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Rock & Roll: a novel

Through unfolding, fragmentary memoirs, the disconnected odyssey of Nick Numbers, a rock music critic working in London and LA through the 1970s into the early 1980s, Rock & Roll explores the multiple realities that exist between documentary, documentable fact and supposedly pure fiction. Real peopl...

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Main Author: Hardaker, Michael
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of English Language and Literature 2018
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access_status_str Open Access
author Hardaker, Michael
author_browse Hardaker, Michael
author_facet Hardaker, Michael
author_sort Hardaker, Michael
collection Thesis
description Through unfolding, fragmentary memoirs, the disconnected odyssey of Nick Numbers, a rock music critic working in London and LA through the 1970s into the early 1980s, Rock & Roll explores the multiple realities that exist between documentary, documentable fact and supposedly pure fiction. Real people and verifiable occurrences are interwoven with invented characters and situations in a way that blurs any clear distinction between the two. The book also sees how the power of additions such as images and footnotes can add, or perhaps undermine, authority and credibility to a story. Meanwhile, stories connect the twin musical and lyrical strands, black rhythm and blues and the writings of the Beat generation, that somehow merged in the mid-1960s to produce rock music. They play with the self-imposed otherness of the self-defined rebel, and how this normalises behaviour that would be unacceptable outside the bubble of exemption. They connect, in passing, Nick Numbers' odyssey with earlier models, Homer, Joyce, C.P. Cavafy and Richard Fariña, heroic, anti-heroic and mock-heroic. And they grapple with the very nature of storytelling itself, the relationship between the storyteller and the story, between the storyteller and the audience, something that goes right back to an essential distinction between Homer, the bard, and Odysseus, the teller of tales who gets to relate his own remarkable, perhaps even incredible, adventures. In a world of truthiness, of alternative facts, a post-factual world, how can fiction respond to increasingly abstract or, perhaps, simply cynical notions of truth and veracity? If the real world can cut its facts from whole cloth to suit the needs of the occasion, where does that leave the storyteller? If the role of any artist or creator, as Hamlet says of playing, is to hold, as 'twere, the mirror up to nature, one response is to reflect and highlight the untrustworthiness of everything. Rock & Roll does not merely have an unreliable narrator, it explores an unreliable world. The book is followed by "Why I Write What I Write," a self-reflective, or reflexive essay that explores the route I took to start writing it.
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2018
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/27481 Rock & Roll: a novel Hardaker, Michael Creative Writing Through unfolding, fragmentary memoirs, the disconnected odyssey of Nick Numbers, a rock music critic working in London and LA through the 1970s into the early 1980s, Rock & Roll explores the multiple realities that exist between documentary, documentable fact and supposedly pure fiction. Real people and verifiable occurrences are interwoven with invented characters and situations in a way that blurs any clear distinction between the two. The book also sees how the power of additions such as images and footnotes can add, or perhaps undermine, authority and credibility to a story. Meanwhile, stories connect the twin musical and lyrical strands, black rhythm and blues and the writings of the Beat generation, that somehow merged in the mid-1960s to produce rock music. They play with the self-imposed otherness of the self-defined rebel, and how this normalises behaviour that would be unacceptable outside the bubble of exemption. They connect, in passing, Nick Numbers' odyssey with earlier models, Homer, Joyce, C.P. Cavafy and Richard Fariña, heroic, anti-heroic and mock-heroic. And they grapple with the very nature of storytelling itself, the relationship between the storyteller and the story, between the storyteller and the audience, something that goes right back to an essential distinction between Homer, the bard, and Odysseus, the teller of tales who gets to relate his own remarkable, perhaps even incredible, adventures. In a world of truthiness, of alternative facts, a post-factual world, how can fiction respond to increasingly abstract or, perhaps, simply cynical notions of truth and veracity? If the real world can cut its facts from whole cloth to suit the needs of the occasion, where does that leave the storyteller? If the role of any artist or creator, as Hamlet says of playing, is to hold, as 'twere, the mirror up to nature, one response is to reflect and highlight the untrustworthiness of everything. Rock & Roll does not merely have an unreliable narrator, it explores an unreliable world. The book is followed by "Why I Write What I Write," a self-reflective, or reflexive essay that explores the route I took to start writing it. 2018-02-09T12:50:47Z 2018-02-09T12:50:47Z 2017 Master Thesis Masters MA http://hdl.handle.net/11427/27481 eng application/pdf Department of English Language and Literature Faculty of Humanities University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Creative Writing
Hardaker, Michael
Rock & Roll: a novel
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Rock & Roll: a novel
title_full Rock & Roll: a novel
title_fullStr Rock & Roll: a novel
title_full_unstemmed Rock & Roll: a novel
title_short Rock & Roll: a novel
title_sort rock roll a novel
topic Creative Writing
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/27481
work_keys_str_mv AT hardakermichael rockrollanovel