Sharon Massey’s comment on the ‘Beloved’ salon

Thank you so much for yesterday evening. It was brilliant being able to seriously appreciate Toni Morrison’s ‘Beloved’ in such excellent company.

I love how you shed light on the written word and leave space for our offerings and insights.
You and your home become a haven for mental vigour and taste-bud-delight.

Starting next week: The Sound and the Fury, Joyce’s Toolbox

young Faulkner

 

In the last few weeks, the new Salon season has kicked off with Intensive studies of Beloved and Housekeeping–delving deeply into the haunted spaces of the human psyche. There is clarity to be found in these conversations; hearing the responses of others to the raw moments of the human journey reminds me of the extraordinary resilience and hope gained by widening one’s own perspective. The personalities I find most difficult are those who are unable to hear nor value the experience of the other– whether the other is an intimate or a refugee. The study of literature constantly expands the narrow lens of the individual–that is just one advantage.

“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 FaulknerThe Sound and the Fury

Next week we start our study of The Sound and the Fury— there is a Tuesday afternoon and Wednesday evening schedule option. There are still spaces available for both– please sign up soon so you can get the opening notes and start reading! 

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. In the Modernist method, Faulkner employs stream of consciousness, symbolism as a connecting fibre and several interior realities (that show how one can see the world as absolutely in one’s way, and directly in contrast to others) that must compete for authority.

This Salon will draw upon individual’s questions and ideas to shed light on this complex text. The book is richer upon re-reading, enabling the first time reader access to Faulkner’s complex vision through the insights of others. Upon a first reading, the narratives appear jumbled and opaque but as the pieces start to fit together, one can see the complex and careful planning that Faulkner has used- and to what end? This is what we must grapple with for the Salon.

Next week I was also be starting Joyce’s toolbox: Sources and Experiments on Tuesday evenings (6-7:30) at City Lit in Covent Garden: 

  • Studying Homer’s ‘Odyssey’, ‘Hamlet’ and selections from Joyce’s ‘Portrait of the Artist’, we consider the questioning and dissenting mind across ages. This course will be excellent preparation for a study of Joyce’s ‘Ulysses’. There will be no class on 20 October.

Studies coming:

Proust: Swann’s Way- Vol. I of In Search of Lost Time  — the evening study will commence towards the end of September– in the afternoon study we are on the fourth volume and going strong–participants have found this immersive reading has deepened their reading habits significantly.

Hamlet: We will do this study as a Salon Intensive– one meeting in early October. I will post the date in the coming days– email me (litsalon@gmail.com) if you are interested….

 

Ulysses— This is a Salon signature study– our 20 week voyage will start in January 2016.

Email me with questions or suggestions–comments always welcome! Lots of events in the local community–check out the Salon community happenings on the website for details.

See you in the pages…

 

 

City Lit Literary Festival 2015

Paul McMahon-Literary Festival-webOn Saturday 12 September 2015, City Lit will host a celebration of published writers, poets and academics from City Lit and beyond.

On the same weekend, we will also be hosting the Seventh International George Moore Conference – and some of the talks from the conference are also included in the Literary Festival programme (the opening talks are on the evening of Friday 11 September).

Lots of interesting talks and presentations– including(for those who can’t get enough of Joyce) :

Saturday 12 September

10:30

Toby Brothers: Ulysses and What should not be said…

What is obscene?

The banning of James Joyce’s Ulysses between 1922 through the 1930s opened up conversations on the nature of art, the role of censorship and the reading public’s ability to respond to highly provocative literary content. Appropriate for both readers and not-yet-readers of Joyce.

More details: http://www.citylit.ac.uk/blog/city-lit-literary-festival-2015

Boundary Art Gallery at the British Art Fair

Boundary Gallery09.15 Salonista Agi Katz, owner of the Boundary Art Gallery, is exhibiting this weekend…here are the details:
20/21 BRITISH ART FAIR
9 – 13 September 2015
at the Royal College of Art

London SW7 2EU
(next to the Royal Albert Hall)
Once again, we are exhibiting at the prestigious 20/21 British Art Fair at The Royal College of Art 9-13 September (stand 33a) Some pictures, never shown before, will enliven our stand.

They represent the same criteria as before, full of expression, wonderful colours and of course, good composition. Among this is a very early work by Anthony Whishaw RA, which has been hanging in my home for numerous years as well as a later work which was part of a series called Las Meninas. He used a restricted palette for both.

Another painting, never exhibited by the Boundary Gallery, by Timothy Hyman, RA entitled Dr Faustus at the Fortune Theatre, shows his passion for the theatre . It was exhibited at the Nottingham Castle Museum in 1987.

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