Serendip is an independent site partnering with faculty at multiple colleges and universities around the world. Happy exploring!

Reply to comment

Serendip Visitor's picture

Essay--> "Essai"

Today, in my course on "Literary Kinds" we used the workbook prompt that asked us to think about what "genre" this piece is--> "What makes this text a 'story in fragments' rather than an essay in fragments, or a life in fragments?"

...and I wrote this:

What's the difference between a story and an essay and a life? The earliest version of this text appeared in my book:  that was for me, clearly, a story about my life and how it was broken by my brother's death. This second version has several other more academic layers in it, several other analytic dimensions; I was quite (self) consciously making it more analytic and professional, and writing for a larger audience. I was working with the idea of breaking (not immediately resonant or positive for me), working through the idea, and also working very hard @ the form --writing in fragments to talk about fragmentation. Very heartening for me, this week, was to read Clare Mullaney's story-essay, which seemed to copy that form for her own purposes.

So: its not a life--it's a life, shaped and represented. It was a story on its first form--less mediated, less self-conscious about shape and concept, than the second, essay form, which really thinks about breaking, and my relation to it, and my need for continuity--"I must depart from this volume." There's another layer of reflection, of analytic distance than there was the first time around.

But then I think (endlessly!) of Cassie Kosarek's telling us, in another class visit, earlier this week,  of the roots of "essay" in "essai," to try out, attempt, experiment...

Reply

To prevent automated spam submissions leave this field empty.
1 + 0 =
Solve this simple math problem and enter the result. E.g. for 1+3, enter 4.