Wednesday, September 23, 2015

'Literary Rogues' by Andrew Shaffer

            I picked up Literary Rogues at the library recently when I needed something to read while my kids used the computers. Also, I needed something to get away from the more historiographical reading I’ve been straining my neck with, although this book turned out to be an interesting bit of history in its own right. I suppose the title was intriguing enough; a quick skim through the beginning of the book left me unsure whether to take it or not, but as I couldn’t find anything else I figured I’d give it a shot. You can never find what you’re looking for, now that there’s no physical card catalog, but sometimes the right book just jumps out at you. I do miss the old stacks from my library; the main branch of Cambridge, MA’s public library is now one of the most well-known in the world, I’m told; it’s not what it was in the good old days, when I went to high school next door and cut class to read Antonin Artaud and dream of being a literary rogue myself.
            But you see, my position has changed on so many things, now that I’m an adult, that part of my reason for choosing this book was to refute the admiration I once held for some of these ill-behaved literati. However, the book itself proved to be interesting and informative, before I even reached the chapters on my youthful idols. Shaffer traces the origins of perverse penmanship to the Marquis de Sade, infamous for his bizarre sexual obsessions and both the life and writings they inspired. Personally, although I haven’t read any of Sade’s writings, and I didn’t know much of his history before Rogues, I have never had an affinity for his persona, as it seems to me based on cruelty and depravity, without the redemptive element of genius or personal drive that some of these other ‘bad boys of Western literature’ arguably possess. Likewise, the following two chapters on eighteenth century English opium addicts, who happened to write poetry, was good perspective, but again I found nothing to draw my ego in to the personalities of Coleridge and de Quincey. Despite my youthful interest in drug literature, I had never read these English fops and I can’t say that I will now. What is accomplished, however, in these early chapters especially, is to demonstrate how lonely and unrewarding the path of the solitary writer often proves to be, even in cases where the artist has received immortal praise. One must be hardened, to the remonstrances of friends and family, to the harsh world of solitude, and to all the pains one rather courts than avoids in the pursuit of his art, while at the same time somehow remaining soft towards that tender impulse inside, nurturing the creative wonder inside with all the warmth and love that one withdraws from everything, and every one, else. The literary road remains less travelled, and now although it is less prohibited, it is also more well-beaten and causes less of a stir, eclipsed by popular music and reality television.
            After these sensitive souls we turn to Lord Byron, whose legendary sexual exploits I think betray a major part of the modern fascination we have towards these figures in general. There is a sort of vicarious cult attached to money, fame and sex that is characteristic of the decline of aristocratic and ecclesiastical values over the past two or three centuries. While the eruption of the mass libido, so violently constrained for ages by arbitrary and inhuman moral restrictions, is no surprise, what is perhaps worth lamenting is the inversion of values which posits excess and decadence, overall lack of discipline, as ideals to be cultivated (or at least adulated) in youth, until the modern man has no sense of decency or responsibility and any appeal to rekindle these important human achievements is summarily dismissed as reactionarily conservative.
            …and so on, until the French so-called ‘Decadent’ writers, particularly the poets Baudelaire and later, Rimbaud, who signified a glorification of decadence as conversely virtuous. What strikes the mature reader is how the desires and unrestrained passions of youth have become embedded in our culture as possessing value in and of themselves, their ‘cool factor’, and this despite the overall predominance of liberal morality in this same demographic. But we shall note this phenomenon in vain, as it has already, too late, been imbedded in the modern esthetic, just as certain opposing virtues were in vogue at one time, and therefore beyond question, implicit as dogma. It is testament to the sublime beauty of these French poets’ work, and in particular the blurring of the distinction between prose and poetry, between thought and feeling, which had such a profound effect on so many generations to come, and in fact inspired the chief esthetic of rock music from the mid-to-late 60’s which still holds sway in the modern cult of today’s youth. Rimbaud in particular was a hero of visionary magnitude to later poets, including the American ‘Beat’ writers, and rock musicians like Jim Morrison of The Doors. France’s influence on modern world culture is the grossest decadence, through the effeminization of European literature and the contagion of Parisian fashion and the idolatry of anorexics, perfumes and prostitution…although Rimbaud himself is striking as one of the few men (or boys) in Literary Rogues not obsessed with brothels and promiscuity…caught up in a turbulent homosexual relationship with older poet Paul Verlaine, his is the quintessential story of youthful innocence lost. After writing the greatest poetry of the French language, Arthur Rimbaud, barely a young man, turned his back on letters, forever. Perhaps this is the moral we should take away from the book.
            But we move on. Those ‘Beats’ we spoke of in America, probably my favorite writers as a teenager, a right-of-passage for so many young people for the past half-century and more, all over the world. This is what I was waiting for the whole time, reading the book. One gets the impression I wasn’t the only one. It seems like once they got past these curious characters, so contradictory, so full of freedom and suffering and youthful foolishness, the author and/or his editors got sloppy, as the grammar and punctuation decline noticeably after this point. I certainly began to lose interest, and in fact I am anxious to hurry on and complete this article. But let us stop for a moment and hover over the spectre of literary rebellion in post-war America, and its deeper implications for the nation’s intellectual psyche. In retrospect, Allen Ginsberg is probably the only one of these writers who can really be said to stand for anything, to possess any art, any substance. Kerouac is a phase, something that touches some of us in a very personal way, myself not least of all due to shared small-town Massachusetts roots in childhood, loneliness and the weathervane-like sense of a loss in the current of the American soul. But Kerouac’s alcoholism and frequenting of child prostitutes in Mexico must lead us to abandon this mystique of decadence altogether, with less a sense of moral outrage at the popularity such men have enjoyed than a sober realization that perhaps English poet William Blake’s famed ‘road of excess’ is really a dead-end street. William Burroughs, for all his brilliance, was merely a creep, a junkie, a deadbeat rich-boy who lucked out and sold books, books which, to be sure, overturned deeply-rooted psychological and literary assumptions, but without any positive influence on society. This was a bitter, hateful man who blamed the whole world for the rejection of his would-be childhood boyfriend and the stifling alienation of his well-to-do Mid-Western upbringing. Ginsberg, aside from being a gifted poet who understood poetics and poet tradition while still revolutionizing the genre, who worshipped the great American poet Walt Whitman (who wasn’t enough of a drunk or philanderer to make it into this book) who believed in religious values even as he fought against religious dogma; Ginsberg was an champion of gay rights, pacifism, environmentalism and freedom of expression, an advocate for his fellow artists often to the neglect of his own ambitions, and early proponent of marijuana reform, as well as publicly testifying that LSD should indeed remain legal so long as all other avenues to freedom of thought were patently denied to citizens of the free world.
            All-in-all, the book is well-written, with a characteristically modern synthesis of gonzo journalistic intrigue and sober scholarship. Indeed, the research that went into the work shows through more often than not, balancing any obvious bias in regards to the subject matter. Quite frankly, it would be either boring, on the one hand, or overly adulating to write about them in a way other than Shaffer has undertaken. The book itself is short and captivating, easy to read straight-through. Shaffer makes strong connections from chapter to chapter, tying his subjects together in time and space, making bold conceptual leaps, literary allusions and displaying a sharp grasp of the social and cultural climate in which these artists all wrote, something that is easily lost on the modern reader of dated literature, and which indeed is critical to the understanding of any form of art.

            The last sentence of the book’s last chapter (prior to the postscript) quotes writer James Frey, “Writers today are polite and meek and scared of bad publicity. Unless that changes, they will fade away.” The challenge, as I see it, for the future of literature is to reclaim that sense of strength and urgency, of courage and individualism that does in fact seem to have faded away, while also disowning the new modern liberal pornographic commercialized esthetic which permeates every facet of our culture, from literature and music to film, journalism and politics. Shaffer’s book will not provide any answers to the questions that must confront today’s writer if she wants to stand out from the crowd; it will give a fascinating and at times entertaining overview of how we arrived at this point.