De Amerikaanse schrijver Dave Eggers werd geboren op 12 maart 1970 in Chicago. Zie ook mijn blog van 12 maart 2007. Zie ook mijn blog van 12 maart 2007 en ook mijn blog van 12 maart 2008.
Uit: You Shall Know Our Velocity!
I was talking to Hand, one of my two best friends, the one still alive, and we were planning to leave. At this point there were good days, good weeks, when we pretended that it was acceptable that Jack had lived at all, that his life had been, in its truncated way, complete. This wasn't one of those days. I was pacing and Hand knew I was pacing and knew what it meant. I paced like this when figuring or planning, and rolled my knuckles, and snapped my fingers softly and without rhythm, and walked from the western edge of the apartment, where I would lock and unlock the front door, and then east, to the back deck's glass sliding door, which I opened quickly, thrust my head through and shut again. Hand could hear the quiet roar of the door moving back and forth on its rail, but said nothing. The air was arctic and it was Friday afternoon and I was home, in the new blue flannel pajama pants I wore most days then, indoors or out. A stupid and nervous bird the color of feces fluttered to the feeder over the deck and ate the ugly mixed seeds I'd put in there for no reason and lately regretted--these birds would die in days and I didn't want to watch their flight or demise. This building warmed itself without regularity or equitable distribution to its corners, and my apartment, on the rear left upper edge, got its heat rarely and in bursts. Jack was twenty-six and died five months before and now Hand and I would leave for a while. I had my ass beaten two weeks ago by three shadows in a storage unit in Oconomowoc--it had nothing to do with Jack or anything else, really, or maybe it did, maybe it was distantly Jack's fault and immediately Hand's--and we had to leave for a while. I had scabs on my face and back and a rough pear-shaped bump on the crown of my head and I had this money that had to be disseminated and so Hand and I would leave. My head was a condemned church with a ceiling of bats but I swung from this dark mood to euphoria when I thought about leaving.
Dave Eggers (Chicago, 12 maart 1970)
De Amerikaanse dichteres en schrijfster Shihab Nye werd geboren op 12 maart 1952 in St. Louis, Missouri. Zij heeft een Palestijnse vader en een Amerikaanse moeder. Gedurende haar middelbare schooltijd woonde zij in Ramallah en in Jeruzalem. Zij studeerde daarna Engels en wereldreligies aan Trinity University in Texas. Nye publiceerde verschillende bundels, waaaronder You and Yours (2005) en 19 Varieties of Gazelle: Poems of the Middle East (2002).
Blood
"A true Arab knows how to catch a fly in his hands,"
my father would say. And he'd prove it,
cupping the buzzer instantly
while the host with the swatter stared.
In the spring our palms peeled like snakes.
True Arabs believed watermelon could heal fifty ways.
I changed these to fit the occasion.
Years before, a girl knocked,
wanted to see the Arab.
I said we didn't have one.
After that, my father told me who he was,
"Shihab"--"shooting star"--
a good name, borrowed from the sky.
Once I said, "When we die, we give it back?"
He said that's what a true Arab would say.
Today the headlines clot in my blood.
A little Palestinian dangles a truck on the front page.
Homeless fig, this tragedy with a terrible root
is too big for us. What flag can we wave?
I wave the flag of stone and seed,
table mat stitched in blue.
I call my father, we talk around the news.
It is too much for him,
neither of his two languages can reach it.
I drive into the country to find sheep, cows,
to plead with the air:
Who calls anyone civilized?
Where can the crying heart graze?
What does a true Arab do now?
Shihab Nye (St. Louis,12 maart 1952)
De Amerikaanse schrijver Jack Kerouac werd geboren op 12 maart 1922 in Lowell, in de Amerikaanse staat Massachusetts. Zie ook mijn blog van 12 maart 2007 en ook mijn blog van 12 maart 2008.
Uit: On The Road
Dean stands in the back, saying, 'God! Yes!' -- and clasping his hands in prayer and sweating. 'Sal, Slim knows time, he knows time.' Slim sits down at the piano and hits two notes, two C's, then two more, then one, then two, and suddenly the big burly bass-player wakes up from a reverie and realizes Slim is playing 'C-Jam Blues' and he slugs in his big forefinger on the string and the big booming beat begins and everybody starts rocking and Slim looks just as sad as ever, and they blow jazz for half an hour, and then Slim goes mad and grabs the bongos and plays tremendous rapid Cubana beats and yells crazy things in Spanish, in Arabic, in Peruvian dialect, in Egyptian, in every language he knows, and he knows innumerable languages. Finally the set is over; each set takes two hours. Slim Gaillard goes and stands against a post, looking sadly over everybody's head as people come to talk to him. A bourbon is slipped into his hand. 'Bourbon-orooni -- thank-you-ovauti ...' Nobody knows where Slim Gaillard is. Dean once had a dream that he was having a baby and his belly was all bloated up blue as he lay on the grass of a California hospital. Under a tree, with a group of colored men, sat Slim Gaillard. Dean turned despairing eyes of a mother to him. Slim said, 'There you go-orooni.' Now Dean approached him, he approached his God; he thought Slim was God; he shuffled and bowed in front of him and asked him to join us. 'Right-orooni,' says Slim; he'll join anybody but won't guarantee to be there with you in spirit. Dean got a table, bought drinks, and sat stiffly in front of Slim. Slim dreamed over his head. Every time Slim said, 'Orooni,' Dean said 'Yes!' I sat there with these two madmen. Nothing happened. To Slim Gaillard the whole world was just one big orooni.'
Jack Kerouac (12 maart 1922 21 oktober 1969)
De Amerikaanse schrijver Edward Albee werd geboren op 12 maart 1928 in Washington DC. Zie ook mijn blog van 12 maart 2007 en ook mijn blog van 12 maart 2008.
Uit: Which Theatre Is the Absurd One?
A theatre person of my acquaintance--a man whose judgement must be respected, though more for the infallibility of his intuition than for his reasoning--remarked just the other week, "The Theatre of the Absurd has had it; it's on its way out; it's through."
Now this, on the surface of it, seems to be a pretty funny attitude to be taking toward a theatre movement which has, only in the past couple of years, been impressing itself on the American public consciousness. Or is it? Must we judge that a theatre of such plays as Samuel Beckett's "Krapp's Last Tape," Jean Genet's "The Balcony" (both long, long runners off-Broadway) and Eugene Ionesco's "Rhinoceros"--which, albeit in a hoked-up production, had a substantial season on Broadway--has been judged by the theatre public and found wanting?
And shall we have to assume that The Theatre of the Absurd Repertory Company, currently playing at New York's off-Broadway Cherry Lane Theatre--presenting works by Beckett, Ionesco, Genet, Arrabal, Jack Richardson, Kenneth Koch and myself--being the first such collective representation of the movement in the United States, is also a kind of farewell to the movement? For that matter, just what is The Theatre of the Absurd?
Well, let me come at it obliquely. When I was told, about a year ago, that I was considered a member in good standing of The Theatre of the Absurd I was deeply offended. I was deeply offended because I had never heard the term before and I immediately assumed that it applied to the theatre uptown--Broadway.
Edward Albee (Washington DC, 12 maart 1928)
De Duitse schrijfster Kathrin Schmidt werd geboren op 12 maart 1958 in Gotha. Van 1976 tot 1981 studeerde zij psychologie in Jena, daarna was zij wetenschappelijk assistente in Leipzig en wetenschappelijk medewerkster aan het Institut für Vergleichende Sozialforschung in Berlijn. 1986/87 studeerde zij aan het Literaturinstituut "Johannes R. Becher". Na de val van de muur werd zij redactrice bij het vrouwenblas Ypsilon. Sinds 1994 is zij zelfstandig schrijfster.
Uit: Die Gunnar-Lennefsen-Expedition
Josepha Schlupfburgs Faible für Taschenkalender geht weit über jenes Maß hinaus, das sich aus bloßer Erwerbsarbeit ergeben könnte. Du steckst in den Kalender eine Ewigkeit, den du entblätterst bei Kaffee und Bodenfrost, murmelt sie, wenn ihre Nächte unter der Rassel eines vorsintflutlichen (falls der Leser das Wort Sintflut als Synonym für den letzten Krieg gelten zu lassen geneigt ist) Weckers regelmäßig dahinsterben, aller Schlaf einer splittrigen Scheibe Toast zum Opfer fällt und der dicke braune Aufguß der Marke Rondo Melange mindestens dreimal ihre Tasse füllt. In der Küche einer Wohnung übrigens, die Josepha Schlupfburg seit ihrem sechsten Lebensjahr mit ihrer Urgroßmutter Therese teilt, mehr in Freud denn in Leid - und doch durch die Not an Wohnungen gedrungen, seit sie erwachsen ist und gern ein Eigenes hätte, ihren Rhythmus zu finden. Gewohntem ergeben, steht die Druckerin Josepha Schlupfburg auch heute (wie eh und je) mit der fünften Stunde auf, zu der die alte Therese zum ersten Mal zur Toilette zu schlurfen pflegt. Die Außenwand bezeichneter Küche, die den Hintergrund des hier zu schildernden morgendlichen Aufbruchs abgibt, hat Josepha Schlupfburg mit exakt zweiundzwanzig bebilderten Kalendern behängt, deren erster aus dem Jahre ihrer Geburt stammt und wie die der darauffolgenden sechs Jahre von Thereses Hand mit nicht zu vergessenden Terminen, Geburts- und Namenstagen und einer Vielzahl kaum zu entschlüsselnder Zeichen, Kreuzchen und Punkte übersät worden ist. Vom Jahr ihres Schulbeginns an hat dann Josepha die Feder geführt und vermerkt, was zu vermerken ihr wichtig schien. Zu den Weihnachtsfesten brachte sich Therese den Inhabern der Buch- und Schreibwarengeschäfte als treue Kundin in Erinnerung: Sie kaufte Kalender. Die Küchenwand bietet Tier-, Zirkus-, Pferde-, Kunst-, Vogel-, Blumen-, Kirchen- und Frauenkalender, deren monatliche Seiten eine Plastspirale zusammenhält oder Papierleim. Josepha, die sich beim Frühstücken unbeobachtet weiß, hat sich mit den Jahren einen rituellen Spaß daraus gemacht, mittels der ihr innewohnenden magischen und Zeitverschiebungs-Kräfte am jeweils Ersten des Monats durch einen besonderen Klapp-Blick die entsprechende Seite aufzuschlagen.
Kathrin Schmidt (Gotha, 12 maart 1958)
De Duitse schrijfster Henrike Heiland werd geboren op 12 maart 1975 in Solms. Zie ook mijn blog van 12 maart 2008.
Uit: Späte Rache
Der Raum glich einer dieser Zellen in psychiatrischenAnstalten. Zellen, in denen man die Patienten einschließt, dieaggressiv gegen sich und andere sind. Wo die Wände mitweichem Polster verkleidet sind, so dass sich die Patientennicht verletzen können. Aber es war keine Gummizelle, in dieer sie gesperrt hatte. Der Raum war großzügiger als eine Zelle,und auch wenn die Wände gepolstert waren, der Boden warmit einem grauen, fleckigen Teppichboden ausgelegt.Außerdem gab es überall Steckdosen, und die Tür war keineZellentür. Aber auch sie war von innen mit schwerem,weichem Polster verkleidet. Das Schaumstoffpolster an denWänden war schäbig und dreckig.Es war dunkel. Der Raum hatte nur ein einziges Fenster,aber das führte nicht nach draußen. Es führte in einenanderen Raum. Und es war sowieso mit einem schwarzen Tuchabgeklebt, so dass kein Licht hindurchdringen konnte. Nurmanchmal, wenn er die Tür öffnete, kam Licht herein, unddann konnte sie sich etwas umsehen.
Henrike Heiland (Solms, 12 maart 1975)
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