Limited, Inc.
“I’m so bored. I hate my life.” - Britney Spears
Das Langweilige ist interessant geworden, weil das Interessante angefangen hat langweilig zu werden. – Thomas Mann
"Never for money/always for love" - The Talking Heads
Monday, June 08, 2026
Left conservativism
Thursday, June 04, 2026
on Leo Perutz
One of Leo Perutz’s classmates wrote that his first memory
of Perutz, an “uncommonly untidy boy” next to whom he sat on the bench at the
Patres der Parister school in Prague in the 1890s: “In my first memory of him,
I see his dirty, bloody hands; he was the enviable possessor of a wonderful pocket
knife with which he’d cut his thumb under the bench, not accidentally but
intentionally: “I’m going to shock the teacher,” he said. The he lay his hands
stretched out on the desk top. The effect was enormous.”
This is a good story, made better by the fact that, unlike
most schoolboy’s with a sense of grotesque (a set that includes almost all
schoolboys I have ever known), Perutz went on to employ this sense in novels
that somehow combine an extraordinary literary merit and the adventure theme of
the thriller. Romances, as R.L. Stevenson called them. He wrote a number of them
in the 20s and 30s – becoming a best selling author in 1928 with Wohin rollst
Du, Äpfelchen. Then the 30s happened, and Hitler came, first in Germany and
then in Austria in 1938. Leo Perutz, a Jew, emigrated to Palestine. He did not
like Palestine or Israel, and returned in the 50s to Austria, where he died,
failing to publish his last book, By Night Under the stone Bridge. In the late
80s, Perutz’s work was rediscovered. It is almost all translated, now, into
English.
Borges was a great fan of Perutz’s novel, The Master of the
Last Judgment: he ranked it as one of the greatest locked door mysteries. So,
out of idleness and because I’ve been thinking about “investigative” novel plots,
I read it last week.
I found it wonderful, although I also found it full of seemingly
arbitrary transitions and subplots. They should not have functioned – the book
should not have been so gripping – but they were sustained by Perutz’s knack
for creating an atmosphere in which the ordinary becomes intermittent. The book
was written in the 1920s, and set in the prewar period; perhaps the
intermittence of the ordinary has its source in the ordinary slaughter of World
War One, in which Perutz served. Or perhaps the source is in the Prague of
Kafka and Meyrink, the very birthplace of modernist “weird” literature.
Daniel Kehlmann, the contemporary German novelist, wrote a
long essay about Perutz in his “Kommt, Geister. Frankfurter Poetikvorlesungen”.
Many are the essays that take up the tired rhetorical trope of “compare and
contrast” – but Kehlmann does something clever with the trope by dipping it
into a passage in a letter from Freud to Arthur Schnitzler. Freud apologizes
for being so distant from Schnitzler, attributing that distance to Doppelgängerscheu
– fear of the Double. Freud wrote that “behind the aesthetic appearance” of
Schnitzler’s work he saw an identity with Freud’s own “presuppositions,
interests and conclusions.” Kehlmmann
uses this idea to pair Perutz and Kurt Gödel.
It seems absurd, but Kehlmann makes it work. It turns out
that Leo Perutz, besides being a novelist, was also a mathematician. His
dayjob, in Vienna, was as a actuarial mathematician for an insurance company,
and he even invented a formula in that field which is named for him.
Thus, Perutz is a mathematician and writer of fantastic
novels that continually play with the conditions of their form, while Gödel
is a mathematician whose work concentrates on the very form of the possibility
of truth in mathematics who became a paranoid fantasist in the latter part of
his career. In fact, it was out of paranoid fear of poisoning that he starved
himself to death.
Gödel, I learned from Kehlmann’s essay, had to flee Austria
after the Anschluss not because he was a Jew, but because Nazi officials fired
him from his post as a Jew, reasoning that logicians such as Gödel
were, practically, all Jews. He was the literal victim of a misconstrual of set
theory.
Kehlmann’s pairing is imaginative. I, however, kept thinking
of Chesterton while reading the Master of Judgement Day. The Chesterton of The
Man who was Thursday, which is also an adventure tale in which the pieces don’t
seem to add up. In which the protagonist thinks, about the anarchist group he
was investigating:
“He knew that each one of these men stood at the extreme
end, so to speak, of some wild road of reasoning. He could only fancy, as in
some old-world fable, that if a man went westward to the end of the world he
would find something—say a tree—that was more or less than a tree, a tree
possessed by a spirit; and that if he went east to the end of the world he
would find something else that was not wholly itself—a tower, perhaps, of which
the very shape was wicked.”
This is so fine a thought that I will never understand it –
which is perhaps the only way to understand it. It could be said about the
narrator in Perutz’s novel, Baron von Yosch, who stands as the puzzled investigator/victim
of a circle of acquaintances among whom there occurs an epidemic of suicides. The
Baron’s story is about those suicides. But the story doesn’t end with the
Baron, but – in an epilogue – with the finding of the Baron’s story among the
papers he had with him when he fell at the battle of Limanova. The epiloguist, whoever it is,
treats the Baron’s story with peremptory harshness – it is all lies, excuses
for the Baron’s crimes. And so the curtain comes crashing down.
Chesterton is, in some ways, not at all Perutz’s Doppelgänger
– he was an anti-semitic Catholic fanatic. But like Baron von Yosch, it was as
part of Chesterton’s vices, rather than in spite of them, that he forged his narrative
vision – his peculiar method of paradox. In one of the Father Brown stories, The
Duel of Dr. Hirsch, Chesterton took the Dreyfus case – which, for Chesterton,
had at its incongruous center the innocence of Dreyfus, a Jew – and transposes
it to the case of Dr. Hirsch, who develops a formula for a weapon for the
French government. A messenger with a letter from Dr. Hirsch to the German
command explaining where that formula is to be found is discovered by a “chauvinist
officer” named Dubosc. Hirsch challenges Dubosc to a duel. One of the officer’s
seconds is Flambeau, a French detective and friend to Father Brown. Brown,
looking at the letter, sees that is transcribes the location of the formula in
a precisely opposite way from where the formula is. It is, in fact, so opposite
that, using a rule of opposites, one could easily locate it.
But opposition is, in Chesterton’s view, less a semantic
abstraction and more an incarnate absurdity. But means of opposition Father
Brown deduces the truth about Hirsch and Dubosc – that in fact they are one
man. Hirsch has simply disguised himself, written the letter, accused himself,
and shown up Dubosc. “It is all like I was saying to Flambeau These opposites
won’t do. They don’t work. They don’t fight. If it’s white instead of black, and solid
instead of liquid, and so on all along the line – there’s something wrong,
Monsieur, there’s something wrong.”
Monday, June 01, 2026
Fan fiction and the stock market
This is the year of the question: why is this bubble different from any other bubble?
Thursday, May 28, 2026
curses
You could not, in words, writing, or printing, legally curse
Queen Elizabeth. To do so put you on the road to having one ear removed, or
half a tongue taken for fishbait -- that is if the hangman caught you. Guy
Fawkes was prosecuted partly for saying that James was accursed. Progress has
brought it about that you can legally curse Donald Trump, but you can't legally
threaten him.
So to our question: what does that mean?
Cursing has definitely socially declined from the old glory, or inglory, days.
Once it implied traffic with divine or demonic powers, and now it simply
implies street level babbling, the unalterable fuck of all the movie script
drug dealers. Once it was mixed up with blasphemy, slander, and a whole set of
verbal crimes -- crimes that were, by their nature, eerie, insofar as they were
hints of a black logos that operated just under the surface, just out of sight
of the angels in paradise, which, to the streetview, was just a bunch of
stinking losers and snitches. And indeed, there’s some truth in the idea that
an angel is just a glorified snitch.
There's always been a bit of a mixup, within Christianity, about cursing. On
the one hand, Jesus, in Matthew, seems to come out against it:
"Again, ye have heard that it was said to the ancients, Thou shalt not
perjure thyself: but thou shalt perform to the Lord what thou hast sworn. 34.
But I charge you, swear not at all: neither by heaven, for it is the throne of
God: 35. Nor by the earth, for it is his footstool: nor by Jerusalem, for it is
the city of the great King: 36. Nor shalt thou swear by thy head: for thou
canst not make one hair white or black. 37. But your speech shall be, Yes, yes;
No, no for what is beyond these comes from evil." (Matthew 5).
On the other hand, our saviour enjoyed a good curse himself.
Coming upon a fig tree that bore no fruit when he wanted fruit, like any fishwife
he cursed it. Later it was observed to be dead -- quid erat demonstratum, or
however the Latin goes. And then there are the Psalms, which are full of the
most beautiful curses. And there are the Prophets. Nowadays, the secret service
would definite pay an unexpected visit to Isaiah, to say nothing of Ezekial.
These were men who knew how to wield a curse like a hammer, and ring down kingdoms.
The Israel of then and the Israel of now are eerily similar in their sacrifice
of babies to appease the god of nations. Isaiah would definitely be hung out by
the media, nowadays, for his anti-semitic podcasts.
….
Shakespeare's Richard III dramatizes the curse the way The Merchant of Venice
dramatizes the contract. There's a nice essay Jane Shore and the Politics of
Cursing by Mary Steible, which takes the case of Jane Shore who, according to
one source, cursed Richard III – thus taking part, as Steible nicely puts it, “in
the historiographical hazing of one of one of England’s most unpopular monarchs.”
Jane Shore was one of King Edward the IV's official concubines. She was
stripped of her goods by Richard III, and according to the anti-Richard III
literature that flooded the Tudor market (Richard being an inveterate enemy to
the Tudors, and conveniently Punch-like), Jane replied with a good many curses
that, in the way of a good curse, came true. Steibel examines some accounts of
Jane's curses, and shows how Shakespeare substituted Margaret's curses in his
play. Margaret was the widow of Henry VI, and a grande dame at the court.
Steible makes some excellent points about the way Margaret figures in the play
as the spokesperson for the curse. She quotes Little, a scholar who has
researched liturgical curses:
"Pope Gregory the Great, says Little, concluded in his study of scripture
that "God is said to curse and yet man is forbidden to curse, because what
man does from the malice of revenge, God does only in the exactness and
perfection of justice." (40) The kind of cursing undertaken by Shore and
Margaret is not of the divine sort, and therefore, in the strictest sense,
could not be regarded as prophetic, even if they do foresee the known end of
Richard's mortal life. Little concludes from his study of curses that the
Church's position is that "[o]rdinary cursing by ordinary people [is]
decidedly not legitimate. (41)"
The curse, like the oath, was officially a hierarchical
speech act, and not to be usurped by the mob. But the mob had its own reasons.
Shore curses Richard over loss of position, fame, property--material goods.
Margaret, to be sure, lost much more than Shore, but she wants vengeance, not
the "perfection of justice." Her ravings are human, not divine.
Shore's are equally human. Indeed, the uncontrolled anger of each woman implies
the disorder that results from loss of control, and, in some ways, parallels
the loss of control that leads Richard to his fated end.
Steible infuses a feminist colour to her view of cursing: "If words, just
words, could cause harm--earthly or otherwise--to others, anyone who could
speak could acquire a power that superseded rank, gender, physical strength,
and so on. Perhaps curses were feared to "touch the hidden order of
things," especially in regard to the divinely sanctioned order of the
monarchy; Shore and Margaret both use words with the intent to wish ill upon
Richard's body, their curses being directed against his birth, his body, and
his soul. The king's body natural is stigmatized, dismembered even. Speaking
through their characters, Churchyard and Shakespeare both protest Richard, both
make treasonous noises. Embedded in the dominant discourse of the divinely
provident, the subversive speech act of cursing is voiced by politically weak
figures, "historical" women who are little more than disaffected
players in the pre-Tudor court. Having further de-mystified the kingship of
Richard through curses, their job is done. Cursed themselves with charges of
witchcraft and stigmatized by their own foul cursing, Shore and Margaret are
authorized to speak like women in the historical narrative, that is, like
witches."
Political weakness, here, might be in the eye of the
litterateur, since these women historically were not necessarily weak. Steible
does not mention Michelet in her text, but in “La Sorcière”, Michelet reads the
reversal of the Lord’s Prayer – the characteristic speech act of the witch – as
a tie between the world of the polis, ruled by men, and the rule of the
counter-polis, ruled by the Goddess.
“It took the Devil, that ancient ally of woman, her
confidant from Paradise, it took the sorceress, this monster who does
everything backwards, inversing the sacred world, to occupy themselves with
woman, to crush under her feet their [the church’s] practices…”
It is a powerful trope, and a romantic one. At least in Shakespeare’s Richard
III, it is the man-devil who is cursed. He has created the inverse kingdom, which
is perhaps why the powerful curses come not from women, but from Richard's
victims. These curses are definitionally pure, in a sense, because they are so
starkly contrasted with the curse's opposite: blessing. Thus, Edward, and
Clarence, and the young Princes, and all of Richard's dead victims visit him in
his vision and pronounce his sentence, and then pronounce a blessing on Harry,
progenitor of the Tudor line and Richard's opponent. It is as if one geneology
-- Richard's cursed one -- is being formally replaced by another - Harry's blessed
one. As the little Prince's say, "thy nephews souls bid thee despair and
die!"
Richard is too modern a man to think that the curse has power. "Soft, I
did but dream/O coward conscience, how dost thou afflict me." Once the
curse is so rationalized, it loses its magical power -- and in its downfall
brings all magic with it.
Which brings us to De Quincey's strange essay
on Modern Superstitions. The architecture of DeQuincey's essays is always
Piranesian, a descent from the tower to the dungeon by an infinite amount of
stairs. In this essay he takes us, by degrees, from those superstitions later
comprised under Ruskin's term, the pathetic fallacy -- that projection onto the
natural of the human - to the superstitions of the ominous. The ominous,
according to De Quincy, was as much the ancient's burden as colonialism was the
white man's. He is particularly feverish (De Quincey is always supremely feverish)
about the the accidental coincidence of a given name with some ill thing, in
which the ancients saw malign powers. De Quincy instances the refusal of a
Roman legion to go into Germany under the command of a man named Umbrius Ater
-- a "pleonasm of darkness," as he puts it: Shadow Black. Offering a
series of similar anecdotes, De Quincy gets to the paradoxical crux: that
crossing of sign and accident, language itself: "These omens, derived from
names, are therefore common to the ancient and the modern world. But perhaps,
in strict logic, they ought to have been classed as one subdivision or variety
under a much larger head,viz. words generally, no matter whether proper names
or appellatives, as operative powers and agencies, having, that is to say, a
charmed power against some party concerned from the moment that they leave the
lips."
The essay probes the very texture of God's invisibility, which is, of course,
symboled, modeled, consistes in logos -- the word, out of spit and air. That
movement from the silent movie world of our apishness to the incredible
communications of our never stilled tongue -- it has left a scar inside us.
Richard III was right: it is our conscience, superstition's last stronghold.
Tuesday, May 26, 2026
Superstition, blessing, and contract: a fantasia on the horror film
Saturday, May 23, 2026
Olga Tokarczuk uses AI to drive over the bones of her own novels
I have run into a persistant, and probably PR driven meme on social media that being against AI is "being against "art'" - like banning pianos or something.
The response to this is simple. Being against AI is being for preserving the internet tools we have that support art. AI is destroying the personal search, as well as creating pervasive counter-measures that we are now used to and should not be - like all those idiot popups making sure we are not robots - that in the glory days of this technology just didn't exist. The robots now do exist and they steal.
The recent comments of Olga Tokarczuk about how she used AI to find songs that her characters would dance to two decades ago shows either O.T. has never gone onto Youtube (ask for dance hits from the 80s or 90s - get a hundred to a thousand hits) or that she was really using it to write a scene about dancing and has smoothed out the features, here. The improvement in speed is negligible - unless of course the prompt was a bit more specific than this, a bit more about using AI to write the character.
She has denied this in a statement published on Lit Hub. It is a weirdly stated denial-snark thing that looks like she used AI to write it.
I should say that, as well, I use data platforms that are hooked up to academic institutions, like JSTOR, that are simply beautiful. But all this access is precisely what AI is aiming at. The end of the personal search is the goal of the AI tech lords, and with the end of the personal search comes the end of the democratic commons of the internet, period. It is not just that the search is speeded up and under the control of the machine instead of the person - it is that the ability to make a search, to use these resources, is under the gun as AI lords get richer and aim to monetize this freedom. Every AI prompt is another bullet shot at the personal search. It can only take so many hits.
I like Tokarczuk. I loved Drive Your Plow over the Bones of the Dead. Which has a strong love of nature behind it. That she now wants to drive her plow over the remaining forests of the world, accelerate climate change, and destroy our glorious research systems to use AI makes me suspect that she is - going down a dark path.
Tuesday, May 19, 2026
Spending my life reading
1. At some point between my 11th and 13th years on this planet, a global equator of sorts was passed: globally, the population that was literate passed the 50 percent point. This was one of the great events of the 1960s, although at the time it was not celebrated with jubilees and fireworks. Rather it was simply a plodding little point on a graph.
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