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	<title>Spike Magazine &#187; Bruce Chatwin</title>
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		<title>Bruce Chatwin&#8217;s travel writing: In Search Of The Miraculous</title>
		<link>http://www.spikemagazine.com/0896chat.php</link>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 01 Aug 1996 10:34:56 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>tlchung</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Bruce Chatwin]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Features]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Novels]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Travel]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Spike on the enduring enigma of Bruce Chatwin&#8217;s travel writing Bruce Chatwin was a truly singular voice in British travel writing, and whose silence is now all too apparent. Since his untimely death in 1989 of what was described at the time as a rare Chinese disease (but which was later admitted to be AIDS), [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Spike on             the enduring enigma of Bruce Chatwin&#8217;s travel writing</p>
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<p>
  Bruce Chatwin was a truly singular voice in British travel writing,             and whose silence is now all too apparent. Since his untimely death             in 1989 of what was described at the time as a rare Chinese disease             (but which was later admitted to be AIDS), several collections of his             previously unpublished work have appeared. The latest of these is <em>Anatomy             of Restlessness: Uncollected Writings.</em> This book, however, pays             poor service to his name. Published under the auspices of a &#8220;sourcebook&#8221;             of uncollected work it draws together various pieces from magazines             and journals. The result is a misshapen assemblage that hides gems amongst             the weak and the substandard.</p>
<p>Chatwin&#8217;s writing at its best is both thrilling and absorbing, capable             of carrying the reader to untravelled lands, and Chatwin was always             the best of companions. However, if Chatwin the writer was intriguing,             Chatwin the man was so much more. His rich life, pushed and pulled by             his demanding interests, was always present in his work. That is not             say that he was example of that breed of traveller who batters you into             submission with endless anecdote heaped upon anecdote. Rather, he introduces             you to the sights of exotic lands, vast parties of characters, all set             free to live an existence untrammelled by the author&#8217;s irrepressible             ego.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.spikemagazine.com/chatwin/restless.jpg" alt="Anatomy Of Restlessness cover" align="right" height="235" hspace="5" vspace="2" width="163"></p>
<p>As the format of this new book suggests, Bruce Chatwin&#8217;s writing was             divisible into distinct categories &#8211; whether it be art, his exploration             of what he termed &#8220;the nomadic alternative&#8221;, or fiction, written in             a style which was an assiduous blend of the real with the imaginary.             The autobiographical piece which opens <em>Anatomy of Restlessness </em> hints at some of the myths that surround this man. By all accounts Chatwin             left his steady job writing for the <em>Sunday Times</em> with a telegram             enigmatically stating &#8220;Have gone to Patagonia&#8221;. This, however, was not             the first time that he had made such a dramatic break from security.             Previously, he threw in his job as a director at Sotheby&#8217;s in order             to live with and study nomadic tribes in the Sudan, offering the excuse             that his doctor said that he needed to view distant horizons in order             to correct an eye defect (a self confessed psychosomatic illness). The             product of his sudden trip to Patagonia was the aptly titled <em>In Patagonia</em> (1977).</p>
<p><img src="http://www.spikemagazine.com/chatwin/patagoni.jpg" alt="In Patagonia cover" align="left" height="226" hspace="7" vspace="6" width="148"></p>
<p>This first book was most probably the driest of all Chatwin&#8217;s output,             but which has already been raised to near classic status. Chatwin weaves             together curious observations with nuggets of historical information             which manages to make this more than an account of a physical journey,             and that, to me, is the essence of good travel writing. I don&#8217;t just             want to know what a cracking guy the author is, and how he managed to             get out of a scrape with an armadillo whilst travelling in the Amazon             with just a piece of used dental floss and a very, very sharp stick.             Nor do I want to be laden down with superfluous information on the economic             argument for the downfall of the Ottoman Empire!</p>
<p>What do I demand from a travel writer then? I want to be able to understand             them as a person, and know why they have undertaken this particular             journey. And that means being able to step inside their head and travel             with them. Though this is nearly impossible, Bruce Chatwin was one of             the few writers that I feel managed it.</p>
<p>Chatwin was not, however, a straight forward kind of travel writer             like Wilfred Thesiger or Norman Lewis. One of the most amazing qualities             that sets Chatwin apart was his ability to mix fact and fiction in his             &#8216;stories&#8217;. As he said himself, &#8220;The word story is intend to alert the             reader to the fact that, however closely the narrative may fit the facts,             the fictional process has been at work.&#8221; This is idea is best held in             mind when considering his best-selling book, <em>The Songlines</em> (1987).</p>
<p><img src="http://www.spikemagazine.com/chatwin/songline.jpg" alt="Songline cover" align="right" height="217" hspace="5" vspace="2" width="138"></p>
<p>Though clearly a novel, it is also not a novel. Let me explain. The             main character is a guy called Bruce who&#8217;s travelling around the Australian             outback researching the nomadic culture of the Aboriginal, and their             singing the world into existence through their travelling of the Songlines.             This coincidence is further compounded by the fact that &#8216;Bruce&#8217; records             his notes in very same moleskin notebooks that Bruce Chatwin himself             was famous for. This book, then, results in being so much more than             just a travel book or a novel. It provides not only a combination of             a portrait of an amazing culture and a damn fine read; it eventually             draws the reader into questioning the very fabric of human culture and             our Western preconceptions. Who could ask for more? An interesting aside:             Salman Rushdie, who travelled with Chatwin in Australia whilst he was             working on this book, provides an enlightening, though brief, glimpse             of Chatwin at work in his book <em>Imaginary Homelands</em> (1991).</p>
<p>An obvious thread that joins much of Chatwin&#8217;s work like <em>The Songlines</em> and <em>Anatomy of Restlessness</em> is his passion for nomadic life.             This interest is represented in both the opening section, &#8216;Horreur du             domicile&#8217;, which draws together various short pieces on his own personal             motivations to travel, and the chapter entitled &#8216;The Nomadic Alternative&#8217;.             In this chapter the collection of pieces outline many of the arguments             that comprised Chatwin&#8217;s own unpublished thesis on nomadism. These pieces,             though frequently dense, are some of the most rewarding, with Chatwin&#8217;s             erudition shining through. Chatwin links many divergent nomadic cultures             from around the world, highlighting several similarities of development,             and in time puts forward a credible case for nomadism as equal to the             sedentary life that has become a universal norm. If Chatwin is to be             believed, civilisation just took a wrong turn somewhere, and chose to             plump for the inferior option. This, he feels, also goes some way to             explain the Western disease: wanderlust.</p>
<p><img src="http://www.spikemagazine.com/chatwin/whatami.jpg" alt="What Am I Doing Here cover" align="left" height="187" hspace="8" vspace="6" width="120"></p>
<p>When viewed in comparison to his own collection of incidental work, <em>What Am I Doing Here</em> (1989), <em>Anatomy Of Restlessness</em> pales.             Chatwin amassed innumerable fabulous pieces in what must be considered             the definitive compilation, and which really renders this new book superfluous.             The pieces range through the intensely personal in &#8216;Your father&#8217;s eyes             are blue again&#8217;, the dramatic with &#8216;A coup &#8211; a story&#8217; (though Chatwin             himself was caught up in the coup in Benin), and the entrancing &#8216;On             the yeti&#8217;s tracks&#8217;. These short works, however, are just the tip of             the iceberg, with this book containing so much more.</p>
<p> Another remarkable quality of Chatwin&#8217;s writing was his ability to             capture a personality, and <em>What Am I Doing Here</em> is filled with             accounts of some the unusual characters he met over the years. We meet             Maria Reiche, a gangly German mathematician who spends her days in the             bleak environment of the Peruvian Pampas, standing on a step-ladder             in order to chart the strange lines, often miles in length, carved into             the floor of this desert. We travel with Chatwin to Ghana to see the             film director Werner Herzog going mad (again) whilst filming Chatwin&#8217;s             novel, <em>The Viceroy of Quidah</em> (1980). We even get to trail around             India with Bruce and the photographer Eve Arnold who followed Indira             Gandhi&#8217;s election campaign shortly before her assassination in the late             Seventies.</p>
<p>Another crucial aspect of Chatwin&#8217;s output addressed in <em>Anatomy             of Restlessness</em> is his unfailing interest in all forms of visual             art. Chatwin&#8217;s aesthetic was that which championed the primitive and             the simplistic, though, whilst at Sotheby&#8217;s he was employed as an &#8216;expert&#8217;             on Impressionism. Whilst interested in the theory of art and collecting,             he was also an artist of considerable aplomb himself with his work being             published in the posthumous <em>Photographs and Notebooks</em> (1993),             with a coinciding exhibition at the Royal Festival Hall, London. Here             we are shown his remarkable eye for the abstract that exists in all             things. Sparse and controlled, his photographs managed to trap the beauty             that can be found in the common and everyday. He crops boats and walls             in Mauritania, so releasing the power of their dazzling colours and             geometric forms. The prayer flags of the Bodnath Stupa, Kathmandu, are             framed so as to cut crazy patterns in the sky.</p>
</p>
<p><center><br />
  <img src="http://www.spikemagazine.com/chatwin/chatphot.jpg" alt="Chatwin photo" border="1" height="158" width="201"><br />
  Bruce Chatwin, <em>Old Noaukchott</em><br />
</center></p>
<p>Chatwin&#8217;s photographs also demonstrate keen awareness of the decay             inherent in all life, littered with images of crumbling buildings, and             tatty ramshackle shacks, all breathing what looks to be their last breath.             Maybe he liked feel that all sedentary life was on its last legs, and             soon nomadism, the rightful king would come and claim back its lands.             Or maybe he just found them beautiful.</p>
<p>This brief excursion through the work of Bruce Chatwin has, I hope,             served to demonstrate not only his uniqueness, but also convey some             sense of the power of his writing. In doing so, it becomes glaringly             apparent that <em>Anatomy Of Restlessness</em> is an unsatisfying epilogue             to Chatwin&#8217;s ouevre. Yes, it is put together in a good accessible form,             and yes, it does aim to cover the main areas of his output. However,             what is lacking is a sense of quality, and as a result much of this             work falls short of being able to be considered &#8216;important&#8217;. However,             if, like myself, you want one last chance to experience the joy of reading             a new Chatwin book, then you won&#8217;t be disappointed. Bruce Chatwin does             still exists in these pages. </p>
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