Darren Hughes

Long Pauses

Darren Hughes

In the latest of FilmInFocus’s Behind the Blog profiles, Knoxville-based film blogger Darren Hughes tells us all about his Long Pauses.

Tell us about your blog.

The name of my site, Long Pauses, was inspired by Denise Levertov’s poem, “Making Peace,” which compares the act of writing to the process of living one’s life. A snippet:

     A line of peace might appear
if we restructured the sentence our lives are making,
revoked its reaffirmation of profit and power,
questioned our needs, allowed
long pauses . . .

At my most idealistic, I think of writing as a kind of spiritual discipline. It’s an occasion to sit quietly and alone and to process ideas – to learn. Of course, Long Pauses is also just another blog filled with half-formed thoughts and random crap. Though, on the whole, I think the ideas-to-crap ratio is relatively high.

How would you describe your readers? Do you have much contact with the people who read you?

I could have answered that question better three or four years ago. Facebook and Twitter have taken their toll on blog discussions, I’ve noticed, both at my site and others, so I don’t have as strong a sense of who is reading now. Certainly, over the years I’ve developed many great friendships through Long Pauses. Some I know only virtually; others I see once or twice a year at film festivals. Not surprisingly, the readers I’ve met are typically a lot like me – over-educated, curious, thoughtful, perhaps a bit below average on the socialization scale, people who’ve spent a large amount of their lives in the company of books, records, and movies. It’s a pretty great clique, actually.

Tell us how – and why – you started your blog?

I launched Long Pauses in 2001 when I was studying for my comprehensive exams and was sick to death of writing in that thick, impersonal language endemic to graduate humanities programs. It all felt so joyless and pedantic. I wanted to write in the first person about subjects that genuinely interested me, which at the time was a mixture of the arts, politics, design, and religion. I wanted to test my voice as a writer as well. Also, as a professional web developer, I needed a playground. I really had no ambitions beyond that. Eight years later, Long Pauses has been through eleven major revisions, and the most recent is my favorite yet.

Describe your blog day – do you work at home? Go to a café? Sit in an office?

Among the many reasons my academic career fizzled is that I’m a ridiculously slow writer, and when I’m totally focused on a project I become a real son of a bitch. (The health of my marriage is directly affected by the number of hours I spend writing each week.) At any given moment, I usually have two or three posts saved in draft form, and I peck at them whenever I find the time, usually during my lunch break at work or late at night at home. Occasionally I’ll carve out a couple hours on a Saturday or Sunday, although that’s becoming increasingly rare. I sometimes think I could be a pretty good writer if I were single and a mild alcoholic. I’m at my most productive after a couple drinks.

How do you find things to blog about and how do you decide that an entry is worth being in your blog?

To slip again into idealist mode, the defining principle of Long Pauses has always been that old English-teacher warhorse: “Writing as discovery.” I only post when I have something to say, and I’m painfully conscious of the fact that I really only have something to say after I’ve taken the time to wrestle with a problem. The kind of writing I most often do, criticism of foreign and classic films, is a dime-a-dozen on the Internet now. The world doesn’t need another plot summary and review of, say, Heartbeat Detector. But the process of writing about that film’s editing was instructive – to me, at least. If a couple other readers learned something from it, too, then so much the better.

What is your favorite blog entry?

My post about Walker Percy’s The Moviegoer, which I read for the first time five days after Hurricane Katrina knocked a hole in the South. That post comes closest to epitomizing my sense of Long Pauses: it melds the arts, politics, faith, and feeling, and it includes a couple of the best sentences I’ve ever written.

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