Authors: Shelly Fisher Fishkin
That I am he
On whom Thy tempests fell all night.
—George Herbert, 1593–1633
Censorship
Silences
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Immoral! Immoral!
Immoral! Immoral! Under this cloak hide the vices of wealth as well as the vast, unspoken blackness of poverty and ignorance and between them must walk the little novelist, choosing neither truth nor beauty, but some half-conceived phase of life that bears no honest resemblance to either the whole of nature or to man.
—Theodore Dreiser,
1902
Having to Censor Self
If you do not tell the truth about yourself you cannot tell it about other people. As the nineteenth century wore on, the writers knew that they were crippling themselves, diminishing their material, falsifying their object. “We are condemned,” Stevenson wrote, “to avoid half the life that passes us by.” What books Dickens could
have written had he been
permitted! Think of Thackeray as unfettered as Flaubert or Balzac! What books I might have written myself.
—Virginia Woolf
Work Withheld:
Not published in one’s lifetime (Mark Twain); or held for years waiting for a changed atmosphere (E.M. Forster:
Maurice).
Has other work by other writers been put aside, or kept from burgeoning, because of fear that its content would deny its being published?
Publishers’ Censorship:
The silencing—or being driven to the novel form—of story or novella writers because “there is no market for stories.”
Political Silences
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Involvement:
When political involvement takes priority, though the need and love for writing go on. Every freedom movement has, and has had, its roll of writers participating at the price of their writing.
The Complete
Silencing by Governments
Lives of the Poets
Otto-René Castillo was born
in Quezaltenango
Guatemala
in 1936 and was killed there
in March of 1967 while fighting
with the Revolutionary
Armed Forces.
The poem
by Javier Heraud, written
in 1963 in La Paz
Bolivia,
was one of the last by the poet
before his death.
Peruvian,
he was killed
at the age of 21
while fighting for the
liberation
of his country.
Leonel Rugama, another young
Latin American
martyr, was assassinated
in January 1970,
in Managua
Nicaragua.
The house
where he and two comrades hid
was surrounded by 1500
national guardsmen and the battle
lasted 4 hours. Before
they went in
to finish him
off, Rugama answered
the demand that he surrender
with “
¡Que se rinde
tu madre!”
Carlos Maria Gutierrez is
Uruguayan,
well known
as a revolutionary journalist.
Diario del Cuartelo
came directly out of a
prison
experience in 1969
and is his first
and only book of poems. His first
and only book
of poems.
*
Political Silences. A woman form:
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Anna Tsetsaeyva, also known as Marina Cvetaeva, the Russian poet, in exile
It is my notebook that keeps me above the surface of the waters.
. . . It will soon be Christmas. To tell you the truth, I’ve been driven so hard by life that I feel nothing. Through these years (1917–1927) it was not my mind that grew numb, but my soul. An astonishing observation: it is precisely for feeling that one needs time, and not for thought. Thought is a flash of lightning, feeling is a ray from the most distant of stars. Feeling requires leisure; it cannot
survive under fear. A basic example: rolling 1½ kilos of small fishes in flour, I am able to think, but as for feeling—no. The smell is in the way. The smell is in the way, my sticky hands are in the way, the squirting oil in the way,
the fish
are in the way, each one individually and the entire 1½ kilos as a whole. Feeling is apparently more demanding than thought. It requires all or nothing.
There is nothing I can give to my own [feeling]: no time, no quiet, no solitude. I am always in the presence of others, from 7 in the morning till 10 at night, and by 10 at night I am so exhausted—what feeling can there be? Feeling requires
strength.
No, I simply sit down to mend and darn things: Mur’s, S.’s, Alya’s, my own. 11 o’clock. 12 o’clock. 1 o’clock. S. arrives by the last [subway] train,
a brief chat, and off to bed, which means lying in bed with a book until 2 or 2:30. The books are good, but I could have written even better ones, if only . . .
“The knife of the perfectionist attitude in art and life.”
This haunting sentence, not in the original talk, is from
What the Woman Lived
(1973), letters by the consummate poet, Louise Bogan—to me one of our most grievous “hidden silences.”
(Woman, economic, perfectionist causes—all inextricably intertwined.)
Silences of the Marginal
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The writer of a class, sex, color still marginal in literature, and whose coming to voice at all against complex odds is exhausting achievement.
“Only eleven [black writers] in the hundred years since 1850 have published novels more than twice.”
*
Nineteen fifty
was evidently the watershed year. Since 1960,
any single year
has seen more than nine novels by black writers that are their second, third, or fourth books.
They are reaping the (hard-won) benefits of having been born in the more favorable nineteen thirties, forties, fifties, instead of into their parents’ generations. They grew into a time of rising economic levels (still low, but for more,
above an all-conditioning economic imperative); ever higher levels of literacy and education (however painfully gotten); shorter work hours; great mass migrations seeking more humane conditions of life; visible struggle; and, with the fifties, a resurgence of black consciousness—all providing a more enabling soil and climate.
Bone did not take into account fiction privately published, nor did
he have the advantage of recent bibliographies (such as those by Rush, Myers, Arata:
Black American Writers,
1973) which disclose a wealth of writers, most of them born since 1920—and indicating eloquently what was silenced in the generations before—(and their own generation)—(“lives that never came to writing”).
These bibliographies also indicate how vulnerable nearly all (especially first-generation
writers) were to lessenings and silencings; revealing numbers of poems and stories that never came to books—and long interims between works.
Marks of all marginal writers.
They do not, except by inference, reveal “the complex odds.” No one has as yet written
A Room of One’s Own
for writers, other than women, still marginal in literature. Nor do any bibliographies exist for writers whose origins
and circumstances are marginal. Class remains the greatest unexamined factor.
“The sacrifice of talent, in pieces, to preserve its essential value”
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