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Conversations with Joyce Carol Oates Lee Milazzo, ed. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1989 192 Pages
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Contents Introduction Dust-Jacket Blurb Here is a collection of virtually every interview Joyce Carol Oates has granted. It reveals this acclaimed writer's deep commitment to the restorative power of literature.In these twenty-five interviews ranging from early in Oates's career to the present she talks candidly about her purposes, her concepts of literature, and her methods of writing.She views her works as a panorama of modern American life, a vast canvas of great import. "I could not take the time to write," she says, "about a group of people who did not represent, in their various struggles, fantasies, unusual experiences, hopes, etc., our society in miniature."Oates expounds upon this theme and upon her responsibility as an artist "to bear witness," and in this light she responds to criticisms that violence seems to dominate her work. She notes: "One simply cannot know strengths unless suffering, misfortune, and violence are explored quite frankly by the writer."In addition to discussing her worksfrom her first book, By the North Gate (1963), to her most popular novel, You Must Remember This (1987)this prolific writer answers questions about her writing habits, including explanations of how she initially composes in longhand and how carefully she rewrites and revises. She tells of one huge revision, the ending of Wonderland for the English edition because she was still dissatisfied with the conclusion in the original American version.This great American author acknowledges the influences of other great writers, including Woolf, Faulkner, Kafka, Freud, Mann, Dostoevsky, Melville, Proust, Stendahl, Sartre, Flaubert, and Katherine Anne Porter. To one interviewer she says, "I just see myself as standing in a very strong tradition and my debt to other writers is obvious. I couldn't exist without them."These interviews, spanning nineteen years, reveal a vivid portrait of Joyce Carol Oates writing as the conscience of society, as the creator of memorable prose and poetry, and as an artist deeply committed to a unique vision.
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