“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
Tuesday, June 20, 2023
For Daniel Ellsberg
Wednesday, June 14, 2023
cormac
To sic James Wood on Cormac McCarthy
is unfair to the sensibilities of both writers. The New Yorker obit/review of
the two last McCarthy book tries for the sweeping overview, but Wood is
permanently not in the mood for McCarthy - hence his elevation of The Road,
surely one of McCarthy's minor novels, as the major work over Blood Meridian,
against which Wood tosses such howlers as: "Of course, his earlier novels
explored “themes” and, in their way, ideas; an academic industry loyally
decodes McCarthy’s every blood-steeped move around evil, suffering, God or
no-God, the Bible, genocidal American expansion, the Western, environmental
catastrophe, and so on. But those novels did not purvey, and in some sense
could have no space for, intellectual discourse. These books were inhospitable
to intellectuals, with their characteristic chatter." For Wood, an
intellectual must either work at the New Yorker or teach at some respectable
Ivy League school. They wear an I badge. But anybody who reads Blood Meridian and
encounters the Judge encounters intellectual talk as high placed as that iof
the figures in Moby Dick. The inability to see ideas in ordinary life - in
ordinary American life - marks Wood's odd relationship to American letters.
Dwight Garner, god bless him, is much
better in the NYT obituary. He gets McCarthy's oddness right. McCarthy's world
is marked, like the world of Melville's Pequod, by a startling absense of
women, of the feminine in general. But the homoerotic bonds don't find their
hetero places as friendships - male friendship is as passing a state as, say,
marriage. These are books essentially about loners and their disastrous effect
on those about them. The Border Trilogy is McCarthy's exploration of what it
might be like not to be a loner, but there is a certain static in that
exploration, a certain sacrifice of narrative magnificence.
The truly American torture is
solitary - something visited upon thousands of men every day in that God
forsaken land. It is an extension of, a sort of diabolical parody of,
individualism - that strange and very hetero fantasy ideology, which suppresses
the mother role entirely, which seriously holds, among people whose lives were
spent, as babies and children, eating free lunches, breakfasts and dinners,
that there is no such thing as a free lunch. Taking that asociality into the
wilderness - or its shadow, the backwards culture of pre-Civil Rights Dixie -
is what makes McCarthy fascinating. It is also what makes McCarthy repulsive -
especially to someone like James Wood, who can't "see" it.
This, from the great - or in Woods'
view, unsound- Blood Meridian. The Judge is sketching and writing things in a
notebook:
"A Tennessean named Webster had
been watching him and he asked the judge what he aimed to do with those notes
and sketches and the judge smiled and said that it was his intention to expunge
them from the memory of man. Webster smiled and the judge laughed. Webster
regarded him with one eye asquint and he said: Well you’ve been a draftsman
somewheres and them pictures is like enough the things themselves. But no man
can put all the world in a book. No more than everthing drawed in a book is so.
Well said, Marcus, spoke the judge.
But dont draw me, said Webster. For I
dont want in your book.
My book or some other book said the
judge. What is to be deviates no jot from the book wherein it’s writ. How could
it? It would be a false book and a false book is no book at all."
Saturday, June 10, 2023
Nathaniel Mackay's oppositional nostalgia, and mine
The poet Nathaniel Mackay wrote a brilliant, manifesto-like essay in 1987 entitled “Sound and Sentiment, Sound and Symbol” that begins, as most American poetic manifestos do not begin, with a consideration of anthropological fact. Mackay begins with the belief about sound and music – bird music, wind music – of the Kaluli of Papua New Guinea. Kaluli myth – rather like Greek myth – locates the origin of music in the moment in which a human being is transformed into a bird. Philomela of course has left her mark on modern poetry – jug jug to dirty ears/so rudely forced. In the Kaluli case, a boy and his sister are catching crayfish. The boy begs some of the crayfish from his sister. She refuses. He puts a crayfish over his nose, which becomes a red beak. Then he spouts wings and flies away as a muni bird. Rather like the Grimm’s tale, the Juniper Bush, in which the soul of a murdered boy becomes a bird that sings an accusatory song, the muni bird’s song goes: "Your crayfish you didn't give me. I have no sister. I'm hungry . . .”
Mackay begins in Papua
because he wants to make a point about the world.
“One easily sees the
compatibility of this musical concept of the world, this assertion of the
intrinsic symbolicity of the world, with poetry. Yeats's view that the artist
"belongs to the invisible life" or Rilke's notion of poets as
"bees of the invisible" sits agreeably beside Zuckerkandl's assertion
that "because music exists, the tangible and visible cannot be the whole
of the given world. The intangible and invisible is itself a part of this
world, something we encounter, something to which we respond.” Victor Zuckerkandl
is the musicologist whose story of the Kaluli is sampled by Mackay.
Which brings us to the
question: isn’t this all just pre-scientific nonsense?
Mackay’s argument, his
poetics, begins with the rejection of the overarching positivism that poses
that rhetorical question and comfortably answers it with an “of course”. But
Mackay doesn’t want to reject that positivism for some reactionary theology. Instead,
in a wonderful coinage, Mackay calls for an “oppositional nostalgia.” Mackay’s
essay is centered on black music, the orphaned boy’s song, but moves widely
among a number of texts, including Toomer’s Cane. “Cane is fueled by an oppositional
nostalgia. A precarious vessel possessed of an eloquence coincident with loss,
it wants to reach or to keep in touch with an alternate reality as that reality
fades.”
My own sense of
politics is absolutely in touch with Mackay’s poetics. My mature life has
coincided with the fading of all the postwar social democratic institutions.
And I have seen the left hamstrung by a rhetoric and conceptual structure that,
while useful to the making of those institutions, seems at a loss to defend
them. I’ve seen that especially lately in France, where Macron’s killing of the
social security system is opposed by the vast majority, which is an opportunity
that the left does not know how to take advantage of. But this is an old story,
as old as my twenties, the years of Reagan and Thatcher. The reification of
revolution only gives us a past to break from. But a larger perspective shows
us the need for an oppositional nostalgia – for the reference landscapes of
childhood, for instance – those landscapes that have been decayed and attacked
by our petrochemical treadmill of production, to the point that they are
turning against us.
There are many levels
of oppositional nostalgia. I think I have moved within that term, without
knowing it, my entire life, and I think I know some of those levels.
Friday, June 09, 2023
The reference landscape and the big fire
It is hard to keep
hold of an emergency feeling when the urgency is sliced and diced by the news
cycle. We know that the past twenty years have been crucial. We know that once,
in the old days at the end of the Cold War, we – we meaning the developed
economies of the world – actually acted to prevent the ozone hole from eating
us up. And we know since, we have done squat as we watch through our windows,
on our nature specials, on our vacations, the world as we know it undergo what
fire historian Stephen Pyne calls “the spectacle of unremitting loss.”
As the atmosphere
emergency drifts South and West, the focus turns to the usual trivia. Well,
naturally. Still, a good time to read Pyne’s essay in Aeon.
An excerpt:
“I see the world through
a pyric prism. In the reforging of Earth, I see fires, especially those burning
fossil fuels, as a cause. I see fires, mutating into megafires, as a
consequence – and fires everywhere as a catalyst. The Anthropocene is, for me,
a Pyrocene, as humanity’s fire practices create the fire-informed equivalent of
an ice age. But fire, and even the charred landscapes it can leave in its wake,
is more than an issue of human health, busted ecosystems, creaky institutions
or bad behaviour. This is also a matter of aesthetics.
This thought came to
me during a field trip to the Jemez Mountains in northern New Mexico in 2014.
Three years earlier, the Las Conchas fire, part of a wave train of
conflagrations, had blasted across the Pajarito Plateau and into the Los Alamos
National Laboratory. When its plume collapsed, the fire sent hot air across
forested mesas and through gorges, like the pyroclastic flow from a volcano.
The flames culled woods, dappled the forest with blowouts and, in some sites
burned down to bare rock, not even blackened stumps remained. Craig Allen, a
fire researcher with the US Geological Survey, was our docent, and as we
scanned the still-scorched countryside, he described not so much the scene
before us as the scene that the fire had taken from him – a vision of the land
restored to its precontact state.”
The contact – a term
which has displaced the old Eurocentric term, “discovery”, but which has still
not found its poetic bearings. The warmer climate has been thought of in terms
of mounting ocean levels, and it is that. But so far are we from the trees that
have sustained us, that we don’t see the fires mounting up, just for us.
"Lord Krishna
said: The universe (or human body) may be compared to an eternal tree that has
its origin (or root) in the Supreme Being and its branches below in the cosmos.
The Vedic hymns are the leaves of this tree. One who understands this tree is a
knower of the Vedas. (15.01)
The branches of this
eternal tree are spread all over the cosmos. The tree is nourished by the
energy of material Nature; sense pleasures are its sprouts; and its roots of
ego and desires stretch below in the human world causing Karmic bondage."
Werner Sombart, an early twentieth century historian of
capitalism – a man of the right, I should say – saw how the trees were
necessary for the ships that formed the logistical core of imperialism and
trade up until the late nineteenth century. Da steht ein Baum – well, Rilke’s
Orpheus was smarter than he knew. Marx’s economic enlightenment came about when
he discovered changes in the laws on gleaning wood in the land around Koeln.
The Russian novelists depict feckless landholders whose wealth is measured by
the forests that they sell to entrepreneurs. Set the Dead souls to one side, it
was the trees from Russia that went into the great liberal era in Europe.
Another excerpt from
Pyne's essay:
"Yet I wondered
what my grandchildren might see if they were present. I recalled a comment by
Bertrand Russell who said that what most people mean when they speak of
returning to nature is really a desire to return to the world they knew as a
child (or, I would add, the world they knew when they came of age). What
existed then seems natural. Whatever comes next – new species, new habits, new
machines – seems intrusive, disturbing and alien.
That childhood world –
what we might call our ‘reference landscape’ – is the marker by which we
measure the present and coming world. It’s how we judge the new world as
welcoming or hostile, lovely or marred. A reference landscape might be
personal, but it might also be shared by a society or nation. When the world
itself is being overturned, personal grief can become intergenerational."
Our reference
landscapes are coming apart. Russell, a product of the nineteenth century
industrialized Britain that produced, among other things, the first diagnosis
of allergy, had a reference landscape that was already radically different from
that of his eighteenth century ancestors.
I think of Shelley's reference landscape and how the seeds, in the
coming storms, will be all burned to a crisp:
O wild West Wind, thou
breath of Autumn's being,
Thou, from whose
unseen presence the leaves dead
Are driven, like
ghosts from an enchanter fleeing,
Yellow, and black, and
pale, and hectic red,
Pestilence-stricken
multitudes: O thou,
Who chariotest to
their dark wintry bed
The winged seeds,
where they lie cold and low,
Each like a corpse
within its grave, until
Thine azure sister of
the Spring shall blow
Thursday, June 08, 2023
Cain's papers
Few writers have seen
their best sentences become their death sentences. Morris Markey, though, was
one of those few.
Lawrence Morris
Markey. He is best known, if known at all, as an early New Yorker writer. He
wrote novels too – about Dixie. His wife was related to Margaret Mitchell, but
he married her before the latter became the author of Gone With The Wind. That
must have peeved him – he’d been the one to leave Atlanta behind and make it in
New York and the big time. The big time dwindled in Hollywood, in Holiday
Magazine, in writing radio spots.
As well, while
Mitchell went in for 19th century prose, Markey’s reporting on murders,
vagabands and riff raff was very much Neue Sachlichkeit, the American version.
Markey is associated
with two engrossing articles about murders, some of which are still recycled
for the mystery and the podcastery in them. One was the murder of Starr
Faithfull, whose body was tossed up on the shore of Long Beach, Long Island on
June 8, 1931. The other murder, also of a flapper, was of Dot King, who was
found murdered in her “love nest” on the 15th of March, 1923. Both murders have
generated books and websites.
The second paragraph
of the Mysterious Death of Starr Faithfull
begins as follows:
“It lies within the
very nature of a mystery story that it must be told backward. The only possible
beginning is the corpse. And then things are learned and told about the corpse
and the creature that existed before it became a corpse…”
Did I say that Morris
Markey and James Cain were friends?
Of course, the corpse
is definitely a given, but it need never be discovered, or it can be discovered
within the elastic schedule of the writer’s telling.
However, I rather like
it, gruesomely, that Morris Markey, who left an imprint on the Cold Blood
genre, was a creature who left a mystery with his corpse himself, one that the
coroner left open: suicide, accident or murder.
On July 12, 1950, the
Atlanta Constitution published a story that began: “Gunshot kills L.M.Markey,
ex-Atlantan: Lawrence Morris Markey, 51, former Atlanta newspepr reporter, died
Monday night of a gunshot wound in his home in Halifax, Virginia.”
And thus, the corpse
with the small .22 entrance wound behind its ear.
In the Constitution
story, Markey was found “in a downstairs hall and that a .22 caliber rifle lay
nearby, one cartridge fired from it.” It doesn’t tell us if a relative of
Margaret Mitchell was in the house.
The coroner relied in
his account on the testimonies of those in the house, but he must not have
relied entirely, since he does leave the case open. A question mark that could
be seen as an accusation against someone in the household.
In his biography of
James Cain, Morris Markey holds a considerable place. Markey introduced Cain to
Harold Ross at the New Yorker. When
Helen Markey called him up and told him Morris was dead, and invited him to the
funeral, Cain went. Oddly “Helen had not said how Markey died, and it was not
until Cain reached Petersburg and bought a Richmond paper that he learned
Morris had been shot.”
Truly, here’s the set
up for a short story. Cain, the author of Double Indemnity, goes to Halifax
Virginia and spends a few days snooping about, hearing stories about the death
of his friend. Cain heard the tale from Morris’s brother, Marvin Markey.
“On the day before his
death… Sue [his daughter] had driven to a store and along the way had seen four
little puppies on the side of the road, where somebody had abandoned them.
Deciding they should have a merciful end, she took them hom, got out the family
.22, and shot them. When she went to bury them, she left the .22 in the hall.”
The family agreed that
Morris, drinking and depressed, had jammed the gun against his head from behind
and shot himself, presumably to make it look less like a suicide and more like
an accident. Insurance reasons. But it made it look like somebody shot him from
behind.
Cain, according to
Hoopes, wrote this all down in a letter he sent to Laurence Stallings, a mutual
friend.
And, to make a true
mystery writer’s death true mystery, the
letter has not, as far as I know, been published. It is among Cain’s papers.
Which is a potential
title, no? Cain’s papers.
Tuesday, June 06, 2023
Lead dogs: Kriegszittern and the post-war
Kafka
being an expert on work related accidents was called upon, in World War I, to
use his talents in Prague’s Temporary Psychiatric Hospital for shell shocked
soldiers. He wrote a publicity sheet for the Hospital that rather disconcerts his
biographer, Reiner Stach. Far from Kafka
the response of the Dadaists, which was to spit on the war. Instead, this is
how the sheet begins: “Fellow Countrymen!
The World War, in which all human misery is concentrated, is also a war
of nerves, more so than ay previous war. And in this war of nerves, all too
many suffer defeat. Just as the intensive operation of machinery during the
last few decades’ peacetime jeopardized, far more than ever before, the nervous
system of those so employed, giving rise to nervous disturbances and disorders,
the enormous increase in the mechanical aspect of contemporary warfare has
caused the most serious risks and suffering for the nerves of our fighting men.”
This is
written for a good purpose, because returning shell shocked soldiers – the famous
Kriegszitterer – were definitely in need of care. But it is clothed in the
average middle class patriotism of a good Kakanian citizen. Nothing here leads
one to doubt the systems at play – they are the given.
Of
course, at the same time Kafka’s feeling about these systems flowed into such
stories as the Penal Colony, where the functionaries of the system that destroys
its victims themselves submit to its machinery – but only, note, because there
was some bug in the machine, some fault.
It is
interesting to contrast the end of World War I and the end of World War II. In the
second case, the end led to what the French call the “thirty glorious years” –
a Keynesian capitalism subtended by extensive social democratic institutions, which
were funded, the latter, by heavy taxes on the wealthiest. The former ended
with a vast global spirt of liberalism – in the U.S., taxes on the wealthy were
halved, and regulations were loosened, while in Britain and France, the
movement was to gold standards and financialization of capital.
The
currents of the collective psyche are murky. Contemporaries can dive in there,
but they come back with doubtful impressions. It is even worse diving into the
collective psyche of eras past. However, I do wonder if, after bombing had
extended the trauma to civilian populations, the fauna of the urban postwar in
the twenties – the crippled, the Kriegszitterer spastically selling pencils on
street corners, the literally defaced, all of which became part of ordinary
life without really pushing society into a more pacifistic and socialistic
system – I wonder if the memory of this worked on the good people streaming
away from the onset of the Soviets, cleaning up the rubble in Berlin and
London, figuring out the balance of treachery and resistance in Paris,
etc. – I wonder if this memory worked as
a powerful incentive to the social insurance put in place in the late forties
and fifties. The fate of the mustard gassed veteran from World War I was now no
stranger to the firebombed or V2-ed citizen of any European urb.
The shell
shocked did not only include veterans – in Germany, in particular, it led to an
art of shock, of outrage that included in its scope not only the leaders but
the led, the frustratingly led. The led who never woke up, who spoke in an
already outmoded feudal trance. There’s
a poem of Kurt Tucholsky that has this spirit of outrage in it – Lead dogs. Actually,
Tucholsky’s entire work contains this demon of outrage, but this one is short
and sweet. It was published under one of
his pseudonyms, Theobold Tiger, in the Weltbuehne in 1921.
Clever
dogs lead the tip tapping blind through the streets
Knowing how
to find the right ways, scent and seek.
Once, you sightless, others lead you for four and a half years.
They growled
and howled and made living men fear.
Once, blind
ones, wolves led you into filthy pits,
Put you
in chains and foddered you with bits.
They ran away when it all collapsed. Following their bloody feasts
they
skipped over the border with the liability round their necks . . .
Carefully, your dog quivers at the end of his lead.
His look
is faithful, ears cocked, watchful for your need.
You,
blind men! None, none, of your puffed up, pimped up
Leaders stands
so human and high before God as your pup!
Monday, June 05, 2023
Beggars and billionaires
The beggar and the
billionaire bookend neoliberal culture. During the era of the social democratic
exception, from the mid forties to roughly the eighties, homelessness – and vagabondage
– fell considerably. Not that this was an unmitigated good – from the mental
asylum to the housing project, coercion, violence, despair and underfunding
were endemic. But the effect of state cuts to welfare and to the general withdrawal
of the state from housing, mental health care, and retirement funding had
effects that were seen throughout the developed economies. In Les gens de rien: l’histoire de la grande pauvreté
dans le France du XXe siecle, Andre Guesclen traces the decline of vagabondage
and homelessness during the thirty glorious years and their return at the end
of the century. The same story was told, in 1991, by Joel Blau in The Visible Poor.
The visible poor, an
excellent title.
I have a media
knowledge of billionaires. How could I not. They populate telenovelas, like
Succession, are featured extensively in the business and political press, have
groupies and fans, and in general are all around us as parts of the celebrity phantom
tribe we think we have a relationship with.
I have an experiential
knowledge of beggars. Beggars are not the stars of popular telenovelas, are not
extensively interviewed or featured in the business and political press, are
not influencers on Instagram or in any way part of the celebrity phantom tribe.
But for any urban dweller, they are ghosts of another sort, flesh and blood
ghosts. They sleep on doorsteps or in tents or in sleeping bags or in improvised
nests of trash. They prostrate themselves in pedestrian heavy areas, with
plastic or paper cups by their sides for the stray coin. They choose their
spots – outside grocery stores or by ATMs – where, by some perhaps shared
convention, they know that people have loose change on them. They get drunk, or they get stoned.
They preach, or they scrawl signs, they favor parks, they tell stories of
hunger on subway trains and trams.
On the whole, my
experience with beggars is much like anyone else’s. That is, if they anyone
else has some money somewhere. Sometimes I give, more often I don’t. I have a sort
of tally in my head, and if I haven’t given for a while, I give more. Never a
lot. Mostly I say no, no thanks, sorry, etc. No, no thanks, sorry, etc. constitutes,
for the most part, the conversation between the beggar and the non-beggar
population.
A couple days ago I
tossed out my “non” to a man accosting me on Rue Charlot. However, he aimed a
few words at my back that made me turn around. I don’t remember what they were.
I approached him. He was a short black man of beggar’s age – that is, anywhere
from 30 on up. Living rough has a way of erasing the middle class marks of age
and registering new ones. This man had a hat. He held in his hand a booklet of
some sort. As I came closer, he showed me what it was: song sheets. And he
explained that he was a singer, that he sang for his money, but that he was too
tired to sing today.
I gave him some Euros,
and went on. A singer.
Where the media
culture does feature the beggar, and there in abundance, is in poetry. In song,
Gypsy Davy still steals the wife of the landowner. The hobo rides the rails,
and Beau Jangles will dance for you in worn out shoes.
Why song and poetry
has the beggar in its heart, and not the billionaire, is of some interest. Song
and poetry is as servile as other media – it has long celebrated kings and
warriors. But it has never celebrated the bourgeoisie. Other supposedly non-poetic
objects – a note about plums on a table, a bright particular chameleon – have roused
the poetic consciousness, but the bourgeoisie have been turned over and over by
novelists, who found them dramatic in exact proportion to the scandals that
de-bourgeois-fy them, and been ignored, mostly, by the poets. True, the sitcom is
the glory of the bourgeoisie, and that is no mean thing in the history of art. However,
I don’t quite know how to measure this.
Beggars have attracted
some attention on tv, but mainly in shows
that are framed around the police. The Wire, even, is framed around the police –
although I remember seeing the first shows of the first season of the Wire and
crying, because finally, finally people in a housing project were being seen.
The visible poor were being made visible. Of course, they were visible as part
of a larger plot, but still.
That singing beggar
rang a lot of bells for me. We live near a park named for a singer and songwriter,
Beranger, whose songs were sung by beggars on the street in 19th
century Paris. Baudelaire, who lived around here (it is hard to find a spot in Paris that is
not near where Baudelaire, a most homeless man, lived for a while), wrote a
poem that is still unloved and very analysed, La Mendiante rousse, about a
redhaired beggar clothed in rags that barely covered her – much as, today, beggars
in real desperation sometimes clothe themselves in such plastic sheeting as you
find at construction sites, a costume that parodies the gaudiest bride’s gown.
Blanche fille aux cheveux roux,
Dont la robe par ses trous
Laisse voir la pauvreté
Et la beauté.
The poverty and the beauty. A combination we have lost. Bo Jangles is
deader than a doornail.
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