Archive for the ‘The Age of Innocence’ Category

READ BETWEEN THE LINES: A Q&A with Bloomsburg Public Library

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

April 22, 2010
Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania

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The New York City skyline, circa 1904. Photo by William Herman Rau, from Library of Congress collection.

When Dr. Ferda Asya, Associate Professor of English at Pennsylvania’s Bloomsburg University, approached the Bloomsburg Public Library staff about organizing a Big Read featuring Edith Wharton’s The Age of Innocence, they were pretty hesitant. “It was maybe not our first choice…” said Anne Cosper, Bloomsburg’s Big Read coordinator. “But the community’s reaction was, surprisingly, really pretty good.” Anne Cosper shared with the NEA more surprises and favorite moments about her community’s first experience hosting a Big Read.

NEA: What has been your favorite Big Read moment?

ANNE COSPER: We held a Children’s tea party, which was a lot of fun. We had a woman come in who brought a lot of personal treasures, such as clothing and antiques from the Age of Innocence time period and explained to the children what they were for.

NEA: Why should other cities participate in The Big Read?

COSPER: It has helped our library establish itself as a participating part of the community. We recently remodeled our library and opened it up for more programs. We held a series of events on Edgar AllAn Poe and The Big Read has helped us to maintain that momentum and keep people stopping into the library.

NEA: In what ways has your community benefitted from The Big Read?

COSPER: It started a lot of new community book discussion groups. The Columbia County Historical & Genealogical Society led discussions, as well as an organization called TRiO Upward Bound at Bloomsburg University.

NEA: What were some of the unique activities that your organization planned for The Big Read?

COSPER: Our Big Read kick-off event featured music by Touch of Brass, an eight piece brass ensemble, who play period popular songs. Dr. Carol J. Singley, Associate Professor at Rutgers University, and author/editor of four books on Wharton gave the keynote speech: Following Convention, Courting Change in The Age of Innocence.

It was also hard to find a way to tie in children to The Big Read, but our Children’s Museum held a month-long exhibition that allowed children to dress in costumes of the era, build and use sets from scenes in the story, and sample foods described in the novel.

NEA: If you could choose three words to describe your Big Read, what would they be?

Cosper: Interesting, surprising, fun. This has been a lot of work, but worth the effort.

To learn more about  Edith Wharton’s most famous novel, visit The Age of Innocence page on The Big Read website.

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Monday, March 29th, 2010

March 29, 2010
Washington, DC

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Undated portrait of Edith Wharton from Library of Congress collection

Although Edith Wharton’s writing chronicled the milieu of early 20th century, upper class New York, I think one of the qualities that makes her a “classic” writer is that the concerns addressed in her fiction and nonfiction remain quite relevant in contemporary times. Take for example this quote from The Decoration of Houses—published with interior designer Ogden Codman in 1898—which treats an idea still very much under discussion today.

If art is really a factor in civilization, it seems obvious that the feeling for beauty needs as careful cultivation as the other civic virtues….The habit of regarding ‘art’ as a thing apart from life is fatal to the development of taste…No greater servcie can be rendered to children than in teaching them to know the best and to want it.

Want to join in The Big Read? Visit The Big Read calendar to find out where activities are taking place near you.

 

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Friday, February 5th, 2010

February 5, 2010
Washington, DC

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View from my bus stop after the last round of snow in metro DC.

Here in Washington, DC, we’re preparing for snow. As I ponder a weekend spent indoors with a lovely pile of books (thank goodness I’m not in charge of shoveling!), how fortuitous to stumble upon this quote by Edith Wharton.

The early mist had vanished and the fields lay like a silver shield . . .It was one of the days when the glitter of winter shines . . . .

What are your favorite literary quotes about snow or other seasonal weather? (And don’t forget to visit The Big Read calendar to find out where there’s some Big Reading taking place near you.)

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Thursday, October 22nd, 2009

October 22, 2009
Washington, DC

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Portrait of Edith Wharton, photographer unknown. From the collection of the Library of Congress.

Although on the surface Edith Wharton’s The Age of Innocence and Amy Tan’s The Joy Luck Club may not seem to have much in common, each novel is—in its own way—an investigation of the tension between the old ways and the new, between obeying the rules and breaking them. Who belongs and who doesn’t? Here’s what Tan has to say about why Wharton’s classic novel still feels current nearly a century after it was first published.

For me, The Age of Innocence has a lot to do with culture and society, and how we behave and conform so that we belong. It’s also about the ways in which others think we don’t belong, because of perhaps who our parents are, or how we dress or who we know, or how popular we are among others. . . .[W]e’re all concerned at some point in our lives about belonging. We’re especially concerned when we feel that we don’t belong, when a group of people has not accepted us, and you don’t quite know why. It wasn’t maybe necessarily anything you did, but to not belong is a huge threat, I think, to your existence. And you especially experience this in grade school and junior high and high school, and also when maybe you’re the new kid on the block, as I often was, because our family moved just about every year. In situations like that, you feel that someone decides whether you belong or not.  And it may be because you wear plaid and not stripes, or you’re friends with somebody who others don’t like. 

Often the rules and requirements are understood, but not spoken about. People notice why you’re less than they are, but they don’t tell you. Or you see something really embarrassing, but you pretend not to notice, even though you did. That is, to me, what The Age of Innocence is about, that pretense of innocence. . . .You’re measured by who your family is, you know, in the novel. You’re a Rushworth and you’re not one of the newer immigrants, you’re one of the older families. You didn’t have a quirky relative, a funny aunt who married too often, or your aunt didn’t dress you funny as a kid at the funeral.  And all these things, your behavior, and what happened long ago are never forgotten.  In this society that Edith Wharton talks about, all of this determines who you are throughout your life. 

To learn more about Edith Wharton and her works, visit The Age of Innocence page on The Big Read website.

 

 

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Friday, May 15th, 2009

May 15, 2009
Washington, DC

Yesterday, the Arts Endowment announced 11 new NEA National Heritage Fellows , the best of the best of the nation’s artists working in the folk and traditional arts. Tradition is at the heart of many of the Big Read titles, from the rigid etiquette of “Old New York” in Edith Wharton’s The Age of Innocence and Henry James’s Washington Square to the immigrant traditions that permeate Amy Tan’s The Joy Luck Club and Willa Cather’s My Ántonia. In the following literary moment, 2006 NEA National Heritage Fellow Charles M. Carrillo, a New Mexican anthropologist and santero (a carver and painter of images of saints), discusses one of the many traditional beliefs at the heart of Rudolfo Anaya’s Bless Me, Ultima.

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Mockingbird at the Mall, and Innocence by Gaslight

Monday, March 23rd, 2009

March 23, 2009
Washington, DC

In all the justifiable frenzy attending Kelleys Island’s steady march toward getting all 128 islanders to read To Kill a Mockingbird, let’s not overlook some fine work going on in a few other burgs. Just across a few acre-feet of Lake Erie, for example, the Erie County Big Read has taken Sandusky by storm. Librarian Terri Estel writes:

“The kick-off was great. A huge success. People lined up at the mall an hour before it began. 450 came, and we gave away 220 books…We gave away rain checks to another 200 plus people, who will redeem them at the movie Sunday at the State Theatre. After the movie, the Erie County Law Association is putting on a mock trial on Monday at 6:30 and 8, complete with kids sneaking into the courthouse…We are doing a Monday Morning “Mockingbird Minutes” program on the radio which airs at 7:40AM each Monday.”

Older man talking to young women at a crowded reception

George Mylander, who, through his Mylander Foundation, volunteered not just money but time for his Erie County neighbors’ Big Read. Photo by Lori Esposito.

As you can see, Terri’s resourcefulness is by no means circumscribed by Kelleys Island. If I noticed 450 people lined up in a mall for an hour, my first assumption would be either a) free ice cream, b) free beer, or c) free iPods. It would not be d) free books — but then, I don’t pretend to have the Sandusky Library’s energy and imagination…

Ornate interior of 19th century mansion, crowd on floor level, others at balcomy rails with books in hand

The first of two capacity crowds, each 150 strong, line the loggia at Portland’s Victoria Mansion. Photo by Karen Sawye.

 

And in Portland, Maine last weekend, I had the honor of officiating at back-to-back kickoffs for the Victoria Mansion’s Big Read of Edith Wharton’s The Age of Innocence. Two students from the School of Music at the University of Southern Maine sang duets from Faust, the opera attended on that novel’s first page. Interspersed with these impeccably performed numbers were dramatizations of the book’s first few scenes, performed by gifted young actors from Livermore Falls High School.

But the undisputed star of the evening was the Victoria Mansion herself, emerging from an annual post-Christmas hibernation and looking none the worse for her 150 years. Mansion director Robert Wolterstorff sheepishly likes to call the Victoria this country’s finest historic house museum of the period, and I’d be the last person to contradict him. Fully three floors of vintage Victoriana are preserved in this ornate palace on Portland’s Danforth Avenue, arrayed around two flights of a handsomely carpeted and resplendently balustered staircase.

To stand in the well of this showplace and look up at a fire-marshal-imposed limit of 150 book-clutching Portlanders, all craning down for a better view of Wharton’s Gilded Age characters, was to see The Big Read in all its glory — spit-shined and rigged out like a three-masted argosy, under full sail and putting the scourge of aliteracy to rout. But to see it twice in a row, and know that the mansion had to turn away still more for another day, sent me back to the hotel fuller even of hope than of myself. The wished-for wonderland of a reading-besotted America still lies a long way off, but you can get there from here.

March 11, 2009

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Thursday, February 5th, 2009

February 5, 2009
Washington, DC

With New York “Fashion Week” a mere 10 days away, here’s a stylish snippet from that most soigné of Old New York chroniclers, Edith Wharton. We join the action just a couple of paragraphs into Chapter 12 of The Age of Innocence, when Newland Archer pays a visit to Countess Olenska who is already (scandalously) being visited by Julius Beaufort . . .

It was usual for ladies who received in the evening to wear what were called “simple dinner-dresses” a close-fitting armor of whale-boned silk, slightly open in the neck, with lace ruffles filling in the crack, and tight sleeves with a flounce uncovering just enough wrist to show an Etruscan gold bracelet or a velvet band. But Madame Olenska, heedless of tradition, was attired in a long robe of red velvet bordered about the chin and down the front with glossy black fur. Archer remembered, on his last visit to Paris, seeing a portrait by a new painter, Carolus Duran, whose pictures were the sensation of the Salon, in which the lady wore one of these bold sheath-like robes with her chin nestling in fur. There was something perverse and provocative in the notion of fur worn in the evening in a heated drawing room, and in the combination of a muffled throat and bare arms; but the effect was undeniably pleasing.

Massillon Museum in Massillon, Ohio kicks off its Big Read of The Age of Innocence February 28 with an exhibition of visual art from “The Gilded Age” and an Age of Innocence Ball. Find out more at The Big Read Web site.

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Thursday, October 9th, 2008

October 9, 2008
Washington, DC

At center of Edith Wharton’s The Age of Innocence is Newland Archer, a prototypical late-19th–century New York City lawyer. He must choose between two ways of life, symbolized by May and her cousin Ellen. Archer’s feelings toward the two women are deftly sketched by Wharton in the following passages.

On May . . .

“His eye lit on a cluster of yellow roses. He had never seen any as sun-golden before, and his first impulse was to send them to May instead of the lilies. But they did not look like her—there was something too rich, too strong, in their fiery beauty.”

On Ellen . . .

“He was not sure that he wanted to see the Countess Olenska again…He simply felt that if he could carry away the vision of the spot of earth she walked on, and the way the sky and sea enclosed it, the rest of the world might seem less empty.”

In this NEA Literary Moment, writer P.J. O’Rourke comments on how Newland Archer helps to make The Age of Innocence such a compelling read.

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Elegy for the Elegiac

Friday, February 15th, 2008

February 15, 2008
Washington, DC

Things ain’t what they used to be. Adam and Eve expelled from Paradise. The Dodgers leaving Vero Beach. Warren Zevon dead. Reading down. The list goes on.

There’s a word for this type of melancholy, and it isn’t griping. It’s elegy, from the Greek elegos, meaning a poem lamenting a bygone era or someone lost. For as long as there have been people to say it, there have been people saying how soft we all used to have it — back when publishing was a gentleman’s profession, when ballplayers didn’t juice, when fire didn’t make the cave walls all sooty. Not many people know this, but right after the Big Bang, guys said to a bartender, “Sure was nicer when all matter was compressed into a single point no larger than this shotglass.”

The Big Read author John Steinbeck interrogated the impulse to lazy elegy in his other triple-decker classic besides The Grapes of Wrath, the elegiacally named East of Eden. In it the sheriff’s deputy and his boss are riding across the valley to grill Steinbeck’s hero, Adam Trask, about how his monstrous wife, Cathy, happened to shoot him in the shoulder. The deputy looks out at the land and says — with Steinbeck’s great ear picking up every last word — “Christ, I wish they hadn’t killed off all the grizzly bears. In eighteen-eighty my grandfather killed one up by Pleyto weighed eighteen hundred pounds.”

Steinbeck’s gift is to put into the deputy’s mouth a nostalgia that most of us feel at one time or another, and then to undercut it immediately. Sure, Julius misses the now-extinct California grizzly — but maybe if his own family hadn’t been so quick with a Remington, there might still be one or two left. Steinbeck doesn’t ridicule our elegiac reflex, but he’s far too smart not to point out the hypocrisy that often thrums under it like an aquifer.

Then again.

For almost as long as folks have been saying how soft we all used to have it way back when, there have been others who’ll say that’s a crock. They insist that everybody always thinks we’re living in, to invoke Thomas Pynchon, “the spilled, the broken world.” They like to write opinion pieces with elegiac quotes about how the automobile has ruined everything, or how insipid television is, and then – whoa, Nelly! – try to make you feel like an idiot for not guessing that the quote in question was written in 1910 or 1940, respectively. In other words, the world can’t be getting worse because folks thought the world was getting worse even when it was better, so how bad can it be?

Alas, there’s a logical flaw in this anti-elegy argument that wants exposing. Isn’t it just possible that the world has always been getting worse? That things seemed worse a hundred years ago because they really were, but that things seem worse now because they’re even worse than they were?

To which anyone might be forgiven for saying, “Thanks, and you have a nice day too.” I’m arguing no particular brief for either side. But it’s interesting to note that of the 21 fine novels to date on the Big Read list, elegies are conspicuous by their near absence.

Poetry may lend itself to elegy more than novels do, or than good novels do. As I look down the Big Read list, I see a lot more stories about what lousier lives we used to lead. A Lesson Before Dying, The Heart Is a Lonely Hunter, The Shawl, The Age of Innocence – not a lot of nostalgia there. Only the pretty happy childhoods in The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, and My Ántonia’s sweet prairie eventually plowed under – have a look at it now, Willa, and see what “plowed under” really looks like – sound like wistful sighs over yesteryear.

In a weird way, Fahrenheit 451 is the most elegiac book on the list. It warns us of a dystopian future without books, a future whose roots could already be glimpsed when Bradbury wrote it half a century ago. If anything, Montag’s story aches with a kind of nostalgia for the present — a useful phrase, into which my preliminary provenance inquiries have proven inconclusive.

Dubious speculation about this expression, or about all things elegiac, are most emphatically welcome at kipend@arts.gov. And now, this post isn’t what it used to be. It used to be unfinished…

Willa Cather’s Prairie and Edith Wharton’s Home

Friday, August 24th, 2007

August 24, 2007
Washington, DC

When I was in graduate school at San Diego State University, I took a seminar in Edith Wharton and Willa Cather that changed my life. The course changed me because it provided the chance to concentrate on the best novels of two truly exceptional writers; to compare their controversial lives and literary themes; and to do it with an excellent teacher and enthusiastic classmates — what could be better for a “Literature Specialist” like me?

But there was something missing. As a child growing up in North Hollywood, California, the childhood places of Willa Cather (Virginia’s Shenandoah Valley) and Edith Wharton (New York City, Italy, and France) seemed fascinating and exotic. Cather’s family moved to Red Cloud, Nebraska, when she was ten, and Wharton bought land in Lenox, Massachusetts, to build her home, The Mount. Red Cloud and Lenox seemed as far away as Uganda or Switzerland to a young girl like me who traveled often in the realms of gold, but never on planes or trains. Yet because of the sensual, vivid way these writers described the plains of Nebraska, the valleys of Virginia, the bustle of New York, and the hills of Western Massachusetts in their fiction, all these unfamiliar places felt familiar through my imagination.

“This place of ours is really beautiful… the stillness, the greenness, the exuberance of my flowers, the perfume of my hemlock woods, & above all the moonlight nights on my big terrace, overlooking the lake…” –Edith Wharton in a letter to Bernard Berenson, August 6, 1911 Photo by Erika Koss

I don’t usually make New Year’s resolutions, but for 2007 it was time to make the journey to Cather’s beloved prairie and Wharton’s first real home. My work on the Big Read materials for My Ántonia and The Age of Innocence fueled this abiding desire to travel to Red Cloud and Lenox. But for reasons more personal than professional, I suddenly needed to physically inhabit these places that transformed two of my favorite writers — if only for a couple days.

Reader, imagine my joy to travel from Washington, DC, to Red Cloud, Nebraska, in March, where Betty Kort, Executive Director of the Cather Foundation, and I took a walk through Cather’s prairie. Then imagine my delight to travel to Lenox, Massachusetts, in July with Betty, where we met Stephanie Copeland, the President and CEO of the Mount, and ate lunch on that “big terrace” that faces Wharton’s splendidly restored gardens, under her unconventional green and white awning, which protected us from the unexpected rain. Imagine my excitement, when the wonderful Mount librarian, Molly McPhee, took Betty and me for a private tour into Wharton’s restored library, where I was allowed to hold her copy of the French translation of The Age of Innocence — bound by Wharton in green and yellow with “EW” inscribed on its leather cover! Imagine my pleasure when I slept for two nights in a beautiful home set in the quiet forest not far from the Mount, finally understanding why Wharton left her fashionable New York City and Newport homes to design, build, and decorate an isolated country estate of her own creation.

“If there was a road, I could not make it out in the faint starlight. There was nothing but land…I had never before looked up at the sky when there was not a familiar mountain ridge against it. But this was the complete dome of heaven.” — from Willa Cather’s 1918 novel, My Ántonia Photo by Erika Koss

I hope Big Read organizers for My Ántonia and The Age of Innocence will consider such a pilgrimage, and that high school teachers anywhere near Red Cloud or Lenox can afford to tackle the frustrating tasks of buses, chaperones, permission slips, and classroom time missed on required exams to give their students a first-hand experience with the sites that shaped these great American writers.

For although my passport now holds stamps from countries as far as Uganda and Switzerland, two places that I love best are right here in America.