Man in Profile: Joseph Mitchell of The New Yorker
Columbia School of Journalism Dean Coll Moderates Conversation with Authors Gay Talese & Thomas Kunkel
January 18, 2016 / Upper West Side Neighborhood / Manhattan History / News Analysis & Opinion / Gotham Buzz.
It was a fairly warm October evening as I made my way north on the subway along the Upper West Side. I got off at 116th Street and walked east through the main campus to the Faculty House. The Faculty House sits atop the Morningside Heights ridge overlooking Harlem, the Upper West Side and the rest of Manhattan.
The entrance into the Faculty House was from an interior courtyard where Columbia University students were hanging around in casual conversations. Once inside, I was directed to an upper floor where the event was being held.
Seated at the head of the room was Gay Talese, a Pulitzer Prize winner and author of numerous books including The Kingdom & The Power. He was in the company of the Dean of the Columbia School of Journalism, Steve Coll, who is also a Pulitzer Prize-winning author having penned several tomes about issues in Asia, most notably the Middle East. And of course, there was the guest author of the evening, Thomas Kunkel, who is the President of St. Norbert College in Wisconsin and who had penned the book being discussed this evening entitled Man in Profile: Joseph Mitchell of The New Yorker.
Click here to read the rest of our report regarding a conversation about the recently published book Man in Profile: Joseph Mitchell of The New Yorker at the Columbia School of Journalism.
Man in Profile: Joseph Mitchell of The New Yorker
Columbia School of Journalism Dean Coll Hosts Discussion with Authors Gay Talese & Thomas Kunkel
January 18, 2016 / Upper West Side Neighborhood / Manhattan History / News Analysis & Opinion / Gotham Buzz. Continued.
Thomas Kunkel Author of Three Books About The New Yorker
The discussion of Kunkel's book about Joseph Mitchell, was underway as I took my place in the back of the room. Joseph Mitchell was a prominent writer for The New Yorker magazine during its Harold Ross heydays in the 1930's, 1940's and 1950's. Mitchell held a position there until his death in 1996. The New Yorker - with writers like Mitchell - covered and brought to life people, subjects and situations that provided a fresh perspective on the world as we knew it.
Man in Profile: Joseph Mitchell of the New Yorker
Kunkel tells us Mitchell spent his time gathering fresh material with what one might call both the regular and irregular New Yorkers. Mitchell's writings cover a mix of people and a cast of characters that he had met frequenting places like McSorely's Pub in the East Village, and on
Kunkel in Conversation with Pulitzer Prize Winning Author Gay Talese
My interest in the attending this event grew when I learned that Gay Talese, author of The Kingdom and the Power, would also be speaking at the forum. The Kingdom and the Power is a book my Father had mentioned on numerous occasions over the course of his lifetime, because it's about the power and attendant responsibilities of newspaper publishers, and specifically the New York Times.
According to Random House, publisher of The Kingdom and the Power, Talese's book is,
"... regarded as a classic piece of journalism ... is as gripping as a work of fiction and as relevant as today's headlines."
Gay Talese, Journalist & Writer, Explores the Boundaries of Storytelling
This subject is not new to the journalism profession, as facts can be reported in an interesting fashion by getting creative with how they're presented - which can be done without fictionalizing them. It appears that both Talese and Kunkel have succeeded at this, as is evident by their books, as both authors draw their readers into real life stories in a fashion that gives the reader the feel of reading a novel.
Columbia University School of Journalism - Journalists' Issues
As I tuned in, the speakers were talking about how to present context in impactful ways. Thomas Kunkel remarked that in fiction this is done by shortening timelines, building composite people [characters exhibiting the qualities or traits of several real life people] and by including interpretations about what folks are thinking. The question to be answered is whether literary journalism can draw from this body of techniques, without tampering with the truth.
Gay Talese remarked that tape recorders capture the facts, but not in interesting ways. A verbatim is not as good as an authored comment because people don't speak in literary sentences. He recalled doing an interview with Floyd Patterson who, he told us, talked in long run on sentences.
Talese spent three days interviewing Patterson and came away with the copy he was looking for through an ongoing dialogue. Talese opined that in some measure journalists collaborate with their subjects in order to tell interesting stories. He remarked that many authors today resort to a question and answer format, which he opined, is like reading a court report. He finished by telling us he didn't like tape recorders.
Columbia University Center for Oral History - A Large Repository of Source Material
Thomas Kunkel as Author(ity) on The New Yorker
Thomas Kunkel is as thorough a researcher as he is a lucid writer. It's somewhere between possible and likely that Thomas Kunkel is one of the most pre-eminent living authorities on life at The New Yorker magazine from its inception through the mid 20th century. All of the books he's written on the subject demonstrate the pains he has taken to collect, organize and make sense of source material.
Kunkel told us that the reason Mitchell's work endures is because it captures some of the universalities of human nature. He told us that in Mitchell's story entitled Mr. Hunter's Grave, the long loopy sentences contain undercurrents of the state of the human condition. Kunkel went on to tell us that he had met Joseph Mitchell while doing research for his previous book, Harold Ross: Genius in Disguise and that it seemed that Mr. Mitchell was someone that "he needed to know".
Gay Talese: Journalists as Creative Authors
Columbia University School of Journalism: Questions & Answers
It was at this point that the forum was opened to the audience for questions.
Columbia Center for Oral History: 20th & 21st Century Source Material
Ronald J. Grele, Director Emeritus of the Columbia Center for Oral History, opined that tape recordings are a reference and thus provide a reliable source of information, while narrations depend on the trustworthiness of the narrator. He said that he never became a writer because he couldn't talk and think metaphorically, and that the facts oftentimes destroy stories in order to provide a factual history. He concluded by informing us that some 2,000 published works had relied on the Columbia Center for Oral History to obtain source material, including the book being discussed in this conversation.
Were Joe Gould & Joseph Mitchell Inspiration for the Oral History Research Office?
Kunkel noted that one of Joseph Mitchell's most famous works is entitled Joe Gould's Secret. Joe Gould was a real person, a Harvard graduate in Anthropology, who lost his job as a writer. Joe Gould (d)evolved into a Bohemian New Yorker who lived on the streets, conversing and in some measure living off shopkeepers and barkeepers, while he collected information for what he would tell people was the longest book ever written or - An Oral History of Our Time.
Mitchell's story in the 1942 New Yorker begins with this in the first paragraph,
"Profile of Joseph Ferdinand Gould, Harvard graduate, hobo panhandler and writer of "An Oral History of Our Time". ... "There's nothing accidental about me," he [Joseph Gould] once said. "I'll tell you what it took to make me what I am today. It took old Yankee blood, an overwhelming aversion to possessions, four years of Harvard and 25 years of beating the living hell out of my insides with bad hooch and bad food. I'm out of joint with the rest of the world."
This story was published on December 12, 1942 - less than a week after Pearl Harbor had been bombed by the Japanese, and the United States entered WWII. Three years after the war, the University of Columbia opened up the Oral History Research Office. I supposed one might fairly ask whether Joe Gould and Joseph Mitchell might have been, in part, their inspiration.
Subject & Author: Did Joe Gould's Secret Become Joseph Mitchell's Secret?
Mitchell reportedly spent his time cloistered in his office, door closed, with notebook, pen and typewriter. Near the end of his life Mitchell told someone that he'd written things in his mind and that there was an irony about how he had turned out to be a bit like the Joe Gould he'd written about. Joe Gould died in 1957 to very little fanfare.
Journalism as Archeology: Unearthing Truth & Issues
There are revelations in Kunkel's book upon which others remarked. For instance that characters in one or more of Joseph Mitchell's Profiles - like King of the Gypsies - had turned out to be composite characters [meaning the characteristics of several people rolled up into one person] and hence fictitious fabrications. And he notes that Editor-in-Chief Harold Ross would have known.
Someone asked the speakers whether they thought James Joyce used his imagination in writing Ulysses. Ulysses is considered by many to be one of the greatest non-fiction literary works of the 20th century. Ulysses was published in 1922 as governments tried to censor it for its attempt to publicly depict a fuller view of life, through the inclusion of private obscenities, masturbations and other behaviors flouting the conventions of the time.
Public & Private Sensibilities: Reporters, Trust & New Media
Talese returned to the story he did on Floyd Patterson upon which he spent days. During the breaks in the interview, Talese said he would imagine what it would have felt like to get knocked out.
Talese talked about one of his most famous stories, Frank Sinatra Has a Cold [Esquire 1965]. He told us that it took about a week to get the story because Frank Sinatra was feigning a cold. Sinatra didn't want to be interviewed by any reporter, because he didn't trust them.
Esquire kept pushing Talese to complete the story, but Talese couldn't get near Sinatra, because Sinatra's publicist kept telling Talese that 'Frank Sinatra had a cold'. Talese stayed and did the story by observing Sinatra from a distance, since he had seen Sinatra moving around just fine and without the cold. Over the course of the week Talese worked on the story, it seems Sinatra came to trust him, and the story went on to include comments later obtained by Talese from Sinatra's family, which Talese opined that Frank Sinatra surely knew about, and must have approved.
Journalism in the 21st Century: Thoughts on a Changing Environment
Since attending that event I've given some thought to Thomas Kunkel's book and the conversation hosted at the Faculty House by the Columbia University School of Journalism. There's been a sort of disaggregation of the media over the past couple decades, as the search engines slice and dice content creators' works, and subsequently serve them up in bits and bytes to the entire world.
Over the past decade the print publishing business, as defined mostly by newspapers and magazines, has lost about $25 billion in revenue. Coincidentally the largest search engine in the world has grown revenue by about the same figure. Content creators are being disaggregated from their revenue sources, while audiences are being distanced from the original information sources and the full context of the works.
Trusted Information Sources: The Ubiquity of Fact & Fiction on the Internet
Given the advances in technologies, and the attendant lag in people learning how to manage them, I expect the debate of fact versus fiction in story telling to continue. The proliferation of easily-available, infinite information makes knowing the integrity of an information source even more challenging. Audiences are increasingly obtaining their information from filtered sources such as search engines and second [3rd, 4th, 5th ...] sourced and crowd-sourced social media.
Even news reporters and news organizations are becoming disaggregated from observing or researching events first hand. It's not uncommon to see one report, one poll, one perspective on an event become the defacto standard / truth for that event, because the report of it is so mercilessly multiplied by resource-starved media organizations which increasingly rely upon others work for first person accounts. This ubiquitous, present-day, media
The State of Journalism: Where are we Going?
Our information is no longer gathered, written, reviewed and edited by a well-paid, elite intelligentsia - but rather developed and disseminated by the mass of humanity that uses the web.
And our information is organized, filtered and prioritized by machines - the software programs built by engineers working at the search engine and social media companies.
And thus the viewer - the audience - is left to prioritize, edit, source-verify and fact-check the information they consume on their own.
New Media: Freedom or Chaos?
Is this freedom or is this chaos? I reckon that like all great changes, perhaps it is a bit of both.
Many Thanks to the Columbia School of Journalism, Steve Coll, Thomas Kunkel & Gay Talese
Addendum: The Faculty House Lunches & Space Rentals
I met Alice Newton, Deputy Director of Seminars, who gave me a quick tour of the Columbia University Faculty House, which is open for lunch daily, Monday through Friday, from 12 noon to 2 pm. They also rent the space for private events and the Faculty House has a beautiful view of the Upper West Side, Harlem and other parts of Manhattan.
By Michael Wood
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