Festival of Faith and Writing 2008 - Day 1
Highlights were the Edward P. Jones (The Known World) interview and Michael Chabon's lecture on "Imaginary Homelands." (Both have won the Pulitzer Prize.) Jones is a legitimate original (in world view) as his deprived childhood & lack of media interaction allowed him to create his own quite original thoughts.
The Known World is set in 1855 Virginia & centers around a n African American owning African American slaves. He feels like historical research is overrated ("If the characters aren't there then" it doesn't matter) & (largely) unnecessary. "The creative part of the brain can't be held back." Later adding, "We know more about the world than we think we do."Give readers good characters and a good story "and you're fine. Readers will believe until they run into the unbelievable."
He also doesn't understand these white male authors who agonize over writing a female or ethnic character. Just care as much about your non-"like you" character as those like you.
Finally, he feels like African Americans with no sense of history - rappers, sports stars - would own African American slaves today, pulling them out with them on their awards shows (instead of the overstylized gold chains, et al) with them because it would be legal. Wow. In essence, people without a sense of history (which is much of America and too many Christians) will do anything legal because they have no sense of consequences or responsibility.
Right now I have to brush up for an interview with Yann Martel (Live of Pi)! Hooray!
Labels: Calvin College, Chabon, Edward P. Jones, Festival of Faith


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