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The Lost Origins of the Essay
A review by Meehan Crist
Central question: How can we read the history of the essay as a history of art? "What word is there to describe this kind of logic that sings?" -- Plutarch Every history is a story, a marshaling of evidence to support a particular reading of the past. Of the Silk Road or Nordic myth. Of Alexandria or pirates or the atom bomb. John D'Agata's history is of the essay, that redheaded stepchild of literature which, he laments, is often mistaken for "a genre that is merely a dispensary of data -- not a true expression of one's dreams, ideas, or fears." There is a problem, he argues, with thinking that the nonfiction tradition originates in records of fact, as in how many bushels of wheat a man once owed his neighbor. It denies the genre a tradition as art. "I think this misperception is prevalent today because we haven't yet laid claim to an alternative tradition.... I am here in search of art. I am here to track the origins of an alternative to commerce." This...
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