Fall 2000

Has the Camera’s Eye Replaced the Writer’s Descriptive Hand?

An editor laments the demise of the narrative. And welcomes its return.

Michael Kelly
The Nieman Foundation and Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism convened a panel of journalists to discuss nonfiction narrative writing during the annual conference that honors the work and life of journalist and Pulitzer Prize-winning author J. Anthony Lukas. Speaking as the new editor in chief of The Atlantic, Michael Kelly described how he intends to oversee “at least some rebirth of serious or ambitious narratives in at least one magazine.” He then commented on some assertions about narrative writing in newspapers and magazines.

The first assertion is that most people who write for newspapers or for magazines cannot write a narrative. And the reason is that they cannot or have not learned to write that which is at the core of narrative, which is physical description and dialogue. The second assertion is that it has to some degree always been thus, but that it has gotten more so in this century and particularly in the last 30 or 40 years. And the third assertion is that the reason boils down to the lamentable, in this context, invention of the camera.

This century has been, among other things, a century of the camera. I think one effect has been to encourage writers and editors, at least subconsciously but pervasively, to adopt a kind of group belief that the great traditional role of the correspondent, as the observer of things who describes what his or her senses perceive, need no longer be fulfilled by a writer. There was no point in fulfilling it because the camera—first the still camera and then the moving camera—would do it better than we could. And we, in our role, in our 19th century role as correspondents, as people who would go to places and send back dispatches saying, “Here’s what the battle looked like,” or, “Here’s what the eruption of the volcano looked like,” and so on, that we had sort of lost our reason, or that reason, for being.

This is not universal. It’s certainly not articulated and certainly not everybody believes in it. But I think that it has come to be a pervasive thing in America’s newspapers and magazines, and I’ve seen it in my own life. When I wanted to go off and write dispatches on the Gulf War, I had a very simple model in mind. I wanted to write the classic correspondent’s dispatch: to simply go to wherever I could go, see what I could see, hear what I could hear, and write only that. I would not attempt any analysis of the war, not attempt any reporting beyond that which grew directly out of the events before me, and to file it in dispatch form for whomever would buy it.

When I went flogging this idea around to various agents and editors, it was pretty roundly rejected, and not only because I was an unknown writer and it was a perfectly reasonable idea to reject me, but because, as various people said to me, frankly, the whole idea was wrong. That this was a war that was going to be filled with cameras. The first night of bombing, there would be cameras there. There would be cameras throughout the war. Everything that could be described would be seen in many cases in real time, so the idea of filing a dispatch that a reader might read a week or even a month later was pointless, and sort of an anachronistic idea.

I see this also in the writing that comes to me as an editor. The thing that I most lament, and causes me most grief in manuscripts that come in from professional writers, from good writers, is the stunning lack of physical description. A writer will go to some interesting, fascinating and dangerous place, and will file a piece that will contain a great deal of terrific reporting on all sorts of levels—interviews, analysis and so on—and the story will simply be bereft of physical description, of the colorful, vivid scene painting that readers continue to love. It’s a myth that readers have turned away from this and that in the age of the picture and now the age of Internet, that readers don’t want it.

Readers of books, but also of magazines, every chance they get to reward this kind of writing, they show it over and over again. They do want descriptive writing, but very few writers—or relatively few, even in the kind of manuscripts we see at The Atlantic—seem to know how to do this. And this leads me to what I think is one of the long-term unfortunate effects of the camera on writing and that is the institutional effect on newsrooms.

I think Robert [Vare] is right to say that in newspapers today there is some renaissance of narrative writing. There are pieces, there are serious projects that are narrative and that are excellent. But it’s notable that when Robert talked about that he spoke exclusively in terms of projects, big ambitious projects that newspapers undertake. These are projects that are intended to attract attention, to showcase the newspaper, maybe to win some prizes, and so on. What he didn’t talk about was the day-to-day structure, the intellectual structure, if you will, of the city room. And that, I think, has changed. I don’t think there’s been much of a renaissance in that and, even if there is, it will take years to reverse what I see as the damage.

My father was a newspaper reporter, a tabloid man at the old Daily News in Washington, and he was very much of a sort of writer that newspapers used to be filled with and used to greatly encourage and to treasure. He was somebody who would wander into work, sit around cracking wise with other people cracking wise, and then go off and cover a set event that other reporters would be at. But he’d do so with the understanding that he was to come back with the angle, the funny story, the feature treatment of it that would set his piece apart from the straight news guys. Or he’d just go off and wander around the city and come up with some story, some slice of human life feature.

There were three papers in Washington in those days, and there were half a dozen people who did exactly this sort of work. One of them was Tom Wolfe. And every day readers were treated to this kind of sketch writing; this was the shortest form of narrative, and readers loved it. And the people who ran newspapers knew that readers loved it, and they encouraged these people whose essential talents were not as reporters but as writers, physical description guys, and dialogue. They encouraged them and rewarded them and valued them.

I used to go and watch my father at work on some days. I’d go down there on Saturdays when he would do essentially nothing for most of the day. He’d talk to his friends, drink a few beers, then go to the circus, come back, and write up 800 words. Everybody would laugh, and then he would go home. This is why I went into journalism. It seemed to be the ideal life and neither my father nor anyone else told me I was witnessing the vanishing of an era, as if he was a buggywhip manufacturer, and that had seemed to me a good line of work to get into.

Newspapers, I think, at least in part because of this sense that the camera does this kind of work, somehow over the years quit valuing, promoting, encouraging, hunting for this kind of talent, the sketch writer. And the result, you can see, I think, in every paper you pick up as a reader, in almost every story. In my father’s time in newspapering, not every political reporter who worked in every paper in the country could, to put it mildly, write the kind of stuff, in terms of physical description, that [A.J.] Liebling wrote in “The Earl of Louisiana,” in which he catches this marvelous picture of Earl Long mopping his brow with a handkerchief dipped in Pepsi-Cola on a hot summer night in the South.

And, of course, not everybody, not anybody could do that. But newspapers were filled with people who thought that’s what they were supposed to aspire to. And the political columnist for even a second- or third-rate newspaper knew that when a presidential candidate came through town, and he went out to cover the speech, that one of the things that he was supposed to do was to paint some kind of theme of what this man looked like and what he sounded like and something to capture the spirit of the crowd and so on. You could read through a year’s worth of political writing in the presidential year we’re now in, read across the country, newspaper to newspaper, and not find that.

This is true also in feature writing, in the kind of quick-profile writing such as the movie star who comes to town and you catch a quick interview and so on. And the result of this institutionally, in no intentional or planned way, has been to sort of destroy what was a kind of literary farm system in which all around the country there were people who were trying, aspiring to what Liebling could do, consciously or unconsciously. Whether they were thinking of Liebling himself, they were aspiring to this. They were learning this craft in small newspapers, and then, if they were good, the system that valued them would find them, would reward them, and would promote them. They would get to a better paper and a better paper, and if they kept learning the craft and they kept getting better they would end up in magazines, where they were greatly valued, and they could make a great deal of money and become stars.

The entire system told people who wrote for a living, in the journalistic sense, from the first day of the job, that they could chart a course on the strength of their writing, on the strength of their ability to describe things in a way that other people couldn’t, describe them with more color or more wit, describe them in a way that was funnier than other people could do. And that if you did this, this would be quite systematically rewarded and encouraged and lead you up to a path to magazines and ultimately books. That farm system, somewhere along the way, broke down.

I hope that it is coming back to some degree in newspapers, but I think judging from what I see in manuscripts, it is a long road back. I know an awful lot of people who write professionally who simply don’t understand that if you’re describing, you know, a couple of Serb paramilitary thugs sitting in a room drinking slivovitz and talking, that you need to do something more than write that they’re sitting there and drinking slivovitz and talking. You need to tell people what everything looks like.

The almost mechanical nature of doing this is something that many writers that I talk to don’t know. For instance, they don’t know that if you want to describe something in physical exactitude, and you’re going to be writing days or weeks or, in some cases, months later, that you need a notebook that is filled not just with people’s words but with physical descriptors. You need to have described the person’s face and his clothes and everything about it or else you won’t be able to do it later. It is almost as if a kind of school for writing, at least for narrative writing, has been lost because of the loss of this core talent, the ability to describe things.

I hope it gets better.

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