Jenny Diski
Jenny Diski | |
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Born |
Jenny Simmonds 8 July 1947 London |
Occupation | Writer |
Genre | Autobiography, fiction, non-fiction, screenplay, travel |
Website | |
www |
Jenny Diski FRSL (née Simmonds;[1] born 8 July 1947) is an English writer. Diski was educated at University College London, and worked as a teacher during the 1970s and early 1980s.[2] She won the 2003 Thomas Cook Travel Book Award for Stranger on a Train: Daydreaming and Smoking around America With Interruptions.
Diski is a regular contributor to the London Review of Books; the collections Don't and A View from the Bed include articles and essays written for the publication.
Early life
A troubled teenager from a difficult, fractured home with a Jewish father,[3] Diski spent much of her formative years as in- or outpatient at various psychiatric institutions.[4] At the same time, she immersed herself deeply in the culture of the '60s, from the Aldermaston Marches to the Grosvenor Square protests,[5] from drugs to free love, from jazz to acid rock[6] and a flirtation with the ideas and methods of R. D. Laing.[7] Taken into the London home of a school-friend’s mother, the novelist Doris Lessing,[8] Diski resumed her education; and by the start of the 1970s was training as a teacher, starting a free school, and making her first publication.[9]
Writings
Over the decades, Diski has shown herself to be a prolific writer of fiction and nonfiction, articles, reviews and books. Many of her early books tackle such troubling if absorbing themes as depression, sado-masochism, and madness.[10] However, some of her later writings, such as Apology for the Woman Writing, strike a more positive note;[8] while her spare, ironic tone, using all the resources of magic realism, provides a unique take on even the most distressing material.[11] Compared at times to her mentor Lessing for their joint interest in the thinking woman,[8] Diski has been called a post-postmodern for her abiding distrust of logical systems of thought, whether postmodern or not.[12]
On "The Sixties"
Diski sets out in her personal memoir to describe her experience of the 1960s:
I lived in London during that period, regretting the Beats, buying clothes, going to movies, dropping out, reading, taking drugs, spending time in mental hospitals, demonstrating, having sex, teaching.[13]
This could be considered a normative 1960s life-style, while her representation of the era as a sort of golden age is also not atypical of her generation.[14] However she also describes the darker side of the age – for example its pervasive sexism, institutionalised in the countercultural cult of casual sex – stating that
On the basis that no means no, I was raped several times by men who arrived in my bed and wouldn't take no for an answer.[15]
Diski returns repeatedly to the question of how far the cult of the self in the permissive society gave rise to 1980s neoliberalism, greed and self-interest.[16] She concludes that, in the words of Charles Shaar Murray,
The line from hippie to yuppie is not nearly as convoluted as people like to believe.[17]
Personal life
She married Roger Diski in 1976, and their daughter Chloe was born in 1977;[18] the couple separated in 1981[1] and divorced. Her current partner is Ian Patterson, known as "the Poet" in Diski's writings, who is a translator and director of English Studies at Queens' College, Cambridge.
In September 2014, Diski revealed that she had been diagnosed with inoperable cancer.[19]
Works
Fiction
- Nothing Natural (1986)
- Rainforest (1987)
- Like Mother (1988)
- Then Again (1990)
- Happily Ever After (1991)
- Monkey's Uncle (1994)
- The Vanishing Princess (1995) (short stories)
- The Dream Mistress (1996)
- After These Things (2004)
- Only Human: A Comedy (2000)
- Apology for the Woman Writing (2008)
Non-fiction
- Skating to Antarctica (1997) (memoir)
- Don't (1998) (essays)
- Stranger on a Train (2002) (travelogue) - winner of the 2003 J. R. Ackerley Prize for Autobiography
- A View from the Bed (2003) (essays)
- On Trying to Keep Still (2006)
- The Sixties (2009) (memoir)
- What I Don’t Know About Animals (2010) (nature)
See also
- Anti-psychiatry
- Postmodern literature
- Shamans
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Katharine Viner Obituary: Roger Diski, The Guardian, 8 March 2011.
- ↑ http://www.contemporarywriters.com/authors/?p=auth29
- ↑ Diski, Skating to Antarctica p. 35
- ↑ Jenny Diski, The Sixties (2009) p. 23 and p. 31
- ↑ Diski, Sixties p. 28 and p. 69
- ↑ Diski, Sixties p. 33-44
- ↑ Diski, Sixties p. 132
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 8.2 Turner.
- ↑ Diski, Sixties p. 24 and p. 97-8
- ↑ Nick Turner "Critical Perspective"
- ↑ Nick Rennisson, Contemporary British Novelists (2005), p. 44.
- ↑ Gerd Bayer, in Vanessa Guignery ed., (Re-)mapping London (2007), p. 24 and p. 31
- ↑ Diski Sixties p.7.
- ↑ D. Sandbrook, White Heat (2007) p. 542
- ↑ Diski, Sixties, p. 59 and p. 61.
- ↑ Diski, Sixties, p. 136.
- ↑ Quoted in Diski, Sixties, p135 and compare pp. 87-8.
- ↑ Steve Crawshaw "Roger Diski: Social entrepreneur who championed sustainable tourism to post-conflict countries", The Independent, 10 March 2011.
- ↑ http://www.lrb.co.uk/v36/n17/jenny-diski/a-diagnosis
External links
- Jenny Diski at British Council: Literature
- Jenny Diski's official website
- Jenny Diski's blog
- Diski's writings at the LRB
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