The Priest They Called Him: The Experimental Work of William Burroughs

This paper centres on William Burroughs’ writing and ideas, which changed the course of literature, and his multi-media collaborations, which generated new directions in music and film. Although primarily known for his involvement with the Beat Generation, he is one of the most prominent figures in...

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Main Author: Jelena Ž. Mandić
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: University of Banja Luka, Faculty of Philology 2015-12-01
Series:Filolog
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doisrpska.nub.rs/index.php/filolog/article/view/2062/1985
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spelling doaj-a3e5e2d6c0bd4a95a522e380625421912021-06-06T14:18:03ZdeuUniversity of Banja Luka, Faculty of PhilologyFilolog1986-58642233-11582015-12-011216417210.7251/fil1512164mThe Priest They Called Him: The Experimental Work of William BurroughsJelena Ž. Mandić0University of Novi Sad, Faculty of PhilosophyThis paper centres on William Burroughs’ writing and ideas, which changed the course of literature, and his multi-media collaborations, which generated new directions in music and film. Although primarily known for his involvement with the Beat Generation, he is one of the most prominent figures in the emergence of the postwar counterculture, a transgressive author with an absolute dedication to experimentation in narrative form and structure. He defines a literary evolution of the self in his rejection of American conservative society. Introducing the cut-up and fold-in techniques, he produces unexpected conjunctions and challenges a common understanding of the world. Much of his narratives are a working through of his thesis that the word – language – is a virus. The virus notion is accompanied by the concept of power and control defined in terms of drug addiction. Burroughs claims that dominating systems degrade us and reduce us to a level of totally repressed human beings that do not question the existing sociopolitical order and live in the accepted constructs of reality. These hidden mechanisms are also present in contemporary mass media. For this reason, he creates a new world, which liberates readers from the dominance of the established society, allowing them to form all their perception anew. His truly revolutionary ideas have inspired and creatively exhilarated many writers, musicians and artists who undertook a variety of collaborative multi-media ventures with him. These collaborations were, again, attempts to escape from authorial constraints and shape art production towards “making the words talk on their own.” They alter the complex interweave of creativity in the (post)modern age.https://doisrpska.nub.rs/index.php/filolog/article/view/2062/1985burroughscontrolcut-upfold-inmediarealityvirus
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jelena Ž. Mandić
spellingShingle Jelena Ž. Mandić
The Priest They Called Him: The Experimental Work of William Burroughs
Filolog
burroughs
control
cut-up
fold-in
media
reality
virus
author_facet Jelena Ž. Mandić
author_sort Jelena Ž. Mandić
title The Priest They Called Him: The Experimental Work of William Burroughs
title_short The Priest They Called Him: The Experimental Work of William Burroughs
title_full The Priest They Called Him: The Experimental Work of William Burroughs
title_fullStr The Priest They Called Him: The Experimental Work of William Burroughs
title_full_unstemmed The Priest They Called Him: The Experimental Work of William Burroughs
title_sort priest they called him: the experimental work of william burroughs
publisher University of Banja Luka, Faculty of Philology
series Filolog
issn 1986-5864
2233-1158
publishDate 2015-12-01
description This paper centres on William Burroughs’ writing and ideas, which changed the course of literature, and his multi-media collaborations, which generated new directions in music and film. Although primarily known for his involvement with the Beat Generation, he is one of the most prominent figures in the emergence of the postwar counterculture, a transgressive author with an absolute dedication to experimentation in narrative form and structure. He defines a literary evolution of the self in his rejection of American conservative society. Introducing the cut-up and fold-in techniques, he produces unexpected conjunctions and challenges a common understanding of the world. Much of his narratives are a working through of his thesis that the word – language – is a virus. The virus notion is accompanied by the concept of power and control defined in terms of drug addiction. Burroughs claims that dominating systems degrade us and reduce us to a level of totally repressed human beings that do not question the existing sociopolitical order and live in the accepted constructs of reality. These hidden mechanisms are also present in contemporary mass media. For this reason, he creates a new world, which liberates readers from the dominance of the established society, allowing them to form all their perception anew. His truly revolutionary ideas have inspired and creatively exhilarated many writers, musicians and artists who undertook a variety of collaborative multi-media ventures with him. These collaborations were, again, attempts to escape from authorial constraints and shape art production towards “making the words talk on their own.” They alter the complex interweave of creativity in the (post)modern age.
topic burroughs
control
cut-up
fold-in
media
reality
virus
url https://doisrpska.nub.rs/index.php/filolog/article/view/2062/1985
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