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Tag Archives: gould
Professor Seagull
Put simply, I love Joe Gould’s Secret by Joseph Mitchell. It’s easy to see, now, why it is held in such high regard. However, I couldn’t help but think the entire time, ‘Lucky for Mitchell, he was profiling a writer.’
Mitchell obtained great quotes and colorful banter out of Gould not only because of his eccentric nature, but also because Gould was also a writer and a master (arguably) of words and journalism himself. No wonder all of the quotes are so playful and fit for a great profile. I would have loved to see the actual interactions between the two men. How can you so accurately profile a man or woman who is a master of the same field? Is there such truth in interviewing and profiling a character who knows exactly what you’re trying to get at, ultimately?
On the subject of dating himself, Mitchell dabbles in the kind of text that we are not accustomed to reading every day in 2013, but cannot be dubbed as “old fashioned” or “out of date” by any means.
On page 9, Mitchell writes, “…once a madam and once a dealer in narcotics…” The reader can understand that a “madam” is a prostitute, and a “dealer in narcotics” is a drug dealer in our lexicon, but he doesn’t use such outlandish words that we are left confused.
On page 27, Mitchell writes, “…enrolled a score or so of dues-paying members…” about Gould’s Friends of Albanian Independence. “Score,” meaning 20, is something that can be attributed to the text originally published in 1942 and not 2013.
Other words and phrases that Mitchell might use to date the text include, “A.B.” when referring to Gould’s degree from Harvard, “per cent” when referring to inaccurate numbers Gould spoke of, and “bareheaded” to describe Gould’s eccentric look when Mitchell first met him.
I liked, in particular, one great phrase.
Page 29, Gould describing the Oral History and what it means to him, “…my wound and the salt on it, my whiskey and my aspirin, and my rock and my salvation.”
Posted in Joseph Mitchell
Tagged gould, mitchell, Rebecca Ungarino
Comments Off on Professor Seagull
Joe Gould’s Secret commentary
I don’t think that Joseph Mitchell’s writing style is outdated or old fashioned. He has a very descriptive writing style that allows the reader to create an image of how Gould looked and how he went about his life. Considering the unusual life of Joe Gould and the story telling style of Mitchell, it feels like one is reading a fictional story. His two pieces on Joe Gould are definitely feature articles. These two profiles on Gould, are good examples that aspiring feature writers can go by.
The second piece on Gould introduces him in a more negative light. Mitchell used sentences like “Gould looked like a bum and lived like a bum.” “He was generally pretty dirty.” “His voice was distractingly nasal. On occasion, he stole.”I feel that Mitchell chose to portray Gould as a bum and not as a literary genius the second time around because he wanted to make it believable when readers found out that his Oral History was a lie.
Reading the first profile, I was skeptical about the Oral History. What made it hard for me to believe was its supposed length. “It is already eleven times as long as the Bible.” This statement threw me off, because I am currently in the process of reading the whole Bible. It has been a couple of months and I am still not done. The Bible is a very long book and just to imagine a book eleven times its size seems unreal.