Popular Culture Review Vol. 18, No. 1, Winter 2007 | Page 41

The Textual Confessional: Memoirs of Societal Taboos and Personal Dysfunctions In an era in which the deepest, darkest secrets of individuals are revealed daily to mass audiences on nothing-is-sacred talk shows like Jerry Springer, Sally Jesse Raphael, Ricki Lake, and Jenny Jones, it proves intriguing to see this urge for public disclosure of embarrassing private facts played out on the pages of various contemporary memoirs. Traditionally, autobiography has been the domain of individuals who have achieved great goals or have engaged in acts of heroism and courage. But in recent years—reflecting the insatiable appetite of television talk shows and tabloid journalism for celebrity gossip and juicy details of sex lives and lifestyle excesses—various memoirs have been published in which the authors confess textually, often to societal taboos and long-hidden dysfunctions. While the publication of some of these memoirs can be attributed to revealing personal secrets to simply make money or gain fifteen minutes of fame, something more psychologically complex seems to be the motivating force in others: the cathartic impulse to purge emotions, anger and guilt, or the confrontation with the darker side of human personality. A classic example of the cathartic impulse is found in Kathryn Harrison’s controversial 1997 memoir The Kiss, in which the author of three critically acclaimed novels {Exposure, Poison and Thicker than Water) reveals in a 207-page account that at age 20 she had an ongoing sexual affair with her father whom she hadn’t seen in many years. A number of Harrison’s friends urged her not to publish the memoir, saying that confessing to the societal taboo of incest would ruin her career. She chose to not heed the warnings, with the need for catharsis outweighing any potential embarrassment and public disapproval that might occur. Harrison’s decision also reflects Janet Varner Gunn’s (1982) theory of autobiography, in which people tell stories, participate in rituals, and write history in an effort to personally comprehend their experience in the world, discover the significance of the experience, and then share the findings with the world in textual form (32-33). Gunn further brings clarity to what is transpiring in memoirs of confession like The Kiss by noting that autobiography represents an act of both discovery and creation, consisting of the movement of the self in the world and the movement of the self into the world (59). Harrison’s The Kiss (1997) is highly reflective of a sub-genre of autobiography that utilizes text as a public confessional as a means of purging wounded emotions in a long-delayed attempt at healing. With a narrative style that Jumps back and forth from the past to the present, Harrison recounts the divorce of her parents when she was only six months old, forcing her and her