Bruce Chatwin

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Bruce Chatwin
Bruce Chatwin, July 1982.jpg
Bruce Chatwin, photographed by Lord Snowdon, 28 July 1982
Born (1940-05-13)13 May 1940
near Sheffield, England
Died 18 January 1989(1989-01-18) (aged 48)
Nice, France
Occupation Novelist, travel writer, art and antiquities advisor
Nationality British (English)
Period 1977–89
Genre History, travel, fiction
Subject Patagonia, slave trade, nomads, Britain, Europe, Australia, Afghanistan
Spouse Elizabeth Chanler

Charles Bruce Chatwin (13 May 1940 – 18 January 1989) was an English writer whose best known works are In Patagonia (1977) and The Songlines (1987).[1] Although he was often referred to as a travel writer, a term he eschewed,[2] Chatwin was also a novelist and a journalist who interviewed figures such as Indira Gandhi and André Malraux for the Sunday Times Magazine.[3] He won the James Tait Black Memorial Prize for his novel On the Black Hill (1982)[4] and his novel Utz (1988) was shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize.[5] In 2008 The Times named Chatwin #46 on their list of "50 Greatest British Writers Since 1945".[6]

With the publication of In Patagonia, an account of his trip to the region and the stories of people who lived there, Chatwin invigorated the genre of travel writing.[7] In The New York Times, Andrew Harvey wrote,

"Nearly every writer of my generation in England has wanted, at some point, to be Bruce Chatwin; wanted, like him, to talk of Fez and Firdausi, Nigeria and Nuristan, with equal authority; wanted to be talked about, as he is, with raucous envy; wanted above all to have written his books."[8]

Chatwin's travels often inspired his work, and although he was described as a travel writer, he did not identify as one. When his book The Songlines was nominated for the Thomas Cook Travel Award, he requested that it be withdrawn from consideration, saying the work was fictional.[9] Nor did he see himself as a novelist ("I don't quite know the meaning of the word novel," he said).[10] Instead he considered himself a storyteller, interested in bringing to light unusual tales.[11]

Married and bisexual, Chatwin was one of the first prominent men in Great Britain known to have contracted HIV and died of an AIDS-related illness, although he hid the facts of his illness.[12] He gave various explanations for his poor health, including malaria and a fungal infection.[13][14] Following his death, Chatwin was criticised by the gay community for keeping his diagnosis secret,[15] and caused some critics question the truthfulness of his work.[16] His biographer, Nicholas Shakespeare, said, "His denial [of his AIDS diagnosis] bred a sense that if he lied about his life, he must have lied about his work. Some readers have taken this as a cue to pass judgement on his books – or else not to bother with them."[17]

Life[edit]

Early life[edit]

Bruce Chatwin was born on 13 May 1940 in the Shearwood Road Nursing Home in Sheffield, England to Margharita (née Turnell) and Charles Chatwin.[18] His mother Margharita had grown up in Sheffield and worked for the local Conservative party prior to her marriage.[19] His father Charles was a lawyer from Birmingham who joined the Royal Naval Reserve following the outbreak of World War II.[20][21]

Chatwin's early years were spent moving regularly with his mother while his father was at sea.[22] Prior to his birth, Chatwin's parents had lived at Barnt Green, Worcestershire, but Margharita moved to her parents' house in Dronfield, near Sheffield shortly before giving birth.[23] Mother and son remained there for only a few weeks.[24] Worried about Nazi bombs, she sought a safer place to stay.[25] Margharita took her son with her as they travelled to stay with various relatives during the war. They would remain in one place until either Margharita decided to move out of concern for their safety, or because of friction among family members.[26] Later in life Chatwin recalled of the war, "Home, if we had one, was a solid black suitcase called the Rev-Robe, in which there was a corner for my clothes and my Mickey Mouse gas mask."[27]

During the war Chatwin and his mother stayed at the home of his paternal grandparents, who had a curiosity cabinet that fascinated him. Among the items it contained was a "piece of brontosaurus" (actually a giant sloth), which had been sent to Chatwin's grandmother by her cousin Charles Milward. Travelling in Patagonia, Milward had discovered in a glacier a perfectly preserved giant sloth, which he later sent to the Natural History Museum. He sent his cousin a piece of the animal's skin, and members of the family mistakenly referred to it as a "piece of brontosaurus." The skin was later lost but it inspired Chatwin decades later to visit and write about Patagonia.[28]

After the war, Chatwin lived with his parents and younger brother Hugh (born in 1944[29]) in West Heath in Birmingham, where his father had a law practice.[30] He was educated at Old Hall School in Shropshire and Marlborough College, in Wiltshire.[31] An unexceptional student, he garnered attention from his performances in school plays.[32] While at Marlborough, Chatwin attained A-levels in Latin, Greek, and Ancient History.[33]

Chatwin had hoped to read Classics at Merton College, Oxford, but the end of National Service in the United Kingdom meant there was more competition for university places. He was forced to consider other options. His parents discouraged the ideas he offered—an acting career or work in the Colonial Service in Kenya. Instead Chatwin's father asked one of his clients for a letter of introduction to the auction house Sotheby's. An interview was arranged, and Chatwin secured a job there.[34]

Art and archaeology[edit]

In 1958, Chatwin moved to London to begin work as a porter in the Works of Art department at Sotheby's.[35] Chatwin was ill-suited for this job, which included dusting objects that had been kept in storage.[36] Sotheby's moved him to a junior cataloger position working in both the Antiquities and Impressionist Art departments.[37] This position enabled him to develop his eye for art, and he quickly became known for his ability to discern forgeries.[38][39] His work as a cataloguer also taught him to describe objects in a concise manner and required that he research these objects.[40] Chatwin advanced to become Sotheby's expert on Antiquities and Impressionist art and would later run both departments.[41] Many of Chatwin's colleagues thought he would eventually become chairman of the auction house.[42]

During this period Chatwin travelled extensively for his job and also for adventure.[43] An admirer of Robert Byron and his book, The Road to Oxiana, he travelled twice to Afghanistan.[44] He also used these trips to visit markets and shops where he would buy antiques which he would resell at a profit in order to supplement his income from Sotheby's.[45] He became friends with artists and art collectors and dealers.[46][47] One friend, Howard Hodgkin, painted Chatwin in The Japanese Screen (1962). Chatwin said he was the "acid green smear on the left."[48]

Chatwin was ambivalent about his sexual orientation and had affairs with both men and women during this period of his life.[49] One of his girlfriends, Elizabeth Chanler, an American and a descendent of John Jacob Astor, was a secretary at Sotheby's.[50] Chanler had earned a degree in history from Radcliffe College and worked at Sotheby's New York offices for two years before transferring to their London office in 1961.[51] Her love of travel and independent nature appealed to Chatwin.[52]

In the mid-1960s Chatwin grew unhappy at Sotheby's. There were various reasons for his disenchantment. Both women and men found Chatwin attractive, and Peter Wilson, then chairman of Sotheby's, used this appeal to the auction house's advantage when using Chatwin to try to persuade wealthy individuals to sell their art collections. Chatwin became increasingly uncomfortable with the situation.[53] Later in life Chatwin also spoke of having become "burnt out" and said, "In the end I felt I might just as well be working for a rather superior funeral parlour. One's whole life seemed to be spent valuing for probate the apartment of somebody recently dead."[54]

In late 1964 he began to suffer from problems with his sight, which he attributed to the close analysis of artwork entailed by his job. He consulted eye specialist Patrick Trevor-Roper, who diagnosed a latent squint and recommended that Chatwin take a six-month break from his work at Sotheby's. Trevor-Roper had been involved in the design of an eye hospital in Addis Ababa, and suggested Chatwin visit east Africa. In February 1965, Chatwin left for Sudan.[55] It was on this trip that Chatwin first encountered a nomadic tribe; their way of life intrigued him. "My nomadic guide," he wrote, "carried a sword, a purse and a pot of scented goat's grease for anointing his hair. He made me feel overburdened and inadequate..."[56] Chatwin would remain fascinated by nomads for the rest of his life.[57]

Chatwin returned to Sotheby's and, to the surprise of his friends, proposed marriage to Elizabeth Chanler.[58] They married on 21 August 1965.[59] Chatwin was bisexual throughout their married life, a circumstance Elizabeth knew and accepted.[60] Chatwin had hoped he would "grow out of" his homosexual behaviour and have a successful marriage like his parents.[61] During their marriage, Chatwin had many affairs, mostly with men. Some who were aware of Chatwin's affairs with men assumed the Chatwins had a chaste marriage but, according to Nicholas Shakespeare, the author's biographer, this was not true.[62] Both Chatwin and his wife had hoped to have children, but they remained childless.[63]

In April 1966, at the age of 26, Chatwin was promoted to a director of Sotheby's, a position to which he had aspired.[64] To his disappointment, he was made a junior director and lacked voting rights on the board.[65] This disappointment, along with boredom and increasing discomfort over potentially illegal side deals taking place at Sotheby's, including the sale of objects from the Pitt-Rivers museum collection, led Chatwin to resign from his Sotheby's post in June 1966.[66]

Chatwin enrolled in October 1966 at the University of Edinburgh to study Archaeology.[67] He had regretted not attending Oxford and had been contemplating going to university for a few years. A visit in December 1965 to the Hermitage in Leningrad sparked his interest in the field of archaeology.[68] Despite winning the Wardrop Prize for the best first year's work,[69] he found the rigour of academic archaeology tiresome and he left after two years without taking a degree.[70]

The Nomadic Alternative[edit]

Following his departure from Edinburgh, Chatwin decided to pursue a career as a writer, successfully pitching a book proposal on nomads to Tom Maschler, publisher at Jonathan Cape. Chatwin tentatively titled the book The Nomadic Alternative and sought to answer the question "Why do men wander rather than stand still?"[71] Chatwin delivered the manuscript in 1972, and Maschler declined to publish it, calling it a "chore to read."[72][73]

Between 1969 and 1972, as he was working on The Nomadic Alternative, Chatwin travelled extensively and pursued other endeavours in an attempt to establish a creative career. He co-curated an exhibit on Nomadic Art of the Asian Steppes, which opened at Asia House Gallery in New York City in 1970.[74] He considered publishing an account of his 1969 trip to Afghanistan with Peter Levi.[75] Levi published his own book about it, The Light Garden of the Angel King: Journeys in Afghanistan.[76] Chatwin contributed two articles on nomads to Vogue and another article to History Today.[77]

In the early 1970s Chatwin had an affair with James Ivory, a film director. He pitched stories to him for possible films, which Ivory did not take seriously.[78] In 1972 Chatwin tried his hand at film-making and travelled to Niger to make a documentary about nomads.[79] The film was lost while Chatwin was trying to sell it to European television companies.[80]

Chatwin also took photographs of his journeys and attempted to sell photographs from a trip to Mauritania to The Sunday Times Magazine.[81] While The Times did not accept those photographs for publication, it offered Chatwin a job.[82]

The Sunday Times Magazine and In Patagonia[edit]

In 1972, The Sunday Times Magazine hired Chatwin as an adviser on art and architecture.[83] Initially his role was to suggest story ideas and put together features such as "One Million Years of Art," which ran in several issues during the summer of 1973.[84] His editor, Francis Wyndham, encouraged him to write, which allowed him to develop his narrative skills.[85] Chatwin travelled on many international assignments, writing on such subjects as Algerian migrant workers and the Great Wall of China, and interviewing such diverse people as André Malraux, Maria Reiche, and Madeleine Vionnet.[86][87]

In 1972, Chatwin interviewed the 93-year-old architect and designer Eileen Gray in her Paris salon, where he noticed a map she had painted of the area of South America called Patagonia.[88] "I've always wanted to go there," Chatwin told her. "So have I," she replied, "Go there for me."[89]

Two years later, in November 1974, Chatwin flew out to Lima in Peru and reached Patagonia a month later.[90] He would later claim that he sent a telegram to Wyndham merely stating: "Have gone to Patagonia." Actually he sent a letter: "I am doing a story there for myself, something I have always wanted to write up."[91] He spent six months in the area, travelling around gathering stories of people who came from elsewhere and settled there. This trip resulted in the book, In Patagonia (1977). He used his quest for his own "piece of brontosaurus" (the one from his grandparents' cabinet had been thrown away years earlier) to frame the story of his trip. Chatwin described In Patagonia as "the narrative of an actual journey and a symbolic one....It is supposed to fall into the category or be a spoof of Wonder Voyage: the narrator goes to a far country in search of a strange animal: on his way he lands in strange situations, people or other books tell him strange stories which add up to form a message."[92]

In Patagonia contains fifteen black and white photographs by Chatwin. According to Susannah Clapp, who edited the book, "Rebecca West amused Chatwin by telling him that these were so good they rendered superfluous the entire text of the book."[93]

This work established his reputation as a travel writer. One of Chatwin's biographers, Nicholas Murray, called In Patagonia "one of the most strikingly original postwar English travel books"[94] and said that it revitalised the genre of travel writing.[95] However, residents in the region contradicted the account of events depicted in Chatwin's book. It was the first time in his career, but not the last, that conversations and characters which Chatwin presented as fact were later alleged to be fiction.[96]

For In Patagonia Chatwin received the Hawthornden Prize and the E. M. Forster Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters.[97] As a result of the success of In Patagonia, Chatwin's circle of friends expanded to include individuals such as Jacqueline Onassis, Susan Sontag, and Jasper Johns.[98]

Ouidah and the Black Hills[edit]

Upon his return from Patagonia, Chatwin discovered a change in leadership at The Sunday Times Magazine and his retainer was not continued.[99] Chatwin intended his next project to be a biography of Francisco Felix de Sousa, a nineteenth-century slave trader born in Brazil who became the Viceroy of Ouidah in Dahomey (present day Benin). Chatwin had first heard of de Sousa during a visit to Dahomey in 1972.[100] He returned to the country, by then renamed the People's Republic of Benin, in December 1976 to conduct research.[101] In January 1977 a coup took place, and Chatwin was accused of being a mercenary, arrested, and detained for three days.[102] Chatwin later wrote about this experience in "A Coup--A Story," which was published in Granta and included in What Am I Doing Here.[103]

Following his arrest and release Chatwin left Benin and went to Brazil to continue his research on de Sousa.[104] Frustrated by the lack of documented information on de Sousa, Chatwin chose instead to write a fictionalised biography of him.[105] This book was published in 1980, and Werner Herzog's film, Cobra Verde (1987), is based on it.[106][107]

The southern part of the Grwyne Fechan valley in the Black Mountains, Welsh Borders

Although The Viceroy of Ouidah received good reviews, it did not sell well. Nicholas Shakespeare said that the dismal sales caused Chatwin to pursue a completely different subject for his next book.[108] In response to his growing reputation as a travel writer Chatwin said he "decided to write something about people who never went out."[109] His next book, On the Black Hill (1982), is a novel of twin brothers who live all of their lives in a farmhouse on the Welsh borders.[110] For this book Chatwin won the James Tait Black Memorial Prize and the Whitbread Prize for Best First Novel, even though he considered his previous book, The Viceroy of Ouidah, a novel.[111] It was made into a film in 1987.[112]

In the late 1970s Chatwin spent an increasing amount of time in New York City. He continued to have affairs with men, but most of these affairs were short-lived. In 1977 he began his first serious affair with Donald Richards, an Australian stockbroker.[113] Richards introduced Chatwin to the gay nightclub scene in New York.[114] During this period he became acquainted with Robert Mapplethorpe, who photographed him. Chatwin is one of the few men Mapplethorpe photographed fully clothed.[115] Chatwin later contributed the introduction to a book of Mapplethorpe's photographs, Lady, Lisa Lyon (1983).[116]

Although Elizabeth Chatwin had accepted her husband's affairs, their relationship deteriorated in the late 1970s, and in 1980 she asked for a separation.[117] By 1982 Chatwin's affair with Richards had ended and he began another serious affair with Jasper Conran.[118]

The Songlines[edit]

In 1983 Chatwin returned to the topic of nomads and decided to focus on the Aborigines.[119] He was influenced by the work of Theodore Strehlow, author of Songs of Central Australia and a controversial figure.[120] Strehlow had collected and recorded Aboriginal songs, and shortly before his death in 1978, he sold photographs of secret Aboriginal initiation ceremonies to a magazine.[121]

Chatwin went to Australia to learn more about Aboriginal culture, specifically the songlines or dreaming tracks.[122] Each songline is a personal story and functions as a creation tale and a map, and each Aborigine has their own songline.[123] Chatwin thought the songlines could be a metaphor he could use to support his ideas about humans' need to wander, which he believed was genetic. However, he struggled to fully understand and describe the songlines and their place in Aboriginal culture.[124] This was due to Chatwin's approach to learning about the songlines. He spent several weeks in 1983 and 1984 in Australia, during which he primarily relied on non-Aboriginal people for information. Chatwin was limited by his inability to speak the Aboriginal languages. He interviewed people involved in the Land Rights movement, and he alienated many of them because he was oblivious to the politics and also because he was an admirer of Strehlow's work.[125]

While in Australia, Chatwin, who had been experiencing some health problems, first read about AIDS, then known as the gay plague. It frightened him and compelled him to reconcile with his wife.[126] The fear of AIDS also drove him to finish the book that became The Songlines. His friend Salman Rushdie said, "That book was an obsession too great for him...His illness did him a favour, got him free of it. Otherwise, he would have gone on writing it for ten years."[127]

The Songlines features a narrator named Bruce whose biography is almost identical to Chatwin's.[128] The narrator spends time in Australia trying to learn about Aboriginal culture, specifically the songlines. As the book goes on, it becomes a reflection on what Chatwin states is "for me, the question of questions: the nature of human restlessness."[129] Chatwin also hinted at his preoccupation over his own mortality in the text: "I had a presentiment that the 'travelling' phase of my life might be passing....I should set down on paper a resume of the ideas, quotations, and encounters that amused me and obsessed me..."[130] Following this statement in The Songlines Chatwin included extensive excerpts from his moleskine notebooks.[131]

Chatwin published The Songlines in 1987, and it became a bestseller in both the United Kingdom and the United States.[132] Following its publication, Chatwin became friends with composer Kevin Volans, who was inspired to base a theatre score on the book. The project evolved into an opera, The Man with Footsoles of Wind (1993).[133]

Illness and Final Works[edit]

While at work on The Songlines between 1983 and 1986, Chatwin frequently came down with colds.[134] He also developed skin lesions that may have been symptoms of Kaposi's sarcoma.[135] After finishing The Songlines in August 1986, Chatwin went to Switzerland, where he collapsed on the street.[136] At a clinic there, he was diagnosed as HIV-positive.[137] Chatwin provided different reasons to his doctors as to how he might have contracted HIV, including from a gang rape in Dahomey or possibly from Sam Wagstaff, the patron and lover of Robert Mapplethorpe.[138]

Chatwin's case was unusual as he had a fungal infection, Penicillium marneffei, which at the time had rarely been seen and only in South Asia. It is now known as an AIDS-defining illness, but in 1986 little was known about HIV and AIDS. Doctors were not certain if all cases of HIV developed into AIDS. The rare fungus gave Chatwin hope that he might be different and served as the basis of what he told most people about his illness. Chatwin gave various reasons for how he became infected with the fungus—ranging from eating a 1,000-year-old egg to exploring a bat cave in Indonesia.[139] He never publicly disclosed that he was HIV-positive because of the stigma at the time. He wanted to protect his parents, who were unaware of his homosexual affairs.[140]

Although Chatwin never spoke or wrote publicly about his disease, in one instance he did write about the AIDS epidemic in 1988 in a letter to the editor of the London Review of Books:

"The word 'Aids' is one of the cruellest and silliest neologisms of our time. 'Aid' means help, succour, comfort--yet with a hissing sibilant tacked onto the end it becomes a nightmare....HIV (Human Immuno-Deficiency Virus) is a perfectly easy name to live with. 'Aids' causes panic and despair and has probably done something to facilitate the spread of the disease."[141]

During his illness, Chatwin continued to write. Elizabeth encouraged him to use a letter he had written to her from Prague in 1967 as an inspiration for a new story.[142] During this trip, Chatwin had met Konrad Just, an art collector.[143] This meeting and the letter to Elizabeth served as the basis for Chatwin's next work. Utz (1988) was a novel about the obsession that leads people to collect.[144] Set in Prague, the novel details the life and death of Kaspar Utz, a man obsessed with his collection of Meissen porcelain.[145] Utz was well-received and was shortlisted for the Booker Prize.[146]

Chatwin also edited a collection of his journalism, which was published as What Am I Doing Here (1989).[147] At the time of his death in 1989, Chatwin was working on a number of new ideas for future novels, including a transcontinental epic provisionally titled Lydia Livingstone.[148]

Chatwin died at a hospital in Nice on 18 January 1989.[149] A memorial service was held in the Greek Orthodox Church of Saint Sophia in West London on 14 February 1989, the same day that a fatwa was announced on Salman Rushdie, a close friend of Chatwin's, who attended the service.[150] Paul Theroux, who also attended the service, later commented on it and Chatwin in a piece for Granta.[151] The novelist Martin Amis described the memorial service in the essay "Salman Rushdie", included in his anthology Visiting Mrs Nabokov.[152]

Chatwin's ashes were scattered near a Byzantine chapel above Kardamyli in the Peloponnese. This was close to the home of one of his mentors, the writer Patrick Leigh Fermor.[153] Near here, Chatwin had spent several months in 1985 working on The Songlines.[154]

Chatwin's papers, including 85 moleskine notebooks, were given to the Bodleian Library, Oxford.[155] Two collections of his photographs and excerpts from the moleskine notebooks were published as Photographs and Notebooks (US title: Far Journeys) in 1993 and Winding Paths in 1999.[156][157]

Writing style[edit]

John Updike described Chatwin's writing as "a clipped, lapidary prose that compresses worlds into pages",[158] while one of Chatwin's editors, Susannah Clapp, wrote, "Although his syntax was pared down, his words were not-or at least not only-plain. ... His prose is both spare and flamboyant."[159] Chatwin's writing was shaped by his work as a cataloguer at Sotheby's, which provided him with years of practice writing concise yet vivid descriptions of objects with the intention of enticing buyers.[160] In addition, Chatwin's interest in nomads also influenced his writing. One aspect of nomadic culture that interested him was the few possessions they had. Their spartan way of life appealed to his aesthetic sense, and it was something he sought to emulate in both his life and his writing. He strove to strip unnecessary objects from his life and unnecessary words from his prose.[161]

In his writing Chatwin experimented with format. With In Patagonia, Clapp said Chatwin described the book's structure of 97 vignettes as "Cubist." "[I]n other words," she said, "lots of small pictures tilting away and toward each other to create this strange original portrait of Patagonia."[162] The Songlines was another attempt by Chatwin to experiment with format.[163] The book begins as a novel narrated by a man named Bruce but about two-thirds of the way through it becomes a commonplace book filled with quotations, anecdotes, and summaries of others' research in an attempt to explore human restlessness.[164] Some of Chatwin's critics did not think he succeeded in The Songlines with this approach, although others applauded his effort at trying an unconventional structure.[165]

Several nineteenth and twentieth century writers influenced Chatwin's work. While in Patagonia he read In Our Time by Ernest Hemingway. Chatwin admired Hemingway for his spare prose.[166] While writing In Patagonia, Chatwin strove to approach his writing as a "literary Cartier-Bresson."[167] Chatwin's biographer described the resulting prose as "quick snapshots of ordinary people."[168] Along with Hemingway and Cartier-Bresson, Osip Mandelstam's work strongly influenced Chatwin during the writing of In Patagonia. An admirer of Noël Coward, Chatwin found the breakfast scene in Private Lives helpful in learning to write dialogue.[169] Once Chatwin began work on The Viceroy of Ouidah, he began studying the work of nineteenth-century French authors, such as Honoré de Balzac and Gustave Flaubert. These writers would continue to influence Chatwin for the remainder of his life.[170]

Themes[edit]

Chatwin explored several different themes in his work. They include human restlessness and wandering; borders and exile; and art and objects.[171][172][173]

Chatwin considered the question of human restlessness to be the focus of his writing. He ultimately aspired to explore this subject in order to answer what he believed was a fundamental question about human existence.[174][175] He believed that humans were meant to be a migratory species but once they settled in one place, their natural urges "found outlets in violence, greed, status-seeking or a mania for the new."[176] In his first attempt at writing a book, The Nomadic Alternative, Chatwin had attempted to compose an academic exposition on nomadic culture, which he believed was unexamined and unappreciated.[177][178] With this volume Chatwin had hoped to answer the question "Why do men wander rather than sit still?"[179] In his book proposal he admitted that the interest in the subject was personal: "Why do I become restless after a month in a single place, unbearable after two?"[180]

Although Chatwin did not succeed with The Nomadic Alternative, he returned to his research when writing The Songlines, which focused on the Aboriginal walkabout.[181] In The Songlines Chatwin sought to link humans' impulse to wander to storytelling. The theme of restlessness is featured in other works of Chatwin's. The protagonist of Utz feels restless to escape to Vichy each year but always returns to Prague. Although the brothers in On the Black Hill spend their entire lives in the Welsh border country, one of them takes an interest in aviation and longs to escape.

Borders are another theme in Chatwin's work. According to Elizabeth Chatwin, he "was interested in borders, where things were always changing, not one thing or another."[182] Patagonia, the subject of his first published book, is an area that is in both Argentina and Chile.[183] The Viceroy of Ouidah is a Brazilian who trades slaves in Dahomey.[184] On the Black Hills takes place on the borders of Wales and England.[185] In The Songlines the characters the protagonist mostly interacts with are people who provide a bridge between the Aboriginal and white Australian worlds. The main character in Utz travels back and forth across the Iron Curtain.[186]

"The theme of exile, of people living at the margins...is treated in a literal and metaphorical sense throughout Chatwin's work," stated Nicholas Murray. He identified several examples in Chatwin's work. There were people who were actual exiles, such as some of those profiled in In Patagonia and the Viceroy of Ouidah, who was banished. Murray also cited the main characters in On the Black Hill, "although not strictly exiles...[they] were exiles from the major events of their time and its dominant values." Similarly, Murray wrote, Utz is "trapped in a society whose values are not his own but which he cannot bring himself to leave."[187]

Chatwin returned to the subject of art and objects during his career. In his early writing for the Sunday Times Magazine, he wrote about art and artists, and many of these articles Chatwin included in What Am I Doing Here.[188] The main focus of Utz is on the impact the possession of art (in this case porcelain figures) has on a collector.[189] Utz's unwillingness to give up his porcelain collection kept him in Czechoslovakia even though he had the opportunity to live in the West.[190] In his life Chatwin experienced a tension between the desire to own beautiful items but also had a strong need to dispose of the objects he acquired.[191] His distaste for the art world was the result of his days at Sotheby's, and some of his final writing focused on this.[192] The final section of What Am I Doing Here, "Tales from the Art World," consists of four short stories on this topic. At the end of What Am I Doing Here, Chatwin shares an anecdote about advice he had received from Noel Coward, who told him "Never let anything artistic stand in your way." Chatwin stated, "I've always acted on that advice."[193]

Influence[edit]

By 1998 one million copies of his books had been sold,[194] but in 2010 The Guardian's review of Under the Sun: The Letters of Bruce Chatwin opened with the question, "Does anyone read Bruce Chatwin these days?" The reviewer suggested that Chatwin's reputation had been diminished by revelations about his personal life and questions about the accuracy of his work.

Although Chatwin inspired a generation of travel writers, the influence of his books is felt in other ways. In addition, his celebrity and his death from AIDS also shape his legacy.

Chatwin loved to tell stories but he was not able to invent them on his own. He relied heavily on the stories he discovered while travelling. Although he often disguised the people he met and then wrote about, they often recognised themselves and did not like the way in which he portrayed him. In the case of In Patagonia, Chatwin's biographer, Nicholas Shakespeare, found that Chatwin did not invent much although in his defence wrote, "He tells not a half truth, but a truth and a half."[195]

The complaints of those featured in In Patagonia included one man whom Chatwin insinuated was homosexual and a woman who felt her father was unjustly accused of killing Indians.[196] However, Chatwin's biographer found one farmer who was featured in the book who felt Chatwin's depictions of himself and other members of his community were truthful. He stated, "No one likes looking at their own passport photograph, but I found it accurate. It's not flattering, but it's the truth."[197]

Despite the complaints of Patagonians, In Patagonia has inspired many people to visit the region. The Songlines also inspired readers to travel to the Australia and seek out those individuals whom Chatwin had based his characters on, much to their consternation.

The Songlines is a controversial book. some criticism comes from anthropologists and other researchers who spent years studying Aboriginal culture and who dismiss Chatwin's work because he visited Australia briefly. Some critics of Chatwin describe his viewpoint as "colonialist", citing his lack of interviews with Aborigines and his reliance instead on white people for information about Aboriginal culture. There are others who believe The Songlines should be widely read, particularly in Australia, where many people had not previously heard of the songlines.

Once it became known that Chatwin had been bisexual and had died of an AIDS-related illness, he was viewed as a liar and his work dismissed by some critics. He was also criticized for not publicly acknowledging his AIDS diagnosis which some people think would have raised public awareness of the disease.

Chatwin's name is used to sell Moleskine notebooks. Chatwin wrote in The Songlines of little black oilskin-covered notebooks that he bought in Paris and which he called "moleskines".[198] The quotes and anecdotes he had compiled in these books serve as a major section of The Songlines. In this book Chatwin mourned the closing of the last producer of these books. In 1997, a company in Italy, Moleskine SpA, began to produce these books and promoted them as the "notebooks of Chatwin."

Works[edit]

Citations[edit]

  1. ^ Benfey, Christopher (10 February 2011). "The Embroider". The New Republic. Retrieved 13 August 2014. 
  2. ^ Ignatieff, Michael (Spring 1987). "An Interview with Bruce Chatwin". Granta 21: 21–37. 
  3. ^ Shakespeare, Nicholas (1999). Bruce Chatwin. New York: Viking. pp. 294–295. 
  4. ^ "James Tait Black Prize Winners". University of Edinburgh. Retrieved 13 August 2014. 
  5. ^ "Bruce Chatwin". The Man Booker Prize. Retrieved 13 August 2014. 
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  7. ^ Murray, Nicholas (1993). Bruce Chatwin. Seren Books. p. 39. 
  8. ^ Harvey, Andrew (2 August 1987). "Footprints of the Ancestor". The New York Times. Retrieved 27 July 2015. 
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  195. ^ Quoted by Blake Morrison "Books: The odd life of two warm rabbits ", The Independent on Sunday, 4 April 1999
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References[edit]

Documentaries[edit]

  • Paul Yule, In The Footsteps of Bruce Chatwin (2x60 mins), BBC, 1999 – Berwick Universal Pictures

External links[edit]