Silk by Grace Dane Mazur (1996, 237 pages)
My first encounter with the work of Grace Dane Mazur came when I received her e-mail asking me if I would be interested in reading her book Hinges: Meditations on the Portals of the Imaginations. In reading the book I found it to be about a number of things but to me and my blog chief among them was an account of what happens to us when we fall under the spell of a great literary work. I was so happy when I saw one of the writers she really admired was Katherine Mansfield. She introduced me to some concepts I will use from now on in trying to understand some of the more mysterious aspects of the reading life. (My post on this book is here.)
Silk is a collection of eleven short stories by Mazur. Several of the stories are about the sexual development of a woman we first meet at age ten, Cass. The stories about Cass are very bold and have the power to shock. She first gets a sense of the notion of sexuality when she watches her aunt, who is enough younger than her mother so she does not see her maternally, enjoying an erotic stimulation from bathing nude from the waist down in a fast flowing stream. I think Mazur shows incredible narrative skill and subtly with this theme as just as ten year old Cass is confused initially by what her aunt is doing, the reader of the story is also confused as to what is happening and what is going on in the mind of Cass. In a very shocking story, we see the long term incestuous relationship of the now young adult Cass and her older brother. This is a very daring story that Mazur powerfully develops and once we understand how it happens we are on the edge of accepting, even though we know we cannot.
Another reason I liked these stories is that the people in them are into interesting things and talk about them in a way that seems real. I was simply fascinated in one of the stories when an older woman who was an expert on French cave art speculated about what the music of the painters of the famous cave images might have been like. Her account of the recreation of this music was fascinating and made perfect sense.
The stories are also set in interesting places from the art quarters of Paris, to Cambridge, Ma, to Singapore. I really enjoyed it when one of the characters buys a durian at a Vietnamese market for her boyfriend. Durians smell so bad that airlines in Thailand, where they are common, will not let people on the plane carrying them. They are also so heavy, imagine a bowling ball with protruding spikes, that every year several people sitting under a durian tree (OK not a bright place to take a nap) are killed when a falling fruit hits their head. I have had several times Durian meringue pie and I really like it but it might not be for everyone.
The people in the stories also have interesting professions they are passionate about, not just jobs. Some of the characters work are curators in museums and some do research work on silkworms, something the author did herself for years. The title story, "Silk" centers on the life of a woman who has dedicated her working life to the study of silk worm eggs. I learned a lot about silk worms from this story and one other one also.
Silk is a wonderfully collection of short stories about interesting engaged by life people, sometimes hurt and pushed into partially destructive behavior by loneliness. It also about competition of women for men.
The prose in these stories is exquisite. There is a lot to be learned from these stories but that is an incidental pleasure. At places I gasped at the beauty of the stories.
Mazur has an extremely interesting and impressive background. She has a PhD in Biology from Harvard. For ten years she was the fiction editor of the Harvard Review.
There is a lot more information on Mazur on her web page.
Mel u
Showing posts with label Grace Mazur. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Grace Mazur. Show all posts
Thursday, October 20, 2011
Thursday, August 25, 2011
Hinges: Meditations on the Portals of the Imagination by Grace Dane Mazur
Hinges: Meditations on the Portals of the Imaginations by Grace Dane Mazur (2010)
"The Garden Party" by Katherine Mansfiield (1922)
Night towns, Orpheus, Gilgamesh, Hinges and Doors
Hinges: Meditations on the Portals of the Imaginations by Grace Dane Mazur is a very illuminating look at the worlds reading can take us into. This a very rich book that covers brilliantly much directly of great interest to those of us very into the reading life.
Mazur explores the myths of Gilgamesh, Odysseus, Parmenides and Orpheus as they relate to how we experience literature. She helps us to understand what happens to our analytic mind as well as our subconscious as we enter a fictional world.
"The Garden Party" by Katherine Mansfiield (1922)
Orpheus, Night Town and "The Garden Party"
Night towns, Orpheus, Gilgamesh, Hinges and Doors
Hinges: Meditations on the Portals of the Imaginations by Grace Dane Mazur is a very illuminating look at the worlds reading can take us into. This a very rich book that covers brilliantly much directly of great interest to those of us very into the reading life.
Mazur explores the myths of Gilgamesh, Odysseus, Parmenides and Orpheus as they relate to how we experience literature. She helps us to understand what happens to our analytic mind as well as our subconscious as we enter a fictional world.
I want to take a brief look at what she says about one of Katherine Mansfield's best known short stories, "The Garden Party" as it can sort of serve to let us see how Mazur's book can help us get more from what we read, which is to me a tremendous boon. There really are an awful lot of very interesting things in this book. I normally do not do this but I think it maybe best to quote from the press release a bit:
"What is it to be at the edge of the world of the imagination? How do writers, readers, and thinkers deal with this threshold? How do painters represent it? This unusual book — a combination of personal essay, literary criticism, art history, and memoir — examines what happens when we come under the spell of writing, when we get to that place where we enter into an altered state of consciousness, either as writer or as reader. Mazur uses the idea of hinges to explore what happens at real doorways as well as at metaphysical turning points and transformations — in fiction and poetry, and also in ordinary life. As she ranges from the ancient narratives of Gilgamesh, Odysseus, Parmenides, and Orpheus, to the modern fictions of Katherine Mansfield and Eudora Welty, she presents the hero’s exploration of the Other World as a metaphor for how we enter into the entrancement of the novel."
I am assuming here a basic familiarity with Katherine Mansfield's short story "The Garden Party. (There is a link to the story in my first post on it HERE.) As the story opens an affluent family is preparing for a garden party. The setting is New Zealand in the 1910s. The mother in the family is trying to let one of her daughters take control of the setting up of the party, or she is pretending to do that to give her daughter responsibility. The workers some how seem more "earthy" and real to her. She wishes she could be friends with them. Near where the girl and her family lives is a place where "workers" live. Everyone in the girl's world works with their mind, not their bodies. Word comes that a man in the worker village has been killed. He has a wife an five children. To compress a bit (read the story and I think you will for sure see Mazur's point of view is very illuminating) the girl ends up taking left over food from the party to the family of the man who was killed. As she walks toward the house of the widow she feels she is entering a dark world she does not really understand. She is both attracted to it and repelled. As she sees the body of the man, about 35 years old, she seems to me to have her first stirrings of passion. She has a simultaneous first encounter with Thanatos and Eros in the cabin in the underworld, the night town of the workers village. As she leaves the village her brother awaits her to guide her home. Here is the wonderful conversation between Laura and her brother:
" Laurie put his arm round her shoulder. "Don't cry," he said in his warm, loving voice. "Was it awful?"
" Laurie put his arm round her shoulder. "Don't cry," he said in his warm, loving voice. "Was it awful?"
"No," sobbed Laura. "It was simply marvellous. But Laurie--" She stopped, she looked at her brother. "Isn't life," she stammered, "isn't life--" But what life was she couldn't explain. No matter. He quite understood.
"Isn't it, darling?" said Laurie"
As I was reading Mazur's remarks on Katherine Mansfield it seems almost as if Mansfield own life was a leaving taking from the very comfortable house hold of her Bank of New Zealand President father to the near poverty of life among the denizens of the night town that was literary London in the 1920s. Mazur makes some interesting speculative points about how Mansfield made use of her fatal disease in deepening and maturing her art.
Mazur has an extremely interesting and impressive background. She has a PhD in Biology from Harvard. For ten years she was the fiction editor of the Harvard Review. She is the author of a novel, Trespass and a collection of short stories, Silk, which was a New York Times Notable Book of the Year.
There is a lot more information on Mazur on her web page.
Mazur has an extremely interesting and impressive background. She has a PhD in Biology from Harvard. For ten years she was the fiction editor of the Harvard Review. She is the author of a novel, Trespass and a collection of short stories, Silk, which was a New York Times Notable Book of the Year.
There is a lot more information on Mazur on her web page.
I strongly endorse this book to anyone interested in understanding the mythic roots and metaphysics of the reading life. I really enjoyed her account of the story of Gilgamesh. The book is also extremely well illustrated. I enjoyed reading this book and gained some concepts I can use going forward with my reading.
I received a complementary copy of this work from the author.
Mel u
Mel u
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