The writer tells: The creative process in the writing of literary fiction |
Journal/Book: Creativity Res J. 1998; 11: 10 Industrial Ave, Mahwah, NJ 07430-2262. Lawrence Erlbaum Assoc Inc. 29-37.
Abstract: The experience of creating fiction, a topic that has been taken up independently in literary publications and in psychological works on creativity, is a promising topic for interdisciplinary conversation. I interviewed five contemporary fiction writers, focusing on their experiences in creating fiction. The commonalities, along with theoretical concepts from psychology, phenomenology, and literary theory, allowed me To construct a tentative modal account. Writers identified seed incidents whose meanings went beyond their narrative understanding and so stimulated exploration and discovery. Writing progressed through alternations between a ''writingrealm'' (in which the writer withdrew from everyday life with intentions to write, to plan actively for specific works, and to reflect on what had been written) and a ''fictionworld'' (which was described in more passive terms, in which story elements came to the writer as narrative improvisation unfolded). Like other creative endeavors, the creative process in fiction writing is a voyage of discovery bur differs from most other arts and sciences (even the art of poetry) in one of its major modes of thought-narrative improvisation, a nonreflective mode that typically involves stances in a fictionworld from viewpoints different from one's own. A response to the suggested account by one of the interviewed writers appears as a postscript to this article.
Note: Article Doyle CL, Sarah Lawrence Coll, Dept Psychol, Bronxville,NY 10708 USA
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