“Write from experience.” “Show, don’t tell.” Self-knowledge. Self-discipline. Well-known conventions like these, whether delivered in classrooms, writing seminars or simply from one writer to another, often anchor traditional writing advice for literary authors and journalists alike in the United States.
While they may seem benign and often useful, they also have a history of political utility. Thanks to a network of underwritten cultural projects and front groups, state organs like the CIA and State Department collaborated with creative-writing programs like the Iowa Writers’ Workshop and publications like the Paris Review to cultivate and reinforce writing tenets like these. The aim: to focus literature and journalism on the individual, feelings, and details, rather than on community, political theory, and large-scale political concepts.
This, of course, isn’t to say subversive literature cannot be first person and sensory, or that these modes of writing are per se conservative––but there is a long and well-documented history of conservative, anti-Left institutions pushing them because, on the whole, they veered (or at least were thought to have steered) writers away from the dot-connecting, the structural and the collective.
On this episode, we discuss the ways in which first-person journalism, solipsism and creative nonfiction, as taught and prized in the US, reinforce existing power structures, exploring how a Cold War-era history of state- and state-adjacent funding of literary journals, educational programs, and other cultural projects taught writers to center themselves and inconsequential details at the expense of raising urgent political questions and notions of class solidarity.
Our guest is author Eric Bennett.
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Eric Bennett is the author of Workshops of Empire: Stegner, Engle, and American Creative Writing during the Cold War, as well as the novel, A Big Enough Lie.
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Eric Bennett | February 10, 2014 | The Chronicle of Higher Education
The Paris Review, the Cold War and the CIA
Joel Whitney | May 27, 2021 | Salon
Thomas W. Braden | May 20, 1967 | The Saturday Evening Post
How the CIA Tricked the World’s Best Writers
Patrick Lawrence | May 31, 2017 | The Nation
Literary Magazines for Socialists Funded by the CIA, Ranked
Patrick Iber | August 24, 2015 | The Awl
Why Writers Love to Hate the MFA
Cecilia Capuzzi Simon | April 12, 2015 | The New York Times
Show Or Tell - Should Creative Writing Be Taught?
Louis Menand | June 1, 2009 | The New Yorker
The CIA funded a culture war against communism. It should do so again.
Sonny Bunch | August 22, 2018 | The Washington Post
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For a full transcript of this episode, go here.
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Mark Schneider
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