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A Reader's Guide
to the Nonenjoyment
of Illiterature

by Robert Kendall

       
From Black Swan Review, No. 3 (1990),
"Special Issue on Illiterature
(with a special emphasis on Neoilliterature
and a special postemphasis on Postneoilliterature)"

copyright (c) 1990 by Robert Kendall


Having become increasingly alarmed at certain vices all too often infecting the modern page, we feel obliged to spring to the defense of the law-abiding piece of literature. More and more unscrupulous writers are getting away with murder (specifically, monotonocide) in their work, verily flaunting a disregard for the life, limb, and front lawn of even the most upwardly mobile conventions. Some of the most lawless have even defrauded Death itself, breaching the multinational headquarters of Posterity Inc. with the aid of such burglar's tools as imagination and--dare I breathe the word?--individuality.

It's well-known that the only legitimate access to the creative writing process is via an appropriate degree from that most diligent guardian of writerly rectitude: the Accredited Writing Program. An assiduous sameness--in the tradition of that most all-encompassing of artistic movements, Xeroxism--and a careful attention to student-teacher relations are the honest man's key to literary achievement.

Crimes of literature have, of course, always proliferated among the lower-circulation strata of publishing society. But their insidious infiltration of even the more exclusive venues of literary life must give us pause.

Since efforts at interdiction too often prove fruitless, our best hope is to curtail the demand for illicit, ill-gotten literature (henceforth referred to as illiterature) through an appeal to the honest citizenry of this great nation. We urge you not to read this trash, however tempting it may be. Remember--anything that makes you feel that great couldn't possibly be good for you.

The following guidelines are offered as an aid for your personal protection:

1. Beware the poet who strays from the rest stop of himself onto the highway of life. Autobiography is poetry's true topic. Anything else requires a willingness to consort with the imagination, an oversized nose for other people's business, an intent to tamper with society, a weakness for thinking, or other equally regrettable tendencies. The poetic diary entry requires nothing but the desire to have written a poem--an admirable quality that can do harm to no one. And no matter what its worth as art, poetic mirror-gazing always stands as testament to the sterling honesty of its author.

2. Don't give humor the time of day. If it catches our attention, it can prove dangerous. A funny story or poem is literature with its pants down. So, it's human after all--just one of the guys, we think with a smile. Then while we are thus disarmed, it can slip inside us by the back door. Once in, it may get serious. Then we'll never be able to get rid of it.

Besides, Art should hold a mirror up to life, and life is never funny. Those who mistakenly believe otherwise are merely inadequately schooled in the crafts of self-pity, bitterness, and pretension.

3. Guard against the cliché, that deadliest of all illiterary devices. I refer not to clichés that have slithered in through the ill-latched door of a lazy imagination. These we can overlook as honest mistakes. I refer to clichés deliberately harbored in the writing of certain illiterists.

They know these archetypes of language are the subconscious building blocks of communication. They twist them, corrupt them, put them to work in unauthorized contexts until they've stirred up the muck of the linguistic unconscious. Why can't meaning be allowed to dream in peace?

4. When they get their hands on the clichés of the culture, the consequences are even more dire. Decorating a work with sinewy Grecian deities or tender-eyed Christs and Magdalens is a fine way to add a pleasing touch of universality and conjure up the days when faiths were faith. But invoking the idols of the silver screen, the oracles of the airwaves, the icons of the glossy ad is another box of pencils altogether. These are the things we really believe in.

Subjecting these straight-shooting stereotypes and buxom platitudes to illiterature tells us more about ourselves than we care to know. These images come straight from the inner heavens and hells--the desires and fears--of that mysterious, collective soul known as The Viewing Public.

Sometimes this species of cliché-mongering will degenerate into out-and-out parody. Cross to the other side of the street if you see one of those coming. Parody can take these subversive principles to an extreme so dangerous it's no laughing matter.

5. A poet who stoops to puns and double entendres--those two-faced pretenders--is merely casting his lines in murky stanzas. He's lost in the woulds--left teetering at the edge of a sheer if. Ambiguity lets a poem reach off into the infinite and the poor reader may never get to the end of its significance.

This approach also sets poetry back a good hundred years. Well-played plays on words are shackles as cruel as any rhyme. Free verse indeed freed verse from the tyranny of the craftsman. Once properly understood, it brought about an artistic revolution of unprecedented magnitude. Here, finally, was art for the New Age American, art requiring no technique. Anyone could don the sacred mantle in exchange for just an anecdote ornamented with line breaks.

The shamelessly clever wordery indulged in by some illiterists sets back the clock by once again inflicting music and order on poetry. A pun is nothing but insidious simultaneous rhyme--one word invoking a consonance with the word it implies.

6. Literature, especially poetry, should not taint itself with vulgar contemporary realities. It should have the decency not to remind us that we're not the dead and buried remnants of a purer age. When we look up from our book, we're confronted by a world whose life blood is the ebb and flow of the airwaves, whose brain is a microprocessor with a one-year warranty, whose breath is asbestos tinged with fluorocarbons, whose voice is just an ad for something else. We can't even drive to the corner store for a TV Guide without being bombarded by the 20th century. We certainly don't want to find it in our poems, too.


It is our hope that you can go out now into the wide world of the word, properly armed against temptation. Whenever you find your soul wanting to dance the wrong steps and your vision starting to turn inside out, stop and ask yourself: Am I under the insidious spell of the illiterists?

 

Contact Robert Kendall at
kendall@wordcircuits.com
           
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