REBECCA SOLNIT WEBCAST

To be a young woman is to face your own annihilation in innumerable ways or to flee it or the knowledge of it, or all these things at once. “The death of a beautiful woman is, unquestionably, the most poetical topic in the world,” said Edgar Allan Poe, who must not have imagined it from the perspective of women who prefer to live. I was trying not to be the subject of someone else’s poetry and not to get killed; I was trying to find a poetics of my own, with no maps, no guides, not much to go on. They might have been out there, but I hadn’t located them yet.

The struggle to find a poetry in which your survival rather than your defeat is celebrated, perhaps to find your own voice to insist upon that, or to at least find a way to survive amidst an ethos that relishes your erasures and failures is work that many and perhaps most young women have to do. In those early years, I did not do it particularly well or clearly, but I did it ferociously.

I was often unaware of what and why I was resisting, and so my defiance was murky, incoherent, erratic. Those years of not succumbing, or of succumbing like someone sinking into a morass and then flailing to escape, again and again, come back to me now as I see young women around me fighting the same battles. The fight wasn’t just to survive bodily, though that could be intense enough, but to survive as a person possessed of rights, including the right to participation and dignity and a voice. More than survive, then: to live. — Rebecca Solnit, from Recollections of My Nonexistence

On Monday, Solnit will join Brit Marling on a City Arts & Lectures webcast.

See link below for details.

REBECCA SOLNIT and BRIT MARLING IN CONVERSATION

Monday, May 11.

7:30 pm on the West Coast; 10 pm East Coast.

REBECCA SOLNIT—RECOLLECTIONS OF MY NONEXISTENCE

(New York: Viking, 2020).

Excerpt © Rebecca Solnit.

From top: Jim Herrington, Rebecca Solnit; Rebecca Solnit, Recollections of My Nonexistence, Viking, 2020; Brit Marling in Another Earth (2011), courtesy and © the writer-producer-actor and Fox Searchlight; “Phrenological San Francisco,” in Rebecca Solnit, Invisible City: A San Francisco Atlas, University of California Press, 2010, maps by Ben Pease and Shizue Seigel, design by Lia Tjandra. Images courtesy and © the author, the photographers, the cartographers, the designers, the University of California Press, and Viking.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.