The Review of Contemporary Fiction
Larry McCaffery, "An Interview with David Foster Wallace"
LARRY McCAFFERY:
Your essay following this interview is going to be seen by some people
as being basically an apology for television. What’s your response to
the familiar criticism that television fosters relationships with
illusions or simulations of real people (Reagan being a kind of
quintessential example)? DAVID FOSTER WALLACE: It’s a try at a
comprehensive diagnosis, not an apology. U.S. viewers’ relationship
with TV is essentially puerile and dependent, as are all relationships
based on seduction. This is hardly news. But what’s seldom acknowledged
is how complex and ingenious TV’s seductions are. It’s seldom
acknowledged that viewers’ relationship with TV is, albeit debased,
intricate and profound. It’s easy for older writers just to bitch about
TV’s hegemony over the U.S. art market, to say the world’s gone to hell
in a basket and shrug and have done with it. But I think younger
writers owe themselves a richer account of just why TV’s become such a
dominating force on people’s consciousness, if only because we under
forty have spent our whole conscious lives being "part" of TV’s
audience. LM: Television may be more complex than what most
people realize, but it seems rarely to attempt to "challenge" or
"disturb" its audience, as you’ve written me you wish to. Is it that
sense of challenge and pain that makes your work more "serious" than
most television shows? DFW: I had a teacher I liked who used
to say good fiction’s job was to comfort the disturbed and disturb the
comfortable. I guess a big part of serious fiction’s purpose is to give
the reader, who like all of us is sort of marooned in her own skull, to
give her imaginative access to other selves. Since an ineluctable part
of being a human self is suffering, part of what we humans come to art
for is an experience of suffering, necessarily a vicarious experience,
more like a sort of "generalization" of suffering. Does this make
sense? We all suffer alone in the real world; true empathy’s
impossible. But if a piece of fiction can allow us imaginatively to
identify with a character’s pain, we might then also more easily
conceive of others identifying with our own. This is nourishing,
redemptive; we become less alone inside. It might just be that simple.
But now realize that TV and popular film and most kinds of "low"
art—which just means art whose primary aim is to make money—is
lucrative precisely because it recognizes that audiences prefer 100
percent pleasure to the reality that tends to be 49 percent pleasure
and 51 percent pain. Whereas "serious" art, which is not primarily
about getting money out of you, is more apt to make you uncomfortable,
or to force you to work hard to access its pleasures, the same way that
in real life true pleasure is usually a by-product of hard work and
discomfort. So it’s hard for an art audience, especially a young one
that’s been raised to expect art to be 100 percent pleasurable and to
make that pleasure effortless, to read and appreciate serious fiction.
That’s not good. The problem isn’t that today’s readership is "dumb," I
don’t think. Just that TV and the commercial-art culture’s trained it
to be sort of lazy and childish in its expectations. But it makes
trying to engage today’s readers both imaginatively and intellectually
unprecedentedly hard. LM: Who do you imagine your readership to be? DFW:
I suppose it’s people more or less like me, in their twenties and
thirties, maybe, with enough experience or good education to have
realized that the hard work serious fiction requires of a reader
sometimes has a payoff. People who’ve been raised with U.S. commercial
culture and are engaged with it and informed by it and fascinated with
it but still hungry for something commercial art can’t provide.
Yuppies, I guess, and younger intellectuals, whatever. These are the
people pretty much all the younger writers I admire—Leyner and Vollman
and Daitch, Amy Homes, Jon Franzen, Lorrie Moore, Rick Powers, even
McInerney and Leavitt and those guys—are writing for, I think. But,
again, the last twenty years have seen big changes in how writers
engage their readers, what readers need to expect from any kind of art. LM:
The media seems to me to be one thing that has drastically changed this
relationship. It’s provided people with this television-processed
culture for so long that audiences have forgotten what a relationship
to serious art is all about. DFW: Well, it’s too simple to
just wring your hands and claim TV’s ruined readers. Because the U.S.’s
television culture didn’t come out of a vacuum. What TV is extremely
good at—and realize that this is "all it does"—is discerning what large
numbers of people think they want, and supplying it. And since there’s
always been a strong and distinctive American distaste for frustration
and suffering, TV’s going to avoid these like the plague in favor of
something anesthetic and easy. LM: You really think this distaste is distinctly American? DFW:
It seems distinctly Western-industrial, anyway. In most other cultures,
if you hurt, if you have a symptom that’s causing you to suffer, they
view this as basically healthy and natural, a sign that your nervous
system knows something’s wrong. For these cultures, getting rid of the
pain without addressing the deeper cause would be like shutting off a
fire alarm while the fire’s still going. But if you just look at the
number of ways that we try like hell to alleviate mere symptoms in this
country- from fast-fast-fast-relief antacids to the popularity of
lighthearted musicals during the Depression—you can see an almost
compulsive tendency to regard pain itself as the problem. And so
pleasure becomes a value, a teleological end in itself. It’s probably
more Western than U.S. per se. Look at utilitarianism—that most English
of contributions to ethics- and you see a whole teleology predicated on
the idea that the best human life is one that maximizes the
pleasure-to-pain ratio. God, I know this sounds priggish of me. All I’m
saying is that it’s shortsighted to blame TV. It’s simply another
symptom. TV didn’t invent our aesthetic childishness here any more than
the Manhattan Project invented aggression. Nuclear weapons and TV have
simply intensified the consequences of our tendencies, upped the stakes. LM:
Near the end of "Westward the Course of Empire Takes Its Way," there’s
a line about Mark that "It would take an architect who could hate
enough to feel enough to love enough to perpetuate the kind of special
cruelty only real lovers can inflict." Is that the kind of cruelty you
feel is missing in the work of somebody like Mark Leyner? DFW: I guess I’d need to ask you what kind of cruelty you thought the narrator meant there. LM:
It seems to involve the idea that if writers care enough about their
audience—if they love them enough and love their art enough—they’ve got
to be cruel in their writing practices. "Cruel" the way an army drill
sergeant is when he decides to put a bunch of raw recruits through
hell, knowing that the trauma you’re inflicting on these guys,
emotionally, physically, psychically, is just part of a process that’s
going to strengthen them in the end, prepare them for things they can’t
even imagine yet. DFW: Well, besides the question of where the
fuck do "artists" get off deciding for readers what stuff the readers
need to be prepared for, your idea sounds pretty Aristotelian, doesn’t
it? I mean, what’s the purpose of creating fiction, for you? Is it
essentially mimetic, to capture and order a protean reality? Or is it
really supposed to be therapeutic in an Aristotelian sense? LM:
I agree with what you said in "Westward" about serious art having to
engage a range of experiences; it can be merely "metafictional," for
example it has to deal with the world outside the page and variously
so. How would you contrast your efforts in this regard versus those
involved in most television or most popular fiction? DFW:This
might be one way to start talking about differences between the early
postmodern writers of the fifties and sixties and their contemporary
descendants. When you read that quotation from "Westward" just now, it
sounded to me like a covert digest of my biggest weaknesses as a
writer. One is that I have a grossly sentimental affection for gags,
for stuff that’s nothing but funny, and which I sometimes stick in for
no other reason than funniness. Another’s that I have a problem
sometimes with concision, communicating only what needs to be said in a
brisk efficient way that doesn’t call attention to itself. It’d be
pathetic for me to blame the exterior for my own deficiencies, but it
still seems to me that both of these problems are traceable to this
schizogenic experience I had growing up, being bookish and reading a
lot, on the one hand, watching grotesque amounts of TV, on the other.
Because I liked to read, I probably didn’t watch quite as much TV as my
friends, but I still got my daily megadose, believe me. And I think
it’s impossible to spend that many slack-jawed, spittle-chinned,
formative hours in front of commercial art without internalizing the
idea that one of the main goals of art is simply to "entertain," give
people sheer pleasure. Except to what end, this pleasure-giving?
Because, of course, TV’s "real" agenda is to be "liked," because if you
like what you’re seeing, you’ll stay tuned. TV is completely unabashed
about this; it’s its sole raison. And sometimes when I look at my own
stuff I feel like I absorbed too much of this raison. I’ll catch myself
thinking up gags or trying formal stunt-pilotry and see that none of
this stuff is really in the service of the story itself; it’s serving
the rather darker purpose of communicating to the reader "Hey! Look at
me! Have a look at what a good writer I am! Like me!" Now, to
an extent there’s no way to escape this altogether, because an author
needs to demonstrate some sort of skill or merit so that the reader
will trust her. There’s some weird, delicate, I-trust-you-not-to
fuck-up-on-me relationship between the reader and writer, and both have
to sustain it. But there’s an unignorable line between demonstrating
skill and charm to gain trust for the story vs. simple showing off. It
can become an exercise in trying to get the reader to like and admire
you instead of an exercise in creative art. I think TV promulgates the
idea that good art is just art which makes people like and depend on
the vehicle that brings them the art. This seems like a poisonous
lesson for a would-be artist to grow up with. And one consequence is
that if the artist is excessively dependent on simply being "liked," so
that her true end isn’t in the work but in a certain audience’s good
opinion, she is going to develop a terrific hostility to that audience,
simply because she has given all her power away to them. It’s the
familiar love-hate syndrome of seduction: "I don’t really care what it
is I say, I care only that you like it. But since your good opinion is
the sole arbitrator of my success and worth, you have tremendous power
over me, and I fear you and hate you for it." This dynamic isn’t
exclusive to art. But I often think I can see it in myself and in other
young writers, this desperate desire to please coupled with a kind of
hostility to the reader. LM: In your own case, how does this hostility manifest itself? DFW:
Oh, not always, but sometimes in the form of sentences that are
syntactically not incorrect but still a real bitch to read. Or
bludgeoning the reader with data. Or devoting a lot of energy to
creating expectations and then taking pleasure in disappointing them.
You can see this clearly in something like Ellis’s "American Psycho":
it panders shamelessly to the audience’s sadism for a while, but by the
end it’s clear that the sadism’s real object is the reader herself. LM:
But at least in the case of "American Psycho" I felt there was
something more than just this desire to inflict pain—or that Ellis was
being cruel the way you said serious artists need to be willing to be. DFW:
You’re just displaying the sort of cynicism that lets readers be
manipulated by bad writing. I think it’s a kind of black cynicism about
today’s world that Ellis and certain others depend on for their
readership. Look, if the contemporary condition is hopelessly shitty,
insipid, materialistic, emotionally retarded, sadomasochistic, and
stupid, then I (or any writer) can get away with slapping together
stories with characters who are stupid, vapid, emotionally retarded,
which is easy, because these sorts of characters require no
development. With descriptions that are simply lists of brand-name
consumer products. Where stupid people say insipid stuff to each other.
If what’s always distinguished bad writing—flat characters, a narrative
world that’s cliched and not recognizably human, etc.—is also a
description of today’s world, then bad writing becomes an ingenious
mimesis of a bad world. If readers simply believe the world is stupid
and shallow and mean, then Ellis can write a mean shallow stupid novel
that becomes a mordant deadpan commentary on the badness of everything.
Look man, we’d probably most of us agree that these are dark times, and
stupid ones, but do we need fiction that does nothing but dramatize how
dark and stupid everything is? In dark times, the definition of good
art would seem to be art that locates and applies CPR to those elements
of what’s human and magical that still live and glow despite the times’
darkness. Really good fiction could have as dark a worldview as it
wished, but it’d find a way both to depict this world and to illuminate
the possibilities for being alive and human in it. You can defend
"Psycho" as being a sort of performative digest of late-eighties social
problems, but it’s no more than that. LM: Are you saying that
writers of your generation have an obligation not only to depict our
condition but also to provide the solutions to these things? DFW:
I don’t think I’m talking about conventionally political or social
action-type solutions. That’s not what fiction’s about. Fiction’s about
what it is to be a fucking human being. If you operate, which most of
us do, from the premise that there are things about the contemporary
U.S. that make it distinctively hard to be a real human being, then
maybe half of fiction’s job is to dramatize what it is that makes it
tough. The other half is to dramatize the fact that we still "are"
human beings, now. Or can be. This isn’t that it’s fiction’s duty to
edify or teach, or to make us good little Christians or Republicans;
I’m not trying to line up behind Tolstoy or Gardner. I just think that
fiction that isn’t exploring what it means to be human today isn’t art.
We’ve all got this "literary" fiction that simply monotones that we’re
all becoming less and less human, that presents characters without
souls or love, characters who really are exhaustively describable in
terms of what brands of stuff they wear, and we all buy the books and
go like "Golly, what a mordantly effective commentary on contemporary
materialism!" But we already "know" U.S. culture is materialistic. This
diagnosis can be done in about two lines. It doesn’t engage anybody.
What’s engaging and artistically real is, taking it as axiomatic that
the present is grotesquely materialistic, how is it that we as human
beings still have the capacity for joy, charity, genuine connections,
for stuff that doesn’t have a price? And can these capacities be made
to thrive? And if so, how, and if not why not? LM: Not
everyone in your generation is taking the Ellis route. Both the other
writers in this issue of "RCF" seem to be doing exactly what you’re
talking about. So, for example, even though Vollmann’s "Rainbow
Stories" is a book that is in its own way as sensationalized as
"American Psycho," the effort there is to depict those people not as
flattened, dehumanized stereotypes but as human beings. I’d agree
though, that a lot of contemporary writers today adopt this sort of
flat, neutral transformation of people and events into fiction without
bothering to make the effort of refocusing their imaginations on the
people who still exist underneath these transformations. But Vollmann
seems to be someone fighting that tendency in interesting ways. That
brings us back to the issue of whether this isn’t a dilemma serious
writers have always faced. Other than lowered (or changed) audience
expectations, what’s changed to make the task of the serious writer
today more difficult than it was thirty or sixty or a hundred or a
thousand years ago? You might argue that the task of the serious writer
is easier today because what took place in the sixties had the effect
of finally demolishing the authority that mimesis had assumed. Since
you guys don’t have to fight that battle anymore, you’re liberated to
move on to other areas. DFW: This is a double-edged sword, our
bequest from the early postmodernists and the post-structuralist
critics. One the one hand, there’s sort of an embarrassment of riches
for young writers now. Most of the old cinctures and constraints that
used to exist—censorship of content is a blatant example—have been
driven off the field. Writers today can do more or less whatever we
want. But on the other hand, since everybody can do pretty much
whatever they want, without boundaries to define them or constraints to
struggle against, you get this continual avant-garde rush forward
without anyone bothering to speculate on the destination, the "goal" of
the forward rush. The modernists and early postmodernists—all the way
from Mallarmé to Coover, I guess—broke most of the rules for us, but we
tend to forget what they were forced to remember: the rule-breaking has
got to be for the "sake" of something. When rule-breaking, the mere
"form" of renegade avant-gardism, becomes an end in itself, you end up
with bad language poetry and "American Psycho" ’s nipple-shocks and
Alice Cooper eating shit on stage. Shock stops being a by-product of
progress and becomes an end in itself. And it’s bullshit. Here’s an
analogy. The invention of calculus was shocking because for a long time
it had simply been presumed that you couldn’t divide by zero. The
integrity of math itself seemed to depend on the presumption. Then some
genius titans came along and said, "Yeah, maybe you can’t divide by
zero, but what would happen if you "could"? We’re going to come as
close to doing it as we can, to see what happens." LM: So you get the infinitesimal calculus—"the philosophy of as if." DFW:
And this purely theoretical construct wound up yielding incredibly
practical results. Suddenly you could plot the area under curves and do
rate-change calculations. Just about every material convenience we now
enjoy is a consequence of this "as if." But what if Leibniz and Newton
had wanted to divide by zero only to show jaded audiences how cool and
rebellious they were? It’d never have happened, because that kind of
motivation doesn’t yield results. It’s hollow. Dividing-as-if-by-zero
was titanic and ingenuous because it was in the service of something.
The math world’s shock was a price they had to pay, not a payoff in
itself. LM: Of course, you also have examples like Lobochevsky
and Riemann, who are breaking the rules with no practical application
at the time—but then later on somebody like Einstein comes along and
decides that this worthless mathematical mind game that Riemann
developed actually described the universe more effectively than the
Euclidean game. Not that those guys were braking the rules just to
break the rules, but part of that was just that: what happens if
everybody has to move counter-clockwise in Monopoly. And at first it
just seemed like this game, without applications. DFW: Well,
the analogy breaks down because math and hard science are pyramidical.
They’re like building a cathedral: each generation works off the last
one, both in its advance and its errors. Ideally, each piece of art’s
its own unique object, and its evaluation’s always present-tense. You
could justify the worst piece of experimental horseshit by saying "The
fools may hate my stuff , but generations later I will be appreciated
for my ground breaking rebellion." All the beret-wearing "artistes" I
went to school with who believed that line are now writing ad copy
someplace. LM: The European avant-garde believed in the
transforming ability of innovative art to directly affect people’s
consciousness and break them out of their cocoon of habituation, etc.
You’d put a urinal in a Paris museum, call it a "fountain," and wait
for the riots next day. That’s an area I’d say has changed things for
writers (or any artist)—you can have very aesthetically radical works
today using the same features of formal innovation that you’d find in
the Russian Futurists or Duchamp and so forth, only now these things
are on MTV or TV ads. Formal innovations as trendy image. So it loses
its ability to shock or transform. DFW: These are
exploitations. They’re not trying to break us free of anything. They’re
trying to lock us tighter into certain conventions, in this case habits
of consumption. So the "form" of artistic rebellion now becomes . . . LM:
. . . yeah, another commodity. I agree with Fredric Jameson and others
who argue that modernism and postmodernism can be seen as expressing
the cultural logic of late capitalism. Lots of features of contemporary
art are directly influenced by this massive acceleration of capitalist
expansion into all these new realms that were previously just not
accessible. You sell people a memory, reify their nostalgia and use
this as a hook to sell deodorant. Hasn’t this recent huge expansion of
the technologies of reproduction, the integration of commodity
reproduction and aesthetic reproduction, and the rise of media culture
lessened the impact that aesthetic innovation can have on people’s
sensibilities? What’s your response to this as an artist? DFW:
You’ve got a gift for lit-speak, LM. Who wouldn’t love this jargon we
dress common sense in: "formal innovation is no longer transformative,
having been co-opted by the forces of stabilization and post-industrial
inertia," blah, blah. But this co-optation might actually be a good
thing if it helped keep younger writers from being able to treat mere
formal ingenuity as an end in itself. MTV-type co-optation could end up
a great prophylactic against cleveritis—you know, the dreaded
grad-school syndrome of like "Watch me use seventeen different points
of view in this scene of a guy eating a Saltine." The real point of
that shit is "Like me because I’m clever"—which of course is itself
derived from commercial art’s axiom about audience-affection
determining art’s value. What’s precious about somebody like
Bill Vollmann is that, even though there’s a great deal of formal
innovation in his fictions, it rarely seems to exist for just its own
sake. It’s almost always deployed to make some point (Vollmann’s the
most editorial young novelist going right now, and he’s great at using
formal ingenuity to make the editorializing a component of his
narrative instead of an interruption) or to create an effect that’s
internal to the text. His narrator’s always weirdly effaced, the
writing unself-conscious, despite all the "By-the-way-Dear-reader"
intrusions. In a way it’s sad that Vollmann’s integrity is so
remarkable. Its remarkability means it’s rare. I guess I don’t know
what to think about these explosions in the sixties you’re so crazy
about. It’s almost like postmodernism is fiction’s fall from biblical
grace. Fiction became conscious of itself in a way it never had been.
Here’s a really pretentious bit of pop analysis for you: I think you
can see Cameron’s "Terminator" movies as a metaphor for all literary
art after Roland Barthes, viz., the movies’ premise that the Cyberdyne
NORAD computer becomes conscious of itself as "conscious," as having
interests and an agenda; the Cyberdyne becomes literally
self-referential, and it’s no accident that the result of this is
nuclear war, Armageddon. LM: Isn’t Armageddon the course you set sail for in "Westward"? DFW:
Metafiction’s real end has always been Armageddon. Art’s reflection on
itself is terminal, is one big reason why the art world saw Duchamp as
an Antichrist. But I still believe the move to involution had value: it
helped writers break free of some long-standing flat-earth-type taboos.
It was standing in line to happen. And for a while, stuff like "Pale
Fire" and "The Universal Baseball Association" was valuable as a
meta-aesthetic breakthrough the same way Duchamp’s urinal had been
valuable. LM: I’ve always felt that the best of the
metafictionalists—Coover, for example, Nabokov, Borges, even Barth—were
criticized too much for being only interested in narcissistic,
self-reflexive games, whereas these devices had very real political and
historical applications. DFW: 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. LM: This is also tied to that expansion of
capitalism blah blah blah into realms previously thought to be
uncommodifiable. Hyperconsumption. I mean, whoever thought rebellion
could be tamed so easily? You just record it, turn the crank, and out
comes another pellet of "dangerous" art. DFW: And this
accelerates the metastasis from genuine envelope puncturing to just
another fifteen-minute form that gets cranked out and cranked out and
cranked out. Which creates a bitch of a problem for any artist who
views her task as continual envelope-puncturing, because then she falls
into this insatiable hunger for the appearance of novelty: "What can I
do that hasn’t been done yet?" Once the first-person pronoun creeps
into your agenda you’re dead, art-wise. That’s why fiction-writing’s
lonely in a way most people misunderstand. It’s yourself you have to be
estranged from, really, to work. LM: A phrase in one of your
recent letters really struck me: "The magic of fiction is that it
addresses and antagonizes the loneliness that dominates people." It’s
that suggestion of antagonizing the reader that seems to link your
goals up with the avant-garde program—whose goals were never completely
hermetic. And "Westward the Course of Empire Takes Its Way" seems to be
your own meta-fictional attempt to deal with these large areas in ways
that are not merely metafiction. DFW: "Aggravate" might be
better than "antagonize," in the sense of aggravation as
intensification. But the truth is it’s hard for me to know what I
really think about any of the stuff I’ve written. It’s always tempting
to sit back and make finger-steeples and invent impressive sounding
theoretical justifications for what one does, but in my case most of
it’d be horseshit. As time passes I get less and less nuts about
anything I’ve published, and it gets harder to know for sure when its
antagonistic elements are in there because they serve a useful purpose
and when their just covert manifestations of this
"look-at-me-please-love-me-I-hate you" syndrome I still sometimes catch
myself falling into. Anyway, but what I think I meant by "antagonize"
or "aggravate" has to do with the stuff in the TV essay about the
younger writer trying to struggle against the cultural hegemony of TV.
One thing TV does is help us deny that we’re lonely. With televised
images, we can have the facsimile of a relationship without the work of
a real relationship. It’s an anesthesia of "form." The interesting
thing is why we’re so desperate for this anesthetic against loneliness.
You don’t have to think very hard to realize that our dread of both
relationships and loneliness, both of which are like sub-dreads of our
dread of being trapped inside a self (a psychic self, not just a
physical self), has to do with angst about death, the recognition that
I’m going to die, and die very much alone, and the rest of the world is
going to go merrily on without me. I’m not sure I could give you a
steeple-fingered theoretical justification, but I strongly suspect a
big part of real art fiction’s job is to aggravate this sense of
entrapment and loneliness and death in people, to move people to
countenance it, since any possible human redemption requires us first
to face what’s dreadful, what we want to deny. LM: It’s this inside-outside motif you developed throughout "The Broom of the System." DFW:
I guess maybe, but it’s developed in an awful clunky way. The
popularity of "Broom" mystifies me. I can’t say it’s not nice to have
people like it, but there’s a lot of stuff in that novel I’d like to
reel back in and do better. I was like twenty-two when I wrote the
first draft of that thing. And I mean a "young" twenty-two. I still
thought in terms of distinct problems and univocal solutions. But if
you’re going to try not just to depict the way a culture’s bound and
defined by meditated gratification and image, but somehow to redeem it,
or at least fight a rearguard against it, then what you’re going to be
doing is paradoxical. You’re at once allowing the reader to sort of
escape self by achieving some sort of identification with another human
psyche—the writer’s, or some character’s, etc.—and you’re "also" trying
to antagonize the reader’s intuition that she is a self, that she is
alone and going to die alone. You’re trying somehow both to deny and
affirm that the writer is over here with his agenda while the reader’s
over there with her agenda, distinct. This paradox is what makes good
fiction sort of magical, I think. The paradox can’t be resolved, but it
can somehow be mediated—"re-mediated," since this is probably where
post-structuralism rears its head for me—by the fact that language and
linguistic intercourse is, in and of itself, redeeming, remedy-ing. This
makes serious fiction a rough and bumpy affair for everyone involved.
Commercial entertainment, on the other hand, smooths everything over.
Even the "Terminator" movies (which I revere), or something really
nasty and sicko like the film version of "A Clockwork Orange," is
basically an anesthetic (and think for a second about the etymology of
"anesthetic"; break up the word and think about it). Sure "A Clockwork
Orange" is a self-consciously sick, nasty film about the sickness and
nastiness of the post-industrial condition, but if you look at it
structurally, slo-mo and fast-mo and arty cinematography aside, it does
what all commercial entertainment does: it proceeds more or less
chronologically, and if its transitions are less cause-and-effect-based
than most movies’, it still kind of eases you from scene to scene in a
way that drops you into certain kinds of easy cerebral rhythms. It
admits passive spectation. Encourages it. TV-type art’s biggest hook is
that it’s figured out ways to "reward" passive spectation. A certain
amount of the form-conscious stuff I write is trying—with whatever
success—to do the opposite. It’s supposed to be uneasy. For instance,
using a lot of flash-cuts between scenes so that some of the narrative
arrangement has got to be done by the reader, or interrupting flow with
digressions and interpolations that the reader has to do the work of
connecting to each other and to the narrative. It’s nothing terribly
sophisticated, and there has to be an accessible payoff for the reader
if I don’t want the reader to throw the book at the wall. But if it
works right, the reader has to fight "through" the meditated voice
presenting the material to you. The complete suppression of a narrative
consciousness, with its own agenda, is why TV is such a powerful
selling tool. This is McLuhan, right? "The medium is the message" and
all that? But notice that TV’s meditated message is "never" that the
medium’s the message. LM: How is this insistence on meditation
different from the kind of meta strategies you yourself have attacked
as preventing authors from being anything other than narcissistic or
overly abstract or intellectual? DFW: I guess I’d judge what I
do by the same criterion I apply to the self conscious elements you
find in Vollmann’s fiction: do they serve a purpose beyond themselves?
Whether I can provide a payoff and communicate a function rather than
just seem jumbled and prolix is the issue that’ll decide whether the
thing I’m working on now succeeds or not. But I think right now it’s
important for art-fiction to antagonize the reader’s sense that what
she’s experiencing as she reads is meditated through a human
consciousness, now with an agenda not necessarily coincident with her
own. For some reason I probably couldn’t even explain, I’ve been
convinced of this for years, that one distinctive thing about truly
"low" or commercial art is this apparent suppression of a mediating
consciousness and agenda. The example I think of first is the novella
"Little Expressionless Animals" in "Girl With Curious Hair." Readers I
know sometimes remark on all the flash-cuts and the distortion of
linearity in it and usually want to see it as mimicking TV’s own pace
and phosphenic flutter. But what it’s really trying to do is just the
"opposite" of TV—it’s trying to prohibit the reader from forgetting
that she’s receiving heavily mediated data, that this process is a
relationship between the writer’s consciousness and her own, and that
in order for it to be anything like a full human relationship, she’s
going to have to put in her share of the linguistic work. This
might be my best response to your claim that my stuff’s not
"realistic." I’m not much interested in trying for classical, big-R
Realism, not because the big R’s form has now been absorbed and
suborned by commercial entertainment. The classical Realist form is
soothing, familiar and anesthetic; it drops right into spectation. It
doesn’t set up the sort of expectations serious 1990s fiction ought to
be setting up in readers. LM: "The Broom of the System"
already displays some of the formal tendencies found in the stories in
"Girl With Curious Hair" and in your new work—that play with temporal
structure and flash-cuts, for instance, for heightened rhetorical
effects of various sorts, for defamiliarizing things. Would you say
your approach to form/content issues has undergone any radical changes
since you were a "young twenty-two"? DFW: Assuming I
understand what you mean by "form/content," the only way I can answer
you is to talk about my own background. Oh boy, I get to make myself
sound all fascinating and artistic and you’ll have no way to check up.
Return with us now to Deare Olde Amherst. For most of my college career
I was a hard-core syntax wienie, a philosophy major with a
specialization in math and logic. I was, to put it modestly, quite good
at the stuff, mostly because I spent all my free time doing it.
Wienieish or not, I was actually chasing a special sort of buzz, a
special moment that comes sometimes. One teacher called these moments
"mathematical experiences." What I didn’t know then was that a
mathematical experience was aesthetic in nature, an epiphany in Joyce’s
original sense. These moments appeared in proof-completions, or maybe
algorithms. Or like a gorgeously simple solution to a problem you
suddenly see after half a notebook with gnarly attempted solutions. It
was really an experience of what I think Yeats called "the click of a
well-made box." Something like that. The word I always think of it as
is "click." Anyway, I was just awfully good at technical
philosophy, and it was the first thing I’d ever really been good at,
and so everybody, including me, anticipated I’d make it a career. But
it sort of emptied out for me somewhere around age twenty. I just got
tired of it, and panicked because I was suddenly not getting any joy
from the one thing I was clearly supposed to do because I was good at
it and people liked me for being good at it. Not a fun time. I think I
had kind of a mid-life crisis at twenty, which probably doesn’t augur
real well for my longevity. So what I did, I went back home
for a term, planning to play solitaire and stare out the window,
whatever you do in a crisis. And all of a sudden I found myself writing
fiction. My only real experience with fun writing had been on a campus
magazine with Mark Costello, the guy I later wrote "Signifying Rappers"
with. But I had had experience with chasing the click, from all the
time spent with proofs. At some point in my reading and writing that
fall I discovered the click in literature, too. It was real lucky that
just when I stopped being able to get the click from math logic I
started to be able to get it from fiction. The first fictional clicks I
encountered were in Donald Barthelme’s "The Balloon" and in parts of
the first story I ever wrote, which has been in my trunk since I
finished it. I don’t know whether I have that much natural talent going
for me fiction wise, but I know I can hear the click, when there is a
click. In Don DeLillo’s stuff, for example, almost line by line I can
hear the click. It’s maybe the only way to describe writers I love. I
hear the click in most Nabokov. In Donne, Hopkins, Larkin. In Puig and
Cortázar. Puig clicks like a fucking Geiger counter. And none of these
people write prose as pretty as Updike, and yet I don’t hear the click
in Updike. But so here I am at like twenty-one and I don’t
know what to do. Do I go into math logic, which I’m good at and pretty
much guaranteed an approved career in? Or do I try to keep on with this
writing thing, this "artiste" thing? The idea of being a "writer"
repelled me, mostly because of all the foppish aesthetes I knew at
school who went around in berets stroking their chins calling
themselves writers. I have a terror of seeming like those guys, still.
Even today, when people I don’t know ask me what I do for a living, I
usually tell them I’m "in English" or I "work free-lance." I don’t seem
to be able to call myself a writer. And terms like "postmodernist" or
"surrealist" send me straight to the bathroom, I’ve got to tell you. LM:
I spend time in the toilet stalls myself. But I noticed you I didn’t
take off down the hall when I said earlier that your work didn’t seem
"realistic." Do you agree with that? DFW: Well, it depends
whether you’re talking little-r realistic or big-R. If you mean is my
stuff in the Howells/Wharton/Updike school of U.S. Realism, clearly
not. But to me the whole binary of realistic vs. unrealistic fiction is
a canonical distinction set up by people with a vested interest in the
big-R tradition. A way to marginalize stuff that isn’t soothing and
conservative. Even the goofiest avant-garde agenda, if it’s got
integrity, is never, "Let’s eschew all realism," but more, "Let’s try
to countenance and render real aspects of real experiences that have
previously been excluded from art." The result often seems
"unrealistic" to the big-R devotees because it’s not a recognizable
part of the "ordinary experience" they’re used to countenancing. I
guess my point is that "realistic" doesn’t have a univocal definition.
By the way, what did you mean a minute ago when you were talking about
a writer "defamiliarizing" something? LM: Placing something
familiar in an unfamiliar context—say, setting it in the past or within
some other structure that will re-expose it, allow readers to see the
real essence of the thing that’s usually taken for granted because it’s
buried underneath all the usual sludge that accompanies it. DFW:
I guess that’s supposed to be deconstruction’s original program, right?
People have been under some sort of metaphysical anesthesia, so you
dismantle the metaphysics’ axioms and prejudices, show it in cross
section and reveal the advantages of its abandonment. It’s literally
aggravating: you awaken them to the fact that they’ve been
unconsciously imbibing some narcotic pharmakon since they were old
enough to say Momma. There’s many different ways to think about what
I’m doing, but if I follow what you mean by "defamiliarization," I
guess it’s part of what getting the click right is for me. It might
also be a part of why I end up doing anywhere from five to eight total
rewrites to finish something, which is why I’m never going to be a
Vollmann or an Oates. LM: You’ve mentioned the recent change
about what writers can assume about their readers in terms of
expectations and so on. Are there other ways the postmodern world has
influenced or changed the role of serious writing today? DFW:
If you mean a post-industrial, mediated world, it’s inverted one of
fiction’s big historical functions, that of providing data on distant
cultures and persons. The first real generalization of human experience
that novels tried to accomplish. If you lived in Bumfuck, Iowa, a
hundred years ago and had no idea what life was like in India, good old
Kipling goes over and presents it to you. And of course the
post-structural critics now have a field day on all the colonialist and
phallocratic prejudices inherent in the idea that writers were
"presenting" alien creatures instead of "re presenting" them—jabbering
natives and randy concubines and white man’s burden, etc. Well, but
fiction’s presenting function for today’s reader has been reversed:
since the whole global village is now presented as familiar,
electronically immediate—satellites, microwaves, intrepid PBS
anthropologists, Paul Simon’s Zulu back-ups—it’s almost like we need
fiction writers to restore strange things’ ineluctable "strangeness,"
to defamiliarize stuff, I guess you’d say. LM: David Lynch’s take on suburbia. Or Mark Leyner’s take on his own daily life— DFW:
And Leyner’s real good at it. For our generation, the entire world
seems to present itself as "familiar," but since that’s of course an
illusion in terms of anything really important about people, maybe any
"realistic" fiction’s job is opposite what it used to be—no longer
making the strange familiar but making the familiar strange again. It
seems important to find ways of reminding ourselves that most
"familiarity" is meditated and delusive. LM: "Postmodernism"
usually implies "an integration of pop and ‘serious’ culture." But a
lot of the pop culture in the works of the younger writers I most
admire these days—you, Leyner, Gibson, Vollmann, Eurudice, Daitch, et
al.—seems to be introduced less to integrate high and low culture, or
to valorize pop culture, than to place this stuff in a new context so
we can be "liberated" from it. Wasn’t that, for example, one of the
things you were doing with "Jeopardy" in "Little Expressionless
Animals"? DFW: One new context is to take something almost
narcotizingly banal- it’s hard to think of anything more banal than a
U.S. game show; in fact the banality’s one of TV’s great hooks, as the
TV essay discusses—and try to reconfigure it in a way that reveals what
a tense, strange, convoluted set of human interactions the final banal
product is. The scrambled, flash-cut form I ended up using for the
novella was probably unsubtle and clumsy, but the form clicked for me
in a way it just hadn’t when I’d done it straight. LM: A lot
of your works (including "Broom") have to do with this breakdown of the
boundaries between the real and "games," or the characters playing the
game begin to confuse the game structure with reality’s structure.
Again, I suppose you can see this in "Little Expressionless Animals,"
where the real world outside "Jeopardy" is interacting with what’s
going on inside the game show—the boundaries between inner and outer
are blurred. DFW: And, too, in the novella what’s going on on
the show has repercussions for everybody’s lives outside it. The
valence is always distributive. It’s interesting that most serious art,
even avant-garde stuff that’s in collusion with literary theory, still
refuses to acknowledge this, while serious science butters its bread
with the fact that the separation of subject/observer and
object/experiment is impossible. Observing a quantum phenomenon’s been
proven to alter the phenomenon. Fiction likes to ignore this fact’s
implications. We still think in terms of a story "changing" the
reader’s emotions, cerebrations, maybe even her life. We’re not keen on
the idea of the story sharing its valence with the reader. But the
reader’s own life "outside" the story changes the story. You could
argue that it affects only "her reaction to the story" or "her take on
the story." But these things "are" the story. This is the way Barthian
and Derridean post-structuralism’s helped me the most as a fiction
writer: once I’m done with the thing, I’m basically dead, and probably
the text’s dead; it becomes simply language, and language lives not
just in but "through" the reader. The reader becomes God, for all
textual purposes. I see your eyes glazing over, so I’ll hush. LM:
Let’s go back just for a moment to your sense of the limits of
metafiction: in both your current "RCF" essay and in the novella
"Westward" in "Girl With Curious Hair," you imply that metafiction is a
game that only reveals itself, or that can’t share its valence with
anything outside itself—like the daily world. DFW: Well, but
metafiction is more valuable than that. It helps reveal fiction as a
meditated experience. Plus it reminds us that there’s always a
recursive component to utterance. This was important, because
language’s self-consciousness had always been there, but neither
writers nor critics nor readers wanted to be reminded of it. But we
ended up seeing why recursion’s dangerous, and maybe why everybody
wanted to keep linguistic self-consciousness out of the show. It gets
empty and solipsistic real fast. It spirals in on itself. By the
mid-seventies, I think, everything useful about the mode had been
exhausted, and the crank-turners had descended. By the eighties it’d
become a god awful trap. In "Westward" I got trapped one time just
trying to expose the illusions of metafiction the same way metafiction
had tried to expose the illusions of the pseudo unmediated realist
fiction that came before it. It was a horror show. The stuff’s a
permanent migraine. LM:Why is meta-metafiction a trap? Isn’t that what you were doing in "Westward"? DFW:
That’s a Rog. And maybe Westward" ’s only real value’ll be showing the
kind of pretentious loops you fall into now if you fuck around with
recursion. My idea in "Westward" was to do with metafiction what
Moore’s poetry or like DeLillo’s "Libra" had done with other mediated
myths. I wanted to get the Armageddon-explosion, the goal metafiction’s
always been about, I wanted to get it over with, and then out of the
rubble reaffirm the idea of art being a living transaction between
humans, whether the transaction was erotic or altruistic or sadistic.
God, even talking about it makes me want to puke. The "pretension."
Twenty-five year-olds should be locked away and denied ink and paper.
Everything I wanted to do came out in the story, but it came out just
as what it was: crude and naive and pretentious. LM: Of
course, even "The Broom of the System" can be seen as a metafiction, as
a book about language and about the relationship between words and
reality. DFW: Think of "The Broom of the System" as the
sensitive tale of a sensitive young WASP who’s just had this mid-life
crisis that’s moved him from coldly cerebral analytic math to a coldly
cerebral take on fiction and Austin-Wittgenstein-Derridean literary
theory, which also shifted his existential dread from a fear that he
was just a 98.6 calculating machine to a fear that he was nothing but a
linguistic construct. This WASP’s written a lot of straight humor, and
loves gags, so he decides to write a coded autobio that’s also a funny
little post-structural gag: so you get Lenore, a character in a story
who’s terribly afraid that she’s really nothing more than a character
in a story. And, sufficiently hidden under the sex-change and the gags
and theoretical allusions, I got to write my sensitive little
self-obsessed bildungsroman. The biggest cackle I got when the book
came out was the way all the reviews, whether they stomped up and down
on the overall book or not, all praised the fact that at least here was
a first novel that wasn’t yet another sensitive little bildungsroman. LM:
Wittgenstein’s work, especially the "Tractatus," permeates "The Broom
of the System" in all sorts of ways, both as content and in terms of
the metaphors you employ. But in later stages of his career,
Wittgenstein concluded that language was unable to refer in the direct,
referential way he’d argued it could in the "Tractatus." Doesn’t that
mean language is a closed loop—there’s no permeable membrane to allow
the inside from getting through to the outside? And if that’s the case,
then isn’t a book "only" a game? Or does the fact that it’s a language
game make it somehow different? DFW: There’s a kind of tragic
fall Wittgenstein’s obsessed with all the way from the "Tractatus
Logico-Philosophicus" in 1922 to the "Philosophical Investigations" in
his last years. I mean a real Book-of-Genesis type tragic fall. The
loss of the whole external world. The "Tractatus" ’s picture theory of
meaning presumes that the only possible relation between language and
the world is denotative, referential. In order for language both to be
meaningful and to have some connection to reality, words like "tree"
and "house" have to be like little pictures, representations of little
trees and houses. Mimesis. But nothing more. Which means we can know
and speak of nothing more than little mimetic pictures. Which divides
us, metaphysically and forever, from the external world. If you buy
such a metaphysical schism, you’re left with only two options. One is
that the individual person with her language is trapped in here, with
the world out there, and never the twain shall meet. Which, even if you
think language’s pictures really are mimetic, is an awful lonely
proposition. And there’s no iron guarantee the pictures truly "are"
mimetic, which means you’re looking at solipsism. One of the things
that makes Wittgenstein a real artist to me is that he realized that no
conclusion could be more horrible than solipsism. And so he trashed
everything he’d been lauded for in the "Tractatus" and wrote the"
Investigations," which is the single most comprehensive and beautiful
argument against solipsism that’s ever been made. Wittgenstein argues
that for language even to be possible, it must always be a function of
relationships between persons (that’s why he spends so much time
arguing against the possibility of a "private language"). So he makes
language dependent on human community, but unfortunately we’re still
stuck with the idea that there is this world of referents out there
that we can never really join or know because we’re stuck in here, in
language, even if we’re at least all in here together. Oh yeah, the
other original option. The other option is to expand the linguistic
subject. Expand the self. LM: Like Norman Bombardini in "Broom of the System." DFW:
Yeah, Norman’s gag is that he literalizes the option. He’s going to
forget the diet and keep eating until he grows to "infinite size" and
eliminates loneliness that way. This was Wittgenstein’s double bind:
you can either treat language as an infinitely small dense dot, or you
let it become the world—the exterior and everything in it. The former
banishes you from the Garden. The latter seems more promising. If the
world is itself a linguistic construct, there’s nothing "outside"
language for language to have to picture or refer to. This lets you
avoid solipsism, but it leads right to the postmodern, post-structural
dilemma of having to deny yourself an existence independent of
language. Heidegger’s the guy most people think got us into this bind,
but when I was working on "Broom of the System" I saw Wittgenstein as
the real architect of the postmodern trap. He died right on the edge of
explicitly treating reality as linguistic instead of ontological. This
eliminated solipsism, but not the horror. Because we’re still stuck.
The "Investigation" ’s line is that the fundamental problem of language
is, quote, "I don’t know my way about." If I were separate from
language, if I could somehow detach from it and climb up and look down
on it, get the lay of the land so to speak, I could study it
"objectively," take it apart, deconstruct it, know its operations and
boundaries and deficiencies. But that’s not how things are. I’m "in"
it. We’re "in" language. Wittgenstein’s not Heidegger, it’s not that
language "is" us, but we’re still "in" it, inescapably, the same way
we’re in like Kant’s space-time. Wittgenstein’s conclusions seem
completely sound to me, always have. And if there’s one thing that
consistently bugs me writing-wise, it’s that I don’t feel I really "do"
know my way around inside language—I never seem to get the kind of
clarity and concision I want. LM: Ray Carver comes immediately
to mind in terms of compression and clarity, and he’s obviously someone
who wound up having a huge influence on your generation. DFW:
Minimalism’s just the other side of metafictional recursion. The basic
problem’s still the one of the mediating narrative consciousness. Both
minimalism and metafiction try to resolve the problem in radical ways.
Opposed, but both so extreme they end up empty. Recursive metafiction
worships the narrative consciousness, makes "it" the subject of the
text. Minimalism’s even worse, emptier, because it’s a fraud: it
eschews not only self-reference but any narrative personality at all,
tries to pretend there "is" no narrative consciousness in its text.
This is so fucking American, man: either make something your God and
cosmos and then worship it, or else kill it. LM: But did
Carver really do that? I’d say his narrative voice is nearly always
insistently "there," like Hemingway’s was. You’re never allowed to
forget. DFW: I was talking about minimalists, not Carver.
Carver was an artist, not a minimalist. Even though he’s supposedly the
inventor of modern U.S. minimalism. "Schools" of fiction are for
crank-turners. The founder of a movement is never part of the movement.
Carver uses all the techniques and anti-styles that critics call
"minimalist," but his case is like Joyce, or Nabokov, or early Barth
and Coover—he’s using formal innovation in the service of an original
vision. Carver invented—or resurrected, if you want to cite
Hemingway—the techniques of minimalism in the service of rendering a
world he saw that nobody’d seen before. It’s a grim world, exhausted
and empty and full of mute, beaten people, but the minimalist
techniques Carver employed were perfect for it; they created it. And
minimalism for Carver wasn’t some rigid aesthetic program he adhered to
for its own sake. Carver’s commitment was to his stories, each of them.
And when minimalism didn’t serve them, he blew it off. If he realized a
story would be best served by expansion, not ablation, he’d expand,
like he did to "The Bath," which he later turned into a vastly superior
story. He just chased the click. But at some point "minimalist" style
caught on. A movement was born, proclaimed, promulgated by the critics.
Now here come the crank-turners. What’s especially dangerous about
Carver’s techniques is that they seem so easy to imitate. It doesn’t
seem like each word and line and draft has been bled over. That’s a
part of his genius. It looks like you can write a minimalist piece
without much bleeding. And you can. But not a good one. LM:
For various reasons, the sixties postmodernists were heavily influenced
by other art forms—television, for instance, or the cinema or
painting—but in particular their notions of form and structure were
often influenced by jazz. Do you think that your generation of writers
has been similarly influenced by rock music? For instance, you and Mark
Costello collaborated on the first book-length study of rap
("Signifying Rappers"); would you say that your interest in rap has
anything to do with your writerly concerns? There’s a way in which I
can relate your writing with rap’s "postmodern" features, its approach
to structure and social issues. Sampling. Recontextualizing. DFW:
About the only way music informs my work is in terms of rhythm;
sometimes I associate certain narrators’ and characters’ voices with
certain pieces of music. Rock music itself bores me, usually. The
phenomenon of rock interests me, though, because its birth was part of
the rise of popular media, which completely changed the ways the U.S.
was unified and split. The mass media unified the country
geographically for pretty much the first time. Rock helped change the
fundamental splits in the U.S. from geographical splits to generational
ones. Very few people I talk to understand what "generation gap" ’s
implications really were. Kids loved rock partly because their parents
didn’t, and obversely. In a mass mediated nation, it’s no longer North
vs. South. It’s under-thirty vs. over thirty. I don’t think you can
understand the sixties and Vietnam and love ins and LSD and the whole
era of patricidal rebellion that helped inspire early postmodern
fiction’s whole "We’re-going-to-trash-your-Beaver
Cleaver-plasticized-G.O.P.-image-of-life-in-America" attitude without
understanding rock ‘n roll. Because rock was and is all about busting
loose, exceeding limits, and limits are usually set by parents,
ancestors, older authorities. LM: But so far there aren’t many others who have written anything interesting about rock—Richard Meltzer, Peter Guralnik . . . DFW:
There’s some others. Lester Bangs. Todd Gitlin, who also does great TV
essays. The thing that especially interested Mark and me about rap was
the nasty spin it puts on the whole historical us-vs.-them aspect of
postmodern pop. Anyway, what rock ‘n’ roll did for the multicolored
young back in the fifties and sixties, rap seems to be doing for the
young black urban community. It’s another attempt to break free of
precedent and constraint. But there are contradictions in rap that seem
to perversely show how, in an era where rebellion itself is a commodity
used to sell other commodities, the whole idea of rebelling against
white corporate culture is not only impossible but incoherent. Today
you’ve got black rappers who make their reputation rapping about Kill
the White Corporate Tools, and then are promptly signed by white-owned
record corporations, and not only feel no shame about "selling out" but
then release platinum albums about not only Killing White Tools but
also about how wealthy the rappers now are after signing their record
deal! You’ve got music here that both hates the white GOP values of the
Reaganiod eighties and extols a gold-and-BMW materialism that makes
Reagan look like a fucking Puritan. Violently racist and anti-Semitic
black artists being co-opted by white owned, often Jewish-owned record
labels, and celebrating that fact in their art. The tensions are
delicious. I can feel the spittle starting again just thinking about it. LM:
This is another example of the dilemma facing avant-garde wannabes
today—the appropriation (and ensuing "taming") of rebellion by the
system people like Jameson are talking about. DFW: I don’t
know much about Jameson. To me rap’s the ultimate distillate of the
U.S. eighties, but if you really step back and think not just about
rap’s politics but about white enthusiasm for it, things get grim.
Rap’s conscious response to the poverty and oppression of U.S. blacks
is like some hideous parody of sixties black pride. We seem to be in an
era when oppression and exploitation no longer bring a people together
and solidify loyalties and help everyone rise above his individual
concerns. Now the rap response is more like "You’ve always exploited us
to get rich, so now goddamn it we’re going to exploit ourselves and get
rich." The irony, self pity, self-hatred are now conscious, celebrated.
This has to do with what we were talking about regarding "Westward" and
postmodern recursion. If I have a real enemy, a patriarch for my
patricide, it’s probably Barth and Coover and Burroughs, even Nabokov
and Pynchon. Because, even though their self-consciousness and irony
and anarchism served valuable purposes, were indispensable for their
times, their aesthetic’s absorption by the U.S. commercial culture has
had appalling consequences for writers and everyone else. The TV
essay’s really about how poisonous postmodern irony’s become. You see
it in David Letterman and Gary Shandling and rap. But you also see it
in fucking Rush Limbaugh, who may well be the Antichrist. You see it in
T. C. Boyle and Bill Vollmann and Lorrie Moore. It’s pretty much all
there is to see in your pal Mark Leyner. Leyner and Limbaugh are the
nineties’ twin towers of postmodern irony, hip cynicism, a hatred that
winks and nudges you and pretends it’s just kidding. Irony and
cynicism were just what the U.S. hypocrisy of the fifties and sixties
called for. That’s what made the early postmodernists great artists.
The great thing about irony is that it splits things apart, gets up
above them so we can see the flaws and hypocrisies and duplicates. The
virtuous always triumph? Ward Cleaver is the prototypical fifties
father? "Sure." Sarcasm, parody, absurdism and irony are great ways to
strip off stuff’s mask and show the unpleasant reality behind it. The
problem is that once the rules of art are debunked, and once the
unpleasant realities the irony diagnoses are revealed and diagnosed,
"then" what do we do? Irony’s useful for debunking illusions, but most
of the illusion-debunking in the U.S. has now been done and redone.
Once everybody knows that equality of opportunity is bunk and Mike
Brady’s bunk and Just Say No is bunk, now what do we do? All we seem to
want to do is keep ridiculing the stuff. Postmodern irony and
cynicism’s become an end in itself, a measure of hip sophistication and
literary savvy. Few artists dare to try to talk about ways of working
toward redeeming what’s wrong, because they’ll look sentimental and
naive to all the weary ironists. Irony’s gone from liberating to
enslaving. There’s some great essay somewhere that has a line about
irony being the song of the prisoner who’s come to love his cage. LM:
Humbert Humbert, the rutting gorilla, painting the bars of his own cage
with such elegance. In fact, Nabokov’s example raises the issue of
whether cynicism and irony are really a given. In "Pale Fire" and
"Lolita," there’s an irony about these structures and inventions and so
forth, but this reaction is deeply humanistic rather than being merely
ironic. This seems true in Barthelme, for instance, or Stanley Elkin,
Barth. Or Robert Coover. The other aspect has to do with the
presentation of themselves or their consciousness. The beauty and the
magnificence of human artistry isn’t merely ironic. DFW: But
you’re talking about the click, which is something that can’t just be
bequeathed from our postmodern ancestors to their descendants. No
question that some of the early postmodernists and ironists and
anarchists and absurdists did magnificent work, but you can’t pass the
click from one generation to another like a baton. The click’s
idiosyncratic, personal. The only stuff a writer can get from an
artistic ancestor is a certain set of aesthetic values and beliefs, and
maybe a set of formal techniques that might—just might—help the writer
to chase his own click. The problem is that, however misprised it’s
been, what’s been passed down from the postmodern heyday is sarcasm,
cynicism, a manic ennui, suspicion of all authority, suspicion of all
constraints on conduct, and a terrible penchant for ironic diagnosis of
unpleasantness instead of an ambition not just to diagnose and ridicule
but to redeem. You’ve got to understand that this stuff has permeated
the culture. It’s become our language; we’re so in it we don’t even see
that it’s one perspective, one among many possible ways of seeing.
Postmodern irony’s become our environment. LM: Mass culture is
another very "real" part of that environment—rock music or television
or sports, talk shows, game shows, whatever; that’s the milieu you and
I live in, I mean that’s the world . . . DFW: I’m always
stumped when critics regard references to popular culture in serious
fiction as some sort of avant-garde stratagem. In terms of the world I
live in and try to write about, it’s inescapable. Avoiding any
reference to the pop would mean either being retrograde about what’s
"permissible" in serious art or else writing about some other world. LM:
You mentioned earlier that writing parts of "Broom of the System" felt
like recreation for you—a relief from doing technical philosophy. Are
you ever able to shift into that "recreational mode" of writing today?
Is it still "play" for you? DFW: It’s not play anymore in the
sense of laughs and yucks and non-stop thrills. The stuff in "Broom"
that’s informed by that sense of play ended up pretty forgettable, I
think. And it doesn’t sustain the enterprise for very long. And I ‘ve
found the really tricky discipline to writing is trying to play without
getting overcome by insecurity or vanity or ego. Showing the reader
that you’re smart or funny or talented or whatever, trying to be liked,
integrity issues aside, this stuff just doesn’t have enough
motivational calories in it to carry you over the long haul. You’ve got
to discipline yourself to talk out of the part of you that loves the
thing, loves what you’re working on. Maybe just plain loves. (I think
we might need windwoods for this part, LM.) But sappy or no, it’s true.
The last couple years have been pretty arid for me good-work-wise, but
the one way I’ve progressed I think is I’ve gotten convinced that
there’s something kind of timelessly vital and sacred about good
writing. This thing doesn’t have that much to do with talent, even
glittering talent like Leyner’s or serious talent like Daitch’s.
Talent’s just an instrument. It’s like having a pen that works instead
of one that doesn’t. I’m not saying I’m able to work consistently out
of the premise, but it seems like the big distinction between good art
and so-so art lies somewhere in the art’s heart’s purpose, the agenda
of the consciousness behind the text. It’s got something to do with
love. With having the discipline to talk out of the part of yourself
that love can instead of the part that just wants to be loved. I know
this doesn’t sound hip at all. I don’t know. But it seems like one of
the things really great fiction-writers do—from Carver to Chekhov to
Flannery O’Connor, or like the Tolstoy of "The Death of Ivan Ilych" or
the Pynchon of "Gravity’s Rainbow"—is "give" the reader something. The
reader walks away from the real art heavier than she came into it.
Fuller. All the attention and engagement and work you need to get from
the reader can’t be for your benefit; it’s got to be for hers. What’s
poisonous about the cultural environment today is that it makes this so
scary to try to carry out. Really good work probably comes out of a
willingness to disclose yourself, open yourself up in spiritual and
emotional ways that risk making you really feel something. To be
willing to sort of die in order to move the reader, somehow. Even now
I’m scared about how sappy this’ll look in print, saying this. And the
effort actually to do it, not just talk about it, requires a kind of
courage I don’t seem to have yet. I don’t see that kind of courage in
Mark Leyner or Emily Prager or Bret Ellis. I sometimes see flickers of
it in Vollmann and Daitch and Nicholson Baker and Amy Homes and Jon
Franzen. It’s weird—it has to do with quality but not that much with
sheer writing talent. It has to do with the click. I used to think the
click came from, "Holy shit, have I ever just done something good." Now
it seems more like the real click’s more like, "Here’s something good,
and on one side I don’t much matter, and on the other side the
individual reader maybe doesn’t much matter, but the thing’s good
because there’s extractable value here for both me and the reader."
Maybe it’s as simple as trying to make the writing more generous and
less ego-driven. LM: Music genres like the blues or jazz or
even rock seem to have their ebb and flow in terms of experimentalism,
but in the end they all have to come back to the basic elements that
comprise the genre, even if these are very simple (like the blues). The
trajectory of Bruce Springsteen’s career comes to mind. What interests
fans of any genre is that they really know the formulas and the
elements, so they also can respond to the constant, built-in meta-games
and intertextualities going on in all genre forms. In a way the
responses are aesthetically sophisticated in the sense that it’s the
infinite variations-on-a-theme that interests them. I mean, how else
can they read a million of these things (real genre fans are not stupid
people necessarily)? My point is that people who really care about the
forms—the serious writers and readers in fiction—don’t want all the
forms "broken," they want variation that follows the essence to emerge
in new ways. Blues fans could love Hendrix because he was still playing
the blues. I think you’re seeing a greater appreciation for fiction’s
rules and limits among postmodern writers of all generations. It’s
almost a relief to realize that all babies were "not" tossed out with
the bathwater back in the sixties. DFW: You’re probably right
about appreciating limits. The sixties’ movement in poetry to radical
free verse, in fiction to radically experimental recursive forms—their
legacy to my generation of would-be artists is at least an incentive to
ask very seriously where literary art’s true relation to limits should
be. We’ve seen that you can break any or all of the rules without
getting laughed out of town, but we’ve also seen the toxicity that
anarchy for its own sake can yield. It’s often useful to dispense with
standard formulas, of course, but it’s just as often valuable and brave
to see what can be done within a set of rules—which is why formal
poetry’s so much more interesting to me than free verse. Maybe our
touchstone now should be G. M. Hopkins, who made up his "own" set of
formal constraints and then blew everyone’s footwear off from inside
them. There’s something about free play within an ordered and
disciplined structure that resonates for readers. And there’s something
about complete caprice and flux that’s deadening. LM: I
suspect this is why so many of the older generation of
postmodernists—Federman, Sukenick, Steve Katz and others (maybe even
Pynchon fits in here)—have recently written books that rely on more
traditional forms. That’s why it seems important right now for your
generation to go back to traditional forms and re-examine and rework
those structures and formulas. This is already happening with some of
the best younger writers in Japan. You recognize that if you just say,
"Fuck it, let’s throw everything out!" There’s nothing in the bathtub
to make the effort worthwhile. DFW: For me, the last few years
of the postmodern era have seemed a bit like the way you feel when
you’re in high school and your parents go on a trip, and you throw a
party. You get all your friends over and throw this wild disgusting
fabulous party. For a while it’s great, free and freeing, parental
authority gone and overthrown, a cat’s-away-let’s-play Dionysian revel.
But then time passes and the party gets louder and louder, and you run
out of drugs, and nobody’s got any money for more drugs, and things get
broken and spilled, and there’s a cigarette burn on the couch, and
you’re the host and it’s your house too, and you gradually start
wishing your parents would come back and restore some fucking order in
your house. It’s not a perfect analogy, but the sense I get of my
generation of writers and intellectuals or whatever is that it’s 3:00
A.M. and the couch has several burn-holes and somebody’s thrown up in
the umbrella stand and we’re wishing the revel would end. The
postmodern founders’ patricidal work was great, but patricide produces
orphans, and no amount of revelry can make up for the fact that writers
my age have been literary orphans throughout our formative years. We’re
kind of wishing some parents would come back. And of course we’re
uneasy about the fact that we wish they’d come back—I mean, what’s
wrong with us? Are we total pussies? Is there something about authority
and limits we actually need? And then the uneasiest feeling of all, as
we start gradually to realize that parents in fact aren’t ever coming
back—which means we’re going to have to be the parents.