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Novelist, Essayist, and Journalist
Benaroya Hall, Tuesday, September 25, 2001
Biography
Excerpt
Selected Works
Links
Biography
Joan Didion (b. 1934) was born and raised in Sacramento, California, a
fifth generation Californian. Didions great-great-great grandmother
traveled to the West with the infamous Donner-Reed party in 1846, but
fortunately her group split off in Nevada, narrowly escaping the cannibalism
that became synonymous with the Donners.
As an undergraduate English major at the University of California, Berkley,
Didion won an essay prize sponsored by Vogue magazine. As a result,
Vogue hired her, and for eight years she lived in New York City, eventually
becoming an associate features editor at the magazine. She published her
first novel, Run River, in 1963 and in the same year married the
writer John Gregory Dunne. In 1964 the couple returned to California,
where they remained for twenty-five years.
Didion has been hailed as one of the shrewdest observers of Americas
political and cultural life. She gained this reputation through the success
of her collections of essays, Slouching Toward Bethlehem (1968)
and The White Album (1979). Since then she has written several
novels and collection of essays and has contributed to The New Yorker
and The New York Review of Books.
In her book Political Fictions Didion analyzes the American political
process, examining developments which occurred between the 1988 and 2000
elections. In these eight essays, several of which have appeared in The
New York Review of Books, Didion explores how a handful of insiders
have come to dominate the American political scene. Political Fictions
is Didions sixth work of nonfiction.
Among the
many awards and nominations Didion has received are first prize in Vogues
Prix de Paris, a National Book Award nomination, and an American Book
Award nomination. Her works include Play It As It Lays (1970), Democracy
(1984), Miami (1987), After Henry (1992), and The Last Thing He Wanted
(1996). She also has collaborated with her husband, John Gregory Dunn,
on screenplays. Didion is currently a contributor to The New York Review
of Books and The New Yorker. She lives in New York City.
Excerpt
Taken from Political Fictions (2001)
At a point quite soon during the dozen-some years that followed getting
on that charter at Newark, it came to my attention that there was to writing
about politics a certain Sisyphean aspect. Broad patterns could be defined,
specific inconsistencies documented, but no amount of definition or documentation
seemed sufficient to stop the stone that was our apprehension of politics
from hurtling back downhill. The romance of New Hampshire would again
be with us. The crucible event in the candidates character
would again be explored. Even that which seemed ineluctably clear would
again vanish from collective memory, sink traceless into the stream of
collapsing news and comment cycles that had become our national River
Lethe. It was clear for example in 1988 that the political process had
already become perilously remote from the electorate it was meant to represent.
It was also clear in 1988 that the decision of the two major parties to
obscure any possible perceived distinction between themselves, and by
so doing to narrow the contested ground to a handful of selected target
voters, had already imposed considerable strain on the basic principle
of the democratic exercise, that of assuring the nations citizens
a voice in its affairs. It was also clear in 1988 that the rhetorical
manipulation of resentment and anger designed to attract these target
voters had reduced the nations political dialogue to a level so
dispiritingly low that its highest expression had come to be pernicious
nostalgia. Perhaps most strikingly of all, it was clear in 1988 that those
inside the process had congealed into a permanent political class, the
defining characteristic of which was its readiness to abandon those not
inside the process. All of this was known. Yet by the time of the November
2000 presidential election and the onset of the thirty-six days that came
to be known as Florida, every aspect of what had been known
in 1988 would again need to be rediscovered, the stone pushed up the hill
one more time.
Selected
Works
Run River (1963)
Slouching Toward Bethlehem (1968)
Play It As It Lays (1970)
The White Album (1979)
Democracy (1984)
Miami (1987)
After Henry (1992)
The Last Thing He Wanted (1996)
Political Fictions (2001)
Web
Site Links
Salon.com interviews
Joan Didion
Reviews
written by Joan Didion on The New York Review of Books
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