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In a comment on yesterday's entry, someone asked why I recommend things like music, design, architecture and sociology in my blog, but little literature and no contemporary fiction. It seemed at the time like a non sequitur, a tangent, but in fact I don't think it was. I think my recommendations are all part of a position I'd call 'post-literary', which might be another way of saying 'self-consciously anti-literary'. And that might be another way of saying that my taste now contains a self-critique -- a critique of myself as a literary person.



For I studied literature, and I would say that literature has been, at certain formative points in my life, almost a kind of religion. My early career as Momus is seen by most as the work of a 'singing author', a cantautore. If I look at the scene I gravitated towards in London when I arrived there in the 80s, it was very much a literary scene -- a poetry scene, to be specific, centred on a coffee house in Earl's Court called the Troubadour.

But if literature was my religion, it's a religion I've lost. I'm now campaigning actively for the other side. Somewhere down the line I decided that I was more interested in non-literary artforms. I was more interested in texture than text. I inverted a personal hierarchy of the arts which had placed literature at the top and 'the lively and applied arts' at the bottom. Now my personal arts hierarchy looks more like this:

1. Music.
2. Visual art.
3. Sound art.
4. Design.
5. Dance and theatre (with dance ahead).
6. Architecture.
7. Cinema (with animation ahead of 'photographed melodrama').
8. Applied arts -- decoration, pottery, cookery, advertising, journalism etc.
9. Poetry.
10. Fiction.



Of course, the roots of my 'betrayal' go a long way back. Sure, I studied literature at university, but books were what I read to meet course requirements. The culture I was passionately excited about was what I heard on the John Peel show. My friends were not literature students but art students. (In fact, when I tried to befriend fellow students in the literature department, like future Booker Prize nominee Ali Smith, we really didn't seem to see eye to eye at all. Ironically, it turned out that Ali's best friends were also art students!)

My main loyalty was and always has been to 'creativity'. I celebrate whatever artform I think is the most creative. I'm quite opportunistic about that. If you give me a thrill, I'll squeal with pleasure. I'll put you on a pedestal. But you're not automatically on a pedestal just because you're working in one artform rather than another.

I adore Shakespeare, and if literature today were full of creative talents of that magnitude, I'd be rooting for literature, no doubt about it. But I think I'm more likely to find people of Shakespeare's freshness of vision in other artforms than literature.

Here are some of the 'objections to literature' I noted yesterday:

1. I dislike the sensory deprivation element of reading -- the lack of colour, sound, texture, form.
2. I dislike the sense that literature is something for an elite bourgeois class, usually university educated (like myself).
3. I think that having studied literature has made me massively self-conscious about any act of reading, and I don't like that.
4. I'm usually living in some country where the bookshops stock products I can't read.
5. I think of literature as a moribund artform, somehow.
6. I have issues with language as an art medium. We have the illusion that we know what we're talking about when we use the same words, but I'm not so sure. Language appears to be close to 'reality', but in fact it's closer to conventions and assumptions about reality. It rarely startles us, and when it does it's usually in the form of poetry, not prose.
7. Nevertheless, the literature which is about the limits of language and explores the very autism I'm describing is tremendously depressing.



When I picture a 'published writer' I don't necessarily think of someone intensely creative. Thoughtful, perhaps. Intelligent, certainly. Maladjusted, probably. My stereotype of 'the fiction writer' is of a somewhat dowdy, unattractive, impoverished and embittered figure tied into national rather than international culture. That person doesn't dress or live well and isn't a lifestyle model for me. That person has few social ties and few really interesting things to say in interviews. That person survives by getting grants rather than selling a lot. And if they sell well, it's because their work has tapped into some dismal national conservatism, or some seam of social snobbery. That person's work is hard to persevere with, and offers a rather bleak and adult view of life, one which depresses me. If I rave about this work to friends, it will be in the knowledge that they are unlikely to read the writer.

What's more, if I had the kind of relationships where literary recommendations counted for a lot, I'd have to limit myself to relationships with the kind of people I went to university with. My friends would probably be a lot more like my brother's friends (my brother is a literary academic, and has friends like Toby Litt, who's one contemporary writer I do rate). My friends tend to be visual people, or musical people. Call me superficial, but I have trouble imagining a piece of fiction being as exciting to me as the new Fashion Flesh tracks that I'm listening to right now. The writers I like -- people like Alasdair Gray, Gunther Grass, and Fernando Arrabal --- seem to be exceptions, drawing as much on visual art movements like surrealism as on literary traditions.



What if fiction had simply failed to make a successful leap into postmodernity? What if, while postmodernity in artforms like TV and pop music is as natural as breathing, in literature it's been represented by a kind of tail-chasing despair which has made contemporary fiction either painfully autistic or the repository of residual anti-postmodern feelings, a kind of museum of fuddy duddy head-in-sand humanism? What if the liveliness of mind I was trained to celebrate in the 18th century novel were now better discovered in cinema (I just saw Jodorowsky's 'El Topo' for the first time and was blown away by it -- what novel since Bataille's 'Story of the Eye' has had that kind of power for me, personally?) or some other artform?

Ironically, I still love a lot of classic literature. I love Shakespeare, Kierkegaard, Moliere. I love the dramatic and the essayistic. I love novels of ideas like Candide's 'Voltaire'. I love literary fragments, like the Satyricon or the Epic of Gilgamesh. I like a lot of poetry, right up to contemporary poetry, and was very sad to hear recently of the death of Michael Donaghy, a very gifted American poet who lived in London. (It's deplorable that his publisher, Oxford, has recently closed its entire poetry list, saying contemporary poetry is just not profitable.)

I've been working for the last two months with a piece of performed literature, 'Attempts on her Life' by Martin Crimp. It's a piece I like very much, and it could, in another context, pass as a 'novel' -- there are no characters per se, just some disembodied voices constructing an unreliable series of portraits of an absent woman named Anne.

I love performed literature, and I really like to hear authors read their work aloud, even writers of contemporary fiction. Somehow then text is magically transformed into texture. The disembodied becomes embodied. Charisma (or lack of it) comes into play. The 'timeless' is pulled down into time. 'God' assumes human form. 'Langue' becomes 'parole'. We abandon the universal, ideal tendencies of language and embrace something specific, something here and now. We jump from the relatively young tradition of the printed word (and its culture of bourgeois professionalism) to the much older one of oral literature -- the Homeric tradition in which stories are 'songs'. That's a tradition I'm personally still very much enthralled with, and it confirms my suspicion that perhaps writers are just failed singers, recording artists manquées.

McLuhan

Date: 2004-11-25 04:21 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
I think during the late 60's through the 70's that Marshall McLuhan wrote about a mid/late 20th century shift from Literary to Post Literary. A move from the written word to sound and tactile sensation. He included graphic design and typography under tactile effects. Years ago I found his theories really fascinating and inspiring. I think I see many echoes in today's entry.
Any thoughts on McLuhan....and how he fits or doesn't fit into your slant?
As for writers appearances.....The Beats looked pretty funky and cool. T.C. Boyle doesn't look like a classical singer either. Kathy Acker was as interesting to me for her author photoes as her books.
Justin Lincoln

Re: McLuhan

Date: 2004-11-25 05:02 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sparkligbeatnic.livejournal.com

With the explosion of text media like blogs, sms (or me-ru if you're in Japan), web pages etc... there have been a huge explosion in the unit production of text per unit time over the last decade. Also there's been a huge shift in that most people are both writers and readers of texts, rather than simply readers or consumers of mass-produced texts. The potency of text as a medium has also exploded. In 2000 I visited the Phillipines just a week after the government had been thrown out of office by a peaceful mob who organized a mass protest using text messaging phones. So here we have political change in a 3rd world country being influenced by cutting-edge technology but driven by one of the most ancient of human technologies - writing. I think this is something that McLuhan did not anticipate.

So while he had some interesting, sharp ideas on many things, I wonder if he wasn't completely wrong about this prediction of a post-literary (or at least post-textual) world?

Re: McLuhan

Date: 2004-11-25 06:24 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Spark.... I'd invert yr last statement as far as McLuhan is concerned. Post literary yes.....post textual, far from it. I think MM read everything as texts in ways that were quite distinct from how Semioticians read things as texts....but nonetheless, he wanted his readers to see images and objects as texts.
I think the kind of Lit addressed in todays entry is connected with the printing press for MMcL. The word/text had a specific place and power in industrial/mechanical society. It was very distinctly powerful. Now, mixed into the electronic/digital environment it moves to a completely different position. The word moves from "Law" to "babble, chatter, and gossip"
which I personally prefer. The word itself becomes less precious, and more disposable, useful, and mobile.
In the model you give of the Philipines election consider the maxim "Medium is the Message" If the government puts up a sign that says "Come together. Meet at 7 tonight" it is very different from cellphones texting this same message citizen to citizen (perhaps with no known point of origin). The words didn't drive it McLuhan might argue that the tech did more driving.
Now as I've gotten more into Deleuze I would differ with both word or tech being the driver. I guess I'd say "Desire" - an interconnected multivalent social network, drove it.
The old style of Literature and text was ,as pointed out in your response, one way.Slow, heavy, and heiarchial.McLuhan was often critical of Technology (a point some critics seem to miss) but his highest hope seemed to be that more people will get involved through electronic culture and potentially social structures could be positively changed.
Came across this weirdly fascinating author today.
http://www-rohan.sdsu.edu/dept/press/fi/home/index.htm
check the photo and texts. Justin Lincoln

Re: McLuhan

Date: 2004-11-25 06:57 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sparkligbeatnic.livejournal.com

One thing I have to add to that story about the EDSA II revolt in the Phillipines (it was early 2001, not 2000): the person who ended up in power, Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, a former classmate of Bill Clinton at Georgetown U and daughter of a previous President of the Phillipines, was popular with people who had enough money to afford a mobile phone - a minority of the population. Joseph Estrada, the ousted democratically-elected leader who was more popular with the more numerous poor, ended up in jail on corruption charges, where he still is, I think.

Another strange thing. When I flew into the country on the National airline, their magazine already contained a story about the incident, hailing it as evidence for technologically driven democracy, even though it was only a week or two after the event had occured. The whole thing was rather bizarre to me, but then third world countries always make the most interesting holiday destinations.

McCluhan was brilliant and great fun to read, but, no, I don't think he would have predicted the EDSA II incident.

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