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More Travel Stories

Volume 6, March 2004

ISSN 1538-893X

 

This Issue

How to afford Europe this summer
Moonlight and Magnolias Host Review

Alabama

Atlanta's Neighborhoods

Beware the Buccaneers!

The Cajuns and the Creoles
Literary New Orleans
Natchez, Antebellum Gem
The Last to Leave
Savannah, Georgia's First City
Scary Savannah
South Carolina: First Place in American History
 

4 Host of the Month

4 Museum Pick
4 Festival Pick
4 World Heritage Site
4 National Park Pick
4 Calendar
 

More Literary tales:

Literary Paris

Literary Buenos Aires

The Cheltenham Festival of Literature

National Story Telling Festival

Ashland's Shakespeare Festival

The Bard's Life Comes Alive...

A New York walk With Alfred Hitchcock

Britain's Lake District National Park


Annual New Orleans Spring Fiesta
March 26 - April 4, 2004

Come and experience our annual Tours of Historic St. Charles Ave., French Quarter, and Garden District Homes and the Metairie Cemetary.

The Spring Fiesta features two weekends of events designed to entertain, educate, and allow all to revel in the cultural heritage that is uniquely New Orleans.

Tours of private homes, courtyards, and Metairie Cemetery complete the festivities.

Web Site Link


New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival
April 23 - May 2, 2004

The 35th annual New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival will join hands with South Africa to celebrate the 10-year anniversary of South African democracy.

Since 1996, Jazz Fest has presented cultural celebrations of Haiti, Mali, Panama, Brazil, and Martinique, as well as other special tributes such as FrancoFête (the tricentennial of Louisiana), Louis Armstrong’s centennial, a showcase of Native American culture, and the bicentennial of the Louisiana Purchase.

Web Site Link

 

 

Literary New Orleans

By Paul A. Greenberg

Visit CulturalTravels.com Web Site

photo by Richard Nowits,
courtesy of New Orleans Metropolitan Convention and Visitors Bureau, Inc.

It is a story always waiting to be written, an ever-changing work in progress. From the ragged sidewalks of the old city to the gleaming mirrored high-rise office towers reaching for the clouds, New Orleans has all the makings of great literature.

With colorful Louisiana politicians as antagonists, and drama playing itself out daily in the French Quarter, the city never stops inventing and producing itself. With the mighty Mississippi River and centuries-old Spanish architecture as backdrops, the plot never wears thin.

Each time someone makes the mistake of trying to wrap the city up in a neat literary package, the colorful characters and living theater that are New Orleans reassert themselves in print or film. The results have become a body of work created by some of the most renowned writers of the past two centuries.

Their tales are often thematically universal, globally cross-cultural and fine examples of literary “staying power.” With New Orleans and its singularly human drama as a setting or plot enhancer, stories that were written as long ago as the 1800’s still seem more like chronicles of today. “New Orleans has become one of the cities of the mind, and is therefore immortal,” said author Cleanth Brooks in 1977.

Indeed. In fact, some writers have observed of New Orleans that even though situated in the Deep South, it seems to be a place all its own, somewhere to indulge in deep imaginings and let the city be a muse for ageless stories. Eudora Welty described place as a magical element of fiction, one of the “lesser angels” that watch over the writer, southern or northern.

In Southern cities, including New Orleans, place becomes a steamy or strategic plot device. In New Orleans’ case that may be simply because the place itself is so much a part of its people. When someone says he or she is “from New Orleans,” there’s a rich heritage and distinctive history that comes with that status.

The city’s greatest chronicler

Perhaps no writer ever capitalized on New Orleanians’ sense of place in a fashion richer or more colorful than Tennessee Williams.

From the time Williams came to New Orleans from Mississippi at the end of the 1930s he often said he found a type of freedom in the city he had never experienced anywhere else. The sense of liberation Williams felt often made its way into his work, whether in the dialogue or the raw emotion it inspired in its characters.

Few people are unfamiliar with Stanley Kowalski’s primal, desperate scream in Williams’ classic “A Streetcar Named Desire.” Kowalski, perspiring from the summer humidity, on his knees in a French Quarter courtyard, beseeching his wife to listen to him:

“Stelllllllaaaa!” still resounds in the streets of New Orleans, even if it’s only annually at the magnificent Tennessee Williams Festival. The event, which just completed its 15th year, features a Stella Yelling Contest. This year attendees came from all over the world to enjoy such festival events as actor Alec Baldwin reading excerpts of “Night of the Iguana,” and the New Orleans Opera Association’s production of “Streetcar.”

Decades change and the culture shifts, but somehow the art of writing has been able to thrive in New Orleans Metropolitan Convention and Visitors Bureau, Inc.’s (NOMCVB)) Literature 2002 festival. The festival was clear evidence of New Orleans’ unwavering respect for its literary heritage.

That heritage includes names such as Walt Whitman, Truman Capote, John Kennedy Toole, Lillian Hellman, Walker Percy and William Faulkner, to name but a few. Faulkner, who became arguably the foremost Southern writer of the 20th Century, took up serious fiction writing while living in New Orleans in 1925.

To this day Faulkner is a figure New Orleans reveres, perhaps because of the elegant words the author combined to describe the Crescent City: “The violet dusk held in soft suspension lights slow as bell strokes, Jackson Square was not a green and quiet lake in which abode lights round as jellyfish, feathering with silver mimosa and pomegranate and hibiscus beneath which lantana and cannas bled and bled. Pontalba and cathedral were cut from black paper and pasted flat on a green sky; above them taller palms were fixed in black and soundless explosions.”  Mosquitoes – 1927

“Finally, an author who truly sees New Orleans as we see it,” thought countless New Orleans natives.

Every year Faulkner’s life and work are celebrated with “Words and Music: A Literary Feast in New Orleans.” Part musical extravaganza, part writers’ conference and part celebration of the author’s contributions, the event draws hundreds of participants from all corners of the world. Agents, editors, established authors and aspiring writers converge in a city that appreciates and nurtures the art of writing.

Others inspired by the great city

Decades change and the culture shifts, but somehow the art of writing has been able to thrive in New Orleans. Just across Lake Pontchartrain, in Covington, LA, Walker Percy often found himself just far enough removed from the city to see it with a clear vision. He used that vision to bring New Orleans to the attention of literature lovers throughout the world, culminating with a National Book Award for his novel, “The Moviegoer.”

Inside the city, in the elegant Garden District, another author finds her inspiration again and again from the people and mystic ambience of the City that Care Forgot. She is Anne Rice, and by now her musings and imaginative take on what is, and what could be in Louisiana is legendary throughout the world. She is as beloved by Hollywood as she is by her neighbors around the block. Anne Rice is a figure of global prominence, but New Orleans will always be her inspiration.

New Orleans, it seems, is in fact the source of endless inspiration for the world’s greatest writers. From the irreverent curbside manner of Paradise hot dog vendor Ignatius J. Reilly in John Kennedy Toole’s classic “A Confederacy of Dunces” to author Andrei Codrescu’s account of seeking his muse while drinking coffee in a local cemetery in his short story, “The Muse is Always Half-Dressed in New Orleans,” the stories are rich with the sultry texture of a city that courts creativity.

Early in the 20th century, a Greek writer, Lafcadio Hearn, who settled in Louisiana to write his “Creole Sketches” for the States-Item newspaper, New Orleans Metropolitan Convention and Visitors Bureau, Inc.’s Literature 2002 most likely spoke for generations of writers who would let the literary spirit move them in New Orleans, when he wrote: “For in this season is the glamour of New Orleans strongest upon those whom she attracts to her from less hospitable climates, and fascinates by her nights of magical moonlight, and her days of dreamy languors and perfumes. There are few who can visit her for the first time without delight; and few who can ever leave her without regret; and none who can forget her strange charm when they have once felt its influence.”

The power of what Hearn calls New Orleans’ “strange charm” is surpassed only by the power of the words writers have used for centuries to paint the singular elegance of a city that continually reinvents itself, to the delight of wordsmiths from all corners of the world. New Orleans remains a great lady in waiting for her close-up, and none have more sweetly and accurately captured her essence than those who wrap her in words that last through the centuries.

Paul A. Greenberg is a freelance writer who contributes to Meeting News, Fodor’s and other travel publications. Reprinted by permission of the New Orleans Metropolitan Convention & Visitors Bureau Public Affairs Department.

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