Work of Words– Origami Swans

Housekeeping cover

Next Tuesday a group of old and new Salonistas will be gathering to read Beloved — one of those books that marks you singularly with its power and beauty. The following week, we will study Marilynne Robinson’s Housekeeping  — a lyric and haunting exploration of the end of domesticity.  Longer studies start in September including Faulkner’s The Sound and The Fury  on Wednesday nights and a new Proust study launching later in September on Tuesday evenings. The daytime Proust study– now in its fourth volume and tenth month, starts again in a few weeks. I am in the process of re-scheduling the Hamlet study to work with the end of summer madness….stay tuned. While you are getting news about the coming Salons, here is a selection from a gem floating around social media…if you have not seen it, here it is– if you have, read it again: crystalline writing is worth re-reading…this comes from Brevity Magazine and is titled:

An Address to My Fellow Faculty Who Have Asked Me to Speak About My Work
by  • 

My work is to see who you are and who I think you could become. To notice the slate grey night lit by a full moon half behind a cloud. To know what it is to want more from someone than they are willing to give. To see the shadows cast by your secrets. To notice an ant that has drowned in a single drop of water in my sink.

My work is to explain my heart even though I cannot explain my heart. My work is to find the right word even though there is no right word.

My work is to remember that I always wanted to be a writer and that one day my father turned to a friend of his and said, “This is my daughter, she is trying to be a writer,” and then he corrected himself and said, “She is a writer.”

My work is to stop everything when a student—right in front of me—writes the line, “I think I would be a better dancer if only I had wings.”

My work is to believe in grace even though I don’t believe in God. To realize that all of my greatest fears are things that are definitely going to come true. My father will die, my mother will die, my brother will, my niece, my nephew, me.

My work is to pay attention when my mother says, “I cried all of my tears that first year I lived in Turkey.” To pay attention when my mother says of her freshman roommate, “It was like Tigger rooming with Owl.” To pay attention when my father says, “You should sit by my side and write down everything I say like the Prophet.” To pay attention when my father says, “Chickens are braver than us.” To pay attention when my nephew says to his sister, “All of your teeth are sweet teeth.” To pay attention when my nephew says to me, “I’d like to see how long you’d last in Azkaban without a book.”

My work is to tell you that without art we would be in a world without art.

My work is the blood on the heels of my socks in high school because I ran hard sometimes, but not always, so that my calluses came and went.

My work is to honor the glory of trash day, all of those cans lined up before dawn, an obedient nation in this one instance only.

My work is to believe in everybody’s capacity for kindness.

My work is to believe in everybody’s capacity for cruelty.

My work is the bird of dawn, the tale of my grief, the thief of love, the city of beauties, the nest of snakes, the helping animal, the animated doll, the transformative power of love, the juice of a single grape.

My work is to imagine a world without art so that there is never a world without art.

My work is to tell you this:

Years ago I was on the subway in Manhattan, and we stopped between stations, and the staticky voice came on the speaker and said there would be a delay of twenty minutes, and cursing ripped through the car, as if a tribe of the homeless mad had just swept into our presence. But then a young woman across from me took out a small pile of paper, and she started folding red origami swans, and each time she finished one, she handed it to one of us.

My work is my origami swans.

 

 

 

Why I am rescheduling the Beloved Salon Intensive—and why you should sign up for this…

Why I am rescheduling the Beloved Salon Intensive—and why you should sign up for this…

A journalist friend told me never to read the comments section (better known as CiF) of articles about issues you care about—especially issues that touch on provocative subjects like race and gender—but I can not help myself. Particularly when it comes to books—why we read what we read, why it has value…so when I saw a list of ‘Ten books that shaped the World’, I leapt in.

 

The list, found here: http://www.theguardian.com/books/2015/aug/07/10-books-that-shaped-the-world, includes expected works—The Bible, The Complete Works of William Shakespeare, Freud…and then the unexpected: Sand County Almanac by Aldo Leopold and Beloved by Toni Morrison. I was so glad to see Beloved there—but then I began reading the comments:

“Yes, I think that saying Beloved changed the world is REALLY overstating things. And it’s not a book I ever care to read, either”

“To put relatively obscure books like A Sand County Almanac by Aldo Leopold and Beloved by Toni Morrison, which few people have read, among a list of classics only serves to reduce the usefulness of the list.”

“

It only ‘speaks’ to you if you’re a black female”

 

Okay. So I shouldn’t have read the comments. FFS, Morrison won the Nobel Prize. Does Shakespeare only speak to 16th century white men? Morrison’s project is to make accessible the experience of slavery and its impact on identity and individual psychology—but in a way that is neither exclusive nor limiting. Her incredibly lyric writing and beautifully wrought images reveal levels of intimacy and complex relationships between people that is incredibly illuminating—not just for women, not just for black people, not just for former slaves. And yes, this book is changing the world because of the universality of the relationships portrayed AND because the story makes the horrific—and recent—experience of slavery accessible to a modern audience. Why is this important? At such a primitive level, so many of our struggles start with inequality between people—the deep gaps between individuals wrought by a sense of difference—and race is the most tangible and direct creator of that gap.

toni-morrison-beloved

This book is so powerfully written that it does not distance me (like, for ex., Uncle Tom’s Cabin)but brings me into the black slave experience. As a person who is white, I can not know what it means to struggle with daily racial oppression—but it is crucial that I enter imaginatively into this experience—as much as possible. And why? If I remain in my own narrow perspective, if I do not reach out into any other’s realm, I am reduced—and my humanity is single-sided. I am struggling to put words to the importance of understanding the experience of another: but every time I read of racially inspired violence or inequality—on a personal or societal level, I know that our individual work to reach across difference towards understanding is crucial.

 

A great work of literature can open the mind in amazing and challenging ways—and this is what Morrison does in Beloved. Reading this book in a group creates an openness to discuss the dehumanization of oppression and the work to claim self-hood in the face of that struggle. The writing is luminous, the subject is hard and the realm of the book extends into the fantastical—and reading this book opens up your humanity.

I hope you can join this study.

Beloved One meeting study– 10.08.15

toni-morrison-beloved

“Freeing yourself was one thing, claiming ownership of that freed self was another.”

 Toni Morrison, writer, professor and essayist on issues including race, gender and forces of life, won the Nobel Prize in Literature and the Pulitzer Prize in 1988. Beloved is regarded by many as Morrison’s best work, and once you have spent some time in the text, it is easy to understand why. Morrison works to help the reader grasp the psychological devastation wreaked by the institution of slavery by close observation of a community of ex-slaves creating lives in Ohio in the second half of the 19th century.

This text is meaty and evocative, and also quite difficult to read alone. The work also offers endless possibilities in terms of discussion of the formation of self, claiming of self, mother/child relationships, the fury of love, the permeable boundaries between the living and the not living, as well as the more predictable (but no less provocative) issues of race, gender and role of history.

 

But what you need to know– along with the history and context which will be provided as part of the Salon–is that the writing is so gorgeous. Morrison tackles the most painful aspects of human experience with an honesty and lyricism that will leave you breathless. If this is your first reading of the book, try not to read around too much: many reviews and commentary give away the central traumatic event that Morrison reveals carefully & purposefully in her own time.  I think Morrison is very purposeful in the way she tells this story—we will discuss the framing and the narrative progression and her purpose there.

SALON DETAILS 

ONE MEETING INTENSIVE 6:00-10 PM

TUESDAY AUGUST 18th

RECOMMENDED EDITION: VINTAGE New ed.  ISBN-10: 0099760118

To register, please use the Paypal button to pay £40– on receipt of payment, I will send the opening notes and background information along with further details for the Salon.




This sounds like warning but is meant simply to prepare you: the book has some graphic scenes- not, I think, gratuitously, but disturbing nevertheless. There are also some incredibly beautiful passages- and some that weave the violence with beautiful prose. It is also a work that (purposefully, I think) disorients the reader in the beginning. This is one of the ways in which the Salon is useful; we usually start with a lot of questions about what is going on …and why Morrison seems to make the read so difficult for the reader. Your persistence is needed- but I promise you, you will be rewarded.

 

If this is your first reading of the text, please know that you will read the first chapter and probably feel quite disoriented (just for starters, notice the chapters aren’t numbered- why would Morrison choose not to number the chapters? What effect does this have on your reading?) I have a few suggestions to help you get your bearings: you might want to keep a list of characters (who they are, what you know about them, how they are connected to each other). I also encourage you to write down dates- the novel opens in the year 1873 (third line, first paragraph) – see if you notice when the time changes and make a note of it.

I am an advocate of active reading- your engagement with the text will be strengthened with a close interaction. One of the ways to do this is to write notes directly in the book- question marks in the margin where you don’t understand, exclamation points where you do, highlighting or underlining a passage that strikes you- making note of a passage that is opaque but intriguing, finding connections both within the text and to your own experience. We will talk more about this- mostly find what works for you to help illuminate the text.

Beloved, Hamlet and Housekeeping–late August Salons

Salons in August- early September 2015

  • Beloved by Toni Morrison –One evening Salon Intensive 01.09

“Freeing yourself was one thing, claiming ownership of that freed self was another.”– Beloved 

  • Housekeeping by Marilynne Robinson One evening Salon Intensive 07.09

“To crave and to have are as like as a thing and its shadow. For when does a berry break upon the tongue as sweetly as when one longs to taste it, and when is the taste refracted into so many hues and savors of ripeness and earth, and when do our senses know any thing so utterly as when we lack it? And here again is a foreshadowing — the world will be made whole. For to wish for a hand on one’s hair is all but to feel it. So whatever we may lose, very craving gives it back to us again.”
― Marilynne Robinson, Housekeeping

  • Hamlet by William Shakespeare –Two evenings: Wednesday August 26th & Sept. 2nd

“What a piece of work is a man! How noble in reason! how infinite in faculty! in form, in moving, how express and admirable! in action how like an angel! in apprehension how like a god! the beauty of the world! the paragon of animals! And yet, to me, what is this quintessence of dust?”
― William Shakespeare, Hamlet

  • The Sound and the Fury by William Faulkner Four meetings over four weeks– Tuesday afternoon or Wednesday evening schedule available starting 15.09.15

“They all talked at once, their voices insistent and contradictory and impatient, making of unreality a possibility, then a probability, then an incontrovertible fact, as people will when their desires become words.”
― William Faulkner, The Sound and the Fury

These brief studies offer a slide back into the rhythms of the Salons. If you are new to the Salons, this will give you a chance to sample the energy and exploration of the Salon meetings; previous participants may enjoy the contained intensity of one or two meetings. Registration information is available on the page for the listed Salons or under the courses list on the front page of the website. Please contact me if you have any questions.

 

Next week: Autumn Salons on Proust to be announced…also Ulysses 2016 will be open for registration..

Summer travels that includes old friends and loved places can be disorientating. Each place, each relationship, once I am there, seems the only place I have ever been, the only world I have ever known—all others feel a fiction…I forget who I am, who I have become as I return to the Adirondack lakes and mountains that contain my adolescence & first loves. This is so delicious for the moments of reconnection; but means that the parting requires a sacrifice of sorts, a shard of the heart.

I am reading about the nature of epic in Adam Nicolson’s The Mighty Dead: Why Homer Matters. He argues that epic’s value is not as a matter of memory nor history but ‘to make the distant past as immediate to us as our own lives, to make the great stories of long ago beautiful and painful now”. So many of the significant works of literature we engage in the Salon explore how we live the past—how we live with our own other stories, how we hold these in our present, how we live within the context of our cultural or ancestral histories—whether these are known or mysteries.

 

All of these stories imprint on the psyche. Our own immediate narratives as well as the greater narratives that define cultural values, norms and biases shade and colour our relationships with the world and each other. In our studies of literature, the overlays and shadings can be more clearly seen—sediments compacted that witness the endless complexity of the human story.

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