Closer to the Truth Than Any Fact
Closer to the Truth Than Any Fact: Memoir, Memory, and Jim Crow
JENNIFER JENSEN WALLACH
Copyright Date: 2008
Published by: University of Georgia Press
Pages: 192
https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt46nmkq
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Book Info
Closer to the Truth Than Any Fact
Book Description:

Although historians frequently use memoirs as source material, too often they confine such usage to the anecdotal, and there is little methodological literature regarding the genre's possibilities and limitations. This study articulates an approach to using memoirs as instruments of historical understanding. Jennifer Jensen Wallach applies these principles to a body of memoirs about life in the American South during Jim Crow segregation, including works by Zora Neale Hurston, Willie Morris, Lillian Smith, Henry Louis Gates Jr., William Alexander Percy, and Richard Wright. Wallach argues that the field of autobiography studies, which is currently dominated by literary critics, needs a new theoretical framework that allows historians, too, to benefit from the interpretation of life writing. Her most provocative claim is that, due to the aesthetic power of literary language, skilled creative writers are uniquely positioned to capture the complexities of another time and another place. Through techniques such as metaphor and irony, memoirists collectively give their readers an empathetic understanding of life during the era of segregation. Although these reminiscences bear certain similarities, it becomes clear that the South as it was remembered by each is hardly the same place.

eISBN: 978-0-8203-3702-9
Subjects: History
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  1. Front Matter
    Front Matter (pp. i-vi)
  2. Table of Contents
    Table of Contents (pp. vii-viii)
  3. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
    ACKNOWLEDGMENTS (pp. ix-xii)
  4. INTRODUCTION: Autobiography and the Transformation of Historical Understanding
    INTRODUCTION: Autobiography and the Transformation of Historical Understanding (pp. 1-12)

    BECAUSE THIS IS A BOOK about life writing, I feel a certain amount of liberty to succumb to the temptation to ground this study of autobiography in an episode from my own life history. As scholars, our personal experiences imprint the work that we produce in myriad subtle and not-so-subtle ways. Scholarly work cannot ever be completely extricated from the scholars themselves. The kinds of things we write, the subjects that attract us, and the theoretical positions that we take are all related in some way to the people we are, the experiences we have had, and the things to...

  5. CHAPTER ONE Subjectivity and the Felt Experience of History
    CHAPTER ONE Subjectivity and the Felt Experience of History (pp. 13-35)

    LIFE WRITING is unabashedly subjective. Sometimes autobiographers claim to speak for members of their entire race or social class; however, within the group the writer claims to represent, there are always members who resent the imposition, who claim that the autobiographer in question “does not speak for me.” Of course, because past evidence is always fragmentary, the historian must often ask the historical subjects about whom she or he has the most information to stand in for those whose direct imprint she or he cannot find in the historical record. In other words, historians must extrapolate from what evidence they...

  6. CHAPTER TWO Literary Techniques and Historical Understanding
    CHAPTER TWO Literary Techniques and Historical Understanding (pp. 36-56)

    A WELL-CRAFTED MEMOIR enables the student of history to “refeel” a past moment from a particular point of view. This emotional understanding of a particular historical reality is not merely a cosmetic adornment that adds an element of human interest to our historical understanding. Rather, these emotions are partially constitutive of historical reality. If we want to recapture a past moment accurately, these emotions cannot be dispensed with. Although all memoirs can provide the historian with important access to affective aspects of the inside of a historical moment, it is my contention that some autobiographers are particularly adept at capturing...

  7. CHAPTER THREE African American Memoirists Remember Jim Crow
    CHAPTER THREE African American Memoirists Remember Jim Crow (pp. 57-98)

    RICHARD WRIGHT’S Black Boy: A Record of Childhood and Youth (1945) is perhaps the most widely read and certainly the most commented on memoir of the African American Jim Crow experience.¹ Wright portrays life in the Jim Crow South as unremittingly bleak and as characterized by poverty, violence, and anxiety as well as by a spirit of anti-intellectualism that Wright found just as oppressive as the economic deprivation of his childhood. Protest is at the center of Wright’s autobiographical writing just as it is in his fiction. Black Boy is a literary rendering of great anger, with a depiction of...

  8. CHAPTER FOUR White Memoirists Remember Jim Crow
    CHAPTER FOUR White Memoirists Remember Jim Crow (pp. 99-135)

    IN North Toward Home (1967), white Mississippian Willie Morris recounts having dinner with several civil rights activists in New York City in 1964. Morris, who had recently moved to New York to take a position at the prestigious Harper’s magazine, had made a name for himself as a truly reconstructed southerner who was willing to acknowledge the brutality of the system of racial oppression in his native state. During the meal, one of his companions, a young African American woman from Mississippi, inexplicably started to sob and had to leave the table. Morris, who had overcome the racist indoctrination of...

  9. CONCLUSION: Talking of Another World
    CONCLUSION: Talking of Another World (pp. 136-154)

    WILLIE MORRIS’S observation that his Mississippi was not the same place inhabited by black civil rights workers or, by extension, by his white neighbors from various political and socioeconomic backgrounds is at the heart of this analysis of literary autobiography. After reading the six memoirs under consideration here, the student of history quickly sees that there is no singular Jim Crow experience but that historical reality is inextricably intertwined with the perspectives of each individual who inhabited that world. Thus it becomes clear that sweeping historical narratives that claim to tell a history that is true for everyone may very...

  10. NOTES
    NOTES (pp. 155-162)
  11. BIBLIOGRAPHY
    BIBLIOGRAPHY (pp. 163-170)
  12. INDEX
    INDEX (pp. 171-176)
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