Nonfiction novel
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The nonfiction novel is a literary genre. It is commonly thought that this genre was formally established in 1965 with Truman Capote's publication of In Cold Blood. The first nonfiction novel, however was Operación Masacre by Argentine author and journalist Rodolfo Walsh.[1][2] In theory, the genre represents real events, while narrativizing these events with techniques of fiction. Though Capote claimed that the nonfiction novel should be devoid of first-person narration (and ideally any mention of the novelist), in the publications subsequent to In Cold Blood, many authors tested the form's "original" concept including Hunter S. Thompson (who produced Hell's Angels the year after), and Norman Mailer and Tom Wolfe (with Armies of the Night and The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test in 1968). In the 1970s, authors began to re-publish essays or articles by uniting episodes into this more cohesive genre -- a reputable example of this practice was made by Michael Herr's nonfiction novel, Dispatches, which reflected on the journalist's reporting from Vietnam.
That the nonfiction novel was formally recognized as a genre in 1965 is undeniable, while the extent to which the genre was "invented" depends upon the extent to which it includes the history or the biography, for example. In Wolfe's school of New Journalism (another supposed "invention" of the mid-sixties), the novel is hybridized with journalistic narration, which, like Capote's prose, places little emphasis on the process of narration (though Wolfe, unlike Capote, occasionally narrates from first-person). Thompson's approach, which a critic coined as Gonzo Journalism, is another departure from the non-fiction novel's expansion of possibilities for writers, especially of the counter-culture. Mailer's Pulitzer Prize-winning Armies of the Night is however the most critically appreciated rendition of this hybrid genre, a narrative which is split into a history and a novel, and which autobiographically recounts the March on the Pentagon in 1967 from the third person.
Though few writers currently take on the endeavor of a "nonfiction novel," forms such as the extended essay, the memoir, and the biography (and autobiography) have been further experimented with since this 1965 distinction. Joan Didion, for instance, has never called her own work a "nonfiction novel," while she has been repeatedly credited for doing so with what she generally calls "extended" or "long" essays. As many of her works might show, the "nonfiction novel" is an incredibly flexible genre which relates fundamentally between the relationship between "reality" and "fiction" in any narrative. Because of the universality of this theme, and because of the potential over-applicability of the generic title, the "nonfiction novel" is surrounded by theoretical obscurity. Despite this obscurity which is mostly the result of critics rather than authors themselves — the generic identification of the "nonfiction novel" has been used since Capote's version as a tool for narrative experimentation, as well as for the underlying suggestion of "reality" being represented by "nonfiction."
[edit] References
- ^ Waisbord, Silvio (2000). Watchdog Journalism in South America: News, Accountability, and Democracy. New York: Columbia University Press, 282 pages. ISBN 0231119755.
- ^ Link, Daniel (2007). "Rethinking past present". Review: Literature and Arts of the Americas 40 (75(2)): 218-230. Routledge.