• About

Bonespark~

~ Lighting the Fire…Write Hot!!!

Bonespark~

Tag Archives: experimental writing

Locard’s Exchange Principle & Literary Rub-Offs

22 Saturday Mar 2014

Posted by BoneSpark Blog in C.A. Explains It All

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

experimental writing, fiction disections, Gertrude Stein, Hemingway, Locard's Exchange Principle, Picasso, Sherlock

A Study in Pink by Alice X. Zhang

A Study in Pink by Alice X. Zhang (Download Wallpaper or Buy Print)

Fans of BBC’s Sherlock will have heard of Locard’s Exchange Principle.  In its simplest form, it is a forensics concept that states “every contact must leave a trace.”  In other words, if I bump into a table, I leave something of myself on it as much as it leaves something on me.

This is an interesting concept to explore in a literary context. The symbiotic relationship of Hemingway and Gertrude Stein comes to mind.

Stein has often been called the mother of the “Lost Generation”—which besides Hemingway counted Sherwood Anderson, Ezra Pound and F. Scott Fitzgerald—but really it was a two-way street in Gertie’s Paris salon.

Scholar Phillip Young documents “striking” resemblances to Hemingway’s prose in Stein’s Three Lives, and much of Hemingway’s works display Stein’s favorite techniques such as repetition and sparse sentence structures.

In interviews, Stein said she was working towards a modified cubist style that applied Picasso’s 01w/25/arve/G2257/025radical ideas to the printed word.  For more on her innovative use of rhythm, rhyme and repetition, see Ruland and Bradbury’s From Puritanism to Postmodernism: A History of American Literature.

As I said, Hemingway adopted much of Stein’s experimental style, but he also achieved a clarity in his prose that ultimately forced her to revisit some of her own ideas about communication and consciousness. Her attempts to capture the transitive elements of human thought (influenced by philosophy) were not always successful.

You can find out more about her language experiments in the NY Times article “Reconsidering the Genius of Gertrude Stein” and also in Understanding Steinese at The New Yorker. Also, visit the interviews and recordings available at PennSound.

For a more in-depth analysis of her style, see Irresistible Diction: Gertrude Stein and the Correlations of Writing and Science. Do pick up Reynolds’ Hemingway: The Paris Years and his own A Moveable Feast for more on Stein’s impact on Hemingway.

One more Stein-link if you will indulge me: this time an application of Locard’s principle to the art world itself. Earlier, I mentioned that Stein was attempting a “cubist” writing style. This was largely due to her great admiration of Picasso’s paintings, which she was one of the first to avidly collect.  You can see some of the paintings she acquired at the San Franciso Museum of Modern Art.

Picasso was so moved by her admiration that he asked her to sit.

gertrudesteinwiki3_small

You can see from the resulting portrait, that he himself moved away from some of his own techniques to try to capture a darker, more brooding mood. Sherlock would have been happy to point out Locard’s principle at work here.

And that’s all chickadees!  Special bonus prize available to those of you who can find more literary examples.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Share this:

  • Twitter
  • Tumblr

Like this:

Like Loading...

Recent Posts

  • Sunday Sentence 1/19/2020
  • NonFiction November Recap
  • Read This With That
  • Hidden Treasures of Booktube
  • (Belated) Sunday Sentence 7/14/19

Archives

Categories

  • 2sDay Poems
  • C.A. Explains It All
  • Fiction Experiments
  • Foremother Friday
  • National Poetry Month '15
  • National Poetry Month '16
  • National Poetry Month '17
  • NonFiction Nook
  • Odd Bits from a Creative Life
  • Poetry Lab
  • Small Press Interviews
  • Sunday Sentence
  • Thoughts on Poetry
  • Uncategorized

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 1,450 other subscribers

Follow me on Twitter

My Tweets

Blogroll

  • Amy King's Alias
  • Arts & Lit @Deep South Mag
  • Blogalicious
  • Catalogue of Women Artists
  • Dear Outer Space
  • International Centre For Women Playwrights
  • Irish Writer's Centre
  • It's About Time Art Blog
  • Kristen Lamb's Blog
  • List of Poetry Journals (Poetry Society of America)
  • Myself the Only Kangaroo
  • National Museum of Women in the Arts
  • Practicing Writing
  • Resources for Southern Writers
  • Sealaska Heritage Institute
  • THE BLIND CHATELAINE'S KEYS
  • The Book of Kells
  • The Other Side of the Story
  • VIDA-Women in the Literary Arts
  • Women's Poetry List-Serv
  • WordCraft Circle
  • Wordgathering: Finding Poetry
  • Write It Sideways

Quick Links

  • Girls Gotta Write: Lit Mags for Us
  • Literary Journals Who Read in Summer (via Blogalicious)
  • Native American Poetry and Culture
  • Presses w/ Open Reading For Full-Length Poetry MS By Month
  • Scouting Small Press Poetry: A Tiny Guide
  • Small Poetry Presses Part II
  • VIDA's List of Women-Run Presses

Recent Work

  • "In the Heartland" poem from McNeese Review
  • Art @ Belle Journal
  • Collage @Foliate Oak
  • Latest Review @SabotageReviews
  • Notes on New Orleans Small Press Poetry @SabotageReviews
  • Papercut Art @Turk's Head Review
  • Review of THE SOUTHEAST REVIEW @theReviewReview

I LOVE POETRY Button

I’m a Southern Writer

Native Blood

American NDN

Member of The Internet Defense League

  • Follow Following
    • Bonespark~
    • Join 108 other followers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Bonespark~
    • Customize
    • Follow Following
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
%d bloggers like this: