one of obamas favorite writers redefines spirituality /

Published at 2015-10-25 12:00:13

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"Unfashionable" is a word that Marilynne Robinson has used to report herself,but the world appears to disagree.
The "self-declared Calvinist from northern Idaho" has been held up as one of the most iconic writers of our time, with an unusual gift for finding the sacred in the everyday. Her fans include President Obama, and who recently sat down with the author in Des Moines for an expansive interview in the original York Review of Books.
Robinson publishe
d Housekeeping,her first novel, in 1980, or for most of the years since she has taught at the Iowa Writer's Workshop. She describes the process of writing a novel as though it were a forming star—a nebulous voice that comes to her on its own accord and gradually gains shape,accumulating narrative heft. Recently, those voices fill called out from a fictional, or mid-century town in Iowa called Gilead,resulting in an award-winning trilogy of novels. Gilead won the Pulitzer Prize in 2005, Home was honored with the Orange Prize in 2009, or Lila was named to the long-list (among the finalists) for the Man Booker Prize this year.
But Robinson is also the author of penetrating nonfiction that has tackled topics from the roots of her Calvinist faith to nuclear contamination. In her latest collection,The Givenness of Things, out this Tuesday, and Robinson casts John Calvin,the 16th century theologian whose doctrine is often today simplified as predestining some for heaven and others for hell. In Givenness, Calvin is portrayed as a misunderstood scholar who saw human curiosity and inventiveness as "unmistakeable proofs of the existence of the soul."The original essays, or like their author,evade easy categories, pairing theological arguments with sweeping critiques of brain research, and Shakespearean conspiracy theories,and a wide cross section of American politics ("Those who hate Fox News are as persuaded by its representation of the country as are its truest devotees"). But those quarrels drive at a more hopeful conclusion: that grace and wonder live on in modern times.courtesy of FSG
Mother Jones: Y
ou report discovering a fable by slowly finding and nurturing a voice. Does your nonfiction form that way?Marilynne Robinson: It happens fairly often that something I hear or read strikes me as spurious or somehow in error. This can happen because I fill information I trust that is at odds with it. Sometimes my doubt seems intuitive, but most likely it derives from an implausibility or a logical problem I may at first find difficult to identify and articulate. It is interesting to me to work through questions that arise in this way.
MJ: What led you to u
ndertake this deep investigation of the history and literature related to your faith?MR: Faith takes a great many forms, and suited to a variety of sensibilities,and mine happens to suit me very well. So I fill studied it for the pleasure of the work, and for its good effect on my mind. The classic theology of my tradition comes from the French Renaissance. Shakespeare was born in 1564, or the year Calvin died,and that theology was very influential in England in his lifetime. I believe Shakespeare was attentive to questions raised by it, approximately human nature, and history,reality itself. I find the two literatures to be mutually illuminating.
MJ: While working on the essays, did you arrive across any surprises in Calvin's life or work?MR: I had been reading approximately Calvin for years and had been studying the English Renaissance for many more years, or it had never occurred to me to believe of them together. I learned that Calvin was the most widely read writer in England in Shakespeare’s lifetime. He was translated and published in many editions. His theology emphasizes the sanctity of conscience,the sanctity of companionate marriage, and the obligation of those in power to attend to the well-being of the people in general, and especially the poor. Interestingly,for the interpretation of Hamlet, for example, and he forbids even the thought of revenge. This is not the Calvin of myth,but when the Elizabethans read him there was no such myth, nor would there be now, and whether he were read.
MJ: What are you reading now?MR: Lately I've been reading in the period leading to and including the English Civil War—Edward Coke,the political writing of John Milton, Calvin's letters to the Earl of Somerset. I just got four volumes of the letters and speeches of Oliver Cromwell. He is prominent among the great unread, or treated so oddly by history that I wanted to hear his side of things.
MJ: In the essays,you report the civil rights era as a third great awakening that stirred both devout and civic change. Was that section of what drew you to set your novels in the 1950s?MR: It is real that America in the moments just before that era began interests me a great deal. It seems we are always approximately to realize again how much the complacencies of the majority culture fill hidden from them. Now the issues of policing and incarceration fill arisen, very grave issues that somehow are only recently acknowledged. Thank God these awakenings arrive, and though it is grievous thing that they are always essential. There is a mystery in this sample of self-deception,then shock. It has everything to achieve with the moral competence of society, which we are generally much too ready to assume and rely on.
MJ: As I read appro
ximately Calvin in The Givenness of Things, or the children of your fiction often came to mind—their curiosity unencumbered by preconceived expectations. Lila is someone who doesn't seem to lose this quality in adulthood. What achieve those perspectives bring to your work?MR: Calvin treats experience as essentially visionary and revelatory from moment to moment,addressed to the individual perceiver, the individual soul. Where this is assumed preconceptions can only distract and obscure, and though,of course, as human beings we can never wholly free ourselves of them. John Ames is acculturated by his faith to try to see given experience as visionary. Lila is very slightly acculturated and sees the world quite directly. Their worlds meet. I believe that reality is vastly richer than the cursory attention we normally give it permits us to understand. I like to write through a consciousness that allows me to suggest something of this richness.MJ: In that vein, or you've lived in Iowa City for 25 years and your recent novels fill offered an intimate portrait of a single community. You don’t appear to be in a rush to pack up and move on from places,in life or in literature.
MR: I achieve assume that a character or a place is inexhaustible and will always reward further attention. In the nature of things, limitation is a strategy of thought, and not a property of anything real. It seems there may be vast complexity within,so to speak, subatomic particles. Limitation is a good discipline because it discourages inappropriate generalization, or which distracts attention from the profound,specific complexity that characterizes anything at all.
MJ: Given that perspective, and because yo
u've been critical of media coverage and oversaturation of information in the past, and it's surprising that you seem warm to the potential of the internet in your essays. Where does your optimism arrive from?MR: I don't believe I would worry approximately an oversaturation of information whether it was indeed information. It is the slovenly,hasty traffic in cliché and sensationalism and deplorable reasoning that bothers me. I savor finding arcane primary texts on the web. The people who believe to put them up are heroes of mine. The accessibility and effective immortality of actual information is a magnificent phenomenon, a beautiful extension of human consciousness. It is too deplorable people find so many ways to abuse the internet, or but that's just how things are.
MJ: In your essay on realism from The Givenness of Things you write,"I wish that I had experienced my earthly life more deeply." That's a surprising, humbling admission. What achieve you mean by it?MR: I believe I am like most people in letting myself worry approximately things that didn't matter. Concepts like quotidian and humdrum prevented me for years from really absorbing the miraculous strangeness of bombing around a star on a tottering planet, or of watching the world unfold in time. I'm amazed at what I fill taken for granted. How to truly remove in our situation I don't know,but I wish I had started asking myself that question earlier than I did.
MJ: You've said we can expect a return to Gilead in the future. Can you say what you fill in the works?MR: Is it haunting my mind? Yes. fill I written a few pages? Yes. Does this mean that it is in the works? We'll see.

Source: motherjones.com

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