Tuesday, October 20, 2009
"It always starts with something true."
Pornoviolence.
There’s no getting around the fact that In Cold Blood has had vast amounts of praise heaped upon it since its release in ’66, but as with any work that stirs as much controversy as Capote’s seminal piece of literary journalism, it has also attracted its share of criticism and controversy.
Among those who leveled criticism at the novel was a fellow pioneer of the New Journalism movement (which subsequently led to literary journalism), Tom Wolfe. While Wolfe has certainly acknowledged the merits of what Capote achieved with In Cold Blood, he also raised some interesting points about its subject matter in one of his essays, entitled, Pornoviolence.
With Pornoviolence, Wolfe made a point of criticising the media for its habit of glorifying violence as a means of gratifying its audience, similarly to how pornography does with sex. In Cold Blood was among the texts to be criticised in the essay, with Wolfe writing: "The book is neither a who-done-it nor a will-they-be-caught, since the answers to both questions are known from the outset ... Instead, the book's suspense is based largely on a totally new idea in detective stories: the promise of gory details, and the withholding of them until the end."
Throughout my research into literary journalism I've read plenty about it being a style of writing that allows for a lot more description and detail than traditional news journalism does, but until now I haven't given much thought to when those details become gratuitous.
I'll admit that while I was reading In Cold Blood, even though I had a vague idea of what had happened to the Clutter family, I was eagerly waiting for Capote to lay out all the details. Has my predilection for slightly "edgier" entertainment conditioned me to react like that? I dunno. Wolfe's words have had me thinking about the issue though. At what point do the details of a violent crime become excessive in any form of journalism, literary or otherwise? The classic saying is, "if it bleeds, it leads," but where is the line drawn between respectable reporting and tasteless exploitation? I don't doubt that if you compared the coverage of a violent crime between a broadsheet and a tabloid you'd notice some stylistic differences.
Having given it some thought in the case of In Cold Blood, I don't think that the explicit details of how the Clutter family was slaughtered were in any way gratuitous, as they were a vital element of understanding Perry Smith and what he was capable of. Having said that, I do wonder if it was absolutely necessary, from a journalism perspective, to withhold the details of the crime for so long and continue to tease the audience as the story unfolded. Granted, it was an excellent narrative technique but when you consider it from the standpoint of journalistic necessity, Wolfe's argument is certainly not without credibility.
Given that my literary piece will focus on the lives of those are frequently confronted with horrific human injury, this does have me giving more consideration to how much detail I'll be using in describing the darker details.
Wednesday, October 7, 2009
A name forever tainted.
Tuesday, October 6, 2009
Through the looking glass.
Tuesday, September 29, 2009
Martin Scorsese can make anybody cooler.
Sunday, September 20, 2009
Nothing like a good segue.
Saturday, September 19, 2009
"On The Road" again.
Thursday, September 3, 2009
Not quite fact, but not quite fiction either.
Friday, August 28, 2009
Lessons in grammar from a condemned killer
Andrews' educated accent and the formal quality of his college-trained intelligence were anathema to Perry, who though he had not gone beyond third grade, imagined himself more learned, and enjoyed correcting them, especially their grammar and pronunciation. But here suddenly was someone - 'just a kid!' - constantly correcting him.
[...]
"Don't say disinterested when what you mean is uninterested."
-Excerpt from In Cold Blood, page 318
Finally got around to finishing In Cold Blood today. I hadn't touched it in a few days. Not because I was uninterested or anything like that, it's just that I've had a lot going on this week. But I took a couple of hours this afternoon to sit down and burn through the final chapter and now that I've had a few more hours to give the whole thing a bit of thought, here I am.
Excellent book, no doubt about it. Very well-written from beginning to end, but what struck me most in the final chapter and final pages and Perry and Dick lived out their final days was what the book had evolved into. Once the two of them had been caught, convicted and condemned Capote seemed to spend a great deal of time meditating on mankind's motives for violence. I quite enjoyed how he tried to get into the minds not only of Dick and Perry, but the other inmates on death row. Almost as though he was trying to establish a common thread among the lives and personalities of each man, which as far as I'm concerned turned out to be a fruitless endeavour. Interesting to contemplate though.
Speaking of which, what I found most interesting about that final chapter, about all that meditation on what drives one person to shed the blood of another, was the issue of the townspeople. And the issue of those involved in the case's investigation and prosecution. Basically, everybody on the right side of the law. So many of whom stated that, ordinarily, they're opposed to the death penalty, but in this case...
And really, who can blame them? The average person probably doesn't consider themselves particularly violent, and subsequently, the average person never finds themselves responsible for the slaughter of an innocent family. But when it comes to justice for people savage enough to level a shotgun at those four innocent faces and squeeze that shotgun's trigger four times, a certain bloodlust is awakened within the average person. That typical "forgive a man for any sins" mentality flies out the window in favour of satisfying that primal desire for revenge. For better or worse, they suddenly become quite comfortable with the act of 'judicial homicide,' as Capote put it.
Finally I'll mention the passage that I quoted at the start of this post. Like my previous post on the symptoms of fury rearranging Dick's face, this line stood out for me quite a bit. Mostly because until now I had no idea there was any difference between the meanings of disinterested and uninterested. But now, thanks to one dead killer's steadfast commitment to proper grammar and one dead journalist's steadfast commitment to thorough documentation, I do.
Not a big step forward in expanding my vocabulary, but hey, every little bit helps.
Tuesday, August 25, 2009
Not Quite Another Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius
- A foreigner who's made good in America.
- A family of four young kids
- A beautiful wife whom he was able to marry, despite any potential racial or religious boundaries.
- Promoted by the New York Times.