Showing posts with label Augsburg. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Augsburg. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 17, 2014

Lost in Translation




     In case it wasn't clear what I've been doing this summer other than traipsing around the Riviera and London, I've actually been working on my thesis, a translation of a book called Paris: Quinze promenades sociologiques (English: Paris: Fifteen Sociological Walks). The second reason I chose this master's program (the first being, well, Paris) was that, like most master's programs abroad, it was only one year in duration—two semesters of classes and one summer session where you write your 25,000-word-minimum thesis. Knowing what I know now, I am so glad that I went this route for grad school, because I don’t know if I had it in me to have done two years back at home. School has always come pretty naturally to me and I’ve always done pretty well when I’ve tried really hard, and okay when I haven’t.
     But grad school is different. 
     I had to work the hardest I’ve ever worked. There was no sliding by or cutting corners. The readings were chock-full of complex ideas by writers and translators who I’d never heard of but that my classmates seemed to have almost known on a personal level. I was the one who showed up to class, barely having been able to get through a dense, forty-page article on what it means to be a native informant in cultural translation, having extracted the most minute kernels of meaning out of it, and then spending the rest of the class period trying to keep my deer-in-the-headlights look under control because I actually didn't understand any of it. Nothing was easy. I don’t think there was ever a single moment of complete clarity where I confidently showed up to a class thinking I had the field of cultural theory figured out in any sort of way. I was constantly thinking to myself, why in the world did I choose this incredibly expensive year of torture over teaching English part-time?
     Almost the entire time, I would keep prefacing that I was new and very green to translation. But, underdog as I was, I am so glad that I did it. I proved to myself that I could get through a year among some truly brilliant classmates and professors who are entirely more passionate about translation than I ever care to be. I’ve always felt completely average in everything that I do and grad school confirmed that to me—but hey, I was able to roll with the best of them. It’s okay and, frankly, almost a relief to not be the absolute best at something. It reminds me of when I got to Augsburg, intending to be a music major and realizing I was no longer the best pianist of the bunch like I had been at home and that I was actually pretty terrible at music theory. If I had to go back and choose a master’s program, there’s no doubt in my mind that I would choose something different, but it is what it is. There was something very humbling and refreshing about learning a new art form (and translation really is an art form that Google Translate will never be able to replicate) from scratch and sitting back and just learning from other people who are dedicating their lives to transferring the experiences of one culture and language into another. It’s a rigorous field that is both underappreciated and taken for granted.
     Matt came to visit me for a little over a week in the beginning of August after his London program ended and then my friend Megan who I’ve been friends with since our freshman year at Augsburg was in Paris for a month-long program before heading off to Bologna, Italy for the year. Saying goodbye to the two of them—Matt goes to school in Indiana and Megan will be in Italy until next summer—was hard. I don’t like saying goodbye and I don’t like being left in Paris, my favorite place in the world, without anyone to share in it with me anymore.
     The latter half of August, I devoted myself to getting serious about my thesis and there were days where I wouldn’t leave my tiny chambre de bonne at all. I started with the goal of only translating about three chapters of the book, and the more time that has passed, the more I've added to it. While we were allotted just the summer to complete our theses, no one in the history of the program has ever finished by September. Even though I participated in commencement, I don’t officially graduate until I’ve turned in my thesis, so I hope to submit and defend it via Skype by December so I can graduate this semester.
     On top of translating from sunrise to sunset, I moved from my room with a view. I moved myself and my seventy-three bags of hell eight minutes away on foot to the rue Saint-Jacques in a studio twice the size of my former room. Let me just say that you can’t really complain about moving until you’ve singlehandedly carried a fifty-pound suitcase among other luggage down the world’s steepest spiral staircase. It gives me a whole new respect for the donkeys in Santorini that I once refused to ride up the 500 steps of the caldera. I feel you, donkeys. I feel you.
     So now it’s two weeks left in Paris to close up shop—cancel my phone plan and bank account, figure out what in the hell I’m going to do with all of my stuff and say goodbye once again to this city I’m so in love with. But somehow, someday, I'll be back. I promise.
Love, 
Rachel
























Sunday, June 15, 2014

Girls From the North Country





“Please, let’s get out of this place,” a man in khaki shorts insists to his family just off Paris’s anthill, the Place du Tertre in Montmartre. Now that summer is in full swing, I can hardly blame him. The deserted streets of January, the cool air flowing freely through the Louvre and spoken French have been replaced by sunshine, long lines and iPad “photography.” The tourists have claimed Paris for themselves and we can either beat them or join them…so I’m joining them.

Before I get ahead of myself by declaring that there’s sunshine in Paris, we need to backtrack to when my friend Amanda arrived on May 23. Following a week or two of post-finals life (who’s counting at this point?), Amanda flew in from Minneapolis to join me in my shameless pseudo-vacation lifestyle for a week. It reliably rained on and off the entire week and I think she got to see about two hours total of sunshine. That’s Paris.

It being Amanda’s first time in Paris, I did my duty of showing her the best of what I know Paris can offer. I tried my hardest to fight my new nocturnal tendencies and get us started each day at a reasonable hour (in my post-grad life, it means anything considered A.M.) with leisurely cappuccinos and croissants every morning at Le News Café (78 rue d’Assas). Some highlights: a show by local Minneapolitan Jeremy Messersmith at Les Trois Baudets (64 boulevard de Clichy) where we bizarrely ran into other Augsburg students, window-shopping and Berthillon ice cream on the Ile Saint-Louis, playing the old untuned piano in Shakespeare and Co., winning the weekly pub quiz and a pitcher of cocktails at The Highlander (8 rue de Nevers), watching people play pétanque in the Jardin du Luxembourg, warming up with a coffee at the classically-Parisian Le Consulat (18 rue Norvins), strolling the gardens at Versailles, graduating from the American University of Paris at the Théâtre du Châtelet, having a pizza party in my tiny apartment with my friends, an unexpectedly non-touristy boat ride on the Bateaux Parisiens at night, and to-die-for steak dinners at both my new favorite, À Bout de Souffle (17 bis rue Campagne Première) and my old favorite, La Bastide d’Opio (9 rue Guisarde).

Amanda is one of those friends with whom you could maintain the same friendship even if you only saw her once every ten years. I was so grateful she shelled out the big bucks and vacation time to flâner les rues (We once got to 26,000 steps in a day), laugh, eat, stay out too late and remind me of home. My friends here in Paris started noticing my Minnesotan accent (“Root beer”) and it was so fun to have two of us for a change.


You betcha. 

Rachel

Eglise Saint-Sulpice

Jeremy Messersmith



Musée Rodin

At the top of the Eiffel Tower



Jardin du Luxembourg

Admiring my lovely view

Le Consulat

Versailles

A visit to the Palais Garnier with Matt


Before our boat cruise on the Seine

Berthillon ice cream- quite simply, the best!

Sunday, May 11, 2014

New Videos




There & Back
Created for a final presentation in my Cultural Translation Workshop, this is a video translation of the last academic year of my life between Paris and Minneapolis. With over an hour of footage to narrow down, I chose clips depicting the constant movement and restlessness of living in two places, which can result simultaneously in both excitement and loneliness. No matter where I live, in Paris or in Minneapolis, my heart is always missing the other.



April
My regular monthly video for April, including visiting Fontainebleau, running the The Color Run 5K, visiting Annecy and Geneva with my sister, hiking on my birthday in the Alps and, of course, regular life in Paris.

Thursday, December 8, 2011

Last Tango, Then Paris

     45 days! I started packing up my room at Augsburg today and it's actually a lot sadder than I thought it would be. All of a sudden it's finals. I swear yesterday was September and we were swimming at Lake Calhoun on the first weekend back at school when it was 90 degrees. Now there's snow on the ground and I have to remind myself to put a coat on. How did half a school year pass by so fast? For the past few days I've been thinking about how much I'll miss this campus- seeing people I recognize, being able to get to class by tunnel, coffee at Einstein's (Even though they got rid of dirty polar bears this year...BIG MISTAKE.), and probably people speaking English, too. I can already tell it's going to be really hard to say goodbye to all my friends, but at least I have one last weekend here to fit in the Holidazzle parade, a Gophers hockey game and maybe a 1 AM order of shitty "Italian" food from Davanni's.

     Once I move out, I leave almost immediately for a week in Cocoa Beach, FL with the family and then I have about four weeks to sit at home and (hopefully) read all the books about France that I've bought in the last five years and haven't got around to reading. It's going to be weird skipping out on most of the winter in Minnesota this year, but hey, no complaints. I won't miss feeling like I have frostbite the moment I step outside. Paris sounds like my kind of winter.

     My one-way plane ticket has been bought and my forms have been turned in and I think I'm done with awkward Skype interviews in French for my internship. Now I'm waiting to hear about my housing placement, which I should hear about sometime this month. I'm hoping to get the place in the brochure picture of the girl sitting on a terrace with the Eiffel Tower in the background. I think I'd die!


À bientôt, Paris!


Rachel

Sunday, November 13, 2011

"America is my country, but Paris is my hometown." -Gertrude Stein

     I leave for Paris in 70 days, which sounds like an eternity and also like it's coming up really fast. I was in Paris in the summer of 2006 and ever since I've been waiting, waiting, waiting, waiting, waiting to go back. Since 2006, I've been studying French and now I'm a junior at Augsburg majoring in French and Cross-Cultural Studies with a minor in International Relations. It's never been a choice for me to study in France; I pretty much knew from my first French class that I would spend a semester there. It's always felt like something so far off in the future. I've wondered what I'll be like and how I'll feel leading up to it and it's really weird to think that that's me now. Even when I studied in Italy this past May for eighteen days, I felt like, "Oh, I'll be back someday when I'm studying abroad in Paris." It's always been The Plan and now I have to go through with it.

     I've never flown alone before. I've never been to another country alone, let alone another state alone before. There are no students from Augsburg going and there isn't even another Minnesotan going. I think the longest I've gone without seeing my family is...three weeks? When I was in Italy, I felt like I was the only one who didn't miss home, but this will be a whole other situation. At orientation last week, after driving five hours in the dark across scenic Iowa, it really hit me how huge this decision is. I have filled out form, after form, after form and there are always new questions that pop up, so basically I have a headache every time I look at the Eiffel Tower poster hanging over my bed.

     Despite all of this pre-departure stress, I know that this is something that I have to do and that I'll be a more independent person because of it. It'll be so liberating to be off on my own around people I've never met and seeing things that I've never seen. I'm extremely lucky and blessed that I have this (very expensive) opportunity. This past May in Rome, I was walking through the Roman Forum when I heard a woman speaking in French ("Je cherche mon mari!"- She was trying to find her husband. Good luck finding him in the most crowded, touristy area of Rome, lady.). After embarrassing myself with several stilted conversations in Italian, this reminded me of all the French that's waiting for me in Paris. After five years, I feel like I'm coming home.

Rachel