Doris Lessing - Let's write a novel! (1/26)

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 7 май 2017
  • To listen to more of Doris Lessing’s stories, go to the playlist: • Doris Lessing (Writer)
    British writer Doris Lessing (1919-2013) was awarded the 2007 Nobel Prize in Literature. Her novels include 'The Grass is Singing', 'The Golden Notebook', and five novels collectively known as 'Canopus in Argos'. [Listener: Christopher Sykes; date recorded: 2007].
    TRANSCRIPT: Well, The Grass is Singing was my first book. It was written in Southern Rhodesia... that is... Southern Rhodesia was before Mugabe and Zimbabwe. Now, I had been saying and behaving as if I were a writer; all I had done was in fact to write some short stories for South African magazines, and they weren't very good... they were rather smart and glossy, because that's what the magazines were like. And yet, the interesting thing people treated me as if I were really a writer; they were always bringing me their manuscripts, and things like that. And I would pronounce on them quite well, I suppose, really. That was only because of the amount I read. So there was a point at which I thought, well, enough of the talk, let's do it!
    Now, at that point I was working in a lawyer's office, not earning very much... it's a question of my... you know, what was I going to live on? Anyway, I marched in to my boss, Mr Hill, and said, 'I'm going to resign, and I'm going to write a novel'. Well there were hearty gales of laughter, of course, because why not? And at that point I was married to Godfrey Lessing. He was earning a living in a large variety of amazing ways, like the tobacco auctions in Salisbury. They're still going. People would get out there about five in the morning to work for the tobacco auctions... you earned a bit of extra money. And... we were all like that... we were all precarious earning money in various ways. So he said, what... he said, what a good idea!
    So I then got work at a... a profession which no longer exists... shorthand writers would go into the parliament - it was the same as our parliament - for 20 minutes, record what was said and come out and dictate to typists, one of whom was me... there was a bank of typists, and... which you earned quite a lot of money, actually. And then also, the same idea, the same shorthand writers would go into government commissions and dictate to typists. One of these men was a man called Mr Lamb, who... now there you are, you see I'm going off into the distant past of... of South African history suddenly... Milner's Kindergarten, I bet you've never heard of Milner's Kindergarten. He had a bank of very bright young men, of whom Mr Lamb when young was one, and he'd ended up as a shorthand writer in the parliament - a very erudite, well-read man. People like that were so... stuck out like sore thumbs in that culture, I can tell you.
    Anyway, he would... I would go up to his house and type. A government commission on the recruitment of native labour, for example, the government commission on tsetse fly, the government commission... this kind of thing. Oh, the funniest one was the Kariba Dam, because half of the experts on the Kariba Dam said you couldn't build a Kariba Dam because there would be deep clefts in the earth, and the water would just go gurgling away down into the depths of the world and vanish completely. I mean, I typed all this stuff!
  • РазвлеченияРазвлечения

Комментарии • 9

  • @lmr3639
    @lmr3639 Месяц назад

    I wish she was still here.

  • @user-cr9yd2jq9t
    @user-cr9yd2jq9t 2 года назад +1

    I'm doing a presentation about her book "The Golden Notebook" and this series will help me a lot!! I'm interested to see the thoughts of such a great author. : -)

  • @dm-heart
    @dm-heart Месяц назад +1

    Captioning please!

  • @sisam356
    @sisam356 5 лет назад +1

    can someone please subtitle it

    • @webofstories
      @webofstories  5 лет назад +1

      Hello Silvia! Could you let us know why would you like this video subtitled and what language interests you? You may find a transcript below the video, does that help at all? Kind regards, Web of Stories

    • @luisaritosa9700
      @luisaritosa9700 2 года назад +1

      @@webofstories it would be ok if there were subtitles in English, thank you

  • @saeedzarfan4445
    @saeedzarfan4445 3 года назад

    Hi

  • @macclift9956
    @macclift9956 3 года назад +1

    There's a lot of ignorance when it comes to the rainbow nation and countries like it. Violence, not feelings of superiority, is usually the great divider; whether we like it or not, some cultures/races are on average more wired for violence than others. The "civilised" world chooses to ignore the thousands upon thousands of white crosses in what seems to be a bloodsoaked tyranny of the masses "democracy." Each cross represents a violent death! This is what happens when passive cultures that contribute very little to the violent crime statistics of the country, are forced, by those who live by coldly clinical hypothetical morality, to live in close proximity to cultures that send the per capita violent crime statistics of the country through the roof. Those who are smugly sanctimonious would rather watch whole cultures decimated over a period of time than admit that sometimes separation is about survival!