Serendip is an independent site partnering with faculty at multiple colleges and universities around the world. Happy exploring!

Workbooked: Breaking: A Life Story in 10 Fragments, Anne Dalke

Prompts for Further Writing and Thinking, Alice Lesnick

Writing to Read

Think on paper using each of the following questions to prompt a focus freewriting.  Remember, these take about 7 minutes, and the only rule is that you keep writing the entire time, even if you aren’t sure where you are going.  As J.R.R. Tolkein wrote in another context, “Not all those who wander are lost.”  You will never be required to share this writing, but you may be asked if you want to contribute it to discussion or use it as the launch point for more formal work.

According to this story in fragments, when is the opposite of broken “whole” and when is it “continuous?”  What makes you say so?

Writing from metaphor: If this story were a physical object, broken into pieces, what object would it be?

If you had the job of putting these pieces back together, what would you use (glue, thread, heat, something else)?  Why?

 

Process Writing

What happened when you wrote about the story as if it were an object?  How did you do it, and what thoughts did it prompt?

 

Collaborative Learning

Here is a sequence of riddle-like questions drawn from Dalke’s story.  Take about 4 minutes to answer each one without thinking too hard about it.  Feel free to answer in a riddler’s tone, as well.

When is breaking like clinging?

When is truth like lying?

When is an old, intact family a broken home?

 

Writing More

Choose two of Dalke’s numbered fragment that interest you.  Create a new fragment that serves to connect, partially, the two of Dalke’s that you chose.  Then write a process note about what this experiment helps you notice about Dalke’s text and your ways of reading it.

  Writing Back

 What makes this text a “story in fragments” rather than an essay in fragments, or a life in fragments?  Write an analytic response to this question in which you use ideas and terms from Dalke’s essay as thinking tools.  In other words, what do you learn from and with Dalke about the nature of stories and what we tell them for?

Breaking Media

Working from what you thought about for “writing to read,” create the object you imagined as a metaphor for Dalke’s text.

Then break it apart and put it back together.

 

The Work: Breaking: A Life Story in 10 Fragments, Anne Dalke

1. Daybreak

On the night before Easter, 1981--late, too late--I got a phone call. My younger brother Chip had been in a car accident. He was not conscious. The next call came early Easter morning. He was not responsive. I called again. The nurse, who knew me from home, said, "Anne, I don't think he's going to make it."

 

I went to my husband, who was caring for our daughter. Standing beside her changing table, looking out the window--this was a West Philadelphia row house, we could not look far out--looking at her, not looking at him, I whispered, "I'm afraid he's going to die." Jeff said, "He can't die. He won't die." He said this with certainty, and I took comfort from his assurance. So when I got the next call, I couldn't understand what I was hearing. I asked, dumbly, "Is he DEAD?" My mother, dully: "Oh, yes. He is dead."

 

This is (certainly one reason) why I teach the way I do—because once I was comforted by that which was not true, by a comfort that turned out to be no comfort at all. "He can't die." Oh, yes he could. I think that, in my teaching, I refuse such false comfort, am impelled by the hope that I will not be surprised again, by facts I do not have. (Or: facts I have, but am not willing to face. Facts others have, but will not speak. Chip was dead when I spoke with the nurse. But she did not think she should be the one to tell me.)

 

A colleague figured this one out for me. At the end of a semester when we’d taught together, she suggested that we go 'round, ask our students to say something about what they had gotten out of the course, what they had learned, what they had found useful. I said, "No. Maybe they did not find it useful. Maybe they did not like it. We will not be hearing the truth."

 

She was just looking to end the course on an affirmative note. But I was after the truth, which impels me...in the searches I conduct both in my classes and in student conferences. That is the cause of my questioning, unremitting, my refusal of complacency, my insistence that, hard and deep as we may dig, we will never, ever get to the bottom.

 

2. On Getting to the Bottom

A core activity for English majors at Bryn Mawr College is the “keyword exercise”—which actually aims at getting to the bottom. Taken from Raymond Williams’ project of the same name, the assignment requires students to research the historical development of a word through a range of dictionaries. When was it first used? What form did it take then? How have its form, function and meaning changed over time?

 

I try this with “break,” which first appeared (as the Old English “brecan” ) in the year 1000, and has since come to mean

a.     To sever into distinct parts by sudden application of force, to part by violence.

b. To disable, destroy cohesion, solidity, or firmness, crush, shatter.

c.     To violate.

d.     To make a way through, or lay open; to penetrate; to open up.

e.  To make a rupture of union or continuity

f.   To sever or remove

g.  To burst.

What is remarkable in this etymology is, of course, its unbroken, invariant evocation of destruction.

 

3. A Break in the Story

In narrative terms, a break interrupts a story, destroys the continuity. A great-enough trauma can prevent a story from being told. We might hazard that trauma is what cannot be told, cannot be contained. What exceeds the story.

 

Paradoxically: what compels it, repeatedly, to be told.

 

4. Breakdown

Alternatively: breaking may be a means to telling the story. In Once Upon a Number, mathematician John Paulos suggests that the world is a contest between complicators (humanists, storytellers) and simplifiers (scientists, statisticians) --a.k.a. “lumpers” and “splitters.” Both assume that meaning-making derives from the presumed correspondence between parts and wholes. The splitters are the ones who break it down. They make the story simple.

 

4. Symmetry Breaking

One of science’s most puzzling—most beautifully simple--stories is about the breaking of symmetries.

 

Symmetry implies complete equivalence between existing alternatives, with no sufficient reason for choosing between them (as, most outrageously, in the case of Buridan’s ass, who had no means for adjudicating between two equivalent bundles of hay, and so starved to death). It was long thought, in physical systems as in philosophy, that symmetry could not “break” without a reason. Asymmetry could not originate spontaneously. Without some explicit input, the initial situation would remain unchanged.

 

However, in the move from classical to quantum physics, it became possible to observe the phenomenon of spontaneous symmetry breaking, now thought to be applicable to infinite, many-body systems (such as ferromagnets, superfluids and superconductors). Wherefrom the asymmetrical? Why do we assume that symmetric laws are the norm, and that an observed asymmetry requires a cause?

 

5. Break dancing

Breaking has been the source of creativity. Think of street corner disc jockeys, stringing together the rhythmic breakdown sections of dance records without any elements of the melody. These “breaks” provided a raw rhythmic base for improvising and further mixing, and allowed dancers to display their skills. Break dancing became one method for rival ghetto gangs to settle territorial disputes. In a showcase of dance routines, the winners were the dancers who could outperform others, displaying a set of more complicated and innovative moves.

 

6. Braking

Spelled differently, this might slow things down a bit.

 

7. “Breaking Up is Hard to Do”

I have been married for 36 years to a man I met in kindergarten. Our grandparents played bridge together. His parents were been married for 50 years; mine have been together for almost 60. I do not come, in other words, from a broken home.

 

Or do I?

 

8. Broken Glass

Whether you’re Jewish or not, you know the part of the ceremony where the groom smashes the glass with his foot.  And you know some of the interpretations. That it represents the end of the couple's lives alone, the beginning of their new lives as one. Or the destruction of the Holy Temple: a reminder that pure joy will not exist until the temple is rebuilt. Or the idea that the world began with breaking of glass vessels, and—importantly--that humans were put here to put the pieces back together.

 

Tikkun olam, repair of the world. 

 

9. Broken Valve

The repair man comes to clean our furnace. He breaks a valve. Ten days later, we discover a slow leak—the oil is dripping from the tank into the French drain, from the drain into the sump pump, from the pump into our driveway, from the driveway into our yard. This initiates an unbroken chain of legal entanglements. Arguments about broken promises, broken contracts.

 

10. Breakout

I must depart from this volume. I do not belong here, amid all these breaks. I’m a belonger. I cling.

 

This is my broken record: Breaking out of the repetition. A pattern of no-pattern. Breaking the pattern.

 

 

View accompanying project

Back to the Workbook

Back to the Breaking Project home page