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Ralph Wessman
- AN INTERVIEW WITH HELEN CERNE
- Helen Cerne is one co-ordinator of the Community
Writer's Group 'Western Union', based in Werribee, Melbourne. In this interview, conducted
by correspondence in late 1992, Helen discusses the practicalities of setting up and
maintaining a community writing group, and explores her own attitudes to writing.
- Helen Cerne: I have belonged to a
writer's group for about eight years which really amazes me as I have never been a joiner
of anything before. I don't like meetings or formal social arrangements but the strengths
of the 'Western Union' group (situated in the western suburbs of Melbourne but mainly
Werribee) is that it is supportive, genuinely encouraging and an impetus to get me working
regularly. Where I live there is not a lot of cultural/art support so it has been
important that the group initiates and facilitates opportunities for local writers to meet
regularly and share their work. We have about sixteen regular members, four of whom have
been there from the outset. The founding member of the group Kip Chauli, a natural
storyteller and poet advertised in the local paper to get it started. All ages and
backgrounds attend; about eight men and eight women at the moment. People drift in and out
and that's good because we need recharging and new ideas. At the moment we need a few
younger members to wake us up a bit. No-one is in charge and that is another positive
thing. However, as people can waffle with a bit of wine and cheese under the belt, we now
have a Madam Lash (with a little bell!) who makes sure readings stay within a certain
limit. Social conversation follows the reading and often goes on until well after
midnight.
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- A few members take roles like distributing regular
newsletters, informing members of writing festivals and competitions, but everyone is
encouraged to get involved and comment on other people's work. Some in the group are
politically committed and write about social equity issues on such themes as aboriginal
land rights and domestic violence. One member, Margaret Campbell has prepared a powerful
anthology for this the Year of Indigenous People. Some of the group opt for more
traditional genres, realistic styles, detective fiction, well plotted stories and
structured yarns with no open endings ... but they do keep an open mind. Others are
exploring their spirituality in poems and stories. We sometimes swap and discuss
influential modern writing and often dispute its merits and influences. Right or wrong, I
believe writing is about sharing ideas and experiences, some of which must reflect
contemporary concerns and experimental approaches.
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- As a group, do you get involved with other
writers and activities?
- As a group we all belong to different
organisations such as the Federation of Victorian Writers, community writers' networks,
the Western Region Writer's Co-op, The Writers' Centre in Melbourne. All have different
uses and outreaches, particularly newsletters about writing events and workshop
opportunities. Most of us go on writers' weekend camps run by the writers' networks. Some
of us regularly attend book launches and readings around town which are always publicised
in the weekly Age EG guide.
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- What are some of the positive points in
favour of writers' groups?
- Many members of our group say how important it is
to read aloud their work. First, you can hear what is or isn't working. Secondly the
feedback you get is valuable. Thirdly, in the group there are people who are genuinely
interested and really like sharing this age-old tradition of story telling. Some of the
writers are too kind and supportive to go for the jugular but overall the criticism is
useful and constructive. Although eleven o'clock on a Friday night is not the best time to
have a clear-headed discussion. We are a mixed group of diverse interests and writing
styles which is good for the cross-fertilisation of ideas. Some go for experimentation,
others for ideas and issues while others for mainstream markets like adolescent fiction,
Mills and Boon, the Women's Weekly etc. Amazingly we still get on ... when there
is a personality clash, someone tactfully diverts the attention or rearranges the seating
or simply leaves the group. That's fine. Everyone has an ego, we all want to make it and
we all need someone to support and encourage us. That can be a problem in running a group.
You have to be sensitive to the needs of the members. But who nurtures the nurturer? And
that is why many female writers refuse to have men in their group. It has not been a
problem for us. Rather we have been fortunate in having males who have injected a
different viewpoint or perspective without taking over. Some censorship may take place ...
it is hard to say. I know I read whatever whether men are present or not. So far, the men
in our group have not trivialised the women's literary output. By and large, they have
been encouraging and supportive but we often dump on them!
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- It is interesting that over the past eight years
we have had many male members but very few Australian born! At the moment we have an
Indian, an Italian, an Irishman, four Englishmen and one Australian. (The women are six
Australian, one English and one Scot). I think that says a lot about how little our
culture values men who create (especially in the western suburbs) and how often the native
born cannot or do not want to express their innermost feelings. But it may be the opposite
case, male migrants to our country might have a greater need to communicate. It would be
good to conduct a study to find out why.
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- Has the group had much of its work
published?
- The Western Union group has published two
anthologies to date and is preparing a third for 1993. Many of the members have been
broadcast on the A.B.C. and stations like 3CR on their informative 'Writers at Work' show.
One of our members, Bronwen Hickman is a regular writer for Radio Helicon. Another, Jim
Cleland has sold over 7.000 books for his 'Radical Rider' adolescent novel series. We have
camps or workshops. In 1988 we took part in An Open Channel TV presentation about
community writers. The director Anthony McMahon had seen us perform at Spoleto and wanted
to make a short documentary about the Werribee writers. Some members have had their plays
performed, workshopped or read at community centres. In 1991, I produced an hour program
for the A.B.C. 'Connexions', about Victorian community writing groups, (there are over
eighty) which focused on a weekend conference held at the Footscray Community Arts Centre.
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- On a personal level ... do you subscribe
to magazines? Do you read the review sections of the Saturday newspapers? Do they
influence what you buy?
- Yes, I do read reviews in newspapers, always the Age,
sometimes Australian Book Review and occasionally other magazines and papers. They
do influence me to buy books but I borrow frequently from the local library. We are a book
buying family. Traditionally, every Christmas eve and birthdays we give books. Ironically
in this house of bibliophiles our children are not readers!
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- I read many of the literary magazines and have
subscribed to several over the years. Our writer's group subscribes to Australian
Short Stories and annually we decide which ones to support. Not everyone is
interested in the same type of literature. I regularly read magazines like Meanjin,
Scripsi, Overland, Hecate, Studio. (The library has funding for ten magazine
subscriptions a year). I think anyone who is serious about writing in Australia should
know what is being published and what are the literary trends/styles/themes current. It's
up to the individual whether to be influenced or to discard them. I also follow radio and
television programmes about writing such as 'Books and Writing', 'First Edition' and 'The
Book Show' on SBS.
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- Can you name some writers and books you've
particularly enjoyed?
- I cannot say which is the best book I have ever
read but there have been special books for particular times of my life. D.H. Lawrence when
I was young until I discovered Joyce. What style can one invent after him? I love a lot of
modern literature and yet I go back to the Russians as my favourites; Tolstoy for his
humanity and breadth of social vision; Turgenev for his style and restrained emotion;
Chekhov for his contemporary insights. Passages of Jane Austen, Katherine Mansfield and
Virginia Woolf can leave me stunned. A.S. Byatt's Possession was a good read
particularly if you have ever researched the life of someone and been taken over by their
persona....
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- An Australian novel I particularly appreciated was
David Malouf's An Imaginary Life. I think there are many fine women writers in
Australia at the moment. I like most of Helen Garner's work, some of Marion Halligan's
Janet Turner Hospital's stories, and want to read Bev Farmer's book The Seal Woman.
I like David Marr's Patrick White as it made me appreciate how much one has to
work at succeeding and I also valued sharing the relationship of Patrick and Manoly,
surely one of the finest committed partnerships in literature. Confirming that writers
need people who believe in them! Another biography I enjoyed was the life of Vanessa Bell
and her complicated involvements with the Bloomsbury set. How she balanced her art and
loves while maintaining a warm home environment was quite remarkable. At the moment I am
reading and enjoying Jeanette Winterson.
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- Have you been to any writers' festivals?
Has the experience been valuable? Have you any memories of them worth recalling?
- I do go to writers' festivals, mainly Adelaide and
Melbourne and various community ones. When you see the same old faces year after year at
these things you begin to feel like a bit of a middle-aged groupie hanging around the
authors for signatures! The cult of the writer as all wise celebrity or cultural guru has
really taken off. Some sessions in Melbourne are always sold out as thousands turn up!
Adelaide is more relaxed and intimate being under the tarpaulins in the Women's Memorial
Gardens which are lovely to wander through after a heady reading. At these events the
reading public wants answers not only about writing but about life which the frail writers
usually cannot give. Of course there are always the rare surprises. The Latin Americans
Luisa Valenzuela and Eduardo Galeano left a lasting impression on me. And that is why I go
back year after year not to be seen chatting with the cogniscenti (I kid myself) but to
savour some insight which expands my limitations. Galeano's trilogy Memory of Fire,
the History of the Americas is a gem of insights and compelling vignettes at which to
ponder and wonder. The Montsalvat Poetry festival was worthwile in 1992 for the diversity
and quality of work shared especially in the open heart readings on the Saturday morning.
I would like to get to the Salamanca (Hobart) and Sydney ones in the near future.
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- What about your own writing?
- I write about everything and anything. I have
explored the changing roles of women but I mostly write about family dynamics and
male/female interaction. Some of my work has a spiritual context but is not overtly
Christian. I think at the moment there is a real interest in this domain as evidenced in
several writers recently eg Helen Garner's Cosmo Cosmolino. One of my fascinations
is with Latin American writers such as Marquez where there is a crossover between the real
and fantastic, the living and the spirit. The very term 'magic realism' conveys this sense
of it being outside the realm of natural phenomena, 'away with the fairies' but these
writers are lucid, rational and well grounded. It is not a weird exception to life, it is
life. Most people do retreat from explicit religious writing. As soon as this comes,
readers back away. One of my fascinations is with the French writer and philosopher Simone
Weil who as a Marxist was valued but once she became spiritual it was as if she had lost
all credibility. To her, however, it was a consistent continuation along the path of
understanding why people suffer and are exploited. In our society, there is a traditional
separation from the secular and the sacred but increasingly there seems to be a need for
artists to unify the two. Hence the interest in myth and ritual in literature and drama. I
think we have lost something integral to our traditional existence - a sense of communal
ceremony. Even in suburbia it's essential to mark the passing of time with moments of
significance; celebration or awe.
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- I know it all sounds half baked or woolly but
things like the annual bonfire, the community fete, the local craft market, arts
festivals, religious rituals, are things which can give kids and adults a sense of
continuity with the past and some meaning to the constant state of flux. In a recent
production by the Abbey theatre in Melbourne, Brian Friel's 'Dancing at Lughnasa' these
sentiments were expressed so much better. And yet I do not want to retreat back to
communal hippiedom. (My sixties' adolescence is showing). I value much of the new; the
hard edged minimalists, the post-moderns with their eclectic layers, the technological
appropriation of creativity challenging writers to compete with lucid possibilities. I
like originality and try to change my style and structure to convey the mood of each
piece.
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- Tell me about your writing habits. Do you
write regularly? Do you use a word processor? Do you keep a journal, collect clippings
etc?
- For the past few years I have been an erratic
writer, as I work part-time. In 1992 however I co-wrote a local history of a Werribee
private school and had to set aside one to two days a week to research and write which I
maintained for most of the year due to my tight schedule. Housework and domesticity has
always had a low profile for me so that was easy to shelve or fit around other priorities.
What I spend more time on is relationships and they do suffer when you are writing as the
creative process spills over into your thinking time as well. I find you have to
discipline yourself to write at a certain time of day otherwise you postpone the starting.
(I want to write but I don't want to begin!) It means three to four hours of uninterrupted
time which sometimes a family does not let you have. Women have a skill of switching on
and off, a necessity for survival but if you are serious about writing you must make the
time. Using that limited time productively is the secret.
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- Using a word processor is a real boon, saves time
and makes the process of layering your work much easier. Although I usually write stories
in long hand first, I constantly redraft adding quotations, allusions, metaphors later to
make the text more resonant. Sometimes I go the other way, have the symbols and themes and
then weave a story around them. To be able to cut and paste, change names delete
paragraphs is great. Last year with the local history which was based on oral anecdotes,
every time someone told me another interesting recollection I easily inserted it into the
text without a laborious rewrite.
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- I have kept a writer's journal for ten years since
I studied Drama at Melbourne University. In that course we were encouraged to write down
reflections, observations, conversations, ideas and issues to be recycled in performance.
I continued the practice for writing. I collect clippings, 'how to write' articles, witty
aphorisms, weird news stories etc. Some of my favourite quotes are now cliches ... many
have been published in the Paris Review writers' interviews edited by George
Plimpton. It's hard to be fresh about writing when it's on calendars but here are some of
my favourites:
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- 'Trust your obsessions.'
- 'A writer is working when he is staring out the
window.'
- 'In literature as in love we are astonished at
what is chosen by others' ... Maurois
- 'There is a voice within that will not be still'
... Sylvia Plath
- 'The man who writes about himself and his time is
the man who writes about all people for all time' .. Bernard Shaw
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- Have you had many rejection slips? How do
you handle rejection of your material?
- Rejection slips I collect and save. At first I
found rejection difficult and did not take the advice offered. I would shelve the project,
or later just send the material somewhere else. One day however I received a letter urging
me genuinely to make the changes which I did and the story was accepted.
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- A rejection slip may not be a negative experience
... one has to be realistic about the nature of publishing. So many unsolicited stories
and poems arriving on an editor's desk, something like only one in a hundred to be
accepted for some publications. In one editorial workshop I attended they said a rejection
should be viewed as a continuing dialogue towards publication particularly if you are
given some useful feedback along the way. They sometimes remember your name and if you
keep on trying they see you have a real commitment with an increasing body of work.
- Standard printed cards with no personal comments
are never good to receive. I have appreciated rejections from Meanjin where the
comments were astute and considered; and Quadrant where one of our finest poets, Les
Murray wrote a short note of rejection but also thanked me for some of my observations. I
found this encouraging. Being accepted is better and if a slim envelope arrives with a
cheque, very pleasant indeed. However, I prefer a verbal comment from someone after
reading some of my work. I am very much a relationship person (E. M. Forster's 'only
connect' sort of aim). A personal response means a lot and if someone remembers something
months later, it really satisfies me.
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- How do you feel about suggestions for
changes to your work?
- It depends on what is said, who says it and how.
It's silly how defensive you get over your work. I'm better now. Personally, I find it
very hard to criticise my peers. I believe everyone has a right to a voice and to tell
something in his or her own way. To me editorial suggestions are useful but when someone
else insists on changing the characters or endings or plot, then writing may become too
formulaic or prescriptive. I think there is a craft to writing a good story but when it
comes down to it, I don't think anyone can tell you how to make it great. It's indefinable
... something extra. When I read the stories of the masters, they don't usually fall into
set patterns of structure and style. Making suggestions is a sensitive area in a writer's
group; if often depends if the person really wants it. Usually a writer wants affirmation
or approval rather than negative comments. If someone has worked on something for months,
maybe years, it would be heartless to dismiss the effort in a few seconds. Better to
accentuate the positives and then move to what may need to be strengthened. It's easier if
someone is specific and asks 'Was the ending too abrupt; in my first draft the wife was
indifferent now she is much more angry, does it work ... etc'. Having copies of the work
distributed around the group is useful too. Everyone has more time to digest the material
and make more pertinent comments ... some can even take it away and report back next time.
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- Personalities do play a part in a writer's
group. Some egos need more massaging than others (mine included). Having adolescent kids
is another important prerequisite for writers not to take themselves too seriously! After
a meeting I often lie awake for hours thinking over the stories or poems read. I value
these once a month encounters and the privilege of sharing in a creative journey with
other people in my community. Who knows where we will end up? And does it really matter?
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