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Cambridge Five Spy Ring — Part 28
Page 11
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bic obey hy ee
me both fashionable’ ‘and demotic {it could have
irvived one or the other, but not both} and is being
{ —~—~tampled to death by hordes of status seekers and audi-
ice participants alike.
{ ——1 Along with Professor Kahler, I am not against the
iw. In the Battle of the Bookg,of two centuries ago, I
suld have been at least as much on the side of the
‘oderns as on that of the Ancients. But the battle of
e books has become a battle against the books. Books
£ becoming nonbooks — catalogues like the nouveau
man, boxes of interchangeable sheets, cut-outs and
-ste-ups; music is becoming pure noise or impure
jence; painting and sculpture, children's and anithro-
‘ids’ games, or accumulations of bric-A-brac and
tritus; and similarly with the other arts. Worst of
== are the mixed media, which can be defined as a
inch of pseudo-arts forced to perform orgies in public
i an audience of voyeurs.
Erich Kahler’s The Disintegration of Form in the
is is a series of three helpfully illustrated lectures:
the Forms of Form,” “The Preliminary Stages of
sintegration” and “The Triumph of Incoherence.”
ithe first lecture, we proceed from a brace of defini-
ns: form is “structure manifesting itself as shape”
“art is form created by a human, intellectual act.”
’ aré shown that “even in works with ‘open form’ it
an Simon is the movie critic al The New Leader and
averredrii iS sfit ree eit fp gat Gi Sauer iF
wna critic of Commonweal and Hudson Review.
DK WORLD May 12, 1968
eeab ase da Viet dade Cudadpic dk, pdestur alta
relationship between consciousness and the uncon-
scious.” First rationalism took over from religious
dogma, and the work of the Devil became a sphere of
instinctual error and, superstition to be examined by 2
budding empirical psychology. This led, by reaction as
_Jauch as by linear descent, to a “speculative romantic
inquiry into the irrational and transrational” which,
in turn, led to a more. scientifically analytical study of
the unconscious, applying ° ‘rational methods to empiri-
cal search.” -t
Reaction set in again, and the “unconscious no longer
remained a mere object of conscious acts of explora-
tion; it seized upon the artistic act itself and emerged
as the very enactor of artistic creation, as... in ‘beat’
literature and action painting.” Finally, we reach the
state of affairs that “John Cage . . . explicitly recom-
mends: a purposeful purposelessness.” What all this
leads to is beautifully chronicled in the third lecture,
which contains the meat of the book. But precisely
because it is so pregnant with horrible examples and
cogent conclusions and caveats drawn from them, it
resists adequate synopsis.
What Kahler traces in “The Triumph of incoherence”
is, first, the growing insecurity of language and com-
munication. He sorts out three phases of, to be sure
overlapping, linguistic disintegration. First, the divorce
of language from all emotional significance; second,
the reduction of language to prehuman, animalistic
gesture; third, the breaking up of words inte sounds
Cofstivtshicss, Baer peroncuuiy altacxs thai “unter.
lectwal demagogue" McLuhan, who confounds raw
perception with meaningful consciousness, the accumu-
lation of data with synthesis. Our arts niake of the
cleavage between original reason and functional, tech.
nological rationality = programmatic schism. At the
extremes lie things like “creative vaf@¥AWtn” and ‘“‘pro-
grammed panic” — the announced aims of various
groups at the recent International Destruction of Art
symposium in London.
Kahler shows how in its ultimate stages this dehu-
manization ceaches the physical constitution of man:
the very megalopolitan noises that threaten our heaith
ate reproduced and further magnified by art. Con-
sciousness is not expanded but exploded, with the final
winner being advertising, which turns all this into
means of moneymaking. And, as the author perceptively
notes, the devaluation of words refiects on the feelings
behind them, which become accordingly undermined,
making of our arts not just a disaster area but a chain
reaction, a self-perpetuating cataclysm.
-One may disagree with certain details of the presen-
tation; one can find occasional lapses in the diction,
perhaps even a slight general prayness. But the bagc
argument is so well thought out and so sagely marshaled
that this third lecture deserves to be reprinted by a
foundation (or perhaps by uNnesco, if that organization
isn’t defunct} and distributed free of charge, wherever
people convene —- at sireet corners, if RECESSATY —aese&
giant anti-happening. ee
aie
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