Lying in all honesty : capturing truth in women’s confessional memoir


Autoria(s): Cantrell, Kate
Data(s)

12/12/2013

Resumo

This paper explores the slippery nature of illness and diagnosis in Lauren Slater’s memoir, Lying: a Metaphorical Memoir (2000). Speaking from the shadowy intersection of childhood and adolescence, Slater’s narrator, Lauren, uses the metaphor of epilepsy to describe her own predilection for exaggeration. In exploiting the fallibility of the first-person narrator, Slater insists on the legitimacy of metaphor in accounts of childhood illness that are more concerned with narrative truth than historical accuracy. The result of this playfulness and general misrule is that Slater writes herself into a double bind: on one side, she is the child narrator who inadvertently misrepresents events and misdirects readers, and on the other side, she is the untrustworthy author who employs metaphor as a licence to lie.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/70135/

Publicador

James Cook University

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/70135/2/Lying_in_all_Honesty_2_-_LinQ.pdf

Cantrell, Kate (2013) Lying in all honesty : capturing truth in women’s confessional memoir. L i NQ, 40, pp. 76-86.

Direitos

Copyright 2013 Kate Cantrell

Fonte

Creative Writing & Literary Studies; Creative Industries Faculty

Palavras-Chave #190000 STUDIES IN CREATIVE ARTS AND WRITING #190402 Creative Writing (incl. Playwriting) #190499 Performing Arts and Creative Writing not elsewhere classified #Lying #Lauren Slater #memoir #metaphor #child narrator #epilepsy #truth #memory #confession
Tipo

Journal Article