Brain Pain discussion

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Pilgrimage 1
Pointed Roofs - Spine 2013
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Discussion - Week One - Pointed Roofs, Chapter I - III
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Richardson, Dorothy Miller, 1873-1957. Pointed roofs (Kindle Locations 58-59). London : Duckworth.

Casceil wrote: "There are ambiguous passages, but mostly there is a clear sense of space and time. The author paints vivid pictures of the scene, but the sounds are also described very clearly. She uses a lot of..."
Re: ambiguous passages, what do you think about this quote from Richardson's wikipedia page:
Do you think there is something to this characterization of the writing using "the psychological sentence of the feminine gender"? I see some of that here. And not to jump the gun for our week three discussion, but the interior monologues for Mrs. Ramsay and Lily Briscoe in To the Lighthouse certainly seem to fit this idea of writing that better expresses female experience.
Re: ambiguous passages, what do you think about this quote from Richardson's wikipedia page:
Richardson is also an important feminist writer, because of the way her work assumes the validity and importance of female experiences as a subject for literature. Her wariness of the conventions of language, her bending of the normal rules of punctuation, sentence length, and so on, are used to create a feminine prose, which Richardson saw as necessary for the expression of female experience. Virginia Woolf in 1923 noted, that Richardson ‘has invented, or, if she has not invented, developed and applied to her own uses, a sentence which we might call the psychological sentence of the feminine gender.’
Do you think there is something to this characterization of the writing using "the psychological sentence of the feminine gender"? I see some of that here. And not to jump the gun for our week three discussion, but the interior monologues for Mrs. Ramsay and Lily Briscoe in To the Lighthouse certainly seem to fit this idea of writing that better expresses female experience.





I loved the sense of awkwardness, the feeling of not belonging in a traditional aristocratic world anymore, of changing social status without really being prepared for it (who is ever?).
To answer Jim's questions, I thought it was ambiguous at first. I thought she was the eldest, because she decided to go away from home to live in a different country and be responsible for her own education. But in fact, she is the third daughter. That was surprising for me, and it emphasises her maturity and independence when compared to her sisters.
And there are also the ramblings in Chapter three. Events are described out of order, and in a way that creates a crescendo to her belonging, to feeling at home and at ease after a fortnight and not wanting to write back home (maybe not to spoil the moment).
It really has a feeling of being written by a woman, and showing her most intimate thoughts, but in this situation there's the added bonus of being a misanthropic and maladjusted teenager in a bankrupt aristocratic family.
Ellie wrote: "For me, the experience of starting PR was a sense of "coming home." As much as I've loved the previous books we've read, the style of this (and in To The Lighthouse) was much easier for me to enter..."
I don't know exactly how to express this, but here goes. When reading Richardson and Woolf, I know I'm reading something not written by a man. I don't know what it's like to live in a woman's psyche and can only guess what that experience is like. And so, I'm glad to hear you confirming that Richardson (and Woolf) are accurately and successfully representing female experience in their writing. Off topic, but I'm re-reading Anna Karenina and as great as the book is, I'm realizing that Tolstoy is not representing Anna the way Richardson or Woolf would. He does a good job, generally, but Anna is no Mrs. Ramsay (in terms of representation, not specifics).
@Casceil - I like your point about "women's homemaking tasks are about a continuous process" and the attention to daily cycles and rhythms. Later in Pointed Roofs, Miriam will complain about the stress caused by interrupted or irregular daily processes/cycles/routines.
@Simone - I'm curious how Miriam's misanthropy is developed in the later volumes of Pilgrimage. (Our schedule is overflowing right now, but maybe we could look at volume 2 later this year if anyone is interested.)
I don't know exactly how to express this, but here goes. When reading Richardson and Woolf, I know I'm reading something not written by a man. I don't know what it's like to live in a woman's psyche and can only guess what that experience is like. And so, I'm glad to hear you confirming that Richardson (and Woolf) are accurately and successfully representing female experience in their writing. Off topic, but I'm re-reading Anna Karenina and as great as the book is, I'm realizing that Tolstoy is not representing Anna the way Richardson or Woolf would. He does a good job, generally, but Anna is no Mrs. Ramsay (in terms of representation, not specifics).
@Casceil - I like your point about "women's homemaking tasks are about a continuous process" and the attention to daily cycles and rhythms. Later in Pointed Roofs, Miriam will complain about the stress caused by interrupted or irregular daily processes/cycles/routines.
@Simone - I'm curious how Miriam's misanthropy is developed in the later volumes of Pilgrimage. (Our schedule is overflowing right now, but maybe we could look at volume 2 later this year if anyone is interested.)

I'm in. I have a lot going on right now, but as I said I loved it and got curious about the other volumes too. Later this year (maybe after we've finished Faustus) is fine by me.
Simone wrote: "Jim wrote: "(Our schedule is overflowing right now, but maybe we could look at volume 2 later this year if anyone is interested.) "
I'm in. I have a lot going on right now, but as I said I loved i..."
OK. The Faust project ends the first week of June. We can return to Richardson, maybe late June, for a summer read.
I'm in. I have a lot going on right now, but as I said I loved i..."
OK. The Faust project ends the first week of June. We can return to Richardson, maybe late June, for a summer read.

I've read complaints that "nothing happens" & yet my sensation while reading is that something is always happening, the way it does for us in our lives because as the center of the (our) world, we are deluged with information/data/experiences constantly & I think Richardson comes close to capturing that experience. It's interesting that even in stream-of-consciousness so much must by necessity be left out.
Books mentioned in this topic
Villette (other topics)Villette (other topics)
Miriam prepares to leave home for a position as governess (teacher?) in Germany. She and her Pater arrive by boat in Holland and board the train for Germany. During the trip, doubts and fears crowd Miriam’s mind and she questions herself and her family. Arrived at her new home, Miriam has many tense moments and fears she may not be able to remain, but slowly, she finds her way and is delighted to rediscover her music amongst her new German companions.
First impressions? Is there a clear sense of space and time? Or are there ambiguous passages? Do you feel the peaks and valleys of Miriam’s shifting moods and emotions?
To avoid spoilers, please limit your comments to Chapters I - III