Monday, 15 January 2018

Make America Narrate Again

I haven't written a post since returning from Singapore, over three months ago, so I thought I'd better crack on before you all started to think I had shown mercy. So here it is, the first one back in the UK, and the first of 2018, also.

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I signed up for one of them Lifelong Learning courses with the university. Even the name makes your skin crawl, doesn't it? These days, I refuse to learn unless paid to do so...or tempted with biscuits at the very least. Learning for life and paying for the privilege is a Kafkaesque kind of terror. I felt like an undergrad again, handing over money I haven't got to "The Man" who only carries on pleading poverty anyway. Then again, it was only £90 for 12 hours' teaching, and there ain't no undergrad this side of Scotland that's going to get 12 kicks in the teeth for that price (in Scotland, of course, they'll kick you all over for free). It's a course on creative writing. As it's getting near crunch-time-thesis-writing-time, I thought I'd sure need a bit of advice on writing believable fiction!

In fact, I have spent the last few weeks working on a journal article. And I have found that writing science is much nicer than doing science, especially if there's hardly anything to say. Around the time I started writing the paper, I discovered this course buried away in an e-mail. I jumped at it for the chance to flex my puny muscles on something other than dreary, terse statements about tube furnaces. When I have been writing science, I have found time passing by serenely, often to the detriment of terseness, and to the scientist type, this is bad. But that's what rekindled my interest in writing. Thus, we come to the happy accident of this course.

The title of the course is, 'Made to be Broken: Writing Experimental Fiction'. Now, apparently, one type of experimental fiction, which the class will learn about soon, is the concept of the unreliable narrator. Think of Donald Trump if he ever became President of the United States. Fortunately, Americans are notoriously easy to reason with, so there isn't a writer in the world who could make that sound convincing, is there?

This whole thing has got me thinking: why do they get PhD candidates to write their own theses? Surely that is the definition of propaganda! It should be written by a neutral observer, a disinterested (and quite possibly uninterested) party. It should be written by someone who has absolutely nothing to gain or lose regardless of what happens. Some furtive and nondescript person who blends in to the background, noticed by nobody. Trouble is, I don't think there are enough Liberal Democrats to go around for all of us.

Anyway, when my fellow experimentalists and I arrived at the first class this evening, we discovered that none of us had been able to access the online lecture notes. It turned out that the lecturer had given us the wrong course code in the enrolment email. And I thought that was wonderful because she has now become the living embodiment of her course, the unreliable narrator made flesh. What devotion to the art! The Daniel Day-Lewis of Portswood. It was then I realised that this course was going to be just fine.

At the end of the first lesson, we were challenged to expand on the opening paragraphs of some famous works by dead literary sorts, but to give them all various experimental twists. Having read them back, I now know what it feels like to be on LSD. I think that when the lecturer told us to give them an experimental twist, she should have specified that most stories have more traditional fillers too…

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By:
The Imperial Orange,
15th January 2018

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