Dark Hunch
Ah you poor thing. Je peux lire un petite frenchy or whatever, but prefer Deutsch, as did Buk, I believe. He was more "rightist" than most hepcats realize.
BukowskiSpeak's great for like wannabe bank robbers or guys in stir, but not my fave: the Buk-fetish's like cheap dope or something. He was overrated I believe, but then so were Kerouac and the rest. One beat writer who did some entertaining if wicked prose was Terry Southern, but he wasn't too PC. Sort of like HS Thompson but smarter.
BukowskiSpeak's great for like wannabe bank robbers or guys in stir, but not my fave: the Buk-fetish's like cheap dope or something. He was overrated I believe, but then so were Kerouac and the rest. One beat writer who did some entertaining if wicked prose was Terry Southern, but he wasn't too PC. Sort of like HS Thompson but smarter.
"It's a noble's sport really". OK, I'll buy that. Bush is only a passing injustice, a symptom of a larger breakdown. OK fine. And a poet cannot waste too much time on symptoms-- his or herself included. OK fine, I'll buy that. Why is knowing two or three languages so critical to poetic expression? Does there come a point when that only gets in the way? And would Bach ever listen to Dylan, given a chance?Totenkopf wrote:It's a noble's sport really: more like Bach than bobby dylan.
I have read a bit of Battaile. Intense, wild, sort of Nietzschean but rather more decadent: I have an old Evergreen Review (maybe to be hawked on ebay!) with some Battaile in it; a rather long ode to a "putain", and her, uh, most valuable asset. Years ago I read Breton ("the real artist should rush into the street and start shooting people at random" or somethin') but drifted away from that sort of jass. I enjoy reading like.....Carnap...or history, econ.
There were good positivists, and bad ones, just like there are good cops, and bad ones. Even Jack Webb, Dragnet founder, had a bit of a Harry Truman like spirit.
The point wasn't about cops really. More about literary deception. However grand Joyce's Ulysses seems it's hardly anything compared to say a few pages of real history regarding trench warfare
The point wasn't about cops really. More about literary deception. However grand Joyce's Ulysses seems it's hardly anything compared to say a few pages of real history regarding trench warfare
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