November's National Novel Writing Month has always intrigued me, from a distance. A novel in thirty days. Well, 50,000 words. How appealing! You become an equal of Anthony Burgess before his breakfast, of William T. Vollmann clearing his throat, of Joyce Carol Oates on Mogodon. Of course quality is not the issue with NaNoWriMo. That's the difference. Just get it written. That’s all. 50,000 words.
But it can never be that simple. Quality is always the only game in town. One might as well copy & paste from random documents until the magical word count is achieved. So how does one judge? Isn't it just a waste of time?
This week I have been reading Reiner Stach’s thrilling new biography Kafka: the Decisive Years. He begins two years before Kafka’s famous breakthrough work began on September 22nd 1912. It took him eight hours through the night to write The Judgment.
Stach makes it clear, however, that before this ecstatic night, Kafka had consigned many hundreds of pages to the family stove. His high standards could not have stood otherwise. Apparently he also spent hours lounging on the sofa, doing nothing. There seems to have been a lot of wasted time and effort in Kafka’s short life. The image of pages covered in his spidery handwriting disappearing into the glowing mouth of the stove has stuck in my mind. Maybe it was a good thing.
I'm thinking of what Emerson says in his essay Experience: We do not know today whether we are busy or idle. In times when we thought ourselves indolent, we have afterwards discovered, that much was accomplished, and much was begun in us.
The inverse is also true. Perhaps December 1st could become worldwide Burn Your Manuscript Day. Imagine what might emerge.
In Kafka’s diary entry for September 23rd, he looked back to the previous night: The conviction verified that with my novel-writing I am in the shameful lowlands of writing. Only in this way can writing be done, only with such coherence, with such a complete opening out of the body and the soul.
Later, he burned another story.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Contact
Please email me at steve dot mitchelmore at gmail dot com.
Website roll (in alphabetical order)
- ABC of Reading
- An und für sich
- Being in Lieu
- Blckgrd
- Blue Labyrinths
- Books of Some Substance
- Charlotte Street
- Craig Murray
- Daniel Fraser
- David's Book World
- Declassified UK
- Donald Clark Plan B
- Ducksoap
- Flowerville
- In lieu of a field guide
- Kit Klarenberg
- Literary Saloon
- Notes from a Room
- Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews
- Of Resonance
- Resolute Reader
- Robert Kelly
- Rough Ghosts
- Socrates on the Beach
- Spurious
- The Goalie's Anxiety
- The Grayzone
- The Last Books (publisher)
- The Philosophical Worldview Artist
- The Reading Experience
- Times Flow Stemmed
- Tiny Camels
- Vertigo
Recommended podcasts
Favoured author sites
Blog Archive
- October 2024 (1)
- September 2024 (1)
- July 2024 (1)
- June 2024 (3)
- May 2024 (31)
- April 2024 (8)
- February 2024 (1)
- December 2023 (2)
- October 2023 (2)
- September 2023 (1)
- August 2023 (1)
- July 2023 (2)
- June 2023 (2)
- May 2023 (1)
- April 2023 (1)
- December 2022 (2)
- November 2022 (1)
- October 2022 (1)
- September 2022 (1)
- July 2022 (2)
- April 2022 (1)
- December 2021 (2)
- November 2021 (1)
- October 2021 (1)
- September 2021 (1)
- August 2021 (1)
- July 2021 (1)
- June 2021 (1)
- April 2021 (1)
- February 2021 (1)
- December 2020 (1)
- November 2020 (1)
- October 2020 (2)
- August 2020 (1)
- June 2020 (1)
- March 2020 (1)
- February 2020 (1)
- December 2019 (2)
- November 2019 (2)
- October 2019 (2)
- September 2019 (2)
- June 2019 (1)
- May 2019 (1)
- March 2019 (1)
- February 2019 (2)
- January 2019 (1)
- November 2018 (1)
- September 2018 (1)
- August 2018 (1)
- April 2018 (1)
- March 2018 (1)
- February 2018 (1)
- January 2018 (1)
- December 2017 (1)
- October 2017 (1)
- August 2017 (2)
- July 2017 (1)
- June 2017 (2)
- May 2017 (3)
- March 2017 (1)
- February 2017 (3)
- December 2016 (1)
- October 2016 (1)
- August 2016 (2)
- July 2016 (1)
- June 2016 (2)
- May 2016 (1)
- April 2016 (2)
- March 2016 (1)
- February 2016 (2)
- January 2016 (1)
- December 2015 (1)
- November 2015 (1)
- August 2015 (2)
- June 2015 (1)
- May 2015 (1)
- March 2015 (1)
- February 2015 (2)
- January 2015 (1)
- December 2014 (1)
- October 2014 (1)
- September 2014 (2)
- July 2014 (1)
- June 2014 (2)
- April 2014 (1)
- March 2014 (3)
- November 2013 (2)
- October 2013 (1)
- September 2013 (1)
- August 2013 (1)
- July 2013 (2)
- April 2013 (1)
- March 2013 (2)
- February 2013 (1)
- January 2013 (1)
- November 2012 (2)
- August 2012 (1)
- July 2012 (1)
- June 2012 (1)
- May 2012 (3)
- March 2012 (3)
- February 2012 (1)
- January 2012 (1)
- November 2011 (1)
- October 2011 (2)
- September 2011 (2)
- July 2011 (3)
- June 2011 (1)
- May 2011 (3)
- April 2011 (5)
- March 2011 (3)
- February 2011 (1)
- January 2011 (2)
- December 2010 (7)
- November 2010 (1)
- October 2010 (5)
- September 2010 (2)
- August 2010 (3)
- July 2010 (4)
- June 2010 (2)
- May 2010 (3)
- April 2010 (4)
- March 2010 (11)
- February 2010 (3)
- December 2009 (3)
- November 2009 (5)
- October 2009 (5)
- September 2009 (3)
- August 2009 (6)
- July 2009 (6)
- June 2009 (4)
- May 2009 (8)
- April 2009 (8)
- March 2009 (12)
- February 2009 (11)
- January 2009 (7)
- December 2008 (7)
- November 2008 (7)
- October 2008 (17)
- September 2008 (7)
- August 2008 (7)
- July 2008 (7)
- June 2008 (7)
- May 2008 (7)
- April 2008 (5)
- March 2008 (8)
- February 2008 (2)
- January 2008 (9)
- December 2007 (26)
- November 2007 (28)
- October 2007 (14)
- September 2007 (22)
- August 2007 (13)
- July 2007 (17)
- June 2007 (11)
- May 2007 (22)
- April 2007 (11)
- March 2007 (23)
- February 2007 (25)
- January 2007 (21)
- December 2006 (8)
- November 2006 (23)
- October 2006 (21)
- September 2006 (16)
- August 2006 (14)
- July 2006 (32)
- June 2006 (17)
- May 2006 (24)
- April 2006 (16)
- March 2006 (18)
- February 2006 (15)
- January 2006 (8)
- December 2005 (8)
- November 2005 (10)
- October 2005 (7)
- September 2005 (13)
- August 2005 (13)
- July 2005 (8)
- June 2005 (15)
- May 2005 (11)
- April 2005 (12)
- March 2005 (8)
- February 2005 (7)
- January 2005 (15)
- December 2004 (2)
- November 2004 (4)
- October 2004 (6)
- September 2004 (2)
Contact steve dot mitchelmore at gmail.com. Powered by Blogger.
High standards? What do you mean by "high standards"?
ReplyDelete"His high standards".
ReplyDeleteI am asking, what do you mean by "his high standards"? Do you really think Kafka had high standards; somehow that seems absurd to me, since he was uniquely original. Originality has no standards, because it can't be compared to anything-- even that its own author can find. I know this sounds like a quibble, but it isn't. It points to a common fallacy of critics: assuming that the subjects of their criticism are operating with anything like the same principles, or standards, as them. We don't know why Kafka burned what he did, and never will. We do know he was gifted with the ability to doubt everything he did. But I do agree with the general point of your post; it just struck me as funny to think of Kafka cooly measuring himself against ANY known standard.
ReplyDeleteWell you've kind of answered your own question. He judged his work by his high standards rather than 'ANY known standard'.
ReplyDeleteStill, it's quite clear that Kafka had favourite authors and used them in some way, just as we all use our own favourite authors in some way.
Anyway, the biographer says high standards is the reason for him burning so much. I happen to think that's the most plausible explanation. Would he have burned so much if he was happy with what he'd written?
You're right that it's a fallacy of criticism to assume a subject operates within the same principles or standards. But I don't know which particular critics you mean - I can't know, and perhaps never will - but Occam's razor is a necessary tool of the reader.
I have to say I'm not crazy about Emerson's remarks about grief BTW. Says it made little impact on him, that it was 'shallow'. I'd be guessing it might not have been the emotion that was at fault there. Thanks for the link.
ReplyDeleteI think you're unfair on Emerson there Genevieve. He says he cannot get his son's death nearer to him, which grieves him; this is his grief. It is shallow because it isn't enough - and isn't this why we grieve, in order to experience something commensurable with the non-experience of irreversible absence?
ReplyDeleteThe essay is a subtle repost to the Cult of Experience, I think; the romantic notion of unmediated contact or engagement.
I certainly don't think of experience of that sort as cultish in any way, nor am I terribly happy with your definition of grief - in my experience it is anything but 'ordered', think rather 'demoralisingly undermining and overwhelming' - but I'll give Emerson another go.
ReplyDeleteFine sentiments. Nanowrimo is worthwhile as exercise, as training, as process. But the actual physical burning is important, too. Just pressing delete is not enough. Word count is less rewarding than physical pages stacked up by the typewriter, or printer. Write your 50,000 words, print them out, fees them into the stove. I can't guarantee you will have produced a novel of any value whatsoever, but it's highly likely you will improve as a writer. You will raise your own standards. And what could be a greater achievement than that?
ReplyDeleteStach's biography is so very good. Easily one of the best I've read in quite some time.
ReplyDelete