The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1995, Blaðsíða 26

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.06.1995, Blaðsíða 26
136 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN SPRING/SUMMER 1995 Wylie: It continues to be a ‘live’ book. Women stop me on the street and say, “You’ve saved my life,” and I say, “you are a widow.” Some of them have been a widow rarely longer than three years but others for only six weeks and are still bleeding around the eyes. It continues to be a vital book because of its accuracy. That’s be- cause of my diary. I had such a close, accu- rate record of my grief. Comack: Which book do you think is more important? Wylie: I thought New Beginnings: Griev- ing and Losses, a Creative Process. I’m very proud of that book because I’m proud of the writing in it and also because it covers a broad range. I really like it. I’ve also writ- ten a book of poetry based on my bereave- ment, Something Might Happen. Comack: As for your latest book, Read- ing Between the Lines: The Diaries of Women, I’ve kept nineteen years of diaries stashed away in my bedroom box, so I felt person- ally involved as I read about women who had “codes” and “tore out pages.” How did you access all these diaries? Wylie: There are few that I haven’t bought. 1 did go to the Schlesinger Library in Radcliffe College. It is one of the best women’s studies libraries in North America. Some (diaries) are totally out of print and unavailable that I could read there. I buy them all because I mark them up and have to own them. I search for dia- ries everywhere I go. Comack: How long have you been work- ing on this book? Wylie: It’s been five years, but during that time I’ve been working on other books as well: a couple of readers for Harper Collins, a book of quotations for Key Por- ter. I’ve written and produced four or five plays as well as my first screenplay, which was nominated for three Gemini awards and won two of them. Comack: You refer to diaries by a great variety of women from different lifestyles and different eras. The ones that amazed ine most were those written by pioneer women, with their lack of paper and scratchy nibs and problems with frozen ink. I wondered how they found time to write. Which diaries affected you most? Wylie: I’m very interested in western pio- neers. I’d like to get a film produced about western pioneer women. They had a totally different trip than the men. They were on the same wagon train but they had a totally different experience. I think that’s fascinat- ing. Comack.: You have chosen wonderful quotations for you book like the one by Nellie McClung, “Women are intended for two things: to bring children into the world and make them comfortable, and then they must keep quiet and if their hearts break with grief, let them break quietly—and that’s all.” Why do you think there are few, if any, references in diaries to abuse? Wylie: Women are ready to take the blame for things, even in an abusive rela- tionship. They think it’s their fault. Erika Johns, the poet/writer, said, “You don’t have to beat a woman if you can make her feel guilty.” It’s a combination of misplaced loyalty to the mate and presenting a united front to the world and guilt. Comack: Why do you think that is? Wylie: I think women have been well- trained over the years. I think it’s brain- washing. COMACK: There was a reference in your book to the woman doctor in the sixties who was “pinched in the ass” by a male doctor and she “held her rage and smiled.” Do you think things have changed? Wylie: NO! I think it’s still pretty hard to win an harassment suit. It’s just becom- ing a little more public now. The men are going to do it and the attitudes aren’t go- ing to change because of that. They may be a little more subtle but you still read of it every day that there are women still be- ing subjected to harassment.
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