Paul Fulcher's Reviews > Blue Self-Portrait
Blue Self-Portrait
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by
Paul Fulcher's review
bookshelves: indy-presses-2018, 2017, republic-of-consciousness-2018, les-fugitives
Jun 01, 2017
bookshelves: indy-presses-2018, 2017, republic-of-consciousness-2018, les-fugitives
Deservedly part of the shortlist for the 2017 Republic of Consciousness Prize for 'gorgeous prose and hardcore literary fiction' from small, independent presses.
Schoenberg or Eisler or Brecht ... the resistance to collective happiness put up by all artists classified as degenerate and persecuted by happiness even in their nightmares.
Les Fugitives is another of the UK’s wonderful small independent presses, one with a very specific remit: to publish "Short, new writing by award-winning francophone female authors previously unavailable in English or in the UK."
Their highest profile release so far has come from Jeffrey Zuckerman's much-lauded translation of Ananda Devi's Eve out of Her Ruins, which, in its US edition published by Deep Vellum, recently won the CLMP Firecracker Award (for Independently and Self-Published fiction), as well as making the shortlist for the illustrious Best Translated Book Award and for the Albertine Prize (for translated contemporary French fiction) .
Blue Self-Portrait, translated by Sophie Lewis from Noémi Lefebvre's 2009 French original L’autoportrait bleu, is their first new release of 2017.
The title of the novel is taken from Arnold Schönberg's Blaues Selbstportait
The story unfolds in an interior monologue by our narrator, a women on a 90 minute flight from Germany back to her hometown Paris, with her sister, ostensibly reading the correspondence between Thomas Mann and Theodor Adorno, but primarily reflecting on their trip to Berlin:
J’affichais une sérénité que j’admirais de l’extérieur, je suis forte comme fille, je me disais dans l’avion, d’afficher une sérénité si sereine, n’en revenais pas de me voir aussi paisible, quasiment paissant et non pas hurlant comme une vache dont on aurait prélevé le veau, qui n’aurait que ses pauvres sentiments bovins maternels, l’un n’empêche pas l’autre, pour meugler à mort et personne pour lui répondre. Je lisais donc en paix apparente ces fameuses lettres de Theodor W. Adorno à Thomas Mann et réciproquement, tandis que ma sœur avait les yeux fixés sur les aérofreins et me racontait des histoires de pilotage, de puissance masculine et de folie volante.
I feigned serenity and admired the exterior effect, for a girl I’m pretty tough, I thought to myself in the plane, projecting such serene serenity, couldn’t get over seeing myself so much at ease, practically meadow-grazing certainly not bellowing like a cow whose calf has been kidnapped, only her poor bovine maternal feelings left to nurse, the one doesn’t eliminate the other, to moo herself to death and nobody there to answer. So evidently at ease I was reading these legendary letters from Adorno to Mann and vice versa while my sister, eyes riveted on the air brakes, was telling me tales of great pilots, of masculine might and airborne derring-do.
In particular, she reflects on her relationship with a composer and pianist there, and, in turn, his own obsession with both the twelve-tone scale of Schoenberg, but, more importantly, his resistance to collective happiness and the relationship between music and the Nazi regime, both the resistance of certain artists but the significance that Heydrich's father was himself a composer.
The obsession with music theory has strong echoes of Eszter in Krasznahorkai's The Melancholy of Resistance, an author, in turn, strongly influenced by Thomas Bernhard. And Lefebvre's prose has very strong echoes of Bernhard (except the narrator trains the scorn on herself), such as this passage where she regrets her unflattering comments on the pianist's old car:
He's obliged to accept it, the appellation world-class pianist, simply forced to swallow the irony in that title and to face the face that for me, Miss Bulletproof herself, knowing nothing of the dynamics of pleasure, a car like his must be the object of jocularity, even ridicule, while for him nothing of the sort, reigning Miss Immortal, I trample anti-commercial values without restraint and deny the possibility of any attachment so deep, powerful, so authentic, to this car and no other, as to be practically in the pianist' s DNA, when the same pianist was driving this very banger (though world-class in his eyes) through the fields and closes of that erstwhile republic, heading for Neuhardenberg Castle, in other words, he was touring about the open-country, joyously driving in the sub-sublime and frozen landscape of the Bradenburg backwoods, at the far edge of reunited Germany and a mere ten kilometres from Poland, a Brandenburg castle then a Prussian one then Nazi them Communist and then returned to its heirs and state-subsidised into a space of high unified German culture, the superbly restored castle of Neuhardenberg as described in the leaflet, the hallowed place to which the pianist was driving at the wheel of that altogether world-class car the company of which alone could make him whole, to see the exhibition 'Music and the Third Reich'.
[...]
Forgetting a single Heydrich, father or son, would have immediate consequences for his interpretation of Beethoven and Liszt, the pianist said to whoever would listen, immediate consequences for his composition and for everything else, you can't play any of that romantic, so-called classical music, as if the Heydrichs had not existed, he would say giving his angelic smile, before launching into Beethoven, without letting up he would explain in his polite and polite and respectful manner to the Auditorium audience which was there to listen to classical music and not to hear a pianist saying that to play Beethoven you must not only know Beethoven but also the Heydrichs, not only Heydrich the son but Heydrich the father too, the composer, der Komposer with a big K, a second-rate capital letter composer nonetheless a craftsman of German music, you do follow my meaning, as director of the conservatorium, the pianist explained to the girl who was keen to listen, and thus director of musical minds, and this instructor of young people with bright futures such as Germany was mass-producing at the time, instructors to the musical youth that would only, from one day to the next, turn into Hitler Youth, verstehst du?
The translation is by Sophie Lewis, formerly Senior Editor at And Other Stories edit fiction for And Other Stories but also for other publishers, including Peirene Press and Tilted Axis Press. She has said:
désinvolture)
Lewis provides a very helpful translator's afterword where she explains some key word choices e.g. translating the narrator's self-description as 'désinvolture', which contains elements of nonchalance, insouciance, devilmaycareism, and happy-go-lucky, as 'not-caring.' She also highlights the striking use of repeated leitmotifs is the text: "accompaniment, counter-phrase, nice and niceness, shame and shamelessness, legs knotted and unknotted, overviews of waterways, criticisms of cars, cows' lowing, flute-playing and many more."
Overall highly recommended and a book I plan to revisit.
Thanks to Les Fugitives for the ARC.
For further reviews see:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show... and
https://triumphofthenow.com/2017/06/0...
Schoenberg or Eisler or Brecht ... the resistance to collective happiness put up by all artists classified as degenerate and persecuted by happiness even in their nightmares.
Les Fugitives is another of the UK’s wonderful small independent presses, one with a very specific remit: to publish "Short, new writing by award-winning francophone female authors previously unavailable in English or in the UK."
Their highest profile release so far has come from Jeffrey Zuckerman's much-lauded translation of Ananda Devi's Eve out of Her Ruins, which, in its US edition published by Deep Vellum, recently won the CLMP Firecracker Award (for Independently and Self-Published fiction), as well as making the shortlist for the illustrious Best Translated Book Award and for the Albertine Prize (for translated contemporary French fiction) .
Blue Self-Portrait, translated by Sophie Lewis from Noémi Lefebvre's 2009 French original L’autoportrait bleu, is their first new release of 2017.
The title of the novel is taken from Arnold Schönberg's Blaues Selbstportait
The story unfolds in an interior monologue by our narrator, a women on a 90 minute flight from Germany back to her hometown Paris, with her sister, ostensibly reading the correspondence between Thomas Mann and Theodor Adorno, but primarily reflecting on their trip to Berlin:
J’affichais une sérénité que j’admirais de l’extérieur, je suis forte comme fille, je me disais dans l’avion, d’afficher une sérénité si sereine, n’en revenais pas de me voir aussi paisible, quasiment paissant et non pas hurlant comme une vache dont on aurait prélevé le veau, qui n’aurait que ses pauvres sentiments bovins maternels, l’un n’empêche pas l’autre, pour meugler à mort et personne pour lui répondre. Je lisais donc en paix apparente ces fameuses lettres de Theodor W. Adorno à Thomas Mann et réciproquement, tandis que ma sœur avait les yeux fixés sur les aérofreins et me racontait des histoires de pilotage, de puissance masculine et de folie volante.
I feigned serenity and admired the exterior effect, for a girl I’m pretty tough, I thought to myself in the plane, projecting such serene serenity, couldn’t get over seeing myself so much at ease, practically meadow-grazing certainly not bellowing like a cow whose calf has been kidnapped, only her poor bovine maternal feelings left to nurse, the one doesn’t eliminate the other, to moo herself to death and nobody there to answer. So evidently at ease I was reading these legendary letters from Adorno to Mann and vice versa while my sister, eyes riveted on the air brakes, was telling me tales of great pilots, of masculine might and airborne derring-do.
In particular, she reflects on her relationship with a composer and pianist there, and, in turn, his own obsession with both the twelve-tone scale of Schoenberg, but, more importantly, his resistance to collective happiness and the relationship between music and the Nazi regime, both the resistance of certain artists but the significance that Heydrich's father was himself a composer.
The obsession with music theory has strong echoes of Eszter in Krasznahorkai's The Melancholy of Resistance, an author, in turn, strongly influenced by Thomas Bernhard. And Lefebvre's prose has very strong echoes of Bernhard (except the narrator trains the scorn on herself), such as this passage where she regrets her unflattering comments on the pianist's old car:
He's obliged to accept it, the appellation world-class pianist, simply forced to swallow the irony in that title and to face the face that for me, Miss Bulletproof herself, knowing nothing of the dynamics of pleasure, a car like his must be the object of jocularity, even ridicule, while for him nothing of the sort, reigning Miss Immortal, I trample anti-commercial values without restraint and deny the possibility of any attachment so deep, powerful, so authentic, to this car and no other, as to be practically in the pianist' s DNA, when the same pianist was driving this very banger (though world-class in his eyes) through the fields and closes of that erstwhile republic, heading for Neuhardenberg Castle, in other words, he was touring about the open-country, joyously driving in the sub-sublime and frozen landscape of the Bradenburg backwoods, at the far edge of reunited Germany and a mere ten kilometres from Poland, a Brandenburg castle then a Prussian one then Nazi them Communist and then returned to its heirs and state-subsidised into a space of high unified German culture, the superbly restored castle of Neuhardenberg as described in the leaflet, the hallowed place to which the pianist was driving at the wheel of that altogether world-class car the company of which alone could make him whole, to see the exhibition 'Music and the Third Reich'.
[...]
Forgetting a single Heydrich, father or son, would have immediate consequences for his interpretation of Beethoven and Liszt, the pianist said to whoever would listen, immediate consequences for his composition and for everything else, you can't play any of that romantic, so-called classical music, as if the Heydrichs had not existed, he would say giving his angelic smile, before launching into Beethoven, without letting up he would explain in his polite and polite and respectful manner to the Auditorium audience which was there to listen to classical music and not to hear a pianist saying that to play Beethoven you must not only know Beethoven but also the Heydrichs, not only Heydrich the son but Heydrich the father too, the composer, der Komposer with a big K, a second-rate capital letter composer nonetheless a craftsman of German music, you do follow my meaning, as director of the conservatorium, the pianist explained to the girl who was keen to listen, and thus director of musical minds, and this instructor of young people with bright futures such as Germany was mass-producing at the time, instructors to the musical youth that would only, from one day to the next, turn into Hitler Youth, verstehst du?
The translation is by Sophie Lewis, formerly Senior Editor at And Other Stories edit fiction for And Other Stories but also for other publishers, including Peirene Press and Tilted Axis Press. She has said:
I love the visionary sensations I sometimes get as I work between languages, seeing how they tessellate or shadow each other, or how they diverge.(see https://caroltranslation.com/2017/06/...
désinvolture)
Lewis provides a very helpful translator's afterword where she explains some key word choices e.g. translating the narrator's self-description as 'désinvolture', which contains elements of nonchalance, insouciance, devilmaycareism, and happy-go-lucky, as 'not-caring.' She also highlights the striking use of repeated leitmotifs is the text: "accompaniment, counter-phrase, nice and niceness, shame and shamelessness, legs knotted and unknotted, overviews of waterways, criticisms of cars, cows' lowing, flute-playing and many more."
Overall highly recommended and a book I plan to revisit.
Thanks to Les Fugitives for the ARC.
For further reviews see:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show... and
https://triumphofthenow.com/2017/06/0...
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Reading Progress
June 1, 2017
– Shelved
June 1, 2017
– Shelved as:
to-read
June 8, 2017
– Shelved as:
indy-presses-2018
June 9, 2017
–
Started Reading
June 12, 2017
– Shelved as:
2017
June 12, 2017
–
Finished Reading
December 10, 2017
– Shelved as:
republic-of-consciousness-2018
December 8, 2019
– Shelved as:
les-fugitives
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Greg
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Jun 13, 2017 10:44AM
Nice review, sounds fascinating!
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This book was specifically recommended to me by my contact at Camden Lock books this week (December 14 2017)
She has great taste. Although I found this book a little too technical first time round I am looking forward to revisiting it.
My recent revisit found it a lot funnier than I remembered but also a lot more poignant. I increased my rating of it as a result.
I am about to start it again - I feel like ideally its a book which should be read on a short haul plane flight - but mine all tend to be long haul.