
Articles
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3 days ago |
jillianhess.substack.com | Jillian Hess
Joan Didion (1934-2021) has been much in the news lately. In a span of days, her archives at the New York Public Library opened to the public and a posthumous collection of her notes from meetings with her psychiatrist were released as Notes to John. I, of course, have thoughts on this publication—but I’ll get to them in this week’s post script because my ideas are tied to my experience in her archive, where I spent two days last week.
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1 week ago |
jillianhess.substack.com | Jillian Hess
This past winter, I set out to read every thing Mary Oliver ever wrote and to listen to every interview she gave. Here is what I learned: as creatives, we must enjoy our creations, and we must respect the source of our creativity.
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2 weeks ago |
jillianhess.substack.com | Jillian Hess
Franz Kafka (1883-1924) left instructions: Upon his death, all “diaries, manuscripts, letters…sketches, and so on” should be burnt. Kafka also left his papers to the one person he knew would not burn them—his greatest literary advocate, Max Brod. Deciding to leave his papers to Brod reflects Kafka’s deep ambivalence, according to Ross Benjamin, who recently translated the diaries.
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3 weeks ago |
jillianhess.substack.com | Jillian Hess
Henry David Thoreau would weep to see the selection of apples in our contemporary orchards—not because there are so many varieties, but because there are so few. He predicted this would happen: In 1850, he wrote, “The era of wild apples will soon be over,” sacrificed to the sweeter fruits developed through grafting.1With the end of “the era of wild apples” came a larger depletion of natural resources and a dwindling in the varieties of plant life.
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3 weeks ago |
jillianhess.substack.com | Jillian Hess
Like many millennials, Henry David Thoreau (1817-1862) graduated from college during an economic recession. The “Panic of 1837,” as it was called, would last for six years, leaving collapsed banks, inflation, and financial ruin for home and business owners in its wake. Thoreau began his professional life as a teacher in Concord’s struggling public school. The school was under-resourced and suffered from chronic absenteeism.
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