Saturday 7 August 2010

The Poetry of William S. Burroughs

William S. Burroughs is generally considered a novelist. To make the case that he was also a poet is neither revisionist nor perverse but absurd. After all, Burroughs paid about as much obeisance to genre or medium as he did to the law. His work consistently ignored the traditional boundaries between forms of creative production — to the point where, if you were really to collect Burroughs’ “poetry,” you would be hard-pressed to explain why you might leave out Naked Lunch. It may well be the most “poetic” text he ever wrote.
And what of the cut-up? Is it poetry, prose, or something else altogether? Oliver Harris has broached the question in his essay “‘Burroughs Is a Poet Too, Really’: The Poetics of Minutes to Go.” Harris writes that, in Minutes to Go, poetry “is not understood in terms of words on the page but as the ‘place’ reached by a particular use of chance operations on pre-existing words.” It is a method “to be grasped by doing,” not a “content to be understood by interpretation.” This insightful analysis could serve as an introduction to this somewhat quixotic attempt to collect the poetry of William Burroughs, and Oliver Harris has very graciously allowed RealityStudio to republish it.

Poems by William S. Burroughs

3 comments:

  1. Nice post Mona - thanks! I often find myself coming back to Burroughs and reality.org is a great source. I wouldn't call WSB a poet but then I wouldn't really call him a novelist either - I kinda think he created his own genre and it's silly to try and label him as one thing or another.

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  2. 2Kaggsy/
    Couldn't agree more w/ you!
    You may be interested in this.
    Regards/

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  3. Thanks Mona and for the link - I thought I had already grabbed the (son of) stuff but can't find it anywhere so thanks for the heads up!

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