Tag Archives: Edmund White

EDMUND WHITE ON JEAN GIONO

9781635571172

“Recently I wrote a note to accompany Paul Eprile’s translation of Jean Giono’s MELVILLE, which quickly evolved into a novel that has nothing to do with the historical neurasthenic and queer-leaning Herman Melville and everything to do with Giono himself.

“Giono was deeply influenced by American writers… [He] first discovered Walt Whitman in French [and] later studied the ‘American Homer’ in English. He loved Whitman’s all-embracing egalitarianism and his pantheism, and the first part of Giono’s œuvre obviously owes a debt to this passionate revolutionary figure. In Hill, his first novel, Giono tried to illustrate two very Whitmanesque truths:

‘The first of these truths is that there are people, simple and nude; the other is that this earth fleeced [entoisonnée] with woods… this living earth, exists without literature.’

“Cutting down on metaphor and simile (he could never altogether forego them) must have been painful for Giono, so naturally gifted with that kind of eloquence. As Aristotle suggest in The Rhetoric, metaphor is one of the greatest ornaments of writing but also the one no one can learn.” — Edmund White, The Unpunished Vice

White’s blend of memoir and literary criticism is out now.

 

EDMUND WHITE, THE UNPUNISHED VICE: A LIFE OF READING (New York: Bloomsbury, 2018).

Top image credit: Bloomsbury Publishing.

Above: Edmund White and Zadie Smith at a writers’ festival in Florence, 2017. Image credit: Édouard Louis‘ Twitter.

Below, from left: Bernard Buffet, Jean Giono, and Pierre Bergé in Manosque, June 16, 1950. Image credit: Musée Yves Saint Laurent, Paris.

COLCOA — MARGUERITE DURAS

“[Marguerite Duras] was a fascinating character… indomitable and tireless, who grabbed the world by the throat and said, ‘Look at me.’  But [she was] very intelligent, and able to think of many different strategies for dramatizing the basic facts of her life.” — Edmund White

Author of the autobiographical novel L’Amant, the screenplay Hiroshima mon amour (1959, for director Alain Resnais), and several diaries of the 1940s which play up her Resistance activities and play down her work with the Vichy regime, Duras was well known for telling a few stories many times, in many different ways.

Duras’ fictionalized “memoir of war” La douleur (written contemporaneously with the events it describes but not published until 1985, eleven years before her death) is the basis for a hallucinatory new film directed by Emmanuel Finkiel, a former assistant director for Jean-Luc Godard and Krzysztof Kieslowski.

LA DOULEUR / MEMOIR OF WAR stars Mélanie Thierry as Duras, and features Benoît Magimel, Benjamin Biolay, Shulamit Adar, and Grégoire Leprince-Ringuet as “Morland” (the code name for François Mitterrand during the Resistance).

COLCOA presents the West Coast premiere of the film, followed by a conversation with the director.

 

LA DOULEUR / MEMOIR OF WAR

Tuesday, April 24, at 5:40 pm.

Directors Guild of America

7920 Sunset Boulevard, Hollywood.

Mélanie Thierry as Marguerite Duras in La Douleur / Memoir of War. Image credit: Music Box Films.

EDMUND WHITE

Edmund White is the recipient of PEN’s lifetime achievement award for American fiction, and will join fellow honorees Edna O’Brien (for international literature), Kamau Brathwaite (poetry), Barbara Harshav (translation), Dave Kindred (literary sports writing), Luis Alfaro (American dramatist), Sibyl Kempson (American playwright in mid-career), and Mike Lew (emerging American playwright) at the awards ceremony on Tuesday night.

 

2018 PEN AMERICA LITERARY AWARDS, Tuesday, February 20, from 7 pm to 9 pm; reception to follow.

SKIRBALL CENTER, NYU, 566 LaGuardia Place, New York City.

pen.org/2018-lifetime-career-achievement-honorees

tickets.nyu.edu

pen.org/literary-awards

Edmund White, City Boy (2009, British edition cover). Image credit: Bloomsbury.

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PIERRE GUYOTAT’S IN THE DEEP

“He has a powerful hieratic appearance and you feel you are in the presence of a priest of Baal—or perhaps he is Baal. He’s stark raving mad but a very gifted writer who staked out the extreme limits of how far you can go….Guyotat is one of the very few geniuses of our day.” — Edmund White on Pierre Guyotat

Brigitte Nicole Grice of Artbook will lead a conversation at Hauser & Wirth’s Book & Printed Matter Lab exploring the connections between Pierre Guyotat’s IN THE DEEP—a “beat-sheet” account of three days and nights from Guyotat’s adolescence—and the art of Paul McCarthy, whose work is currently on view at the gallery.

PIERRE GUYOTAT’S IN THE DEEP—SUMMER READING GROUP, Sunday, August 27, from 11 am to 1 pm.

PAUL McCARTHY—WS SPINOFFS, WOOD STATUES, BROWN ROTHKOS, through September 17.

HAUSER & WIRTH LOS ANGELES, 903 East 3rd Street, Los Angeles.

ARTBOOK AT HAUSER & WIRTH LOS ANGELES, 917 East 3rd Street

hauserwirthlosangeles.com/events/summer-reading-group-in-the-deep-20170827

hauserwirthlosangeles.com/exhibitions/paul-mccarthy-20170701

artbook.com/artbook-hw-la.html

Pierre Guyotat, In the Deep, translated by Noura Wedell (Los Angeles: Semiotext(e), 2014).

mitpress.mit.edu/books/deep

See Wedell’s Bomb interview with Guyotat:

bombmagazine.org/article/2000051/pierre-guyotat

Pierre Guyotat.

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