Artigo Revisado por pares

"When Novelists Become Cubists": The Prose Ideograms of Guy Davenport

2002; University of Arkansas Press; Volume: 36; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

ISSN

2374-6629

Autores

André Furlani,

Tópico(s)

Art, Politics, and Modernism

Resumo

Guy Davenport's narratives are hybrids of fiction, documentary, poem, and illustration, disciple of Ezra Pound, he adapts to the short story the ideogrammatic method of Cantos, where a grammar of images, emblems, and symbols replaces that of logical sequence. This grammar allows for the grafting of particulars into a congeries of implied relation without subordination. In contrast to postmodernists, Davenport does not omit causal connection and linear narrative continuity for the sake of an aleatory play of signification but in order to intimate by combinational logic kinships and correspondences among eras, ideas and forces. His collages (he calls them assemblages of fact and necessary fiction) are arbitrary without being gratuitous, play proceeding in them under the auspices of emancipatory containment. These features of Davenport's experimentation are revealed in three exemplary texts. Although rich meditations on squandered or misdirected cultural possibility, each encomiastic and prospective r ather than elegiac and nostalgic. Davenport summons and rechannels dormant energies released by his archival subjects--the Vorticist art of Henri Gaudier-Brzeska, the discovery of the Aurignacian cave paintings at Lascaux, and the utopian project of Charles Fourier. Assemblage For Guy Davenport every force evolves a form. It typical of him, who makes this epigram the title both of an essay and of a book, to find a contemporary avant-garde formula not in, say, Shklovsky, Marinetti, or Rimbaud but in the founder of the Shakers, Mother Ann Lee. He scarcely trusts an idea that not on closer inspection an old one. For Davenport it always later the same day. He shares with the modernists a disposition towards syncretic structures. Lascaux aurochs and a Picasso bull share their pigment; a Pre-Socratic fragment and a Wittgenstein Zettel share their ink. A work of art, Davenport claims in the forward to Every Force Evolves a Form, is a form that articulates forces, making them intelligible (xi). Seeking out forms that might faithfully correspond to the range of forces inhering in his literary subjects, he follows his modernist precursors in assuming that a new subject entails the renegotiation of formal convention. As a consequence, his one of the most eclectic and innovative bodies of fiction in contemporary American literature. Indeed, he has renegotiated the conventions distinguishing prose from verse. During a period when the first person present retrospective narrative has nearly monopolized American short fiction, he has almost entirely eschewed the subgenre, except to adapt it. (Thus the youths who narrate The River and O Gadjo Niglo omit all punctuation except the period and the question mark.) He prefers to draw on much more heterogeneous stylistic instigations, such as surrealism, hexameter mime, formalism, dramatic monologue, classical e clogue, collage, Roman cento, Japanese renka, postcard, imaginary dialogue, Hellenistic philosophical sketch, and journal. In Davenport, collage structures predominate. Encouraged by William Carlos Williams's maverick defiance of the proprieties separating verse from prose, he has treated the story in a kindred way. In narratives inspired as much by modernist painting and poetry as by fiction, he juxtaposes a variety of discontinuous and discrete writings and images. Laurence Zachar argues that Davenport's writing situated aux frontieres intergeneriques where manifold modes are brought into concord: L'etonnant chez Davenport est la facon don't ce materiau qui parait l'incarnation meme du chaos--hermetique, enigmatique, obscur, avec son tropplein de references--se revele en fait etre construit, ordonne, structure. Plus l'on s'y plonge, et plus l'on distingue de cohesion dans le texte 'What astonishes in Davenport the way in which material that seems the very incarnation of chaos--hermetic, enigmatic, obscure, with its proliferation of allusions--in fact reveals itself to be constructed, organized, structured. …

Referência(s)