Paradise Lost and Faulkner –starting in October

 

“Meaning is an event, something that happens, not on the page, where we are accustomed to look for it, but in the interaction between the flow of print and the actively mediating consciousness of a reader.”–Stanley Fish, Surprised by Sin: the Reader in PARADISE LOST

In Paradise Lost, Milton dares to explore the Creation story at the core of the Christian belief, questioning how in a perfect vision pain and violence could exist. As Stanley Fish explains, it is our story that we consider in reading this epic work: Milton is deeply interested in understanding how humanity came to be divided from Heaven and what repercussions this has on our nature, our ideas around sin, gender, the natural world, justice…the poetry is majestic and the going may get tough: but to understand Paradise Lost is to probe deep into the structures of human spirit that we have inherited.

Heading off to Paris just now for two studies: Faulkner’s “The Bear” which will be happening in London next week as well and The Passion of New Eve  by Angela Carter…two mind-bending works that the Paris Salonistas have been willing to tackle…next up in London:

 

Faulkner’s “The Bear” Thursday October 4th 7-10 PM One meeting intensive (space remaining for three participants) *use the links or visit the events page to register*

Paradise Lost by John Milton Tuesday Evenings 8-10 PM, Thursday afternoons 1-3 PM (five week study) *use the links or visit the events page to register*

Here is one reviewer on Paradise Lost (Norton Edition–available at Owl Bookshop in Kentish Town):

“Milton is hard to read. There’s no way around it. He was incredibly well versed in Latin and Greek and the famous epics, and intentionally set out to imitate that style with this Christian poem. Thus, some of the sentences are close to thirty lines or more, and are almost unintelligible at first. I am a Latin scholar, so I am used to seeing this kind of writing, but Paradise Lost could be challenging to the uninitiated. That being said, it is definitely worth the effort. Milton set out not just to tell the story of the Fall of Man but also to “justify the ways of God to men.” It is frequently remarked that God is a secondary character and Satan is the most well-developed. I think this may be the same technique used by Dante to draw in the reader and have them commit the same sin as the characters. And this is what is most enjoyable about Milton: trying to unravel the many layers.

If you are a Christian, this book may ask some interesting questions. Milton was definitely pious, but he did have some interesting personal beliefs that may or may not have agreed with doctrine at the time.

If you are just a fan of the classics and great literature, I’m sure you will find Paradise Lost to be among the best poems in history, and certainly the best in English.

Finally, the Norton Critical Edition is superior in that it contains about 300 pages of criticisms and background information, all of which aid to one’s understanding and enjoyment of the poem. ”

Sin. Satan. Fall of Man. I think we are in for some fun.

Celebrating Women Writers: an evening of readings 28.09.12 in Camden

Celebrating Women Writers

an evening of readings

Working Men’s College Library

44 Crowndale Road  London NW1 1TR

 Nearest tubes Camden, Mornington Crescent

Friday 28 September @ 7.00pm

Admission £5.00 includes a FREE glass of wine

 

Tracy Brabin is an actress and writer. She has been a team writer on various TV shows such as Crossroads, Family Affairs, Tracy Beaker, Heartbeat, Hollyoaks and Shameless and has two feature films Yarko and Cross your Heart in development. She has appeared inLove + HateMidsomer Murders, Rosemary and Thyme, Sunburn, El Cid, Silent Witness, Holby, Casualty, DoctorsStrictly Confidentialand several series of Outside Edge, A Bit of a Do and Ghosthunter, as well as playing Roxy in Eastenders and Trisha Armstrong inCoronation Street  for three years. Tracy will be reading from a work in progress, Paradise, a novel for young adults.

 

Syd Moore is the author of The Drowning Pool, a ghost-thriller set in Leigh-on-Sea, inspired by the legend of the 19th Century Essex woman – the Sea Witch, Sarah Moore. Her latest book, Witch Hunt, published on 11 October 2012, explores the myths and motivations surrounding Mathew Hopkins, the self-appointed Witch finder General, and voices the stories of the ‘witches’ he persecuted. Syd has worked extensively in the publishing industry and fronted Channel 4’s book programme, Pulp. She was the founding editor of Level 4, an arts and culture magazine, and currently works for Metal Culture, developing literature programmes.

 

Chibundu Onuzo grew up in Lagos, the youngest of four children to doctor parents. She has just finished a history degree at King’s College London and is about to start a Masters in Public Policy at UCL. Chibundu’s debut novel, The Spider King’s Daughter, was published by Faber in March 2012 to much acclaim. Chibundu’s second novel, also to be published by Faber, follows two soldiers during the Niger Delta conflict.

 

Denise Saul is a poet and fiction writer. Her White Narcissi (published by Flipped Eye Publishing), was Poetry Book Society Pamphlet Choice for Autumn 2007. Denise’s poetry has been published in a variety of US and UK magazines and anthologies. House of Blue (published by Rack Press) was Poetry Book Society Pamphlet Recommendation for Summer 2012. She is the winner of the 2011 Geoffrey Dearmer Prize for her poem ‘Leaving Abyssinia’.

 

Helen Smith is a novelist and playwright. She is the author of bestselling cult novels Alison Wonderland and Being Light as well as other books and plays. Alison Wonderland hit Amazon’s bestseller lists on both sides of the Atlantic, reaching number one in the US Kindle chart. The Times has called her: “at the very least a minor phenomenon.”  Her latest novel is The Miracle Inspector published in September 2012. Helen is a member of the Writers’ Guild of Great Britain and English PEN. She hosts the popular Literary Cabaret events at literary festivals.

 

 

Come and meet the authors, hear them read, buy their books

To reserve a seat please email: lucyjpop@gmail.com

*****
The Good Tourist By Lucy Popescu (pub. by Arcadia Books) is in all good bookshops and available to buy online.

‘The Good Tourist is a fascinating, timely and important book. You will never travel in the same way again’ William Boyd

The Word Made Flesh–Upcoming Salons in London


This weekend I had the wonderful privilege of attending King Lear at the Almeida Theatre with Jonathan Pryce in the title role. I love this play and know it deeply–found myself mouthing the lines along as though I were in a Lear sing-a-long…comparing this production to previous ones I have seen with Sir Ian McKellen and (the late great)Pete Postlethwaite–comparing portrayals of the Fool, the struggle to dramatize Cordeila (overheard: “I always judge a Lear production on how the gouging out of the eyes goes….”). In the moment of the play, I was newly alert to how full immersion in the perspective of other humans in turmoil can transform. For three hours I lived through Lear’s love test, rejection of those who loved him, rejected by those who flattered him, loss of his recognition of his self, madness, storm, rescue and collapse. I have not (yet) been thrown out onto a blasted heath and exposed to be reborn–but I can find within my own experience echoes of emotional drama I witnessed in the gorgeous language and images of despair that construct King Lear. The viewing of this tragedy and the projected experience of it onto one’s own life order opens perception, galvanizes and refreshes the muscles we need to weather the storms of being alive and aware.

In the Salon– whether I am looking at a work of literature for the first or 18th time, I find myself responding anew to the ideas with each meeting. The discussions in the Salon, the views of others and the questions that drive us further into the work help to make the engagement of reading an embodied performance. I hope to meet you in the pages.

COMING SALONS *register now*

THE BEAR by William Faulkner Salon Intensive One Day Meeting October 4th

PARADISE LOST by John Milton Five-week study starting October 9th

Salons coming in London: Bleak House, Howards End, The Aeneid, one meeting poetry studies and The Sound and The Fury…email me requests and interest.

LONDON Salon Updates…Wasteland 20th of September, Sound and the Fury….

Flexibility is one of the greatest human attributes and one of the hardest to evoke when it is demanded. September requires a great deal of this flexibility as I am learning: thus I will hold off the Aeneid study until there is a critical mass (post- Paradise Lost?) and offer some shorter studies in the meantime to meet the schedule needs of these days of schedules shifting, classes starting, Olympics ending and evening falling.

So here are the coming Salon studies–when possible, please sign up as soon as you can as some Salons have had to be cancelled due to lack of the minimum number of participants even though quite a few were interested in the study. The commitment to a Salon may be like the discipline of exercise–hard to take the plunge, daunting to schedule, but never regretted once you have embraced the work and energy of it.

Thursday 14th 8-10 PM “Sonny’s Blues” £5 (trial rate) Not too late to join this study which is designed particularly for those who would like to try a Salon (although experienced Salonistas are very welcome. This is a short story so there is still time to read, the story can be found here. *One Night study*

Thursday 20th September 7:30-10:30 The Wasteland by T. S. Eliot £20 Mary Karr in her introduction to The Wasteland: “The boundary between 20th century verse in English and its 19th century predecessors –Romantic poetry and the genteel Victorian stuff after it—didn’t simply dissolve. It came down with an axe swoop, and the blade was T. S. Eliot’s “Waste Land”. *One Night study*

Tuesday 25th September 8-10 PM The Sound and the Fury four week study £65

Thursday October 4th 7- 10 PM “The Bear” by William Faulkner *One Night study*

Wednesday October 10th (evening)/Thurs 11.10 (afternoons) Paradise Lost Five week study £75 (registration page will be up next week)

Still on the burner, looking for nudges: Howards End, Bleak House, Iliad, Aeneid….

IN writing this post, I searched for a poem on flexibility and found nothing but Hallmark card prattle– does anyone know of a good poem or short writing that explores flexibility with lively language?

Coming LONDON Salons –Update

Hard to imagine getting down to the work of reflection and analysis when summer is singing so loudly her final song…but for those missing the great work of the Salon conversations, or those curious and interested in delving into the world of words and ideas, there are some wonderful studies proposed based on participant request.

Week of September 10th:

‘Sonny’s Blues’ by James Baldwin

“ You think your pain and your heartbreak are unprecedented in the history of the world, but then you read. It was books that taught me that the things that tormented me most were the very things that connected me with all the people who were alive, or who had ever been alive.”

This study, at a greatly reduced rate of £5, is designed to welcome new participants to the Salon and ease us back into the Salon rhythm. Set in racially-divided Harlem in the 1950s, Baldwin’s long short story tells of a lost brother, mean streets, inheritance, nobility and cowardice, and ultimately of the transcendence available in art. This piece- with its riffs, swoops and echoes comes as close as almost any text I have read to the experience of musicality in writing.

Starting Week of September 17th

The Aeneid by Virgil Five week study

T.S. Eliot claimed that the Aeneid is the ultimate “classic”: “our classic, the classic of all Europe.” It is probably the single text from classical antiquity that has had the longest continuous influence over the later Western tradition…
It is a poem about the formation of a vast imperial power, and the human cost of that process. The second half of the Aeneid, in which the Trojans fight against the Rutulians — a group of native inhabitants — has clear resonance with the beginnings of American colonial history, and even with the current war in Iraq. Aeneas has no difficulty establishing an initial stronghold in Italy; the difficult thing is to pacify the natives and to win the peace. Virgil’s analysis of the formation of a multicultural society — composed of Latins, Rutulians, and Trojans, all mixed together and speaking the same language, forgetful of their historical differences — is an obvious prototype for modern societies. (from NEW REPUBLIC online review by Emily Wilson)

Coming Salons
The Bear by W. Faulkner (rec. ed: Go Down Moses, Vintage) cost £30
Thursday October 4th Short Story intensive—one three-hour meeting 7-10 PM
Paradise Lost by John Milton Wednesdays (1-3 or 8-10 PM) five week study starting October 10th

Upcoming studies to be offered….these are on the planning board; please email me directly if you are interested (requesting specific days or evenings for scheduling would be helpful!)
Howards End by E. M. Forster
The Sound and The Fury by W. Faulkner
The Four Quartets by T. S. Eliot
The Iliad by Homer

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