TEXT E
Policeman as a Writer I decided to begin the term’s work
with the short story since that form would be the easiest for the police
of5cers, not only because most of their reading up to then had probably been in
that genre, but also be-cause a study of the reaction of people to various
situations was something they relied on in their daily work. For instance, they
had to be able to predict how others would react to their directives and
interventions be-fore deciding on their own form of action; they had to be able
to take in the details of a situation quickly and correctly before intervening.
No matter how factual and sparse police reports may seem to us, they must make
use of a selection of vital detail, similar to which a writer of a short story
has to make. This was taught to me by one of my students, a
captain, at the end of the term. I had begun the study of the short story by
stressing the differences between a factual report, such as a scientist’s or a
policeman’s report, and the presentation of a creative writer. While a selection
of necessary details is involved in both, the officer must remain neutral and
clearly try to present a picture of the facts, while the artist usually begins
with a preconceived message or attitude which is then transmitted through the
use of carefully selected de-tails of action described in words intended to
prvoke associations and emotional reactions in the reader. Only at the end of
the term did the captain point out to me that he and his men also try to
evaluate the events they describe and that their description of a sequence of
events must of necessity be structured and colored by their understanding of
what bas taken place. The policemen’s reactions to events and
characters in the stories were surprisingly unprejudiced... They did not
object to writers whose stories had to do with their protagonist’s rebellion
against society’s accepted values. Nor did stories in which the strong father
becomes the villain and in which our usual ideals of manhood are turned around
offend them. The many hunters among my students readily granted the message in
those hunting tales in which sensitivity triumphs over male aggressiveness,
stories that show the boy be-coming a man because he fails to shoot the deer,
goose, or catbird. The only characters they did object to were those they
thought unrealistic. As the previous class had done, this one also excelled in
interpreting the ways in which characters reveal themselves, subtly manipulate
and influence each other; they, too, understood how the story usually saves its
insight, its revelation, for the end. This almost instinctive
grasp of the writing of fiction was revealed when the policemen volunteered to
write their own short stories. They not only took great pains with plot and
character, but with style and language. The stories were surprisingly well
written ,revealing an understanding of what a solid short story must contain-the
revelation of character, the use of background description and language to
create atmosphere and mood, the need to sustain suspense and get make each event
as it occurs seem natural, the insight achieved either by the characters in the
story or the reader or both. They tended to favor surprise endings. Some stories
were sheer fantasies, or derived from previous reading, films, or television
shows. Most wrote stories, obviously based on their own experiences, which
revealed the amazing distance they must pat between their personal lives and
their work, which is part of tile training for being a good cop. These stories,
as well as their discussions of them, showed how coolly they judged their own
weaknesses as well as the humor with which they accepted some of the
difficulties or injustices of existence. Despite their authors unmistakable
sense of irony and awareness of corruption, these stories demonstrated how
clearly, almost naively, these police men wanted to continue to believe in some
of the so-called American virtues--that courage is worth the effort and will be
admired; that hard work will be rewarded; that life is somehow good; and that,
despite the weariness, boredom, and occasional ugliness and danger, despite all
their dislike of most of their routine and despite their own occasional grousing
and complaints, they somehow did like being cops; that life, even in a chaotic
and violent world, is worth it after all. According to the author, policemen view their profession as ______.
A.dangerous but adventuresome B.full of corruption C.full of routine D.worth the effort