Read Tell Me a Riddle Online

Authors: Tillie Olsen

Tags: #test

Tell Me a Riddle (3 page)

BOOK: Tell Me a Riddle
12.85Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads
Death Labors
JOANNE TRAUTMANN BANKS
199
Motherhood as Source and Silencer of Creativity
MARA FAULKNER
213
To ''Bear My Mother's Name":
Künstlerromane
by Women Writers
RACHEL BLAU DuPLESSIS
243
 
''
No One's Private Ground": A Bakhtinian Reading of Tillie Olsen's Tell Me a Riddle
CONSTANCE COINER
271
Selected Bibliography
305
Permissions
309
 
Page 1
Introduction
 
Page 3
DEBORAH SILVERTON ROSENFELT
Introduction
How much it takes to become a writer. Bent ....
circumstances, time, development of craft-but beyond
that: how much conviction as to the importance of what
one has to say, one's right to say it. And the will,
the measureless store of belief in oneself to be able to
comprehensions. Difficult for any male not born into a
class that breeds such confidence.
Almost impossible for a girl, a woman.
TILLIE OLSEN,
Silences
Tillie Olsen's life spans more than eighty years of this century. Born in Nebraska in 1912 or 1913, she lives today, as she has for many years, in a third-floor walk-up apartment in cooperative housing in San Francisco, still the modestly priced multicultural community envisioned by its longshoremen's union founders. Writer, scholar, teacher, activist, mother, she has touched the lives of others through her presence as well as through her prose. Her legacy of published work is not large: in the thirties, two poems, two essays, a story; in the forties, columns for the
People's World,
a leftist newspaper; subsequently, the work she is known for
todayTell Me a Riddle
(1962), a volume of short fiction;
Yonnondio,
a novel written in the thirties but not published until 1974; ''Requa I" (1970), a short story, intended as the first section of a longer work;
Silences
(1978), a collection of critical essays as intricately webbed as a poem. A poem and a short story written when Olsen was in her teens were published for the first time in 1993. She also edited a "daybook and reader,"
Mother to Daughter, Daughter to Mother
(1984), a gathering of words from 120 writersmothers and daughters, including herself
 
Page 4
and her daughter Julie Olsen Edwardsand wrote or cowrote several short essays and prefaces. Though Olsen has written less than her readers might wish, her fiction is highly regarded for its transformative vision and consummate craft. As Robert Coles observed in a review of
Tell Me a Riddle,
''Everything she has written has become almost immediately a classic."
1
Olsen: Her Life and Her Work
Tillie Olsen's parents, Samuel Lerner and Ida Beber Lerner, were born and raised in Russia.
2
Like many other young people of their time, they saw in socialism the promise of a world free from religious superstition and from the divisiveness of narrow ethnic identities, as well as from the political oppressions of the tsarist regime. As Jews, they were close to the Bund, a Jewish socialist organization with a humanist and internationalist perspective; this radical humanism informs the grandmother's passionate rejection of traditional Jewish religious practice in "Tell Me a Riddle": "Tell them to write: Race, human; Religion, none."
3
They participated in the 1905 Revolution, a mass uprising protesting the tyranny of the tsarist regime in Russia and calling for democratizing measures. When the revolution failed and Samuel faced imprisonment and exile in Siberia, he fled to this country, where he and Ida were married. Samuel Lerner eventually became the secretary of the Nebraska Socialist Party, and the six Lerner children grew up in a home where the struggles for survival of their working-class immigrant family were understood in the context of global human struggles for survival and dignity. As Elaine Orr writes, the young Tillie Lerner
came to know the United States both as a place of promise and as a country economically, socially, racially, and sexually divided. Around her she saw farmers suffering from a depressed agricultural industry and miners and packinghouse workers (among them her father) who were beginning to organize against management. Thus her first memories were colored by labor struggles, the realities of the workplace, the desire of laborers for a job and dignity, and a growing Ameri-
BOOK: Tell Me a Riddle
12.85Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Can Anyone Hear Me? by Peter Baxter
A Christmas Courtship by Jeannie Machin
Revolution Business by Charles Stross
B00BKLL1XI EBOK by Greg Fish
The Fort by Aric Davis