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The Short Storya guide to the greatest works
The short story is as old as the earliest tale-telling. Many longer narratives such as epics and myths (such as the Bible) contain short episodes which can be extracted as stories. But as a distinct literary genre, the short story came into its own during the early nineteenth century.
Many other writers have created successful short stories - but those which follow are the prose artists who have had most influence on its development in terms of form. We will be adding more guidance notes and examples as time goes on.
How short is short? There is no fixed length for a short story. Readers generally expect a character, an event of some kind, and a sense of resolution. But Virginia Woolf got most of this in to one page in 'Monday or Tuesday'. There are also 'abrupt fictions' of a paragraph or two - but these tend to be not much more than anecdotes. There are also quite long stories - such as those written by Henry James. If the narrative sticks to one character and one issue or episode, they remain stories. If they stray into greater degrees of complexity and develop expanded themes and dense structure - then they often become novellas. Examples include Herman Melville's Billy Budd, Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness and Thomas Mann's Death in Venice
Nathaniel Hawthorne's stories are beautifully crafted studies in symbolism, moral ambiguity, and metaphors of the American psyche. His stories are full of characters oppressed by consciousness of sin, guilt, and retribution. They have become classics of nineteenth-century US literature. This selection of twenty of Hawthorne's tales is the first in paperback to present his most important short works with full annotation in one volume.
Guy de Maupassant brought the subject matter of the story down to an everyday level which shocked readers at the time - and can still do so now. He also began to downgrade the element of plot and suspense in favour of character revelation. Friend of Flaubert, novelist manqué, and bon viveur who died at forty-three of syphilis in a madhouse, he nevertheless left behind him an oeuvre of more than 300 stories.
Charles E. May, The Short Story: the reality of artifice, London: Routledge, 2002, pp.160, ISBN 041593883X
This is a study of the development of the short story as a literary genre - from its origins to the present day. It takes in most of the major figures - Poe, Hawthorn, James, Conrad, Hemingway, Borges, and Cheever. May explains the important fetures of story writing techniques.
Katherine Mansfield is one of the few major writers who worked entirely within the short story form. Her complete work is available in one volume. She followed Chekhov in paring down the dramatic element of the short story to a minimum, whilst raising its level of subtlety and psychological insight to new heights. Every smallest detail within her stories is carefully chosen to complete a pattern which the whole tale symbolises.
James Joyce's Dubliners is an enormously influential collection which helped to establish the form of the modern short story. These are studies of Dublin life and characters written in a stark, pared-down style. Most of the characters and scenes are mean and petty - sometimes even tragic. Joyce had difficulty finding a publisher for this his first book, and it did not appear until many years after it had been written.
The Whiplash Ending It used to be thought that the 'point' of a short story was best held back until the last paragraph. The idea was that the reader was being entertained - and then suddenly surprised by a revelation or an unexpected reversal or twist. O. Henry popularised this device in the US. However, most serious modern writers after Chekhov came to think that this was rather a cheap strategy. They proposed instead the relatively eventless story which presents a situation that unfolds itself to the reader for contemplation.
Virginia Woolf took the short story as it had come to be developed post-Chekhov, and with it she blended the prose poem, poetic meditations, and the plotless event. Her finest achievements in this form - 'Kew Gardens', 'Sunday or Monday', and 'The Reflection in the Mirror' - create new linguistic worlds without the prop of a story line. These offer a poetic evocation of life and meditations on time, memory, and death.
Franz Kafka created stories and 'fragments' (as he called them) which are a strange, often nightmarish mixture of tale and philosophic meditation. Start with 'Metamorphosis' - the account of a young salesman who wakes up to find he has been transformed into a giant insect. This particular collection also includes Kafka's other masterly transformations of the short story form - 'The Great Wall of China', 'Investigations of a Dog', and 'The Burrow'.
Epiphanies and Moments James Joyce's contribution to the short story was a device he called the 'epiphany'. Following Guy de Maupassant and Chekhov, he wrote the series of stories Dubliners which were pared down in terms of literary style and focussed their effect on a revelation. A sudden remark, a symbol, or moment epitomises and clarifies the meaning of a complex experience. This usually comes at the end of the story - either for the character in the story or for the reader. Katherine Mansfield and Virginia Woolf followed a similar route of playing down action and events in favour of dramatising insights into character and states of mind. Woolf called these 'moments of being'.
Jorge Luis Borges, like Katherine Mansfield, only wrote short stories. He was an Argentinean, much influenced by English Literature. His tales manage to combine literary playfulness and a rich style with strange explorations of mind-bending ideas. He is credited as one of the fathers of magical realism, which is one feature of Latin-American literature which has spread worldwide since the 1960s.
Ernest Hemingway trained as a newspaper reporter and began writing short stories in the post-Chekhov period, consciously influenced by his admiration for the Russian novelist Turgenev. He is celebrated for his terseness and understatement - a sort of literary tough-guy style which was much imitated at one time His persistent themes are physical and moral courage, stoicism, and what he called 'grace under pressure'.
John Cheever is a story writer in the smooth and sophisticated New Yorker school. His writing is urbane, thoughtful, and his social details well observed. What he writes about are the small moments of enlightenment which lie waiting in everyday life, as well as the smouldering vices which lurk beneath the polite surface of suburban America. This is no doubt a reflection of Cheever's own experience.
Nadine Gordimer is one of the few modern writers who have developed the short story as a literary genre beyond what Virginia Woolf pushed it to in the early modernist phase.
She starts off in modern post-Chekhovian mode presenting situations which have little drama but which invite the reader to contemplate states of being or moods which illustrate the ideologies of South Africa.
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