A young reader asks “Why ‘anecdotal’?” It was a last-minute decision that Sunday afternoon almost eighteen years ago. I had it narrowed down to three or four potential titles but liked the legal/criminological connotation of “anecdotal evidence,” which is always judged suspect by officialdom. I was also thinking of a remark by Dr. Johnson reported by Boswell in his Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides (1785):
“I love anecdotes. I fancy mankind may come, in time, to write
all aphoristically, except in narrative; grow weary of preparation, and
connection, and illustration, and all those arts by which a big book is made.
If a man is to wait till he weaves anecdotes into a system, we may be long in
getting them, and get but a few, in comparison of what we might get.”
I had no interest in a “big book,” a “tome.” I was digitally naïve
but relished the independence of a blog. No editors breathing down my neck. So
many blogs back in 2006 were badly written (not that much has changed). I
figured I could do better. There is something “down-home” about anecdotes. Everyone
collects them and some of us enjoy them. Their informality is a given not
contradicted by my devotion to a semi-formal but non-academic style.
In English, the original meaning of “anecdote” Dr. Johnson
tells us in his Dictionary was “something
yet unpublished; secret history,” like samizdat.
Nicely evocative of a non-aligned sensibility at work. Then Johnson adds the
definition of “anecdote” as it evolved: “It is now used, after the French, for
a biographical incident; a minute passage of private life.” That’s the real
gem, written “aphoristically.”
Irving Howe helped me settle on the blog’s
title. In “Anecdote and Storyteller,” posthumously collected in A Critic’s Notebook (1994), he defines
an anecdote as a “brief, unelaborated, often humorous account of a single
incident, taken to be piquant in its own right.” He adds: “One of its
attractions is that in times of dislocation, the anecdote holds out the
possibility that human beings may still connect, perhaps only briefly, through
memory and story.”
1 comment:
Just this afternoon, my older brother and I were visiting a cemetery, where we got into a conversation with a cemetery employee out under a tree. The man started into telling us some lore of the old place and then stopped. "Never mind," he said. "It's a long story." My brother, a retired journalist, said, "Tell me. I love stories." And the guy told us some stories and they were good ones.
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