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William Burroughs and the Secret of Fascination
 
 
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William Burroughs and the Secret of Fascination [Hardcover]

Professor Oliver Harris (Author)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

April 15, 2003

William Burroughs is both an object of widespread cultural fascination and one of America’s great original writers. The two mysteries that Oliver Harris explores are how Burroughs became that writer and what fascination itself means. His book is both a work of investigative scholarship that draws on rare access to manuscripts to unearth a secret history behind the received story of Burroughs the writer and an enquiry into the experience of being fascinated, its enigmatic psychology and seductive allure.  

 

Harris examines the major works Burroughs produced in the 1950s—Junky, Queer, The Yage Letters, and Naked Lunch—analyzing them within their cultural history and in relation to the methods of their writing. Piecing together for the first time an accurate, material record of Burroughs’ creative history during his germinal decade as a writer, Harris shows the importance of getting this right. He refutes the “junk paradigm” of addiction and instead reveals how the dark power of Burroughs’s fiction, particularly its sexual and political dimensions, was shaped by the creative energy he invested in his letter writing. As Burroughs said to Allen Ginsberg about Naked Lunch, “the real novel is letters to you.”  

 

Examining a history of epistolary practices from Kafka to Kerouac, Harris reveals the unique nature and economy of Burroughs’ letters. Readers are thus able to recognize the emergence of Burroughs’ true textual politics—not just his writing’s analysis of power, but its own relation to it—within his actual writing practices. Finally, it becomes clear that the discovery of such secrets does not demystify Burroughs, since this discovery is one more response to the enduring power of his fascination.


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Editorial Reviews

Review

“From the moment that I began, I could barely stop reading this brilliantly intoxicating ‘fascination’ with the hermeneutics of Burroughsian mysteries. Using considerable intrigue and deftness of his own, Harris draws the reader into the genesis of Burroughs’s creative imagination and the intricate geography of his textual politics. Harris has the independence and audacity of his own strong views, which are grounded in scholarly spadework, biographical insight, and textual analysis. For those interested in Burroughs, Beat dynamics, or postmodernism, this is a seminal work.”—John Tytell, author of Naked Angels: Kerouac, Ginsberg, Burroughs



“Oliver Harris is in the forefront of the next generation of scholars of William S. Burroughs, about whose life and work so much has already been said that the ‘standard myth’ has become an obstacle to further original research  and analysis.  Going directly to primary sources and documents (some of them only newly available) and bringing to his job a deep cultural literacy corresponding to Burroughs’ own classical education, Harris dispels much false ‘received wisdom’ about the author’s life and throws unprecedented light on many of the literary, historical, political, scientific, and contemporaneous pop-cultural references encoded in Burroughs’ innumerable allusions.  From this new vantage, Harris holds up for provocative reconsideration all the important critical constructions that have grown up densely around Burroughs’ work since the publication of his first book fifty years ago.  No one seriously proposing now to discuss the Burroughs oeuvre can afford to ignore this major book.”— James Grauerholz, executor, William S. Burroughs Estate

About the Author

Oliver Harris is a professor in the School of American Studies at Keele University in Staffordshire, England. He is the editor of The Selected Letters of William S. Burroughs, 1945–1959 and the editor of the fiftieth anniversary edition of Junky. Harris is also the author of numerous scholarly articles on Burroughs, the Beat Generation, film noir, and the epistolary form.


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 304 pages
  • Publisher: Southern Illinois University Press; 1st edition (April 15, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0809324849
  • ISBN-13: 978-0809324842
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.4 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,487,963 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Thorough and Useful, But Not Especially "Fascinating", March 31, 2009
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Harris' most valuable contributions to Burroughs scholarship have been in the relics he's unearthed from various archives: early drafts, notebook reproductions, correspondence, etc. Harris has also been very good at placing these materials in their proper context within the Burroughs canon, showing how and why they might matter. Here, he attempts a full-length forensic report of what seems to be his favorite era, Burroughs' pre-Naked Lunch period, with mixed results.

If anyone ever thought that their own "fascination" with Burroughs' work was a bit extreme, Harris will provide some serious perspective. After reading his interpretations of the cover image (a dewey-eyed paean that takes up two or three pages), of the formative Burroughs-Ginsberg correspondence, or of Harris' own exploits mapping and photographing every alley in Tangier, one gets the sense that Harris crossed over from "fascination" to "obesession" with his subject long ago. Harris spends his life stalking Burroughs' ghost so we don't have to, a hard job indeed, so kudos to him for that.

Much of this book finds Harris trying to debunk the myths that have grown around Burroughs' life and work. His alternate explanations for the various notches in the Burroughs timeline are perhaps the most refreshing aspect of this book.

However, it's an exercise that quickly makes Harris come off as just plain willfully contrary. If critical consensus is that some area of Burroughs' work is inconsequential, you can expect that Harris will argue that it is one of the most crucial. And if some aspect of Burroughs' work is generally considered to be noteworthy and influential, Harris will argue that people are just diffusing their attention.

This reaches absurd depths when Harris takes critics to task for their misplaced emphasis on the "Talking Ahole" routine in Naked Lunch, immediately followed by an entire chapter devoted to analyzing that very same section... and very little else in the novel.

Critics don't make a name for themselves regurgitating other critics, and Burroughs scholarship needs an Oliver Harris to challenge the received wisdom... But on the whole, following Harris down his rabbit holes yields little beyond the tiresome sense that he is trying to recruit readers into an epic series of pssing matches with other critics.

In fact, a better title for this book really would be "My Pssng Matches with Other So-Called Burroughs Scholars." Perhaps Harris would find a more sympathetic audience in his continued efforts to revise and rewrite -- er, create 'restored editions' -- of the Burroughs canon.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
The fascination of William Burroughs, which somehow always precedes the writing that yet produces it, is a paradox already at work in his first appearance. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
junk paradigm, epistolary economy, whale drek, carny man, talking asshole, main anecdote, unpredictable human factor, letter routine, epistolary relation, epistolary practice, textual politics, real novel, soft machine, epistolary fiction, automatic obedience, textual body, routine form
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Naked Lunch, William Lee, Slave Trader, The Yage Letters, Skip Tracer, Mexico City, William Burroughs, Ace Books, Word Cultures, Allen Ginsberg, Timothy Murphy, Composite City, Selected Letters, Ugly Spirit, Carl Solomon, Driving Lesson, New York, Robin Lydenberg, David Savran, South America, The Soft Machine, The Ticket That Exploded, Steven Shaviro, Beat Generation, Billy Bradshinkel
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