Monday, March 29, 2010

A reflection on creation

1. What specific genre you intend to craft

For this project I intent to write in a multi-form genre one that may include poetry, song, memoir, autobiography, creative non-fiction, 1st person narrative and autohistoria. The overall genre of this piece will be memoir; I will be reflecting on my experiences on campus and at home through memories. I will also be drawing conclusions about these memories and what that means for me. I also want to reflect on what my placement in society is and how that placement has affected these experiences. A writer who used writing in different genres as a rhetorical tool is Gloria Anzaldua in Borderlands. She uses her interweaving of multiple genres as an expository example of living with multiple identities.

There are many features and rhetorical strategies used in the genre of memoir. For example the option to write in a liner narrative or non-linear narrative is a rhetorical tool; in this piece I would like to attempt to write a circular narrative. My goal is to start the reader/audience in an experience or a place – I would like to end my audience in that same place but with a different perspective. A writer who does that beautifully for me is Octavia E. Butler. Butler has the ability in her novel Kindred to engage the reader in her family’s history and experiences by traveling through time into memories told by her ancestors. She defines her place in society through her history and her genealogy. In her novel she ends at her beginning – that expresses the crippling effects of slavery on a woman in the 1970s; she makes no clear distinction between past and present because the atrocities of the past are still alive in the present. Also I have read rhetoric’s of resistance in memoir that use flashbacks as a rhetorical tool; for example the author is writing in the present – talking with the audience but flashes back to experiences that has shaped their life or influenced the conversation the writer is now having with their readers. A writer who exemplifies this in my eyes is Bell Hooks. In many of her writings she challenges topics like race, class and gender but through flashbacks. I enjoyed reading a piece where the author is talking directly to the reader. Jamaica Kincaid also does this very well in her book, A Small Place; she challenges her readers by directly questioning and talking to them.

I have chosen to write in and explore these genres because they are genres that interest me and because they are genres that I enjoy reading. Similar to Anzaldua, Kincaid, Butler and Hooks are all very boisterous, independent and explosive female writers. They are all writers that I aspire to be like and all write in genres that not only excite me but ignite me. I think a rhetoric of resistance is a text that defines a truth; a truth that has been ignored publicly, privately and historically. I think that any genre has the ability to inflame that truth, and I plan to explore multiple genres to explain my own.

2. What audience you intend to target

It is hard for me to clearly define who my audience is at this particular point in my writing. I haven’t truly begun to write and craft the story that I want to tell or how I plan to tell it. I will be writing about my college experience at Syracuse University. One of my audiences would be the Syracuse community and other college communities like it. I would also want to talk to the community of education and educators; the institution of learning itself. What does it mean to educate? How can you educated in a place that hierarchies embody and encourage mis-education. I want to speak to education in the United States and the bodies that run the education institution.

I am also speaking to an audience both for and against social justice. I hope that my rhetoric of resistance will encourage social justice in the United States and the re-education of those justices and injustices in the histories of the United States. I have chosen these audiences because they are both the audiences that can change and re-define what history has mis-defined or mis-interpreted both from the top and the bottom.

My goal is to not make assumptions about my audience. I know it is inevitable not to assume but I want to write first and have my writing define my audience instead of writing for a particular audience. I feel that in writing this way it will encourage a more authentic work.

Again I want to caution myself from researching a particular audience because I do not want to limit myself in either my creative liberty or authenticity. One of the audiences that I know I will be writing to is the Syracuse University community and other university communities. Since I am a part of that community I plan to write in – I can write in a way that is understandable to all sub-communities in that community. I think that experience is the most effective research, and many of the communities that I would assume would be the audience of this piece I am already a member of that community.

The biggest goal here in regard to audience is to write in and with experiences that everyone can relate to. If I write in a way that refers to specific events I may exclude certain members of my audience. But if I try to write about an experience that is relatable to a wide audience my piece will be more effective.

3. What identities you are resisting and what identities you are crafting

It is hard to define which identities I will be crafting exactly because I haven’t crafted them yet. But my main goal in this piece is not for me to craft a “new identity” but it is for me to define myself through the identities that have been crafted for me. I will talk about the positive and negative effects of having a society that crafts an identity or categorizes a person without that persons consent or input. I plan on challenging the ideal of identities as a whole. Who makes the identity? Me or Society. If I make my own identity will society accept that identity? Do I have power over what my identity is? These are some questions I will be asking and in asking these questions I hope that my readers will ask the same questions for themselves. In asking those questions I also hope they will challenge themselves and their identities. Do they need to craft a new one? I don’t think so I just think there is a need to understand where identities are derived from and what that acceptance of those identities mean for oneself and for society at large.

I don’t know if I’m crafting a new identity or a project identity as much as I am reclaiming an identity that was stolen from me; the identity of the individual. I hope the challenge the ideal of individualize and categorize. What was first the individual or the category? In today’s society I would argue the category people are born into categories; we are defined from birth. The individual is an identity that has been lost; and I hope in my writing to reclaim it for myself and challenge others to reclaim it as well.

I think most of the texts we have read this semester resonate in some way to the identity of the individual. Said was challenging the category of the oriental. What is ortienalism? Why are Middle Eastern peoples automatically thrown into the category of the oriental by western perspective? Anzaldua was challenging the idea of identity itself. She was embracing identity and the categories that embody it. Anzaldua was making the conscious choice to choose her own identity. Kincaid challenges the idea of identity stemming from place. Similar to Anzaldua they were both defined by their places of origin – that was their identity. I think all of these writers are grappling with the same idea; overall the question is where do these identities stem from? Who created them? And why do they continue to be prominent? These are the same questions I aim to ask.

4. What kind of research you will do for this project

The main research that I would need to do for this project is to research the ways that others craft and use rhetoric’s of resistance. For example one of my main influences for this project will be Bell Hooks. She does a wonderful job of using memoir to define her placement in society as she learned to define it herself. That understanding is important to me. I am in a stage in my life where I am just learning that placements in society exist and are implanted by hierarchies that have been in place since the founding of this country. It is my personal experience that makes this act of resistance authentic and it is that authenticity that makes it relevant, relatable and readable. Bell Hooks uses her experiences to educate a wide audience; one that may already understand her experiences and another they may not even know that experiences like this exist. I also plan to analyze some rhetorical strategies that some of the authors I am interested (Hooks, Butler, Anzaldua and Kincaid) in researching used to keep their audience engaged while simultaneously resisting.

5. Why you intend to embark on this project

Honestly, the topics this semester have not particularly influenced my reasons for wanting to create a rhetoric of resistance. My passions, influences and inquiries have always rested in a genre of this nature. I enjoy writing and when I think about what I want to write about I want to write something meaningful about my life, my experiences, the experiences of family and people I have known. I want to educate and encourage people through my writing and write a piece that is both timeless and malleable. I think that this assignment allowed me the opportunity to express myself and write in the genres that interest me. It also allowed me to explore some of my favorite writers that are already writing in the genres that I indulge in and we have discussed this semester in this class.

I want to write. I have always wanted to write about my experiences in a way that would educate people and help them. I feel as though this assignment has allowed me a space to do so. I have many concerns when writing anything and I never feel that anything I write is “good enough”. But that is all in the process of writing and the process that I choose to write in. I hope that I can craft my writing in a way that is both understandable and relatable to my readers and a wide audience of people. My writing should be meaningful, thought provoking, eloquent and pungent. I believe in the beauty of writing and flow of words; I don’t think that because I am writing a rhetoric of resistance. My main goal is to express and educate – I hope that my writing will accomplish that.

1 comment:

  1. Alonna. I am glad you have chosen to embark on a project that has meaning to you and already have identified some models you can draw on to determine what rhetorical strategies you might employ in your own text. Today, we can perhaps think about the form of your memoir. I am wondering if you had time to check out Adrian Piper's video and if you have considered playing with multimedia as a medium to write in for this assignment. ps. I'd also like for you to unpack what you mean when you say that you want your writing to define your audience than write for an audience. I am interested to see exactly what you mean by this strategy...and how, say Kincaid, might have been defining her audience rather than writing "for" one.....

    ReplyDelete