[Yale-readings] TODAY: Bryher Celebration and Reading, Beinecke May 4
Nancy Kuhl
nancy.kuhl at yale.edu
Wed May 4 09:41:31 EDT 2005
Beinecke Library, Yale University
May 4, 2005
A Celebration of Bryher and Visa for Avalon
with readings from the novel and comments about Bryher's work and life
For more information, please contact Patricia Willis, patricia.willis at yale.edu
WHO?
Susan Howe, author of several books of poems and criticism, most
recently, The Midnight (2003), and The Europe of Trusts (2002). She is
currently the Samuel P. Capen Chair of Poetry and the Humanities at
SUNY-Buffalo, and is a Chancellor of The Academy of American Poets.
Patrick Gregory, author of The Daguerreotype (2004), and son of poet,
translator, and critic Horace Gregory and poet Marya Zaturenska. Patrick
Gregory and his parents knew Bryher intimately, and Gregory is one of the
few friends living who can offer insights and information about her life
and work.
Cynthia Hogue, author of several collections of poetry and criticism,
most recently Flux (2004), and is The Jonathan and Maxine Marshall Chair in
Modern and Contemporary Poetry at Arizona State University. She is the 2005
H.D. Fellow at the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library.
Jan Freeman, author of three collections of poetry, most recently Simon
Says (2000), and director of Paris Press. She is currently at work on
several Bryher projects.
Patricia C. Willis, curator of the Yale Collection of American Literature
at the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library.
Timothy Young, assistant curator of the Modern Books and Manuscripts at
the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library.
WHAT?
Paris Press director Jan Freeman will introduce Visa for Avalon to the
audience and offer background information about the long-neglected author,
Bryher. Event participants will then read passages from Visa for Avalon and
offer their comments about Bryher, Visa for Avalon, and the timely
political and social message of the novel. This event is funded in part by
the Massachusetts Cultural Council.
WHEN? WHERE?
Wednesday, May 4, 2005 Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript
Library
4:00 - 5:00 p.m. The Mezzanine
121 Wall Street
Reception at 5:00 p.m. Yale University
Free Admission New Haven, CT
Bryher (Annie Winifred Ellerman, 1894-1983) was born in England and spent
most of her adult life in Territet, Switzerland and in London. Her novels
and memoirs received high critical praise during her lifetime. However,
nearly all of her work has been neglected during the past thirty years.
Bryher was the partner of H.D., and she was the benefactor of many writers
and thinkers, from Marianne Moore to Walter Benjamin. She was involved in
politics, film, and psychology, as well as literature. Bryher was the
publisher of Contact Publishing, Life and Letters To-day, and Close Up, and
she helped to support the intellectual sanctum, Shakespeare and Company.
Bryher's papers are housed at the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library.
Visa for Avalon remains a suggestive and beguiling fiction by one of the
twentieth century's most interesting artistic figures. The Paris Press
should be thanked for republishing it.
--Margaret Atwood, New York Review of Books
Visa for Avalon is a testament to the power of fiction. It illuminates the
truth at the heart of what is commonly called reality. This account of
lives transformed and ruined by the triumph of a totalitarian rule is a
timely reminder of how moral and intellectual laziness and apathy can pave
the road to the reign of terror brought on by such a system."--AZAR
NAFISI, author of Reading Lolita in Tehran
"Visa for Avalon is so tense, its characters so tightly wound, if it were
any longer it would be in danger of implosion.... This book is the literary
equivalent to espresso...." -- Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
"Visa for Avalon is a startling political allegory that readers, especially
the politically curious, will return to for deciphering our own time."
--San Francisco Chronicle
In these jittery times when questions of national security dominate, Paris
Press has decided the moment is right for a rediscovery of a political
allegory called Visa for Avalon. . . . Bryher's corpus and life story are
worth bringing to light. Visa for Avalon is a short allegory about the
devastating cost of political apathy. . . . [M]any political allegories
feel static; Orwell's Animal Farm and Huxley's Brave New World come to
mind. . . . But Visa for Avalon is a bit of a nail-biter. It's set in a
no-name country that looks a lot like England, where a totalitarian
movement claiming to be working for the betterment of the common citizenry
is about to sweep away individual rights. . . Overcoming roadblocks, mobs,
sadistic bureaucrats and forces of nature, her characters push forward to
Avalon, where society perhaps is more enlightenedor not. The indeterminacy
of Bryher's ending is one of the subtler aspects of this lively story. As
someone who helped refugees escape Hitler, Bryher certainly knew that
there's a time when it's wiser to flee into the unfamiliar than to stand
and fight a known evil. But Visa for Avalon is certain about one thing:
There's never a time to stop thinking, stop questioning."
--Maureen
Corrigan, NPR's "Fresh Air"
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