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Maria Antas on Susanne Ringell's alphabetical people
Susanne Ringell's new work is the shortest of the books published
in 2000. It easily disappears on the bookshelf if one doesn't carefully
remember where one put it. Only 62 pages. Yet it constructs a whole
civilisation and a humanity.
Av blygsel blev Adele fet ('It
was embarrasment that made Adele fat') is an ABC for grown-ups. At each
letter we meet a person. At 'A' we encounter Adele, who grows as fat
as she is shy. She carries 78 kilos of shyness inside her, and she
eats until her body is the same weight. At 'W' we meet Walter, who
runs away from the zone therapist's clinic to the restaurant. He is
in no doubt as to what does body and soul good: a rare beef steak,
in spite of his wife's pleas in favour of the beneficial therapy.
And at 'E' and 'F' we meet Egil and Folke: two shy men waiting for
a train and for a long period of waiting to end.
Susanne Ringell gives her readers an
entire alphabet; she restores to us the foundation for our structuring
of language and the world around us. But a language without people
would be dead. So each letter is a person; each letter is coloured
by a human fate that seldom figures largely in the history books,
but on which Susanne Ringell confers dignity. The people we encounter
in the book are lonely. That is certainly nothing new in literature
but Ringell has an unusual gift of being able to create dignity
around the most bizarre creatures. It is perfectly clear that Egil
and Folke look absurd as they stand on the platform in their woolly
hats, and Walter is probably a quite intolerable male chauvinist pig.
And yet it is easy to love them. They endure their lives; they do
not exchange them for anything else, or anyone else's life. Firmness,
dignity. Just like the stone in Ringell's book Vara sten ('Being
stone', 1996): it was always proud of itself, even though the whole
world around it was in motion and change. The world was forever new,
while the stone grew older and older, but was always just as unchanged.
But our respect for Susanne Ringell's
thumbnail sketches of Adele and the others is only half our reaction.
At least as important is the joy, humour and playfulness of the texts.
It is as though Ringell wants to say that there is human dignity exists,
but no language that can express it totally. One can only let language
approach the human being and then sometimes the words bounce
back and repeat themselves illogically. They come to a standstill
in comic alliterations, they recall and sound like other words and
therefore pop up in the wrong context. Respect for people demands
a lack of respect for the language that is used to portray them; the
reader laughs with delight. No one in a long time has been as serious
and exhilarating as Susanne Ringell when she blends linguistic analysis
with psychology and absurdism. Female absurdism is something of which
we cannot have too much.
Translated by David McDuff
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