The genre of memoir has many literary qualities those are unique only to memoir that appeals to many readers. Compared to other genres, memoirs are author’s real memories and include stories involving the problem of the author and other characters’ relationship. Memoirs include many authors’ extraordinary memories and events that may look surprising to the readers. In the book A List of Things That Didn’t Kill Me by Jason Schmidt, the author recalls a horrifying memory of his father. It said,”... I came home from school one day and found my dad crawling around on a kitchen floor in a big pool of blood. (3)” For Jason, who was surprisingly calm, some happenings that may be seen horrifying for the readers weren’t casual for him. Events like this
It is within the human nature to be interested in other people’s experiences. Whether it be with reality shows or blog posts, people like to hear different incidents through diverse perspectives. Writers take advantage of this curiosity and try to tie experiences into their works. Many times writers will include experiences of their own in order to convince their audience of their perspective on a subject. These personal experiences are done in order to make an impact on the audience and it is written in a certain way to make it the most efficient for the readers. The use of personal anecdotes is effective when details are described to the point where readers can create their own opinions, when they are used as the main topic against an argument as opposed to being an unimportant detail, and when it has the ability to appeal to the audience’s emotion.
In the reading, “Writing About Yourself: The Memoir” by William Zinsser, the author uses organization, examples, and direct advice to develop the purpose and message of the selection. The message of this piece is that writing about oneself and delving into what has made the author who they are gives the writing individuality and distinction. Like the message, the purpose is to encourage writers to write about themselves and what has shaped them without hesitation. To begin with, the author uses a pattern of organization where he introduces an excerpt of a memoir by stating a quality that makes this memoir exemplary. After the excerpt, he will further comment on what makes this memoir memorable for him. For example, the author states, “One secret of the art [the memoir] is detail… a sound or smell—as long as it played a
memoir about my father. This memoir described and expressed the feelings that I had and
For this assignment we were asked to write a memoir about a significant event in our life. We were graded on our ability to create an engaging opening, write a powerful storyline with a complex self-awareness, and create a piece with a clear beginning, middle, and end. It was expected that we followed MLA format and at least two pages long. For my memoir I wrote about a time I injured myself. I think the main purpose of the assignment was to get us to think about how events in our life impacted who we are today. It was also meant to encourage us to analyze how we reacted to a certain situation and why we reacted in the way we did. Overall it was meant to help us analyze who we are as a person and better understand how we came to be that
In Maus, Spiegelman uses a third person narrative to tell the story of his father’s experiences in the Holocaust. In contrast, Robinson uses first and second person to tell the story of Lisa Marie’s family’s hardships due to Residential Schools. Through the use of historical references, relationships and evoking emotion in the reader, Eden Robinson’s narrative better exemplifies how individuals of second generation trauma use the experience of post memory to connect with the reader when compared to Spiegelman’s Maus.
Telling stories can help people separate tragic events and occurrences like war from themselves. “I did not look on my work as therapy, and still don’t. Yet when I received. . . memories that might have otherwise have ended in paralysis or worse (Page 152).” To Tim O’brien writing was not a therapy, but it actually was. He says if he didn’t write, his memories might have caused him to end in paralysis
Magical realism and memoir are ostensibly opposing genres—the first is a work of fiction with elements of fantasy infused with reality while the other is a nonfiction account told through narrative. Despite their differences at the surface, at their foundation, both genres are driven by the same force: ambiguity. Because magical realism is a genre that consists of a realistic yet fictional story in which the characters have an acceptance of the fantastical, the lines between what the reader knows to be real and fake are blurred. Within memoir, because the author reconstructs a history without all the concrete facts through old memories, accounts from friends and family, and even photographs, there is much room for error and even confusion,
I have made a lot of deliberate decisions and intentional choices while writing this memoir. While writing this memoir I recalled a lot of memories from an incident that happened to me on Virginia Beach in Chesapeake, Virginia. An incident that changed me forever, changed my feelings every time I pass by or go to any beach. It was three years ago when a friend of mine died drowning while we were on a boat. During the memoir I chose to be more implicit than explicit by giving enough details about the event that happened not just telling the reader. I have maintained to keep the essay more open and understandable to the reader.
Towards the end of the memoir, Johnny suffered from amnesia attacks and I saw these as one of the brute, unthinking side effects of his condition. After months of testing various treatments, Johnny’s doctors and parents were shocked to see that Johnny had recovered so quickly only to see him deteriorate twice as
I attended the "Fathering Word: The Making of an African American Writer" lecture by E. Ethelbert Miller, Miller is an advocate for the arts and a Howard University graduate. Miller started his lecture by saying that being an author was a lonely job, but it was worth it because he enjoyed getting the opportunity to attend events all over the country and meeting the many audience members. Miller says that literature takes you behind the scenes, for example, he talked about how in reality his father was an average working class man, but in his stories his father was elevated to seem like a "Greek god". Miller also mentioned how literature allowed him to reveal secrets of your life that you wouldn 't necessarily want to say out loud. After his opening remarks Miller went on to talk about the important factors that are included in a memoir, he said that a memoir is a collection of someone 's memories and their thoughts of the events. Miller also made an interesting point about if a person has the right to remember or erase a memory from their memoir, but before you make that decision you should ask yourself, "what can a person learn from your life.” (Miller) A memoir is about storytelling and what have you been a witness to. The magic should start on the first page and it 's very important that the first sentence grabs their attention because you want to make people who don 't know you want to read about you.
Myth number 13 state that people repress memories of traumatic experiences. The text talks about the controversy in the pasts years in what really happens to the repress memory. In this myth, the idea of people’s not being able to report an event is not necessarily that they forgot the memory or even repressed it. It also argues that the belief of repress memory “seems to be a relatively recent product of our cultural dating from 19th century” (page 5, paragraph 2). Moreover, the text challenges the believe of repress memory existing as a method that our minds to repress traumas. Instead, it highlights that what we adopted as “repress memory” can be also interpret with other causes other than our minds putting away painful memories.
In a very different vein, Aleksandar Hemon's essay about his infant daughter's terminal illness is a difficult and unnerving reading experience. Most stories about illness package grief up in a retrospective way, but reading Hemon's account, you feel like you're muddling along with him. His inability to understand what's happening and subsequent psychological coping mechanisms are raw and painful but also have a surreal logic to them; left me feeling weirdly inspired about the resiliency of human psychology. A Child’s Isolating
Memoirs, unlike autobiographies “come from the writer’s memory and often contain known falsehoods” displaying a more “individualised style and tone” (The Book Club. (2011). pp.1). Memoirs have more in common with narrative non-fiction, consequently classifying the genre as subjective, involving a degree of creative licence.
Finally finished vid. So I'm not personally offended by these comparisons, and I've used them in the past in a public way. I was influenced by learning things like: "Henry Ford, who was so impressed by the efficient way meat packers killed animals in Chicago, made his own special contribution to the slaughter of people in Europe. Not only did he develop the assembly-line method the Germans used to kill Jews, but he launched a vicious anti-Semitic campaign that helped the Holocaust happen." Charles Patterson, Ph.D. (Admittedly, I never researched it in depth.)
When keeping the psychological effects of a tragic event, such as 9/11, in mind while reading Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close a reader can gain a deeper insight into the way 9/11 and Oskar’s father’s death has affected him negatively. After his father’s death, caused by 9/11, Oskar begins to develop a number of fears, sleeping, and behavioral problems. Each of these is a symptom of PTSD, or post traumatic stress disorder, a product of the 9/11 attack. “First, symptoms can be produced by re-experiencing the trauma, whereby the individual can have distressing recollections of the trauma,” (Panzarino). For Oskar, he re-experiences his traumas from 9/11 through recurring nightmares, Oskar wakes up in the middle of the night with his cats paws on his face saying,“He must have been feeling my nightmares,”(Foer