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tv   HAR Dtalk  BBC News  May 1, 2024 11:30pm-12:01am BST

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this city has always had an outsize influence on american culture. the buzz in this nation comes from right here in terms of the arts, entertainment, publishing, the media. but what happens in new york when america's political culture is riven with division? well, my guest today is the great american novelist, new york resident, paul auster. if america is experiencing a culture war, is he ready to fight? paul auster, welcome to hardtalk. thank you. it is a pleasure to be in your home. your writing study is just below
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us, the floor below. just tell me, does it matter to you when you are writing what is going on in the world outside yourfront door? does it affect your writing? well, it depends on what you mean. if there's a fire engine screeching in front of my door, it will interrupt my concentration and i might go out and see what's going on. but if there's a distant war going on in another place and i know about it, i'm not going to read about it while i'm doing my work for the day, but i certainly will inform myself about it later. you talk of distant wars, i'm thinking of wars much closer to home. you write a lot about your take on american politics. you've talked about your feelings through the course of four years of donald trump. you've talked about a country at war with itself, so the war isn't so very far away.
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yes. the war that we're engaged in here, fortunately, has not become, yet, a fighting war with guns to a large degree. but we are divided in ways that i have never seen before, and i've been around a long time now. you've been around a long time and you grew up with �*60s activism. you were a very vocal opponent of ronald reagan conservatism. you were a very vocal opponent of george bush's decision to go to iraq. true enough. so are you telling me there is something profoundly different about this division in america, this polarisation? because you could argue we've been here before many times? well, i think... i think it's been a series of steps that have been taken, and each time when i think it's gotten as bad as it can possibly be, it gets worse. because once obama was elected — and this, i think, is something that people don't talk about very much — there was a backlash by a sizeable percentage of the american public against the election of obama, a black man occupying
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the white house. just the symbolic resonance of that, i think, brought out all the hidden racism in the culture that people had forgotten about to the degree that it really continues to exist. and immediately, overnight, remember, the tea party grew up. and by 2010, two years later, the democrats were overwhelmed in the midterm elections. even though obama was re—elected in �*i2, the democrats never got a majority in congress again, and no serious legislation was passed for the last six years he was in office. you haven't even gotten to donald trump. not yet. and i'm just thinking... i'm clearing my throat. i'm getting ready for that. but you know what i'm thinking. i'm thinking, "here speaks a man
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who americans "of a different political persuasion will already "be dismissing as a typical new york liberal elite..." and jewish. and jewish on top of it all. so, yeah. so, i'm just wondering whether, actually, you don't see any room for communication with your political opponents. you're a leftist, that's clear, but you're not really leaving much room for communication. i want to talk to people on the other side. they don't want to talk to me. it's... i'm perfectly happy to talk to anybody. but with respect, you dismiss the trump movement as jihadists. you talk about their use of the confederate flag as though it's a swastika. your clear implication is that what trump represents is something akin to american nazism. i wouldn't. .. i wouldn't go so far as to say nazism. no, no. but i would say it's an anti—democratic impulse and it is an authoritarian impulse. i mean to say, look at the facts.
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it's just simply that. i mean, i think all these labels are unimportant. we have a government that is supposed to function. it's supposed to be a democracy. it's supposed to be a government of we the people. trump... well, it is, though. but it is. joe biden replaced donald trump. admittedly, it didn't come easy, but it happened. i know that. and this is... this is, you know, why the system is still standing, but... when trump got in, his mission was, and i don't think he really cared one way or the other, he aligned himself with hard right republicans who've been trying to diminish the size and scope of the government for decades, and they finally had a willing partner in the white house this time... this brings me back to my opening question about how you create
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and work when you're so passionate and so preoccupied with what is happening outside your own front door, because the truth is, during the years you've just described, the trump years, you committed to a major new artistic enterprise, a biography of a writer born in the late 19th century that many people outside the us will never have heard of, stephen crane. true enough. and did you do that because you felt there were resonances in his short life with the united states that you're living in in your time? not at all. this, this, this.... this book was not generated by politics. this book was generated by the fact that after i finished writing my last very long novel, 4 3 21, i was a very tired person and i needed a break, and i spent some months not writing at all — anything — for the first
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time probably in my adult life. and i... i was reading a lot and i was reading books that i had somehow missed and i'd always wanted to read. i finally read middlemarch, for god's sakes, my wife's favourite novel. i finally read to the lighthouse by virginia woolf, which i find one of the most beautiful novels i've ever read in my life, a masterpiece. and one of the writers i went back to was stephen crane, whom i had not read since i was a teenager. and i... and for those folks who don't know him, stephen crane died very young, in his late 20s... 28. ..of tuberculosis, but had already written some extraordinary books, perhaps the most famous of which was a take on fighting in the civil war, the red badge of courage, which he wrote never having been a soldier and certainly born long after the civil war was over. but nonetheless, a book which matters to many americans... yes. ..and clearly matters to you. yes. well, i think it's an extraordinary book. and in any case, i started reading crane again,
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and i was astonished by how fantastically powerful and original it was. and then i got interested in his life, which was a fascinating life full of all kinds of adventures. and i decided after a while that it would be a good idea to write a little book about stephen crane, an appreciation, to explain why i cared about this work and why i thought people should read it and to pay more attention to it than is being given to it now. and the little book grew into a big book... 800 pages of the book. yes, but... well, not quite 800, but it was... it's a big book, and i kept asking myself, "why am i doing this? "what the hell has gotten hold of me?" and the only thing i could think of was that in 4 3 2 i,
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there's a character, ferguson, and there are fourof them... archie ferguson. there are four versions of ferguson. you give him four lives. well, crane is ferguson five. that's how i kept thinking about it. and in a way, trying to understand him was as daunting as trying to understand one of my fictional characters, and i had to go through the same process as a writer — emotional process, it's not even an intellectual process, an emotional process — trying to get myself inside him to understand his very erratic, at times, behaviour. so it's interesting to me that you link that book to 4 3 2 i because, as you say, in that book, you imagine this guy born in newark in the same year you were born, then you follow through different possibilities for his life, depending on so many contingencies and coincidences and things that happen, that might not have happened. and it seems to me, reading all of your work, one of your messages to all of us human beings is, "take nothing
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for granted, assume nothing. "make plans, but don't imagine they're ever going to work out "because happenstance and the what—ifs of life "always take over." well, i agree with you completely, and thank you for summing up my work so succinctly. i'm impressed. another way to put it is, and i believe this firmly, "anything can happen," and anything can happen at any moment. but you know what that tempts me to ask you is, in your own life, imagine you're sort of living a life where you could look back at moments, the sliding doors moments when things might have been different. are there now things you wish you had done or decisions you'd taken in a different way, which would have taken you down different pathways, different avenues? is there a human being of our age who doesn't feel some regret about some things we've done in the past? i can't imagine a human being who wouldn't have some second thoughts about a decision he or she made years before.
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what are your regrets? well, i don't really want to talk about it. why? they're too personal. i mean to say, i suppose, you know, people that i, you know, attached myself to without really understanding the nature of that other person fully enough. and let's leave it at that. see, sometimes i wonder whether you even regret being a writer because you have a love—hate relationship with what you do. you say you're compelled to do it, you cannot imagine not doing it, but you also describe how weird it is to make a decision to be a writer. rather than go out into the world and live your life and experience in an outward sort of way,
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you turn inward, you go down literally to your basement, to your writing study, and every single day, you put yourself in there and you shut yourself away from the world. but i have no regrets about that. really? no. i mean, i think that i was made to do this and i need to do it. and i don't feel that it's a going inward. you see, this is... this is... ..something i would dispute completely. the first time i had an impulse to write anything, i was nine years old. it was the first very beautiful day of spring. it was a saturday, there was no school. i remember getting up and feeling free and happy. and i left the house early in the morning and i took a walk through the neighbourhood. i went to a little park, not far from the house, and the first birds were hopping around, the first robins of the spring. i felt ecstatically alive and i had an impulse to write a poem.
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age nine? age nine. and i sat down and wrote probably the most wretched poem ever written about the coming of spring, ever written by a mortal human being in the new world, all right? and yet this was the feeling i had that by trying to write about what was happening, i felt more connected to the world around me. i felt that i had found a place for myself inside this teeming, chaotic reality outside of myself, not inside of myself. and i think that writing has always been a way for me to connect rather than to separate. you have long been... i don't know if enemy is the right word, but you've long questioned the utility of creative writing, teaching writing. but i just wonder whether. .. wait, wait, wait, wait. there's a big difference between the utility of writing and the practice of teaching
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writing, two different things. no, i've made the point that writing or art in general doesn't do anything tangible in the world. it doesn't fix the toilet the way a plumber can fix the toilet, it doesn't fix a broken arm the way a doctor can fix a broken arm. it is, in a sense, useless. but this uselessness, i think, is the very definition of what makes human life so exciting to live. it's because we do have this ability to think and to reflect on what we're thinking and to think about the world and to make art out of that. and to value beauty. exactly. but it doesn't have any concrete purpose in life in the way that all these practical occupations do. teaching writing, on the other hand, is something i don't really think one can do.
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i think it's very important for young writers to have guidance, and that's something different. but these are people who are already committed to trying to become writers, and they want some help about, say, "why doesn't this story that i've written work?" "why is this poem not succeeding?" and then you, as an older writer, can say, "all right, let's look at it and we can figure out "where you went wrong and what you might be able to do." but... sorry to interrupt, but i'm just thinking about so many young people today who have deep sort of creative urges but aren't necessarily turning to fiction writing, the novel as a platform. you know, they're being reared in a world where, actually, words are mostly used on their smartphone, are mostly used in bite—sized chunks on social media platforms.
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and i'm just wondering whether paul auster in 2021 worries that the next generation or the generation after that of people who have real creative gifts are not going to engage with the, as you've just written, 800—page book? that's ok. i mean, they're all kinds of arts and they're all means of expression. far be it from me to, you know, make restrictions on what people should do. but i think you underestimate young people a little bit. i keep running into young people who are reading passionately and really care about it. and i think we, in the so—called... or the people in the media, the people who are, you know, somehow the gatekeepers of our culture have decided that the audience is stupid and that...they don't really know anything. and i think this is what, you know, the capitalist market of art — i mean, art as business — has assumed all along. but are you then saying that in this market—oriented, capitalist united states of america
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of 2021, where the internet and digital culture dominates all, are you saying that writing fiction and the novel matters as much as ever, that, you know, you and the generation before you were of updike and bellow and roth and all these... it doesn't matter because a book is read by one person at a time. and the book, in spite of everything, is the only... a novel, for example, is the only place, i think, in the human world, where two strangers can meet on terms of absolute intimacy. and that space that is created in the book is something very beautiful and precious. and whether ten people read the book or 10,000 people read the book or ten million people read the book, it doesn't matter. the person reading it is alone with the writer, and the two of you, the writer and the reader, are creating the book together. and every reader reads a different book, and this is what's
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so beautiful about it. we all bring our own lives, our own sufferings, our own joys, our past to whatever it is we encounter in the world. and nothing, never more so than when we're encountering art and particularly literature, which requires time. i can look at the paintings on the wall in a glance and see what's there. but if i pick up this 750—page book, no, i can't take it all in at once. i have to give it time, and that time is the beautiful thing about it. let me ask you a somewhat different question, but it taps into your passion for good art. you know, whether it be great writing or great pictures or great movies, you have a thing for beauty and you appreciate it. does it matter to you if you learn that the people who created that beauty were not just deeply flawed, but possibly criminal, that they did things which any
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right—thinking human being would regard as unacceptable? because there is a real discussion right across culture... i agree. andi, i... ..i have thought about this all my life, and the fact is, human beings are flawed and artists are flawed, too. and if we expect human perfection from every artist that we want to read or look at or listen to... yeah, but you're creating a false argument. it's not about expecting perfection, it's about... well... it's about placing somebody and their art in a context. and if that creator or that artistic genius, maybe, was so flawed that their behaviours were utterly unacceptable, then does that colour the way
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you see their creativity? let me give you an example. and it's funny you bring this up, becausejust last night, my daughter and her husband were here and i started telling them about the novels of louis—ferdinand celine, the french writer, best known for the two novels that he wrote in the 1930s, journey to the end of the night and death on the installment plan, which i think are two of the greatest novels of the 20th century — extraordinary, energetic, brilliant novels. celine was a horrible anti—semite fascist, and he wrote anti—semitic tracts leading up to world war ii. and that doesn't matter? in appreciating his art? those books? no, it doesn't, really, because these books are great... and that would apply to some of the modern—day discussions about everybody from philip roth to woody allen to roman polanski, whom you've argued for? listen, it's, it's, it's... how shall i put it? if it's in the work, then there's a discussion to be had. if it's not in the work, does it...?
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i mean, we listen to the music of gesualdo, the medieval composer. he murdered his wife, but he is truly the best medieval composer. i mean, it's undeniable that his music is beautiful. well, and he murdered his wife. i mean, so the fact that he did that means we can't listen to the music? it's a murky subject. it is. i don't have a final answerfor you on this. i'm just saying for me, it's complicated because i have to be able to say, "that artist did a beautiful work." and i have to also say, "i don't like that artist personally, "and ifind abhorrent many of his or her ideas." but how can i reconcile them? you can't. i mean, life is complicated. i mean, if we all can make simple solutions for all of life's complications, then would life really be worth living? i mean, it's messy. it's complicated.
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you're taking me into end thoughts and philosophy here, with life and its worth... yeah. ..and i want to end with you and a personal thought. you've talked about entering the winter of your own life. i meant chronologically. i know you did. but i'm extrapolating from that because there are writers — i'm thinking now of martin amis, for example — who've said, frankly, any writer writes their best work when they are still "young", that old people do not create their best work. i know martin. martin comes out with all kinds of remarks, and we can start laughing about all this too. i don't agree with that. no, but you have said... you've said yourself, you said, you know what? i've written pretty much the things i wanted to write. i will only write more if i find it to be, and it's an interesting phrase you used, "really necessary". is it really necessary any more? are you kind of done?
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no, i've started writing some new things, and as long as i feel excited about what i'm doing, then i'm going to keep doing it. i prefer to do it. it's just simply, i don't ever feel the need to write, just to write. that's not how i've ever functioned. andi, i... listen, when i first started out, i thought, "maybe i'll be good enough to finish one book "that will be good enough to be published, "and that might be the whole thing." and then i was amazed to find myself, sometime later, having a new idea for another book that excited me just as much as the first. i thought, "well, maybe that's the end." and i've been living that way ever since, thinking, "maybe this is the end," and something new always seems to happen. paul auster, there are a lot of people around the world who will be delighted to hear of that. thank you very much indeed for being on hardtalk. thank you for inviting me.
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hello. on wednesday evening in france, we saw some pretty nasty storms with hail and thunder, gusty winds, and they have been drifting towards us. if we look at the satellite picture over the radar superimposed, the rainfall, you can see these dark blue colors indicating the very heavy rainfall and drifting in from the south towards the uk. so i think through the early hours we will have had some downpours. if they haven't reached you already, they may be on the way, but of course not everybody is going to get them. it's near enough impossible to exactly predict where the storms
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will be, but north of that, it's a completely different picture across northern england and scotland. some clear skies overnight. now let's have a look at the early hours. this is widespread rain in the southwest. i think the more vicious brief downpours with hail, thunder and lightning and flash flooding in places will be further towards the east. and some of these heavy showers may last through the morning and possibly pop off during the afternoon as well again around here. but by the time we get to northern england, northern ireland and scotland, it's mostly sunny, but note windy weather on the north sea coast, a chilly breeze. so it will keep things cool here. maybe only 12 degrees on the north sea coast, 20 possible elsewhere across england. but i think the best of the weather for sure around the western isles with light winds and sunny skies. now, the weather front still with us on friday. i don't think that is going to be itself producing any thunder. the showers could be developing across more northern parts of england through the course of the day.
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and again, it's across the north and the north west of scotland where we have the best of our weather once again, 20 degrees celsius. compare that to so many other major towns and cities, only around 13 or 14 degrees. and this does sometimes happen when we have easterly winds that sheltered part of western scotland tends to warm up in the sunshine. now, here's saturday. you can see a fairly cloudy picture with a few blobs of rain here and there, maybe sunnier skies for a time in the south. and the temperatures are recovering somewhat, typically the mid teens to the high teens. now, overall, the bank holiday weekend is looking quite mixed for most of us. temperatures stabilising around the average. i think the high teens across the south of the uk and not far off the average across many other parts of the uk, but for the time being, watch out for those storms in the south.
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welcome to newsday, reporting live from singapore, i'm steve lai. the headlines... israel reopens the main crossing into northern gaza to allow more humanitarian aid to enter for the first time since the war broke out. a night of violence in the us as counter—protesters
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attack a camp set up by pro—palestinian demonstrators at ucla. disgraced hollywood film producer harvey weinstein faces a new trial — after having one of his rape convictions overturned. and the best thing since sliced bread — scientists are developing a new �*white loaf�* — that's just as healthy as wholegrain. welcome to bbc news — broadcasting to viewers in the uk and around the world. we begin in gaza where for the first time since the attack by hamas on october the 7th, israel has reopened the main crossing into northern gaza for humanitarian aid.
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the un has warned that more than 70% of the population

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