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Katherine Beam

Waterland

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"Only nature knows neither memory nor history. But man - let me offer you a definition - is the story-telling animal." - Graham Swift, pp. 85

I recently finished Waterland by Graham Swift. I had never read anything by this author before, but I think I might have to go see what else he's written, after this one. 

There is this idea of fate not as a natural thing, but as a construct, a story that we humans are telling ourselves; stories run their courses as surely as the river finds the sea. But, centrally to Waterland, those courses can be changed, can be forced and shaped and re-carved by humans. Fate, or the lack thereof, is still the story we are telling ourselves. 

Waterland is one of those books that makes me want to go up to the fens and turn time back right past the Romans and then sit and watch humanity unspool itself across the landscape. There's been such a deep-seated change to the fens, the draining and the re-directing and I think...it speaks to fate. There's this idea that we can change the landscape, can change the inevitability of the river's course, through our efforts and our genius. 

But the river overflows its banks, anyway. 

There's a metaphor spun into a motif here, I'm just struggling to put it into words succinct enough. 

"For a little while - it didn't start so long ago, only a few generations ago - the world went through its revolutionary, progressive phase; and the world believed it would never end, it would go on getting better. But then the end of the world came back again, not as an idea or a belief but as something the world had fashioned for itself all the time it was growing up." - Graham Swift, pp. 460


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Katherine Beam

Welcome??

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I have to admit, I'm not really entirely sure what to do with this space. It feels unfathomably large, if I'm honest, and my consistent fear over yelling into the void is that the void may one day yell back. But I have it, so I figure I ought to use it. 

I suppose that the most effective use would have to be a diary, of sorts, to track the sorts of thoughts and questions I have regarding my schoolwork that won't ever make it anywhere else. That being said, I am notoriously inconsistent, so we'll see. It might also get a little bit of creative writing, or thoughts about creative writing, or reading, or the development of my abilities as an active reader. General academic-related sorts of things? 

I'm sure I'll look back on this post by the end of the year and laugh at myself and the ideas I've expressed here. But maybe that's half of why I'm doing this at all, to preserve the moment in time where I thought that this was a good idea. I am all about that, really, preservation. I'll catch moments like wildflowers and suffocate them to death in my online book until they are flat and faded and lifeless and this metaphor really did not go the way I intended it to. 

Anyway. Until next time, maybe. Hope you're laughing, future Katherine.

-Katherine

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