Good as her Word: Selected Journalism

Текст
Авторы:, ,
0
Отзывы
Книга недоступна в вашем регионе
Отметить прочитанной
Good as her Word: Selected Journalism
Шрифт:Меньше АаБольше Аа

LORNA SAGE

Good As Her Word



Selected Journalism





Edited by Sharon Sage and Victor Sage












Dedication





For Olivia





Contents





Cover







Title Page







Dedication







Introduction







I PRE-WAR LIFE WRITING






Grave-side story,

Observer

 18 June 1978



Moon in Eclipse: A Life of Mary Shelley

 by Jane Dunn




Good as her word,

Observer

 14 December 1980



Elizabeth Gaskell: A Portrait in Letters

 by J. A. V. Chapple




Flora by gaslight,

Observer

 24 January 1982



The London Journal of Flora Tristan

 Jean Hawkes (trans. and ed.)




Life stories, 19 February 1984



A Need to Testify: Four Portraits

 by Iris Origo




Strategy for survival,

Observer

 10 June 1984



Secrets of a Woman’s Heart: The Later Life of Ivy Compton-Burnett

 by Hilary Spurling




Honest woman,

Observer

 5 May 1985



Selections from George Eliot’s Letters

 Gordon S. Haight (ed.)




The girl from Mrs Kelly’s,

Observer

 28 September 1986



Beloved Emma: The Life of Emma Lady Hamilton

 by Flora Fraser




Half of Shandy,

Observer

 28 December 1986



Laurence Sterne: The Later Years

 by Arthur H. Cash




Nothing by halves,

Observer

 20 November 1988



The Letters of Edith Wharton

 R. W. B. Lewis and Nancy Lewis (eds)




The bright, ferocious flames of his internal ether,

Observer

 27 June 1993



The Letters Of Charles Dickens: Volume VII, 1853–1855, The Pilgrim Edition

 Graham Storey, Kathleen Tillotson and Angus Easson (eds)





II POST-WAR LIFE WRITING






First person singular,

Observer

 12 August 1979



Sleepless Nights

 by Elizabeth Hardwick




Client relationships,

TLS

 5 November 1982



An English Madam: The Life and Work of Cynthia Payne

 by Paul Bailey




Orient of the mind,

Observer

 23 October 1983



Profile of Lesley Blanch




Last testament,

Observer

 17 June 1984



Adieux: A Farewell to Sartre

 by Simone de Beauvoir




What a frightful bore it is to be Gore,

Observer

 15 November 1987



Profile of Gore Vidal




Independent

, 28 October 1989



Obituary of Mary McCarthy




The deb who caught her muse,

Observer

 20 January 1991





Necessary Secrets: The Journals of Elizabeth Smart







The Assumption of the Rogues and Rascals





By Grand Central Station I Sat Down and Wept

 by Elizabeth Smart




Death of the Author,

Granta

 41, 1991



Obituary essay Angela Carter




The man they mistook for Marcel Proust,

Observer

 18 August 1991



Obituary of Terry Kilmartin




Boy in a box springs forth,

Observer

 28 March 1993



Daphne du Maurier

 by Margaret Forster




The secret sharer,

Independent On Sunday

 25 April 1993





What Remains and Other Stories





The Writer’s Dimension: Selected Essays

 by Christa Wolf




In full spate,

TLS

 17 December 1993



Obituary of Anthony Burgess




Secret agonies and allergies,

Guardian

 24 April 1994



Elizabeth Bishop, One Art: Selected Letters

 Robert Giroux (ed.)




Home is where the art is, south of the psyche,

Observer

 15 May 1994



The Still Moment: Eudora Welty, Portrait of a Writer

 by Paul Binding




Surviving in the wrong,

TLS

 4 November 1994



The Silent Woman

 by Janet Malcolm




Alone in the middle of it all,

TLS

 9 june 1995



Angus Wilson: A Biography

 by Margaret Drabble




Living like a poet, or, Hello to all that,

Guardian

 2 July 1995



Life on the Edge

 by Miranda Seymour



Robert Graves: His Life and Work

 by Martin Seymour-Smith



Collected Writings on Poetry

 by Robert Graves




The culture hero’s vision of sameness,

Guardian

 16 July 1995



F. R. Leavis: A Life in Criticism

 by Ian MacKillop




Landlocked,

LRB

 25 January 2001



Romancing: The Life and Work of Henry Green

 by Jeremy Treglown





III THE WOMEN’S CAMP






The old girl network,

TLS

 30 September 1977



Literary Women

 by Ellen Moers




The heroine as hero,

TLS

 14 April 1978



Elizabeth Barrett Browning: Aurora Leigh and Other Poems

 introduced by Cora Kaplan




A contrary Muse,

TLS

 29 September 1978



Lawrence and Women

 Anne Smith (ed.)




Practical ecstasies,

Observer

 28 January 1979



St Teresa of Avila

 by Stephen Clissold




Hearts of stone,

Observer

 27 October 1985



Monuments and Maidens: The Allegory of the Female Form

 by Marina Warner




Sisters of Sisyphus,

Observer

 26 January 1986



Beyond Power: Women, Men and Morals

 by Marilyn French




Staying outside the skin,

TLS

 16 October 1987



Intercourse

 by Andrea Dworkin



Women

 by Naim Attallah




Woman’s whole existence,

Observer

 28 February 1988



Women and Love: The New Hite Report

 by Shere Hite




Forever black suspenders,

Observer

 24 January 1993



Divine Decadence: Fascism, Female Spectacle and the Making of Sally Bowles

 by Linda Mizejewski




Right but Romantic,

TLS

 25 June 1993



Romanticism and Gender

 by Anne K. Mellor



Frankenstein

 by Mary Shelley




News from the revolution that never was,

Independent On Sunday

 26 September 1993



Sexing the Millennium

 by Linda Grant




TLS

 21 December 1993



Three Steps on the Ladder of Writing

 by Hélène Cixous




Farewell Lady Nicotine,

Observer

 2 January 1994



Cigarettes are Sublime

 by Richard Klein




The women’s camp,

TLS

 15 July 1994



Article on critical theory




Paean to gaiety,

LRB

 22 September 1994

 



The Apparitional Lesbian: Female Homosexuality and Modern Culture

 by Terry Castle




A record of honourable defeat,

THES

 17 February 1995



No Man’s Land: The Place of the Woman Writer in the Twentieth Century, Volume 3, Letters from the Front

 by Sandra M. Gilbert and Susan Gubar




They lived for their work,

Los Angeles Times Book Review

, 7 January 1996



Women on the Margins: Three Seventeenth-Century Lives

 by Natalie Zemon Davis




The Goddess of More: Parallels between ancient novels and the new womanism,

TLS

 9 August 1996



The True Story of the Novel

 by Margaret Anne Doody




Learning new titles,

TLS

 17 March 2000



Critical Condition: Feminism at the Turn of the Century

 by Susan Gubar




Mother’s back,

LRB

 18 May 2000



What Is a Woman? and Other Essays

 by Toril Moi





IV CLASSICS






Daringly distasteful,

TLS

 26 April 1974



Keats and Embarrassment

 by Christopher Ricks




Gay old times in Greece,

Observer

 1 October 1978



Greek Homosexuality

 by K. J. Dover




Victorian fun and games,

Observer

 24 December 1978



No Name

 by Wilkie Collins




Observer Magazine

 24 June 1979



Villette

 by Charlotte Brontë




When two melt into one,

TLS

 22 February 1980



Sexuality and Feminism in Shelley

 by Nathaniel Brown




A Scribbler comes of age,

TLS

 23 January 1981



Lord Byron: The Complete Poetical Works

 Jerome J. McGann (ed.)




Weaving, deceiving and indecision,

TLS

 5 March 1982



Heroines and Hysterics

 by Mary R. Lefkowitz




Links in a mystic chain,

Observer

 23 May 1982



Lull and Bruno

 by Frances Yates




Ravishment related,

TLS

 24 December 1982



The Rapes of Lucretia

 by Ian Donaldson




From our spot of time, TLS 9 December 1988 Review of several books on Wordsworth including



Wordsworth’s Revisionary Aesthetics

 by Theresa M. Kelley



Dorothy Wordsworth and Romanticism

 by Susan M. Levin




Peace with a vengeance,

Observer

 21 November 1993



Witness Against the Beast: William Blake and the Moral Law

 by E. P. Thompson





V CRITICAL TRADITION






The gay protagonist,

Observer

 20 Apri1 1980



The Homosexual as Hero in Contemporary Fiction

 by Stephen Adams




Seminal semantics,

Observer

 10 January 1982



Dissemination

 by Jacques Derrida




Men against women,

Observer

 19 December 1982



The Rape of Clarissa

 by Terry Eagleton




Cavalier and roundhead,

Observer

 24 August 1986



Essays on Shakespeare

 by William Empson



Valuation in Criticism and Other Essays

 by F. R. Leavis




TLS

 14 April 1989



Harold Bloom: Poetics of Influence

 John Hollander (ed.)




Oops, a lexical leak,

Observer

 20 March 1994



In the Reading Gaol

 by Valentine Cunningham




The First Bacchante,

LRB

 29 April 1999



The Ground Beneath Her Feet

 by Salman Rushdie




A Simpler, More Physical Kind of Empathy,

LRB

 September 1999



West of the Sun

 and

The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle

 by Haruki Murakami





VI ITALY






Fighting Fascists in bed,

Observer Magazine

 18 June 1978



Italian feminists




Displaced persons,

Observer

 13 July 1980



Flight From Torregreca: Strangers and Pilgrims

 by Anne Cornelison




Our Lady of the Accident,

Observer Magazine

 23 November 1980



The shrine of the Madonna of Montenero




Unholy ecstasies,

Observer

 9 February 1986



Immodest Acts: The Life of a Lesbian Nun in Renaissance Italy

 by Judith C. Brown



Holy Anorexia

 by Rudolph M. Bell




The vegetable paradiso,

TLS

 26 September 1986



Sotto il sole giaguaro

 by ltalo Calvino




Man who put the cult in occultism,

Observer

 1 October 1989



Interview with Umberto Eco




From the mind’s balcony,

TLS

 5 October 1990



La strada di San Giovanni

 by Italo Calvino



Calvino and the Age of Neorealism: Fables of Estrangement

 by Lucia Re




Freedom fighter,

Vogue

 November 1992



Interview with Oriana Fallaci




On the seas of story,

TLS

 7 October 1994



‘L’isola del giorno prima

 by Umberto Eco




Signs of possession,

TLS

 19 January 2001



Out of Florence: From the World of San Francesco di Paola

 by Harry Brewster





About the Author







Also by the Author







Copyright







About the Publisher









Introduction





LIKE CERTAIN PHOTOGRAPHS, WHICH hint at the gap between themselves and their future, posthumous books often have a slightly thin, accidental irony about them. This effect depends on how much they are designed to render their author’s intentions, how narrowly those intentions are inscribed in the book’s form: the stricter the author’s plan, the more the unfinished nature of the text becomes an issue. Here, there are no ghostly plans left on the desk, nothing was left unfinished. Instead, the work itself – perhaps a million and a half words written over thirty years – is just too vivid and alive to be left merely dispersed. What strikes us now, having made our selection, is how intimate a portrait of a mind and personality it provides, and how unexpectedly fresh, how new, that portrait is. As Lorna puts it in ‘Death of the Author’, her unflinching tribute to her friend Angela Carter: ‘Nothing stays, endings are final, which is why they are also beginnings’.



We have selected Lorna’s journalism to display the sheer range and diversity of her writing. During the seventies and eighties, while making her reputation as a contemporary fiction-reviewer, Lorna was also writing in many of the other newspaper and magazine genres. From the days of

The New Review

 in the early 1970s under Ian Hamilton, she continued this diverse practice all her working life: profiles, short notices, interviews, multiple book reviews, essayistic pieces and, more latterly, obituaries. In the late 1970s, she started writing for the

TLS

, a long-time ‘home’ (branching out briefly into the

New Statesman

), and settled at the

Observer

, with Terry Kilmartin, under whose subtle tutelage she learned the tricks of the trade. In the last years, she wrote for the

Independent

, the

London Review of Books

 and the

New York Review of Books

.



In a late essay called ‘Living on Writing’ from 1998, Lorna rebels against what she calls a ‘conspiracy of reflexiveness’ in literary journalism:



Barthes’s famous saying went: ‘The birth of the reader must be at the cost of the death of the Author’. But the Author’s death has led to the birth of endless lower-case authors. If you want to speak with authority as a reader, in other words, you do it first by saying that you are a writer. I have always preferred to be a hack, it seems less of a mystification.



‘Hack’ is a theatrical double-take: Lorna dressed up in her hack persona to create an outside position for herself, from which she was able to concentrate on the work of other people. She thought of herself as a correspondent, sending in urgent bulletins from the front line of reading, not a ‘lower-case writer’.



The urgency of her dialogue with books is one of the distinctive aspects of her voice as a reviewer. She liked the commitment deadlines forced. She also increasingly wrote for money, needed to work, and was proud of the way her pen could supplement her income. Lorna began as an instinctive reader (voracious, indiscriminate) and this trait never left her throughout her life: during the fine contempt of adolescence, the prentice years of scholarship in the Renaissance and seventeenth century, the later years of teaching and constant reviewing, and even finally the last, hand-over-fist period in which she started to edit and write books herself, the curiosity, the primary thrill of the reader, never left her – that what she had in her hand was new; even

Don Quixote

 felt to her passionately curious eyes like a tract of snow that no one else had walked upon. She was able rapidly to read one book after another, without pauses for assimilation, ritual movements or changes of place. Her attention was absolute. She did not appear to digest books at all. She read like this late into the night and began again early in the morning: she simply picked up the next volume, whether it was the

Corpus Hermeticum

 or

Tarzan of the Apes

, propped it in front of her, her thin, long-nailed thumb creasing down the top three inches as she turned the page, and sped away in a trance of rapid eye-movement, dog-earing the leaves as she went whenever something was memorable. When laid aside, paperbacks, in particular, always had a subtly pot-bellied aspect, as if somehow they had more in them: the persistent creasing at the top caused their pages to bell out slightly. They looked as if they had been filled with reading.



To write your reading was equally direct. Lorna’s habit of accuracy was like a religious devotion and her unusual memory, into which books sank, apparently whole, not a feather of their print disturbed, combined with a jesuitical kind of mischievousness, meant that she was a formidable opponent indeed in a literary discussion. She positively wielded quotation and was very canny about lines of argument. So: this very ‘directness’ is a paradox. When she was young, one of Lorna’s favourite quotations was Polonius’s ‘by indirections find directions out’. To represent your reading so directly is certainly a craft and a pleasure, to say nothing of the service it performs for your authors and readers. But that directness is the product of much meditation, a labour of indirection. When reviewing a book, Lorna would usually read the rest of the author’s works and whatever she could find (often whatever there was) of biography and criticism. Marina Warner has spoken of what it felt like as a writer to receive a Lorna Sage review. Before starting to stab, hunched and one-fingered, at the old Olivetti, or later, the little Toshiba, whose keyboard was transformed into rows of letterless cups by the furious battering it had taken, she liked to make sure she had an intimate grasp of the text. This meant picking out the one-liners she made emblematic of the whole. She often did this by ear, not eye; reading out loud with the special emphasis she put into even the smallest of phrases. The quality of her attention, witnessed by the letters and cards she used to receive from writers, came from the detailed work she put in, to represent not only that intimate grasp but also its logic, where it was heading, its implications in a wider context. Many reviewers, of course, work in this way, but what is different about Lorna’s writing is precisely what was different about her reading: a rare combination of warmth and sophistication, in which she mimes with strange fidelity the act of reading a text, while tactically holding it at arm’s length at the same time. The details eventually click to make an unexpected drift of argument that was, if you look back, there all along. There is always a lot more going on in a Lorna Sage review than the ostensible, but she is always uncannily faithful to the ostensible.

 



The fact that her directness is also a rhetorical performance is what makes a lot of this writing so eerily coherent and readable. The articles and essays we’ve chosen seem not to develop, but to spring into print, fully fledged from the beginning. Lorna was a seasoned teacher and scholar by the time she started seriously writing for the papers in her late twenties. The development of her voice does not really take place in these pieces – it takes place offstage, earlier. It was curiously literal: a struggle against the lapidary written style of male academics – a kind of Attic dialect – which all students, regardless of gender, still had to acquire by the early sixties. You can see faint signs of that rebellion in the earlier pieces from the late seventies; the need to put the limp mandarin gesture in brackets as she speaks. When she began, Lorna would write out scripts for her voice. It was not long, however, before that’s how she spoke. The brackets were in her speech, often indicated by a switch of the gaze or a fleeting rise in pitch, to throw away the important point. This voice was the one she wanted, the one that did for all purposes, including public speaking, and writing became a staging of her own mercurial speech. When that happened, she rapidly developed the capacity to make a discussion out of an account.



This work when put together has all the pleasure and risk of her bracing talk. Dialogue (between pieces, texts, authors, readers, different parts of herself) is everywhere like good sea air. Lorna pioneered for herself an informality of style that she used to translate into clear and accessible terms any form of perversity, jargon, or learned obscurity. She learned this defence of the common space of culture early on from Plato and it continually informs the ‘attack’ of these pieces. For all her tactical agility, that knack she has of seizing the acute angle, she is not to be deflected, always on a search for what is really there in front of her, its particularity.



Our title comes from Lorna’s 1980 review of J. A. V. Chapple’s

Elizabeth Gaskell: A Portrait in Letters

. ‘Goodness’ was part of the politics of intimacy, a special preoccupation in Lorna’s writing about the lives of women, who can so easily become lost in what she calls, ironically, after George Eliot, ‘the womanly duty to mediate’. Lorna was acutely aware of the mystification of the personal life, something which was for her a spurious self-confirming logic, by which women cast themselves as appendages. She is suspicious in this piece. Gaskell is almost

too

 normal. She must have a hidden, inner life. You can hear Lorna probing for this telltale flaw of self, calling her, cajolingly, ‘an almost infinitely divisible woman’. But in the end Gaskell’s fund of empathy seems to have matched her own, for she concedes: ‘Most good women turn out on closer inspection to be hypocritical, envious or dim (or of course bad), while she genuinely delights in living in and with others.’



As with books, so with people. Intimacy was another paradoxical aspect of Lorna’s character. She disliked formal lecturing, but was a riveting public speaker, converting even her own shortness of breath to an intimate style. She read, wrote and received visitors at the kitchen table, her ear almost imperceptibly turned towards the door. She had a gift for intimacy, a trick of ‘seeing the point’ of people (a favourite phrase of hers in later years), especially outsiders. This was compounded of a genuine curiosity about the lives of others and a talent for benignly picking them up. She liked to keep open-house, sixties-style, often passing the latest apparition at the door a draft of what she had just finished. You were expected to read it on the spot, while she watched your face keenly for reactions. A conspiratorial need for close contact ran through all her relationships – intimacy was her style, but it was a public style, an argumentative style, a performative component of the writing life.



We have split the pieces into six sections, each arranged according to an internal, chronological order of publication: ‘Pre-War Life Writing’; ‘Post-War Life Writing’; ‘The Women’s Camp’; ‘Classics’; ‘Critical Tradition’; and ‘Italy’. These divisions are essentially a shaping device – loose, but inclusive – intended to allow the reader to follow chronological development on one front, or on several at once. In the first two sections we have given prominence to biography, autobiography, memoirs, letters and sketches. From the mid-nineties on, while issuing bulletins from

Bad Blood

 and then editing

The Cambridge Guide to Women’s Writing in English

, Lorna had been reflecting on the whole question of ‘Life-Writing’. The project she had begun to work on after

Moments of Truth

 was a book entitled

Writing Lives

. She was fascinated by the links between lives and work; in much of what she writes she traces the cuspid points between inner and outer lives: in Dickens, for example, whose manic ‘busyness’ with people kept them away so that he could work, and Angus Wilson, whose ‘inner life was lived on the outside’. Even in the other central sections, which contain a more familiar range of materials, this theme can often be found surfacing too. Finally, ‘Italy’ collects a number of different pieces Lorna wrote over the years about the culture in which she spent so many springs and summers from the seventies on. A good Latinist from childhood, her familiarity with Italian was another means of subverting binary imprisonment. It gave zest to her Renaissance interests, and with the help of the language she also kept the texts and authors of the modern tradition in view, outside the canonical effect of their English packaging. You can feel this direct contact with the language in her pieces on Calvino, and in the punning connection (‘sapere’/‘sapore’) she spots in the Italian between knowledge and appetite. She’s amused, here, to be outside and inside at once.



The readerly pleasures of these pieces are many and they are tied to Lorna’s personality. Her hawk’s eye for detail and her almost Dickensian penchant for the grotesque turn up some wonderful things. On St Theresa: ‘her ecstasy was contagious. And not only to artists … General Franco carried her left hand around with him for 40 years.’ Or take this brisk paraphrase of Lawrence’s disgust at the thought of Shelley: ‘A fairy slug is at once unmanly, irrational and grossly slimy: or, in short, a bit of a woman.’ Byron’s attempts to slim: ‘I wear

seven

 Waistcoats, & a Great Coat, run & play at cricket’, which becomes a metaphor for the mawkish ghastliness of his juvenilia. Giantess Emma Hamilton who could ‘impersonate Goddesses because she was nobody, or worse’ declined, apparently, into ‘a Juno lumbering among sceptics’. And of Flora Tristan, she writes: ‘Who else (except a Sterne) would have a chapter on pockets? Or report on a mud-splashing service for huntsmen too poor to hunt? Now there’s an idea for a small business.’ 



The world of these writings is a generous, but not a frictionless one. Lorna is sceptical of both puritanism and realism in just about equal measures. Both overlap with the claustrophilia of women’s personal lives. The point of writing is not to reproduce the world, but to change it. Women, she argues, have enough problems with reproduction without being locked into it as an aesthetic mode as well. And she is also suspicious of

Купите 3 книги одновременно и выберите четвёртую в подарок!

Чтобы воспользоваться акцией, добавьте нужные книги в корзину. Сделать это можно на странице каждой книги, либо в общем списке:

  1. Нажмите на многоточие
    рядом с книгой
  2. Выберите пункт
    «Добавить в корзину»