Advertisement
The Paris Review
Subscribe
Sign In
Remember me
Forgot password?
Sign In
Subscribe
The Daily
The Latest
Columns
The Quarterly
Issues
Interviews
Fiction
Poetry
Letters & Essays
Art & Photo
graphy
Authors
Podcast
About
History
Opportunities
Masthead
Prizes
Submissions
Media Kit
Bookstores
Events
Donate
Donate to
The Paris Review
Institutional Support
THE SPRING REVEL
Newsletters
Store
The Paris Review
The Daily
The Latest
Columns
The Quarterly
Issues
Interviews
Fiction
Poetry
Letters & Essays
Art & Photography
Authors
Podcast
About
History
Opportunities
Masthead
Prizes
Submissions
Media Kit
Bookstores
Events
Donate
Donate to
The Paris Review
Institutional Support
THE SPRING REVEL
Newsletters
Store
Sign In
Remember me
Forgot password?
Sign In
Subscribe
Sign In
Remember Me
Forgot password?
Hang Your Quiver on Your Wagon, and Other News
By
Dan Piepenbring
October 20, 2014
On the Shelf
An illustration of the Amazons from the
Nuremberg Chronicle
, 1493.
In 1882, Walt Whitman and Oscar Wilde spent an afternoon together.
They had some homemade elderberry wine and talked about how to be famous
.
And in 1817,
Keats, Wordsworth, and Charles Lamb had dinner
. Lamb said repeatedly, “Diddle idle don / My son John / Went to bed with his breeches on.”
Winning the Nobel Prize causes an intense, nearly insurmountable euphoria. But according to Patrick Modiano, there is
one
way to magnify this sensation: by having a family member who hails from the same country that gives the prize. “
It gave me even greater pleasure because I have a Swedish grandson
… It’s to him I dedicate this Prize. It is, after all, from his country.”
Historically, fiction has afforded writers the chance to break taboos—under the guise of the fictive, one can “talk about potentially embarrassing or even criminal personal experiences without bringing society’s censure on oneself.”
So what happens when taboos fall away
? “It could be we are moving towards a period where, as the writer ‘gets older’ … he or she finds it increasingly irrelevant to embark on another long work of fiction that elaborately reformulates conflicts and concerns that the reader anyway assumes are autobiographical. Far more interesting and exciting to confront the whole conundrum of living and telling head on, in the very different world we find ourselves in now, where more or less anything can be told without shame.”
The
sexual congress of the Amazons
“was robust, promiscuous. It took place outdoors, outside of marriage, in the summer season, with any man an Amazon cared to mate with … The sign for sex in progress was a quiver hung outside a woman’s wagon.”
Last / Next
Article
Last / Next Article
Share