Tag Archives: Abducted and Abandoned

The Versatility of Storytelling

The Versatility of Storytelling Wednesday Blog by Seán Thomas Kane

This week, how the same tools can be used to weave a variety of different stories. — Click here to support the Wednesday Blog: https://www.patreon.com/sthosdkane


This week, how the same tools can be used to weave a variety of different stories.


My favorite sorts of stories are the ones where I feel that I’ve gotten to know the characters and can relate to them on a personal level; that these characters are either real people who I’ll never meet or entirely fictional is beside the point. I often remember the stories I was reading, or watching, or listening to more than the experiences from my own life that surrounded new tellings of those stories. This potent relationship is heightened in moments when my own life is dull or foreboding, as in the height of the recent Pandemic when I passed the long days of isolation in my Binghamton apartment or at home in Kansas City watching and reading stories in the Star Trek franchise which I only really began to discover in February and March of 2020.

I wanted to be a storyteller from my youth. I read a book by the Irish journalist Frank Delaney called Ireland which followed a young man as he discovered his own passion for storytelling by listening to the seanchaí who often visited his family’s home. I began to write for myself around this time, though my efforts were focused more on poetry and plays at first. A decade ago, I built up the endurance to write a longer-form short story called “Abducted and Abandoned,” and around that time started writing what today is The Wednesday Blog. By the time I was working on my first master’s degree in 2015 and 2016 I’d begun writing a longer work, my book Travels in Time Across Europewhich I self-published in 2017. That one tells the stories I collected from my year living in London, stories of my own adventures traveling from the British capital to other cities across Europe. At the time I imagined that it could become a sort of valuable source for readers seeking to understand the world as it was in that last year before the Brexit referendum and the rise of Trumpism swept across Britain and the United States.

Dr. Olivia Stephens, the main character of “Ghosts in the Wind.”

Like the main character of Delaney’s Ireland, I too went to university to study history, to use my passion for storytelling, and as things came about, I’m now close to earning my doctorate in the field. Today, besides my efforts here with the blog I largely am just writing things related to my research. Alongside my dissertation I currently have one encyclopedia entry soon to be published, a book chapter and a scholarly article submitted for editing and am now writing another article related to my translation of André Thevet’s Singularitez. I still try to write the odd bits of fiction, like “Carruthers Smith’s Museum” which I released two weeks ago, or “Ghosts in the Wind” which I’m quite proud of. Yet I haven’t written anything to be acted in years. That’s striking to me, because my first big scribal efforts were for the stage and screen in my high school years. I do have an idea for a play that I might turn to someday in the next few years, yet even writing that here fills me with a sense of loss because it could well become another project that I’m excited about and have good ideas for yet don’t ever get to.

What I love most about writing for the stage and screen is that there’s a chance I’ll get to hear my words interpreted into lived experiences. Ideas that once only existed in my mind could be seen by many others played out before them and enlivened by the actors who utter those words & all the designers of sets, sound, lighting, props, effects, and music who flesh out that lived experience into something relatable and emotional in its truth. In short, to see my words brought to life in performance is to see a world created from what was once my thoughts, the smallest and most intimate of stages that I alone know.

To this end then, I am awed by the versatility of those storytellers who create these worlds in their performances. My erstwhile dissertation advisor Dr. Richard Mackenney, a man for whom I have the deepest respect and consider a friend, often talked about his own experiences on stage playing characters created by Shakespeare alongside many of the greats of the British theatre. In his lectures I saw a performance like any revival of King Lear or any of the Henrys or Richards that Shakespeare wrote. My own lecturing has taken on this same quality, yes at least in part in flattery, because I saw how he kept the rapt attention of most of the 150 or so students in the lecture hall with his art.

In recent weeks I had the pleasure to see the English actor Ralph Fiennes play two very different yet still akin parts in the films Conclave and The Return. In the former, Fiennes plays Cardinal Thomas Lawrence, the Dean of the College of Cardinals who is tasked with managing a papal conclave on the death of the Pope. In the latter, Fiennes returns to the screen a mere month after he appeared cassocked as an English cardinal this time dressed in rags as Odysseus returned to Ithaca after 20 years away at war against Troy. To see the same man inhabit two characters who on the surface could not be more distinct is a profound testament to the man’s mastery of his art. Both films are pieces of theatre imagined with the realism of a certain type of cinema that is more European than American, with less effects and a minimalist score that has its roots in the French New Wave. In the American context it’s reminiscent of the minimalism that we see in some of the television dramas produced recently for their streaming service by Apple.

I felt that I could instantly relate to Cardinal Lawrence in spite of his high office. The finest leaders I’ve met, whether cardinals and bishops or mayors, senators, and ambassadors are all people first and foremost. They acknowledge the trappings of their offices yet retain the everyman spirit that makes them relatable. I saw this in Cardinal Lawrence more than in many of the other characters who populate the halls of the Vatican in Conclave. That he is an English Catholic cardinal speaks to the post-Reformation moment in which we now live when the old sectarian wars of religion feel behind us and reflects on the Catholic Church in England and Wales that I know from my year living there and going to Mass in London. He speaks for a certain Anglophonic ideal that is democratic yet still upholding of tradition and custom.

Ralph Fiennes as Cardinal Thomas Lawrence and Odysseus, in performances which premiered within a month of each other.

Odysseus in contrast is a man who has seen much and endured much more than I ever hope to. His pain is written across his mostly silent face, and in this role, Fiennes says more with a tortured look than with words. That he only acknowledges his own identity verbally once in the film is telling. This is a man who fears that he won’t be the man that his family have waited for over these twenty long years that he was away. I can merely relate in that I’ve noticed time and again how my home and my city change each time that I’m away. On this most recent return of my own from Mérida on 10 November I was startled in the weeks that followed to see that the last vestiges of the long summer we had in this region at last faded away into a brief Fall before receding into the winter cold far sooner than I expected. Even more dramatic was the city I found on my return from London at the end of August in 2016. Kansas City wasn’t the same place it had been even 8 months before when I flew home for Christmas. There were plenty of stories I’d missed while I was away, one relative who’d been born and who I met for the first time at a far later date than any of her cousins in the youngest generation of my family. In that loss that comes with being far from home I can relate, yet in the pain he suffered and inflicted while he was away at war, I am thankful to lack that experience.

Yet the brilliant versatility of storytelling here expresses itself in Fiennes’s ability to say so much with so little about the war he fought and the trials he faced on his homeward voyage. Odysseus suffered for his efforts, and in his suffering, I see his humanity & feel that I can relate to him. At the end of the film, I felt that I got to know Odysseus for the man he’d become, and that in spite of the Bronze Age setting and the far looser garments, in a film whose costumes are marked by a combination of loincloth & cloak, than anything I would wear, I felt that I could see myself, my own humanity in that moment in time on the island of Ithaca in the second millennium BCE, perhaps the 12th century BCE as the polymath Eratosthenes of Cyrene (276–194 BCE) dated the fall of Troy to 1183 BCE.Where both Conclave and The Return succeed is in placing the lives of their characters in moments and settings which feel real. Odysseus’s Ithaca feels as lived in as Cardinal Lawrence’s Vatican, yet the former seems to be set in a far brighter and younger world with different morals and values than the darker and starker built world which succeeded it in the monumental edifices of the Vatican. Yet both are in my imagination places which I now have visited & seen, and both are places that I would recognize again if I ever returned to them in my memory of those films, or should I ever venture there in my own life to the Vatican or to the Ionian Islands and Peloponnese where the filmmakers created their vision of Ithaca. That stage is as lived in as any seemingly sparser platform that Shakespeare’s Muse might have evoked in Henry V; it is as alive as any other that can be imagined in our art.


Travel as the Great Educator

Travel as the Great Educator Wednesday Blog by Seán Thomas Kane

As we end the coldest month of the year and I think ahead, I want to share with you my thoughts on the joy of travel. — Click here to support the Wednesday Blog: https://www.patreon.com/sthosdkane

As we end the coldest month of the year and I think ahead, I want to share with you my thoughts on the joy of travel.



For most of my life my mother traveled for her work to offices and customers near and far here in North America and in Europe. I then early on learned to love travel from her and my father, and in the process of venturing far from home I learned a great deal about our world. Travel remains for me one of the great educational resources we have available, yet the purposes of our traveling will have a clear impact upon where we go and for what reasons.

Because of these frequent forays beyond my childhood home, and our grand move west from Chicago to Kansas City when I was six years old, I learned to read maps quite quickly. I distinctly remember loving to tune the family television to the Weather Channel as a young child just to see the big colorful maps that made up most of that network’s broadcast schedule in the late ’90s (it was Channel 58 on our TV by the way). With family in both Midwestern metropolises, we often drove or flew between each city for Christmas, Easter, and big family events, and on these road trips when I could still read in the car without getting motion sick, I would spend hours engrossed in the maps and road atlases to the point that now as an adult I can navigate from memory across most of the United States.

Today of course I have a computer in my car which does most of the navigating  for me, and I love having all the detailed information that it provides: distances to the next turn, estimated times of arrival (ETAs), and an overall route suggestion, yet I just as often ignore the computer’s suggestion and go whichever way feels right to me as I actually follow it. I feel that I’ve been formed to be the person I am today just as much by the places I’m from as by the places I’ve visited and the experiences I’ve had as a guest in someone else’s city.

When I was eight years old my mother took me on a grand European adventure. It was my second time crossing the Atlantic, I’d visited relatives stationed with the U.S. Air Force in Germany when I was very little, yet the first that I really experienced and can remember. Before that trip, I remember thinking that the things I was most proud of were the great American achievements of the late twentieth century which for me included the space shuttle, the great skyscrapers of Chicago, the idealized memory of cowboys, the dynastic Chicago Bulls, and of course Sammy Sosa. The two weeks that followed opened my eyes to a far wider world than I had yet imagined. I knew about Europe, but to me England and France were places more suited to a medieval and ancient past than to a vibrant present. I laugh now when I look back at the journal we kept on that trip and scrapbook that resulted from all our photos. Returning to the two great cities we visited on that trip––London and Paris––time and again afterward I’ve grown to appreciate the childish wonder that filled me in my first visit there now 23 years ago.

In the last few months, I found myself looking back at that first overseas trip and trying to recapture some of the spirit of it as I felt it so early in my life. As it turned out, after I took my parents to see the latest Indiana Jones film The Dial of Destiny last summer, I found my way into that corner of Disney+’s catalog that contains the old Young Indiana Jones Chronicles created during my first decade and recaptured some of that youthful spirit I was seeking. While not as grandiose or adventurous as Young Indy’s own childhood voyage across the Atlantic, mine was just as strong a gateway into a whole host of new stories, ideas, and possibilities that have led me to the career I enjoy today.

One thing I regret about how my teaching has gone so far is that I haven’t been able to take people on field trips to some of these great monuments to human ingenuity that mark the globe’s tourist trails. I’ve had an idea for a while of starting a freelance tour guide service, after recommendations from friends and relatives, and while this isn’t an announcement of anything grand, it’s still a suggestion of something that could come. Some of the wisest people I’ve met and read like to say that the best way to describe a setting is to visit it. My long time readers will note how specific I made the locations in my first published novella Abducted and Abandoned, something I tried to do in Erasmus Plumwood as well.

Learning on the road offers the student more than a classroom can because one is having to learn not only about the sights and sounds around them but how to interact with other people who may have very little in common with them. I always make an effort to learn the local language as best I can before I travel somewhere, something that I’m currently working on for an upcoming trip. I’ve rarely felt more embarrassed than when I don’t get the joke or understand what people are saying around me. This goes for English as well as other languages. On my second night in Finland, my phone died as I was walking back to my lodging from the tram stop and without a dictionary, I felt too embarrassed to ask the clerk in the corner market what was Finnish for ham and Swiss cheese, resulting in me buying a loaf of bread and eating that dry and alone for dinner. Last March too, during my visit to San Juan in Puerto Rico I could understand what the people were saying around me but still couldn’t quite get the confidence to reply in Spanish despite thinking up the right things to say.

Travel is a great teacher of humanity. There’s a sense of accomplishment that I feel when I make it to a waypoint or destination. I cheered the first time I drove my car within sight of the towers of Manhattan in November 2019 and sighed with relief after hours of bumper-to-bumper traffic when I made it all the way south to the Gulf of Mexico in the Florida panhandle in August 2022. On this most recent European trip I was proud with how most of the time I was finally able to converse in French without too much trouble, though I still have room to grow.

I love wandering through cities and experiencing the ordinary daily life continuing on as it would had I not been there. I love wandering into grocery stores and bookstores and seeing what familiar and foreign is for sale. I love meeting people in random places who have vague commonalities with me like the woman in the Erasmus House Garden in Brussels who joined me in a curious stroll among the medicinal herbs and asked me many questions about my research.

Today I’m traveling more than my mother for work. I tend to go to two or three academic conferences per year to present my research and will usually try to fit in another trip or two for fun. Yet even my traveling is at a low now compared to just a few years ago when I was driving four times a year on my Long Drive East to Binghamton. So much of how I travel is informed by how my parents travel, and the stories they’d bring back of their own experiences. Increasingly, while I will take photos and videos and post them to my social media accounts or save them for future editions of this Wednesday Blog, I appreciate more now the simple pleasure of being there. 

I read over the weekend an argument that play is necessary among all animals and that we adult humans have a way of stripping out our playtime in exchange for more “productive” work. The author of that now lost piece suggested that one thing we could do was to create something that would be impermanent and be sure to not take a photo of it so it lasts only in our memory. I think travel fills that role for me in a way, it’s my time to be looser and play with living in a different place if only for a short while. It helps make my world feel much larger than just my neighborhood, city, state, region, or country. In travel, I to try to recapture some of my childlike wonder at seeing the richness of this our world for the first time. That, dear reader, is what makes traveling a great educator.


Introducing “The Adventures of Horatio Woosencraft and Other Short Stories”

Horatio Woosencraft front cover

After a decade of writing, I have decided to release a collection of my short stories, composed between 2008 and 2017. I am happy to announce it will be available for purchase on Amazon starting in late August 2017 in paperback form to readers in Europe, and in the United States as well as to a global audience digitally on Kindle.

From the fictional Welsh immigrant detective Horatio Woosencraft who solves mysteries in an alternate-reality Kansas City to the glamour and adventure of the massive airship Phaëton and bewildering confusion of the characters in Abducted and Abandoned, this volume is sure to please. I have included my epic poem Caffydd, a tale of love and the daily struggle against evil with deep theological undertones in this volume as well. While it does not reflect my current theology quite as closely as it did when I wrote it in 2010, Caffydd still serves as a fascinating read, a vision of what might be.

Beyond the stories, this book includes many, many of the stories and ideas, the metaphors and hyperboles that I thought of through out my high school and undergraduate years. It reflects my interests in history, theology, linguistics, and the great Classical, Victorian, and Edwardian works of fiction that fill out my library.

The Adventures of Horatio Woosencraft and Other Stories will be available for sale in both paperback and Kindle formats on Amazon later this month, just in time for Halloween, any Autumn birthdays, and Christmas. Keep an eye on my website, Twitter, and the Adventures of Horatio Woosencraft and Other Stories Facebook page for further updates on the book.

Link

Abducted and Abandoned

Kansas City – Last night I finally finished a short story that has been a joy to write for quite some time. Abducted and Abandoned is about a man who finds himself alone, bare, in a unfamiliar hotel room in some city in the world. He must find the truth as to who he is, where he is, and how he got there. It certainly has been a fun piece to write, and I hope you all get a chance to buy a copy. It is currently available for Kindle only for $2.99 USD, £1.99 roughly in the UK. Click on the article title for a link to the Amazon page, or click here.