Laura de la Parra Fernández
in Moore’s pathography through capitalised healthcare, to be bought as if it
were a commodity — upon receiving a diagnosis, the Father wonders, “What
if we can’t pay?” (Moore 1998a: 220). In neoliberal times, care is not a right
accessible to everyone, but a marketable product to be afforded by a few. This
form of privatised care relies on and affects the family’s well-being. Since there
is no support allocated by the state, “[j]obs have been quit, marriages hacked
up, accounts ravaged” (Moore 1998a: 31). Therefore, health is something to be
bought and sold, regulated by the market, and self-governed.
The solution they find is that the Mother takes notes to make money from the
story (Moore 1998a: 219), revealing the commodification of stories about the
pain of others. But how? The Mother struggles to think about how to tell such a
story: “I write fiction. This isn’t fiction” (222). When the husband suggests that
she write non-fiction, she retorts, “Even the whole memoir thing annoys me”, to
which the husband responds, “Well, make things up, but pretend they are real”
(222). This conversation addresses what Leigh Gilmore has called the rise of the
‘neoconfessional’ genre (2010), which was brought about by the ‘memoir boom’
(Rak 2013) of the 1990s and early 2000s. The genre, Gilmore explains, follows a
predictable pattern of the “redemption narrative” where “a narrator [...] overcomes
adversity” (2010: 657). These memoirs contribute to the homogenization
of experience, as they fix the ideological message that every hardship must be
endured and overcome, erasing structural differences and difficulties (662). In
this sense, “truthfulness” is judged upon “structures of identificatory desire”, that
is, sentimental and ideological truths preemptively acknowledged by the audience
(661). Therefore, what the Father is asking Mother to write is not an account
of events as they happened, but a neat story that sells and conveys the reader’s
expectations about “actual children in a children’s hospital” (Moore 1998a: 228).
Writing becomes a sort of care work, not only in the material need for money to
pay for the treatment, but also in the search for an ethical account of her son’s
illness, who cannot speak for himself, even though the Mother is told that she
will be the one to suffer the most through the treatment (217). The narrator
contrasts the cold, unemotional way that the Doctors use to talk to the parents
—“That’s doctor’s talk” (216)— with the “canonical babbling” (217) used to
address babies. These are both “incomplete, meaningless sounds” (Ratekin 2007:
4) that do not account for the disconcerting experience of her Baby suffering from
cancer. However, there is no way to describe what the Mother and the Baby go
through, it is “unsayable” (Moore 1998a: 237), exceeds narrative structures and
traditional stories of illness, leaving Oprah “in the dust” (Moore 1998a: 242).
Coincidentally, Gilmore credits Oprah for popularising the ‘neoconfessional’
memoir (2010: 662-663), that is, for creating redemption narratives ready for
quick consumption. How can the Mother bear witness to the Baby’s pain if the
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miscelánea 72 (2025): pp. 93-109 ISSN: 1137-6368 e-ISSN: 2386-4834