[In advance of the expanded third edition of Technicians of the Sacred on which I’m now working,
What follows here is the opening of the Pre-face to the 1983 edition. (J.R.)]
When the industrial West
began to discover – and plunder – “new” and “old” worlds beyond its boundaries,
an extraordinary countermovement came into being in the West itself. Alongside the official ideologies that shoved
European man to the apex of the human pyramid, there were some thinkers and
artists who found ways of doing and knowing among other peoples as complex as
any in Europe and often virtually erased from
European consciousness. Cultures described as “primitive” and “savage” – a
stage below “barbarian” – were simultaneously the models for political and
social experiments, religious and visionary revivals, and forms of art and
poetry so different from European norms as to seem revolutionary from a later
Western perspective. It was almost,
looking back at it, as if every radical innovation in the West were revealing a
counterpart – or series of counterparts – somewhere in the traditional worlds
the West was savaging.
The
present gathering will center on the poetics of the matter and will map, from
the perspective of the editors, a discourse on poetics (really a range of such
discourses) that has been a vital aspect of twentieth-century poetry and art –
with precedents going back two centuries and more. The poetics in question,
which we will speak of as an “ethnopoetics,”
reemerged after World War II (with its rampant and murderous racism) and the
dislocations of the European colonial system during the postwar period. Whenever it has appeared—and some version of
it may be as old as human consciousness itself – it has taken the form of what
the anthropologist Stanley Diamond, in a recently renewed “critique of
civilization,” calls “the search for the primitive” or, more precisely, the
“attempt to define a primary human potential.” The search as such is by no
means confined to the “modern” world (though our concern with it will be just
there) but is felt as well, say, in the words of ancient Heraclites often cited
by Charles Olson: “Man is estranged from that with which he is most familiar.”
And it is present too in the thought of those the West had cast as ultimate
“primitives,” as when the Delaware Indians tell us in their Walum Olum:
in
the beginning of the world
all men had knowledge cheerfully
all had leisure
all thoughts were pleasant
at
that time all creatures were friends . . .
The past is what it is –
or was – but it is also something we discover and create through a desire to
know what it is to be human, anywhere.
Some
of the results of that search and its attendant yearnings are obvious by now –
so much so that a principal defense against their power to transform us
involves an attack on a primitivism debased by the attackers and abstracted
thereby from its revolutionary potential.
Such a primitivism is not in any case the stance of this
collection. Nor is our interest directed
backward toward a past viewed with feelings of decontextualized nostalgia. It is our contention, in fact, that the most
experimental and future-directed side of Romantic and modern poetry, both in
the Western world and increasingly outside it, has been the most significantly
connected with the attempt to define an ethnopoetics.
There
is a politics in all of this, and an importance, clearly, beyond the work of
poets and artists. The old “primitive” models in particular – of small and
integrated, stateless and classless societies – reflect a concern over the last
two centuries with new communalistic and anti-authoritarian forms of social
life and with alternatives to the environmental disasters accompanying an
increasingly abstract relation to what was once a living universe. Our belief
in this regard is that a re-viewing of “primitive” ideas of the “sacred”
represents an attempt – by poets and others – to preserve and enhance primary
human values against a mindless mechanization that has run past any uses it may
once have had. (This, rather than the
advocacy of some particular system, seems to us the contribution of the
“primitive” to whatever world we may yet hope to bring about.) As a matter of
history, we would place the model in question both in the surviving, still
rapidly vanishing stateless cultures and in a long subterranean tradition of
resistance to the twin authorities of state and organized religion.
What
we’re involved with here is a complex redefinition of cultural and intellectual
values: a new reading of the poetic past and present which Robert Duncan speaks
of as “a symposium of the whole.” In such a new “totality,” he writes, “all the
old excluded orders must be included. The female, the proletariat, the foreign;
the animal and vegetative; the unconscious and the unknown; the criminal and
failure – all that has been outcast and vagabond must return to be admitted in
the creation of what we consider we are.”
If that or some variant thereof is taken as the larger picture, it can
provide the context in which to see most clearly the searches and discoveries
in what we call “the arts.” In painting
and sculpture, say, the results of those searches are by now so well known that
there’s little surprise left in marking the change from Ruskin’s late
nineteenth-century comment, “There is no art in the whole of Africa, Asia, and
America,” to Picasso’s exclamation on his first sighting of an African sculpture,
“It is more beautiful than the Venus de Milo.” Yet the obviousness of the
change is itself deceptive. The “human” concerns demanded by the Dada poet
Tristan Tzara—for an art that “lives first of all for the functions of dance,
religion, music, and work”—remain largely submerged in the “aesthetic”; and
it’s a long way too from Picasso’s classicizing admiration of the static art
object to the reality of a tribal/oral “art in motion” (Robert Farris
Thompson’s term) that brings all our scattered arts together.
This
dream of a total art—and of a life made whole—has meant different things and
been given different names throughout this century. “lntermedia” was a word for
it in its 1960s manifestation – also “total theater” and “happenings” – behind
which was the sense of what the nineteenth-century Wagnerian consciousness had
called Gesamtkunstwerk and had placed
– prefigured – at the imagined beginnings of the human enterprise. The
difference in our own time was to smash that imperial and swollen mold, to shift
the primary scene from Greece, say, to the barbaric or paleolithic past, or to
the larger, often still existing tribal world, and to see in that world
(however “outcast and vagabond” it had been made to look) a complexity of act
and vision practiced by proto-poets/proto-artists who were true “technicians of
the sacred.” And along with this shift
came the invention and revival of specific
means: new materials and instruments (plastic and neon, film and tape)
alongside old or foreign ones (stones, bones, and skin; drums, didjeridoos, and
gamelans); ancient roles and modes of thought that had survived at the Western
margins (sacred clowns and dancers, shamanistic ecstasies, old and new works of
dream and chance); and a tilt toward ritual, not as “an obsessional concern
with repetitive acts” but, as Victor Turner describes it, “an immense
orchestration of genres in all available sensory codes: speech, music, singing;
the presentation of elaborately worked objects, such as masks; wall-paintings,
body-paintings; sculptured forms; complex, many-tiered shrines; costumes; dance
forms with complex grammars and vocabularies of bodily movements, gestures, and
facial expressions.”
The
description, which fits both “them” and “us,” holds equally true in the
language arts – as this book will attempt to show – though by the nature of
language itself (and the need to translate ourselves in – always – partial
forms) the complexity and the interplay of new and old haven’t been as clear
there. Taken as a whole, then, the human species presents an extraordinary
richness of verbal means – both of languages and poetries – closed to us until
now by an unwillingness to think beyond the conventions and boundaries of
Western literature. This “literature” as such goes back in its root meaning to
an idea of writing—more narrowly and literally, the idea of alphabetic writing
(littera, Lat. = letters) as
developed in the West. In poetry, the
result has been to exclude or set apart those oral traditions that together
account for the greatest human diversity, an exclusion often covered over by a
glorification of the oral past. Thus Marshall McLuhan – defining the words
“tribal” and “civilized” on the basis of alphabetic literacy alone – can write:
“Tribal cultures like those of the Indian and Chinese [!] may be greatly
superior to the Western cultures in the range and delicacy of their expressions
and perception,” and in the same paragraph: “Tribal cultures cannot entertain
the possibility of the individual or of the separate citizen.”
If
the recovery of the oral is crucial to the present work, it goes hand in hand
with a simultaneous expansion of the idea of writing and the text, wherever and
whenever found. To summarize rapidly what we elsewhere present in extended
form, the oral recovery involves a poetics deeply rooted in the powers of song
and speech, breath and body, as brought forward across time by the living
presence of poet-performers, with or without the existence of a visible/literal
text. The range of such poetries is the range of human culture itself, and the
forms they take (different for each culture) run from wordless songs and
mantras to the intricacies (imagistic and symbolic) of multileveled oral
narratives; from the stand-up performances of individual shamans and bards to the
choreographies of massed dancers and singers, extended sometimes over
protracted periods of time. From the side of visual and written language—which
may, like the oral, be as old as the species itself—a fully human poetics would
include all forms of what Jacques Derrida calls archécriture (= primal writing):
pictographs and hieroglyphs, aboriginal forms of visual and concrete poetry,
sand paintings and earth mappings, gestural and sign languages, counting
systems and numerologies, divinational signs made by man or read (as a poetics
of natural forms) in the tracks of animals or of stars through the night sky.
That
practices like these correspond to experimental moves in our own time isn’t
needed to justify them, but it indicates why we’re now able to see them and to
begin to understand as well the ways they differ from our own work. Other areas
in which such correspondences hold true may be more involved with “idea” than
“structure,” though the distinction isn’t always easy to maintain. Traditional
divination work, for example – the Ifa oracles of Africa, say, or the Chinese I Ching – rests on the recognition of a
world revealed moment by moment through processes of chance and synchronicity
(i.e., the interrelatedness of simultaneous events), and these processes in
turn inform one major segment of our avant-garde. Similarly, the widespread practice of
exploring the “unknown” through the creation of new languages shows a strong
sense of the virtual nature of reality (what Senghor speaks of as the
traditional surreal) and the linguistic means to get it said. The idea of the
surreal – at its most meaningful – also suggests the dream-works so central to
other cultures and so long submerged in ours. And from these, or through them,
it’s only a short step into a life lived in a state-of-myth (“reality at white
heat,” Radin called it) and to the recovery of archetypes (as image and/or
symbol) that infuse our own work at its most heated: the animal and trickster
side of us; the goddess and the feminine; the sense of “earth as a religious
form” and of a living, even human, universe; and the commitment to imaginal
geographies and journeys that lead into our own lives and minds. These are as
old as the human, maybe older, and they come back to us, transformed, not so
much when we shut out the immediate world around us as when we choose to work
within it.
The
twentieth century – and with it the attendant modernisms that have
characterized our poetry and art – is by now fading out. It has been a long
haul and a sometimes real adventure, but the work is in no way complete and
some of the major points have still to be hammered home. My own choice has been
to write from the side of a modernism that sees itself as challenging limits
and changing ways of speaking/thinking/doing that have too long robbed us of
the freedom to be human to the full extent of our powers and yearnings. The
struggle is immediate and the objects and attitudes to be destroyed or
transformed appear on every side of us. But it isn’t a question of our having no
sense of history or of the human past – no sense of possibilities besides the
most apparent. The clincher, in fact, is the transformation beyond that, of our
consciousness of the human in all times and places.
1 comment:
This is one of my all time favorite books. I have a hardback edition but would love for the update to be available on kindle or ibooks.
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