Pubdate: Sun, 29 Aug 2004
Source: Times of India, The (India)
Copyright: Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. 2004
Contact:  http://www.timesofindia.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/453
Author: Pothik Ghosh

A PAPERBACK REEFER

Let's mourn the dawning of the age of reason. With clay pipes clenched 
firmly between our teeth, a plate full of mushrooms, and a book of poems. 
For, it doesn't suffice to be a cheap versifier.

Not when the jingle of gold celebrates poetry. One then has to become, as 
French boy-poet Rimbaud said, "a seer; by a long, rational, prodigious 
disordering of senses".

Humanity's vanguards - poets, artists and madmen - whenever they have 
wanted to push at the seams of reality, have turned literature upon itself 
and endeavoured to make it disappear in a torrent of linguistic excess.

Modern western literature, long before Ginsberg and Co dropped anchor on 
life's schizophrenic shores, has shared a long, troubled, intimate 
relationship with drugs.

The altered states of consciousness that modern writers, particularly on 
the Continent, have chased with such masochist abandon, did not merely 
bring literature into the erotic embrace of the weed, but in the same 
movement transformed words into the greatest intoxicant of them all.

The 'literature of intoxication' didn't exactly have a benign provenance. 
The oppression and pain, wrought by the reality of a young industrial 
Europe, deformed existence in such a fashion that Reality, which closed in 
oppressively on the men and women on the Continent's dank alleys, had to be 
challenged if a way out of the dark tunnel of oppression and megalomaniacal 
wars had to be found.

So, along came Baudelaire, Rimbaud and Nietzsche, and rolled drugs, sex, 
evil and poetry into bullets for hunting down man's rational ego.

Indeed, so gut-wrenching was existence during those times - particularly 
the inter-war years - that words alone sufficed to shatter the mirrors of 
realist drudgery that surrounded them.

The Surrealists of the '30s and the '40s allowed the absurd meaninglessness 
of dreams and sleep to invade the wakeful, feel-good lives of European men 
and their limp literature.

They made words dance to the dissonant orchestra of insanity. All this, not 
necessarily aided by substances.

Most of them, with no help from narcotics at all, conjured realms where 
language broke through its boringly coherent boundaries to explode into a 
fireball of savage, incoherent freedom.

German-Jewish writer Walter Benjamin, who delved deep into Marseilles' dark 
soul after drugging himself 'silly' with hashish, later declared that a 
thinker was as much of a pathbreaker as an opium eater.

It's precisely this aesthetic of intoxication that has informed much of 
world literature and cinema of the past 50 years. The American Beats are 
obviously the first to come to mind.

But the entire modern sci-fi genre in cinema and literature - Minority 
Report, Solaris and Matrix - has been inspired immensely by this 
freaked-out, surreal and dopey dance of words and images.

This 'druggy poetics', if not drugs themselves, will continue to inspire 
fantastic hope in a boringly Real world.
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