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Apr. 1st, 2008

On speaking French, scholarhips, art, literature=another long entry

I've found recently that I really badly need to practice speaking French. My French conversation class is fine, but I need to speak it more frequently than twice a week--I need it everyday!

I think I'm just missing hearing everyone around me(except for the people who came with me) speaking French. It was great...I know I could have spoke more but I was extremely timid until Thursday and the "incident," which showed me that I can speak pretty well. I just wish there was a way to practice speaking here! I need to grab a classmate and make it mandatory that we speak to each other only in French...I need to find someone who's not timid though...hmmm.


I'm really excited about the scholarship ceremony next week. I have no idea what scholarship I got and the mystery is killing me! Hahah. I'm also excited because soon this semester will be over and each day I'm closer and closer to the summer and maybe even going back to France if my friend's offer still stands and I can get my finances in order. Let us cross our fingers. :)

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Recently in survey II we've been discussing orientalism and "otherness" in the sense of the depiction of non-european women in modern art(think Picasso and Matisse) and, equally, the depiction and treatment of women in art in general. The latter doesn't intrigue me as much as the former, mainly because the concept of "otherness" is a bit more of a daunting issue for me than femininity. Moreover, while pondering why Picasso and many of his contemporaries chose to pursue l'art negré or orientalism in their art, it made me think of why France enamores me so and why other things, more domestic things, do not.

I guess the intrigue comes also from the idea hinted on by L.Ferdinand Céline in "Voyage au bout de la Nuit," the idea of getting as far away from where one is in hopes of reaching some form of happiness, while at the same time having the--although pessimistic--realistic acknowledgement that wherever one goes, the "night" is inescapable(although, admittedly, that's not what I'm talking about, but how can one reference Nietzchan philosophy without mentioning Voyage?). It's that hopefulness and interest in what it is like to be something other than what one is and, I guess, trying to figure it out. I've always, albeit unconsciously, thought of my home, Houston, Texas, and, increasingly, the United States as a sort of void or blackhole which I can either escape or plummet into, either willingly or not. I believe this to be a leifmotiv between me and my siblings(or at least the two older ones), ongoing fear of the "void." Although we've never talked about it, I think it's the rapport we have between one another which binds us.

What does this have to do with "otherness? and France? Well, the "other" is that escape for me. The idea of seperation from what is normalcy here and, therefore, becoming the "other" but at the same time having the power to choose. By and by, in France I have that power. I'm different because I am American, and different in the U.S. because I am not like all Americans nor am I French or want to be--what I am is an individual who, perhaps imaginatively and marginally, has cultivated her own little space of existence. Unlike Picasso's Demoiselles or Matisse's falsified L'asie , I would have the power to choose my distinctiveness, more so than I've had that here--no one would be able to cover me with fake meaing, no one important, anyway. Freedom from the void. Yves Klein was trying to find it and I'm trying to get away from it, but of course in this context it has two meanings. Miraculously this ties back to Céline in the sense that one could say my "night" is the void and like Bardamu(the main character in the novel) I'm trying my hardest to find a way out. Let us hope that our results aren't connected also.

Mar. 20th, 2008

Bonjour from Paris!

so, my vacation in paris is almost over and I'm very sad. I wish I could travel around France, but I haven't the time. I've seen a lot of really cool stuff. I'm trying to decide if I'll go to Versailles tomorrow(I know I said I HAD to go) or the Louvre. I realized I'm not that interested in going to specific places...I like just walking around aimlessly until I find something interesting. Like today I walked along le quai de musee d'orsay and found the Grande Palais and then realized that the Goya exhibition I've been seeing signs about everywhere was at the Petit Palais. Sooo...I went in there, paid 4,50 euros and it was really cool. Then I walked from there to avenue de la motte piquette grenelle(close to my hotel), realized I'd gone the wrong way...took the metro two stops and went back to my hotel for a nap. Now I'm hanging out at a internet cafe off of st.germaine.

my first day was by far the most exciting, interesting, and fun day. It honestly made my trip worth-wild and made me realize that I need this place. I've never felt more at home anywhere else.
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HOLY CRAP! Did I mention I saw "the Fountain"? I freaking stood next to Duchamp's "Fountain"! I nearly passed out when I saw it and of course I took a picture next to it. Oh my goodness...I friggin' saw "the fountain."