Writing thread: Secondary characters in biography and history.
When writing a biography, it's easy to fall into the trap of focusing relentlessly on your subject. Writers of narrative history sometimes treat people not as characters but inanimate objects. Let's fix that.
1/11
When Jean Strouse turns to the creation of the Morgan Library, she does so through the librarian, Belle da Costa Greene. After a glorious description, she springs a surprise that makes the library chapter also about the rising Black intelligentsia in America. Stunning.
2/11
A secondary character allows an author to expand the book's scope while preserving the narrative—it's still about people & their fate. Strouse uses Greene to open a door we expect—the great Morgan Library—which turns out to lead to an unexpected door. She writes it so well.
3/11
Robert Caro is a master of this, as we see in "Master of the Senate." He doesn't just tell us about the liberal movement, or how LBJ used Hubert Humphrey; he switches the point of view, giving us Humphrey's story. He invests the reader in this character & his priorities.
4/11
That's the thing about really getting into the heads of secondary characters. It turns narrative from a progression of inevitable events into the story of intersecting agendas. We see people wanting different things, & why. It leads to deeper knowledge *and* more suspense.
5/11
But when I was teaching this chapter once, a writing student pointed out a problem, in this excerpt. Caro failed to ponder Cyril King's perspective. Did King want to be the center of a conflict in the Senate Dining Room? Did Humphrey use him to burnish his own righteousness?
6/11
Good point. We have to remember that everything looks different to different characters. What seems Good and right may not be good for everyone. Onion in James McBride's "The Good Lord Bird" doesn't want to be in a crusade—he's just trying to survive.
7/11 jamesmcbride.com/good-lord-bird/
In "Custer's Trials," I consider the points of view of Libbie Custer and Eliza Brown, a self-emancipated woman who ran the Custer household. They expand the book, taking us into slavery, woman's lives. But they had their own agendas, & a fraught, complicated relationship.
8/11
When you step aside to delve into secondary characters—and new themes in the book—it's important to invest the reader in them. I'm not always clever at this. To explore the culture of deference through Vanderbilt's only boss, I kind of said, "Hey! This is going to matter!"
9/11
Sometimes secondary characters just makes the story better. Also in "The First Tycoon" is the tale of how Vanderbilt aided Costa Rica's costly war against William Walker, the "filibuster" who seized Nicaragua. Vanderbilt's agent was Sylvanus Spencer. I'd cast Jason Statham.
10/11
That's how I think about it, anyway. Secondary characters, treated *as characters*, can correct the tendency to cast events as ineluctable. They can organically expand the scope of a book, naturally bringing in important issues & themes. And they just make things more fun.
11/11
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Is stupidity a defense that you're not evil? In the case of elected officials, no. It gets people killed. Since Trump lost the 2020 election, Sen. Ron Johnson is both the dumbest and most evil elected official in America.
Ron Johnson is *still* pushing Ivermectin as an alternative to vaccination. It has been closely studied. Ivermectin helps—only if you have worms as well as COVID. Don't have worms? Don't take it. Pro tip: Don't take drugs for ailments you don't have. economist.com/graphic-detail…
Ron Johnson is a liar as well. "I'm not anti-vax," he lied. "That's people's individual choice but they should have information to be able to make that choice." False. He encourages people to not get vaccinated, with lies. And people are dying as a result. cnn.com/2021/05/07/pol…
Our story begins in 1901, when John Garner published his dissertation—what became for decades the standard history of #Reconstruction in #Mississippi—with adviser William A. Dunning at Columbia, the leading historian.
1/11
Garner had to answer why in 1875 an armed insurrection overthrew the elected government of Mississippi under Gov. Adelbert Ames. He started with the carpetbagger stereotype: thieving yankees came to despoil the prostrate South. But he found that Ames didn't fit it.
2/11
A few facts. Mississippi had a Black majority. Ames was made provisional governor under Congressional Reconstruction. He named its first Black officeholders & oversaw a constitutional convention that enfranchised Black men—creating real "home rule," lifting federal control.
3/11
Writing thread: Openings, one of my favorite topics.
In a work of history or biography, the first paragraph, often the first sentence, tells you if you are in the hands of a writer, or someone just trying to arrange research and argument in some kind of logical order.
1/9
There are books that shout, “Here’s a bunch of stuff I know about this topic,” or, “Scholarly contribution!” But real writing requires that you give the reader a reason to turn every page. Raise questions in the mind of the reader & delay the answers, as David Lodge says.
2/9
Claire Tomalin, a giant, shows how to proceed chronologically but invest the reader in events long before her subject does the stuff that made you read about him. She starts with a sentence that announces she is telling a story. Then, mystery! Suspense! (Spoiler: He lives.) 3/9
When my bio of Jesse James came out, some were upset at my portrait of a pro-slavery terrorist in the Civil War who seized the role of Confederate hero in Reconstruction politics in Missouri. I besmirched a folk hero!
Why is that? It says something about white supremacy.
1/9
I wasn’t making a leap. I just took seriously what he himself wrote & how he was discussed. His family enslaved 7 people in 1860. Proslavery politics was fierce and ugly in western Missouri, & his family was very partisan—hardcore secessionist. So why has that been denied?
2/9
There are some specific reasons in Jesse James’s case. He was addicted to violence, always in it for the money (well, money plus politics, but money first.) After his gang & Reconstruction both blew apart, he had a 3-year apolitical criminal reprise. It blurred his image.
3/9
Texas HB 3979 blocks Critical Race Theory in public schools. It's hard to imagine any prosecutions resulting. But it makes teachers vulnerable to parents' complaints—especially of the hot-take variety. And it could have unintended consequences.
Let's take a look, shall we?
1/10
Some of Texas HB 3979 is fine. It requires that students learn about founding documents, the 13th, 14th, 15th Amendments, Native American history, etc. Correct me if an amendment changes this. But it's got some wacky & dangerous language. It's a mess.
2/10 capitol.texas.gov/tlodocs/87R/se…
The wording of Texas HB 3979 clearly shows its main motivation is to protect white children from any sense of the moral weight of history. But it's also aimed at a non-existent threat: teachers who are telling kids they are to blame as individuals for racism writ large.
3/10
Academic historians fret about not reaching the public. It's not enough to say (even if true), "I'm doing such important & interesting work." It's about writing.
First, accept that work that doesn't signal that it's for academics only can still be cutting-edge scholarship.
1/5
There are conventions for journal articles & monographs that serve a professional purpose, & signal that they are for fellow scholars. That's fine! But historians should embrace serious work that doesn't follow these conventions. It's not dumbing down to depart from them.
2/5
Second, academic historians who want a wide audience need to read fiction & compelling nonfiction journalism, & ask why it's appealing. It's not about color, an anecdote, an important fact. It's about giving the reader a reason to go on to the next page—the next paragraph.
3/5