The Gong Show

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August 2012

2 posts

Infinite Jest

So, quoting David Foster Wallace didn’t cure my bug.  Instead, I ordered Infinite Jest on Amazon last night.  I’m writing this post so I can re-live my mistake on Timehop a year from now, at which time I’ll have just hit page 932 while waiting in the pharmacy line for my Vicodin RX to be filled after being diagnosed with scoliosis from lugging this tome around.

Talk me out of it, or in to it.

Aug 11, 20123 notes
“

But when you talk about Nabokov and Coover, you’re talking about real geniuses, the writers who weathered real shock and invented this stuff in contemporary fiction. But after the pioneers always come the crank turners, the little gray people who take the machines others have built and just turn the crank, and little pellets of metafiction come out the other end. The crank-turners capitalize for a while on sheer fashion, and they get their plaudits and grants and buy their IRAs and retire to the Hamptons well out of range of the eventual blast radius.

There are some interesting parallels between postmodern crank-turners and what’s happened since post-structural theory took off here in the U.S., why there’s such a big backlash against post-structuralism going on now. It’s the crank-turners fault. I think the crank-turners replaced the critic as the real angel of death as far as literary movements are concerned, now. You get some bona fide artists who come along and really divide by zero and weather some serious shit-storms of shock and ridicule in order to promulgate some really important ideas. Once they triumph, though, and their ideas become legitimate and accepted, the crank-turners and wannabes come running to the machine, and out pour the gray pellets and now the whole thing’s become a hollow form, just another institution of fashion.

Take a look at some of the critical-theory Ph.D. dissertations being written now. They’re like de Man and Foucault in the mouth of a dull child. Academia and commercial culture have somehow become these gigantic mechanisms of commodification that drain the weight and color out of even the most radical new advances. It’s a surreal inversion of the death-by-neglect that used to kill off prescient art. Now prescient art suffers death-by acceptance.

We love things to death, now. Then we retire to the Hamptons.

”
—

- David Foster Wallace

(Alex Taussig posted this quote a few weeks back.  It has been rattling around my mind for awhile now, gnawing at my brain.  I’m hoping posting it here will help me move on, or infect others).

Aug 9, 201217 notes
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