Josipovici, Gabriel (David)
JOSIPOVICI, Gabriel (David)
Nationality: British. Born: Nice, France, 8 October 1940. Education: Victoria College, Cairo, 1950-56; Cheltenham College, Gloucesteshire, 1956-57; St. Edmund Hall, Oxford, 1958-61, B.A. in English 1961. Family: Married in 1963. Career: Lecturer, 1963-74, reader, 1974-80, part-time reader, 1981-84, and since 1984 professor of English, University of Sussex, Brighton. Northcliffe Lecturer, University College, London, 1981. Awards: Sunday Times award, for play, 1970; South East Arts prize, 1978. Agent: John Johnson, 45-47 Clerkenwell Green, London EC1R 0HT. Address: Department of English, University of Sussex, Falmer, Brighton, Sussex BN1 9RH, England.
Publications
Novels
The Inventory. London, Joseph, 1968.
Words. London, Gollancz, 1971.
The Present. London, Gollancz, 1975.
Migrations. Hassocks, Sussex, Harvester Press, 1977.
The Echo Chamber. Brighton, Harvester Press, 1980.
The Air We Breathe. Brighton, Harvester Press, 1981.
Conversations in Another Room. London, Methuen, 1984.
Contre-Jour: A Triptych after Pierre Bonnard. Manchester, Carcanet, 1986.
The Big Glass. Manchester, Carcanet, 1991.
In a Hotel Garden. Manchester, Carcanet, 1994; New York, NewDirections, 1995.
Moo Pak. Manchester, Carcanet, 1995.
Now. Manchester, England, Carcanet, 1998.
Short Stories
Mobius the Stripper: Stories and Short Plays (includes the plays One, Dreams of Mrs. Fraser, Flow ). London, Gollancz, 1974.
Four Stories. London, Menard Press, 1977.
In the Fertile Land. Manchester, Carcanet, 1987.
Plays
Dreams of Mrs. Fraser (produced London, 1972). Included in Mobius the Stripper, 1974.
Evidence of Intimacy (produced London, 1972).
Flow (produced Edinburgh and London, 1973). Included in Mobius the Stripper, 1974.
Echo (produced London, 1975). Published in Proteus 3, 1978.
Marathon (produced London, 1977). Published in Adam (London), 1980.
A Moment (produced London, 1979).
Vergil Dying (broadcast 1979). Windsor, SPAN, 1981.
Radio Plays:
Playback, 1973; A Life, 1974; Ag, 1976; Vergil Dying, 1979; Majorana: Disappearance of a Physicist, with Sacha Rabinovitch, 1981; The Seven, with Jonathan Harvey, 1983; Metamorphosis, from the story by Kafka, 1985; Ode for St. Cecilia, 1986; Mr. Vee, 1988; A Little Personal Pocket Requiem, 1990.
Other
The World and the Book: A Study of Modern Fiction. London, Macmillan, and Stanford, California, Stanford University Press, 1971; revised edition, Macmillan, 1979.
The Lessons of Modernism and Other Essays. London, Macmillan, and Totowa, New Jersey, Rowman and Littlefield, 1977.
Writing and the Body: The Northcliffe Lectures 1981. Brighton, Harvester Press, 1982; Princeton, New Jersey, Princeton University Press, 1983.
The Mirror of Criticism: Selected Reviews 1977-1982. Brighton, Harvester Press, and New York, Barnes and Noble, 1983.
The Book of God: A Response to the Bible. New Haven, Connecticut, Yale University Press, 1988.
Steps: Selected Fiction and Drama. Manchester, Carcanet Press, 1990.
Text and Voice. Manchester, Carcanet, 1992.
Touch. New Haven, Connecticut, Yale University Press, 1996.
On Trust: Art and the Temptations of Suspicion. New Haven, Connecticut, Yale University Press, 1999.
Editor, The Modern English Novel: The Reader, The Writer, and the Work. London, Open Books, and New York, Barnes and Noble, 1976.
Editor, The Sirens' Song: Selected Essays, by Maurice Blanchot. Brighton, Harvester Press, and Bloomington, Indiana University Press, 1982.
*
Critical Studies:
Interview with Bernard Sharratt, in Orbit (Tunbridge Wells, Kent), December 1975; "True Confessions of an Experimentalist" by Josipovici, and interview with Maurice Kapitanchik, in Books and Bookmen (London), 1982; article by Linda Canon and Jay L. Halio, in British Novelists since 1960 edited by Halio, Detroit, Gale, 1983; interview with Timothy Hyman, in Jewish Quarterly (London), 1985; James Hansford, in Prospice (Portree, Isle of Skye), 1985; essay by Josipovici, in Contemporary Authors Autobiography Series 8 edited by Mark Zadrozny, Detroit, Gale, 1988; "Bonnard and Josipovici" by Jean Duffy, in Word and Image, 9(4), October-December 1993.
* * *
"Modern art," says Gabriel Josipovici in The Lessons of Modernism, "moves between two poles, silence and game." In his own novels the game is that of verbal art; the silence is that of unanswered questions. Conversations abound, explanations are sought, inquiries are pursued, but answers are always lacking. Characters experience an overwhelming pressure to speak, like a weight on the chest. But there is no narrator with authority to pronounce on the truth. The reader is drawn into puzzled involvement, impotent attentiveness, and pleasure in the play of the text.
In The Inventory a young man is constructing a list of the contents of a flat in which an old man and his son Sam used to live. They are both now dead. The precision of the inventory contrasts with the uncertainty of what he hears about their lives from Susan who tells him stories about her experiences of the two men. Why did Sam suddenly leave? Was he in love with Susan? Did she love him? Are her stories based on memory or invention? The novel is almost entirely in dialogue form and its effect depends on the author's precise control of rhythm, pace, and tone. It demonstrates his fascination with the musical, kinesthetic, and dramatic aspects of speech which he has explored equally in his work for radio and theater.
In Words Louis and his wife Helen are visited by Jo, who was once Louis's girlfriend and who may or may not also have had an affair with his brother Peter. The reader learns about the characters only through what they say to each other. Conversations return again and again to certain nagging questions. What happened years ago when Louis and Jo separated? Are either of them in earnest now when they talk about going away together? Are they serious or are they playing games? We only have their words to go on and words always leave open a variety of possible interpretations: cheerful banter or wounding aggression, flirtation or contempt, honesty or evasion? The Present represents a change in fictional technique, for in this novel even the basic narrative situation is left undecided. The narrative, in the present tense, simultaneously develops stories in a number of different possible directions. The present leaves the future open. Reg and Minna share a flat with Alex; Minna is in hospital after a breakdown and dreams or imagines her life with Reg; Minna is married to Alex and they live with their two daughters in the country; Alex is dead having thrown himself from the window of Reg and Minna's flat. The stories interweave, each compelling but inconclusive.
Since 1977 Josipovici has written his most ambitious and accomplished work, including the major radio play Vergil Dying and the novels Migrations and The Air We Breathe. In these novels he moves further away from the conventions of realist narrative. Whereas the early novels (and The Echo Chamber ) are constructed around inconclusive stories and are primarily in dialogue form the later novels are constructed around multiple repetitions of fragmentary scenes and haunting images.
In Migrations a man lies on a bed in an empty room; a man collapses in an urban street; an autistic child fails to communicate with uncomprehending adults; a man talks in an over-furnished room
with an unsympathetic woman, and so on. The text migrates restlessly from scene to scene: "You try to find a place to stop, roots … attempt to find a resting place for the imagination." "A series of places. Each must be visited. In turn. Then it will be finished. Then they will disappear." Temporary stillness and a disturbing sense of the physicality of speech, of words in the mouth, are achieved as the narrative voice repeats certain rhythms, images, and sound patterns and occasionally settles on certain sensuous sentences: "The black sky presses on his face like a blanket." "The sun streams in through the closed panes." "Silence drains away from him in dark streams." There is a poetic preoccupation with certain elemental forces, water and light, motion and rest, air and breath, which are to become an explicit theme of inquiry in The Air We Breathe.
In Conversations in Another Room an old woman, Phoebe, lies in bed. She shares her flat with a companion and is visited regularly by her niece. The narration is in the present tense and is mostly dialogue, at times very funny. The conversations circle around unanswered questions about Phoebe's husband who vanished without trace, and her son David whose marriage has broken up. In the hall the niece's boyfriend sits under a convex mirror, occasionally jotting in a notebook. To the reader's surprise, towards the end of the book there is suddenly a section in an unfamiliar and unidentified voice, in the first person. We do not know what the relationship is between this voice and the characters in Phoebe's flat. The voice says: "Perhaps we cannot write about our real selves, our real lives, the lives we have really lived. They are not there to be written about. The conversation always goes on in another room." Contre-Jour derives from a fascination with the French painter Pierre Bonnard. The first half of the novel is in the voice of his daughter, who has left home. The second half is in the voice of his wife. She compulsively bathes as her husband sits and sketches her. She voices her complaints and her unhappiness about her daughter's behavior. She writes odd notes and pins them around the house. We begin to realize that she is seriously disturbed. Perhaps the daughter does not exist at all but is made up as a consolation or a demented irritant by the painter's wife. We hear only short fragments of the painter's own speech as they are quoted by the women. Through all of his wife's miseries he continues, apparently serenely, to paint. Is his absorption in his work immensely cruel or is it that he has extraordinary patience? At the end we read a short, formal letter from the painter to a friend announcing the death of his wife. It has come to seem that the main subject of the work is the painter himself even though we scarcely hear his own voice directly. We view him only in the negative shapes he makes against the background of those who surround him, against the light.
The plot of In a Hotel Garden takes place as much in flashback as in forward motion, with the glum protagonist Ben attempting to sort out the problems of his past. All in all, the book offers little to hold a reader's attention. One central image from Migrations can serve as an index of Josipovici's concerns as a novelist. The friends and relations of Lazarus wait outside the tomb, excited, anticipating a miracle. Lazarus emerges and slowly unwinds the linen cloth. He unwinds and unwinds and when he is finished there is nothing there, nothing but a little mound of dust. There is nothing in the center. There is no central meaning. As Josipovici says in The Lessons of Modernism the modern writer, like Eliot's Prufrock, rejects the role of Lazarus, "come back from the dead, come back to tell you all."
—John Mepham
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
CONNECTKENTUCKY TO RECEIVE $175,000 IN FUNDS FROM AT&T, LOUISVILLE METRO COUNCIL, HILLIARD LYONS TO BRIDGE DIGITAL DIVIDE
News Wire article from: US Fed News Service, Including US State News; 10/25/2007; 700+ words
; ...the Louisville Metro Council, AT&T and Hilliard Lyons held a press conference...Metro and marks the first local partnership in...urban center for the first time," stated Andrew...experience technology first-hand," said Joan...
|
|
`I'm no council stooge - Lyons.(News)
Newspaper article from: South Wales Echo (Cardiff, Wales); 6/10/2003; 655 words
; ...the way Cardiff council is run, pledged today: ``I'm no council stooge''. Sir Michael Lyons, who yesterday chaired the first meeting of the corporate...worked for three councils. ``I prided myself...to work for the council as a whole.'' In his first interview since...
|
|
JUST ONE DISSENTER! Storm over chief executive's pay rise THE Evening Mail hotline was inundatedwith calls after we asked readers to air their views on the proposed salaryincrease for Birmingham City Council chief executive Michael Lyons. Only onesupported the pay rise
Newspaper article from: Evening Mail; 7/17/1999; 700+ words
; ...who said that Michael Lyons should plough his proposed pay rise back in to the council coffers. The 74 year...the elderly which the council are closing down...money and having to pay council tax to fund this increase...been offered it in the first place. There are so...
|
|
JUST ONE DISSENTER!; Storm over chief executive's pay rise THE Evening Mail hotline was inundated with calls after we asked readers to air their views on the proposed salary increase for Birmingham City Council chief executive Michael Lyons. Only one supported the pay rise.
Newspaper article from: Birmingham Evening Mail (England); 7/17/1999; 700+ words
; ...who said that Michael Lyons should plough his proposed pay rise back in to the council coffers. The 74 year...the elderly which the council are closing down...money and having to pay council tax to fund this increase...been offered it in the first place. There are so...
|
|
Statement by The Morongo Band of Mission Indians Tribal Council Chairman Maurice Lyons Regarding Compact Negotiations.
PR Newswire; 8/30/2006; 700+ words
; ...the rights of our workers to organize according to the terms and protections that labor unions demanded when our compact was first enacted. The Tribal Labor Relations Ordinance (TLRO) extends more rights to unions in tribal casinos than any other workplace...
|
|
Otis Lyons mourned; Ex-city council member was 76
Newspaper article from: New Pittsburgh Courier; 4/18/2004; ; 530 words
; Otis Lyons Jr., a bear of a...to Pittsburgh city council in the days before...battle with cancer. Lyons was 76. Longtime...year term on city council in 1987, but in 1990...He was my guy. The first talking movie I ever...
|
|
EVELYN LYON, 98, FIRST GIRL SCOUT COUNCIL PRESIDENT.(NEWS)(Obituary)
Newspaper article from: The Kentucky Post (Covington, KY); 4/20/2002; 624 words
; Evelyn Lyon, first president of the Licking Valley Girl Scout Council and a mentor to scout organizers...Villa Hills. She was 98. Mrs. Lyon was a member of the Cincinnati...spend some time with her. Mrs. Lyon was a health food and nutrition...
|
|
A grown-up debate on equality of opportunity; Michael Lyons chief executive of Birmingham City Council, looks at a key issue surrounding the work of the authority.
Newspaper article from: The Birmingham Post (England); 10/26/1998; ; 700+ words
; ...objectives. So, is Birmingham City Council right to believe that its workforce...largest companies, let alone councils and others dealing with public...The reasons are clear. The first concerns the issue of quality...communities, we need to have first hand understanding of those...confidence. The ...
|
|
Lyons' share for a kennel boy who made his way to the top; Boris Worrall charts Michael Lyons' ascent to the best-paid job in local government as chief executive of Birmingham City Council.(News)
Newspaper article from: The Birmingham Post (England); 7/15/1999; 605 words
; When Michael Lyons took the helm of Birmingham City Council in the summer of 1994...West Midlands County Council employee during the...charmer, Mr Lyons first cut his teeth in local...East End, Mr Lyons first job at the age of 13...
|
|
Inquiry focuses on union side salaries; Millwrights' small union local wants money back; The four men who received extra pay from Millwrights Local 548 are Dennis Gervais, a former vice president; Bob Lyons, a former financial secretary; Mark Magler, Local 548 treasurer; and John Raines, an organizer for the Lakes and Plains Regional Council.(BUSINESS)
Newspaper article from: Star Tribune (Minneapolis, MN); 12/23/2004; ; 700+ words
; ...Lakes and Plains Regional Council in St. Paul, part of...employees of the regional council. Renamed field agents...Dennis Gervais and Bob Lyons, who also were the local...a week [pay] at the council," said Mark McNabb, who proposed the first supplement from the millwrights...
|
|
First Council of Lyons
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
First Council of Lyons , 1245, 13th ecumenical council of the Roman Catholic Church, convened at Lyons, France...Frederick by his ambassador, he was declared deposed by the council. The action was without effect.
|
|
Lyons, First Council of
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church
Lyons, First Council of (1245). Reckoned by RCs the 13th Oecumenical Council , it was convoked by Innocent IV and...the accused had not been cited to the Council and that it was irregular for the Pope...
|
|
Lyons
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Lyons Fr. Lyon , city (1990...Christianity was first introduced into...importance of Lyons until c.1300...Waldenses and the councils held there in...15th cent.; at first the silkworms...1940-44), Lyons was the capital...The Butcher of Lyon" ), who was...
|
|
Lyon, George Ella 1949-
Book article from: Something About the Author
LYON, George Ella 1949...married Stephen C. Lyon (a musician and composer...1980; Kentucky Arts Council, Frankfort, KY...Central Kentucky Council for Peace and Justice...two-act play), first produced in Lexington...
|
|
ecumenical council
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...Lateran, 1215; (13) 1 Lyons, 1245; (14) 2 Lyons...e.g., Nicaea, First Council of ). The Orthodox...Church recognizes the first seven and counts the...Constantinople. The first council was the model for the rest. Purposes of the Councils The common purpose of...
|