London November & December Salons–Feedback requested…

Coming Studies…details below
The Wasteland by T.S. Eliot Monday November 19th
The Dead by James Joyce: Thursday November 29th
Bleak House by Charles Dickens: 4 week study starting 5th December
Walt Whitman Poetry Evening December 6th
Howards End Salon Intensive One night study December 13th

I live in determined optimism…although Salon participation patterns seem to be revealing that long Salons (anything beyond one meeting) are not viable, I continue to believe that reading a great work is worth the time and effort…and luckily, Salon feedback has supported this. But for the Salons to run, participant preferences and feedback is crucial…so for the following coming studies PLEASE respond in an email (litsalon@gmail.com or toby@litsalon.co.uk) to the following choices: if one of these is interesting to you but the dates do not work or you would prefer a daytime or evening or different weekday schedule, let me know.

Below you will find a combination of short and longer studies, poetry and prose. Details and descriptions for most can be found on the website, using the link to the events page for each:

The Wasteland Monday November 19th Salon There is still time to read through the gorgeous and sharp lines of T.S. Eliot’s Modernist masterpiece…the notes suggest a few audio versions that will also help immerse you in the poem before we meet. A close study of this work will guide you into poetry and the heart of the Modernist struggle for meaning in a world collapsed by war.
April is the crueelest month, breeding
Lilacs out of the dead land, mixing
Memory and desire, stirring
Dull roots with spring rain.

Bleak House by Charles Dickens
It is a big book, but a perfect winter holiday read and in my opinion, it is Dickens at his outrageous best. I am spreading this study out over four meetings in eight weeks to make room for the reading and the holidays. I would be happy to offer afternoon schedule as well if there is interest…
Proposed Dates (evening or afternoon schedule) Tuesdays, 05.12, 11.12, 08.01, 15.01

The Dead by James Joyce: Thursday November 29th 7:30-10 PM (afternoon option available if interested) 30 pounds
This longer short story is a rich feast through which one may taste the world of Joyce. Nothing- NOTHING in Joyce is casual. Each image, reference, description carries symbolic resonance. Career Joyce scholars may try to align all the references- but I like W. Tindall’s attitude: “The text is not a system of mathematical equations but a flexible relationship of possibilities…” Bearing this in mind, we will dig at some of these references to give a sense of the richness in the writing. This story also holds to Joyce’s fascination with epiphanies- that moment of sudden and intense illumination when a profound truth may be revealed. Joyce describes the epiphany as ‘the most delicate and evanescent of moments’ and offer ‘a sudden spiritual manifestation, whether in the vulgarity of speech or of gesture or in memorable phase of the mind itself’. For Joyce, these moments did not occur at the height of the heroic or dramatic gesture, but in the ordinary acts of life. What moments in ‘The Dead’ that fits this description? More importantly, what is revealed?

Walt Whitman ‘Song of Myself’ Selections Thursday November 6th
This is a writer of exuberance and breadth; working in the tradition of the Transcendentalists, Whitman sought to use the words he crafted to contain the multitudes of human character…here is an example from ‘Song of the Open Road’:

AFOOT and light-hearted, I take to the open road,
Healthy, free, the world before me,
The long brown path before me, leading wherever I choose.

Henceforth I ask not good-fortune—I myself am good fortune;
Henceforth I whimper no more, postpone no more, need nothing,
Strong and content, I travel the open road.

The earth—that is sufficient;
I do not want the constellations any nearer;
I know they are very well where they are;
I know they suffice for those who belong to them.

(Still here I carry my old delicious burdens;
I carry them, men and women—I carry them with me wherever I go;
I swear it is impossible for me to get rid of them;
I am fill’d with them, and I will fill them in return.)

Howards End Salon Intensive December 13th 19:00-22:00 40 pounds

In this intensive three hour study, we will encounter the book as a whole, attending to Fosters’careful and profound understanding of human relationships. Forsters’ style is marked by grace, delicacy, and a pervasive sense of comedy. Each character is given a certain sense of dignity, and although critically considered, none of his characters can be simply categorized as good or bad: the writing is much more subtle than that. This work is deeply interested in how place and economic class impacts human identity—and how we are failed in our attempts to connect across distance and circumstance.

Why Read in groups? Beyond the Kindle debate…

The introduction of Kindle, the e-book and other new forms of technology threaten to render the book- that object of pages and black on white scratchings-obsolete or at least archaic. But what if instead we grab this opportunity to not just re-imagine the form of the thing but our relationship to books?

Beyond fetishizing the object, perhaps we may reconsider how books act in our lives. In a time of increasing divisions between people and isolation of the individual, is there a way that books– and more importantly, the worlds and questions contained within them– can provide an intellectual space that supports deep human connections?

There have been many moments in the Salons when the study of a significant work of literature brings awareness, an understanding between people coming from different worlds. A recent study of ‘The Wasteland’, for example, considered how religious traditions have imposed on that fundamental human relationship of intimate love and the ways in which we may resist such strictures. A discussion of “Sonny’s Blues” opens up the deep inheritance of racism and how we all live within its shadow. Literature provides a platform for the issues that make us human; the hard and complex issues around which we can each illuminate, with our own ideas and experiences, what it is to be a vibrant and thinking being in this world.

November Paris Salons –register now!!

I am preparing for the Paris studies that are scheduled for next weekend…there is still time to read and register for each of these studies. Life is so very full and it is hard to take the time necessary to read deeply and reflect–but many who have participated in the Salons comment on how investing the time in the more thoughtful work of deep study energizes us for the other, more frantic parts of our lives. Please register TODAY (use the links or click on the events on the website) so I can send you the opening notes and get you started with your reading…

The Bear by William Faulkner Friday November 23rd, 7-10 PM

Three hour Salon Intensive 23 November 2012 cost €38 includes notes and critical essays.

“The Bear” is not so much a long short story as it is a short novel…but in our meeting, we should be able to do justice to the depth and complexity of this work. “The Bear” is ostensibly a coming of age story, but the narration also probes the cracked surfaces of human relationships—between mentor and child-man, between slave and master, between hunter and prey…Equally potent are the relationships between man and the pulsing world: between the beast and man and the wilderness around and within him. Go Down Moses is the collection of stories that contain The Bear; the collection described as the most spiritual of Faulkner’s work.

The Aeneid by Virgil— Six hour Salon November 24th & 25th Saturday afternoon & evening (3PM- 9:30), Sunday (optional) morning

“the descent to the Underworld is easy.
Night and Day the gates of shadowy Death stand open wide,
But to retrace your steps, to climb back to the upper air—
There the struggle, there the labor lies.” (Book 6.149-52)

As with any new epic read, I find myself dizzy at first as I dive in, reaching for thematic handgrips, looking for the questions within the fabric that stir theoretical or philosophical structures of meaning. And then, in spite of my over-working analytical eye, sometimes I am just taken by the story…and I remember that at the heart, great literature must also be an enthralling story. This is—to finally see the Fall of Troy, to hear the clanging of the Greek warriors inside the womb of the horse, to glimpse the anger of the decimated Trojans against Helen as the city collapses around them—and that is only in Book II. The language feels familiar, but even as Homer is evoked, I am aware that Virgil’s tones and meter are more complex, the characters more multi-faceted and unpredictable.

**These will be the last Paris Salons until late February so if you are looking for some great reading to get you through the holidays, dive in!

Athena’s Superior Swagger

Why I love teaching adults: in the penultimate Paradise Lost Session this week, one of the participants arrived late from work in The City: he came in with great flourish and offered apples to each of the women in the group, and then did Satan’s speech of appeal to Eve for the forbidden fruit…from now on, my Satan image from Milton is a sharply dressed business man with a lilting Scottish accent: “Why then was this forbid? Why but to awe/Why but to keep ye low and ignorant? He knows that in the day ye eat thereof your eyes…shall perfectly be then/Opened and cleared and ye shall be as gods…”

Why I love teaching 10 year-olds: I was having my students create their own Greek God or Goddess after a week of studying the creation stories of Zeus and friends…after one of my students threw up on me, another one determined: “I think if Athena walked in here, she would have a superior swagger…”

The Sound and the Fury starting this week in London

Honeysuckle was the saddest odor of all…

There are books that you read once and they hold your attention for the moment of the read, but then slip away leaving a faint odour…then there are the books that require your full and total attention just to know what might be going on and what meaning you are to make of it. These are the books that more often stay with you, pointing to a depth of human nature that we must work to understand–but recognize when we do. The Sound and the Fury is one of those books…lines and images will stay with you long after the reading of it and our discussions will illuminate and galvanize your understanding of the book.
Listen:

poor Quentin
her face looked at the sky it was low so low that all the smells and sounds of the night seemed to have been crowded down like under a slack tent especially the honeysuckle it had got into my breathing it was on her face and throat like paint her blood pounded against my hand I was leaning on my other arm it began to jerk and jump and I had to pant to get any air at all out of that thick gray honeysuckle

The Sound and the Fury, p. 95

What?!? Lyric, beautiful, opaque and sensual–this is the world Faulkner explores in his churning psychological journey to the depths of the human soul. I was planning to start this study this Wednesday, but if there are other participants who are interested but can’t join this week, please tell me asap. The first section to be read for our first discussion is 45 pages, told in the voice of a character who does not understand that time progresses. This is a wonderful way to enter the stunning writing of Faulkner–once you have been lured, you will want to go further–into the honeysuckle, down to the creek, through the greasy rain…..

Next Salon: The Wasteland one night intensive

Reading Recommendations by Salon participants

Sometimes I have to drag myself out of the deep reading that the Salon immerses me in…and I can always count on Salon readers for great and discerning recommendations. The weekend Review section of the Guardian showcased one of my favourite contemporary fiction writers Alice Munro and introduced me to a writer I will seek out for her explorations across the gender line: A. M. Homes.

Here is a recent reading list from Denise of the Paris Salons: “…since compiling it I’ve just seen Hilary Mantel has won the Booker Prize this year for the SECOND time with her sequel to Wolf Hall. She deserves it.”

Austerlitz by W.G. Sebald (German professor of European Literature at the University of East Anglia, who died in 2001) A masterpiece of contemporary literature. “A superb meditation on time, loss and retrieval. A new kind of writing, combining fictions, memoir…philosophy.” A MUST.

Bring up the Bodies, by Hilary Mantel. A great sequel to Wolf Hall: a modern language historical romp based on Thomas Cromwell, Henry VIII’s chief minister and his role at court at the time of Ann Boleyn’s demise. Brilliant.

The Blue Flower (about the dramatic youth and loves of the philosopher Novalis) and The Beginning of Spring (about the dramas of an English/Russian couple living in Russia in 1922) by Penelope Fitzgerald (she started writing late in life and died in 2000). I’ve just discovered this remarkable writer, and her innovative writing style, thanks to a member of our Salon Odile Hellier,

The Comfort of Strangers by Ian McEwan. A novella which he wrote years ago, and for me the best book I’ve read by him. A curious, disturbing tale of a couple’s stay in Venice which slowly spirals into violence and obsession. Compact and chilling!

The Poetry of Thought by George Steiner (former Professor of Compared Lit at Cambridge, foremost international intellectual), I’m a fan of his, and here he shows how great thought is carried by great language and style.

Here is a selection from a reading group list that Carol of the London Salons is involved in (Books read by our book group acc to country where apt and starred/commented briefly upon by Carol and/or group. )

Nigeria: Achebe, Chinoa. Things Fall Apart. *** a classic
Eire: Banville, John. The Book of Evidence. ***
UK: Barker Pat. Regeneration ***
Eire: Barry, Sebastian. The Secret Scripture ***
Ulster but international as takes place in Congo: Bennett Ronan The Catastrophist ****
USA/ English author domiciled both countries: Gaiman, Neil. American Gods. ** The group generally didn’t really get this but my husband and I rate it highly and I think it could be a marvellous one to perhaps end your tour with. The premise – where do their gods go when whole cultures move ie to the Land of the Free? It is so clever and manages to answer this question and show what might be happening as the gods evolve/fade away, find new roles. It is also cleverly critical AND understanding of mass culture. Much more than fantasy which is why I like it so much.
England: Garner, Alan The Weirdstone of Brisingamen **
England: Gaskell. Elizabeth. North & South. ***
Burma, Malaya & India & Bangladesh: Ghosh, Amitav. The Glass Palace. *** Another excellent find and he is an author to read more of, born in Calcutta and grew up in India, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka, written on Hong Kong too in Sea of Poppies
Mexico, English author, Greene, Graham. The Power and The Glory. ****

From Bronwyn of the Paris Salons:
Teju Cole “Open City” http://www.newyorker.com/arts/critics/books/2011/02/28/110228crbo_books_wood

 

From WWM of the Paris Salons

The book I referenced was “Violence and the Sacred” by René Girard.

The quick Wiki summary:
René Girard (born December 25, 1923) is a French historianliterary critic, and philosopher of social science. His work belongs to the tradition of anthropological philosophy. He is the author of nearly thirty books, in which he developed the ideas of:
  1. mimetic desire: all of our desires are borrowed from other people;
  2. mimetic rivalry: all conflict originates in mimetic desire;
  3. the scapegoat mechanism is the origin of sacrifice and the foundation of human culture, and religion was necessary in human evolution to control the violence that can come from mimetic rivalry;
  4. the Bible reveals the three previous ideas and denounces the scapegoat mechanism.

And then, my now beloved David Foster Wallace.  His fiction and his essays.  Maybe his essays provide a more accessible entry into his work.  I would suggest “A Supposedly Fun Thing I’ll Neve Do Again” as a collection of his essays, and of course, Infinite Jest, for his fiction.  What I can say about him is he makes me feel more awake.

Please email further recommendations to me…..

Paris Salons weekend November 23-25: Bear Aeneid

Site for the Aeneid Salon

The next Paris Salons will be offered the weekend of November 23rd to 25th; following Paris studies will happen in late January: please send requests now (use litsalon@gmail.com please). The studies on offer are The Aeneid (Fagles translation recommended) and Faulkner’s The Bear.

The Aeneid For those who enjoyed the Odyssey, for those who appreciate a story of adventure and heroism, for those interested in considering the struggle between ambition and love: this will be a satisfying read. This Salon Intensive is being hosted just outside of Paris and includes time for more informal discussion as well as reflection and wandering in the village of Villennes-sur-Seine. The study happens on both Saturday and Sunday, but for those who are pressed for time, the Saturday schedule will provide a solid consideration of the work.

Faulkner’s novella The Bear offers his clearest reflections on the inheritance of racism and the implications for future generations. This relatively short work also engages the struggles between man and nature and asks us to consider how we might re-imagine our relationship to the natural world beyond the model of aggression and control…these are issues immediate and relevant to our world today.

Please sign up by November 15th for either of these studies to be sure you recieve the notes and start reading in time to enjoy….

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