
Fiction Collective Two is an author-run, not-for-profit publisher
of artistically adventurous, non-traditional fiction.
FC2 is supported in part by the Illinois Arts Council, Illinois State University,
Florida State University, and the Florida Arts Council.
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::R.M. BERRY::
THE PRESENT OF FICTION
Because of FC2’s
reputation as a forward-looking press, I’m frequently asked at conferences
what I believe is happening in fiction today. My first impulse is to insist
that I have no idea what’s happening and don’t believe anyone else
does either. My second impulse is to insist that nothing’s happening.
These responses avoid the trap of pretentiousness, but they smell of bad faith,
and neither is satisfying. What they mean to acknowledge is a difference between
our present and, say, 1922 or 1968, moments when, at least in Europe and America,
cultural upheaval appeared unmistakable. It might never have been obvious what
Freud’s writings or later Lacan’s Paris seminars were expressing,
but whatever they were, it seemed inseparable from what Joyce and the Harlem
Renaissance and Beckett and those barricades in the streets were expressing.
Of course, looking back we can see, or think we can, that some of the fish swimming
in these currents were, in fact, chickens, that not every writer claiming to
represent 1922 or 1968 was living in the present, but the sense of history unfolding,
of possibilities impossible before, remains palpable even in retrospect.
I don’t believe there’s any comparable upheaval occurring in America
today. In May I attended the Whitney Biennial in New York. I was deeply impressed
by the inventiveness and wild play of the selected works, and the exhibition’s
unprecedented diversity seemed to me cause for great celebration. At the same
time, I couldn’t shake a feeling of arbitrariness, of disconnection from
intellectual breakthroughs or from anything recognizable as art’s history.
Why these forms, not almost any others? Twenty blocks away at MOMA, the Gerhard
Richter retrospective struck me as a case of precisely the opposite. There seemed
much less cause for celebration, little of the fun and spectacle at the Whitney.
I had no difficulty imagining a visitor fresh from the Biennial coming away
bored. However, if anyone asked of Richter’s work why late twentieth-century
painting had to change, she would be deluged with revelations.
So where among such alternatives is FC2? I believe our collective effort is
inseparable from the present. That is, either FC2 exists to represent fiction’s
present against global efforts to misrepresent it, or FC2 shouldn't exist. But
who are we to say, among so many competing versions, which is really the present?
Ours is probably a period of consolidation, of solidifying labor like that which
follows any revolution. In other words, this is when the real work of change
gets done and undone. Therefore, our first task as writers must be to grow up,
to complete the project enunciated by Ronald Sukenick in his 1974 NYTBR Fiction
Collective “manifesto,” that of opening "a path toward the
maturity of the American novel" by assuming responsibility for fiction’s
current direction. This is what our past demands. Our goal at FC2 must be to
produce the writing that can only exist after the great cultural upheavals of
the last century, that continues modernism’s revolutionary program of
self-critique, that lives up to postmodernity’s achievements by overcoming
them. In other words, we are the ones who can’t defer the question of
the present. We’re its producers.
So whenever I’m asked what’s happening in fiction today, I stifle
my impulse to side-step the question and reply:
“At FC2, we’re following four recent developments with keen interest.
First, we’re deeply invested in the new experimental writing by women,
especially the generation born after 1960. This is the front on which we believe
the investigation of writing’s relation to sexuality and the body is progressing
most rapidly today, and for the immediate future, our direction as a literary
enterprise will be partly a response to it. Second, we’re supporting work
that investigates the relation of literature to other media. FC2 remains committed
to writing on the page, but we see in literature’s confrontation with
computers, the web, film, photography, and video an unprecedented opportunity
to find out for the first time what writing on the page actually is. Third,
we’re dedicated to fictions of the book. That is, we believe the history
of literature is advancing at present in the form of fake texts, unwritten novels,
self-generating artifacts, works in which the vehicle of previous literature—i.e.,
covers, copyright pages, titles, blurbs, spines, print, etc.—occurs within
the fiction. And last, we continue to find the present in language. For us,
fiction escapes the past, overcomes its traditional absence, wherever its verbal
medium exceeds the description of character or action and reasserts its autonomous
power. In short, FC2 underwrites fiction's material existence. This is what,
wherever it happens, never happened before.”
And when my questioner guffaws, says I'm mad, and, brandishing his New Yorker,
insists fiction today is no such thing, I reply that it could be.