In the 42nd in a series of posts on 2015 books entered for The Story Prize, Barbara Paul-Emile, author of Mosaic (Eunoia Publishing), explores the source of her impulse to write.
What do you think is the
source of your impulse to write stories?
I write stories because life is about stories. We are story-telling entities and the culture of our world is based on a composite of our stories. Through stories we define who we are. We connect with each other, build communities and shape nations. Through stories of shared experience we explore our principles, values and define existence. Human life is all about stories.
I write stories because life is about stories. We are story-telling entities and the culture of our world is based on a composite of our stories. Through stories we define who we are. We connect with each other, build communities and shape nations. Through stories of shared experience we explore our principles, values and define existence. Human life is all about stories.
Looking back at my early life, I recall that I
started to write stories when I was quite young in an attempt at self-definition.
At about twelve years old while living at
a privately owned and run boarding school in Kingston, the capital city of Jamaica,
in the Caribbean, I started my first collection. At that time, my stories dealt with the
experiences shared by Jamaican students living at boarding schools on the
island and away from home. My focus was
shaped by my voluminous reading of English novels about adolescents which
portrayed the experiences of girls at various boarding institutions in England
and Wales. Jamaica was at that time, an
English colony and as such our practices were shaped by our colonial rulers. Our academic system and its values in their
entirety were based on English traditions and models as reflected in our text
books and all other pedagogical influences.
The realm that was the origin
and source of these influences were entirely unknown to most of us because as young
students we had never left the island. Great
Britain was for the most part a land of myth and legends. We read about the mists drifting off the
moors in England, the snow-capped mountains in Wales and dangerous bogs but had
never seen any of these aspects. The
focus of the stories that I wrote at that time followed the stock pattern of
the English stories except set on a tropical island. The
plots dealt with the trials and tribulations of living at Dickensian schools as
reflected in conflicted student relationships,
the rigid and restrictive rules with which we had to contend and the homesickness
from which we suffered.
Kingston, Jamaica |
I spent much of my leisure time
writing. I soon discovered, however,
that writing stories was one thing but allowing others to read them was
another. While my stories were sometimes
quite well received, at other times classmates found descriptions that they
thought related to their own personalities and activities and this lead to
arguments and much divisiveness if they were displeased. Some classmates considered it quite
presumptuous of me to dare to think that I could write stories at all. For in truth, all of our books came from
England and we had never met anyone who wrote those books. In fact, we had never met anyone who wrote books
at all.
On one occasion, in the absence
of our teacher from the classroom, my stories were passed around and the class
erupted with boisterous laughter as passages were read out aloud. Embarrassed and ashamed, from that day forth,
I felt it best to keep my writing to myself. One teacher had, ironically, already written home to my family to report
that I was doing far too much writing and reading and was not concentrating on my
homework.
Years passed, but the urge to
write stories could not be stilled. I continued
to write as an undergraduate adding the composition of poetry and longer
literary pieces to my list of creative interests. I had, however, learned my lesson and kept my
activities secret. I was admitted to graduate
school, and dutifully composed academic papers but my heart was not there. The urge to continue with my creative writing
could not be suppressed. Finally, there
came a time when I gave up the struggle and boldly decided to devote myself to writing
and publishing in the area of my first love: creative writing.
Name or describe some
hidden influences on your work.
It is my intent to share with readers my experience of life growing up in the Caribbean islands through the prism of literature. I wish to show that these islands are more than pristine beaches. They offer a varied culture rich in history, custom and tradition shaped by a multiplicity of external and internal forces. I seek to present the multi-layered and complex social relationships that exist in Caribbean society, to uncover the dynamics that shape the resourceful choices that the characters make in the context of cultural frame-works and personal values.
It is my intent to share with readers my experience of life growing up in the Caribbean islands through the prism of literature. I wish to show that these islands are more than pristine beaches. They offer a varied culture rich in history, custom and tradition shaped by a multiplicity of external and internal forces. I seek to present the multi-layered and complex social relationships that exist in Caribbean society, to uncover the dynamics that shape the resourceful choices that the characters make in the context of cultural frame-works and personal values.
While much information has been
disseminated about the Caribbean as a region for vacation travel, very little
is known about the tenor of the lives of the people who live there. In travel brochures, glossy magazines, and TV
commercials, the Caribbean is represented in beautiful color as a necklace of
azure islands strung out in sparkling blue waters. The region is seen as a kind of paradise
where happy and carefree people lead bucolic lives, joyous and pain-free.
Little is known of their
cultural traditions, the ways in which reality is conceptualized and perspectives
shaped so as to allow them to survive and overcome the challenges they face in
their daily lives. Little is known of the priorities that form their values,
personal and social, which in turn affect relationships creating the fabric of
their society. Too little is known of the impact of the economic hardships that
they face and the courage it takes to overcome. In what way does class affect
private and public relationships? What is the role of the supernatural and
other spiritual dimensions in people’s lives? What are the core mythic beliefs that
hold the social fabric together? Mosaic explores several of these
philosophical, social, and psychological terrains in the stories it presents and
shows life in its panoply of colors.
This collection, in
highlighting particular aspects of Caribbean society, explores attitudes
towards parenting and child-rearing, relationships between males and females in
romantic situations, roles played by
both genders in family affairs and in society at-large and the place of the
mystic, village obeah woman or man, as healer and mediator between the world of
the living and of the dead. This
collection allows me to share with readers the
voices of the characters that speak in my creative fiction, giving life to
their actions, personalities, interests, and priorities thereby presenting the
dramas that punctuate their lives. Mosaic presents several of the different faces of the Caribbean as I have
experienced, observed and envisioned them.
The character of Caribbean
people, described in broad strokes, is fascinating and thought-provoking. Resourceful, strikingly devoid of self-pity,
Caribbean people are easy-going, quick to share their opinions and perspectives
while rejecting victim-mentality. Resilient, enterprising, and engaging, these
open-hearted islanders exhibit an infectious sense of humor and good spirits.
Gregarious and optimistic, most are always looking for that second, and
occasionally, third or fourth chance in life.
Economically, times are, for the most part, very hard and the road to
success for many is non-existent. Yet, inherent self-confidence and belief in the
ultimate beneficent running of the universe promotes and strengthens the will
to survive and to prosper in difficult times.
Mosaic, presents
stories that focus on the vicissitudes of daily life as experienced by people
in small towns and rural districts in the Caribbean islands. It seeks to
uncover the dynamics that shape the resourceful choices that characters make within
the context of cultural frame-works and personal values. These tales deal with personal dilemmas,
psychic themes, class distinctions, and social issues as shaped by the legacy of
colonialism and slavery and as expressed in the complex heritage of the region.
Describe
your collection in ten words or less.
Mosaic presents Caribbean characters in stories: passionate, sumptuous, and compelling.
Mosaic presents Caribbean characters in stories: passionate, sumptuous, and compelling.