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Thread: Marcel Proust

  1. #1
    Absinthe minded bIGwIRE's Avatar
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    Marcel Proust

    Even a bureau crammed with souvenirs,
    Old bills, love letters, photographs, receipts,
    Court depositions, locks of hair in plaits,
    Hides fewer secrets than my brain could yield.
    It's like a tomb, a corpse-filled Potter's field,
    A pyramid where the dead lie down by scores.
    I am a graveyard that the moon abhors.

    -Baudelaire

    Marcel Proust's "In Search of Lost Time" is more than just an elaborate series of dinner parties and conversations,
    it is a journey through the mind, to the hidden place where time stops.

    I would love to see a proper Proust thread on Lit-Net.
    I am not qualified to lead such a discussion, but I would love to be a part of one. So, please, indulge me.

    What was your experience with reading Proust? What about his art is special? What was he searching for, if anything?
    Talk about his life, his method, his ideas and philosophy on memory..... anything Proust.

    For grievous war these arms don't ask,
    No armor, save this joyous flask

  2. #2
    Registered User ashulman's Avatar
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    For me the process of reading Recherche was one of stops and starts. I got halfway through Swann's Way years ago and just couldn't stick with it. Then several years back I picked it up where I left off and suddenly I was fascinated. Now, everything he said made sense to me, and I was dazzled by the sharpness of his insight and his elegance of expression. Then I went on to Budding Grove and had the same reaction - 100 pages in and stop. Went back again years later and once again was swept up. This time it stuck. I saw that I wasn't reading for the plot, but for the sheer brilliance and beauty of the writing. So I kept going, with breaks in between sections just to read other stuff. Most recently I am midway through The Captive and taking another break. But I have no doubt I will finish in the coming months.
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  3. #3
    I just want to read. chrisvia's Avatar
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    Wow, I checked the dedicated author forums, and you're right; there's no forum for Proust.

    I discovered Proust whikle studying Kerouac's Duluoz legend, which the author himself compares to Proust's sprawling opus.

    But before then I had long experienced these snatches of memories, seemingly randomly popping into my mind. Then I started to notice patterns, or triggers. For example, the smell of a bonfire would call up memories of the previous October when I had had a very pleasant time with friends around a campfire. Little did I know, the master painter of this phenomenon had produced his magnum opus based on what would come to be termed Proustian, or voluntary, memory.

    Most artists have this longing for the innocence and excitement of youth (see Rilke's "Imaginary Career," for example), and who doesn't enjoy getting momentarily swept away by their most precious memories of a time when they didn't have the responsibilities of adulthood crushing down on their backs (slight allusion to Miller's comments about the world breaking men's backs, from Tropic of Cancer)? Well, Proust takes it all a step further, giving us the iconic lime blossom event as a trigger for a wellspring of memories, deftly stitched together across 6 volumes, all of which are packed with a tapestry of rich detail-intense sentences.

    I have read the 4 (I-IV) recent Penguin translations, and the 2 (V-VI) Modern Library installments; and I would be delighted to participate in a dedicated thread!
    "J'ai seul la clef de cette parade sauvage."
    - Rimbaud

    "Il est l'heure de s'enivrer!
    Pour n'être pas les esclaves martyrisés du Temps,
    enivrez-vous;
    enivrez-vous sans cesse!
    De vin, de poésie ou de vertu, à votre guise."
    - Baudelaire

  4. #4
    I just want to read. chrisvia's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by ashulman View Post
    For me the process of reading Recherche was one of stops and starts. I got halfway through Swann's Way years ago and just couldn't stick with it. Then several years back I picked it up where I left off and suddenly I was fascinated..
    I had the same initial experience with Swann's Way, James's Portrait of a Lady, and Wolfe's Look Homeward, Angel. What's amazing is how, when I picked these works back up and decided to start from the beginning, I found that everything I had read came flooding back! I even remembered the setting in which I originally started the books, and what was going on in my life. A very meta-Proustian experience in itself!
    "J'ai seul la clef de cette parade sauvage."
    - Rimbaud

    "Il est l'heure de s'enivrer!
    Pour n'être pas les esclaves martyrisés du Temps,
    enivrez-vous;
    enivrez-vous sans cesse!
    De vin, de poésie ou de vertu, à votre guise."
    - Baudelaire

  5. #5
    confidentially pleased cacian's Avatar
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    Great subject Marcel Proust. And what a fine writer indeed.
    Here is a poem I wrote a time ago to celebrate his ingenious talent in dedication to him.

    coust* from accoustic
    croup* from croupier
    roul* from roulette
    toup* from touppie


    marcel proust
    the man with
    the coust
    never doubt
    the boost
    his wording
    croups
    his writing
    is roul
    like the billiard
    with a toup


    I shall post more about his writing when I can.
    Last edited by cacian; 03-27-2013 at 11:37 AM.
    it may never try
    but when it does it sigh
    it is just that
    good
    it fly

  6. #6
    Absinthe minded bIGwIRE's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by chrisvia View Post

    But before then I had long experienced these snatches of memories, seemingly randomly popping into my mind. Then I started to notice patterns, or triggers. For example, the smell of a bonfire would call up memories of the previous October when I had had a very pleasant time with friends around a campfire. Little did I know, the master painter of this phenomenon had produced his magnum opus based on what would come to be termed Proustian, or voluntary, memory.

    Most artists have this longing for the innocence and excitement of youth (see Rilke's "Imaginary Career," for example), and who doesn't enjoy getting momentarily swept away by their most precious memories of a time when they didn't have the responsibilities of adulthood crushing down on their backs (slight allusion to Miller's comments about the world breaking men's backs, from Tropic of Cancer)? Well, Proust takes it all a step further, giving us the iconic lime blossom event as a trigger for a wellspring of memories, deftly stitched together across 6 volumes, all of which are packed with a tapestry of rich detail-intense sentences.
    Proust, too, noticed the direct link between our sense of tastse and smell and our memory.

    "When from a long distant past nothing subsists, after the people are dead, after the things are broken and scattered, taste and smell
    alone
    , more fragile but enduring, more unsubstantial, more persistent, more faithful, remain poised a long time, like souls, remembering,
    waiting,hoping, amid the ruins of all the rest; and bear unflinchingly, in the tiny and almost inpalpable drops of their essence, the vast
    structure of recollection."


    In Swann's Way, the famous madeleine brings out his ideas on this perfectly, and he used it as a point from which to unravel his entire being.

    Have you ever read Proust was a Neuroscientist by Jonah Lehrer? I know Jonah has taken alot of heat lately, and lost some jobs in the process, but I enjoyed his section on Proust, and thought him a charming writer.

    Prehaps some more scientific minds can chime in here, but according to the studies he mentions, our senses of smell and taste are the only senses directly connected to the hippocampus, the brains long term memory center. All our other senses are are first filtered through the thalamus. His intuition guided him to this thruth long before science could confirm it.

    Some of his connections make sense, like the cookie calling to mind Combray, much like the smell of a bonfire draws up memories of time spent around bonfires. Some, however, are completely unexplained. For example, the napkin reminding him of the ocean. I notice those strange connections in my own mind as well.

    Lehrer likens our nerual connections to a loom, and by meticulously retracing all those connections, like Proust did, we can understand ourselves.
    Interesting stuff...
    Last edited by bIGwIRE; 03-29-2013 at 01:09 AM.

    For grievous war these arms don't ask,
    No armor, save this joyous flask

  7. #7
    Registered User ashulman's Avatar
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    BTW, I had my first Madeleine at Cafe Boulud in NYC recently, and I can see why his whole life came flooding back - damn that was a good cookie! Appropos of nothing, Yoko Ono was eating in the same restaurant, so I'll have a cool memory of that next time I eat one.
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  8. #8
    I just want to read. chrisvia's Avatar
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    I have not read Lehrer's book, but you have effectively compelled me to seek it out!

    Very interesting thoughts indeed. And it does stem beyond smell and taste, of course. Music, for example, is a grand memory trigger. Just this morning I listened to Mozart's Fantasy in Dm--a piece I hadn't listened to in over a year--and immediately I was transported back to the very time and place of my last listen: I was back in our family getaway, a rustic wood cabin set off the Blue Ridge Parkway in Virginia. I could see and feel the fabric of the old couch in the living room, the random bric-a-brac on the walls from years of patronizing little mountain shops. I could smell the coffee and eggs from the kitchen. And I could even feel and sense the state of my being at the time, as if truly looking back on myself as an older, different person.

    And speaking of the napkin: yes, I have experiened memory recall from simply looking at certain textures and intuiting the way they feel. For example, looking at the rough surface of a napkin and intuiting the salty texture of the ocean; and then, bingo, here my senses are flooded with a fragment of a memory of standing in or at the sea.

    Truly, truly amazing is our brain.

    Thanks for the book suggestion!
    "J'ai seul la clef de cette parade sauvage."
    - Rimbaud

    "Il est l'heure de s'enivrer!
    Pour n'être pas les esclaves martyrisés du Temps,
    enivrez-vous;
    enivrez-vous sans cesse!
    De vin, de poésie ou de vertu, à votre guise."
    - Baudelaire

  9. #9
    I just want to read. chrisvia's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by ashulman View Post
    ...damn that was a good cookie!
    HA!

    I always associate the restaurant La Madeleine in Georgetown in DC (a place I frequented for years) with Proust. Just the name, in general, whether a person or thing, is inseparably associated with Proust in my mind now.
    "J'ai seul la clef de cette parade sauvage."
    - Rimbaud

    "Il est l'heure de s'enivrer!
    Pour n'être pas les esclaves martyrisés du Temps,
    enivrez-vous;
    enivrez-vous sans cesse!
    De vin, de poésie ou de vertu, à votre guise."
    - Baudelaire

  10. #10
    Registered User Desolation's Avatar
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    Proust is one of those huge "Jesus Christ, how the **** did he just do that?" writers. He can be an overwhelming experience, sometimes.

    I've only made it through the second volume, and I'm considering just setting it aside until I'm able to read it from beginning to end in French (I'm at the end of my first year right now - maybe next year?).

  11. #11
    Absinthe minded bIGwIRE's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by chrisvia View Post
    And it does stem beyond smell and taste, of course. Music, for example, is a grand memory trigger.
    Its true, any of our senses can transport us in time and evoke strong memories, but our senses of sight, touch, and hearing are first processed by the thalamus, our center of language, among other things, and because of that they less connected to our memory than our senses of smell or taste, which are directly processed by our memory center, the hippocampus.

    Proust picked up on this, which is why just looking at the madeleine didn't summon up any memories.
    He even wrote;"Prehaps because I had so often seen such madeleines without tasting them, their image had disasociated itself from those Combray days."

    Aren't we all glad he ate it?

    For grievous war these arms don't ask,
    No armor, save this joyous flask

  12. #12
    Absinthe minded bIGwIRE's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Desolation View Post
    Proust is one of those huge "Jesus Christ, how the **** did he just do that?" writers. He can be an overwhelming experience, sometimes.

    I've only made it through the second volume, and I'm considering just setting it aside until I'm able to read it from beginning to end in French (I'm at the end of my first year right now - maybe next year?).
    I agree, Proust takes some serious digestion time. Its so rich that at times it needs dilution. When I was reading it I read an easier book at the same time, like Vonnegut's Bluebeard, and traded off for a couple days while I thought about the Proust I had read. Otherwise I had the same feeling I get from eating too much cheesecake... delicious but overwhelming.

    I appluad your plans to read it in French. Maybe after my kids are out of school I'll follow your lead.

    Good luck

    For grievous war these arms don't ask,
    No armor, save this joyous flask

  13. #13
    Registered User ashulman's Avatar
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    Another great resource is Bloom's essay on Proust and sexual jealousy in The Western Canon.
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    Registered User hawthorns's Avatar
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    Yeah the guy had genius in spades. I remember thinking when I was reading recherche that it should be required text for psych students lol. Add the complexity/number of its themes, thoroughly fleshed out characters, its sheer magnitude, sentences that you want to bathe in, and you have one incredible work. As a science major I wasn't much of a reader until just a few years ago. Then I somehow discovered Proust. Many (even most) report that Proust has more relevance later in life, and maybe that's why I was taken right at the first memorable line. Swann's Way was unquestionably fantastic--esp the first 50 pages and Swann In Love. But for some reason I thought he reached the pinnacle of style, thematic richness, and description in Cities of the Plain (S&G) and Time Regained. The Captive, good as it was, sometimes dragged.

    Bigwire--I love that painting in your sig. Damn...what's the name and where did I see that?! LOL

  15. #15
    Absinthe minded bIGwIRE's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by hawthorns View Post
    Bigwire--I love that painting in your sig. Damn...what's the name and where did I see that?! LOL
    The Absinthe Drinker by Viktor Oliva. It was hanging in the Cafe Slavia in Prague, Czech Republic. A friend who visited brought me a reprint.

    For grievous war these arms don't ask,
    No armor, save this joyous flask

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