Thursday, September 19, 2019
The Aesthetic, the Postmodern and the Ugly: The Rustle of Language in William S. Burroughsââ¬â¢ The Soft Machine and The Ticket That Exploded :: Essays Papeers
The Aesthetic, the Postmodern and the Ugly: The Rustle of Language in William S. Burroughsââ¬â¢ The Soft Machine and The Ticket That Exploded Ugliness is everywhere. It is on the sidewalksââ¬âthe black tar phlegm of old flattened bubblegumââ¬âsquashed beneath the scraped soles of suited foot soldiers on salary. It is in the straddled stares of stubborn strangers. It is in the cancer-coated clouds that gloss the sweet-tooth sky of the Los Angeles Basin with bathtub scum sunsets rosier than any Homer finger-painted dawn. Like the treble yell of helpless children, ugliness is piercing, unavoidable, everywhere. Yet, some powerful pieces of literature, with the assistance of paroxysmal words juxtaposed against brutal vistas and bitter emotions, have transformed the ugly into the beautiful. Here are some obvious examples: the monomania of Ahab in Herman Melvilleââ¬â¢s Moby-Dick ; Rhodaââ¬â¢s descent towards suicide in Virginia Woolfââ¬â¢s The Waves ; Walt Whitmanââ¬â¢s telling of the shipwreck of the San Francisco in ââ¬Å"Song of Myselfâ⬠ââ¬âin these works, the lilting power of lang uage, with its ability to moisten raw and tender flesh, exposes the friction between unsightly sores and the soaring majesty of the greatest artââ¬âthe ability to transform the ugly into the beautiful. What I describe in the previous paragraph pertains to the literary realm of the aesthetic. George Levine frames the aesthetic scene as being composed mostly of moments when readers ââ¬Å"have felt overwhelmed, perhaps on the verge of tears, the whole body thrillingly interestedâ⬠(4). Geoffrey Galt Harpham describes it in the following terms: ââ¬Å"[Precisely] as ââ¬Ëtheoretical confusion,ââ¬â¢ as the undecidablitity between object and subject, freedom and the repressive law, critical and uncritical passages, grievous and necessary misreadings, even art and ideologyâ⬠(135). Yet, in certain theoretical writings about postmodernism, there seems to be no confusion at all. Instead, what has been described appears as an-aesthetic: a style, or a poetics, that deadens and numbs a tendency towards the aesthetic in postmodern literature. Jean-Franà §ois Lyotard describes postmodern writing as putting ââ¬Å"forward the unpresentable in presenatation itself; that which denies itself the solace of good formsâ⬠(81). Linda Hutcheon even suggests that postmodern poetics might, instead, be referred to as ââ¬Å"a ââ¬Ëproblematicsââ¬â¢Ã¢â¬ (224). In her book The Poetics of Postmodernism, Hutcheon focuses on an-aesthetic forms in the critical and literary writings on and within postmodernism without any consideration of the aesthetic.
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