Time Sensitive

Siri Hustvedt on the Value in Embracing Ambiguity


Listen Later

When Siri Hustvedt was 12 years old, she began reading 19th-century novels by Jane Austen, the Brontë sisters, Charles Dickens, and Mark Twain that were given to her by her Norwegian mother, and soon developed a passion for literature. She found great satisfaction in how these stories expanded her mind with new ideas and realms beyond. At 13, precociously enough, she decided she wanted to become a writer. Her interest in developing what she calls a “flexibility of mind” led her to eventually reading and studying works in a wide range of disciplines, including art history, philosophy, psychoanalysis, and neuroscience. Through her essays, poems, fiction, and nonfiction over the past five decades, Hustvedt’s aim has become clear: to bring together perspectives that might help her—and those who read her work—see the world differently.

Hustvedt’s efforts to break down barriers and build a diversity of knowledge have steered her toward an array of topics. Upon moving from her hometown of Northfield, Minnesota, to New York City in 1978 to attend Columbia University, from which she earned her Ph.D. in English literature, she worked as a waitress, a researcher for a medical historian, a model, and an artist’s assistant. She went on to write seven novels, including the international bestseller What I Loved (2004) and The Blazing World (2014), the latter of which won the Los Angeles Times Book Prize for Fiction in 2014. Since 1995, Hustvedt has written extensively about art and what comes from looking deeply at it, unpacking works ranging from Johannes Vermeer’s “Woman with a Pearl Necklace” (1662–1664) to the photorealistic paintings of Gerhard Richter​​. 

Often, Hustvedt’s subject matter comes to her because it hits close to home. In her 2010 book The Shaking Woman or a History of My Nerves, she investigated the violent tremors that she first experienced in 2006 while delivering her father’s eulogy. Hustvedt (who with her husband, the novelist Paul Auster, has a daughter, the singer-songwriter Sophie Auster) has also long been interested in the peculiarities of motherhood, and more recently, the placenta, a subject she plans to explore at length in a future book. 

On this episode, Hustvedt talks with Spencer about the mysteries and misunderstandings around gestation, maternity, and being a mother; books as friends; and the problems with putting up walls between disciplines.

 

Show notes:

  • Full Transcript
  • sirihustvedt.net
  • [05:01] Mothers, Fathers, and Others (2021)
  • [47:53] A Plea for Eros (2005)
  • [53:24] “The Future of Literature: The Anatomy of the Novel” (2017)
  • [01:03:31] The Shaking Woman or a History of My Nerves (2010)
...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Time SensitiveBy The Slowdown

  • 4.9
  • 4.9
  • 4.9
  • 4.9
  • 4.9

4.9

148 ratings


More shows like Time Sensitive

View all
Design Matters with Debbie Millman by Design Matters Media

Design Matters with Debbie Millman

1,228 Listeners

The Modern Art Notes Podcast by Tyler Green

The Modern Art Notes Podcast

475 Listeners

Talk Easy with Sam Fragoso by Lemonada Media

Talk Easy with Sam Fragoso

1,224 Listeners

Hyperallergic by Hyperallergic

Hyperallergic

150 Listeners

The Week in Art by The Art Newspaper

The Week in Art

199 Listeners

Scaffold by The Architecture Foundation

Scaffold

37 Listeners

Dialogues: The David Zwirner Podcast by David Zwirner

Dialogues: The David Zwirner Podcast

408 Listeners

City Arts & Lectures by City Arts & Lectures

City Arts & Lectures

375 Listeners

Talk Art by Russell Tovey and Robert Diament

Talk Art

477 Listeners

The Great Women Artists by Katy Hessel

The Great Women Artists

523 Listeners

The Art Angle by Artnet News

The Art Angle

331 Listeners

A brush with... by The Art Newspaper

A brush with...

135 Listeners

NOTA BENE: This Week in the Art World by Benjamin Godsill & Nate Freeman

NOTA BENE: This Week in the Art World

141 Listeners

Critics at Large | The New Yorker by The New Yorker

Critics at Large | The New Yorker

579 Listeners

Fashion Neurosis with Bella Freud by Bella Freud

Fashion Neurosis with Bella Freud

191 Listeners