Joyce Carol Oates |
The most intriguing thing on her website to me was under the "Biography" tab. The following written passage from Oates was found here:
Stories That Define Me
A drunken peasant in czarist Russia is beating his overburdened, dying horse, a mare, and the child Raskolnikov and his father happen upon the scene. Raskolnikov wants to save the horse, but his father pulls him away, saying, as fathers have so frequently—so necessarily—said: It's none of our business.
When I first read "Crime and Punishment" some time in my late teens, and came upon this image, it struck me as neither melodramatic nor lurid; nor was it, in its subtle configuration (child-witness, helpless "civilized" father, brutal "natural" peasant, female horse), anything other than a paradigmatic image, for me, of how the larger world—the world outside the home, the schoolroom, the library—is constituted. A melancholy vision, a "tragic" vision, but inevitable. Uplifting endings and resolutely cheery world views are appropriate to television commercials but insulting elsewhere. It is not only wicked to pretend otherwise, it is futile. If all a serious writer can hope to do is bear witness to such suffering, and to the experience of those lacking the means or the ability to express themselves, then he or she must bear witness, and not apologize for failing to entertain, or for "making nothing happen"—in Auden's derisory phrase.
—Joyce Carol OatesThe most important part of this passage is when Oates says, "Uplifting endings and resolutely cheery world views are appropriate to television commercials but insulting elsewhere. It is not only wicked to pretend otherwise, it is futile." This outlook shows the reasoning behind Oates's harsh, realistic, and violent writing style. She uses the passage from "Crime and Punishment" as inspiration in her writing because so often that is what happens in real life. More often than not, people will stand by and watch something wrong happening instead of standing up and doing the right thing. Joyce Carol Oates portrays this reality in her writing instead of giving people false hope by writing with happy endings and demonstrating that most people in the world are good and will stand up for what is right, when in reality, as much as we would like to think that most people have other's best intentions in mind, that is not the case. This might give further insight and also be a reason why Oates is an atheist.
Laura- thanks for sharing the part about her outlook on writing. I can't say that I agree with her because I like happy endings, but it definitely shows why her writing is very violent. While I do like when things turn out fine in the end, there is always room for variety like violent, harsh writing. Thanks for providing an insight to Oates, it has helped to grasp the story we red in class a little better!
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