America's Museum

IF 0.1 4区 文学 0 LITERARY REVIEWS SEWANEE REVIEW Pub Date : 2024-08-09 DOI:10.1353/sew.2024.a934399
Chase Culler
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

  • America's Museum
  • Chase Culler (bio)

The email came to me in the basement of what I then called my life: unemployed, twenty-three years old, still living too close to campus. Looking to travel the globe? Become a Program Advisor for Stoddard's pre-college tours.

My parents were thrilled to hear their eldest would travel Europe. Really any job would do; it helped that this one was glamorous. Lately I had begun calling home for money, not understanding the ruckus it caused. My father said he wished I lived closer, probably so he could place both his lumpy hands on my shoulders and sigh. College had duped me into believing I was like everyone else, meaning I had forgotten I was lower-middle-class with parents who didn't travel. My mother had terrible agoraphobia and had only flown once, to a skincare conference in Atlanta she'd spent in the convention center bathroom. She bought a travel book of UNESCO sites from a bargain store for $3.99 and said I had to sign the ones I had visited by Christmastime.

I knew the job must suck doorknobs from the way the ladies in the Stoddard study-abroad office doted on me. Did I smoke? No. [End Page 445] Did I drink? Only socially. Did I use drugs? I couldn't afford them. Did I have sex with random women? No, and they didn't need to know I had sex with random men. Did I have a passport? That part was flexible. I was offered the job immediately. Seventeen kids, seventeen years old; seven boys (thank God only seven) and ten girls for seven weeks abroad. As my passport documentation changed hands, I spent weeks in the office folding itineraries, annotating a schedule with little stars for our dinners and asterisks for lunches.

Turns out I had signed up for a nunnery. No drinking, no smoking, no strangers on our floors. The kids needed me sober, but all the time? Yes. I also had to control the budget, wield the credit cards, make museum appointments and meal reservations, and pull emergency cash from ATMs. I laminated cards for students with allergies to nuts, seeds, fruit, latex. I printed out the phrase fish and vegetables okay in ten languages, which was how I became an international citizen.

The office ladies explained I'd be assigned a professor, but I never once saw him on campus. He was a philosophy guy named Gareth Sorensen. I'd never taken a class with him, or even heard of him, which concerned me. Philosophy resided on the top floor of the humanities building where it beheld all of campus from its great, thoughtful promontory; Gareth was up there somewhere watching me from his office. I emailed him and he never got back to me, and when I discussed this later with Study Abroad, they laughed in my face. Gareth Sorensen has worked on this program for a decade, they said. He had a new companion each summer, mixing up their name with the ones before it. The ladies spoke of him darkly. Don't expect him to learn your students either, Edna laughed—I'd learned her name on day one—as a buoy of gum bobbed on her tongue. And sure as hell don't let him handle the money. [End Page 446]

_______

Later, when I recalled Gareth Sorensen, that lovely mess of a person I once knew, I remembered our bus ride to London.

I hadn't slept well on the plane. My flight to Stansted had blindfolded and spun me round and as a result, I was five minutes late to meet the bus. I waited in line at Tesco for a sandwich I ditched in the queue, but it didn't matter. When I mentioned to Gareth what had happened, he split his turkey BLT and passed a half of it across the aisle. There he was, in black jeans and a black Izod shirt, with gray hair and a slightly grayer beard. He offered tales of summers past as we fetched students from across terminals in Gatwick, Heathrow, Luton—so many airports I could barely...

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美国博物馆
以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要: 美国博物馆 Chase Culler(简历 这封邮件是在我当时所谓的生活的地下室里收到的:失业,23 岁,仍然住在离校园太近的地方。想环游世界?成为斯托达德大学预科之旅的项目顾问吧。我的父母听说他们的长子要去欧洲旅行,激动不已。其实任何工作都可以,但这份工作很有魅力。最近,我开始给家里打电话要钱,却不知道这样做会引起多大的骚动。父亲说他希望我住得近一点,也许这样他就可以把他那双肿胀的手放在我的肩膀上,然后叹气。大学让我误以为自己和其他人一样,也就是说,我忘记了自己是中下阶层,父母不出远门。我母亲有严重的恐旷症,只坐过一次飞机,那是去亚特兰大参加一个护肤品会议,她在会议中心的卫生间里度过的。她从廉价商店花 3.99 美元买了一本联合国教科文组织景点的旅游书,说我必须在圣诞节前在我去过的景点上签名。从斯托达德留学办公室的女士们对我的宠爱程度来看,我就知道这份工作一定很糟糕。我抽烟吗?我喝酒吗?只在社交场合。我吸毒吗?我买不起我和别的女人发生过性关系吗?没有,他们也不需要知道我和别的男人发生过关系。我有护照吗?这部分可以灵活处理。我立即得到了这份工作。17 个孩子,17 岁;7 个男孩(感谢上帝,只有 7 个)和 10 个女孩,在国外待了 7 周。随着护照文件的转手,我花了几个星期在办公室折叠行程表,在日程表上用小星星标注我们的晚餐,用星号标注我们的午餐。原来,我报名参加的是一个尼姑庵。不喝酒,不抽烟,楼层里没有陌生人。孩子们需要我清醒,但一直清醒?是的我还得控制预算、使用信用卡、预约博物馆和订餐、从自动取款机上提取应急现金。我为对坚果、种子、水果和乳胶过敏的学生制作了卡片。我用十种语言打印了 "鱼和蔬菜没问题 "的短语,就这样,我成了一名国际公民。办公室的女士们向我解释会给我分配一位教授,但我从没在校园里见过他一次。他是个哲学系的家伙,名叫加雷思-索伦森(Gareth Sorensen)。我从没上过他的课,甚至都没听说过他,这让我很担心。哲学系位于人文学科大楼的顶层,在那里,哲学系可以从其伟大而深思熟虑的岬角俯瞰整个校园;加雷斯就在上面某个地方的办公室里看着我。我给他发了邮件,但他一直没有回我,后来我和 "海外学习 "讨论这件事时,他们嘲笑我。他们说,加雷思-索伦森在这个项目上已经工作了十年。他每年夏天都有一个新同伴,把她们的名字和之前的名字搞混。女士们暗地里议论他。埃德娜笑着说,我第一天就知道了她的名字,她舌头上的口香糖还在晃动。当然,也别让他管钱。[第 446 页完] _______ 后来,当我想起加雷斯-索伦森,那个我曾经认识的可爱的烂人时,我想起了我们去伦敦的大巴车。我在飞机上没睡好。飞往斯坦斯特德的航班蒙住了我的眼睛,让我转了一圈,结果,我在等大巴时迟到了五分钟。我在乐购超市排队买三明治,在排队时我把三明治丢掉了,但这并不重要。当我向加雷思说起发生的事情时,他把火鸡肉 BLT 分成两半,然后把其中的一半递到过道上。他穿着黑色牛仔裤和黑色 Izod 衬衫,头发花白,胡子略白。当我们从盖特威克机场、希思罗机场和卢顿机场的各个航站楼接送学生时,他向我们讲述了过去夏天的故事。
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来源期刊
SEWANEE REVIEW
SEWANEE REVIEW LITERARY REVIEWS-
CiteScore
0.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
44
期刊介绍: Having never missed an issue in 115 years, the Sewanee Review is the oldest continuously published literary quarterly in the country. Begun in 1892 at the University of the South, it has stood as guardian and steward for the enduring voices of American, British, and Irish literature. Published quarterly, the Review is unique in the field of letters for its rich tradition of literary excellence in general nonfiction, poetry, and fiction, and for its dedication to unvarnished no-nonsense literary criticism. Each volume is a mix of short reviews, omnibus reviews, memoirs, essays in reminiscence and criticism, poetry, and fiction.
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