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Anatomy of Restlessness: Selected Writings, 1969-1989

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Although he is best known for his luminous reports from the farthest-flung corners of the earth, Bruce Chatwin possessed a literary sensibility that reached beyond the travel narrative to span a world of topics—from art and antiques to archaeology and architecture. This spirited collection of previously neglected or unpublished essays, articles, short stories, travel sketches, and criticism represents every aspect and period of Chatwin’s career as it reveals an abiding theme in his his fascination with, and hunger for, the peripatetic existence. While Chatwin’s poignant search for a suitable place to “hang his hat,” his compelling arguments for the nomadic “alternative,” his revealing fictional accounts of exile and the exotic, and his wickedly en pointe social history of Capri prove him to be an excellent observer of social and cultural mores, Chatwin’s own restlessness, his yearning to be on the move, glimmers beneath every surface of this dazzling body of work.

224 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1996

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About the author

Bruce Chatwin

66 books671 followers
Charles Bruce Chatwin was an English novelist and travel writer. He won the James Tait Black Memorial Prize for his novel On the Black Hill (1982).

In 1972, Chatwin interviewed the 93-year-old architect and designer Eileen Gray in her Paris salon, where he noticed a map of the area of South America called Patagonia, which she had painted. "I've always wanted to go there," Bruce told her. "So have I," she replied, "go there for me." Two years later in November 1974, Chatwin flew out to Lima in Peru, and reached Patagonia a month later. When he arrived, he left the newspaper with a telegram: "Have gone to Patagonia." He spent six months in the area, a trip which resulted in the book In Patagonia (1977). This work established his reputation as a travel writer. Later, however, residents in the region contradicted the account of events depicted in Chatwin's book. It was the first time in his career, but not the last, that conversations and characters which Chatwin presented as fact were alleged to have been fictionalised.

Later works included a novel based on the slave trade, The Viceroy of Ouidah, which he researched with extended stays in Benin, West Africa. For The Songlines (1987), a work combining fiction and non-fiction, Chatwin went to Australia. He studied the culture to express how the songs of the Aborigines are a cross between a creation myth, an atlas and an Aboriginal man's personal story. He also related the travelling expressed in The Songlines to his own travels and the long nomadic past of humans. Winner of the James Tait Black Memorial Prize, his novel On the Black Hill (1982) was set closer to home, in the hill farms of the Welsh Borders. It focuses on the relationship between twin brothers, Lewis and Benjamin, who grow up isolated from the course of twentieth century history. Utz (1988), was a novel about the obsession that leads people to collect. Set in Prague, the novel details the life and death of Kaspar Utz, a man obsessed with his collection of Meissen porcelain.

Chatwin was working on a number of new ideas for future novels at the time of his death from AIDS in 1989, including a transcontinental epic, provisionally titled Lydia Livingstone.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 73 reviews
Profile Image for Danilo Scardamaglio.
115 reviews12 followers
April 1, 2023
Anatomia dell'irrequietezza è una raccolta di testi, editi e non, composta dopo la prematura morte di Chatwin. I testi sono di vario genere, sia di natura autobiografica, sia narrativa (che nel caso di Chatwin è indissolubilmente legata all'autobiografia), sia saggistica. I testi autobiografici sono ovviamente, come ci si potrebbe aspettare, al di sotto del livello dei grandi capolavori del viaggiatore inglese: eppure sono testi di spessore, si catalogano come secondari soltanto per la grandezza irraggiungibile dei primi. In effetti è sempre lo stesso Chatwin, scarno, asciutto nello stile, fanciullesco nell'interesse per il mondo e per l'uomo, e in cui è presente la solita ironia britannica. I testi narrativi sono un po' più meh. Per quanto gli intrecci siano semplici, riescono comunque a gravare sulla fascinazione chatwiniana. Ciò che mi ha realmente stupito invece sono i testi saggistici. Non mi aspettavo un acume critico così spiccato nelle recensioni letterarie, mentre i saggi sul nomadismo mi hanno incantato: la canonica girandola di curiosità e aneddoti si incastrano ad una vena saggistica, a tratti rigorosa a tratti un po' ballerina, in cui, come indica lo stesso titolo, viene indagato il grande, eterno problema per Chatwin, ossia l'essenza nomade dell'uomo, e quella che è storicamente l'alternativa nomade alla sedentaria e decadente civiltà (intesa nel significato originario di vita nelle città). È bellissimo l'abbozzo di quello che doveva esserne l'esposizione piena della materia, un saggio di nome L'alternativa nomade, soltanto canovacciato e mai scritto realmente. Ma Chatwin non si limita a ciò, e gli ultimi due saggi della raccolta vertono su un problema, a tratti indipendente, ma in realtà strettamente legato a quello del nomadismo, e soprattutto autobiografico (essendo stato Chatwin legato alla Sotheby's, la più importante casa d'aste del mondo): la percezione psicologica dell'arte, in cui affiora l'iconoclastia dello stesso Chatwin, tratta dal modus vivendi frugale delle tribù nomadi. Per quanto Anatomia dell'irrequietezza sia una raccolta secondaria, oltre a fornire una visione globale su uno degli scrittori più interessanti del XX secolo ed indagarne il pensiero attraverso scritti inediti e a tratti privati, è anche un testo di assoluta fruibilità, e un modo per approcciarsi a Bruce Chatwin.
Profile Image for Jim.
2,415 reviews798 followers
October 31, 2013
It is always fascinating to read the minor works of someone whose majo works one loves. After having finished Anatomy of Restlessness: Selected Writings, 1969-1989, I have only two more works of Bruce Chatwin to tackle: On the Black Hill and his collected letters, both of which I have on my shelves.

There are some things that draw me to Chatwin, and others that repel me. On the one hand, he had this mania for travel that has been part of my life after since I broke free of my parents; and, as a former art auction expert for Sotheby's, he has a distrust for people who keep score in life by accumulating "things."

On the other hand, Chatwin's restlessness also pertained his relationships with people. He was bisexual and somewhat treacherous (in effect) with those people who were drawn to him. Even in his best books, The Songlines and In Patagonia, he partook of the same mythomania that he criticizes in others. The story took precedence over the data provided by informants. Many of those who acted in that capacity felt seduced and betrayed by him. Read Nicholas Shakespeare's Bruce Chatwin: A Biography for particular instances of his "treacherous" side.

And yet, the stories he tells are frequently -- but not always -- wonderful. I feel I have the same yearnings toward travel, the same horreur du domicile and distrust of "accumulators" of stuff. I wish I could write like the man, but I will just have to content myself by reading him. Particularly good are the opening essay, "I Always Wanted to Go to Patagonia" and the two closing essays, "Among the Ruins" and "The Morality o Things."

The only disappointing part of this collection is Chatwin's failed attempt to provide a philosophical basis for his rootlessness, his so called "Nomadic Alternative." It is always a danger to take one's own psychological traits and write them large as a theory of life.

Chatwin tried to live his "Nomadic Alternative," but sadly died all too young of AIDS in 1989.
Profile Image for Margarida Sequeira.
69 reviews9 followers
February 6, 2025
Quando lês este livro, viajas com o autor em interessantes reflexões sobre a arte e a literatura.
Mas também sobre os humanos, as suas idiossincrasias e sobre as suas paisagens. Por lendas , por mitos, por personagens excêntricas, passando pelas históricas como às políticas .
Começas a pensar com Chatwin sobre determinadas personalidades menos favoráveis, nomeadamente Hitler e Mussolini.
Descobres as vidas narcisistas de alguns escritores na famosa ilha de Capri, refúgio para vários escritores, tais como Oscar Wilde.
E tão fruidora foi esta leitura, com uma linguagem simples, Bruce Chatwin envolve -nos numa nuvem de conhecimento.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Marica.
411 reviews210 followers
May 3, 2018
Collage malriuscito
Si tratta di una raccolta di saggi e racconti pubblicata postuma e purtroppo sembra un’operazione editoriale volta a sfruttare il nome dell’autore pubblicando contributi trascurabili. Il filo conduttore dovrebbe essere la celebrazione della vita nomade, dato che la vita stanziale è considerata dall’autore non salutare per l’essere umano in quanto portatrice di psicosi ed eccessivo attaccamento ai beni materiali. Chatwin fa presente che il genere umano ha iniziato a insediarsi in villaggi solo negli ultimi diecimila anni, da quando è dedito all’agricoltura. Il filo conduttore si perde presto per via e anche i motivi di interesse. La prima parte, autobiografica, è piacevolissima, le disquisizioni successive sulle culture nomadi e via divagando non so quanto siano fondate. Decisamente è una lettura evitabile, Chatwin ha scritto di meglio.
Profile Image for icaro.
502 reviews46 followers
January 27, 2019
La eterogeneità dei testi compresi nella raccolta nuoce un po' alla sua consistenza. Ma più che in altri suoi libri si può cogliere qui qualcosa della personalità di Chatwin. Alcune delle sue brillanti osservazioni (grandi o piccole che siano) sono probabilmente infondate, ma mai banali: aprono, in modo 'laterale', squarci sulla realtà e possono offrire a ciascuno materiale di riflessione autonoma a partire dalla misurazione di una differenza con modi di pensare condivisi, più consueti e scontati
Profile Image for Simona Moschini.
Author 5 books45 followers
June 18, 2019
"Diversivo. Distrazione. Fantasia. Cambiamento di moda, di cibo, amore e paesaggio. Ne abbiamo bisogno come dell'aria che respiriamo. Senza cambiamento, corpo e cervello marciscono. L'uomo che se ne sta quieto in una stanza chiusa rischia di impazzire, di essere tormentato da allucinazioni e introspezione. (...) Monotonia di situzioni e tediosa regolarità di impegni tessono una trama che produce fatica, disturbi nervosi, apatia, disgusto di sé e reazioni violente. (...) I pochi popoli "primitivi" degli angoli dimenticati della Terra comprendono meglio di noi questa semplice realtà della nostra natura. Sono in perpetuo movimento. I bimbi bruno-dorati dei cacciatori boscimani del Kalahari non piangono mai e sono tra i bimbi più contenti del mondo. E diventano anche, crescendo, persone mitissime. "

Imperdibile raccolta di saggi, articoli, recensioni letterarie e racconti brevi di Chatwin, pubblicata dopo la sua morte ma sulla falsariga del titolo (L'alternativa nomade) che lo scrittore vagheggiava per un'ambiziosa, enciclopedica, mai terminata opera sul nomadismo, che esercitava sul suo spirito un'irresistibile attrazione.
Le parti più belle del libro sono infatti quelle dedicate ai nomadi del deserto e ai personaggi nomadi, bizzarri, irrequieti per vocazione e destino, primo fra tutti lui stesso; notevoli anche i ritratti capresi di Axel Munthe e Curzio Malaparte.
Profile Image for Bloodorange.
850 reviews208 followers
June 23, 2016
It left me lukewarm, compared to Chatwin's collected letters, which are more informative and consistently rather amusing.

The first section, Horreur du domicile, is OK; the second, Stories, quite unremarkable; the third, The Nomadic Alternative, quite redundant if you know the letters; Reviews - might be useful to some, but not many; and the final section, Art and the Image-breaker forms an interesting analysis of Chatwin's attitude to art, possessions, and nomadism.
Profile Image for Robert DeMayo.
Author 23 books75 followers
October 3, 2014
During my heavy travel years I read Chatwin religiously. His stories brought me to places I'd never known of or even thought of going to, but made me see them with all the unique details he tended to collect. I thought I'd read everything when I stumbled upon Anatomy of Restlessness in a box in my storage bin. This collection may have seemed dull to a 20-something on the road, but as an older man with a tired body I have to say it's priceless.
Profile Image for Irene.
8 reviews
August 1, 2021
Mi è piaciuto molto l'inizio, la parte centrale scorre più lentamente però.
Profile Image for Andrew.
2,258 reviews933 followers
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June 6, 2021
As I go through the careers of authors I love, I always wind up at something like The Anatomy of Restlessness -- a B-side collection, as it were. And just like when I was 18 and was routinely disappointed by B-side collections of bands that had broken up before my time that wished I could have seen (The Jesus & Mary Chain, Galaxie 500), I was not much wowed by these errata, for the most part, but some shone fairly bright, because, after all, it's still Chatwin writing them.
Profile Image for Josie Shagwert.
20 reviews
April 21, 2008
These essays are maybe even a bit more developed than the ones in What Am I Doing Here? Really pleasurable to read.
Profile Image for Chi Mus.
18 reviews3 followers
January 21, 2020
P. 84: "Combattevano, in realtà, per perdere. Esteticamente, perdere è sempre più sicuro".
Profile Image for Vittorio Giannotti.
2 reviews
February 2, 2020
Mappazzone editoriale per molti aspetti, la raccolta ha il pregio di sottolineare alcuni brillanti concetti ancora attualissimi, quali l’elogio del nomadismo e del minimalismo, e alcune notevoli curiosità come il breve excursus biografico di Curzio Malaparte e lo scarso gusto estetico di Mussolini nella scelta delle cravatte.
Profile Image for Rory.
125 reviews2 followers
June 14, 2023
Predictably, Chatwin is best on travel and history. Significantly worse when he’s on his pith-helmet, evo-psych, anthropo-Freudian bullshit. Kind of interesting to see the seeds of later (better) books in his early pieces, and hard to blame the author for the shortcomings of a posthumously-assembled miscellany.
Profile Image for Garry.
340 reviews3 followers
February 7, 2022
A collection of short stories, essays and articles from the pen of Bruce Chatwin, the author of In Patagonia and Songlines. Helpful in shedding some light on this frustratingly mysterious author.
Profile Image for Nick Parkinson.
168 reviews34 followers
September 9, 2019
Anatomy of Restlessness was what I’d call an ‘inbetween book’. Sick of hard non-fiction tomes, I looked to Mum for something shorter and simpler. She picked this haphazardly from her school library.

Chatwin was a man of many talents: journalist, travel writer, critic and story-teller. Anatomy of Restlesness is a collection of his neglected and unpublished works, meaning it’s a rather strange book for someone who isn’t a Chatwin aficionado to pick up.

The works vary a lot in quality, but I’ll pick out a few chapters to talk about.

Milk
In this short story, a white American loses his virginity to a black woman while travelling through Africa. We never find out where in Africa the story is set, except that it was colonized by France (which doesn’t really narrow things down, does it?)
Here, Chatwin reveals the lengths to which he’ll go to fetichize black women. This intoxication with the other (or the “exotic” or “primitive” as he variously calls them) runs throughout the work. It was deeply uncomfortable to read and a disturbing reminder of what Said terms the “extrareal, phenomenologically reduced status” with which the White Imperalist views the world beyond the West.

The Estate of Maximilian Tod
Whereas in Milk Chatwin’s racism is likely unintended, in The Estate of Maximilian Tod he is purposefully a provocateur. The protagonist decides to fight for the Nazis. The justification given: “war is Man’s supreme aesthetic experience and… only the Germans and Japanese understood this.” I couldn’t follow this reasoning and I’m not sure Chatwin even knew what he was saying.

The Anarchists of Patagonia
This was, by far, my favorite piece in the book. It is a review of Osvaldo Bayer’s Los Vengadores de la Patagonia Trágica and it charts the 1920 Anarchist Revolution. Much of the review is just a summary of the events: there isn’t a whole load of criticism. But the events of the revolution are so interesting that Chatwin accomplished his job as a reviewer and left me wanting to read Bayer’s work.

The Nomadic Alternative
The second half of the book is less autobiographical and tends towards non-fiction. Chatwin presents his thesis which, essentially, is that humans (or ‘man’ as he terms us) are meant to wander the Earth. Things and civilization corrupt us. We are better off with few possessions, living like the ‘noble savage’ which he so desperately desires to be. One possession he wishes us to do away with is art. “For what, on the face of it,” he argues, “enhances life less than a work of art?”

All in all, this work is a vestige of colonialism and a deeply unsettling form of anthropology. Its value therefore does not lie in the arguments it presents but rather in it being a historical document.
Profile Image for Aurora.
191 reviews45 followers
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November 13, 2010
con alcune punte magistrali.
in molte parti non l'ho capito, forse per come scrive Chatwin, forse perché pur amando l'idea del viaggio non sono abbastanza "folle" per poterlo concepire come "motivo di una vita".
se il viaggio è "evasione" allora lo sia per un determinato tempo e non come obiettivo di un'intera vita.
e forse è solo che sono irrequieta e quindi non riesco ad applicarmi a sufficienza.

jules verne non mi è mai piaciuto, essendo io convinto che il reale è sempre più fantastico del fantasioso.

da bc.com: http://auro.bookcrossing.com/journal/...

Profile Image for Rita Fortunato.
168 reviews8 followers
April 6, 2021
Un po' delusa da In Patagonia, avevo messo da parte Bruce Chatwin e la sua narrativa di viaggio ripresa con Anatomia dell'irrequietezza.

Anche in questo libro è difficile mantenere alta l'attenzione sui contenuti che, per quanto interessanti e di ampio respiro, tendono a disperdere, con le lunghe descrizioni di cui sono corredate, l'intento di leggere in profondità e a dare un effetto dispersivo all'insieme tutt'altro che superficiale. Da leggere ma, con impegno.

Altre considerazioni a riguardo su:
https://paroleombra.com/2021/03/17/an...
Profile Image for Jason.
75 reviews5 followers
October 31, 2009
Best intro to Chatwin's marvelous work.
Profile Image for Cher.
365 reviews26 followers
July 24, 2011
Two words: editor needed.
Profile Image for amy.
639 reviews
May 18, 2018
I need to step away from Chatwin's orientalism for a minute.
Profile Image for Claudia ∇.
26 reviews1 follower
April 10, 2019
Una raccolta di racconti dello stesso Chatwin che riescono a trasportarti nella mente dello scrittore e nella sua irrequietezza travolgente
Profile Image for zunggg.
539 reviews
November 6, 2024
This grab-bag of literary disjecta confirms my impression that Chatwin isn't my kind of travel-writer (he's the kind who travels with his eyes more than his ears), but since none of it is actual travel writing, I quite enjoyed it. There are five sections:

1. Pieces about places or traveling to/from them — I liked A Tower in Tuscany because said tower turns out to belong to one of my fave literary oddballs, Gregor von Rezzori, and his glam wife, and Chatwin chats winningly about hanging out with them. The short piece on Timbuctoo is good, too.

2. Stories. Nothing special here, and Chatwin's embarrassing Orientalism is on full view.

3. Pieces about "nomadism". These are mostly pretentious nonsense, unfocused notes for a book that unsurprisingly never materialised.

4. Reviews. I especially dug his review of a biography of R.L. Stevenson and the one about an outbreak of anarchism in Patagonia.

5. Writings on art. Only two of these, but they're the highlight of the book imo. I loved Among the Ruins, a leisurely look at the enchanted isle of Capri and three of the myriad eccentrics who've taken up residence there over the centuries — Jacques d'Adelswärd-Fersen (of whom I'd never heard), Axel Munthe, and Curzio Malaparte — with nods in the direction of the emperor Tiberius and Norman Douglas, whose novel of Capri South Wind has a special place in my heart. The other piece is all about objets d'art and our relationship to them, kinda abstract but interesting stuff.
Profile Image for IO.
50 reviews
April 5, 2024
Il libro si presenta come una raccolta di saggi, aneddoti, e storie che riflettono sul desiderio innato dell'uomo di esplorare, scoprire e connettersi con il mondo che lo circonda. Attraverso le sue narrazioni, Chatwin ci trasporta dai deserti australiani alle pianure africane, dalla Siberia alla Patagonia, esplorando le diverse culture, mitologie e geografie che popolano il nostro pianeta.La sincerità e profonda intimità con cui Chatwin esplora il tema del viaggio. Oltre a fornire descrizioni vivide dei luoghi visitati, l'autore condivide anche le sue riflessioni personali sul significato e sull'importanza del viaggio nella sua vita e nel suo processo creativo.Uno degli elementi più affascinanti del libro è la capacità di Chatwin di trovare connessioni e analogie tra le diverse esperienze di viaggio e di trarre spunti di riflessione universali da esse. Attraverso le sue storie, ci invita a esplorare temi come l'identità, la memoria, il senso di appartenenza e la ricerca di significato nella vita.Inoltre, "Anatomia dell'Irrequietezza" è anche un'opera che sfida le convenzioni narrative tradizionali, mescolando la finzione con la realtà in un modo che rende difficile distinguere il vero dal fantastico. Questo approccio crea una sensazione di magia e mistero che avvolge il lettore e lo spinge a esplorare mondi nuovi e sconosciuti insieme all'autore.
Profile Image for joseph.
26 reviews2 followers
June 6, 2021
a collection of chatwin's short essays, uneven in quality but overall a great intro to his abiding obsessions, above all his grand donnée of nomadism. i have concluded that his prose slaps. the stories were so-so but for the virtuosic "estate of maximilian tod". of the book reviews and architecture reporting i liked the critique of konrad lorenz's crypto-fascist ethology and the one on malaparte, who i now really want to read. i took chatwin for a rousseauistic political naif before this so was quite surprised that he often comes off as astutely socialistic in his political judgements. main reservations are his orientalism and the slightly grating way he purports to know so much and to teach us lessons about these cultures, historical and present.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 73 reviews

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