To open the
semester, the intent of our first notebook prompt was to explore the
distinction between history and fiction, and how one views each as a consumer.
The ideas within my response from then have remained the same until now, in
that there is a degree of discernment required when reading history that is
nonexistent in fiction, which can just be taken for what it is. History
consists of seemingly true facts and events that (from an educational point of
view) undeniably happened. However, no two historical texts are the same. Based
on the political, cultural, religious, or some such predisposition of the
author, the account has the potential to be biased. To add on that, people have
the right to question history as a whole since we can never know what really happened. Fiction, though often
plausible, is imaginative from the start so there may be a level of curiosity,
but never outright questioning.
After
reading Ragtime, I can now reflect on the fine lines between history and
fiction in the novel. Doctorow most definitely incorporates both, and often at
the same time. He mixes the two so much that a question comes to mind while contemplating this
occurrence throughout the book: Does is matter whether or not we know what is
fact or fiction (what sort of reactions does it create)? This is a question that
stems from the very first prompt and is specific to the novel. To a certain
extent, yes, it does matter. There is a natural mindset assigned when reading
history and fiction, and they differ. There is simply no way around it.
However, the primary layer of importance should be the symbolism and
overarching themes of the time, so overall the distinction between history and
fiction should not matter. In other words, the lens through which we see the
text may alter slightly, but that should not distort the content and intents of
the author. The novel is so rich in terms of symbols through various characters
as well as generalizations/indications of the early 20th century,
particularly those of race and class. When Evelyn Nesbit and Emma Goldman have their
moments together, the world of fiction is entered. Using the two entirely real people,
Doctorow sets up fictional dialogue to delve into topics such as Nesbit’s
beauty in relation to capitalism, and the narrator refers to her as a “sex
goddess.” Symbolism and a stage to represent the feel of the times is set up in
this way. Another instance where highlights were made of a real person’s life
actions was the conversation between Booker T. Washington and Coalhouse Walker
towards the end of the book. While the meeting between Goldman and Nesbit has
an extremely slim chance of ever happening, the example of Washington is one
that could not have occurred for certain. In real life, Washington had the
goals of educated the freed black man, and working to set a good reputation for
black people In general. By founding the Tuskegee Institute, he set up a system
for them to earn respectable jobs. In Ragtime, Washington stresses the importance
of image/appearance to Coalhouse, and how he needs to stop ruining it for black
people. He expresses that the actions of
Coalhouse are those that have the potential to wipe out all of his life’s work.
The scene with Washington is one that
has symbolism that uses but is not part of history.
So my “final
answer” to my own question would be no, it does not matter so much. Doctorow has
a way of stating everything in style so matter-of-fact that it blends history
and fiction together even more, in addition to the jumping around from story to
story (except for the end) that takes the focus slightly away from the plot. While
it is easy enough to pick out what is fact and fiction throughout the book, it
is not of necessarily high importance as the consistently straightforward tone
of the narrator suggests. What matters more is the connections, references,
themes, and symbols that present themselves through the characters, whether
real or fictional.
One historical insight I take away from Hayden White's work is that this "mindset" in which we consume history differently from fiction (which definitely exists, and which I am subject to as much as anyone--it does shift my perception in some hard-to-define way when I'm told that a narrative is "based on historical events") is itself a pretty recent development. As Doctorow himself points out, early novels were marketed "disguised" as history--or nonfiction, in the form of travel narratives or memoirs that were "discovered" by the author-as-editor. And "historical" writing was inseparable from myth at a certain point (exhibit A: The Iliad). Doctorow points out how the modern separation of history from fiction in a sense devalues *fiction*--it isn't seen as "consequential" in the same way that "serious historical writing" is. It's "just a story," an amusement or entertainment. And this general perception helps nullify its potentially subversive effects. We don't imprison counter-establishment novelists in this country; we relegate them to the realm of "entertainment."
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