
[The following was first published on the RAWIllumination.net website on January 28, 2021. A big thanks to Tom and all his readers.] 
Znore is the author of Death Sweat of the Cluster (pictured above), a collection of pieces selected from his blog, Groupname for Grapejuice. 
I enjoyed the book a great deal, and
 I thought it would be fun to ask Znore to take a few questions about 
topics covered in the book. This is one of my favorite interviews that 
I've published here.
If you like this interview, see my earlier interview with Znore. 
RAW
 Illumination: When I read your book, it made me want to read or re-read
 many of the books you mention, i.e. I plan to read the new translation 
of "The Odyssey" by Emily Wilson and right now I am trying to read the 
Bible from start to finish, something I've never done, even though I 
read the New Testament when I was a teenager. I also plan to read more 
James Joyce, and I just wonder if that's one of the reactions you were 
hoping for.
Znore: Yes, this is exactly a response I was hoping for. Umberto Eco wrote, to paraphrase, that Finnegans Wake is
 the paradigm of his idea of the "open work". Essentially this means 
that there is no fixed and final reading of the text, that it is 
completely open to chance and novel interpretations, and that it 
continually urges us to venture outside of itself into the entire field 
and experience of literature and life in general. Riffing on this idea, 
I've thought that in the wake of the Wake all books turn into the Wake. All texts become open works; they can all be read as if they are incorporated into the webwork of Finnegans Wake. And with Jacques Derrida -- another thinker who was profoundly affected by the Wake, who
 said that it singularly did not need to be deconstructed because it is 
deconstruction itself -- there arrives the idea that there is nothing 
outside of the text, nothing in experience that cannot be "read". These 
are ideas that I'm playing with, that I may be misreading but that is 
also the point. Obviously I cannot rewrite the Wake, or even 
approach it, but I can try to emulate this aspect of it. These essays, 
now in my book, were written with the aspiration that they would inspire
 readers to open other books, to view the opening of books and the 
linking together of books as being a kind of adventure, and then to 
further extend this process throughout all media and all moments of 
perception. Not that humble! I'm happy if this book has provoked you and
 other readers to read more.
RAW Illumination: I liked your 
efforts to reclaim Ezra Pound's literary legacy, and I like your 
approach, i.e. acknowledging his terrible prejudices and not trying to 
excuse them, but also arguing that they don't invalidate his literary 
work. The world seems increasingly polarized politically -- do you worry
 that his reputation will fall? 
Znore: Ezra Pound is a
 vitally important figure to consider at precisely this time. His 
influence on poetry is enormous. And his influence on prose -- through 
Hemingway and others, and through his literary criticism -- is just as 
immense. And Pound, in his own time, tirelessly promoted other writers 
and artists and brought them to the attention of the world. Modernism 
without Pound would undoubtedly have had far less impact. On top of 
this, Pound's own writing in the Cantos and his earlier poetry is not to
 be missed. But -- Pound was also a fascist and an antisemite who 
eventually prodded, on Rome radio during WW2, U.S. and other Allied 
soldiers to support the Axis powers. Even though towards the end of his 
life he renounced his former antisemitism, this part of Pound's work and
 career should not be ignored. U.S. poet and reluctant Pound disciple, 
Charles Olson likely put it best:
It is not enough to call him a fascist.
He
 is a fascist, the worst kind, the intellectual fascist, this filthy 
apologist and mouther of slogans which serve men of power. It was a 
shame upon all writers when this man of words, this succubus, sold his 
voice to the enemies of the people.
Second generation Beat poet, Ed Sanders, in his Tales of Beatnik Glory,
 discusses the "Lb Q" or "Pound Question" that was on the minds of poets
 in the late '50s and early '60s: Pound is a poetic genius but he's also
 a complete reactionary; what can we do with him? Certainly his fascist 
influence has continued to the present day through groups like the 
CasaPound in Italy and followers of Eustace Mullins in the U.S. I don't 
think Pound's reputation can be completely redeemed. Without going 
extensively into it here, his fascist worldview is far too tied up with 
his thoughts on economics and history, his spirituality and even his 
poetics to entirely overlook it. Yet, especially by taking the 
perspective of what Pound called "Eleusis" in his work, there is much 
that is inspiring and beautiful in Pound also.
But I think the 
main reason why Pound is so relevant today, is that he represents a kind
 of archetype or figure from the interwar era: an avant-garde and 
libertarian writer and artist who was somehow seduced by the worst kind 
of political movement.  And echoes of this process can be heard and felt
 at this very moment. Just as Pound and other bohemian artists spiraled 
towards fascism, too many bloggers, artists, occultists, creative people
 have veered off in a reactionary direction over the past decade or 
more. (Maybe in response to excessive political correctness, which also 
had its parallels in Pound's day.) I've seen this happen in real time. 
The life of Ezra Pound can act as a cautionary tale in this regard.  
RAWIllumination: As I wrote in my blog post today, William
 Blake apparently is a more influential writer than I realized, and  you
 write a lot about Blake in your book. What is it about Blake that would
 particularly appeal to a Robert Anton Wilson fan?
Znore: I think there are many points of contact between William Blake and Robert Anton Wilson. The character Blake Williams in 
Schrödinger's Cat is an obvious hat tip, but there is a much 
wider shared understanding of the two writers. Even if RAW was not 
directly influenced by Blake -- which I'm sure he was -- he would have 
been affected by the poet's worldview through writers, like Joyce and 
Pound, who did deeply influence Wilson's thought. Aside from these 
influences, though, is simply the immense and almost atmospheric 
presence of Blake within the mid-20th century counterculture that RAW 
played a vital part within: from Allen Ginsberg's 1948 "Blake Vision" in
 Harlem, which set Ginsberg off on his career as poet-prophet, to Jim 
Morrison & the Doors (of perception), to the constant ubiquity of 
Blake within the pages of the underground press.   
Yet aside from this general influence, there are also quite specific overlappings of the ideas of the two. In Jerusalem, Blake
 wrote that “I must create a system, or be enslaved by another man's. I 
will not reason and compare: my business is to create.” This emphasis on
 creating one's own system or set of beliefs and not getting "enslaved" 
or ensnared by someone else's belief system (BS) is at the heart of 
RAW's thought. A difference between the two might be that, in his 
prophetic epics and related poetry, Blake did create a vast and 
complex mythological/theological system, whereas Wilson, while he 
explored and played with countless ideas and philosophies, was content 
to take an ironic stance of "transcendental agnosticism" without 
constructing his own elaborate system (although one could argue that he 
approaches this in Prometheus Rising). 
What
 brings the two even closer together, though, is Blake's insistence that
 literal thought must be avoided altogether. The literal and historical 
existence of Jesus Christ, for example, was irrelevant to Blake. The 
thing that matters most is the mythological and symbolic significance of
 Jesus and his mission. Wilson, on the other hand, was an agnostic, but 
one that was entirely and quite uniquely open to mystical and visionary 
experience. The ultimate stress for both writers is the vigilant 
avoidance of moral dogmatism, be it priestly, governmental or 
scientific. Blake would have called himself a "Christian," but his 
Christianity was a non-dogmatic, visionary, life- and body-affirming 
gospel of the Imagination that RAW would likely have found little to 
disagree with:
I know of no other 
Christianity and of no other Gospel than the liberty both of body & 
mind to exercise the Divine Arts of Imagination.
Blake's
 affirmation of the desires and delights of the body -- to the point of 
practicing sex magic, according to certain scholars -- would have also 
appealed to RAW, as would Blake's insistence that "State Religion" is 
"the source of all Cruelty," and that the real battle is the "mental 
fight" between genuine and uncompromised visionaries of the imagination 
and those that use their creative talents to help justify power. These 
are just a few of the many points that unite Blake and RAW.
RAWIllumination: Where does the title of Death Sweat of the Cluster come from?
Znore: Well, one thing that the title does not
 have anything to do with -- contrary to what some have guessed -- is 
the "clusters" of the infected or of the fevered "death sweats" of 
COVID-19. This book has been in the making since 2016 and the title was 
chosen early on, so any connection of the title of the book, and its 
publication in 2020, to the ongoing pandemic is purely a "coincidance". 
In fact, the title is the opposite of anything morbid. And it is related
 to your last question because it's taken directly from the final 
sections of Blake's The Four Zoas. On one level, the "cluster" is
 a cluster of grapes and the "death sweat" is the juice or wine. In this
 way it is related to groupname for grapejuice. But on a deeper level, 
this is also Blake's culminating vision of the apocalypse; the spilling 
of the blood of tyrants and also the communion festival for the great 
harvest of the ascending era. There's a kind of unsettling ambiguity in 
this symbolism -- at once containing the end and the beginning, tragedy 
and comedy, night and day -- that I try to probe and linger within 
throughout the book.
RAWIllumination: I have started reading the entire Bible (partially influenced by your book) and it seems to me Finnegans Wake
 is a kind of modernist Bible, in the sense that reading and 
understanding Joyce is almost as fundamental to understanding modern 
literature as reading the Bible has been to understanding older 
literature for centuries. (At the end of TSOG, RAW remarks that Joyce invented the "New Yorker" story with Dubliners, invented multiple viewpoint novels with Ulysses and invented a new hologrammatic style with Finnegans Wake.)
Znore: Yes, I would agree that Joyce and Finnegans Wake are pretty crucial to understanding modern literature. I notice traces and obvious winks to the Wake in
 the works of Henry Miller, Jack Kerouac, William S. Burroughs, William 
Gaddis, Thomas Pynchon, Philip K. Dick, William Gass, Jorge Borges, 
Vladimir Nabokov, David Foster Wallis, Mark Z. Danielewski and on and 
on, whether this influence is acknowledged or not. It's actually quite 
difficult to avoid the vortex. So in that sense Finnegans Wake has this parallel with the Bible. 
The difference, of course, is that it would be very hard to base a religion -- at least a traditional one -- on Finnegans Wake. Like I said before, the Wake is
 an entirely open book. It is impossible to give just one interpretation
 of it. It resists any form of dogmatism, any ethical or moral 
systematizing, completely. And it constantly demands that the reader 
doubt its own seriousness. We are never really certain if the whole 
thing might not simply be a colossal practical joke. This would seem to 
be the exact opposite of what the Bible is. But is it? 
In the book, I mention that Norman O. Brown (another influence on RAW) wrote that only after understanding the Wake,
 could Westerners ever hope to grok the Koran. He meant that the Koran 
itself is such a rich and "avant-garde" text that it requires a 
heightened literacy to appreciate it. But could the same be said about 
the Bible? In other words, is the Bible itself just as much of an open 
work as the Wake is? Do we only now have the capacity to read it 
as the open and multi-dimensional text that it truly is? Yet we must 
always remember that kabbalists, poets and mystics of all sorts have for
 centuries interpreted the biblical writings in non-reductive, creative 
and esoteric readings. Finnegans Wake, in actively encouraging these types of readings, is merely a part of this deeper tradition. 
RAW is right to say that the Wake has a "hologrammatic style," but it should be remembered that this idea appears in Blake, -- "to
 see a World in a Grain of Sand" -- in the Hermetic writings -- "that 
which is above is like to that which is below" -- and back to Plato's Timaeus and earlier. But the Wake,
 maybe uniquely, captures these ideas in a "style", embodies the living 
microcosmic-macrocosmic correspondence within its every page. And it not
 only does this, but it transforms and enables one to read all other 
books as this also. So if the Wake becomes the Bible, the Bible -- alive to this same tradition --  also becomes the Wake.
RAWIllumination: I'm curious why you decided not to do an ebook of Death Sweat of the Cluster. Do you ever read ebooks, or do they seem like not "real" books to you?
Znore: The
 main reason for not publishing an ebook is that almost all of this 
material is still available -- as blog posts -- online. I wanted to 
shift this writing into a different medium, a printed book. I wanted a 
tactile object that could be touched, smelt and even tasted if desired. 
In certain ways, the once dominant and totalizing medium of print has 
somewhat surprisingly become, in McLuhan's sense, an anti-environment. 
It at least has the potential to temporarily release the reader from the
 current tyranny of networked screens. Blog posts, ebooks and even 
audiobooks do not have the full ability to do this, in my experience, as
 they remain more or less disposable or interchangeable files within the
 neverending feed. Physical books, even if they were published and 
distributed through these networks (as mine is unfortunately by Amazon),
 can be set apart, and in reading them the reader can -- for a time -- 
be set apart as well. I'm not opposed to ebooks or audiobooks, but I 
understand that they are certainly different sorts of media and that 
their "message" changes accordingly. 
RAWIllumination: Do you have a favorite literary critic whom you read for pleasure or insight?
Znore: Ezra
 Pound cautioned that readers should avoid critics who have not 
published any notable creative work themselves. I get where Pound is 
coming from -- there should be some proof that the critics really know 
their business -- but I've also found that certain literary criticism 
can be inspired and inspiring in itself. The work of Northrop Frye on 
Blake I'd include in this, and Frye himself is a fascinating foil and 
"rival" to his University of Toronto English department colleague, 
Marshall McLuhan. In fact, McLuhan's work can be viewed as "extended" 
literary criticism, and I certainly value his insights. Kathleen Raine, 
an accomplished poet who would handily pass Pound's test, is an 
excellent literary scholar of Blake, Yeats, Shelley, etc. I also enjoy 
Marsha Keith Schuchard's work on Blake's possible sexual magic. Frances 
Yates' many books on Renaissance esotericism -- though I'm not sure if 
these can be classed as literary criticism -- are always exciting.
In
 general, I'm not that interested in criticism that tends to emphasize 
the merely formal or stylistic elements of writing. Yet these elements 
can be fascinating if they are related, as they often are, with the 
visionary architecture of the work. I think what I'm looking for in lit 
crit are "clues," explanations of signs, cyphers and symbols that I may 
have overlooked, a kind of solidarity of enthusiasm with someone more 
dedicated than myself; guides that make the way clearer and point 
outside of the text to the greater and endless weaving of influences and
 pulses that holds and runs through all lasting verse and prose. 
Emerson, another inspired poet and critic, wrote that often critics are 
too much concerned with the "material" side of literature -- what the 
writer "does" over what he/she "says". In contrast, he states that poets
 know that they are expressing themselves "adequately" when speaking 
"somewhat wildly." 
This, even though far from 
poetry, is essentially the "method" in Death Sweat. The book is not 
meant to be academic literary criticism or even to resemble it. I have 
too much respect for real criticism to pretend otherwise. So it's not 
criticism and it's not journalism. It's loose, it's "wild" -- even silly
 and embarrassing at times -- and it's primarily concerned with 
burrowing into moments of visionary enthusiasm in books & films 
& pop culture & current events & in my own experiences, 
moments of "bust thru". It's a flawed and stumbling ode to that sort of 
gibberish and doggerel which somehow captures a glimpse of the eternal. 
And that's also the category of both lit and lit crit that I find most 
attractive.
RAW Illumination: I am generally
 up for reading difficult or demanding books and authors, but to tell 
you the truth, whenever I read a passage from Finnegans Wake, I 
am worried about actually being able to read it from start to finish. 
What can you tell me (if you wish to) to assuage my anxiety?
Znore: Just
 a short answer for this. I remember RAW somewhere saying that the Wake 
should be read out loud, and if at all possible read with other people 
while drinking Irish stout (weed would also do). I heartily agree. I 
read Finnegans Wake as music, as a sort of unhinged free jazz 
with Celtic instruments. If you read and listen to it as music, you will
 quickly notice repeating or "rhyming" themes and motifs and eventually 
these will take on meaning and then constellate into greater patterns of
 meaning. Yet attaining the precise or "correct" meaning is secondary. 
When Joyce was asked about the accuracy of the French translation of the
 Wake, he replied that the sound was most important. As long as the 
sound (in French or whatever) carried the reader along its "message" 
had been successfully transmitted. Of course the many existing 
guidebooks help, too. I think RAW also said that FW was the funniest and
 sexiest book he'd ever read. I wouldn't argue with that either. Nothing
 to be intimidated by!
 
Excellent interview; I enjoyed reading it.
ReplyDeleteI'm sitting here in British Columbia and halfway through reading your book. I'm truly enjoying it. I'm reading it alongside Jung's collected "Psyche and Symbol" - a chapter of one and then a chapter of the other, alternating. This is a great way to do it, and the books obviously speak to each other. Of course I imagine I could do the same with your book and FW, or really any other book, and they would still speak to each other, which I am sure is your point.
In any case, I am enjoying your book, and I enjoy your blog. I only wish you could publish more frequently! (That being said, I'll aways prefer a reign of quality over a reign of quantity.)
Thank you for your work!
Finished up your book last week--excellent read! I'm sure I've read most but maybe not all of the chapters on the blog over past years but in the book form they seemed new, fresh & even better. This is definitely a book I will come back to in the future. Great work!
ReplyDeleteVery glad you like it, Manic.
DeleteHave the book. So much esoteric bliss. To shine forth is key. 87
ReplyDeleteThanks, Dennis. Trying to shine.
DeleteGreat interview, and I love these answers Znore - I did wonder about the title too :)
ReplyDelete