2003年诺贝尔文学奖获奖者--约翰˙麦克斯韦˙切库 |
送交者: 清静妙音 2003年11月30日21:03:32 于 [新 大 陆] 发送悄悄话 |
NOBEL PRIZE WINNERS--John Maxwell Coetzee [This conversation is an interview about Coetzee in Chinese and English.] 杰弗里·布朗: 三十年以来,南非作家约翰˙麦克斯韦˙切库早已经是一个在世界文学中杰出的人物。在他的八本小说中,比如《迈克尔·K.的生平与时代》和《耻》,若贝尔委员会评价到,“切库的兴趣是区分正义与邪恶,分析得水晶一般清晰,透彻见底;在探索人类的软弱和失败中,切库捕获到人类神圣的闪光。” 切库本人几乎罕见地接受采访或出席颁奖仪式。
我认为他透彻地剖析了人类当代的社会环境。他用自己智慧的光芒和慈悲心,探索我们的时代人类灵魂非常凄凉的景象。如果你要说约翰做得最好的一件事,就是他不说谎。关于他自己他不说谎。关于人类环境他不说谎。关于他的人物他不说谎。他进入了人类的灵魂的深处:无论男人、女人、乞丐和王子。
杰弗里·布朗:
埃里厄尔·道夫曼: ARIEL DORFMAN: I think it's very central to his writing. I mean, his great models are Kafka, Dostoyevsky, Beckett, very existential writers but he is very impressed and impressed by the situation of apartheid and injustice that he sees in his land and all the conflicts. I mean the problems of death-and-life issues, right and wrong, make him constantly look at this landscape around him and see people in the most difficult situations, show them with all their flaws and yet rising in some sense to find their humanity in the midst of all of this. Of course, you know, he takes a man with a hair lip, presumably a black man, and in the life and times of Michael Kay, and he just follows him to the last little space on earth that he can find, saying all the maps have been taken from him. He has no place to go. He finds in this man who has been experimented upon, he finds a dignity just in the little tiny thing of putting a little seed into the ground. This happens in the age of iron, which is about a woman who has got cancer who discovers herself. It happens in "Disgrace," which just won the Booker prize. It happens in relation to animals. He's an animal rights activist in some sense. In his latest novel which is about to come out called "Elizabeth Costello." He cares about the marginal, those who are outside. I think this has come to him especially because he has lived in a place where humanity was defined as just one small group of people and then most of the blacks and, you know, the Africans who were in Africa were excluded from that. I think that that has very, very sharply marked his existence.
ARIEL DORFMAN: Oh, you know, if you just read four or five of his sentences, they're so lucid, so well written, and the way in which he can create in one situation... you know, there's a slight situation, there's grace. There's an older professor who basically has a lust for a very young woman, you know? And the way in which he describes the sexual relation between them is so absolutely masterful I guess, you know? Every one of his sentences is extraordinarily constructed. It creates a whole world there. It's this relationship of how sophisticated he is. Yet at the same time these are very simple or deceptively simple stories that he's telling. He goes deeper and deeper. He just takes away every layer and shows us the different, you know, I would say the different forms of the human soul.
ARIEL DORFMAN: Very much so. I've taught two of his books, "Waiting for the Barbarians," which is one of his first novels and then "The Life and Times of Michael Kay." What this does with students is it forces them to look at a situation where the problems of ethics are always there but the solutions are always difficult. What I love about Coetzee is that he will take a situation that is very difficult and he won't make it easier. He'll make it more arduous, more difficult, more impossible to resolve. In that lack of resolution and yet in the redemption that the human spirit finds trying to grapple with these things, he keeps on going deeper and deeper. The students really like that because they recognize there an authentic, original voice, a voice they've never heard before. He's really one of the most original... I think one of the most original and most modest writers. You know, when he says that, that he did not expect this, he is reserved, modest, very, very... he's just not willing, you know, to appear publicly. He believes in his own private person.
ARIEL DORFMAN: Well, you know, he's very inquisitive and extremely compassionate. Let me tell just one little story about this. I was having dinner with him in South Africa a few years back before he had left South Africa. One... our hostess who was the ambassador's wife, the ambassador of Chile's wife who had invited him so we could get together -- said to him, "you are so courageous to be writing the way you do." He looked at her and I knew something was going to happen because he rarely speaks up. He said, "You know what I do takes no courage at all? You know what takes courage? What takes courage is to get up in the morning at 4:00 in the morning and go on a bus and go twenty or thirty miles on a packed bus and clean out the bed pans of people at hospitals and then go back and cook food for the people you love. He said it with such compassion, such a sense, you know, here was this man who himself of course is not cleaned out bed pans, you know, and yet in some sense in his latest novel he says it," we are able through the compassionate imagining, we are able to understand the other." Literature really does that. It's that leap into the other's mind and heart. He goes deeper and deeper into that. I could see there that flicker. You know, a few years back we had another dinner in England. I told him about a problem that I was having. He was very helpful. He knows how to listen. He's very, very quiet. One could imagine it. Very rarely do you find somebody who from his novels you would expect the man to be like that. And yet it is that solitude, that stillness, that quiet from which he watches the human condition that I think he writes. And that I mean the wonderful thing is that so many people... today they called me from another radio television show and they asked me, well, what do you think? Isn't this great for him? I said it's not great for him. He's not going to change at all. It's great for us. It's great for the world. Many more people are going to read him than that's going to be an extraordinary journey, which I’ve been, talk taking for many years and I know I'm going to be joined by many other people.
ARIEL DORFMAN: Well thank you so much. I wouldn't come for anybody else, well I probably would. For him I have a particularly admiration and devotion. He's a great man, great novelist. [I read Disgrace recently. It is really a amazing and striking book! Everyone will love the story about the Professor and his student! I just translate a couple of paragraph. If anyone love to continue, they are welcome to continue this translation work! I believe most of people here are very good at English!] |
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