I don't think we should mix any author's work up with their personal
life, even though the life of authors may help to explain their work.
By
the way, I fondly remember the anthology book we had in French
Literature class when I was a highschool student. It was the Lagarde et
Michard collection, that had a volume for each century -- well the first
volume was about the whole Middle Ages (of course I now consider such a
reduction to be a heresy!), the second about the XVIth century and so
on -- and the structure was always the same: life of the auhor, work of
the author.
Must we take an artist's life into account in order to understand his (or her) work?
I
do believe that the former enlightens the latter, and not only when it
comes to auto-fiction, but at some point the work must speak for itself
too, and we have to forget about the artist behind it.
It's a two
phase process. First knowing to understand and possibly analyse (if
you're studying Literature), then forgetting to enjoy and really assess
without any bias. The work is usually bigger than the artist, and will
go on its own journey anyway.
Some artists are horrible people in
what we call here "Real Life", and yet their work may be masterpieces.
Others are really nice people but their work will never be any good.
Take Louis Ferdinand Céline for instance. His Voyage Au Bout De La Nuit
is a literary monument from the XXth Century. The man, on the other
hand, was notoriously anti-Semitic. Richard Wagner's work is a musical
monument as well, not only for the XIXth Century but in the whole
history of music, but he was also as Anti-semitic as they came, and
probably a difficult man to be around.
I read this morning an article from The Guardian about Marion Zimmer Bradley,
or rather on the reactions that were caused by her daughter's
revelations. Apparently MZB was quite the monster, especially by
nowadays' standards -- read the article I linked to, if you want to know
what she is accused of, but given that it is her daughter who's the
accuser you probably can guess. So there are fans or fellow-authors from
the SFF community that obviously now feel ashamed of having liked her
work or revered her person. Some people say that they will never read
one of her books again. It seems that they feel betrayed by an author
they never met and tainted by their reading. I think it's an interesting
reaction showing how much readers deeply bond with the invisible and
untouchable god that created the word-universe they dive in. There's
something sacred but also intimate in reading someone else words, isn't
it?
Personally, I read MZB's The Mists of Avalons when I
was about 14 or 15 year old. I remember that I enjoyed the book, but
that's it. I never reread it, so I guess I wasn't that impressed, and I
doubt I would find it that good if I read it now. So no, MZB is not in
the same league as Céline, probably far from it. However reading that
article in the morning prompted that musing.
How much do we want to know? How much should we know? Is it always possible to forget the worst and still enjoy the best?
You
may have noticed that I have an inquisitive mind. I always want to
know, to penetrate a mystery, to draw connections that would provide
meaning. But I believe -- or hope -- that I'm also capable of accepting
the mystery from time to time, and that, above all, I can distance my
experiencing a work from the author of said work.
I guess it's
easier when it comes to music, cinema/tv or plastic arts. The written
words usually carry more, show more. The ghost of the author haunts the
place in a way that is more explicit, more dialectical. Books contain
multitude, give freedom, but they also have magical powers. There is the
author's voice whispering to the reader's ear, a voice that still can
be heard long after the writer's death. Do anyone want the Devil to
whisper to their ear?
Jorge Luis Borges, whom I consider a
literary genius, was not a supporter of Perón, and he denounced the
military dictature in Argentina, but he was a conservative man. I know
that. As Latin-American authors go, he didn't share Alejo Carpentier's
or Pablo Neruda's, or Garcia Marques' left inclinations. We would
probably have disagreed on a lot of subjects if we had discussed
politics together. But still, rather decent a man, I believe. And he
loved cats, which is always a plus in my book. *g*
Would I still
adore his work if I ever found out that he had actually enslaved
Indians, molested children or tortured dogs? Or that he had committed a
crime that goes against everything he embodies: burn a library (like his
evil alter-ego, the Venerable Jorge, from Umbert Eco's The Name Of The Rose)?
Could
I still find the same pleasure in reading his words? Would I be able to
slowly forget what I found out, and be willing to keep reading his
short stories and essays?
I hope so.
Now that I think
about it, I believe that part of the mysterious alchemy that defines the
reading experience is not only taking over a work, but also re-creating
its author.
By reading Borges, while reading Borges, I make Borges.
I
think he would have liked that, he, who once wrote that every author
creates his precursors, and who told the short story of a man who
eventually finds out that he is the product of another man's dream.
So I leave you with the ending of "The Circular Ruins" in its online English version:
"The
ruins of the sanctuary of the god of Fire was destroyed by fire. In a
dawn without birds, the wizard saw the concentric fire licking the
walls. For a moment, he thought of taking refuge in the water, but then
he understood that death was coming to crown his old age and absolve him
from his labors. He walked toward the sheets of flame. They did not
bite his flesh, they caressed him and flooded him without heat or
combustion. With relief, with humiliation, with terror, he understood
that he also was an illusion, that someone else was dreaming him."
vendredi 27 juin 2014
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