"“I can’t sum myself up because it’s impossible to add up a chair and two apples. I’m a chair and two apples. And I don’t add up,” states the female narrator of Clarice Lispector’s novel Agua Viva (The Stream of Life) as she pursues a narrative quest of self-discovery only to realize that her identity is compound and words cannot always convey what she actually feels. If the apple symbolizes knowledge and the chair an aspect of domesticity, this voice is affirming that she is greater than her gender. Despite an intense struggle with words, Lispector’s female protagonists nevertheless burst forth, sparked by unexpected epiphanies that lead them to probe their existential condition with a self-conscious awareness of the limitations of language and of their beleaguered situations. These narrator/protagonists also manifest experiences of displacement and otherness that, rather than inducing alienation, expand the knowledge of self, as exemplified by the words of another female narrator, GH: “He who lives totally is living for others.” Lispector’s prose also transmits the evocative and spiritual sense of the ineffable, an openness to a form of mystical and linguistic reception that transcends the concreteness of the written word to enable her characters and readers to experience a lyrical sense of the sublime, the “unsayable,” which scholar and theologian Abraham Joshua Heschel, in Man Is Not Alone (1951), recognized as “the root of man’s creative activities in art, thought and noble living.”"
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Jews from UkraineWomen authorsNovelists from BrazilShort story writers from BrazilJournalists from Brazil
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Nelson H. Vieira, "Clarice Lispector" (2009)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Clarice_Lispector
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Clarice Lispector
Clarice Lispector (born Chaya Pinkhasivna Lispector; December 10, 1920 – December 9, 1977) was a Brazilian writer. Acclaimed internationally for her innovative novels and short stories, she was also a journalist and a translator. A legendary figure in Brazil, renowned for her uncommon and unique writing style, her great personal beauty — the American translator Gregory Rabassa recalled being "flabbergasted to meet that rare person who looked like Marlene Dietrich and wrote like Virginia Woolf,"
133 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Clarice Lispector →
Related Quotes
"I have an affectionate fondness for the unfinished, the poorly made, whatever awkwardly attempts a little flight and …"
"Traduzo, sim, mas fico cheia de mêdo de ler traduções que fazem de livros meus. Além de ter basntante enjôo de reler …"
"The struggle to reach reality-that's the main objective of this creature who tries, in every way, to cling to whateve…"
"One of the most intense aspirations of the spirit is to dominate exterior reality through the spirit. Lucrécia doesn'…"
"It's not apparent to me that all these intimate movements of the book, as well as others that complement them-were dr…"
"I just want to say that I write not for money but on impulse."
"I am so lost. But that is exactly how we live; lost in time and space."
"The clock strikes nine. A loud, sonorous peal, followed by gentle chiming, an echo. Then, silence. The bright stain o…"
"I have been sculpted into so many statues and haven't frozen in place ("Obsession")"
"It is not easy to remember how and why I wrote a story or a novel. Once they detach from me, I too find them unfamili…"