Document: The Symbolism Survey
https://www.theparisreview.org/blog/2011/12/05/document-the-symbolism-survey/
Document: The Symbolism Survey
By Sarah Funke Butler
December 5, 2011
In 1963, a sixteen-year-old San Diego high school student named Bruce McAllister sent a four-question mimeographed survey to 150 well-known authors of literary, commercial, and science fiction. Did they consciously plant symbols in their work? he asked. Who noticed symbols appearing from their subconscious, and who saw them arrive in their text, unbidden, created in the minds of their readers? When this happened, did the authors mind?
McAllister had just published his first story, The Faces Outside, in both IF magazine and Simon and Schusters 1964 roundup of the best science fiction of the year. Confident, if not downright cocky, he thought the surveys could settle a conflict with his English teacher by proving that symbols werent lying beneath the texts they read like buried treasure awaiting discovery.
His project involved substantial laborthis before the Internet, before e-mailbut was not impossible: many authors and their representatives were listed in the Twentieth-Century American Literature series found in the local library. More impressive is that seventy-five writers repliedmost of them, in earnest. Sixty-five of those responses survive (McAllister lost ten to a kleptomaniacal friend). Answers ranged from the secretarial blow off to a thick packet of single-spaced typescript in reply.
The pages here feature a number of the surveys in facsimile: Jack Kerouac, Ayn Rand, Ralph Ellison, Ray Bradbury, John Updike, Saul Bellow, Norman Mailer. Each responder offers a unique take on the issue itselfsymbolism in literatureas well as on handling a sixteen-year-old aspirant approaching writers as masters of their craft.
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