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2 - Registering protest: The Left Bank and Quartet

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 September 2009

Elaine Savory
Affiliation:
New School for Social Research, New York
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Summary

I think French books helped me an awful lot … They had clarity. Ford insisted – if you weren't sure of a paragraph or statement, translate it into another language. And if it looks utterly silly, get rid of it. Anglo-Saxon is rather messy, don't you think?

(Jean Rhys to Mary Cantwell, Interview (1974) 1990: 24)

Cut it? Thats nearly always the answer. Cut bits of it [cut] … Ive looked up self-pity in my French dictionary & cant find it. Only ‘amourpropre’ or ‘egoism’ [sic]. It can be the start of a lot of things but can be tiresome too I know. Perhaps there's too much in ‘Postures’. That book could be improved by cutting.

(Letter to Diana Atwell, 1 December 1966)

Rhys made an impressively swift transition from an amateur writer of therapeutic diaries, with the instinct to use writing to erase painful memories, to a professional and impressive writer who was reviewed in powerful literary publications: a process which took only three years. Furthermore, she reworked what she learned from Ford, i.e. the prevailing style of European high modernism and how to be a professional writer, in the light of her writing instincts and what was important from her West Indian experience.

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Jean Rhys , pp. 36 - 56
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1999

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