they must make their own mistakes, especially when a scintilla of good
advice would spare tem the pain.
If one were asked to provide a simple rule about including
personal experience in a memoir, it would read something like this: the
information should help communicate your idea without drawing undue attention
to you.
It’s like getting angry. If your anger directs attention
toward the cause of your anger, it’s a good thing. If your anger merely makes
you look like an angry person, it has served no purpose, therapeutic or
otherwise.
If you write a memoir for what it will do for you, you are
wasting your time. Like any piece of writing a memoir needs to engage a reader’s
interest and tell him something that will be worth knowing.
Unless you are an historical figure, your memoir should never be directly about you.
I would emphasize that it is no small task to write about yourself without drawing attention to yourself, how to select or hide personal experience in order to show how to apply or not to apply moral precepts to real life situations.
Of course, we did not invent the memoir.
In truth, most modern memoirs pale in comparison tothe great
memoirs of the past.
One recalls The Meditations
of Marcus Aurelius which date to the second century, A.D. Augustine wrote his Confessions in the late fourth century A.D. St. Teresa of Avila’s The Life of Teresa of Jesus dates to the
sixteenth century. In more modern times, Jean-Jacques Rousseau penned his Confessions in the mid-eighteenth
century.
Strictly speaking, fictionalized autobiography, like James
Joyce’s A Portrait of the Artist as a
Young Man is not a memoir, but is an offshoot of the genre.
It should go without saying that all the cited works are well
worth a read.
Obviously, the books by Catholic authors are a subspecies of
the sacrament of Confession. They must have served to show believers how to
confess sins and to receive forgiveness.
The autobiography of St. Teresa does recount her
confessions, but it does something else. Counting among the medieval and
Renaissance books about mystical journeys to find God, it shows an individual
gaining a more personal relationship with God, one that does not depend on the
Church.
With the exception, perhaps, of Rousseau, none of the great
memoirists or autobiographers is really telling a life story. These books are
didactic and instructional. They offer life lessons, good and bad. Often they
show how the authors overcame sin and doubt to find God and faith.
You might say that these authors are showing how they gained
knowledge, but they are also showing themselves as examples worthy of
emulation.
The most important change in the genre was introduced
during the French Enlightenment by Rousseau. With his Confessions, he shifted the genre away from moral teaching toward
self-exposure. Rousseau was not trying to show you how you should become. He
believed that he needed to tell everything about himself, the good, the bad and
the horrific.
He was arguing that complete disclosure was on higher
importance than showing how to improve your character.
I would go so far as to say that Rousseau was promoting amorality. Telling everything, without regard for the results it might
produce in other people is self-indulgent. In the hands of as brilliant a
writer as Rousseau it aims at redefining moral values.
Rousseau justified his tell-all memoir by saying that it is
all his truth. He even pretended that the book of his life will gain him
entry into Heaven:
Whenever
the last trumpet shall sound, I will present myself before the sovereign judge
with this book in my hand, and loudly proclaim, thus have I acted; these were
my thoughts; such was I. With equal freedom and veracity have I related what
was laudable or wicked, I have concealed no crimes, added no virtues; and if I
have sometimes introduced superfluous ornament, it was merely to occupy a void
occasioned by defect of memory: I may have supposed that certain, which I only
knew to be probable, but have never asserted as truth, a conscious falsehood.
Such as I was, I have declared myself; sometimes vile and despicable, at
others, virtuous, generous and sublime; even as thou hast read my inmost soul:
Power eternal! assemble round thy throne an innumerable throng of my
fellow-mortals, let them listen to my confessions, let them blush at my
depravity, let them tremble at my sufferings; let each in his turn expose with
equal sincerity the failings, the wanderings of his heart, and, if he dare,
aver, I was better than that man.
Clearly, he did not want to show himself at his best. He did not want to show you how he overcame his faults and improved his character. Rousseau was not
presenting himself as an exemplar of what Aristotle would have called good
character. In that he was surely correct.
Character is something you build. Just as you do not build a
house by including everything that is lying around, you do not build character
by giving equal value to everything. All of your actions and passions do not
have equal value in showing who you are. They do not all show how you can or cannot be expected to
conduct yourself in the future. The fact that you acted badly does not define who you are… unless you decide that it must.
3 comments:
So reality TV is thee latest modern social horror I have to thank Rousseau for?
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The short answer is: Yes.
I suppose the other is Obama's grand vision for the new American social contract....
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