Podcasts about Hustvedt

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Best podcasts about Hustvedt

Latest podcast episodes about Hustvedt

Crónicas Lunares
Todo cuanto te amé - Siri Hustvedt (Análisis integral y 14 párrafos)

Crónicas Lunares

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2025 36:02


Todo cuanto te amé es una elegía intelectual sobre cómo el arte y el amor son formas de violencia disfrazada. Hustvedt construye un triángulo pasional entre estética, locura y duelo, donde cada personaje es a la vez obra de arte y artista mutilado. Como dice Leo: "Al final, solo quedan los cuadros. Y ni siquiera ellos dicen la verdad."AVISO LEGAL: Los cuentos, poemas, fragmentos de novelas, ensayos y todo contenido literario que aparece en Crónicas Lunares di Sun podrían estar protegidos por derecho de autor (copyright). Si por alguna razón los propietarios no están conformes con el uso de ellos por favor escribirnos al correo electrónico cronicaslunares.sun@hotmail.com y nos encargaremos de borrarlo inmediatamente. Si te gusta lo que escuchas y deseas apoyarnos puedes dejar tu donación en PayPal, ahí nos encuentras como @IrvingSun  https://paypal.me/IrvingSun?country.x=MX&locale.x=es_XC  Síguenos en:  Telegram: Crónicas Lunares di Sun  ⁠Crónicas Lunares di Sun - YouTube⁠ ⁠https://t.me/joinchat/QFjDxu9fqR8uf3eR⁠  ⁠https://www.facebook.com/cronicalunar/?modal=admin_todo_tour⁠  ⁠Crónicas Lunares (@cronicaslunares.sun) • Fotos y videos de Instagram⁠  ⁠https://twitter.com/isun_g1⁠  ⁠https://www.google.com/podcasts?feed=aHR0cHM6Ly9hbmNob3IuZm0vcy9lODVmOWY0L3BvZGNhc3QvcnNz⁠  ⁠https://open.spotify.com/show/4x2gFdKw3FeoaAORteQomp⁠  https://mx.ivoox.com/es/s_p2_759303_1.html⁠ https://tunein.com/user/gnivrinavi/favorites⁠ 

The United States of Anxiety
Writer Siri Hustvedt on James Baldwin's Complexity

The United States of Anxiety

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2024 30:58


In the third episode of “Notes on a Native Son,” host Razia Iqbal sits down with the celebrated writer of novels and essays, Siri Hustvedt. When Hustvedt was invited to record a conversation for the podcast about her favorite passage from the work of James Baldwin, the timing in so many ways couldn't have been worse — it turned out to be the last few weeks of life for her husband, writer Paul Auster. However, a few weeks after his passing, Hustvedt reached out to say that she was ready.She felt that re-reading and talking about Baldwin would somehow be a balm for her grief. Hustvedt describes how Baldwin's novels “possessed” her as a young reader and discusses his intricate ability to recognize the oppressor within, even as he gave a voice to the oppressed.Notes from America is a 2024 Signal Awards finalist! Community voting is now open for the show to earn a Listener's Choice honor for Best Live Podcast Recording, and we would be honored for you to take a minute to cast a vote our way. Click here to vote through October 17, and thank you for listening and supporting Notes from America! Tell us what you think. We're @noteswithkai on Instagram and X (Twitter). Email us at notes@wnyc.org. Send us a voice message by recording yourself on your phone and emailing us, or record one here.Notes from America airs live on Sundays at 6 p.m. ET. The podcast episodes are lightly edited from our live broadcasts.

Earned: Strategies and Success Stories From the Best in Beauty + Fashion

REPLAY - In Ep. 71 of Earned, Conor sits down with Marc Hustvedt, president of the largest YouTube channel in America (137 MILLION subscribers at time of recording, now 312 MILLION): MrBeast. Marc's impressive resume also includes founding ventures like Tubefilter, Supergravity Pictures, and the Streamy Awards. We start the episode by learning why Marc enjoys building new companies, and hear why he's particularly interested in YouTubers. We ask Marc about the core elements that make a piece of content successful, and the reasons behind MrBeast's most recent explosion in (billions of) views. Marc shares how the MrBeast team has leaned into TikTok, before explaining the importance of viewer acquisition with captivating video titles and thumbnails, and a few of the ways MrBeast optimizes its content for performance. We hear Marc's take on the current monetization models of social platforms like YouTube and TikTok, and how MrBeast's side ventures like Feastables and MrBeast Burger are now contributing a larger slice of the revenue pie. To close the show, we discuss the impact that MrBeast, aka Jimmy Donaldson, has had on his hometown of Greenville, North Carolina, and hear what's in store for the company over the next 20 years. In this episode, you will learn:  1. The keys to creating a successful piece of content  2. The importance of catchy video titles and thumbnails for viewer acquisition  3. How MrBeast grew a following of 213 million subscribers (and counting!)   Resources: MrBeast Youtube: @mrbeast MrBeast Twitter: @mrbeast MrBeast Instagram: @mrbeast Shop MrBeast Merch: https://shopmrbeast.com/   Connect with the Guest: Marc's LinkedIn   Connect with Conor Begley & CreatorIQ: Conor's LinkedIn - @conormbegley CreatorIQ LinkedIn - @creatoriq   Follow us on social: CreatorIQ YouTube - @TribeDynamics CreatorIQ Instagram - @creatoriq CreatorIQ TikTok - @creator.iq CreatorIQ Twitter - @CreatorIQ

Studio B - Lobpreisung und Verriss (Ein Literaturmagazin)
Die Diskussion - Hustvedt, Graeber, Wengrow

Studio B - Lobpreisung und Verriss (Ein Literaturmagazin)

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2024 24:40


Fußnoten und Literaturverzeichnisse waren früher ein klares Erkennungszeichen für “ernsthafte” wissenschaftliche Werke. Das hat sich ein bisschen verwässert (looking at you, Junot Diaz

Studio B - Lobpreisung und Verriss (Ein Literaturmagazin)
Siri Hustvedt: Die Illusion der Gewissheit

Studio B - Lobpreisung und Verriss (Ein Literaturmagazin)

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2024 5:39


Was macht eigentlich Siri Hustvedt? Schon seit längerem ist sie meiner Aufmerksamkeit entgangen und nur durch Zufall bekam ich mit, dass sie bereits im letzten Jahr ein neues Werk veröffentlicht hat, das den Titel Mütter, Väter, Täter trägt und eine Sammlung von Essays beinhaltet. Bevor ich dieses in meiner nächsten Rezension besprechen möchte, gibt es heute als Studio B Klassiker eine Rezension aus dem Jahr 2018, in der ich mich ebenfalls mit Siri Hustvedt und ihrem Essayband Die Illusion der Gewissheit befasse.Es gibt eine Vielzahl an Sprichwörtern und vor allem Redensarten, die aus unserem täglichen Sprachgebrauch zwar nicht mehr wegzudenken sind, von denen wir uns aber längst nicht mehr die Mühe machen, sie zu hinterfragen oder zu verstehen, worin deren Sinn liegt. Das kann einem schon ganz schön auf den Geist gehen, es sei denn, man hat plötzlich einen Geistesblitz. Was ich damit sagen will? Dass sich Siri Hustvedts kürzlich im Rowohlt Verlag erschienener Essay Die Illusion der Gewissheit, oder The Delusions of Certainty, wie er im englischen Original heißt, genau mit diesem Thema befasst. Nämlich der Frage nach dem Geist. Was hat es mit diesem Begriff, den wir so leichthin benutzen, auf sich? Und was verstehen wir eigentlich unter Geist bzw. was ist die Beziehung zwischen Geist und Körper?Die Frage ist nicht neu, doch für Siri Hustvedt viel zu spannend, um sich nicht mit ihr zu beschäftigen. Dies tut sie, indem sie dem Leser bekannte Fragestellungen und Theorien vorstellt und sich auf verschiedene Fachbereiche wie Genetik, Psychologie, Sprache oder die Evolutionstheorie bezieht. Sehr gut recherchiert und stets mit Beispielen und Gegenbeispielen belegt, führt sie dem Leser vor, wie Annahmen einfach über die Jahre hinweg übernommen wurden, ohne hinterfragt zu werden und damit eine gewisse Allgemeingültigkeit erlangt haben, was sie für die meisten Menschen über jeden Zweifel erhebt. Doch Siri Hustvedt will „für den Zweifel und die Vieldeutigkeit plädieren, und zwar nicht etwa, weil wir nichts wissen können, sondern weil wir unsere Überzeugung stets prüfen sollten und hinterfragen, woher sie kommen.“ (S. 30)Ein zentraler Aspekt ihres Essays ist die Unterscheidung zwischen angeborenen und erworbenen Eigenschaften, kurz gesagt: Natur versus Kultur. Unter ihrem Gliederungspunkt „Frauen können keine Physik“, wird, wie auch im restlichen Essay, deutlich, welch große Rolle auch der Feminismus in ihrem Werk spielt. Es geht dabei um die immer wiederkehrende Behauptung, dass Frauen Männern von Natur aus unterlegen sind und angeblich, aufgrund ihrer Biologie, in einigen Bereichen schlechter sind als diese – anhand des Untertitels wird deutlich, auf welche Bereiche sie hier anspielt. Um dies zu widerlegen, wird sie nicht müde, die verschiedensten Studien ins Feld zu führen, die sowohl für als auch gegen diese Tatsache sprechen und wie diese unterschiedlichen Ergebnisse zustande kommen. Und es ist wunderbar einfach zu verstehen, wenn man sich nur einmal kurz die Zeit nimmt, darüber nachzudenken.Ein weiteres, kurzes Beispiel dafür, womit sich ihr Essay auseinandersetzt, ist die Frage, wie sehr ein Wunsch körperliche Auswirkungen mit sich bringen kann. Deutlich gemacht wird dies anhand der Scheinschwangerschaft. Die Vorstellung, schwanger zu sein, kann durchaus sichtbare und objektiv nachweisbare Schwangerschaftsmerkmale erzeugen. Dabei ist aber nicht die Frage, ob der Wunsch nach der Schwangerschaft zu Veränderungen des Hormonspiegels führt, sondern vielmehr, wie stark der Inhalt dieses Wunsches, also dieses Gedanken, den unser Geist produziert, sein kann, dass er zu physischen Auswirkungen führt. Hierzu ein Zitat:„Wie können Vorstellungen, Überzeugungen, Wünsche und Ängste den Körper verändern? Steht der Geist über der Materie? Haben wir es hier mit einem Zusammenspiel von psychologischen und physiologischen Faktoren zu tun? Wenn man die Tatsache akzeptiert, dass Vorstellungen Körper verändern können, was hat das dann im Hinblick auf das Körper-Geist-Problem zu bedeuten?“ (S. 134)Hustvedt verweist darauf, dass es eine Lücke zwischen Körper und Geist gibt, die der Grund dafür ist, dass wir zwar das Gehirn mit all seinen Synapsen, Neuronen und chemischen Eigenschaften irgendwann in Gänze erklären können, doch es bleibt die Frage, wie sinnvoll es ist, Dinge wie gerade genannte Wünsche, aber auch Hoffnungen, Träume und Gedanken ausschließlich als neuronale Prozesse zu bezeichnen?Was ist nun also die Illusion der Gewissheit? Ich denke, die Frage ist gleichzeitig die Antwort. Es wird immer Dinge geben, die für uns Menschen nicht greifbar sind: Was ist der Geist? Was ist der Verstand und wie unterscheidet er sich vom Körper? Und es gibt die Illusion, dass wir diese Frage mit Gewissheit beantworten können. Das wirklich interessante ist aber, zumindest für mich, die Frage und nicht ihre Antwort. Denn solange es Menschen gibt, werden diese sich wohl mit dieser Thematik beschäftigen und genau dieses – sich-damit-beschäftigen – treibt uns an und bringt uns voran. Genau das ist auch das Wundervolle an Siri Hustvedts Essay. Sie regt uns an und fordert uns auf, Dinge nicht als gegeben und feststehend hinzunehmen, sondern zu hinterfragen. Dabei räumt sie, für mein Empfinden, manchmal fast etwas wütend mit gängigen Vorurteilen und deren Erschaffern auf.Wer Die Illusion der Gewissheit auf deutsch liest, dem sei gesagt, dass die studierte Literatur- und Sprachwissenschaftlerin (also eine Geisteswissenschaftlerin, haha) Bettina Seifried hier eine großartige Übersetzung geleistet hat. Die Gliederung des Essays hätte, für meinen Geschmack, hier und da noch etwas gebündelter sein können. Nichts desto trotz ist der Text sehr verständlich und hält sich nicht damit auf, sich einer allzu wissenschaftlichen Sprache zu bedienen. Eine sehr geistreiche Arbeit und absolut empfehlenswert. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit lobundverriss.substack.com

Auslese: Der Literatur-Podcast
Auster schreibt ein kleines Buch über eine große Liebe

Auslese: Der Literatur-Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 24, 2023 28:16


Das Buch „Baumgartner“ über die Liebe und den Tod kann man nicht lesen, ohne an Paul Auster selbst und ohne an die Ehe mit der Schriftstellerin Siri Hustvedt zu denken. Denn es ist offensichtlich, dass Auster diese Geschichte vor dem Hintergrund seiner ernsten Krebserkrankung erzählt, mit der er und seine Frau sehr offen umgehen. Schon im März postete Hustvedt auf Instagram, dass sie in „Cancerland“ (Krebsland) seien, dass Paul Chemo- und Immuntherapie durchmache. Nun kam, für Auster überraschend schnell, ein ungewöhnlich dünnes Buch heraus: „Baumgartner“, in dem der titelgebende Held auf sein Leben, vor allem aber auf die Liebe seines Lebens blickt: Anna und Sy im Buch, im echten Leben Paul und Siri. Es beginnt mit slapstickartigen Ereignissen: Sy Baumgartner, emeritierter Phänomenologe aus Princeton, verbrennt sich erst die Hand an einem alten Kochtopf, fällt dann die marode Kellertreppe hinunter. Schließlich liegt der 70-Jährige lädiert auf dem Sofa und denkt über das vertrackte Körper-Geist-Phänomen nach. Und eigentlich denkt er fast immer nur an Anna – seine vor zehn Jahren bei einem Badeunfall vor Cape Cod ums Leben gekommene geliebte Frau. Ein melancholischer Rückblick eines Professors auf seine große Liebe hört sich im ersten Moment nach einem Altherrenbuch an, dass „Baumgartner“ definitiv nicht ist: Paul Auster ist ein genialer und fast intuitiver Erzähler. In der achten Folge von „Auslese“ der Aachener Zeitung diskutieren Chefredakteur Thomas Thelen und Redakteurin Andrea Zuleger über das Buch. Sie ordnen den Zufall und das Absurde ein, die in Austers Werk eine große Rolle spielen und kommen immer wieder auf das berühmte Schriftstellerpaar Hustvedt/Auster zu sprechen. Passend zum nahenden Weihnachtsfest empfehlen sie am Ende der Folge Bücher, die sich an andere oder auch an sich selbst gut verschenken lassen.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Typisk Indøk - med Jakob & Håkon
E3: Erling Eide Hustvedt om kjærlighet, politikk og psykisk helse

Typisk Indøk - med Jakob & Håkon

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2023 54:20


Hils på tredjeklassingen Erling Eide Hustvedt! Visste du at han sitter i bystyret i Trondheim? I episoden diskuterer vi "Hva stemmer en indøker?"-undersøkelsen, reflekterer rundt kjærlighet og babler i vei om masse annet gøy. God lytt!

Typisk Indøk - med Line & Liset
E3: Erling Eide Hustvedt om kjærlighet, politikk og psykisk helse

Typisk Indøk - med Line & Liset

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2023 54:20


Hils på tredjeklassingen Erling Eide Hustvedt! Visste du at han sitter i bystyret i Trondheim? I episoden diskuterer vi "Hva stemmer en indøker?"-undersøkelsen, reflekterer rundt kjærlighet og babler i vei om masse annet gøy. God lytt!

Chasen Walter's In Thru The Outdoors
Episode 626 Ron Hustvedt Game Fair 2023

Chasen Walter's In Thru The Outdoors

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 14, 2023 2:00


I had a chance to chat with Ron Hustvedt about the second weekend of Game Fair 2023 held near Anoka, MN August 18, 19 & 20. #ittoutdoors #GameFair2023 #hunting #huntingdogs

Outdoor News Radio
Episode 440 – Border country fishing and camping with Ron Hustvedt, Game Fair preview, volunteer loon monitoring opportunities, and a new Minnesota state record nontypical whitetail buck

Outdoor News Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2023 54:00


Outdoor News Managing Editor and host Rob Drieslein kicks off the program with old friend and contributor Ron Hustvedt. Top topics include moose numbers in the Upper Midwest, Hemingway country, houseboating in Voyageurs National Park, and a 2023 Game Fair preview. Then Lori Naumann, public information officer from the Minnesota DNR's nongame wildlife section, joins … Episode 440 – Border country fishing and camping with Ron Hustvedt, Game Fair preview, volunteer loon monitoring opportunities, and a new Minnesota state record nontypical whitetail buck Read More » The post Episode 440 – Border country fishing and camping with Ron Hustvedt, Game Fair preview, volunteer loon monitoring opportunities, and a new Minnesota state record nontypical whitetail buck appeared first on Outdoor News.

NDR Kultur - Das Gespräch
Siri Hustvedt über den Zwang, eine "gute Mutter" zu sein

NDR Kultur - Das Gespräch

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2023 25:59


Mit ihren Büchern erreicht sie ein Millionenpublikum. Nun hat die US-amerikanische Schriftstellerin Siri Hustvedt einen neuen Essayband veröffentlicht: "Mütter, Väter, Täter". Im Gespräch mit NDR Kultur Redakteur Jan Ehlert erzählt sie von der innigen Beziehung zu ihrer eigenen Mutter, aber sie kritisiert auch den gesellschaftlichen Zwang, unter dem Mütter stehen: „Es gibt nur weniges in unserer Gesellschaft, was für so viel Empörung sorgt wie eine schlechte Mutter. Niemand möchte sich diesem Vorwurf aussetzen. Es ist also eine Art soziale Kontrolle des Verhaltens von Frauen.“ Mit ihren Texten versucht Hustvedt, diesen festgefahrenen Rollenbildern andere Perspektiven entgegenzustellen - und findet dabei auch in den Naturwissenschaften überraschende Erkenntnisse, die unsere Vorstellung von Männlichkeit und Weiblichkeit hinterfragen.

The Great Women Artists
Siri Hustvedt on Artemisia Gentileschi, Louise Bourgeois, and more

The Great Women Artists

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2023 58:22


THIS WEEK on the GWA Podcast, we interview the acclaimed novelist, essayist and author of 18 books, SIRI HUSTVEDT! From memoir to poetry, non-fiction to fiction, Hustvedt's writing has touched on the topics of psychoanalysis, philosophy, neuroscience, literature, and art. Long-listed for the Booker Prize and winner of the Los Angeles Times Book Prize for Fiction, Hustvedt's The Blazing World is a provocative novel about an artist, Harriet Burden, who after years of being ignored attempts to reveal the misogyny in art by asking three male friends to exhibit her work under their name. It is of course a triumph, and other bestsellers include What I Loved and The Summer Without Men. Born in Northfield, Minnesota to a Norwegian mother and an American father, and based in NYC since 1978, it wasn't until 1995 that Hustvedt began writing about art. Since then, her art writing oeuvre has expanded enormously with numerous books and essays published to acclaim – which often focus on the fate of female artists in history, the biases of history making, and discuss the likes of Louise Bourgeois, Alice Neel, Adrian Piper, Lee Krasner, Betye Saar, Joan Mitchell, Dora Maar, among others – which I can't wait to get into later on in this episode… Hustvedt's writing is both eye-opening and groundbreaking. She has questioned how we measure greatness, if art has a gender, the effect of art and literature existing in our memory and the future of fiction. She has looked at the masculine traits of the mind and the female traits of emotion, the domestic vs the intellectual, and analysed how historians have not just told the narrative of art, but the narrative of the world. She has asked why absence is so prevalent and explored how women have reconfigured the body after years of what she calls ‘fictive' spaces… I love her writing and it's allowed me to unlock elements (and see things differently) in books, art, and more that exist in my memory. Favourite books include A Woman Looking at Men Looking At Women: Essays on Art, Sex and the Mind and, more recently, Mothers, Fathers and Others – which is part memoir, part psychological study. So I couldn't be more delighted to have her on the podcast today. Follow us: Katy Hessel: @thegreatwomenartists / @katy.hessel Sound editing by Mikaela Carmichael Artwork by @thisisaliceskinner Music by Ben Wetherfield https://www.thegreatwomenartists.com/ THIS EPISODE IS GENEROUSLY SUPPORTED BY OCULA: https://ocula.com/

Earned: Strategies and Success Stories From the Best in Beauty + Fashion

In Ep. 71 of Earned, Conor sits down with Marc Hustvedt, president of the largest YouTube channel in America (137 MILLION subscribers): MrBeast. Marc's impressive resume also includes founding ventures like Tubefilter, Supergravity Pictures, and the Streamy Awards. We start the episode by learning why Marc enjoys building new companies, and hear why he's particularly interested in YouTubers. We ask Marc about the core elements that make a piece of content successful, and the reasons behind MrBeast's most recent explosion in (billions of) views. Marc shares how the MrBeast team has leaned into TikTok, before explaining the importance of viewer acquisition with captivating video titles and thumbnails, and a few of the ways MrBeast optimizes its content for performance. We hear Marc's take on the current monetization models of social platforms like YouTube and TikTok, and how MrBeast's side ventures like Feastables and MrBeast Burger are now contributing a larger slice of the revenue pie. To close the show, we discuss the impact that MrBeast, aka Jimmy Donaldson, has had on his hometown of Greenville, North Carolina, and hear what's in store for the company over the next 20 years.In this episode, you will learn:The keys to creating a successful piece of content The importance of catchy video titles and thumbnails for viewer acquisitionHow MrBeast grew a following of 137 million subscribers (and counting!)Key Takeaways[12:51] The keys to creating a successful piece of content[20:25] Why MrBeast leaned into TikTok[26:06] The importance of optimizing titles, thumbnails, and integrated ad reads[41:40] Marc's predictions for the future of MrBeastResources:MrBeast Youtube: @mrbeastMrBeast Twitter: @mrbeastMrBeast Instagram: @mrbeastShop MrBeast Merch: https://shopmrbeast.com/Connect with the Guest:Marc's LinkedInConnect with Conor Begley & CreatorIQ:Conor's LinkedIn - @conormbegleyCreatorIQ LinkedIn - @creatoriqFollow us on social:CreatorIQ YouTube - @TribeDynamicsCreatorIQ Instagram - @creatoriqCreatorIQ TikTok - @creator.iqCreatorIQ Twitter - @CreatorIQ

Psychoanalysis On and Off the Couch
From Education to Psychoanalysis with Susana Merlo, MA (Buenos Aires) and Ellen Pinsky, PsyD (Cambridge, Mass)

Psychoanalysis On and Off the Couch

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 4, 2022 57:05


"I think that writing also is among the things that help me think this through and get there. When I finished my degree, I was actually very pessimistic - I had no idea that at close to age 55-56 that a psychoanalytic institute would even consider me but I did decide to take the leap and I ended up going to BPSI [Boston Psychoanalytic Society and Institute] and here I am." — Ellen Pinsky    "The training time was a time of discovering - we read the authors I knew, and what was happening to me also at that moment, what kind of an analyst would I be during and after the training? My background encouraged me to go on - when it was difficult to go on searching for the truth, searching for the knowledge, but the knowledge about myself during the training and it went on in my actual training analysis." —Susana Merlo    Episode Description: We discuss Susana's and Ellen's first careers in education and what led them "to wish to go deeper." They both describe the formative contributions of their own analyses as well as the influence of analytic writers that they valued. We consider the possible advantages and disadvantages of each of the many backgrounds that we bring to our clinical work and share conclusions about the similarities and differences in how we practice. We discuss some of their favorite writers and we conclude with their perspectives on the future of psychoanalysis both in the States and in Argentina.    Our Guests:  Susana Ruth Merlo is a member of APdeBA (Asociación Psicoanalítica de Buenos Aires, Argentina) and holds a position as an Associated Professor at IUSAM of APdeBA (Instituto Universitario de Salud Mental de APdeBA), where she teaches Introduction to the ideas of Melanie Klein and English School. She provided school psychological services in school settings for 15 years. At present provides therapy to children, adolescents, and adults in a private clinic setting. Susana holds two university degrees, School Psychology (1986) and Clinical Psychology (2007).    Ellen Pinsky came to psychoanalysis as a second profession following 25 years as a middle school English teacher. She says her experience in the classroom with 12 and 13-year-olds taught her most of what she needed to know to become a credible clinician. She is the author of Death and Fallibility in the Psychoanalytic Encounter: Mortal Gifts. About her book, Thomas Ogden writes: “Mortal Gifts is a necessary book—necessary for analysts and necessary for the analyses they conduct. In it, Ellen addresses a long-neglected issue in the practice of psychoanalysis: the analyst's failure to include in the very fiber of the analysis the fact of his or her mortality.” In 2014 she was awarded BPSI's Deutsch Prize for her essay “The Olympian Delusion” (JAPA, 2011)    Recommended Readings:  SM  Bion, W. Learning from experience. Aprendiendo de la Experiencia Paidós, (2009) Bs.As.    Hustvedt, S. The Sorrows of an American. Elegía para un Americano. Anagrama (2009) Barcelona.    Klein, M. Our adult world and its roots in infancy. Nuestro Mundo Adulto y Sus Raíces en la Infancia. En Envidia y Gratitud, OC. Paidós (1991) Bs.As.    Meltzer, D. A Psychoanalytical Model of the Child in the Family in the Community. Familia y Comunidad, Spatia editorial (1990) Bs. As.    Nemas, C. Strangers in Virtual Land. Toronto Psychoanalytic Society – 22nd Annual day in applied psychoanalysis (2021)  EP  Freud, Observations on Transference Love (1915)   Remembering, Repeating and Working-through (1914)    Freud, Fort-Da” from Beyond the Pleasure Principle, (1920, 14-15)   Paula Heimann, On Counter-transference (1950)    W. Winnicott, The Use of an Object (1969)   Hans Loewald, On the Therapeutic Action of Psychoanalysis (1960)    James Strachey, The Nature of the Therapeutic Action of Psychoanalysis (1934)    Brian Bird, Notes on Transference (1972)    Betty Joseph, Transference: The Total Situation (1985)    Ida Macalpine, The Development of Transference (1950)    Irma Brenman Pick, Working through in the Countertransference (1985);    Selma Fraiberg, Ghosts in the Nursery (1975)    Hans Loewald, Transference and Love (2000 [1988] 549-563)    Ella Freeman Sharpe, The Technique of Psychoanalysis, (on “Qualifying as an analyst,” 1930, 256-257). 

Mujer Vestida
Episodio 8.11 Mujeres incómodas: Siri Hustvedt

Mujer Vestida

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2022 54:12


En este episodio, la escritora Vanessa Rosales vuelve a entrevistar a una de los faros y plumas que más ha formado su propio trabajo: la escritora estadounidense Siri Hustvedt. En esta conversación - hecha en inglés - dialogan sobre los distintos sentidos de la incomodidad, sobre las ideas que se tejen entre lo femenino, lo incómodo, y algunas ideas sobre las mujeres incómodas. Conversan sobre el concepto de "vagabunda intelectual", los "bordes abiertos" entre los campos y las maneras de incomodar el conocimiento tradicional a través del pensamiento fronterizo. También sobre las construcciones de personajes de Hustvedt, en algunas novelas escribiendo como mujer, en otras como hombre. Hablan sobre la misoginia, el peligro de su llegada al poder y todo lo que detona cultural y socialmente. Reflexionan sobre lo político que hay en el acto de mirar. Conversan también sobre su más reciente libro.Una voz colmada de resplandor.

Free Library Podcast
Elif Shafak | The Island of Missing Trees with Siri Hustvedt | Mothers, Fathers, and Others

Free Library Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 8, 2021 57:53


The most widely read woman female writer in Turkey and acclaimed worldwide for her work's ''vision, bravery and compassion'' (The New York Times Book Review), Elif Shafak is the author of 12 bestselling novels, including The Bastard of Istanbul, The Architect's Apprentice, Three Daughters of Eve, and 10 Minutes 28 Seconds in This Strange World, which was shortlisted for the Booker Prize. She is also the author of the memoir Black Milk and has written articles for periodicals around the world. A fellow and a vice president of the Royal Society of Literature, Shafak has taught at numerous universities in Turkey, the U.K., and the U.S. The Island of Missing Trees explores love, trauma, and ecological renewal through the bittersweet love story of two Cypriot teens on opposing sides of war.  A ''21st-century Virginia Woolf'' (Literary Review UK), Siri Hustvedt is the author of the internationally bestselling novels The Blazing World, What I Loved, and The Summer Without Men, among others. She is also the author of A Woman Looking at Men Looking at Women, a three-part essay collection that employs feminism, psychology, neuroscience, and a host of other frameworks that connect pursuits to bridge the gaps between the sciences and humanities, a topic upon which she has also published numerous academic essays and papers. Her many honors include the International Gabarron Prize for Thought and Humanities and the Los Angeles Times Book Prize for Fiction. In Mothers, Fathers, and Others, Hustvedt examines familial love and hate, feminism, and the power of art in a series of interdisciplinary essays. (recorded 12/7/2021)

Time Sensitive Podcast
Siri Hustvedt on the Value in Embracing Ambiguity

Time Sensitive Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2021 83:30


When Siri Hustvedt was 12 years old, she began reading 19th-century novels by Jane Austen, the Brontë sisters, Charles Dickens, and Mark Twain that were given to her by her Norwegian mother, and soon developed a passion for literature. She found great satisfaction in how these stories expanded her mind with new ideas and realms beyond. At 13, precociously enough, she decided she wanted to become a writer. Her interest in developing what she calls a “flexibility of mind” led her to eventually reading and studying works in a wide range of disciplines, including art history, philosophy, psychoanalysis, and neuroscience. Through her essays, poems, fiction, and nonfiction over the past five decades, Hustvedt's aim has become clear: to bring together perspectives that might help her—and those who read her work—see the world differently.Hustvedt's efforts to break down barriers and build a diversity of knowledge have steered her toward an array of topics. Upon moving from her hometown of Northfield, Minnesota, to New York City in 1978 to attend Columbia University, from which she earned her Ph.D. in English literature, she worked as a waitress, a researcher for a medical historian, a model, and an artist's assistant. She went on to write seven novels, including the international bestseller What I Loved (2004) and The Blazing World (2014), the latter of which won the Los Angeles Times Book Prize for Fiction in 2014. Since 1995, Hustvedt has written extensively about art and what comes from looking deeply at it, unpacking works ranging from Johannes Vermeer's “Woman with a Pearl Necklace” (1662–1664) to the photorealistic paintings of Gerhard Richter​​. Often, Hustvedt's subject matter comes to her because it hits close to home. In her 2010 book The Shaking Woman or a History of My Nerves, she investigated the violent tremors that she first experienced in 2006 while delivering her father's eulogy. Hustvedt (who with her husband, the novelist Paul Auster, has a daughter, the singer-songwriter Sophie Auster) has also long been interested in the peculiarities of motherhood, and more recently, the placenta, a subject she plans to explore at length in a future book. On this episode, Hustvedt talks with Spencer about the mysteries and misunderstandings around gestation, maternity, and being a mother; books as friends; and the problems with putting up walls between disciplines. Show notes:Full Transcriptsirihustvedt.net[05:01] Mothers, Fathers, and Others (2021)[47:53] A Plea for Eros (2005)[53:24] “The Future of Literature: The Anatomy of the Novel” (2017)[01:03:31] The Shaking Woman or a History of My Nerves (2010)

FAN Outdoors
Fan Outdoors: Ron Hustvedt. Tom Dokken

FAN Outdoors

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 13, 2021 92:02


Billy is back for a cabincast and Bob is back in studio. Ron Hustvedt talks Game Fair, and Tom Dokken talks dog training and Game Fair as well.

Paul Bunyan Country Outdoors
Rich Blomberg Talks PBC Fishing & Ron Hustvedt Previews GameFair, Returning To Ramsey This Weekend and Next

Paul Bunyan Country Outdoors

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 10, 2021 46:07


Rich Blomberg has been fishing Paul Bunyan Country for a long time and he joins Kev Jackson to discuss the best bites and the best lakes. They dive into Pokegama and the amazing Lake of the Woods. He also discusses a very special event he's been involved in the past two years. Plus, Ron Hustvedt is ready for GameFair, back in Ramsey this weekend and next after the 2020 Covid hiatus.

FREIHEIT DELUXE mit Jagoda Marinic
Siri Hustvedt – Über Frauen. Und Frauenhass (in deutscher Übersetzung)

FREIHEIT DELUXE mit Jagoda Marinic

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 1, 2021 72:56


Zwei Schriftstellerinnen, die eine in Heidelberg, die andere in New York, über Geschlechterrollen und Politik: Was muss eine Frau eigentlich tun, um von Männern ernstgenommen zu werden - als Intellektuelle oder Künstlerin oder Politikerin? „Falten helfen, das Alter hilft“ - ist sich Hustvedt sicher. Denn Frauen werden von vielen Männern eher mit dem Körper in Verbindung gebracht, nicht mit dem Geist. Jagoda Marinic lacht viel mit ihrem Gast in dieser Ausgabe von FREIHEIT DELUXE. Dabei ist das Thema ernst: Es geht um Frauenfeindlichkeit, die die Freiheit von Frauen massiv einschränkt. „Frauenfeindlichkeit ist Bestrafung und richtet sich besonders gegen Frauen, die ehrgeizig sind“ sagt Hustvedt und führt als Beispiel die Wahlkampfniederlage von Hillary Clinton im US-amerikanischen Wahlkampf 2016 vor allem auf Frauenhass zurück. Die westliche Kultur sei laut Hustvedt immer schon auf die Mutterrolle fixiert gewesen und deswegen werde von allen Frauen erwartet, dass sie fürsorglich und folgsam seien: "Und wenn sie das nicht zur Zufriedenheit derer leisten, die das für ihre natürliche Rolle halten, dann muss das eben bestraft werden." Ein aktuelles Beispiel für Frauenhass gegen aufstrebende Frauen seien die andauernden Attacken gegen die grüne Kanzlerkandidatin Annalena Baerbock, meint Jagoda Marinic. Vielen Dank an Alf Mentzer für die Übersetzung und Karmen Mikovic für Siri Hustvedts deutsche Stimme. Hier findet ihr das Transkript der Folge zum Nachlesen: https://download.hr2.de/pdf-fdl-siri-hustvedt-dt-100.pdf FREIHEIT DELUXE mit Jagoda Marinic ist eine Produktion des Hessischen Rundfunks und des Börsenvereins des deutschen Buchhandels. Der Podcast wurde gefördert im Rahmen von "Neustart Kultur" der Beauftragten der Bundesregierung für Kultur und Medien durch den Deutschen Literaturfonds e.V.

FREIHEIT DELUXE mit Jagoda Marinic
Siri Hustvedt – Women. And Misogyny (English Original Version)

FREIHEIT DELUXE mit Jagoda Marinic

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 1, 2021 69:03


How to be taken seriously as an intellectual woman - in arts or politics? „Wrinkles help, age helps“ - Siri Hustvedt is sure about that. Because women are associated with the body and men with intellect. Hustvedt and Marinic are laughing a lot in this episode, although the topic is grave: They talk about misogyny and how it limits the freedom of women. „Misogyny is punishment, hatred and it is particularly directed at women who are ambitious“, Hustvedt says and she attributes Hillary Clintons defeat against Donald Trump in 2016 to misogyny. All women are supposed to be caring and obsequious, because Western culture has fixated on the maternal role, Hustvedt states: „And when that is not performed to the satisfaction of those who believe that this is her natural role, punishment ensues.“ A current example for misogyny against ambitious women are the ongoing attacks against the green candidate for chancellor Annalena Baerbock, claims Jagoda Marinic. The transcript of the episode: https://download.hr2.de/pdf-fdl-siri-hustvedt-englisch-100.pdf FREIHEIT DELUXE mit Jagoda Marinic ist eine Produktion des Hessischen Rundfunks und des Börsenvereins des deutschen Buchhandels. Der Podcast wurde gefördert im Rahmen von "Neustart Kultur" der Beauftragten der Bundesregierung für Kultur und Medien durch den Deutschen Literaturfonds e.V.

Mujer Vestida
5.8 -Siri Hustvedt: La mujer que mira la codificación estructural de lo femenino

Mujer Vestida

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 4, 2020 73:27


En este episodio (en inglés), la escritora Vanessa Rosales conversa con una de las escritoras, pensadoras e intelectuales que más han influenciado su propio trabajo: Siri Husvedt. Doctora en literatura y estudiosa de la filosofía, Hustvedt ha construido un trayecto singularmente híbrido que ha incluido también trabajo y escritura desde la neurociencia y la psiquiatría. Ha estudiado la historia del arte tanto como asuntos de la percepción, la memoria, le emoción, el tiempo, la relación entre el yo y el otro. Y lo ha hecho empujada por la creencia de que ningún modelo teórico por sí solo puede contener la complejidad de la experiencia humana. Eso le ha permitido transitar entre campos codificados como "masculinos" y "femeninos" respectivamente. Ese híbrido se cuela en su obra, en su ficción y su temperamento ensayístico.Conversan sobre la fabricación histórica de lo codificado como femenino, sobre misoginias estructurales, el dilema de la mente y el cuerpo, sobre el acto de mirar, la mujer como sujeto visual e intelectual. Hablan sobre la novela El mundo deslumbrante, sus exploraciones temáticas alrededor de la ambición y el mundo del arte. También sobre feminismo, el rol de quienes escriben y lo político, sobre las elecciones estadounidenses y sobre el amor romántico desde la perspectiva de su insigne feminismo estructural.

Sommar & Vinter i P1
Siri Hustvedt

Sommar & Vinter i P1

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2020 64:23


Internationellt känd amerikansk författare med norska rötter, senast aktuell med romanen Minnen av framtiden. Om sin mor som dog i oktober och om moderskap i allmänhet. Moderskapet en kulturell tvångströja Författaren Siri Hustvedt pratar i sitt Sommarprogram om moderskap och om sin mor Ester Vegan Hustvedt som födde fyra flickor, genomlevde nazisternas ockupation av Norge och gifte sig i USA. Modern dog 2019 och Siri säger i programmet: - Hon var en mor som på många sätt uppfyllde fantasin om hur moderskapet skulle vara i efterkrigstidens Amerika. Hon arbetade hemma tills alla barnen började skolan och hade aldrig ett eget yrke. Siri Hustvedt var 30 år när hennes egen dotter föddes, lika gammal som hennes mor var när hon fick Siri.  I programmet pratar Siri om synen på moderskap och att den förändrats genom historiens gång. - Moderskapet har drunknat i så mycket sentimentalt trams med så många regler för hur man ska bete sig och känna att det varit som en kulturell tvångströja, och fortfarande är, menar hon. Ester Vegan Hustvedt var 17 år när hon väcktes av sin mamma 9 april 1940 med orden stå upp, det är krig.  Siri berättar att modern demonstrerade mot nazisternas ockupation och blev intagen till förhör: - Hon fick välja mellan att betala en bot på 30 kronor eller tillbringa nio dagar i fängelse. Mor valde fängelset. I programmet frågar sig Siri Hustvedt: - Vad hade hänt om min mor fötts in i en annan historisk period, tidigare eller senare? På vilket sätt hade hennes moderskap sett annorlunda ut? Om Siri Hustvedt Författare, 65 år. Född i Minnesota, USA, bosatt i New York. Debuterar som Sommarvärd. Internationellt känd amerikansk författare med norska rötter, senast aktuell med romanen Minnen av framtiden. Undersöker i den uppmärksammade boken Den skakande kvinnan den egna sjukdomsbilden med krampanfall och migrän. Föreläser och undervisar blivande läkare i narrativ psykiatri, om att ta tillvara människors livsberättelser. Debuterade som poet 1981 och slog igenom stort med romanen Vad jag älskade 2003. Har översatts till över 30 språk och fått en rad utmärkelser. Har en doktorsexamen i litteraturvetenskap. Kopplar av med trädgårdsarbete och meditation. Jag ska prata om min mor som dog i oktober men också reflektera över moderskap i allmänhet, vilket innefattar en del vetenskap om hur embryon och foster utvecklas under graviditeten. Producent Mustafa Can

Dan Hill's EQ Spotlight
Siri Hustvedt, "Memories of the Future" (Simon and Schuster, 2019)

Dan Hill's EQ Spotlight

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 16, 2020 43:07


How Do We Write Our Personal History at the Same Time That It’s Written for Us? Today I talked to Siri Hustvedt about this question and others as we discuss her book Memories of the Future (Simon and Schuster, 2019). The Literary Review (UK) has called Hustvedt “a twenty-first-century Virginia Woolf.” She’s the author of seven novels, four collections of essays, and two works of nonfiction. She has a PhD in English literature from Columbia University and lectures in psychiatry at Weill Cornell Medical College. Hustvedt is the recipient of numerous awards, including the European Essay Prize. Topics covered in this episode include: What it can mean to be a heroine instead of a hero, including in regards to which emotions might conventionally be considered “off-limits.” The role that the author’s over-a-dozen drawings play in this novel. Musings on what the roots of ambition might be, and how ambition and shame as well as memory and imagination are often so intertwined. Dan Hill, PhD, is the author of eight books and leads Sensory Logic, Inc. (https://www.sensorylogic.com). To check out his “Faces of the Week” blog, visit https://emotionswizard.com.  

New Books in Literature
Suri Hustvedt, "Memories of the Future" (Simon and Schuster, 2019)

New Books in Literature

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 16, 2020 43:07


How Do We Write Our Personal History at the Same Time That It’s Written for Us? Today I talked to Suri Hustvedt about this question and others as we discuss her book Memories of the Future (Simon and Schuster, 2019). The Literary Review (UK) has called Hustvedt “a twenty-first-century Virginia Woolf.” She’s the author of seven novels, four collections of essays, and two works of nonfiction. She has a PhD in English literature from Columbia University and lectures in psychiatry at Weill Cornell Medical College. Hustvedt is the recipient of numerous awards, including the European Essay Prize. Topics covered in this episode include: What it can mean to be a heroine instead of a hero, including in regards to which emotions might conventionally be considered “off-limits.” The role that the author’s over-a-dozen drawings play in this novel. Musings on what the roots of ambition might be, and how ambition and shame as well as memory and imagination are often so intertwined. Dan Hill, PhD, is the author of eight books and leads Sensory Logic, Inc. (https://www.sensorylogic.com). To check out his “Faces of the Week” blog, visit https://emotionswizard.com.   Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books in Literary Studies
Suri Hustvedt, "Memories of the Future" (Simon and Schuster, 2019)

New Books in Literary Studies

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 16, 2020 43:07


How Do We Write Our Personal History at the Same Time That It’s Written for Us? Today I talked to Suri Hustvedt about this question and others as we discuss her book Memories of the Future (Simon and Schuster, 2019). The Literary Review (UK) has called Hustvedt “a twenty-first-century Virginia Woolf.” She’s the author of seven novels, four collections of essays, and two works of nonfiction. She has a PhD in English literature from Columbia University and lectures in psychiatry at Weill Cornell Medical College. Hustvedt is the recipient of numerous awards, including the European Essay Prize. Topics covered in this episode include: What it can mean to be a heroine instead of a hero, including in regards to which emotions might conventionally be considered “off-limits.” The role that the author’s over-a-dozen drawings play in this novel. Musings on what the roots of ambition might be, and how ambition and shame as well as memory and imagination are often so intertwined. Dan Hill, PhD, is the author of eight books and leads Sensory Logic, Inc. (https://www.sensorylogic.com). To check out his “Faces of the Week” blog, visit https://emotionswizard.com.   Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books Network
Suri Hustvedt, "Memories of the Future" (Simon and Schuster, 2019)

New Books Network

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 16, 2020 43:07


How Do We Write Our Personal History at the Same Time That It’s Written for Us? Today I talked to Suri Hustvedt about this question and others as we discuss her book Memories of the Future (Simon and Schuster, 2019). The Literary Review (UK) has called Hustvedt “a twenty-first-century Virginia Woolf.” She’s the author of seven novels, four collections of essays, and two works of nonfiction. She has a PhD in English literature from Columbia University and lectures in psychiatry at Weill Cornell Medical College. Hustvedt is the recipient of numerous awards, including the European Essay Prize. Topics covered in this episode include: What it can mean to be a heroine instead of a hero, including in regards to which emotions might conventionally be considered “off-limits.” The role that the author’s over-a-dozen drawings play in this novel. Musings on what the roots of ambition might be, and how ambition and shame as well as memory and imagination are often so intertwined. Dan Hill, PhD, is the author of eight books and leads Sensory Logic, Inc. (https://www.sensorylogic.com). To check out his “Faces of the Week” blog, visit https://emotionswizard.com.   Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books in Psychology
Suri Hustvedt, "Memories of the Future" (Simon and Schuster, 2019)

New Books in Psychology

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 16, 2020 43:07


How Do We Write Our Personal History at the Same Time That It's Written for Us? Today I talked to Suri Hustvedt about this question and others as we discuss her book Memories of the Future (Simon and Schuster, 2019). The Literary Review (UK) has called Hustvedt “a twenty-first-century Virginia Woolf.” She's the author of seven novels, four collections of essays, and two works of nonfiction. She has a PhD in English literature from Columbia University and lectures in psychiatry at Weill Cornell Medical College. Hustvedt is the recipient of numerous awards, including the European Essay Prize. Topics covered in this episode include: What it can mean to be a heroine instead of a hero, including in regards to which emotions might conventionally be considered “off-limits.” The role that the author's over-a-dozen drawings play in this novel. Musings on what the roots of ambition might be, and how ambition and shame as well as memory and imagination are often so intertwined. Dan Hill, PhD, is the author of eight books and leads Sensory Logic, Inc. (https://www.sensorylogic.com). To check out his “Faces of the Week” blog, visit https://emotionswizard.com.   Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/psychology

New Books in Gender Studies
Suri Hustvedt, "Memories of the Future" (Simon and Schuster, 2019)

New Books in Gender Studies

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 16, 2020 43:07


How Do We Write Our Personal History at the Same Time That It’s Written for Us? Today I talked to Suri Hustvedt about this question and others as we discuss her book Memories of the Future (Simon and Schuster, 2019). The Literary Review (UK) has called Hustvedt “a twenty-first-century Virginia Woolf.” She’s the author of seven novels, four collections of essays, and two works of nonfiction. She has a PhD in English literature from Columbia University and lectures in psychiatry at Weill Cornell Medical College. Hustvedt is the recipient of numerous awards, including the European Essay Prize. Topics covered in this episode include: What it can mean to be a heroine instead of a hero, including in regards to which emotions might conventionally be considered “off-limits.” The role that the author’s over-a-dozen drawings play in this novel. Musings on what the roots of ambition might be, and how ambition and shame as well as memory and imagination are often so intertwined. Dan Hill, PhD, is the author of eight books and leads Sensory Logic, Inc. (https://www.sensorylogic.com). To check out his “Faces of the Week” blog, visit https://emotionswizard.com.   Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

LIC Reading Series
PANEL DISCUSSION: Siri Hustvedt, Helen Phillips, and Jason Tougaw

LIC Reading Series

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2020 34:58


Where is all of the literary love for Queens? It’s right here at LIC Reading Series. Join them each week for stories, readings, and discussions with acclaimed writers, recorded with a live audience in the cozy carriage house of a classic pub in Long Island City, Queens, New York, and hosted by founder Catherine LaSota. This week, the podcast features the reading and panel discussion from the LIC Reading Series event on December 10, 2019, celebrating Writers of Queens, with Siri Hustvedt, Helen Phillips, and Jason Tougaw. About the Readers: Siri Hustvedt is the author of a book of poetry, Reading to You; seven novels, The Blindfold, The Enchantment of Lily Dahl, What I Loved, The Sorrows of an American, The Summer Without Men, The Blazing World, and Memories of the Future, as well as four essay collections, A Plea for Eros; Mysteries of the Rectangle: Essays on Painting; Living, Thinking, Looking; A Woman Looking at Men Looking at Women and a work of nonfiction: The Shaking Woman or A History of My Nerves. Hustvedt has a PhD from Columbia University in English Literature and is a lecturer in psychiatry at Weill Cornell Medical College in New York City. Her scholarly interests are interdisciplinary. She has given numerous lectures at scientific and academic conferences on philosophy, neuroscience, neurology, psychiatry, and literature, and published papers in scientific and scholarly journals. She is the recipient of numerous awards including the International Gabarron Prize for Thought and Humanities (2012). The Blazing World was long-listed for the Man Booker Prize and won The Los Angeles Book Prize for Fiction 2014). In 2019, she was awarded the European Essay Prize from the Charles Veillon Foundation for The Delusions of Certainty, an essay on the mind/body problem, an American Academy of Arts and Letters Award for Literature, and the Princess of Asturias Award in Spain for the body of her work. Her books have been translated into over thirty languages. Hustvedt lives in Brooklyn, New York. Helen Phillips is the author of five books, including, most recently, the novel The Need, a 2019 National Book Award nominee. Her collection Some Possible Solutions received the 2017 John Gardner Fiction Book Award. Her novel The Beautiful Bureaucrat, a New York Times Notable Book of 2015, was a finalist for the New York Public Library’s Young Lions Award and the Los Angeles Times Book Prize. She is the recipient of a Rona Jaffe Foundation Writers’ Award and the Italo Calvino Prize. Her work has appeared in The Atlantic and the New York Times, and on Selected Shorts. She is an associate professor at Brooklyn College and lives in Brooklyn with her husband, artist Adam Douglas Thompson, and their children. Jason Tougaw is the author of The One You Get: Portrait of a Family Organism, winner of the Dzanc Nonfiction Prize. He is currently completing a novel, Summer Isn’t, as part of his mission to write about the brain and identity in every genre he can. He is also the author of The Elusive Brain: Literary Experiments in the Age of Neuroscience, and Strange Cases: The Medical Case History and the British Novel. His work as appeared in Literary Hub, Electric Literature, OUT magazine, and Largehearted Boy. He blogs about art and science at www.californica.net. * This event was made possible in part by the Queens Council on the Arts, with public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

LIC Reading Series
READING: Siri Hustvedt, Helen Phillips, and Jason Tougaw

LIC Reading Series

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2020 52:20


Where is all of the literary love for Queens? It’s right here at LIC Reading Series. Join them each week for stories, readings, and discussions with acclaimed writers, recorded with a live audience in the cozy carriage house of a classic pub in Long Island City, Queens, New York, and hosted by founder Catherine LaSota. This week, the podcast features the reading and panel discussion from the LIC Reading Series event on December 10, 2019, celebrating Writers of Queens, with Siri Hustvedt, Helen Phillips, and Jason Tougaw. About the Readers: Siri Hustvedt is the author of a book of poetry, Reading to You; seven novels, The Blindfold, The Enchantment of Lily Dahl, What I Loved, The Sorrows of an American, The Summer Without Men, The Blazing World, and Memories of the Future, as well as four essay collections, A Plea for Eros; Mysteries of the Rectangle: Essays on Painting; Living, Thinking, Looking; A Woman Looking at Men Looking at Women and a work of nonfiction: The Shaking Woman or A History of My Nerves. Hustvedt has a PhD from Columbia University in English Literature and is a lecturer in psychiatry at Weill Cornell Medical College in New York City. Her scholarly interests are interdisciplinary. She has given numerous lectures at scientific and academic conferences on philosophy, neuroscience, neurology, psychiatry, and literature, and published papers in scientific and scholarly journals. She is the recipient of numerous awards including the International Gabarron Prize for Thought and Humanities (2012). The Blazing World was long-listed for the Man Booker Prize and won The Los Angeles Book Prize for Fiction 2014). In 2019, she was awarded the European Essay Prize from the Charles Veillon Foundation for The Delusions of Certainty, an essay on the mind/body problem, an American Academy of Arts and Letters Award for Literature, and the Princess of Asturias Award in Spain for the body of her work. Her books have been translated into over thirty languages. Hustvedt lives in Brooklyn, New York. Helen Phillips is the author of five books, including, most recently, the novel The Need, a 2019 National Book Award nominee. Her collection Some Possible Solutions received the 2017 John Gardner Fiction Book Award. Her novel The Beautiful Bureaucrat, a New York Times Notable Book of 2015, was a finalist for the New York Public Library’s Young Lions Award and the Los Angeles Times Book Prize. She is the recipient of a Rona Jaffe Foundation Writers’ Award and the Italo Calvino Prize. Her work has appeared in The Atlantic and the New York Times, and on Selected Shorts. She is an associate professor at Brooklyn College and lives in Brooklyn with her husband, artist Adam Douglas Thompson, and their children. Jason Tougaw is the author of The One You Get: Portrait of a Family Organism, winner of the Dzanc Nonfiction Prize. He is currently completing a novel, Summer Isn’t, as part of his mission to write about the brain and identity in every genre he can. He is also the author of The Elusive Brain: Literary Experiments in the Age of Neuroscience, and Strange Cases: The Medical Case History and the British Novel. His work as appeared in Literary Hub, Electric Literature, OUT magazine, and Largehearted Boy. He blogs about art and science at www.californica.net. * This event was made possible in part by the Queens Council on the Arts, with public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Bergstø og bra folk
#59 -Om smitten hadde kommet inn på avdelingen... Det tør jeg nesten ikke tenke på. Sykepleier og tillitsvalgt i Fagforbundet, Eskild Hustvedt

Bergstø og bra folk

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2020 39:33


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Mujer Vestida
#3.7 Siri Hustvedt y la codificación de lo femenino

Mujer Vestida

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2020 44:52


En este episodio la escritora Vanessa Rosales hace un análisis sobre algunos de los grandes lemas que atraviesan la obra de la escritora estadounidense Siri Hustvedt, quien en 2019 ganó el Premio Princesa de Asturias. Una reflexión desde la perspectiva feminista que busca demostrar cómo Hustvedt es una escritora que ha combinado en su obra los mundos "masculinos" de la ciencia y los mundos "femeninos" de la literatura y el arte; que a través de una erudición amplia y ecléctica desglosa de manera constante cómo se ha codificado lo masculino y lo femenino en el mundo occidental, en la ciencia, el arte, la literatura, la filosofía, la cultura, la biología y más. Retrato de una lectora ferviente.

Encuentros Fundación Telefónica
Siri Hustvedt: cincuenta años de feminismo.

Encuentros Fundación Telefónica

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 6, 2019 70:24


Siri Hustvedt es novelista, ensayista y poetisa. Nació hace 64 años en Estados Unidos y lleva, como ella misma reconoce, cincuenta años luchando por la igualdad entre mujeres y hombres. Con la excusa del Premio Princesa de Asturias de las Letras 2019 visita el auditorio del Espacio Fundación Telefónica para hablar sobre su carrera y hacer incapié en su idea del feminismo. Hustvedt está acompañada por Ana Bella Estévez, creadora de la Fundación Ana Bella Red de Mujeres Supervivientes; Edurne Portela, escritora y activista feminista; e Isabel Valdés, periodista especializada en feminismo. Más información https://espacio.fundaciontelefonica.com/evento/encuentro-con-siri-hustvedt/ Encuentros es un podcast producido por Cuonda y Fundación Telefónica, con música de DJ Moderno cedida bajo licencia CC y conducido por Luis Quevedo y Sergio F. Núñez. Si quieres conocer más sobre Fundación Telefónica y sus actividades, visita www.fundaciontelefonica.com y en sus redes sociales (@fundacionTef y @EspacioFTef).

Encuentros Fundación Telefónica
Siri Hustvedt: cincuenta años de feminismo.

Encuentros Fundación Telefónica

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 6, 2019 70:24


Siri Hustvedt es novelista, ensayista y poetisa. Nació hace 64 años en Estados Unidos y lleva, como ella misma reconoce, cincuenta años luchando por la igualdad entre mujeres y hombres. Con la excusa del Premio Princesa de Asturias de las Letras 2019 visita el auditorio del Espacio Fundación Telefónica para hablar sobre su carrera y hacer incapié en su idea del feminismo. Hustvedt está acompañada por Ana Bella Estévez, creadora de la Fundación Ana Bella Red de Mujeres Supervivientes; Edurne Portela, escritora y activista feminista; e Isabel Valdés, periodista especializada en feminismo. Más información https://espacio.fundaciontelefonica.com/evento/encuentro-con-siri-hustvedt/ Encuentros es un podcast producido por Cuonda y Fundación Telefónica, con música de DJ Moderno cedida bajo licencia CC y conducido por Luis Quevedo y Sergio F. Núñez. Si quieres conocer más sobre Fundación Telefónica y sus actividades, visita www.fundaciontelefonica.com y en sus redes sociales (@fundacionTef y @EspacioFTef).

Encuentros Fundación Telefónica
Siri Hustvedt: cincuenta años de feminismo.

Encuentros Fundación Telefónica

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 6, 2019 70:24


Siri Hustvedt es novelista, ensayista y poetisa. Nació hace 64 años en Estados Unidos y lleva, como ella misma reconoce, cincuenta años luchando por la igualdad entre mujeres y hombres. Con la excusa del Premio Princesa de Asturias de las Letras 2019 visita el auditorio del Espacio Fundación Telefónica para hablar sobre su carrera y hacer incapié en su idea del feminismo. Hustvedt está acompañada por Ana Bella Estévez, creadora de la Fundación Ana Bella Red de Mujeres Supervivientes; Edurne Portela, escritora y activista feminista; e Isabel Valdés, periodista especializada en feminismo. Más información https://espacio.fundaciontelefonica.com/evento/encuentro-con-siri-hustvedt/ Encuentros es un podcast producido por Cuonda y Fundación Telefónica, con música de DJ Moderno cedida bajo licencia CC y conducido por Luis Quevedo y Sergio F. Núñez. Si quieres conocer más sobre Fundación Telefónica y sus actividades, visita www.fundaciontelefonica.com y en sus redes sociales (@fundacionTef y @EspacioFTef).

Kulturmisjonen
#16 Siri Hustvedt – Er minner pålitelige? Og (dag)boka «Minner om fremtiden»

Kulturmisjonen

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2019 43:07


Siri Hustvedt er favoritt blant medlemmene i redaksjonen. Men denne gangen var vi svært uenige om hvor god den siste boka til Hustvedt er. Hustvedt er en sprenglærd forfatter på hjerneforskning og minner, med filosofiske tema som engasjerer, men blir det god litteratur?I studio sitter Ingrid Nyhus, Maria Bjørdal og Arne Christian Konradsen.Kulturmisjonen er en podkast laget av Stiftelsen Areopagos i samarbeid med Moderne Media

Les chemins de la philosophie
Profession philosophe (42/74) : Siri Hustvedt, philosophe du corps et de l'esprit

Les chemins de la philosophie

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 27, 2019 58:36


durée : 00:58:36 - Les Chemins de la philosophie - par : Adèle Van Reeth, Géraldine Mosna-Savoye - Portrait de l'écrivaine Siri Hustvedt, dont l'oeuvre est traversée par la philosophie : de la relation corps-esprit jusqu’à la question de savoir ce qui fait qu’un être humain est humain, de la distinction entre une image et un texte jusqu’à son goût pour l’incertitude, et pour René Descartes… - réalisation : Nicolas Berger - invités : Siri Hustvedt écrivaine et essayiste

LitHouse podcast
Siri Hustvedt and Linn Ullmann about Memories of the Future

LitHouse podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2019 73:41


In Siri Hustvedt’s new novel Memories of the Future, the grown up and well established writer S.H. enters into dialogue with twenty-year-old S.H., with her reflections, her writing and her experiences. What do we forget, and how can we use our memories? The writer Linn Ullmann is among those who have long followed Hustvedt’s writing, and in her last novel, Unquiet, she also examines the past and how we remember. The conversation took place at the House of Literature on June 12, 2019.   Lithouse is a podcast from the House of Literature in Oslo, presenting adapted versions of lectures and conversations featuring international writers and thinkers.

Creative Disruption Podcast
CD 4: Fine Brothers Entertainment. Building Teams and Processes. Creativity and Busting Out of Hamster Wheel. Talking with Rafi Fine & Marc Hustvedt

Creative Disruption Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2019 81:59


Today we talk with Rafi Fine and Marc Hustvedt. They lead one of the most successful studios creating entertainment for YouTube. Rafi, and his brother Benny are the founders of Fine Brothers Entertainment, which operates three successful channels: “TheFineBros”, “TheFineBros2” and “React”. FBE currently produces fifteen serialized shows every week for over 30 million subscribers. Marc Hustvedt is FBE’s recently appointed CEO and an internet video veteran in his own right. Marc has an impressive track record of establishing and managing other digital-first companies, such as Tubefilter, the Streamy Awards, and Supergravity Pictures.

Town Hall Seattle Arts & Culture Series
74: Siri Hustvedt: Memories of the Future

Town Hall Seattle Arts & Culture Series

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2019 62:15


When veteran author Siri Hustvedt discovered her old notebook along with early drafts of a never-completed novel, she found herself caught in a dialogue between her past and present selves. The product of this juxtaposition was Memories of the Future, her new novel that brings together themes that have made Hustvedt among the most celebrated novelists working today. Hustvedt took Town Hall’s stage to provide a glimpse into the process of the novel’s creation, and to reflect on the internal decade-spanning conversation that emerged alongside it. She met in conversation with journalist Lauren Du Graf to enlighten us on the novel’s themes: the fallibility of memory; gender mutability; the violence of patriarchy; the vagaries of perception; the ambiguous borders between sensation and thought. Join Hustvedt and Du Graf for an exploration of sanity, madness, and our dependence on primal drives such as sex, love, hunger, and rage. Siri Hustvedt is the internationally acclaimed author of a book of poems, six novels, four collections of essays, and a work of nonfiction. In 2012 she was awarded the International Gabarron Prize for Thought and Humanities. Her novel The Blazing World was longlisted for the Man Booker Prize and won the Lost Angeles Book Prize for Fiction. She has published numerous papers in scholarly and scientific journals, and her work has been translated into over thirty languages. Lauren Du Graf has written about film, art, music, and literature for The New York Times, The New Yorker, The Washington Post, Los Angeles Review of Books, The Oxford American Magazine, and elsewhere. Her research and writing have been supported with fellowships from the Camargo Foundation, the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas at Austin, and the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library at Yale University. Recorded live at Seattle First Baptist Church by Town Hall Seattle on March 25, 2019. 

London Review Bookshop Podcasts
Siri Hustvedt and Lisa Appignanesi

London Review Bookshop Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2017 59:36


'Americans don’t actually believe in death.' Siri Hustvedt and Lisa Appignanesi were in conversation in the bookshop. Hustvedt's latest collection of essays on art, sex and psychology, A Woman Looking at Men Looking at Women, is published by Sceptre; Prospect magazine, reviewing the volume, called her 'a writer of blazing intelligence and curiosity'. Lisa Appignanesi's Trials of Passion: Crimes in the Name of Love and Madness was published in 2014. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Página Dos
Entrevista a Siri Hustvedt en Página Dos - "La mujer que mira a los hombres que miran a las mujeres" (Seix Barral)

Página Dos

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 2, 2017 15:53


Siri Hustvedt habla de "La mujer que mira a los hombres que miran a las mujeres". Su nuevo libro recoge varios ensayos de reciente publicación donde aborda temas como el arte contemporáneo, las neurosis en el mundo actual, el suicido… Pero sobre todo, Hustvedt habla de literatura y feminismo. Estos ensayos están escritos desde un punto de vista, principalmente, academicista, y en la charla que Óscar López mantiene con ella habla también de cómo es su relación profesional con su marido, el escritor Paul Auster. Vídeo de la entrevista: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oBZ7DLak2TY Sinopsis de: La mujer que mira a los hombres que miran a las mujeres: «La mujer que mira a los hombres que miran a las mujeres». Así define Siri Hustvedt esta ambiciosa reunión de sus mejores ensayos, escritos entre 2011 y 2015. Su vasto conocimiento en un amplio abanico de disciplinas como el arte, la literatura, la neurociencia o el psicoanálisis ilumina una teoría central en su obra ensayística, la de que la percepción está influenciada por nuestros prejuicios cognitivos implícitos, aquellos que no provienen del entorno, sino que se han interiorizado como una realidad psicofisiológica. Ficha del libro: https://www.planetadelibros.com/libro-la-mujer-que-mira-a-los-hombres-que-miran-a-las-mujeres/245890 ----------------------------------------------- Algún día en alguna parte: Web: http://buff.ly/1KQot5O Fragmentos para olvidar: http://buff.ly/1KQot5P Facebook: http://buff.ly/1R7rT0A Twitter: http://buff.ly/1R7rT0B Google+: http://buff.ly/1R7rT0C Tumblr: http://buff.ly/1R7rR8J Pinterest: http://buff.ly/1R7rT0D Instagram: http://buff.ly/1KQouGJ Podcast: http://buff.ly/1R7rR8M Canal en ivoox: http://buff.ly/1R7rR8N * Suscríbete a mi canal de YouTube: http://buff.ly/1R7rTgS Email: contacto@algundiaenalgunaparte.com

LitHouse podcast
Siri Hustvedt and Chris Kraus

LitHouse podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 1, 2017 56:03


In this episode, you can hear a conversation between the American writers Siri Hustvedt and Chris Kraus, led by Anne-Hilde Neset, director of Kunstnernes Hus in Oslo. Why are men still connected to intellect and society, and women to emotions and the body? This is one of the key questions in this conversation, as Hustvedt, Kraus and Neset discuss gender and perception of literature and art, talking about female antiheroes, rage and women’s place and recognition in the art world. In Siri Hustvedt's last essay collection, A Woman Looking at Men Looking at Women, she examines how narrow ideas of gender and perception affect how we experience art and literature. Art and identity is also a topic in her latest novel, The Blazing World. Chris Kraus, famous writer of the kult novel I love Dick, is the author of a number of genre bending essays and novels dealing with women's experiences in the art world. The conversation took place on August 21st, 2017.   Lithouse is a podcast from the House of Literature in Oslo, presenting adapted versions of lectures and conversations featuring international writers and thinkers. Music by Apothek.

Litteraturhusets podkast
Siri Hustvedt og Chris Kraus

Litteraturhusets podkast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 1, 2017 56:03


I denne episoden kan du høre en samtale mellom de amerikanske forfatterne Siri Hustvedt og Chris Kraus, ledet av Anne-Hilde Neset, direktør ved Kunstnernes Hus i Oslo. Hvorfor er det fremdeles slik at menn knyttes til intellekt og samfunn, mens kvinner ofte settes i sammenheng med kropp og følelser? Dette er blant hovedspørsmålene i denne samtalen, idet Hustvedt, Kraus og Neset diskuterer kjønn og hvordan vi oppfatter kunst og litteratur. I samtalen snakker de om kvinnelige antihelter, kvinners forbudte raseri og deres plass og anerkjennelse innen kunstverdenen. I Siri Hustvedts siste essaysamling, Kvinne ser på menn som ser på kvinner (oversatt av Knut Johansen) undersøker hun hvordan fordommer om kjønn og persepsjon påvirker hvordan vi ser på kunst og litteratur. Kunst og identitet er også et tema i hennes siste roman, Den flammende verden. Chris Kraus, kjent for kultromanen I Love Dick, står bak en rekke sjangeroverskridende essays og romaner hvor hun skildrer kvinnelige erfaringer i kunstverdenen. Samtalen fant sted 21. august 2017.    Litteraturhusets podkast presenterer bearbeidede versjoner av samtaler og foredrag i regi av Stiftelsen Litteraturhuset. Musikk av Apothek. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

LittPod
Knausgård writes like a woman

LittPod

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 1, 2017 73:44


(Lecture in English) Foredrag med Siri Hustvedt om kjønn, skrift og litteratur. Da Siri Hustvedt intervjuet Karl Ove Knausgård på hans første USA-turné i 2012, avsluttet hun seansen med å spørre ham hvorfor han bare nevner én kvinnelig forfatter blant de mange litterære referansene i bøkene sine. Han svarte kort og kontant: No competition. Svaret har hjemsøkt Hustvedt i ettertid, og blitt utgangspunkt for et mye omtalt essay i hennes siste bok, A Woman Looking at Men Looking at Women. Hustvedt undersøker hva Knausgård kan ha ment, og hvordan kjønn spiller en rolle for skrivingens status og resepsjon.

LittPod
Siri Hustvedt: Knausgård writes like a woman

LittPod

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 1, 2017 73:43


Foredrag med Siri Hustvedt om kjønn, skrift og litteratur. Da Siri Hustvedt intervjuet Karl Ove Knausgård på hans første USA-turné i 2012, avsluttet hun seansen med å spørre ham hvorfor han bare nevner én kvinnelig forfatter blant de mange litterære referansene i bøkene sine. Han svarte kort og kontant: No competition. Svaret har hjemsøkt Hustvedt i ettertid, og blitt utgangspunkt for et mye omtalt essay i hennes siste bok, A Woman Looking at Men Looking at Women. Hustvedt undersøker hva Knausgård kan ha ment, og hvordan kjønn spiller en rolle for skrivingens status og resepsjon.

Narrative Medicine Rounds
Siri Hustvedt: Why One Body and Not Another? A talk by novelist and scholar Siri Hustvedt

Narrative Medicine Rounds

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 12, 2016 94:13


For our October Narrative Medicine Rounds, the Program in Narrative Medicine is honored to present Siri Hustvedt, who is one of the leading American writers of the 21st century. A new book by the publisher DeGruyter, entitled "Zones of Focused Ambiguity in Siri Hustvedt’s Works," edited by Johanna Hartmann, Christine Marks, and Hubert Zapf, has just been released, and Hustvedt will speak about the ideas and analysis within the new collection. The book brings together essays from various inter-disciplinary perspectives to analyze and interpret her fictional and non-fictional works and is structured into the parts: “Literary Creation and Communication,” Psychoanalysis and Philosophy,” “Medicine and Narrative,” “Vision, Perception, and Power,” and “Trauma, Memory, and the Ambiguities of Self.” There is also an interview with Hustvedt, in which she elucidates her personal conception of her own creative processes of writing. Hustvedt, who has a Ph.D. from Columbia, is a lecturer in Psychiatry at Weill Medical College of Cornell University. Among her works are the novels The Enchantment of Lily Dahl (1996), What I Loved (2003), The Sorrows of an American (2008), The Summer without Men (2011), and The Blazing World (2014). Her upcoming book, “A Woman Looking at Men Looking at Women: Essays on Art, Sex, and the Mind,” published by Simon and Schuster, will be out in December.

Books Like Us
The Blazing World – Siri Hunstvedt

Books Like Us

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 11, 2015


This fourteenth episode features an in-depth conversation about Siri Hunstvedt’s expansive and confrontational novel The Blazing World (2014). I sat down with our reader to discuss Hustvedt’s tragic heroine, Harriet Burden, and her strategic exposure of gender inequality within the art world. The novel is provocative, insightful, and draws the reader toward an understanding of... Read More

National Book Festival 2014 Webcasts
Siri Hustvedt: 2014 National Book Festival

National Book Festival 2014 Webcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 1, 2014 39:36


Aug. 30, 2014. Siri Hustvedt appears at the 2014 Library of Congress National Book Festival in Washington, D.C. Speaker Biography: Siri Hustvedt, who was born in a small Minnesota town, has received international acclaim for her work, which has been translated into more than 30 languages. Of Norwegian descent, Hustvedt spent many of her early years overseas, in Bergen, Norway, and Reykjavik, Iceland. In 1978 she moved to New York to study English at Columbia University and to write poetry. She published her first poem in The Paris Review in 1981. Hustvedt's first novel, "The Blindfold," was published in 1992 and was so successful it was translated into 17 languages. Her subsequent novels include "The Enchantment of Lily Dahl," "The Sorrows of an American" "What I Loved" and "The Summer Without Men." Her new book, "The Blazing World" (Simon & Schuster), recently reviewed enthusiastically on the front page of The New York Times Book Review, is a send-up of gender bias in the art world. For transcript, captions, and more information, visit http://www.loc.gov/today/cyberlc/feature_wdesc.php?rec=6388

Biblioteket
Hemma hos Paul Auster och Siri Hustvedt

Biblioteket

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2009 43:47


Hemma hos Paul Auster och Siri Hustvedt USA:s mest kända författarpar är förmodligen Paul Auster och Siri Hustvedt. Paul Auster, mannen bakom bland mycket annat romanerna i New York-trilogin från mitten av 1980-talet. Gift med Siri Hustvedt, som med sin förra roman Vad jag älskade fick sitt stora internationella genombrott. Marie Lundström är hemma hos de båda i sekelskifteshuset i Brooklyn, New York, där de sedan länge bor. Hör en unik parintervju om kärlek, hemmets skötsel, hur de hjälper varandra med skrivandet, deras olika arbetsmetoder och gemensamma vardag - och hur de egentligen träffades för mer än 28 år sedan. Hur lever två författare ihop? Myten om det skapande paret har under modern tid personifierats av franska Jean-Paul Sartre och Simone de Beauvoir. USA:s nu levande mest kända författarpar är Paul Auster och Siri Hustvedt. Paul Auster, det snygga egensinniga geniet, mannen bakom bland mycket annat romanerna i New York-trilogin från mitten av 1980-talet. Gift med Siri Hustvedt, som med sin förra roman Vad jag älskade fick sitt stora internationella genombrott. Marie Lundström har varit hemma hos de båda i sekelskifteshuset i Brooklyn, New York, där de sedan länge bor. Hör en unik parintervju om kärlek, hemmets skötsel, hur de hjälper varandra med skrivandet, deras olika arbetsmetoder och gemensamma vardag - och hur de egentligen träffades för mer än 28 år sedan.