Not a liar, but not a truth-er either
The style of story-telling is something that every writer struggles with as they put pen to paper or fingers to keyboard. How should my story be told? Who should be the narrative voice? What kind of voice should it have? Will I, as the writer, have a part in my story?
Autobiographies tend to solve part of that problem. The author is often telling their own story to the public and everyone listening is listening to them tell everything that they know and part of what someone else knows. In the end though, they are still the only person speaking. Even if there is someone else speaking, the reader can hardly walk up to them and confirm that the other voices in the story, the other stories in their story are really factually accurate. It would make sense since an over-abundance of narrative voices very often causes confusion in the narrative arc. Everyone has their own version of the story and things don’t always match up so neatly that several different people can each tell their account of what happened and the collective result will make sense.
Holley’s Stories We Tell does exactly that.
Everyone’s story about one person gets told and all of that is put together into one big over-riding narrative arc about a single individual. The way it is executed is so perfect that everything everyone says seems as though it is real, even the re-enacted flashbacks of past times seem as though they were shot in the actual moment that it was happening in and just brought back to light in her documentary. However, it turns out that everyone was staged, a particularly poignant part of the whole documentary being the brief scene where a make-up artist is helping an actor apply his mustache. That one single scene manages to make one question the truth of everything that they just watched. It makes one wonder if any of that was actually genuine or was it all staged and scripted.
In Spiegelman’s Maus, Vladek is telling the story. The narrative voice is partially his and partially Spiegelman’s. However, the two voices are distinct and it’s quite believable. As a reader, I never really found myself doubting the truth of the words that belonged to Vladek. The art that depicted his past was done so in such a way that I knew it wasn’t going to be 100% accurate so I can’t say I ever felt deceived by the story-telling. The narrative made it clear where one voice ended and another began. The images made it clear that while it depicted what the Holocaust would have been like for Vladek, it wasn’t exactly like Vladek’s Holocaust experience. There was an implied message to read what was being shown to me with a grain of salt.
Holley’s documentary belonged to no one. It was a odd mish-mash of everyone’s stories. People who weren’t directly involved, people who were involved by association, people who were associated with the people who were involved by association; everyone had a part in telling the story. Real-life narratives of an event or of an individual have multiple perspectives and by exploring all those different perspectives, the telling of the story becomes much more realistic. However, it’s natural to expect a truth and everything that isn’t a truth is expected to be a lie even though everyone knows that isn’t how reality works.
Who gets to tell a story? Everyone tells their bit of the story and now the telling of the story becomes much more believable becomes everyone’s input is taken into account and inconsistencies in between the stories can be uncovered. At the same times, if the original owner of the story is missing, then no one really gets to judge the validity in any of the versions being told. The problem of the narrator is now brought into light. Everyone gets to tell a story but for people to believe the story is true, only one story can be chosen as the ‘truth’. Everything else is just a spin-off of that ‘truth’.