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Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Another conversation with Patricia


The things you learn while editing:  Today, finally, I confirmed the meaning of "antebellum."  Without looking it up, over time I came to decipher the meaning at least in the United States as dating back to before the Civil War.  That is where the term is used most often. Who has ever read a novel about the South that doesn't have an antebellum mansion in it?

The real meaning came up today in a conversation with Patricia.  Now, if you have stuck with this blog over the years, you know Patricia as a writer friend with whom I carried on long electronic conversations about writing.  In time she developed cancer and she died last November, leaving me with a void in my life and three expensive tickets to a Lady Gaga concert.

She also left me with a chore.  At the time of her death, she was editing her book "The New Book of Goddesses and Heroines" for a new edition.  Mostly the editing was shortening the book.  She was unable to finish it and her husband asked me to complete the edit, a chore I at first resisted, but now have embraced as it is keeping me in touch with my friend, in part giving me an answer to the question I asked at the end of the post I wrote about her passing:  What am I going to do now?  What I am going to do, what I am doing is converse with her almost daily about word choices, antecedents, references and all the little details of writing craft.  Patricia is one of those writers who is difficult to cut.  It is a burden for editors, but a joyful one, because good writers like Patricia make it very difficult to leave anything out.

As I have gone through it, I find myself looking at the ceiling wondering what she meant here, and is this going to hurt the message if I take it out, and why did you say this instead of this?  I find myself often talking to her, explaining why this or that is a good cut and why I took it out, even sometimes apologizing for what I am cutting, sometimes shaking my head to chastise, noting something I know I told her about years ago.  I can almost see the smile on her face as she patronizes me, acknowledging that I am right, while at the same time stubbornly refusing to change it.

Along the way she is teaching me, exposing  a world and a perspective very new to my way of thinking.  I wonder how much of classical mythology reaches kids in schools today.  I know from what I am reading now that what little I received in world history and Latin classes was largely male-based, highlighting the gods and relegating the goddesses to consort roles.  That's the perspective Patricia is now in the process of changing for me.

I catch myself often saying, oh that's where that comes from, while reading one entry or another and connecting a name to modern word usage, or seeing the logic in the development of goddesses in native cultures, some of whom are still with us in one form or another.  Just look at the names of all the stars and particularly constellations.

And I so much want to tell her a story.  Often when dealing with ancient cultures there are varying opinions and interpretation of people and events that occurred before written history and even after for that matter.  As a result people writing about it and attempting to show all interpretations will use the term "Some say," this or that.  What I want to tell her is that while I was in college, in an age of change, black studies and particularly history courses were quickly added to curricula.  At the University of Kansas a black history professor from a small college in Missouri was flown in twice a week to teach a huge lecture class in that history.  Twice a week we had to sit and listen to this guy drone on taking all the life out of what should have been fascinating history beginning with origins in Africa.  His favorite source was a professor "some say" as I called it, for example (and he really said this) "Some say Cleopatra was black." Eventually I quit going to class except for the midterm and the final.  At the time I was also taking Recent American History, which began in the late 19th century.  An energetic young instructor taught it and he had wound black history in the with rest of it.  How good was he?  I got a B in black history and a C in modern American history.  But the younger fellow never quoted Dr. Some Say.  And, now whenever I come across Patricia saying "Some say..." I have to laugh and look at the ceiling and wish I could tell her why I want to change it.

So the conversations with Patricia go on, in an altered state, but allowing me to feel she is still at least influencing us.  I am sure, given our conversations about procrastination, she would be laughing at the machinations I go through to avoid sitting down and cutting more out of her beautiful piece of work.  But I do it, because it keeps us in touch, and pushes further into the future that day when I have to ask again "What am I going to do now?"

And, "antebellum?"  According to Patricia, Bellona was a Roman goddess who ruled conflict, diplomatic as well as military, and the Latin word for war, "bellum," derives from her name.


Earthmaker judges the world



Conversations with Patricia: Day before the election (with apologies)



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