London Salons coming in November

26.10.12
I return from weekend Salons in Paris and a brief retreat in Bourgogne- not restful exactly but the kind of intense physical activity and land-work that brings me back into the shape of my limbs, the needs of my bodily self. The Paris study of “The Wasteland” and some requests from London Salonistas for more poetry has prompted me to offer the work again on November 19th in London—there is so much to be discovered in Eliot’s struggle to negotiate a modern world that dragged at his soul….the Salon released such energy into the poem and into the stance we each take in our lives: how we live with the hard news of modern life, how we find fluidity, art, connection and shards of light to shore up against our ruins. Forgive me: somewhere between Paradise Lost and the Wasteland I have gone all apocalyptic.


But there are other studies coming in London: these require registration and commitment in the coming weeks…each of these studies will offer a rare and vital engagement with a significant work of literature that will lift your perspective out of the daily schedule and give you energy to consider the world with freshened eyes. The Salons are dependant on your participation: please sign up today.

The next series, William Faulkner’s The Sound and the Fury is a four week study starting the 7th of November. I still hear from participants in the first S & F study I led six years ago that introduced (or re-introduced) them to fecund, complex and deeply probing poetry of Faulkner. If you are looking for a read to challenge and inspire you, this is an extraordinary study.

In William Faulkner’s first truly modernist work, he pushes to break through the confines of time and sequence to get at the essence of human nature- as Malcolm Bradbury explains, “Faulkner’s preoccupation with time has to do with the endless interlocking of personal and public histories and with the relation of the past to the lost, chaotic present.” The Sound and the Fury uses the interior world of its narrators to expose a crumbling world, through inference and allusion rather than through direct social critique.
–from the Salon description of The Sound and the Fury

There is a short salon intensive on Raymond Carver’s “Cathedral” on November 5th. This short study is a great way to glimpse the Salon experience in a brief but probing consideration of Carver’s minimalist technique.

Although Carver has been described as a minimalist, his writing evokes layers of feelings reflecting the complexity of human relationships. In this brief story, we are in the hands of a narrator whose world is closed and stifling; as uncomfortable as this is, Carver shows us how even in the hands of this unhappy man, a glimpse of something extraordinary may break through.

–from the Salon description of “Cathedral”

Also coming: Bleak House by Charles Dickens, Four week study starting November 27th ; Howards End by E. M. Forrester, One night Intensive December 2nd ; The Odyssey Four week study starting late November; Ulysses by James Joyce starting in January 2013

Introduction to Poetry – Billy Collins
I ask them to take a poem
and hold it up to the light
like a color slide
or press an ear against its hive.
I say drop a mouse into a poem
and watch him probe his way out,
or walk inside the poem’s room
and feel the walls for a light switch.
I want them to waterski
across the surface of a poem
waving at the author’s name on the shore.
But all they want to do
is tie the poem to a chair with rope
and torture a confession out of it.
They begin beating it with a hose
to find out what it really means.

I love this description of the possibilities and danger of poetry study….See you in the pages.

Salonistas winning prizes, publishing, displaying

The Salon community is rich with creative minds—sometimes those minds and voices surface to public acclaim and it is worth celebrating these successes.

Congratulations to Lizzy Welby who has been awarded third prize in the short story competition from the prestigious Bridport Prize for her lyric and sharp work, “Jugged Hare”. We are hoping to schedule a Salon study of this work in the coming months.

“Mention the Bridport Prize and the eyes of writers everywhere light up. It’s not just the money – though that’s not to be sneezed at – it’s a prize really worth fighting for in terms of prestige and genuine literary accomplishment”

Fay Weldon CBE, patron of the Bridport Prize

Denise Larking-Coste has published her first book in French…as those in the Paris studies who have worked alongside Denise know, she is a poet in her ideas, words and passion for language.

Partitions, a novella by Denise Larking Coste

Partitions is a novella about love and loss, built around four characters – two women and two men – whose lives and loves come together at different times. The story is told through their different voices, in a poetical but simple and concise style which is one of the strengths of the author’s writing. Conrad, Strindberg, Camus are amongst the authors that the protagonists are reading, and this story also shows the importance of the books that accompany us through life at a given moment – and how they can even change its course.

Denise Larking Coste was born in Scotland and has been living in Paris for many years. A translation of her short story collection, Trop Tard, was published by Editions Le Reflet in 2002. Her writing has also been featured in literary magazines and on the Internet. In November 2010 she was long-listed for The Literateur magazine poetry competition. “Partitions”, published by L’Harmattan this year, is her first novel written in French.
It can be obtained on www.Amazon.fr under Livres en francais.

London Salonista Sandrine Joseph is displaying her gorgeous work inspired by Hampstead Heath in The City of Versailles: “Les Ateliers Portes Ouvertes 2012”, on the 20th & 21rst, 27th & 28th October.

Within a collective exhibition at La Tangente, SandJo’s photographic work will show how Hampstead Heath’ trees can hide and reveal hidden shapes and faces, all genuine master pieces showing how one can literally walk on the Heath like visiting an exhibition…

For more information, please call Sandrine Joseph (“SandJo”) on 0779 412 7822 and visit:

http://www.versailles.fr/outils/agenda/agenda/article/parcours-dans-lart-actuel-10-ans-deja/

http://www.la-tangente.com/
http://www.facebook.com/latangente32

Journalist and a writer, Sandrine discovered the Heath in 2000 and instantly fell in love with it. She has been photographing in Hampstead for the past 7 years, and since then the Heath has inspired her with writing texts, poems and taking photographs.She participated in Nick Hillel’s Heathlife project and exhibition at Burgh House (January-April 2012 ; www.heathlife.co.uk), and since then has been working on showing how the trees of the Heath can hide and reveal hidden shapes and images, all genuine master pieces (human faces, animals, odd creatures, patterns and shadows…). Showing how one can literally walk on the Heath like visiting a museum or like flicking through images of a fantasy book.

The show in Versailles will now bring Hampstead Heath to France!

Recent Salon Feedback

From a Paris participant on the value of studies that meet over weeks…
I bear (sic) a grand nostalgia for our previous salons where we would spend a month on an oeuvre. What luxury to be able to expand time like that, to be able to work and dream, giving our subconscious the freedom to stir things up and take a seat alongside those other parts of the brain. So I jumped at the overnight concept, as the participants would have at least 12 hours to think alternatively, bringing new insights with breakfast the next morning. Being able to sit on something for a while is magic. It’s another kind of thinking.

Great session, by the way. A real treat, not only to be back with everyone, but also to be working with such a rich author.

Just to say what a tremendous salon that was…Faulkner really works for us all! Hope the Carter one went well, you need a lot of energy to do two demanding works in one day…you’ll need a good long swim in THE POND when you get back..

From London participants:

Thank you again for a great session. A bit like personal training for the mind. ( you can do it yourself, but it is great to get the instruction and inspiration).

Hi Toby,

It’s been two nights now, and Cathedral is still in my mind, so all I can say again, is thank you for running these salons, as my life certainly would have been poorer without them.

I come to CL Salon to have a time out in my day, when I can consider the creative thoughts of others instead of the many small decisions and adjustments that are part of being a parent and keeping a household running. It’s a way to find space in a busy day, even though you have to make space to do it! Well worth it.

I love to come to the CLSalon. For me, it has been a way to discover genres -short stories and poems- I was not familiar with and that I’m really enjoying. Moreover, the opportunity to be “guided” by Toby and the discussions which take place with the other participants make the experience really pleasant and fulfilling. And it’s a great way to plunge, once a week, in a parallel world!

London Salons Paradise Starting this week; Fury to follow…

“The mind is its own place, and in itself can make a heaven of hell, a hell of heaven..” (Milton, Paradise Lost

LONDON NEWS: Paradise Lost starts this week; room for two more participants but please sign up NOW so you can start reading…After our appreciation of Faulkner in this past weeks’ study of The Bear, there will be a four week study of his formative work, The Sound and the Fury, starting in November. The Aeneid will start October 30th (daytime Salon) and Bleak House by Dickens in mid-November; there are short intensives to be scheduled including Raymond Carver’s “Cathedral” (November 5th) and poetry…but do sign up as the Salons are viable only with strong participation. Those who have done Salons will attest to their value and worth the resources as you commit to the life of the mind.

Paris Salons–October filling up…register now!

PARIS NEWS   Two studies coming in October: Faulkner’s The Bear (October 19th 18:00-22:00 ) and Eliot’s “The Wasteland” (October 20th 10:00-13:00). Please register now –“The Wasteland” is almost full.  In November, there will be two short stories on 23.11 in the evening (Carver & Cheever) then a Salon first on November 24th & 25th: an evening and morning study of Virgil’s Aeneid that includes options for a walk and a meal…details to follow but mark your calenders now….

Thoughts on Power and the Word


7 October 2012
The last few Salons in London and Paris have raised questions around the power of language: how language evokes power, how language may represent the struggle with power (Faulkner’s grappling with the structures—grammar, words—of language as he questions his culture’s systems of power) how language can evoke such responses through the portrayal of horror and violence. These issues are coalescing for me as I prepare the Paradise Lost study starting this week in London. Milton, as the image of literary authority, was also the figure of power resistance in his time: it is his writings that articulated the first (and in England, only) anti-monarchical rebellion resulting in the overturning of divine authority—only to see this reversed in his lifetime.

There are moments when I am reading the news or biking through the city streets when I wonder how relevant the study of literature is in a world facing epic challenges and gross inequalities—not somewhere else, but here, in my neighbourhood in the air I breathe, the water I relish and the education systems shaping our young people. I return again to the relevance of the word—the way that language determines relationships, the way language is employed for power. In our studies—in any engagement with a challenging and significant work of literature, our ability to use language is increased. The analysis and understanding of the characters in the literature increases our ability to be in relationship with others; reveals the limits of our own perception, widens our sense of how one lives in the world. The Salons in their structure also force us each to enter into the minds of other participants: to respond, to disagree with respect, to be inspired by, to learn from their ideas.
The dynamic nature of the Salons means that they are created in response to the needs and desires of participants. I WELCOME any requests, suggestions and feedback.

Reflections on Paris Salons…upcoming Paris studies

Live out Loud, think with all your heart, welcome the voices of others

The two Salons this past weekend in Paris reminded me (if I needed reminding) what an amazing community gathers there for our work together…and the (forgive the cliché) particular je ne sais quoi of Paris–that effervescence and higher reach feeds the Salon work as well. We spoke of inheritance, race, gendered fear, mythologies and eruptions to mythologies, the compulsion to wilderness, the wildness within…and that was just the beginning.

NEXT UP
Friday October 19th 6-10 PM The Bear by William Faulkner (for those who could not join for this one)
Saturday October 20th The Wasteland three hour intensive (afternoon)

I had been thinking of offering a third study but schedule and family conspired- The Fury and Watching Eyes will wait…I am creating a page on the websote to include Salonistas’ recommended reads–please submit (to my email or into the comments section) any book (it doesn’t have to be serious literature…if there is such a thing…) that you have or are enjoying with a few words of context. And keep those recommendations coming; we do have world enough and time….

 

“Just to say what a tremendous salon that was…Faulkner really works for us all! “–Paris Salon participant, 09.12

“So…just wanted to say how much I enjoyed The Bear salon, (it was
magic) and the start of our work on The Passion of New Eve…The grey matter was stirred up because my texto (if you didn’t receive
it) written in the metro, read:

‘In effect, how else to proceed but by imitation of man’s image of
woman because we do not (yet) have our own authenticity.'”

Thank you to all who participated offering their time, energy and most authentic selves.

November 23-25th weekend: Short stories (Carver & Cheever) The Aeneid (Fagles translation) Details to follow…

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