John Berger and Michael Silverblatt - part 1

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  • čas přidán 1. 04. 2013
  • Part 2: podcast.lannan.org/2010/03/29/...
    John Berger is a storyteller, essayist, novelist, screenwriter, dramatist and critic, whose body of work embodies his concern for, in Geoff Dyer's words, "the enduring mystery of great art and the lived experience of the oppressed."
    He is one of the most internationally influential writers of the last fifty years, who has explored the relationships between the individual and society, culture and politics and experience and expression in a series of novels, book works, essays, plays, films, photographic collaborations and performances, unmatched in their diversity, ambition and reach. His television series and book Ways of Seeing revolutionized the way that Fine Art is read and understood, while his engagement with European peasantry and migration in the fiction trilogy Into Their Labours and A Seventh Man stand as models of empathy and insight.
    John Berger in conversation with Michael Silverblatt at Berger's home, a working farm, in Quincy, Mieussy, France, October 2002. Silverblatt is the host of the radio interview program, Bookworm.
    Lannan Foundation

Komentáře • 52

  • @sarahp007
    @sarahp007 Před měsícem +1

    I love John’s comfort with silence whilst he considers his reply.

  • @Wrenasmir
    @Wrenasmir Před 2 lety +9

    At 5:22 when Silverblatt quotes Kaspar, and Berger nods with his entire smile, you recognise the gratitude of being completely understood.

  • @Canatomy
    @Canatomy Před 9 lety +52

    What great listeners both of these men are.

  • @JussaraAlmeida2912
    @JussaraAlmeida2912 Před 5 lety +21

    Such a humble man, John Berger. And with so much wisdom! What an inspiration! I've watched this interview more than a dozen times now, and I always feel amazed and touched by their words EVERY TIME.

  • @ryandudley3616
    @ryandudley3616 Před 2 lety +4

    John Berger is so funny, I love the gestures and facial expressions

  • @MariaAyub-ma-sentient24
    @MariaAyub-ma-sentient24 Před 8 lety +23

    The comment on tenderness is so well taken, and so many subtleties about writing discussed, makes one appreciate literature even more.

  • @aaronlair3114
    @aaronlair3114 Před 3 lety +4

    There's poetry in this conversation.

  • @coreycox2345
    @coreycox2345 Před 6 lety +4

    I like Michael Silverblatt's point about a child learning about life from the suburbs through books. I used to borrow from my grandmother and felt worldly beyond my reality when I read Jean Genet and Henry Miller at thirteen. Without the actual danger.

  • @heitorcaramez
    @heitorcaramez Před 4 lety +4

    Legends. Cant get tired to listen to this interview.

  • @TranscendentalTunes
    @TranscendentalTunes Před 5 lety +7

    Very interesting conversation - one of my greatest regrets is getting rid of the books I read from early childhood (4-7). I remember how vivid my imagination was at that time and it's as if the things I visualized when reading those books are always on the periphery of my mind's eye: never accessible but always influencing my thought patterns.

  • @audreyburton5367
    @audreyburton5367 Před 7 lety +2

    I love this conversation, thank you both.

  • @earthgirl63
    @earthgirl63 Před 11 lety +1

    Have found it via Lannan, Thank you.

  • @oskaretc
    @oskaretc Před 2 lety +2

    This conversation so brilliantly illustrates why the writer needs the writer just as much as vice versa.

  • @zachzigrang177
    @zachzigrang177 Před 3 lety +3

    1:08:02 Soul recognizing Soul. Beautiful.

  • @jeancageot3542
    @jeancageot3542 Před 8 lety +6

    Rare to learn more from the interviewer than the interviewee. Excellent stuff

    • @coreycox2345
      @coreycox2345 Před 6 lety

      Michael Silverblatt has a way of doing that, I think Jean Cageot. He is excellent.

  • @kamilla1960
    @kamilla1960 Před 11 lety +1

    Thank you!

  • @cherylraywood6723
    @cherylraywood6723 Před 3 lety +1

    wow! what an excellent interview!
    insightful questions, profound answers!
    thank you

  • @JussaraAlmeida2912
    @JussaraAlmeida2912 Před 5 lety +1

    What an amazing conversation! One feels so small and ignorant (not in a negative way, on the contrary!) when listening to these men... Thank you for posting this!

  • @ShaneBordoli
    @ShaneBordoli Před 3 lety

    thanks for uploading, wonderful stuff

  • @alvarovukasin1167
    @alvarovukasin1167 Před 7 měsíci

    Hoping that Michael gets well soon. He has enriched us readers so much.

    • @driedup
      @driedup Před 4 měsíci

      What's wrong with him?

  • @sattarabus
    @sattarabus Před 6 lety +11

    Two brilliant minds of our time so engrossed in each other, they are hardly aware of the camera, the recording device, and tens of thousands of listeners overhearing their slow, free flowing conversation about words, narrative, voice, image, silence, black currants, snail watching, and pauses so long and pregnant they could populate the vast uninhabited swathes of the noösphere.
    This kind intercourse requires slow listening, notwithstanding the locale which may be kitchen, pantry, barn, or vineyard. Mark Michael's countenance, his ears cocked, as he hangs on the lips of his interlocutor who has covered his forehead with his outstretched fingers to utter slowly the echt rather than the ersatz.

    • @user-cv2df5cr8i
      @user-cv2df5cr8i Před 3 lety

      Prof Sattar Basra -… reflecting Sebald (Austerlitz, Die Ringe Des Saturn), i am surprised by finding
      this Video, this talk with John Berger and Michael Silverblatt - all these ideas: „[…] the universe within the universe […] the light, […] you see […] through this window,“
      ...and then your comment.
      Prof Sattar Basra „[…] the echt rather than the […] ersatz.“
      …- a poem!
      Thank you
      ✨🧚‍♂️✨
      ☀️
      „[…] the echt rather than the […] ersatz.“ - what a thought! Thank you ✨🧚‍♂️✨☀️

  • @junkettarp8942
    @junkettarp8942 Před 5 lety +3

    I am so very impressed and grateful that this video gives me hope and applicable evidence that the concept of better faster newer that we are bombarded with daily through every media in western culture is indeed what I feel it is. That being a brutish assault on humanity .We world is very very hungry for something slow and measured and full of substance to be considered and never the ultimate that seems to me is the opposite of love as the word ultimate implies it is the end hence a judgment .Obviously how could the ultimate product be such every six months?Verbal inflation is damaging to the point where it will or all ready has sponged up all meaning of language.Hence leaving everyone ,even its proponents very vulnerable as a vacuum of principals is manifested leaving one feeling worse than before you had the ultimate.

  • @planesfall
    @planesfall Před 11 lety +3

    ah! thank you very much.

  • @scoon2117
    @scoon2117 Před měsícem

    Silverblatt knows the people he interviews better than they know theirselves

  • @earthgirl63
    @earthgirl63 Před 11 lety +6

    Thank you for uploading this... what a compelling, and thoughtful interview. Do you know if there is a second part to it?

  • @dkhbtube
    @dkhbtube Před 7 měsíci

    Interesting exploration of how inter-being of artist and world and art is a 3-way process of co-creation

  • @endless2804
    @endless2804 Před 3 lety +1

    In a brutal life - tenderness is the ultimate speaking of unspoken love.

  • @MrRevoltOfficial
    @MrRevoltOfficial Před 8 lety +25

    How could a man hold his head up with a brain that big.

  • @angies6989
    @angies6989 Před 7 lety +11

    RIP John Berger :(

  • @46metube
    @46metube Před 3 lety

    I mean, who really cares? But how fabulously interesting this conversation is. What are most conversations anyway? Getting and giving. This is listening and empathy. Understanding. Questioning. Excellent. Now I can go and have a little sleep, I’m very tired.

  • @bambam5am
    @bambam5am Před 3 lety +1

    This is conversation.

  • @scoon2117
    @scoon2117 Před měsícem

    We need the reverence of literature back in our cold world. Our brains need to dance again.

  • @CaroleMora22
    @CaroleMora22 Před 3 lety

    Novalis... oh yes, and I appreciate the way this discussion emphasizes the value of a subtle form of nourishment.

  • @planesfall
    @planesfall Před 11 lety +2

    what was the name of the person they were referencing in the marionette conversation? it sounded like Kaiss.

  • @elmerborromeo8663
    @elmerborromeo8663 Před 7 lety +2

    John Berger is kind enough to consider Michael's interpretations of him or his work. But it is Michael's interpretation and he insists that he knows him that he interprets him exactly. John Berger's writings can be interpreted in many different ways

  • @francesculus
    @francesculus Před 7 lety +1

    I can't understand those 5 thumbs down....

  • @charlespeterson3798
    @charlespeterson3798 Před 5 lety

    What a perfect rootless examination of pretension. Nothing going all directions at once, teaching no subversion, responding to dead animals,, ellipsis and the absence of nada,nada,nada.

  • @sdeslimbes
    @sdeslimbes  Před 11 lety +2

    Heinrich von Kleist.

  • @junkettarp8942
    @junkettarp8942 Před 5 lety +6

    I think Burger needs a psychologist or a change of medication or at least a councilor as he is obviously too slow and makes way to much sense and damaging kindness. He is a threat to industrialism and not only a thoughtful man but indeed a danger to our society. Cover your ears and lock up your wife if this guy is around..

    • @Superromi15
      @Superromi15 Před 3 měsíci

      The Internet is an absurd place, really.

  • @Tom-xc8ff
    @Tom-xc8ff Před rokem

    1:08 :05 - the cringe in that hand shake speaks volumes

  • @HomeAtLast501
    @HomeAtLast501 Před 2 lety

    "The page makes words present".
    How many ways can a man speak yet say nothing?

  • @HomeAtLast501
    @HomeAtLast501 Před 2 lety

    What a load of crap.