I thought what Jane has to say in the interview about poetry and writing might be of interest to some of the aspiring writers who stumble upon Tea at Trianon. It certainly was helpful to this aspiring writer, especially since Jane's newest book is a memoir based upon family heritage. To quote:
Place is crucial--there's the visible reality a writer seeks to honor and the less visible histories that inform and shape both place and inhabitants. Place is the source of our remembering, the site of our witness. As a person with "transatlantic" roots, I've often felt pulled between multiple places and definitions of home. It's easy to think that this is simply a "new world" condition, but it isn't. At the end of the book's title essay, I reflect on a colleague's well-meaning statement: if you've lived in America your whole life, isn't the "exile" metaphor contrived, little more than a "romanticized longing" that should be put aside? Marina Tsvetaeva wrote that "One's homeland is not a geographical convention, but an insistence of memory and blood." In some ways, the book's a meditation on that observation.Share
5 comments:
A refreshing interview. Keep up the good work Jane.
I agree that home is more a state of mind than a geographical location, but in the area where I now live, families have been here for several hundred years and for them there is no place like home. Also in my mother's case, her heart and soul were always adrift because of having to leave her homeland.
Very interesting material, both about the sense of place, and about the pleasures as well as the difficulties involved with a foreign language. I don't know Jane Satterfield's work, but I should like to repair this omission.
As my organ teacher (who is - like her husband - perfectly bilingual in English and German) once put it, when discussing European schooling: "If a kid can speak three languages his 'self-esteem' will take care of itself."
I understand how your mother feels, Julygirl.
How true, Rob. I have not yet read Jane's book myself but would like to soon.
Before I click the links and read your friend Jane, I can relate to this meeting:
a) meeting old classmates
b) in my case I might be the only writer, otherwise I have not met other writer as yet (I know one at same boarding home but differnet class went on to write articles about environment, probably in malthusian vein)
c) the class of French being only five and only girls - obviously my own French classes were not only girls, but German is bigger and more popular with boys in Sweden (I already knew it, when I had to take a third foreign language after Engl and Fr I read one German book, talked about it with teacher and got best grade with free hours for rest of - is "secondary highschool" what Fr call lycée and Gm/Sw Gymansium?)
Now, having said this, I will read your friend!
"place is crucial"
so true
I am in comments to turned off older blog writing the day by day account of my pilgrimage in 2004. Since I was in different places every day, it is nearly possible.
Making a day by day account of what happened in a work place I was in for one month had become impossible even as I ended it (I had not kept diaries) since there the place was the same.
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