Thursday, October 6, 2011
Complaints
Tuesday, September 20, 2011
Sunday, June 5, 2011
re: previous
a scallop
Thursday, April 14, 2011
Thursday, April 7, 2011
In which there is a discussion of the multitudinous frustrations of Modern Life, and the pronoun "I" is overused
Wednesday, April 6, 2011
I was once going to give a paper, tentatively titled "Aesthetics, Ethics, and Revolt in Baudelaire's Prose Poetry." That never happened...
Ces plaisanteries nerveuses ne sont pas sans péril, et on peut souvent les payer cher. Mais qu'importe l'éternité de la damnation à qui a trouvé dans une seconde l'infini de la jouissance?"
Really, aren't we talking about aesthetic pleasures here? Aren't we talking about knowing them? About knowing what we want? About exercising authenticity? About that final realization of damnation? Not of religious damnation, but of Faustian immolation - annihilating oneself in a fit of orgasmic self-awareness, an eruption of the desire for beauty that can come only at the expense of modern society?
Anyway, Baudelaire is dead. Perhaps that means that poets are dead; that romantics are dead, and all we have left are the new artist-automatons; formalists endlessly searching for inspiration in the dregs of their betters, thinking that the grotesque is nothing more than what the public finds disgusting. Perhaps we are doing nothing but romancing the superflat and making endless love to floating signifiers. I don't know - I do think, however, that romantic longings stem from nothing other than self-awareness, from a longing for a golden age that may or may not ever have existed or exist, and from that interminable search for modern-day heroism; undefined and unattainable, hobbled as we are by stunted our albatross-legs.
And thus he, too, immolated himself in a fit of post-modern circularity.
Saturday, March 26, 2011
good names for epic things TO RIDE INTO BATTLE OR FIGHT WITH A SPEAR
Search not, lest ye find
Imagine, for a moment, that true "self-awareness" is, in fact, attainable - that the term itself has retained a bit of its optimistic karmic oneness, and that the term hasn't completely become a floating signifier.
Perhaps I should back up. Self-awareness, at least in the context of the following paragraphs, can be thought of not as a literal awareness of an inner self, but rather as a locational positioning of a state- through cultural, psychological, and societal echolocation, if you will - that results in some conception of that specific being's figurative or metaphorical worth within a defined system. Whether that system remains defined for more than a moment is irrelevant.
Monday, February 28, 2011
Something Corny About New Beginnings
1) I am listening to Dimmu Borgir. Do yourself a favor and follow suit.
2) I am fascinated by the role that aesthetics play(or don't play)in daily life. I would never have expected Baudelaire to be such an influence post-undergraduate, but my default response to the events around me is "La vie en beau!" If you know what I mean.
3) I am so happy that I was an English major. Really, I should say that I was a literature major, but in two languages at once. But fuck am I brilliant.
4) I want a Mead Hall.
5) I am the philosopher king; the Kwisatz Haderach; Prospero before he drowned his books - Nicholas Urfe after colonizing mars; etc. etc.
6) I'd like to finish the saga of Alastor Sinncraft, and begin anew on the trials and tribulations of Thomas whatsisname in the land of the Esquimaux.
7) I want a Mead Hall.
8) It turns out that I'm legitimately descended from the real-life Lords of Rohan. Bad. Ass.
There will be more to come (finally!) over the next few weeks, dear invisible reader - I merely need time to compose my wits, and to perhaps to put together several treatises on aesthetics, the sacred, and the role of deconstructionism in the life of a modern dandy-philosopher.