In the beginning were words - by Bill Kirton
Teleological inadequacy in the quest for meta-fictional catharsis is a trope too frequently associated with linguistic excess. In his previous studies of root vegetables in Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason and his monograph entitled Descartes and the Bay Leaf, Professor Nonchalant posited the extensory variability of post-cultural deviance in the seventeenth century’s sporadic yet transitional dalliance with anarchic conceptualisations of disassociated herbivorous phenomena. Here, he extends his exegetical analysis of textual malfunctions to encompass the twin themes of literacy and indigestion, arguing persuasively that the Victorians’ semi-precocious insistence on the iconography of laissez-faire nutritional expediency both complemented and contradicted their equally fervent adherence to the vertiginous monotony of the iambic pentameter. That, in simplistic terms, is the point de départ of this 642 page study.
If you’re still reading, thanks for your
persistence and good will. The paragraph, of course, means absolutely nothing.
It’s unadulterated garbage masquerading as learning. In a moment, I’ll get to
why I’ve quoted it here but first, why write it at all? Well, I contribute book
reviews to the excellent booksquawk.com and, when it celebrated the arrival of
its 25,000th visitor, I suggested one way to mark the occasion would be for all
its regular contributors to send in a parody of the opening paragraph of the
worst type of reviewing they could think of – not nasty or vicious stuff, simply
something typical of the most pretentious or plain silly garbage. The idea was just
to have a bit of fun.
So I wrote the above as an example and
posted it to the group. But here’s the interesting thing. Two of the other
contributors – both friends and excellent writers – knew that it was only a
parody and therefore not supposed to make sense but they tried to read it as if
it did, and one of them said ‘my brain couldn't HELP trying to make sense of what you
wrote...and it *almost* did’, a fact which she said was sort of
frightening. So it brings us back to
another aspect of the power of words. If we see them laid out in seemingly
normal structures, we want to unlock what they’re saying. The tendency is to
assume that they ‘mean’ something so we do what they implicitly ask and try to
give them that meaning. And if we can’t, we think it’s our fault.
But what if I hadn’t confessed that the paragraph was just
crap? I’d (deservedly) have suffered the same fate as a lecturer in my novel Shadow Selves, which is set in an
academic institution. I wrote of him:
Early on, he’d learned that students and colleagues alike could be kept at bay by words. The longer the words and the more intricate their context, the greater the security they provided. No one was ever willing to admit they didn’t understand anything and Christie moved through his days pushing before him a bow wave of verbal pretence and leaving in his wake students who either worried about their own intellectual inadequacy or dismissed him as a wanker.
And all because of words. They’re powerful, they shape our experience and they’re the
only things that try to fix meaning in the accidental chaos of the world we
live in. My old mate Sisyphus had his rock; we have words. Let’s respect them.
Learn more about Bill Kirton's books (the ones that make very good sense) here.
Learn more about Bill Kirton's books (the ones that make very good sense) here.
Comments
Lee, you're right - sloppy of me.
Cally, what can I say? God bless rabbits, I guess. Thanks.
Phew.
If you WERE going to put it in a novel, I would suggest making it shorter - and clearly identifying is as a character's thoughts, etc., as quickly as possible.
Like a snowdrift, it is possible to push through this sort of thing - but only if it isn't too long.
OTOH, don't you find it frightening that you can WRITE such?
ABE
liebjabberings. I was exposed to so much of that sort of thing when I was an academic that I could almost write a computer program to generate it (that's if I knew how to write a computer program). Don't worry, I wouldn't want to spend much time with a character of mine who wrote or spoke like that.
Chris, I'm nearly half way through your Missing Presumed Dead and it proves that your 'poor little brain' has some very deep, dark recesses.
Thank you, Diane (and I know you know whereof you speak).
They're the best ones, Reb - straight, to the point and just as powerful.