.
It all comes back to our old friend the arbitrary constraint. (The
following is a fairly familiar argument, I think, but come along anyhow,
we’ll make a day of it.) One of the basic tenets of the Oulipo—founded
in reaction, if not opposition, to Breton’s Surrealists—is that freedom,
in writing (that is, “letting it flow,” and other such nauseating
commonplaces), leads one to produce derivative offal. That is, when you
free associate, it isn’t you talking, it’s the culture: we’re
all plugged into the same calcified memes, cadences, and clichés; we’ve
all got hearts, brothers and sisters, of bullshit. And yet—and yet!—we
all still have to use the same words to communicate, all have to dip
into the same language(s) to write “creatively,” all have to do our best
to keep English (in this case) a worthwhile medium. The only way to
circumvent the unclean spirit is to put pressure on our means of
expression—and the best way isn’t to stop at naming your
character “John McLane” rather than “Mr. M’Choakumchild” (though this is
no less a constraint, and no less arbitrary, really, than not using the
letter E), but to frustrate one’s compositional impulses at
their root. Now everyone can type “Oulipo” into a search engine and
choose their own example.
What this has to do with smut is that here, again, is a medium where
one is restricted to a fairly finite number of effective tools. Sex as
sex is not all that interesting, outside the context of our complex
reactions to it in life, in art, in passing. Prudishness, then, is an
arbitrary constraint on human interaction and expression. It makes smut
more interesting and peculiar if it comes out of someone battling their
own inability to be forthright about . . . whatever. Even if they
succeed in writing something quite filthy, this filth is a different
filth from the filth mongered by an author who feels they have nothing
to hide. (Which reminds me: my favorite Oulipian constraint? The “Canada
Dry”: Write something that reads as though it was written under a
constraint, but was not.)
- Jeremy M. Davies, find the rest of the interview here
.
October 15, 2012
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1 comment:
Ahhhh, the CULTure speakin', that's an excellent phrase.
Stay on groovin' safari,
Tor
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