Writer Annie Ernaux: "I'm nobody when I write." | Louisiana Channel

"Memory is my instrument and my element, my material", says French Nobel-prize winner Annie Ernaux. "I'm nobody when I write. I search. When I write, I know I have a woman's experience."
Ernaux's books are fictionalized memories depicting a woman's experiences. Her working-class background has influenced her writing: "I have a class defector experience", she says. "I have many other aspects that I don't know, which also influence my writing. And that's what is in my writing."
Even though Annie Ernaux writes from her memory, "I'm very surprised when I open a book, to say, "did I write that?" I can't say it was me because it's the version of me that wrote four or five years ago."
Ernaux keeps a personal diary: "It's the diary that gives the feeling of the person's persistence. I have many decades of diary behind me, and I can see an evolution. But at the same time, there's a hardcore which must be the being, that thing that resists. And that appears in the diary."
"You need to have a global vision. So, a book is also a fight against time. I have the vision of generations succeeding each other and falling into oblivion. Only prominent events remain characters. But I don't even imagine myself having a life beyond my human life", Ernaux states.
Writing in the past tense "translate the depth of time," Ernaux says. "This mutation of mankind is a fact, in my opinion. Perhaps if Proust hadn't, at some point, written about and explored that memory maybe it wouldn't have happened. But now, it's done. So that's one role of literature."
Addressing the times we live in, Annie Ernaux says: "One should always have three dimensions interiorized: the past and the memory of the past, the enjoyment of the present and the hope of the future. Now, we're tragically amputated of two dimensions. We're actually in "presentism"; the word even exists in French. Presentism. We only transmit present."
Annie Ernaux (born 1940) was born Annie Duchesne to a working-class family in Lillebonne, France. Ernaux is known for her lightly fictionalized memoirs written in spare, detached prose. Her work examines her memories, sometimes revisiting and reconstructing events in later works. Themes include her illegal abortion, her troubled marriage, her mother's decline from Alzheimer's, her love affairs during middle age, and her experience with cancer. Ernaux received the 2022 Nobel Prize for Literature for a work described as personal yet universal in depicting a woman living in the 20th and 21st centuries. 'A Girl's Story (2020), 'A Woman's Story (2003), 'A Man's Place (1992), and 'Simple Passion' (2003) are among Ernaux's most acclaimed works.
Matthias Dressler-Bredsdorff interviewed Annie Ernaux in May 2023 in Copenhagen.
Camera: Rasmus Quistgaard
Edit: Malte Bruun Fals
Produced by Christian Lund
Copyright: Louisiana Channel, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, 2023.
Copyright: Louisiana Channel, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, 2023. Louisiana Channel is supported by Den A.P. Møllerske Støttefond, Ny Carlsbergfondet, C.L. Davids Fond og Samling, and Fritz Hansen.
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Пікірлер: 12

  • @tinustinus571
    @tinustinus5719 ай бұрын

    I will sign the petition for saving "l'imparfait".🙂

  • @lucasgdrezes
    @lucasgdrezes9 ай бұрын

    I had never thought about it. It's weird thinking that people were excited and hopeful about the future at some point. We live in extreme anxiety and hopelessness in 2023.

  • @witchestoast8347
    @witchestoast83479 ай бұрын

    she's sooo full of life and beauty. thank you again

  • @MiaK06
    @MiaK069 ай бұрын

    So truly wonderful Your intelligent contents and conversations are always a bright spot in between so much immaterial content

  • @inesabassi6053
    @inesabassi60539 ай бұрын

    Magnifique cette réflexion sur l'imparfait

  • @tinustinus571
    @tinustinus5719 ай бұрын

    there is another very interesting French writer you should interview in this long format, this is Nicolas Mathieu.

  • @Dipesh_Nepal
    @Dipesh_Nepal8 ай бұрын

    Please interview Krisztina Tóth!

  • @mamumonkan
    @mamumonkan9 ай бұрын

    it's 6 days after the last video??? Time for another chopped video, guys !!!

  • @ChaiTogether
    @ChaiTogether9 ай бұрын

    3:19

  • @mamumonkan
    @mamumonkan9 ай бұрын

    didn't we have that a little while ago !?!

  • @olafsager6056

    @olafsager6056

    9 ай бұрын

    POUR CHANGER IL FAUT UN ANGE, POUR S'ÉCHANGER IL FAUT UN ARCHANGE Je ne doute pas que tu veux en savoir plus que moi, mais je pense aussi qu'avec des objections on ne changera pas grand chose dans ce musée. Parce qu'on ne peut tout simplement pas échanger des idées avec les Danois. Louisiana ne pose pas de questions au public, et nous, les auditeurs, n'entendons même pas les questions que Louisiana pose à ces invités. Ils sont dingue là. Connais-tu un dingo? Il s'agit d'un type de chien sauvage qui, comme nous le savons par des articles journalisiés australiens, parfois vole aux petits enfants.