Everything is a story: Lydia Davis's Very Short Fiction

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: Lima, Maria Antónia
Data de Publicação: 2018
Tipo de documento: Artigo de conferência
Idioma: por
Título da fonte: Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (Repositórios Cientìficos)
Texto Completo: http://hdl.handle.net/10174/24353
Resumo: For Lydia Davis, writing has always wished to be as concise as possible. Her very short stories have almost no plot, emerging as reiterative pieces of thoughts where the chronology becomes a subject rather than a formal device. One of the most important aspects of her tales is that they are nourished by ordinary people and by the frustrations we find around us. They ingeniously manage to focus on what is important in everyday life, revealing its beauty and rescuing what is valuable in the simple actions of each day, immortalizing them with a very particular style. Davis's narratives may be bizarre, absurd and strange but they keep a secret truth to be discovered. Her short stories are undoubtedly short ways to express the secrecy of many truths that not even a long story could tell. Like good pictures, her very short fiction is really very powerful to capture instant glimpses of deeper dimensions in every common routine or experience of our daily lives, where everything is a story. If her writing was acknowledged as belonging to an American tradition, her fiction also persists in evoking the influence of many other writers such as Beckett, Thomas Bernhard, Kafka, Hemingway, W.G. Sebald or Peter Handke. Like them, Lydia Davis is a radical expert of making a long story very short.
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spelling Everything is a story: Lydia Davis's Very Short FictionFor Lydia Davis, writing has always wished to be as concise as possible. Her very short stories have almost no plot, emerging as reiterative pieces of thoughts where the chronology becomes a subject rather than a formal device. One of the most important aspects of her tales is that they are nourished by ordinary people and by the frustrations we find around us. They ingeniously manage to focus on what is important in everyday life, revealing its beauty and rescuing what is valuable in the simple actions of each day, immortalizing them with a very particular style. Davis's narratives may be bizarre, absurd and strange but they keep a secret truth to be discovered. Her short stories are undoubtedly short ways to express the secrecy of many truths that not even a long story could tell. Like good pictures, her very short fiction is really very powerful to capture instant glimpses of deeper dimensions in every common routine or experience of our daily lives, where everything is a story. If her writing was acknowledged as belonging to an American tradition, her fiction also persists in evoking the influence of many other writers such as Beckett, Thomas Bernhard, Kafka, Hemingway, W.G. Sebald or Peter Handke. Like them, Lydia Davis is a radical expert of making a long story very short.2019-01-29T16:50:46Z2019-01-292018-06-01T00:00:00Zinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObjecthttp://hdl.handle.net/10174/24353http://hdl.handle.net/10174/24353porLima, Maria Antónia. "Everything is a story: Lydia Davis's Very Short Fiction", Beyond History: the radiance of the Short Story - 15th International Conference on the Short Story in English. University of Lisbon, 27-30 June.naosimnaolima.antoniamc@gmail.com296Lima, Maria Antóniainfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessreponame:Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (Repositórios Cientìficos)instname:Agência para a Sociedade do Conhecimento (UMIC) - FCT - Sociedade da Informaçãoinstacron:RCAAP2024-01-03T19:17:11Zoai:dspace.uevora.pt:10174/24353Portal AgregadorONGhttps://www.rcaap.pt/oai/openaireopendoar:71602024-03-20T01:14:59.842086Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (Repositórios Cientìficos) - Agência para a Sociedade do Conhecimento (UMIC) - FCT - Sociedade da Informaçãofalse
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv Everything is a story: Lydia Davis's Very Short Fiction
title Everything is a story: Lydia Davis's Very Short Fiction
spellingShingle Everything is a story: Lydia Davis's Very Short Fiction
Lima, Maria Antónia
title_short Everything is a story: Lydia Davis's Very Short Fiction
title_full Everything is a story: Lydia Davis's Very Short Fiction
title_fullStr Everything is a story: Lydia Davis's Very Short Fiction
title_full_unstemmed Everything is a story: Lydia Davis's Very Short Fiction
title_sort Everything is a story: Lydia Davis's Very Short Fiction
author Lima, Maria Antónia
author_facet Lima, Maria Antónia
author_role author
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Lima, Maria Antónia
description For Lydia Davis, writing has always wished to be as concise as possible. Her very short stories have almost no plot, emerging as reiterative pieces of thoughts where the chronology becomes a subject rather than a formal device. One of the most important aspects of her tales is that they are nourished by ordinary people and by the frustrations we find around us. They ingeniously manage to focus on what is important in everyday life, revealing its beauty and rescuing what is valuable in the simple actions of each day, immortalizing them with a very particular style. Davis's narratives may be bizarre, absurd and strange but they keep a secret truth to be discovered. Her short stories are undoubtedly short ways to express the secrecy of many truths that not even a long story could tell. Like good pictures, her very short fiction is really very powerful to capture instant glimpses of deeper dimensions in every common routine or experience of our daily lives, where everything is a story. If her writing was acknowledged as belonging to an American tradition, her fiction also persists in evoking the influence of many other writers such as Beckett, Thomas Bernhard, Kafka, Hemingway, W.G. Sebald or Peter Handke. Like them, Lydia Davis is a radical expert of making a long story very short.
publishDate 2018
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dc.relation.none.fl_str_mv Lima, Maria Antónia. "Everything is a story: Lydia Davis's Very Short Fiction", Beyond History: the radiance of the Short Story - 15th International Conference on the Short Story in English. University of Lisbon, 27-30 June.
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