Put the Person on the Page with a Collage Essay

Try this.

Consider that subject about which you have had trouble writing.  A difficult experience, a problematic person in your life, an emotionally challenging circumstance. That subject that you want to write about, but when you try, the writing turns out dull, awkward, or lifeless.

Yes, you know the subject.

Rather than trying to write a conventional narrative about that troubling topic, abandon your effort to make narrative sense of it all. Instead, write down bits of memory, impressions, expressions of emotion, or visual images connected to the subject. 

These disconnected pieces can be juxtaposed on the page to create a collage essay. This genre of personal essay allows the writer to combine written fragments skillfully to create an aesthetically pleasing whole. It also allows the writer to approach difficult subjects that do not lend themselves to traditional narrative.

Memories, especially memories of emotionally charged or traumatic events, come to us in fragments. We recall images, impressions, sounds, or smells, and we feel the emotions that we associate with them. Our minds naturally try to create a story from these fragments. But, because of the emotional impact of the memories, we may feel that we cannot convey the story effectively in writing.

Try collecting those fragments on the page. Express them through any of several non-narrative means. For instance, if you are writing about a person with whom you have a complex or conflicted relationship, your fragments might take some of these forms.

  • A vivid detail about the person’s appearance or personality
  • A set of instructions for coping with the person
  • A list (of your complaints about the person, of the person’s strengths or weaknesses . . .)
  • A scene in which you and the person interact
  • A dialogue between you and the person
  • A fable or fairy tale that captures the relationship between you and the person
  • Description of an object you associate with the person
  • Description of your physiological response to the person or the person’s actions

Then, try this.

1. Experiment with writing fragments about the subject until you find a pattern, a repeated idea, or a motif among some of them. 

2. Arrange the related fragments in a way that allows them to convey a whole picture.

3. Avoid writing conventional transitions between the fragments.  Instead, connect them through repeated words, phrases, or images.

A good example of the assembly of fragments into a cohesive text, a collage essay, is Dinty Moore’s “Son of Mr. Green Jeans.” In it, Moore collects his disconnected thoughts and memories about fatherhood and arranges them alphabetically. His essay serves as a model of the form and an illustration of the way non-narrative writing can convey a revealing profile of the self.

By choosing not to force our emotionally charged memories into a conventional narrative form, we give ourselves the freedom to more fully explore them and, by writing about them, to better understand them.

Writing a collage essay is one good strategy for approaching the subjects with which we struggle.  It’s a great way to get the person on the page.



7 responses to “Put the Person on the Page with a Collage Essay”

  1. 1) Love that Dinty Moore essay. I’ve never read anything by him before. I may now be a fan.
    2) I like it when people structure essays in nontraditional formats. I guess I’ve dabbled in this before, but there’s never a plan behind it. Things just end up nontraditional. I wonder if that’s how the Geen Jeans essay started.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I’m a long-time fan of Dinty Moore. He’s the editor-in-chief of Brevity Magazine, which publishes short creative nonfiction online. If you’re not familiar with Brevity, you might check it out. If you’re interested in submitting some of your work there, I think you should.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. I toyed around with submissions a few years back. I found it stressful and when finally published, unfulfilling. I’m pretty happy with my readership on my blog and on GMP. Submissions would just fill me with anxiety. Plus, I like to hear what my blogger friends have to say. I’m sure my perspective will change at the drop of a hat one day.

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      2. I have enjoyed the instant gratification that comes from blogging, and I have been grateful for positive feedback and encouragement from readers. I get it.

        Liked by 1 person

  2. What. An. Essay. That was so thoroughly enjoyable to read. 🙂
    Gives me hope for all those bits and bobs floating around in my head. Sometimes they make it to a page, but rarely do they become anything worth reading.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I’m so glad you found it useful. I hope it will enable more writing for you.

      Liked by 1 person

  3. […] Written to the prompt “A forgotten spring…” and inspired by Georgia Kreiger’s Put the Person on the Page with a Collage Essay. […]

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