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Authors: David Shields

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BOOK: Reality Hunger
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Part of what I enjoy in documentary is the sense of banditry. To loot someone else’s life or sentences and make off with a point of view, which is called “objective” because one can make anything into an object by treating it this way, is exciting and dangerous. Let us see who controls the danger.

appendix

This book contains hundreds of quotations that go unacknowledged in the body of the text. I’m trying to regain a freedom that writers from Montaigne to Burroughs took for granted and that we have lost. Your uncertainty about whose words you’ve just read is not a bug but a feature.

A major focus of
Reality Hunger
is appropriation and plagiarism and what these terms mean. I can hardly treat the topic deeply without engaging in it. That would be like writing a book about lying and not being permitted to lie in it. Or writing a book about destroying capitalism but being told it can’t be published because it might harm the publishing industry.

However, Random House lawyers determined that it was necessary for me to provide a complete list of citations; the list follows (except, of course, for any sources I couldn’t find or forgot along the way).

Who owns the words? Who owns the music and the rest of our culture? We do—all of us—though not all of us know it yet. Reality cannot be copyrighted.

Stop; don’t read any farther.

Numbers refer to sections
:

2
      
Sentence about
Unmade Beds:
Soyon Im, “The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly,”
Seattle Weekly
4
      
Thoreau
5
      
Roland Barthes,
Barthes by Barthes
(who else would be the author?); “minus the novel”: Michael Dirda, “Whispers in the Darkness,”
Washington Post
6
      
Walter Benjamin,
Arcades Project
7
      
Lorraine Adams, “Almost Famous: The Rise of the ‘Nobody’ Memoir,”
Washington Monthly
8
      
Mark Willis, “Listening to the Literacy Events of a Blind Reader,”
http://fairuselab.net/?page_id=635
11
      
Adams
13
      
John D’Agata,
The Next American Essay
16
      
Second sentence: paraphrase of information conveyed in the foreword to
The New Oxford Annotated Bible
18
      
D’Agata
19
      
D’Agata, in conversation 21–25 Adams
26
      
William Gass, “The Art of Self,”
Harper’s
27
      
Adams; parenthetical statement: first line, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr.; second line: Darwin
28
      
first half of passage: D’Agata,
The Next American Essay
29
      
Gass
32
      
J. M. Coetzee,
Elizabeth Costello
33
      
Adams
34
      
Jonathan Raban, in conversation
35
      
Raban assures me that this Greene disclaimer exists, but I can’t find it.
36
      
Vivian Gornick,
The Situation and the Story
37
      
Kevin Kelly, “Scan This Book,”
New York Times
38
      
D’Agata
39
      
Alain Robbe-Grillet,
For a New Novel
, the book that in many ways got me thinking about all of this stuff
40
      
D’Agata
41
      
Alice Marshall, “The Space Between,” unpublished manuscript; cf. last line of my book
Black Planet:
“All that space is the space between us.”
42
      
Kelly
43
      
Robbe-Grillet
44
      
Charles Simic,
Dime-Store Alchemy
45
      
Adams
48
      
Ozick, interviewed by Tom Teicholz,
Paris Review
49
      
Philip Roth, “Writing American Fiction,”
Commentary
50
      
Robbe-Grillet
51
      
D’Agata 52–53 Gornick
55
      
Jim Paul, “The Found Life,” Bread Loaf lecture
57
      
Geoff Dyer,
Out of Sheer Rage
58
      
W. G. Sebald, interviewed by Siegrid Löffler,
Profil
59
      
Peter Bailey, “Notes on the Novel-as-Autobiography,” in
Novel vs. Fiction
, eds. Jackson I. Cope and Geoffrey Green
63–64
      
Robert Winder, “Editorial,”
Granta
’s “Ambition” issue
65
      
Ben Marcus, “The Genre Artist,”
Believer
66
      
Rachel Donadio, “Truth Is Stronger Than Fiction,”
New York Times
67
      
Margo Jefferson, “It’s All in the Family, But Is That Enough?”
New York Times
69
      
Saul Steinberg, quoted by Kurt Vonnegut,
A Man Without a Country
71
      
Melville,
Billy Budd
72
      
D’Agata
73
      
I’m pretty sure these lines, or something close to these lines, were spoken by Terry Gilliam in an interview, but I can’t for the life of me find the source.
74
      
William Gibson, “God’s Little Toys,”
Wired
75–76 Kelly
77
      
Robert Greenwald, “Brave New Medium,”
Nation
79
      
D’Agata
80
      
Lauren Slater,
Lying
81
      
Clifford Irving, interviewed by Mike Wallace on
60 Minutes
82
      
Picasso
84
      
Slater, quoted in David D. Kirkpatrick, “Questionable Letter for a Liar’s Memoir,”
New York Times
85
      
James Frey
86
      
Dorothy Gallagher, “Recognizing the Book That Needs to Be Written,”
New York Times
88
      
First two sentences: Mary Gaitskill, quoted in Joy Press, “The Cult of JT LeRoy,”
Village Voice;
the rest is Stephen Beachy,
“Who Is the Real JT Leroy?”
New York
89
      
Elmyr de Hory, quoted in Orson Welles,
F for Fake
91 Slater, “One Nation Under the Weather,”
Salon
96
      
Nic Kelman, quoted in Sara Ivry, “Pick Those Fawning Blurbs Carefully,”
New York Times
101
      
First three sentences are from Brian Camp’s letter to the
New York Times
, “Is It Plagiarism, or Teenage Prose?”; the rest of the passage, except for the last line, is from Malcolm Gladwell, “Annals of Culture,”
New Yorker
.
102
      
Jonathan Lethem, interviewed by Harvey Blume,
Boston Globe
103
      
Patricia Hampl, interviewed by Laura Wexler,
AWP Chronicle
104
      
Susan Cheever, interviewed by Roberta Brown,
AWP Chronicle
106
      
Gornick, “A Memoirist Defends Her Words,”
Salon
108
      
D’Agata,
The Lost Origins of the Essay
109
      
Hampl
110
      
Gornick,
The Situation and the Story
113, 115–116 Marshall
119
      
Except for parenthetical statement, Motoko Rich, “James Frey Collaborating on a Novel for Young Adults, First in a Series,”
New York Times
121
      
Cicero
122
      
D’Agata,
The Next American Essay
124
      
John Mellencamp (!?)
125
      
The Commitments
(the movie version); I haven’t read the novel.
126
      
Hemingway, interviewed by George Plimpton,
Paris Review
128
      
First sentence: Lynn Nottage, quoted in Liesl Schillinger, “The Accidental Design of Rolin Jones’s Career,”
New York Times
129
      
Jenni, quoted by Steven Shaviro,
Stranded in the Jungle
—29:
http://www.shaviro.com/Stranded/29.html
130
      
Otto Preminger, (apocryphal?) advice to Lee Remick
131
      
Thomas Pynchon,
Slow Learner
132
      
Ross McElwee, interviewed by Cynthia Lucia,
Cineaste
133
      
Dave Eggers, interviewed by Tasha Robinson,
Onion;
Eggers reminds me that he said this ten years ago in a conversation about semi-autobiographical fiction, and that he no longer subscribes to the sentiment expressed here.
134
      
“funny”: title of Rick Reynolds CD; “pretty”: title of Steve Martin album
136
      
Frank O’Hara, quoted in Jim Elledge,
Frank O’Hara
137
      
Janette Turner Hospital,
The Last Magician
138
      
Robert Lowell, “Epilogue”
139
      
Robert Towers, review of my novel
Dead Languages
in
New York Review of Books
141
      
D’Agata
142
      
Frederick Barthelme,
The Brothers
143
      
Dogme 95 manifesto
144
      
McElwee
146
      
Last line: Nietzsche
149
      
Reynolds,
Only the Truth Is Funny
151
      
Martin, quoted in Bruce Weber, “An Arrow Out of the Head and into a Shy Heroine’s Heart,”
New York Times
152
      
Lionel Trilling,
The Liberal Imagination
153
      
Adam Gopnik, “Optimist,”
New Yorker
154
      
First two sentences: Jonathan Goldstein, performing on
This American Life;
I could listen to that self-generating/self-demolishing voice of his forever.
157
      
Wittgenstein
158
      
Walk the Line
161–162
      
Patrick Duff, “From the Brink of Oblivion,” unpublished manuscript
163
      
Mark Doty, “Return to Sender,”
Writer’s Chronicle
164
      
Duff
167
      
David Carr,
The Night of the Gun
168
      
Duff
169
      
Edward S. Casey,
Remembering
170
      
Legal brief filed by Libby’s lawyers
171
      
Naipaul? Nabokov? The human condition?
172
      
Marshall
173
      
Duff
174
      
Elizabeth Bowen, “Mental Annuity,”
Vogue
175–177
      
Duff
178
      
Tony Kushner, quoted in Adam Liptak, “Truth, Fiction, and the Rosenbergs,”
New York Times
179
      
Osip Mandelstam
180–181
,
183
      
Bonnie Rough, “Writing Lost Stories,”
Iron Horse Literary Review
185
      
Emily Dickinson
186
      
Irving Babitt, quoted by D’Agata in conversation as
via negativa
188
      
Dyer, “A Conversation with Geoff Dyer,” self-interview, Random House website:
http://www.randomhouse.com/catalog/display.pperl?isbn=9780375422140&view=auqa
190
      
Raban,
Passage to Juneau
191
      
Raban, interviewed by Dave Weich, Powells.com
192
      
Raban,
For Love & Money
193
      
Gallagher
194
      
Jefferson, “From Romantic-Comedy Sidelines to Glaring Spotlight,”
New York Times
195
      
Sebald, quoted in
The Emergence of Memory
, ed. Lynne Sharon Schwartz
196
      
T. S. Eliot,
Four Quartets
197
      
Joseph Lowman, quoted in Jane Ruffin, “Be More Shocked When You Don’t Lie,”
Raleigh News & Observer
198
      
McElwee
199
      
Werner Herzog, interviewed on
Fresh Air;
I am equal parts Terry Gross’s investment in explanation and Herzog’s striving for mystery.
200
      
Picasso; Virginia Woolf
201
      
Email from Heather McHugh
202
      
McElwee
203
      
Geoffrey O’Brien, introduction to Elizabeth Hardwick,
Sleepless Nights;
as is so often the case with me, I like the book, but I like the introduction as much or more: concision.
BOOK: Reality Hunger
11.91Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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