Friday, December 30, 2011

bonne anniversaire

 Marilyn as Clara Bow for Life magazine

So I'm thinking here today about two birthdays. One, I turned 34 today. I am one year away from a personal scary age (all the 5s and 10s are scary to me, I am one of those people who mourn and turn inwards on birthdays, immersing myself in all of these philosophical inquiries about identity and life, probably too because it's the day before the end of the year). It is strange to celebrate a birthday when one is technically unemployed - in some ways I feel I'm accomplishing what I want to so far, as a writer, or feel okay where I'm at,  in other ways I feel I still have to figure out how to basically survive at life. I am seriously considering enrolling as an undergraduate at the university here in the fall, to intensely take languages and see if I can maybe get into a comp lit program here, also because of a fierce desire to live abroad, or at least travel more abroad, and also to translate. I am thinking of taking intense French and German in the summer, I also want to take: Swedish, Italian, Portuguese (Portuguese for Lispector, Swedish because of the amazing-sounding women writers Johannes Goransson writes about.) I know it might seem to late to embark on these endeavors, but I've always been a late bloomer. If I do reenroll as an undergrad I also want to potentially take world religion classes, or at least go to a temple, as in my twenties I learned my mother was  Jewish and I've never even been inside of a temple. More goals, some surface, others vague: to finish or figure out my American Fritzl triptych; to begin work on my post-feminist essays set in the South, which will involve rereading all of Kathy Acker and spending time in the Acker archive at Duke; to finish doing readings for Green Girl and embark on the Heroines tour without having it eat my soul; to continue to grow my hair out so that I look like St. Vincent or Maya Deren (my hair's like an inch long now, it'll take a while); oh, to fucking get some PAYING work here. Also: in 2012 I will try my damnedest to not read anything toxic or negative on the Internet (especially about anything I have written). I will try not to get into any more Internet altercations. They are exhausting and draining.

Tomorrow it will also be the two year anniversary of Frances Farmer is My Sister. Two years ago tomorrow, on December 31, 2009, I was bored in Akron, Ohio, and had just the day before turned 32, and was reading Tropic of Cancer again for the first time since I was in my early 20s, and wanted to talk to someone about it, and thought, hmm, I should start writing essays for such-and-such-a-place, I liked this idea, of trying to write essays about literature, and instead I opened up a Blogger account and John quickly put together the header with Frances Farmer kicking and screaming and I started typing into a void, not really editing myself in any way, not even really understanding the subculture or subsubcultures of the Interwebs. I wrote these posts fueled not like Kerouac on speed and split pea, but by a sort of anarchy and fervent belief in my own anonymity. Then one or two months later Chris Kraus contacted me about maybe trying to write a book about the women of modernism for Semiotext(e)  (that sounds like a calendar: Djuna would be January, of course, Jean Rhys would be April, no Vivien(ne), would be crueller). And that's that. Then my blog totally sucked and has been limping along broken and barking out the quotidian the next one year and 7 months while I freaked out and tried to write a book that combined criticism and memoir.  I'm kidding. Kind of.


I have been putting together a list of my favorite posts of the past two years, I'll post it soon.

I hope the New Year brings you anarchy or calm, whatever you desire.

11 comments:

  1. happy birthday Kate Zambreno. May the year bring languages, a temple, love, travel and American Fritzl and archive fever and dancing in the kitchen and a few miracles to you!!!!!!!!

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  2. Hi, I just discovered you and like you a lot because you like Kraus and Lispector a lot. I don't know much of your history, though, and this post was nice to read for that. I'm really appreciating the writing you're doing here. Please don't think "my blog totally sucked and has been limping along." I only know your recent posts, and they've been pretty great. Perhaps I should go back in time? ;)

    "Then one or two months later Chris Kraus contacted me about maybe trying to write a book about the women of modernism for Semiotext(e)"
    Then I got to the above sentence and DID YOU JUST PLOTZ WHEN THAT HAPPENED? I've been hunting around the internet for an email address for her, somewhere, anywhere, just so I could tell her how much I Love Dick and Torpor have meant to me. I never did find one. So, and I know this sounds weird, but if you're still in contact with her, can you just pass along that simple message?

    I hope you keep blogging and Heronies sounds great: I'm looking forward to it!

    Cheers!
    PANIC

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  3. Hi Kate. I recently came across this blog and have enjoyed the discussion immensely. I work as a protein scientist but study philosophy, literature, and language independently. It's nice to be able to 'connect' online with others who share these interests. Thank you so much! I hope you choose to keep it going and look forward to possibly contributing some to the discussions. Best wishes for a great 2012!

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  4. Dear Bhanu Kapil. Thank you. You are such a remarkably generous writer and friend - I'm so glad to know you.

    Hi PANIC! Yes I was nervous and thrilled. But CK is definitely the model of a writer who's super generous and supportive of younger writers, not all dismissive and devouring like some can be. I had introduced myself to her by sending her my manuscript of Green Girl before, and she also blurbed my first book. Will certainly pass along your ardor for I LOVE DICK, one I certainly share - but also maybe - friend her on Facebook?

    Thanks Andreas! Glad to see you here!

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  5. Just found this blog (through your great post on Marie Calloway, which I won't hash over again, all good stuff)

    Love for Lispector will keep me reeling back, that, and I had randomly put Green Girl on my big bad reading list for this coming year after hearing good things dotted about the internet.

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  6. Thanks! Good to see you here!

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  7. it is yr bday today?! happiest of birthdays kate! i hope it's been a beautiful one. we will celebrate four months after the fact on tour, with cake + st. vincent. xox

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  8. Hello--happy birthday! I'm in downtown Chicago and being very unfestive alas: I don't really know my way around and it's not balmy so being alone and potentially lost seems ugh-ugh but your bit on introspective year ends makes me feel a bit better about my unfestive stance. I hope all's well and of course say hello to John and Genet--does he still wear cute sweaters?

    There's an amazing and amazingly I think not lovely (I'm also very biased and believe she is likely the most over-rated looker in American history) Seven Year itch Marilyn statue on Michigan Ave which I don't remember from last time I was here. Ok I always write longish comments here I hope it's not hoggy/worst of male egotism.

    Happy New Years to you and The Francis Farmer community!

    adam strauss

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  9. thanks adam. you too. genet doesn't wear his sweater much anymore - i think he has a wool allergy, actually.

    if you're in downtown chicago - are you from there? if not you should take the blue line to damen/division and walk around...let me know if you want advice where to go. i'm not the biggest fan of downtown, chicago's all about the neighborhoods. although the intelligentsia coffee downtown next to the chicago cultural center is nice...as is the art institute, etc.

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  10. I adore the Art Institute--made myself look at stuff I wldnt normally first--and then to stuff I've loved since I was like five; I think that method worked well!

    A huge Carravagio which image-wise I guess I didn't love totally entranced me--those fabric folds via paint: whoa wow awesome! And some dude from the 18th century named Hubert something which was really "un-me" but I thought interesting.

    adam s

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