Archive for April, 2011

“Post In Haste…”

…And you can repent at leisure, that’s what they say, but it didn’t really feel like leisure, it felt more like a huge pain in the ass finding the threads I’d brilliantly meant to connect up to other threads, and then actually connecting them up even if th connection did not end up so brilliant as I’d imagined.

NEVERTHELESS…!

The thing is back again.

Apologies for any annoyance this blip may have caused!  As far as the post itself goes, though, I may be right in there with you on the annoyance front…

Well, but thank goodness it’s just a blog!

And now is the hour I customarily set aside for eating celery, so I should go do that.  After all, it won’t eat itself!

Universe Part Six: Flashback! To “The Adventures Of Luther Arkwright…!”

Psychometry.

It’s the key word in question, Bloggers; the recurring mantra of he who flips between the universes. “Truth”, is what it means…

…And it’s all right here, not outside your own backyard.

Let’s talk about Big Systems.

Anyone may apply to make links here. You know? Because there’s a hard and fast-breathing thought all about us, that consciousness equals reflexion: the thing that is aware becoming aware of itself as an aware thing…but I’ve been thinking lately (though I can’t recall just who put me onto said thought — some philosopher, surely?), that’s all just so nice and neat and convincing and mathematical, that maybe it works too well? Maybe it’s just flattery?

And maybe consciousness precedes reflexion, in fact; maybe reflexion is not possible without it, at all.

Be objective. Those are the hardest-hitting words in all of the book, even harder than the reminder that things are in the saddle and ride mankind. Hard to beat that transcendent poetry, but it does, and in the solidest way, and Alan Moore must be jealous of the transition: the unimportant reporter-character who’s just there to add some textural infodump from time to time puts his glass against his cheek and tries to chill his face, chill his disgust…all alone, with no one watching, he orders himself to bear down, and he does. And we do feel it. This is The Adventures Of Luther Arkwright, that old parallel-Earth thing you’ve heard so much about: the heavy-into-Moorcock thing, glam flintlocks and cutlasses and telepathy in glorious black-and-white bloodflecks, the small press, the influential, the “this is what they used to call groundbreaking” thing…all fucked up with that youthful rebellion of those days, those touchstones and allusions, that perhaps-good story fighting its way to you through all those off-the-rack characters and that veil of naivete thick with dust. Time-and-space specific, inevitably flavoured with the enthusiasms of its age, truly amateur even if it’s professional, those same shortcuts and that same shorthand, somebody’s idea of how to shock the reader with the real, subvert his expectations and blow his mind, somebody’s idea of a good idea for a hero, somebody’s idea of a good idea for a villain. Somebody’s idea of a good idea for a story. Be objective. So okay, I will try to be.

And I’ll say it’s damn good, and deserves its reputation, and that all of this actually surprises the fuck out of me. It takes you a little while, maybe, and at first it comes in through only certain parts of the art: some stunning-at-second-glance ornamentation in the Sim/Gerhard style, some gee-that-is-actually-quite-neat pacing.  There is detail here, loving detail, but doesn’t it seem wasted on places and objects, you wonder? And you find yourself lingering over these things oddly, so oddly for such a just-okay book full of stuff you’re pretty sure you’ve seen before a couple dozen times…but something tells you it’s not just-okay, and then the next thing you notice is that somehow it manages to take itself really seriously despite all that (because of all that?) inky profligacy, and then somehow so do you, too, start taking it seriously that is: and then sex and stream-of-consciousness come into it like a black-and-white wave, and suddenly you notice some things look more realistic than you thought they did, and then you notice that your eye’s passage across the page to those kooky trip-your-Dad-out words is borne along effortlessly, effortlessly, in a way that no one is doing quite as economically today, even though you still think you’ve seen it before, and before, and before and before… The thing is totally serious, actually; those words, you suddenly realize, are also damn good…and it comes as a bit of a slow-burning shock. Here we have those infinite universes, and the Very Special Hero who is all about the needs of the larger multiversal ecology: the most natural thing in the world is to look at it all as a cosmic playground, an infinite series of possible worlds where really nothing is particularly important except the constants…and everything else is just a variable, next door to Maya, a symptom at best and a distraction at worst. Why should we care about the individual constituents of these shifting probabilistic sands? Where is the value, in their decidedly unspecial particularity? Arkwright himself, as his name tells us, is of necessity more interested in preserving overall diversity than in protecting specific individuals, and this too is something we’ve seen before…the old Chosen One story, the selection of the backwater person from the backwater world, to be a multiversal Bishop or a Knight so they can make a bigger sacrifice on a bigger board…but that’s about all. And it never really…hm, never really works? Never really works? But there is always something so arbitrary about it, and alternity seems so cruelly indifferent to its own sexy devices, so barren of meaning when you get down to it: the plot-hammer of the gods. Iron on iron, lead on lead. People don’t seem to matter much. Tellya: that’s what modern means.

And yet…

It is different here, somehow. Resistant. Be objective. Wow, but why? What difference will that make? Why are we even looking at this? This, the hardest-hitting bit, is also the one (perhaps) that must make us the most embarrassed for the earnestness of those of-their-time affectations, all the way from the Cornelian dandiness of the (yawn) (no offence) Eternal Champion, to the transparent hypocrisy of the repressive, religious villain…so very early Eighties, that, as nothing will ever be again. Hail His Holiness Pope Stupid Hypocrite! Add in the stab for relevance, the effort to really make the reader feel something, in this most unlikely of settings for feeling…and, well, but maybe fantasy-adventure just isn’t the best kind of literature for talking about these things, and never was? Science-fiction rape and superhero cancer don’t work any better than sitcom suicide, because Very Special Episodes are only very special because they break the tone to shock the reader, and so in the end you have to ask yourself what’s so all-fired very special about tone-breaking and shock anyway? All very well to have Captain America battle Richard Nixon or Ronald Reagan or George W. Bush, but it isn’t actually helping anything, is it? To get real with it all, suddenly…

Maybe we have to question that, a little.

But then…why do we have to?

There is always another “why”. Why should this earnestness be threatening, what is wrong with things being of their time? What is wrong with us twenty-first century readers that we might ask them to be anything more than that? Of its time, of its time…well, everything is of its own time, so why should we care, why should we feel the slightest embarrassment about it? We don’t feel embarrassment at Orphee or at the Bowery Boys…I Spy and Equus are not embarrassing to us, and for that matter neither is Dickens, or Ballard…so what’s between that time and this one, that LA’s New Wave concentrations pluck the string of? What aesthetic do we feel it touches, that persuades us for a moment to recoil before we are forced to swear the other way even more severely: “no, it’s damn good“?

Which reversal is a remarkable relief, actually. For myself, I didn’t really know how encumbered I felt by that feeling of familiarity with near-Eighties earnestness…weighted down with the record of previous experience, and the duty of taking a position on it in hindsight. Trends and tropes and origin-points, is it right to keep these things tidily swept up in a dustpan called “narrative” in the first place? Have I really “seen it all before somewhere”? Well, maybe that’s just me. Though maybe not, too; because some genres stretch their moment of birth out longer than others. There is still something recognizably youthful in LA, a young man’s story in a young man’s medium, parts of it desultory and no self-conscious genre-bending in it to make them other than what they appear to be. No special knowingness for the reader, to let him off the hook for this; but just stuff he might have done himself, so foolishly, long ago. The giant computer W.O.T.A.N., now obviously we would name a giant computer like that nowadays, but it doesn’t mean it wasn’t a bit creaky five years after this was published…I mean, blah…and as well, the alternity-fantasy and the Exceptional Man, all hollow and sexy, who is its most important character…and his infinite affairs with his infinite woman, in infinite cool places…now that really is an old one, the Superman of SF; it goes way back past Moorcock’s “Eternal Champion”, and it goes way forward past Dr. Manhattan. I often wonder how far back or how far forward it does go, actually — having no idea of Moorcock’s own influences, what I see in it mostly are echoes of Vance and Van Vogt (as, I better confess, I see Moorcock in Ursula LeGuin too, and how’s that for a stretch?), the really odd pop synthesists, smooth and detached virtuosic play on the one hand, ecstatic near-Caycean Atlantean rumblings on the other…Vance is all dry-mouthed irony and velvet, jigsaw confections like jokes without punchlines, neatly rounded like caramel chocolates in the mouth, so perfectly chewy; meanwhile Van Vogt’s mental myrmidons bend space and time around them into cosmic punctuation marks, and then beat you over the head with them: so it’s all punchline. And not much set-up. Hot spacetime vinegar, that you throw the neural mystery of the horseradish into…!

Red Rover, Red Rover, we call Reflection over…!

But is that all there is to this game?  Just reflection?  Just interpretations of the statistical fallout of interreactivity?  Maya, maya everywhere, and nothing solid;  if an infinity of universes exist and they’re all different, then all universes are the same and might as well not be infinite at all — you can’t even get lost in them.  Because you’re never more than lost to begin with.  Lost in a rainbow sea of probabilities, caught in an uncomfortable twilight between knowing too little and knowing too much, with no way to…

Be objective. Right, all right, I will: sorry, got carried away for a minute there.  So I’ll get back to it, and talk about the status of LA as what we used to call in university “Original Text”: my third encounter with such a text within a year, the first being Pale Fire and the second being Franny & Zooey. I was really, as readers of the blog might know, enormously upset by how the copiers of Nabokov and Salinger failed miserably at copying what counted about them…the weird thing though, is that the copiers of Talbot really did get it: or, at least made a stab at it…

Hmm, because they could never really get it. “Luther Arkwright” does things, even purely graphically, that no other heroic story that followed it seems able to do. God knows I adore Jim Starlin’s “The Price”, but the truth is that’s as good in this direction as ol’ Jim gets.  Dreadstar, when it finally arrives, occasionally has a pure economy of storytelling that no one post-Kirby has even attempted much less matched…but Metamorphosis Odyssey, while an appropriately stunning idea for a guy of Starlin’s talent, kind of just falls apart at the end there.  The Moorcockian meaning, for all Mr. Jim (one of our greatest pure storytelling talents!) means for it, in the end defies synthesizing by any measure less weird than Arkwright’s inverted flight across the sky, needless and backward, and yet there it is:  unimaginable.  Original.  A moment without a proper meaning, heavy as hell yet pointless as a ray of light.  It’s bloody hard to adapt.  Those swords, that blood;  this stained-glass time, that steel-hard space;  what’s the ultimate multiversal meaning of it all?

Well, there is none.

Because the only problem is awareness.  And not only that, but it ain’t even metatextual awareness, it isn’t even an awareness of us the reader reading, but it’s an awareness of something beyond that, something far more fucked-up. Far more naive? Far more expansive, though every story tries to bound itself in its own logic;  and Starlin in maturity was too mature for this, perhaps.  Arkwright takes flight for pages, and obliterates narrative as he goes:  by the end of his flight, he doesn’t mean anything but himself.  The multiverses don’t matter, except as things to fret and stretch against, and eventually break free from.  To wake up from, so their stately mirrored halls may eventually be left behind.  Oh, muddy and bloody and dirty, bones aching, we all eventually crawl into a tub of some sort, looking for a good soak…you can’t blame us for that!  But even the tub is a good place to grapple with awareness, and maybe it’s even better than most.  Where did these aches and pains come from, what’s with all this filthiness that’s being so soothingly washed clean?   There is something hypnotically inward-looking about it, something strange and disconnecting even as (given the aches and pains and mud) we certainly ought to be in no difficulty as far as feeling ourselves in causality’s net goes…and yet it is never hard to feel the moment as something that belongs mostly to itself, and less to the events leading up to it.  On a string it may be, but it’s a pearl nonetheless…

…So is it really reflexion, that brings awareness?  But then where does it come from?  Even if the hand drawing itself is its own cause, still it’s a hand…and the recursion doesn’t never begin, the awareness becoming aware of itself being aware is still predicated on something…isn’t it?  So what is that:  mere “form”?

If origins don’t come at the beginning then they probably can’t come at the end, so maybe they must come in the middle but they must still come, perhaps.  What in the fuck is that inverted flight about, with all the different birds flying.  As the clouds impassively shift their shapes.  Is there really no message there, in that instant of limitless escape?  Luther himself, at the very moment he comes to be aware that the only love he can really have is a metauniversal one…right as he gets down in the muck, Henry V-style, with his extraordinarily-specific Mayans…confronts a limit of awareness that even divine access can’t remove, even as he’s predetermined himself to have an instant of freedom that even divinity can’t imagine, in pursuit of the pull-down and the pack-up of the story. Free on both sides, and over and out, and that’s all:  it’s up to you now.  So is it The Invisibles, as well? Yeah, well…it is, but so is all Original Text everything. This was the first time anybody took Moorcock seriously into the comics world: his motifs, his themes. Over in the SF world Mr. Moorcock was taken off and run with by everyone from Roger Zelazny to Howard Waldrop, but in the comics world he was like a drop of fat fallen into water: he diffused after a time. Diffused, and bound to every passing body, and started causing the interactions to calculate out differently. Harlan Ellison had much the same effect when he collaborated with Roy Thomas, and introduced the second-person-omniscient narration into comics…a great leap forward for the tools of experiment, to be sure!  But Talbot did something else again, when he channelled Moorcock. Something more permanent.  What is the meaning of all those sword-thrusts and deaths, those infinitely playful universes? Is it really that nothing matters…?

That nothing is real?

No, not at all.

Psychometry.  Put your hands on it.  All hands to disaster stations!

Because the thing about Maya is that it is illusion…and sometimes something real actually does happen, and does count.

Whether you’re put here or come here, it just happens, that’s all.

Happens and you can’t explain it.

But it doesn’t mean you’re not actually there to begin with…!

And possibly that’s the message.

TOTEP!

It All Depends On If It’s Cool With You That Your Guy Wins…

…By lying.

Which is not a question whose possible answers admit of a whole lot of shades of grey, actually…either it’s cool with you or it isn’t.

And so maybe this is the essence of the “vote while holding your nose” thing?

I was thinking today about what draws young people to conservative viewpoints…that is, I mean, to Conservative viewpoints.  If we can separate out local social factors like the politics you were raised with, the need to choose a “team” that is drilled into you among your peers, matters of aesthetics and the pressure to form your personality by forming your tastes in distinction to the tastes of others around you…if we can separate those local social factors out, what else is left that can explain the attraction?

I think it’s the promise held out by a certain type of intellectual rigour, a steeling oneself to the skeptic’s role, the rationalist’s role, against even one’s own inherent weakness;  the promise of the crucible, and of the action of right choice.  If one senses somehow that one would like to be better…well, I am not saying that isn’t a very great and rare achievement, to be capable of sensing such a thing, without any training, without any explicitly-delivered vocation, just out of one’s own personal feeling.  And to wish to pursue a more encompassingly rational perspective, there is certainly nothing wrong with that.  Everybody who’s got the sense God gave a goose wants that, for heaven’s sake…!

Of course it’s much easier to play the role of rationalist than it is to be a rationalist…to play the role, after all, only requires the sort of discipline that is its own reward.  Genuine rationality subjects its own methods and conclusions to scrutiny above all, and mistrusts easy reinforcement and the allure of positional superiority;  to enact the role of rationality, on the other hand, only requires an intellectual justification for preferring one’s own biases to those of others.  Not that just anyone can do it, you understand, not that just anyone can find their way to such justifications!  Because it does in fact require intelligence, it does require a disciplined and an agile mind, it requires sterling effort to come up with an objective reason for why one happens to be always right, and never wrong.  And in one’s novitiate days there is indeed much to learn from older and wiser heads;  there are plenty of pitfalls one is tempted by, and the corrections administered are not few, and sometimes they are not gentle.  So to do this may offer many rewards, but it is not easy;  there is a species of humility that is active here.  It’s not all just “I am the best, I should be the best, I have something inside me that is begging to be let out, and it’s something admirable!“, but there is also the idea that one can’t simply grasp at the key, one must be given it;  and so one must be worthy of it.

Think I don’t know what I’m talking about?

Oh, but I do.  Because I was recruited many times, when I was younger, over and over in fact, into the astonishingly arduous role of Young Conservative Guy…and I’m well-acquainted with the idea that the more you load on the back of the camel, the bigger a lion it eventually turns into when it gets out into the desert, and far from anywhere.  That’s why I’m saying that young people who are drawn to the Conservative aren’t simply idiots — well, they’re not idiots!  And they aren’t just purely venal hypocrites, tempted by riches.  Often hypocrisy can be as hard a road as any, and harder than most;  one may labour in the fields of hypocrisy for decades before being plucked out to sit at the right hand of that land’s king…and some never get there.  Don’t be so naive as to think the hypocrites among us never struggle to conquer bitterness and disappointment;  they do.  The universe is the same in every direction, after all.  The disinfectant properties of sunlight come to everyone equally.  And people are not any less people because they happen to be smart, or loyal to an ideal, or willing to work hard against terrible obstacles.

But the question still is — as Jesus, Mohammed, and the Buddha all said — not whether lies can sometimes be preferable to truth, but what you’re willing to do about it when they are.  And it’s a tough game, that.  It is not so acrobatically-demanding, so gymnastically-admirable, Gold Medal Star, as finding a way around truth no matter what it is, that obvious exercise of virtuosity…sometimes the big accomplishment in this game is to be a nobody and a nothing, no different from anybody else, an unspecial person with an unspecial decision in their hands that they can simply make one way or another, and never with any hope of fanfare.

Does it matter if your guy lies, so long as he wins?

Well, it’s a trick question, isn’t it?

Because it’s not whether it matters.  It’s what you’re going to do about that mattering, that counts.

Which is, of course, the part nobody ever sees.  And there are no blue ribbons for.  No red ribbons either, or white.  No ribbons at all, in fact…

…See even those who only play at rationalism, have to be true rationalists at some point.  Even if it’s only by themselves.  A Sports Day nobody comes to;  a sack race nobody can win.  Don’t think for a second that it’s easy to be intellectually agile, or to have already wrung a disciplined nature from the world.  It really isn’t.  It never is.

The thing is whether it’s cool with you if your guy wins, by lying.

And no one is asking you to switch your vote just because it’s not…but is it?

Me, I’m an old guy, and I’ve had the biscuit.  Evolution has spoken (in the form of the opinions of the girls I know), and I’ve got nothing to lose by saying that in 2011 lying is what we need least, in this election.  This is a pivot-point, I’m pretty sure.  I feel it all around me.  The question used to be, how much do you care, if your guy has to lie to win?

But now it’s:  how far are you prepared to take that?

You can take it as far as you want, of course.  I’ll be dead before the daisies come up.  But I’m voting Green, this election.  And it’s only for one reason.

Because as far as I can tell (and believe me I’ve been watching!),  Elizabeth May doesn’t lie.

Think that makes me stupid, to think that?  Or to base a vote on that?

A member of my extended family (he was a Member of Parliament too, but I love him best for the other stuff) said on a birthday of his not too long ago that if you want good government it’s pretty easy.  Just locate people of character, force them to run, and then move heaven and earth to get them elected.

I remember thinking, “wow, that is a crazily old-mannish way of looking at the world, super out-of-date, maybe the most naive second-childhood thing I’ve ever heard.”

And then I remember thinking, “oh no, holy crap, he’s right.”

That was the night I got drunk off a bottle of liberated vodka in the parking lot with Pat Carney and we broke some stuff, too — we broke some rules, too! — but that’s not germane to the discussion today.

That’s germane to the discussion tomorrow.

I am horrified by the way the debate went tonight.  Last election we had a nice table, the leaders had cups of coffee, they sat next to each other, if they were pissed-off they had to bend their head and scratch at their eyebrow as normal people do.  If they were mad at somebody they could reach over and lay a hand on their wrist.  Tables are so much better.  I felt this was something that Canadians could boast about:

“Oh, you have your candidates stand behind podia and emote to the camera? Right, we have them sit around a table shoulder-to-shoulder and talk to each other.”

You can learn a lot that way.  But tonight it was so stultifying, the leaders just don’t have any guts, they can’t operate without the cue-cards.  They’re supposed to debate the issues, not sell themselves.  What a closed system.  THERE WAS SO MUCH LYING.

I have really and truly come to be NOT COOL with my guy winning by lying.  Your mileage may vary, of course.  But I will just about vote for ANYBODY who doesn’t lie.

After all, the universe is the same in every direction.  Either a person tells a lie because they think it will advantage them, or they don’t.

If they do, they’d tell any lie.

So please ask yourself what you’re going to do about that.

Dear Reader, I hope your thoughts remain ever with

 

Your true friend,

 

 

 

 

Plok


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