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- Newsgroups: misc.writing
- Path: sparky!uunet!snorkelwacker.mit.edu!bloom-picayune.mit.edu!news.mit.edu!eliz
- From: eliz@ai.mit.edu (Elizabeth Willey)
- Subject: Re: Life as Art, vice as versa
- In-Reply-To: elf@halcyon.com's message of 28 Jul 1992 22:40:26 GMT
- Message-ID: <ELIZ.92Jul29100209@corpus-callosum.ai.mit.edu>
- Sender: news@athena.mit.edu (News system)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: corpus-callosum.mit.edu
- Organization: MIT Artificial Intelligence Laboratory
- References: <1992Jul27.185559.1@eagle.wesleyan.edu>
- <1992Jul28.224026.22911@nwnexus.WA.COM>
- Date: Wed, 29 Jul 1992 15:02:09 GMT
- Lines: 25
-
- Elf Sternberg writes, discussing the problem of roman a clef (hey,
- wasn't she a Doctor Who companion...?):
- [...]
- Basically, you have three resources for information: Non-fiction
- (the newspaper and such), Fiction (other people's writings), and your
- life. The last is, of course, usually the best and most honest, the
- only place where you really have any human emotions to write fiction
- with.
-
- Don't forget the imagination, through which you process all of your
- personal and vicarious experience, as well as what you think you know
- about humanity, to produce a unique artifact. Imagination is the most
- potent tool available to any writer (techies too: imagine you're the
- naive user, and start there).
-
- Otherwise, Elf's (accurate) breakdown implies that all fiction is
- fundamentally autobiographical, which is untrue. May lightning strike
- anyone who tries to biographize *me* from *my* fiction, anyway, and I
- believe most of my writing friends would strongly agree.
-
-
- Elizabeth Willey
-
- ["Mommy! That lady said `biographize'!"]
- [(after Brust)]
-