20/03/2014

Time and History

Ortwin de Graef with Nick Cave (c) Rob Stevens
Some thoughts from Ortwin de Graef's intro to the presentation of the Passa Porta Seminar on The Time of the Author at Flagey (12 March 2014)





Humans are singularly touched by time — haunted in the present by echoes from the future recalling traces of the past. The medium of that haunting is not the flow of life but the teletechnological stutter of symbols stitching stuff into history.

What distinguishes and indeed divorces history from the uninterrupted flow of life is the crisis of decision: the choice for a future that cannot be predicted as an extension of the present, yet which depends on the performance of this choice as its condition of possibility.

History is made by humans doing all those things humans do — which is also always to say it is made, and made up, by the histor, the Greek term for “one who judges, a wise person” — ultimately “one who sees,” but then specifically one who sees what is not available as evidence, what is more of the order of the idea and has to be written down to come into being. Which is also to say that history belongs to the province of the author giving it time...

13/03/2014

Day Three: Time's Up

by Jack McMartin, reporting from the Passa Porta Seminar at Villa Hellebosch, Vollezele

10:00 a.m. ticks by. The sturdy round table around which we've been gathering for the past three days is vacant, save a stack of books. Their authors linger on the patio, talking and enjoying the morning sun. A camaraderie has formed, and it is stronger than a clock. Eventually, the final session convenes, a discussion begins, ends. Our authors turn their attention to the evening’s event in Flagey. Their task: to share the special time spent over the past three days with the public. How will they ever manage that?

Jens Christian Grøndahl
With words, of course.

“The great art of writing is the art of making people real to themselves with words,” reads Jens Christian to an audience of 200+.

Our seven writers spend the evening doing just that: an excerpt from Juan Gabriel’s thought-provoking keynote, “Getting Poems from the News”; a conversation between Goce and Céline about giving voice to the nameless and forgotten through historical and contemporary fiction; a ‘stand-up philosophy’ session from Joke calling our consciousness to the creative time of Kairos; a conversation between Anne and Iman about seeking answers and finding questions; an excerpt from Jens Christian’s masterful keynote, “News and the Writer” – all tied together by moderator Ortwin.

10:00 p.m. ticks by and The Time of the Author ends. I am reminded of Céline’s reflection on Jens Christian’s keynote during the morning’s discussion: “What if the art of writing is the art of making the writer real to himself with words?” After three days of sharing words – spoken, read, written – with one another (not to mention meals, bathrooms and many bottles of red wine), I find gratitude and comfort in that thought, and I hope it to be true.

Check back in two weeks for the final report on ‘The Time of the Author’.


Iman Humaydan & Anne Provoost with Ortwin de Graef

12/03/2014

Day Two: Time for authority?

by Jack McMartin, reporting from Villa Hellebosch, Vollezele

We are more than halfway through our time here at beautiful Villa Hellebosch, and, like a plot unfolding, storylines have begun to emerge. One such storyline: authority. Should the writer unabashedly embrace her authority and use it to be a moral beacon in society? Should she strive to cultivate an honest authority, or use her authority to expose its own weaknesses and ambiguities? Is writing with a certain authority inevitable? What of gendered authority? For our seven authors, the time to discuss (their own) authority is now.

Buzzword

If there is a buzzword for this gathering, it is: beacon. This, courtesy of Anne, who, on Day 1, called on her fellow writers to dare to find a more assertive voice. This meant asking important questions, but also suggesting important answers. “I am defending the novelist as a moral beacon. As authors, we should be more convinced that we can change the world.”

A lofty, thorny conviction, no doubt. But this challenge has found resonance among the group in interesting ways. The keynotes, readings and subsequent discussions over the past two days have explored this question from many angles.

Iman is skeptical. “Why should I play the role of the priest when I’m living in uncertain times, too? I don’t know anything for certain, and I’m hesitant of the word ‘moral’.”

Juan Gabriel points out that Latin American authors have an authority that carries with it both respect and politicality. This is an inevitable authority, and one that should be claimed by novelists if they – and not politicians – are to be the ones to write the narrative of their times.

Honesty

Jens Christian sees a departure from the writer as all-knowing (and thus capable of delivering moral prescriptions). For him, today’s writers are excavators of thorny authority. Writers do this by incorporating authorial problems in their stories, as a comment on the danger and deceit of an overly moralizing authorial voice. “I can only be a beacon without deceit. I try to write honestly.”

Joke affirms the importance of an honest, truthful authority. “Truthful implies that risk you take when taking a position of vulnerability, a new perspective, a sincerity, which is the counter to skepticism.”

Vulnerable

By the end of Day 2’s afternoon session, Anne seems to have backed off from her vulnerable position at the vanguard of writerly beacons. (Granted, she took on the role in the first place to generate discussion.) “I hear a lot of ambition in the group. We want to live forever and treat forever-contemporary stories. The more I hear this, the more I sink into the modesty of the author. It’s too much. My response is to go back to the simplest of simple stories.”

But this response is not a retreat, says Goce, invoking his concept of all-timeness. “Our stories are not going to last forever, but something should be so essential to existence in them that they communicate for all time. The simplest of simple stories can do that.” But how, asks Céline.

Maybe that’s the writer’s beacon. Maybe that’s the source of her authority.

Hear more tonight, when Céline, Joke, Iman, Jens Christian, Anne, Goce and Juan Gabriel open the writers’ circle they’ve nurtured here at Villa Hellebosch to the public – and the reader. Don’t miss “The Time of the Author” tonight at 8:15 pm at Flagey.  

11/03/2014

Day Two - some snapshots

Discussing the role of the news in Céline Curiol's excerpt from her novel "Voice Over", on day two of the Passa Porta's writers' Seminar.


Discussing Anne Provoost's keynote "Is the time of the author in sync with that of the world he or she is living in?"

Upstairs: discussing Goce Smilevski's keynote 'Does literature have to be contemporary, and what does that mean?' with Belgian authors and critics.



Goce Smilevski reading.

Iman Humaydan presenting excerpts from her book 'Other Lives'.







To be continued with Jack McMartin's report on Day 2, later today or tomorrow morning...

Day One: The Time of the Author begins

by Jack McMartin, reporting from Villa Hellebosch, Vollezele

The tour bus carrying seven internationally renowned writers and four Passa Porta staffers rolls to a stop at the gates of Villa Hellebosch in Vollezele. A summerlike sun warms shoulders clad for late winter, shrugging. A thatched roof and gabled windows can just be gleamed at the end of the tree-lined drive. It seems we’ve arrived at a writers’ paradise (or a scene out of an Agatha Christie novel?) where the sun is always shining and time stands still. Here, “The Time of the Author” begins.



Monday, 10 March. Day One of the three-day writers’ retreat. Céline Curiol (France), Joke Hermsen (Netherlands), Iman Humaydan (Lebanon), Jens Christian Grøndahl (Denmark), Anne Provoost (Belgium), Goce Smilevski (Macedonia) and Juan Gabriel Vásquez (Columbia) settle in for conversation and reflection on the gathering’s focus: the relationship between the literary imagination and current affairs, along with readings from their work.



New(s)

Wading us into our allotted time, moderator Ortwin De Graef invites each writer to introduce him or herself, say why they have come and what they hope to get out of the retreat. It does not take long for lines of thought to emerge, overlap, find resonance.

Jens Christian insists on the need to find a language for writing in the here and now. “What does it mean to be there, right now, aesthetically and ethically?”

Juan Gabriel, a novelist and columnist, calls out the tension between the role of the columnist, who writes of the present as someone who knows and tries to convince, and the role of the novelist on the other, who writes of the past as someone who does not know.

Céline Curiol, who spent ten years as a journalist, asks what is news? Is news new? How should novelists use it? She points out that news is becoming more and more fictionalized while novels are becoming more and more ‘realistic’.

Kairos

Joke Hermsen, a writer and philosopher, is skeptical of time and is interested in alternative models and ways of thinking about it. Her new book explores Kairos, whose time is that of the right or opportune moment. She senses shimmers of this time in a world dominated by the linear, ever scarce and ever-accelerating time of Chronos.

Anne Provoost says that every novelist will sooner or later write about the past. In her historic novels, she looks for where we “missed the bend”, that is, where history had the chance to create something new but fell back on old habits instead. Knowing it does not exist, she fixates her gaze on a utopic future and proclaims the path leading to it literature. “This offers us the possibility of imagining the unimaginable.”

Goce Smilevski’s historiographical writing (e.g. Freud’s Sister) is concerned with remembering characters from history that were left behind, in the shadows of its giants. He, like Joke, senses a shift in the last few decades. “We have the resurrection of Kairos that Joke mentioned – the time of the time is coming again."

Unease

“I have a traumatic relationship with time,” says Iman. “I see time as a masculine thing because all these traumatic events in my life have happened by men.” The time of women is outside history for Iman. Writing about women has enabled her to write in the present, but a distrust of reality and time remains. “I am here to come nearer to a peaceful relationship with time,” she says.

The tour de table done, Ortwin sums up with characteristic frankness: “None of you seem to be content with time. I’m hearing a deeply felt unease with time. My questions to you: What is a happy time? Where is love? Where is God?”

Plenty of time to ponder these and more questions in the days to come.

Inaugural keynote by Juan Gabriel Vásquez

Yesterday 10 March, Columbian author Juan Gabriel Vásquez opened the first Passa Porta Seminar on "The Time of the Author" with a keynote answering the question "How does the writer relate to the news that he or she never entirely has under control, the news that we call "current affairs", "today's world" and "our time"?

From left to right: Jens Christian Grøndahl, Juan Gabriel Vásquez and Céline Curiol.



Discussing Vásquez' first keynote "Getting Poems from the News". From left to right: Ilke Froyen, Joke Hermsen and Anne Provoost

10/03/2014

Passa Porta Seminar "The Time of the Author" starting today

The first writers have arrived at Villa Hellebosch for the three-day Passa Porta Seminar.