4 111-I* + 0 o v wA L Outside the In' ;oniinued from page four) ing itself. And when that happens, "we are yielding to an irrational- ism; we are committing an error against which the intellectual histo- ry of our century should certainly have warned us. Itsideological ex- pression is fascism; its practical consequence the Final Solution." Alternatively, the novel must not move so far away from form that it cannot communicate: "As soon as it speaks, begins to be a novel, it im- poses causality and concordance, development, character, a past which matters and a future within certain broad limits determined by the project of the author." A book which did not contain these ele- ments, for example "a set of dis- continuous epiphanies" such as Sar- tre has seemed to propose, could not be a novel. Even if it could com- municate something, such a book would not provide the consolations for existence which Kermode offers as the ultimate criteria for fiction. This is an oversimplification of a complex argument, but it is accu- rate in its main outlines: Kermode begins by describing the relation- ship between fiction and its envi- ronment (both producer and audi- ence), and then uses this description to provide a prescriptive base for his discussion of the novel. In the hands of a critic of Kermode's intel- ligence and imagination, this meth- od produces a richly suggestive book. But to begin a discussion of art withan examination of its audi- ence, and to make everything hinge on the audience's response is a dan- gerous practice. For one thing, it becomes possible to talk at length about nothing at all without ever being aware ofait. Kermode does not fall into that error, but his mu- sical counterpart does. Ned Rorem is of course ham- pered by the fact that he is poorly informed. He thinks, for example, that Stan Kenton and The Beatles both play jazz-which is like saying that Wagner and Rudolph Friml both wrote opera-or that lyric poe- try is not popular among contempo- rary American poets. His book, so far from being "music from inside out," is not about music at all, but is a sustained lament over the in- difference of the public and the lack of recognition and money giv- en to composers. But the book is valuable to the extent that it illus- trates the weaknesses in a critical approach like Kermode's. The fundamental difficulty with this approach in both books is that it tends to lose sight of the art form itself while it is busy talking about artists and audiences. In Rorem, this produces a vague psychologism. combined with pseudo-profundity, as in his apparently gratuitous ad- aptation of Wordsworth: "Compos- ers and painters, in retaining initial fancies, stay children." This might be charming at a cocktail party, but it doesn't tell me much about mu- sic. Kermode eventually does get around to discussing the treatment of time, character, plot and so forth. But these discussions are not sys- tematic, and they are carried to an almost impossible degree of abstrac- tion. Kermode's referents somehow get lost. And Rorem, except for a few vague comments on fitting words to tunes, has almost nothing to say about music at all. The book does not reach the level of the col- lection of demonstration-lectures Bernstein has put together from his TV scripts. And it comes nowhere near Andre Modeir's book on jazz. Music, for Rorem, is so abstract a term that it doesn't seem to apply to anything in particular. But since the art is expected to produce a particular kind of re- spouse, these critics are forced to take a conservative position with re- gard to the forms appropriate to it. For Rorem, this means giving an- other beating to what I had thought was the quite pulverized corpse of t~ 4 -t-C 66snark 0 Il 74 393 7040 stony islanid - 3 s program music. There is a lot of sil ly talk about the importance )f art-song, and the incomprehensi- bility of John Cage. None of this is important, but it is interesting that Kermode should think in terms of the same opposition between a false literalness (program music or myth) and what he takes to be pure form- lessness (Cage or Robbe-Grillet). Ev- eryone canagree to the case against program music or myth, even though it is overstated. But it is not true that Robbe-Grillet rejects form (I cannot speak for Cage). What he does reject is the "false" distinction between form and content. The nov- el, then, becomes nothing but its form; it is a complex "imitation," having certain relations to its pro- ducer, the world and its audience, but never entirely defined by any single one of these elements. But Kermode is interested in form only subordinately. And it turns out, fi- nally, that Kermode is not so much a formalist as he is a critic who is capable of recognizing the validity of only certain kinds of form. This limitation is the direct re- sult of his primary decision to de- scribe fiction in terms of an audi ence's response. Clearly fiction re- quires an audience, but Kermode's extension of this point has resulted in a subtle argument for the gratifi- cation of that old symbol of deca- dence, the aesthetic emotion. Both he and Rorem expect this gratifica- tion. It is the consolation of art. Ro. rem is sorry that so few experience it: "art... is an aristocratic affair." Kermode is afraid that the means for its arousal will die away in a mad scramble for new experimen- tal techniques. There is no answering Rorem, but it is surprising that Kermode could follow Collingwood as far as he does and still talk about a re- sponse so generalized and abstract that it becomes peculiarly "aesthet ic." Emotions are held to be much more particular and specific in most neo-idealistic systems (and Kermode is a neo-idealist). And even outside such systems it seems clear that our responses to fiction are more varied than Kermode suggests. How, for example, does Lear "console"? If I were a sinner, to what extent would Revelations control my "eschatologi- cal anxiety"? And in any case, how much would the answers to either of these questions explain these works as works of art? It is likely that contemporary French criti cism, perhaps even the criticism of Robbe-Grillet, by placing its empha- sis on the thing itself as opposed to the response of a hypothetical audi- ence, will produce the more coher- ent aesthetic for the novel of today. Michael I. Miller Mr. Miller is a first-year graduate student in the department of English at The University of Chicago. When one first encounters Wil- liam Burroughs, he is amazed, per- haps baffled if he's trying to be a critic, by the violent concoction of poetic effects. Much has been writ- ten about Burroughs's "themes" and rightly so, for one can derive a hard-fisted abstract revolutionary outlook from his work. Burrough's essential social outlook is modeled after narcotics addiction: total need and dependence on the part of the junkie and total control by the drug and the pusher. But the real proof is in the reading, and Burroughs' many literary effects demand atten- tion. He is an extremely talented writer, and to read him is an incred- ible experience. Allen Ginsberg in his boyish way called Naked Lunch "an endless novel that will drive everyone mad." But Norman Mailer comes closest to explaining what Bur- roughs is really about, describing his writing as: attaching a stringent, mordant vo- cabulary to a series of precise and horrific events, a species of gallows humor which is a defeated man's last pride, the pride that he has, at least, not lost his bitterness. Burroughs's principal effect is hu- mor, surreal, black, satiricl, or a mixture of these, always scornful. le is a great imitator and parodist of A m e r i c a n argots-regional, scientific, bureaucratic, journalistic, and even foreign slang from Grade B cinema. In his huge vision of de- cadence, of addiction and control, the types he parodies frequently merge with relics of street life, the living symbols of the degradation man permits and often unknowing- ly perpetuates. Burroughs's enor- mous cast of characters is full of freaks and perverts. Among others: Dr. Benway, mad medico who massages a patient's heart with a suction cup, an amoral pure scien- tist who tries to keep a woman alive on a diet of sugar. The County Clerk, example of Southern brutality and ignorance, who "often spent weeks in the privy living on scorpions and Montgom- ery Ward catalogues." The academic pedant who inad- vertently shows that "nothing can be accomplished on the verbal lev- el'" The capitalist exploiter of foreign markets who comments: "Nice folk, these Arabs.. .nice ignorant folk." Unscrupulous t y c oo n s, liars, bores, junkies, "orgasm addicts," and more-the refuse of civilization piled so high that one is in danger of suffocating. Burroughs is con- temptuous of them all. He would like to see the mess eliminated and chides society for standing still in the face of it. Burroughs' prose is limited to the barest kind of description: Slunk traffickers ("slunks" are infant calves trailing the after- birth) tail a pregnant cow to her labor. The farmer declares a cou- vade, rolls screaming in bullshit. The veterinarian wrestles with a cow skeleton. The traffickers ma- chinegun each other, dodging through the machinery and silos, storage bins, haylofts, and man- gers of a vast red barn. The calf is born. The forces of death melt in morning. Farm boy kneels rev- erently-his throat pulses in the rising sun. In the space of a paragraph the en- tire mood of a preposterous scene changes dramatically. The language is not melodic, yet its brutal mode of expression achieves such rhythm that contempt, humor and pathos stand out in bold outline. Bur- roughs always writes to the point; his nonfiction is excellent journal- in surreal and fantastic comic strip episodes by the "nova criminals" ("nova," of course, is the astrophysi- cal term for an exploding star). These cover a wide range of charac- ters, from absurd and hideous bad- men to fantastic crab-like insectival and reptilian monsters. Their weap- ons against freedom, besides mere verbal untruths, arise from unre- stricted manipulations of science- like the "writing in" of another per- son's existence, using real or imagi- nary biochemical and biophysical methods. They distort reality al- most beyond repair. (Burroughs claims a technical justification for certain of these who have collabo- rated with him in writing.) Howev- er, apocalypse, or "nova," and "the colorless no-smell of death" can be averted by recognizing the enemy and using appropriate counter- measures. Hence symbolic war occa- ._. abandone fined by]r Burrou power of of consci "the wor pers, poi opinion, actually sciousnes use langi same obj fact seem pertinent the Vietn cant in a means to ant and w American many poi one real tary oper place. Bu immediat being in I Then he ality to e time may one allow the prisor One must any other any dime Unforti structure brilliant i noying. A to arhythi ing to st Ginsberg etry rea Press will new Bu straight n addition, is now wc brainwasl published, unique in literature: with a pro [ie P expose a In Nakec Nova Ex and wha they will ed. D/lin from nth shudderi prisone'rs with yo The Real nopoly- - (Sg NOVA ( Mr. Hack i joring in E Chicago. ST LITEE TEXTS AND CONTEXTS Burroughs's Slunk Traffickers in the Cut-C ism. And to compound the mixture, he often expresses sober social, po- litical and scientific ideas through the mouths of his villains in their stereotyped-speech patterns. Since his first book, Naked Lunch, Burroughs has written three novels: The Ticket That Exploded, The Soft Machine, and Nova Ex press. Each was done in what he calls the "cut-up or fold-in method" which consists of actually splicing strips of manuscript together. The ensuing associations are constructed-consciously or by chance. Consequently, much more depends on the reader's dynamics than on the author's careful crafts- manship. Invariably the result is more rapidfire cardstacking of sen- sory, humorous, and intellectual ef- fects. Man's enemies are symbolized sionally breaks out between the Nova Mob and the good guys, the Nova Police: The Reality Film giving and buckling like a bulkhead under pressure and the pressure gau edging to NOVA. Minutes to go Burnt metal snmell oDf ;iter- planetary war in the raw noon strcets swept by screaming glass uli-zards of enemn flak. Burroughs justifies the cut-u p technique (of which the above, mc.- dentally, is not an example) by his need to give language immnediate meaning, to chop his verbal medi- um into its most expressive units. As he says in Naked Lunch: "The word cannot be expressed direct... It can perhaps be indicated by mo- saic of juxtaposition like articles May, 1967 * M I D W E 10 0 MIDWEST LITERARY REVIEW May, 1967