Joyce Carol Oates: "As a writer, I put my faith in people" | Louisiana Channel

“What is so exciting about the novel is that it mimics life and that you end up doing something you never thought you would do,” says Joyce Carol Oates, one of America’s greatest living novelists, when looking back on a life of writing.
When writing, Joyce Carol Oates writes about people, often about a family, because “the family unit to me is like the nexus of all emotion, and people derive their meaning from the position in families,” she says. It might be a violent event or something politically relevant, or it could be a racist experience that sets off a novel.
In her storytelling, Oates finds it interesting to focus on girls at the beginning of puberty: “There's a kind of wonderful neutrality of childhood that gets conditioned out when girls get to be 12 - 14 years old. And then, from that point on, when they're so shaped by what we call the male gaze and the expectations of others that they grow into being someone who is this female image.”
But today, the family is very different and there are all kinds of families: “There are families of same-sex couples who got married and they may adopt a child or they may have a child of their own, but then there may be families that are like communes where people are living, sharing a house, but they are a family and they may have dogs and cats who know who they are. […] The so-called nuclear family - which is just a father, mother, and children - still exists, of course, but it's not the only example of any longer, which is wonderful. It all begins with the emancipation of women”, Joyce Carol Oates concludes.
Oates feels attracted to writing because writing is storytelling and “what's interesting about storytelling is that you have to have revelations. That you start off with a situation, and a little bit of a mystery evolves, and then you have to follow the tendrils and the roots of that mystery, like an investigator. And then there has to be a revelation.” This means that Oates focuses a lot in her writing on the pacing and the suspense and the movement, like “how long is a paragraph, how short is the dialogue, and how much dialogue is there in proportion to the exposition, and the craftsman side of writing is actually where many people write.“
When looking upon the time we live in novelists and historians have two different approaches: “Historians write books about things that happen. When we're alive, when we live through an experience, we don't really know what it is 20 years from now. If we read about our lives now, we're learning much more,” Joyce Carol Oates says.
Joyce Carol Oates (b. 1938) is an award-winning American author, who has published a large number of novels, plays, novellas, short stories, poetry and nonfiction. Among her books are ‘them’ (1969), ‘Black Water’ (1992), ‘Demon and other tales’ (1996), ‘Blonde’ (2000), ‘The Falls’ (2004), ‘Black Dahlia & White Rose’ (2012) and ‘The Accursed’ (2013), which writer Stephen King described as “the world’s first postmodern Gothic novel.” ‘Babysitter’ was published in 2022. She has won numerous awards, including the National Book Award (1969), two O. Henry Awards, the National Humanities Medal (2010), the Norman Mailer Prize (2012) and many more. Three of her novels, ‘Black Water’ (1992), ‘What I Lived For’ (1994) and ‘Blonde’ (2000), have been nominated for the Pulitzer Prize.
Joyce Carol Oates was interviewed by Elisabeth Skou Pedersen in connection to the Louisiana Literature festival at the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Denmark in August 2023.
Camera: Simon Weyhe
Edit: Signe Boe Pedersen
Produced by Christian Lund
Copyright: Louisiana Channel, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, 2023
Louisiana Channel is supported by Den A.P. Møllerske Støttefond, Ny Carlsbergfondet and C.L. Davids Fond og Samling.
0:00 On preferred subjects for writing
3:20 On Karen Blixen /Isak Dinesen
4:24 On families
6:54 On the mother figure
9:00 On the novel ‘Babysitter’
17:27 On the novel ‘Night. Sleep. Death. And the Stars’
22:48 How traveling resembles writing
28:47 On Donald Trump
#writing #writer #author
Subscribe to our channel for more videos on literature: / thelouisianachannel
FOLLOW US HERE!
Website: channel.louisiana.dk
Facebook: / louisianachannel
Instagram: / louisianachannel
Twitter: / louisianachann

Пікірлер: 20

  • @carlwagner4650
    @carlwagner465028 күн бұрын

    Several years ago back in the middle of the 1960's, I had a job as a "bus boy" in the faculty club called the Quodlibet at the University of Detroit, I am sure Ms. Oates will not remember me, but I was always so impressed with her intelligence and sense of humor on the few occasions when she was at the club with other professors. It has always felt like such an honor to have been able to attend to her and her fellow faculty members' desires. I was not in the honors program where most of her students were even though I too majored in English. Around that time, she wrote about the civil unrest going on in Detroit at that time. I feel honored to this day to have been blessed with a chance to wait on Ms. Oates at that time.

  • @Largo3point0
    @Largo3point02 ай бұрын

    The way she gesticulates as she talks is so charming.

  • @thirdrockjul2224
    @thirdrockjul22245 ай бұрын

    Bless women young and old. ❤

  • @balintinasuncion4284
    @balintinasuncion42845 ай бұрын

    thank you so much for sharing this!

  • @Godovgrind
    @Godovgrind3 ай бұрын

    One of the masters. Love her. ❤️❤️

  • @Carmela-el7fi
    @Carmela-el7fiАй бұрын

    Very interesting and have found joyce carol oates stories exciting to read

  • @tantrictraveller1212
    @tantrictraveller12125 ай бұрын

    Spoiler alerts and all - a great listen!

  • @drendelous
    @drendelous4 ай бұрын

    2:33 🙌🙌

  • @yeshechangchub6914
    @yeshechangchub691420 күн бұрын

    i met her when she promoted monroe. gracious. i support women's rights ofc, but the only problem is men cannot bear children . we need to accept that fact and without children we will not have many reader nor writers...of english lieterature., maybe world literature but with tik tokl i have many doubts.. forgive me.

  • @sublimeister9630
    @sublimeister96305 ай бұрын

    Put her “faith” in people, as in “We The People,” but in reality there is no people, only individuals experiencing their own personal truths which can differ greatly from another individual who is aware or enlightened (Osho-“I do not believe on believing” = faith). 🙏🏼😊

  • @BruinBearDoc
    @BruinBearDoc4 ай бұрын

    Her day of judgement by the G_d coming soon

  • @Mentos6

    @Mentos6

    4 ай бұрын

    G_d? Do you mean god? If so, he doesn’t appear to exist. You should focus on your LIFE and stop worrying about a dumb, non-existent pyschopath.

  • @albertafarmer8638

    @albertafarmer8638

    4 ай бұрын

    @@Mentos6 Hi, if you don't believe that the entire Bible is the eternal Word of GOD you must study fulfilled Bible prophecy - only GOD can declare the end from the beginning! End Times prophecy is being fulfilled all around us, everyone can see and feel this by now! Please accept JESUS CHRIST as your Lord and Savior while you can, HE is coming soon for the rapture of all born again Christians! You can listen to Dr Ron Rhodes, a former Hollywood producer who got saved after he studied fulfilled Bible prophecy. Dr. Rhodes has a great lecture on end times chronology. PS: JESUS is GOD see John 1!

  • @coreyc1685

    @coreyc1685

    3 күн бұрын

    What a bizarre way to threaten someone.

  • @BruinBearDoc

    @BruinBearDoc

    2 күн бұрын

    Dumb? U clearly do not understand the math behind the probability of G_d’s nearly certain existence. U r not worth more than 5 seconds of my time.

  • @keithepley2132

    @keithepley2132

    Күн бұрын

    What a weird, disturbed person you seem.

  • @hswing11
    @hswing114 ай бұрын

    Very hard on the eyes with a opinion that means nothing..

  • @Mentos6

    @Mentos6

    4 ай бұрын

    Please explain.

  • @Largo3point0

    @Largo3point0

    2 ай бұрын

    You don’t *really* want someone inane enough to leave a comment like that to elaborate on it, do you? LOL…

  • @jthorn5782

    @jthorn5782

    Ай бұрын

    What a pointless opinion...well done!

Келесі