The Trouble With Autobiography
Novelist and travel writer Paul Theroux examines other authors' autobiographies to prove why this piece will suffice for his
- By Paul Theroux
- Smithsonian magazine, January 2011, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 6)
Hemingway’s A Moveable Feast, which is glittering miniaturism but largely self-serving portraiture, was posthumous, as were Edmund Wilson’s voluminous diaries. James Thurber’s My Life and Hard Times is simply jokey. S. J. Perelman came up with a superb title for his autobiography, The Hindsight Saga, but only got around to writing four chapters. No autobiographies from William Faulkner, James Baldwin, John Steinbeck, Saul Bellow, Norman Mailer or James Jones, to name some obvious American masters. You get the impression that such a venture might be regarded as beneath them or perhaps would have diminished the aura of shamanism. Some of these men encouraged tame biographers and found any number of Boswells-on-Guggenheims to do the job. Faulkner’s principal biographer neglected to mention an important love affair that Faulkner conducted, yet found space to name members of a Little League team the writer knew.
The examples of American effort at exhaustive autobiography—as opposed to the selective memoir—tend to be rare and unrevealing, though Kay Boyle, Eudora Welty and Mary McCarthy all wrote exceptional memoirs. Gore Vidal has written an account of his own life in Palimpsest, and John Updike had an early stab at his in Self-Consciousness; both men were distinguished essayists, which the non-autobiographers Faulkner, Hemingway, Steinbeck and some of the others never were—perhaps a crucial distinction. Lillian Hellman and Arthur Miller, both playwrights, wrote lengthy autobiographies, but Hellman in her self-pitying Pentimento, neglects to say that her longtime lover, Dashiell Hammett, was married to someone else, and in Timebends Miller reduces his first wife, Mary Slattery, to a wraithlike figure who flickers through the early pages of his life.
“Everyone realizes that one can believe little of what people say about each other,” Rebecca West once wrote. “But it is not so widely realized that even less can one trust what people say about themselves.”
English autobiography generally follows a tradition of dignified reticence that perhaps reflects the restrained manner in which the English distance themselves in their fiction. The American tendency, especially in the 20th century, was to intrude on the life, at times blurring the line between autobiography and fiction. (Saul Bellow anatomized his five marriages in his novels.) A notable English exception, D. H. Lawrence, poured his life into his novels—a way of writing that recommended him to an American audience. The work of Henry Miller, himself a great champion of Lawrence, is a long shelf of boisterous reminiscences, which stimulated and liberated me when I was young—oh, for that rollicking sexual freedom in bohemian Paris, I thought, innocent of the fact that by then Miller was living as a henpecked husband in Los Angeles.
The forms of literary self-portraiture are so various I think it might help to sort out the many ways of framing a life. The earliest form may have been the spiritual confession—a religious passion to atone for a life and to find redemption; St. Augustine’s Confessions is a pretty good example. But confession eventually took secular forms—confession subverted as personal history. The appeal of Casanova’s The Story of My Life is as much its romantic conquests as its picaresque structure of narrow escapes. You would never know from Somerset Maugham’s The Summing Up, written in his mid-60s (he died at the age of 91), that, though briefly married, he was bisexual. He says at the outset, “This is not an autobiography nor is it a book of recollections,” yet it dabbles in both, in the guarded way that Maugham lived his life. “I have been attached, deeply attached, to a few people,” he writes, but goes no further. Later he confides, “I have no desire to lay bare my heart, and I put limits to the intimacy that I wish the reader to enter upon with me.” In this rambling account, we end up knowing almost nothing about the physical Maugham, though his sexual reticence is understandable, given that such an orientation was unlawful when his book was published.
The memoir is typically thinner, provisional, more selective than the confession, undemanding, even casual, and suggests that it is something less than the whole truth. Joseph Conrad’s A Personal Record falls into this category, relating the outward facts of his life, and some opinions and remembrances of friendships, but no intimacies. Conrad’s acolyte Ford Madox Ford wrote any number of memoirs, but even after reading all of them you have almost no idea of the vicissitudes (adulteries, scandals, bankruptcy) of Ford’s life, which were later recounted by a plodding biographer in The Saddest Story. Ford rarely came clean. He called his writing “impressionistic,” but it is apparent that the truth bored him, as it bores many writers of fiction.
Among the highly specialized, even inimitable, forms of small-scale autobiography I would place Jan Morris’ Conundrum, which is an account of her unsatisfactory life as a man, her profound feeling that her sympathies were feminine and that she was in essence a woman. The solution to her conundrum was surgery, in Casablanca in 1972, so that she could live the rest of her life as a woman. Her life partner remained Elizabeth, whom she had, as James Morris, married many years before. Other outstanding memoirs-with-a-theme are F. Scott Fitzgerald’s self-analysis in The Crack-Up, Jack London’s John Barleycorn, a history of his alcoholism, and William Styron’s Darkness Visible, an account of his depression. But since the emphasis in these books is pathological, they are singular for being case histories.
In contrast to the slight but powerful memoir is the multivolume autobiography. Osbert Sitwell required five volumes to relate his life, Leonard Woolf five as well, adding disarmingly in the first volume Sowing, his belief that “I feel profoundly in the depths of my being that in the last resort nothing matters.” The title of his last volume, The Journey Not the Arrival Matters, suggests that he might have changed his mind. Anthony Powell’s To Keep the Ball Rolling is the overall title of four volumes of autobiography—and he also published his extensive journals in three volumes. Doris Lessing, Graham Greene, V. S. Pritchett and Anthony Burgess have given us their lives in two volumes each.
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Comments (8)
My writer friends and I find Theroux's article fascinating. Memoir is by definition a point of view on time, place, and events. Autobiography, theoretically, less so. Yet it is hard to imagine our lives 'being given a C-minus,' as Theroux says. Perhaps fiction is the way to go.
Posted by Carol Bodensteiner on January 18,2011 | 10:43 AM
Who was it that said that autobiography is usually honest, but never truthful?
Posted by Gregory Goldmaker on January 17,2011 | 05:06 PM
"In the one memoir-on-a-theme that I risked, Sir Vidia’s Shadow, I wrote some of the pages with tears streaming down my face."
I wondered if you were going to refer to this embarrassment. Tear streaming down your face? How painful it must have been for you to betray an old friend and mentor! And what did you really hope to accomplish with your shameless indiscretion? Destroy a superior artist who'd grown cold to you? In reality your attack did nothing but ruin your own reputation. No wonder you were crying.
Posted by Don Shapiro on January 14,2011 | 12:23 AM
Well, first of all what is he trying to do i do not understand is he critizacing other´s people biography or he is telling theirs biagraphy?
Posted by Arantxa Collin on January 14,2011 | 11:47 AM
Regarding Paul Theroux's "The Trouble with Autobiography" spread (as in agriculture) across pages 76-88 of the January 2011 issue.
WHY?
Posted by Lawrence Mingus on January 14,2011 | 06:57 AM
I wouldn`t read a fully objective autobiography because the author would loose the fantasy and dreams that make us humans.
Posted by alberto on January 13,2011 | 11:33 AM
The point of this wonderful essay is (aptly, albeit unfortunately) underscored by a few inaccuracies in Mr. Theroux's recollections of childhood French:
-"comme ils faut" should read "comme il faut"; as it should be, a perfectly good French expression, but unnecessarily pluralised.
-"Mon petit bonhomme" would doubtless be spelled "Mon p'tit bonhomme" by a Québecois(e), thus reflecting the local pronunciation.
-By "plaqueteur", I think Mr. Theroux probably remembers the word "placoteur", a noun derived from the verb "placoter" meaning to chat, gossip or babble; cf. http://fr.wiktionary.org/wiki/placoter.
Thanks and greetings from Montreal!
Posted by Epigraphist on January 12,2011 | 01:10 PM
In reading this I'm reminded of one who perhaps had well been mentioned in Mr. Theroux's explanation, Samuel Beckett, who in response to inquisition of his autobiography stated, (and I qoute loosely from memory) "My life was uneventful and uninteresting."
Posted by Areal Naam on January 7,2011 | 10:10 PM