What's the difference between lies and hyperbole? Lying is
wrong, but hyperbole is the worst thing ever.
One pernicious hyperbole is that fiction is a lie. The truth
is that fiction is untruth, and if that confuses you, welcome to my job. My
grandfather believed fiction was a pack of lies, and even tried to talk me out
writing the one time he drove me back home from Liberal Arts college. Over
burned toast and runny eggs, he argued that someday society would recognize
that novels and movies were feeding us falsehood and that we should only deal
with facts and non-fiction.
That's what I hear when people joke about writers as
high-paid liars. If anything, the lie is that most of us are paid very much.
Lies and fiction are two kinds of untruth that are little alike.
Lies are non-consensual. You speak misinformation under the
assumption the other person doesn't know better. Your kid doesn't know there
isn't a Santa Claus, but you want to fool him, for fun, or to get his mind off
a chronic illness. The IRS doesn't know how much money you've hidden under the
table, and you want to deceive its agents to get away with paying less. A lie
is your decision without the informed agency of the other person.
This is why lies are associated with benefitting off of
someone else's vulnerability, where writing novels about profound
vulnerabilities like The Color Purple
or To Kill a Mockingbird is praised.
Fiction doesn't work like that. Fiction is the expression of
an author to an audience that knows that they're reading isn't true. When you
read a novel, you're entering a consensual pact to experience something other
than reality. Some readers want to be transported. Often I want to analyze the
structure of someone's artifice, no different than an architect visiting a
great building.
There are great uses for fiction. Aldous Huxley's Brave New World imagines a future that
mixed truth and satirical implausibility to question how we engage with media
and pop culture. The Twilight novels
afforded millions of girls escape from their everyday problems while also being
relative enough of their lives to find connection (one reason I don't abide
bashing them anymore).
When I was bedridden in my own teens, the novels of Stephen
King and Michael Crichton often interested me enough to give me something to
look forward to - the turn of a page gave me enough willpower to survive
another agonizing minute of being alive.
These are all lovely uses of fiction. Getting at truth in
ways we can't articulate through composition of pure facts, or getting at our
hearts when they need protection. The consensual nature is what allows
revisiting; good fucking luck believing the same revealed lie as many times as
I've re-read The Hobbit. It not only
leaves audiences feeling safe to open themselves up, but encourages them to
fanfiction and interpretation.
You might argue that lying has its uses. Enough politicians
have believed a fully informed public would vote and act against their own
interests; Presidents Bush and Obama alike have lied and obfuscated about their
military campaigns. Both were convinced enough that it was beneficial that they
continued doing it.
We even have our "little white lies," ones told
for the benefit of the other. Grandpa died peacefully, you say, so your sister
can sleep easier. But even the best-intentioned of these wouldn't work if the
other person knew they were lies.
Whereas even fiction that you personally despise can work on
vast audiences that know the words are untrue. The lies we hate, about covert
torture campaigns and Holocaust denial, don't belong anywhere near the fiction
we hate.
I read to be transported. Fiction spurs the imagination and what isn't a reality now can become a reality thanks to that imagination. It's sad that people like your grandfather can't see beyond the obvious and realize the potential possibilities.
ReplyDelete[shudder] People who only want to deal with "facts" have no imagination and no ability to deal with metaphor.
ReplyDeleteI've noticed this in a lot of people who work in the sciences. The odd thing is, the people who decry novels as lies the most are also some of the biggest sitcom addicts I've ever encountered -- the cornier, the better.
At least with the people I've met, it's like they're determined to live shallow lives. And they get very angry when you point out the exercises in empathy fiction-reading allows might lead to a different perspective.
[shudder] People who only want to deal with "facts" have no imagination and no ability to deal with metaphor.
ReplyDeleteI've noticed this in a lot of people who work in the sciences. The odd thing is, the people who decry novels as lies the most are also some of the biggest sitcom addicts I've ever encountered -- the cornier, the better.
At least with the people I've met, it's like they're determined to live shallow lives. And they get very angry when you point out the exercises in empathy fiction-reading allows might lead to a different perspective.
Sometimes the 'lies' of fiction articulate truth for us all. Or for those of us who are prepared to listen.
ReplyDeleteI read to escape reality for a little while. Even then, fiction is a lie that can help us examine the truth.
ReplyDeleteI don't like when fiction is referred to as a lie, either. It's not the same. Fiction holds too many truths.
ReplyDeleteFiction often carries more weight than non-fiction. Most non-fiction books can be distilled down to a few bullet points and the rest is there to lay a foundation. After we read it goes somewhere in our mind and we keep a few talking points. Whereas when we read good fiction the story stays with you and you think of the ways it reflects life.
ReplyDeleteThink about it. Even Jesus Christ taught using parables because he knew the power of story.
Hello John,
ReplyDeleteSpeaking of Stephen King, it was he who said "Fiction is the truth inside the lie."