Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Welcome

This blog is an exercise on multiculturalism and Canadian literature.

We are a Toronto based group of three writers that are attending a program called Canadian Journalism for Internationally Trained Writers at Sheridan College.

We have very different backgrounds:
  • Lina GrajalesLina Grajales
    diplomat, writer
    Colombia

  • Intikhab AmirIntikhab Amir
    journalist, writer
    Pakistan

  • Fabio MarchioroFabio Marchioro
    journalist, writer
    Brazil
As part of an assignment to the Canadian Literature course, we chose a book to be the focus of this exercise: The Jade Peony by Wayson Choy (Douglas & McIntyre, 1995). We will read a chapter a day, everyday, and post each one of us, until 11:00PM, a comment on the section read.

The premise here is to verify how three different writers face the themes of the book and how they will express themselves about its contents on immigration in Canada.

The Process

This blog was a process, if you consider its creation, and will be a process, while readers comment on the posts that Lina, Intikhab and Fabio wrote on the book of Wayson Choy.

During the creation, and for the purpose of this exercise, the authors first considered Michael Ondaatje’s Running in the Family. After a quick read, it was decided that the book’s characteristics wouldn’t offer the same possibilities for debate. The group decided to try another book and eventually settled with Choy’s The Jade Peony.

Mayank BahttIn the meantime, Mayank Bahtt, a journalist, classmate of this blog's authors, read Running in the Family, wrote his impressions and even recorded an audio interpretation on the text.

The group considered important to share with the blog’s readers this moment of the process to get to Choy’s book.

The most poignant moment in Michael Ondaatje’s Running in the Family is when he finally gets hold of the photograph of his parents taken when they were on their honeymoon. Instead of having regular, posed photographs taken the couple indulges in horseplay and prefers the unconventional.

Ondaatje writes, “They both begin to make hideous faces. My father’s pupils droop to the south-west corner of his sockets. His jaw falls and resettles into a groan that is half idiot, half shock…My mother…has twisted her lovely features and stuck out her jaw and upper lip so that her profile is in the posture of a monkey…On the back my father has written “What we think of married life.”

By itself this would be mildly interesting and unusual, considering that such a photograph was taken in 1932, when the tendency was to take posed pictures. What makes it a shatteringly vivid memory for the writer is that, “It is the only photograph I have found of the two of them together.”

Despite the fact that his parents fought bitterly and divorced after 14 years of marriage, Ondaatje, who was very young when that incident happened, is forced to remember them forever at a time when they were enjoying their lives together like never before and never after.

Running in the Family is an unusual book and difficult to slot into any genre.

It’s a compelling and unstructured ensemble of fact, fiction, poetry, oral history, photographs and fading memories.

It’s a reconstructed biography of his parents, grandparents, aunts, uncles, siblings, half-sisters; and, of course, about himself.

It’s a potent brew of stories, incidents, accidents, despicable drunkenness, honourable sacrifices, loneliness and togetherness, falling in love and falling out of love, cruelty, destiny, fate and faith.

It’s the story of every family that is never told and that is because most families don’t have an Ondaatje to record it.

It’s replete with sensuous poetry. Sample this:

Seeing you
I want no other life
and turn around
to the sky
and everywhere below
jungle, waves of heat
secular love

Holding the new flowers
a circle of
first finger and thumb

which is a window

to your breast

pleasure of the skin
earring earring
curl
of the belly

In her afterword to the book Nicole Brossard aptly remarks: “Most often writers lose patience with their families, but Ondaatje dances with his…”

Ondaatje left Sri Lanka when he was 11 and returned twice for brief visits in 1978 and 1980 to the , the mystifying land that Ceylon was before 1983 when its peace was shattered forever as the Buddhist Sinhalese and Hindu Tamils began a civil war that has spilled over to even reach downtown Toronto.

He returned to his homeland to reconstruct his own history and the only way in which he could do that was to reconfigure the stories of his family especially his mother and father. Actually, not so much the mother as the father; Ondaatje writes, “Words such as love, passion, duty, are so continually used they grow to have no meaning – except as coins or weapons. Hard language softens. I never knew what my father felt of these “things.” My loss was that I never spoke to him as an adult. Was he locked in the ceremony of being “a father”? He died before I even thought of such things.”

The book is lyrical, captivating and yet in a very specific way, enervating. It leaves one mysteriously sad for the writer.

This is the first Ondaatje book that I’ve read. People who’ve read more than one Ondaatje tell me that his best is English Patient.

Wayson Choy Biography


Wayson Choy was born in Vancouver, British Columbia in 1939. As a Chinese-Canadian he grew up and lived in Chinatown. He attended Gladstone secondary school, and then went on to attend the University of British Columbia studying creative writing.

He was the first writer of Chinese ancestry to study in creative writing. He studied under Earle Birney. He moved to Toronto, Ontario in 1962, he began teaching at Humber College in 1967 and ended in 2004. He currently continues to teach at the Humber school for writers. He also was the president of the Cahoots Theater company of Toronto from 1992 to 2002. In 2005 he was named a member of the Order of Canada.

His first novel The Jade Peony (1995) ,earned him two prestigious awards, the Trillium Book Award and the Vancouver Book award. His second and last novel to date is All that Matters and is the sequel to The Jade Peony, it was nominated for the Giller Prize.

His first memoir Paper Shadows: A Chinatown Childhood was written in 1999 and won the Edna Staebler Award for Creative Non-Fiction and was nominated for a Governor General's Award. His second memoir Not Yet is excepted out in 2009.

(source - OPPapers)