Friday, July 3, 2020

Memoir's Primary Argument--How to Make Sure Your Memoir Has Universal Meaning

Cheryl Strayed, author of Wild, once said, "The most powerful strand in memoir is not expressing your originality.  It's tapping in to your universality."  

A.M. Homes said, "Memoir is about more than you."

My aunt, who is in her 100th year, wrote her memoires.  It was fun to read them, and I learned things about my father's family that I never knew.   This style of memoir follows the Anglo-French definition:  an "account of someone's life." A wonderful gift to pass on to those who know you and who want to hear your past.

But if you're gearing towards publishing outside of family and friends, you need to consider the wisdom of memoirists like Strayed and Homes.  Modern memoir is not autobiography.  It focuses on a salient part of a life, not the entire trajectory, as an autobiography might.  And it contains a universal element, a meaning, that has nothing to do with the person writing it. 

I'm teaching an afternoon workshop on memoir on July 17 on Zoom, and I've taught this workshop every summer for about five years. This time, I'm looking into the meaning element of memoir, that universality, and how the writer finds it.

I think there are three steps.  First, I believe the writer needs to orient towards a snapshot, a certain pivotal period of time, that changed his or her life in a big way.  Once you find that pivotal moment that your story orbits around, it's easier to reach out from it to find which storylines are part of the memoir--what might have happened years before which led to this moment,  what happened years later that came as a result.

Second, I think the writer needs to choose where to place the weight of the memoir.  Some memoirists write about the time leading to the pivotal moment; some write about the aftereffects--the living with, surviving from, reconciling or not.  A memoir can often be built on any of these, or sometimes all of them, with the event in the middle.

Once you find that pivotal moment that your story orbits around, it's easier to reach out from it to find which storylines are part of the memoir--what might have happened years before which led to this moment,  what happened years later that came as a result.

Most writers feel they have to include all of their childhood, maybe twenty, thirty, forty years of smaller but significant (to the author) events.  Otherwise, how will the reader understand the big change?  This is where the storyboard comes in so handy.  Memoirists create two or more storyboards, or maps of their storylines, then learn to weave them together like a braided rug.  

But the most intriguing step, the one that fascinates me, is discovering the primary argument of the memoir.  This is the key to its universality, and best described through example.

Girl, Interrupted, by Susanna Kaysen, is about mental illness, being confined to an institution.  To me, it's primary argument is What is sanity, truly?  The argument is not stated outright, not for a while, but it's clear even in the opening scenes.  That's what draws us in, keeps us reading.  The situation is personal, the argument leads to the universal.

H Is for Hawk, by Helen Macdonald, has three storylines:  her training of a hawk, her father's death and her relationship with him, and the author T.H. White's falconry.  Complex story, so I'm guessing at the primary argument, but it is tied to what drew me in:  what we can control, what we can't, and how love appears within that empty space.

Writers often wonder what backstory to include, and where to put it.  The argument tells you.  Only backstory that elucidates it is needed.  If Kaysen included stories of trips to the circus as a young girl but they didn't illustrate the question of sanity, they'd feel off to the reader--the writer stepping in where she wasn't wanted.  

This takes incredible restraint. Because everything is fascinating to us, who lived it.

Dani Shapiro, author of Inheritance, talks about the "frame" of a memoir.  Which window will your memoir look out of?  This is another way of getting to the primary argument and one I use in the workshop, because it's also fascinating.  Shapiro's frame concept forces the writer to focus the story in some direction.  Unlike an autobiography, it's heading towards a universal meaning. 

This week, I'll share a writing exercise, a taste of what we'll be exploring in the workshop on July 17.  Set a timer or your phone alarm for 20 minutes and begin a list of the most important events in your life, so far.  No censoring, no editing, no explanations needed, just it get on paper.  Then begin to ask yourself if any are related or linked.    Do they have a common argument, or theme, teaching you something about life?

If you're interested in joining me on Zoom on July 17 for more about memoir, click here to go to the Loft's website for more information.

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