Has anyone ever written about landscape as a defining drama upon one's inner life as Handke does?
"the dark cypresses of the summer of 1971 in Yugoslavia" 149 Taking Cezanne's relationship with Mont St Victoire as another doppelgänger effect upon him. Earlier in the first section, the stranger on the train encounter is perfect. Not a train but a bus. They meet for lunch after they arrive in NYC. They need each other, do not expect to get to know each other, simply experience the encounter as a necessary moment each has on their journey, their private inner journey.
transformation and always intrinsic guilt 149 desire for reconciliation which comes from desiring another's desire 149 as the philosopher put it a perfectly reasonable desire which philosopher?
well as it happens I do now have as a companion this book by Christoph Parry "Peter Handke's Landscapes of Discourse" and just glancing through he answers this and all related questions with the great detail and depth of superior academic scholarship. Pynchon's Crying of Lot 49 shows up! Whole chapter on Repetition (which I forget I did read out of order!) and much much more. Way much more than I'd realized---did the German Romantics not indeed invent landscape and literary inner travel?
the metaphorical relationship of landscape and writing Parry 131
feels so much like a culmination of all my years of "teaching" travel literature---something I did out of a desire to"for reconciliation which comes from desiring another's desire" "as the philosopher puts it" but which I really had no way of articulating beyond reading one book after another, one writer after another---Chatwin, Leigh Fermor etc
Parry was born in '51 in Cambridge, traveled in Singapore and Nigeria, studied in Edinburgh and Marburg, but Chatwin is not in the Index. Wrote his dissertation on Celan and Mandelstam (neither of whom have I read! ) and settled into teaching in Finland.