Considered
one of the most important Argentinian writer since Jorge Luis Borges,
Saer is wide-ranging and creative in The
One Before,
a collection of story-vignettes and two longer stories. Each one is
like a snapshot of the writer's mind at a particularly philosophical
moment in time: looking at a painting, remembering a friend, thinking
about translation in all of its many manifestations.
In the introduction to this book, the translator suggests that Saer's main theme is itself translation and "the possibility of representing human experience in any language." After all, these vignettes have titles like "The Interpreter," "Argument Over the Term Zone," and "The Traveler."
I was particularly intrigued by Saer's story "Hands and
Planets," in which two characters discuss questions of scale in
relation to humanity and our planet. As Barco suggests "probably...in
many of these grains of salt there are Ancient Greeces where
Heraclitus is thinking that the events of the world are the product
of a game of dice played by children." He goes on to talk about
a recently televised moon landing and how, the moment the Earth
started getting smaller as the camera pulled away, Barco and others
experienced intense anxiety, as if they, too, were journeying far from
home.
"A Layman's Thoughts on Painting" is yet another vignette
that considers different perspectives. Just one page long, it opens
with the (unexpected) line "I think more about frames than
paintings." This is because the paintings within those frames
deny the infinite moment of anticipation offered by the white canvas
or wall: "each picture looks to me like a white wall that has
been diminished, attenuated." Before the paint, there was the
freedom and mystery of a blank canvas.
The
One Before
is a fascinating journey through Saer's head, and the title story is
quite Proustian and hypnotic. Enjoy!
No comments:
Post a Comment