
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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::LANCE OLSEN::
NARRATOLOGICAL AMPHIBIOUSNESS, or:
INVITATION TO THE COVERT HISTORY OF POSSIBILITY
The present, needless
to say, is too present to imagine.
It’s too much with us, the Technicolor gel we live in.
Try to get your mind around it, some distance on it, some language with which
to articulate it, and in the end all you feel is dumb.
All you feel in the end is like you just raised your camera to take a shot of
that skyscraper in front of you, no, that pallid-skinned red-haired girl crossing
the street beside you, no, that jet rushing miles above you, yes, and your viewfinder
frames nothing but blank blue sky or cloud cusp or, if you’re really,
really lucky, some ghost-strand contrails at 39,000 feet.
The present is clearly too present to imagine. It’s nonsense trying to
pin it down, an act of egg-headed presumption, brash and bombastic tomfoolery,
a fool’s game doomed to fail over and over again, and the one I just can’t
stop playing.
The one, I want to say, most of us at FC2 just can’t stop playing.
In part that’s because every writer, at FC2 and elsewhere, contributes
in some small part to its invention.
Whether or not she or he likes it, of course.
Whether or not he or she is even necessarily aware of it.
In part that’s because by trying to imagine the present, by trying actively
to imagine the present, you have a hand in imagining the future, and by having
a hand in imagining the future you have a hand, a tiny hand, a tiny hand but
a real hand, a real hand and therefore an important hand, in shaping its architectonics.
In part that’s because trying to imagine the present, trying actively
to imagine the present, is a way of remaining awake.
It’s a way of rousing ourselves in the midst of our dreaming.
Thinking, Ludwig Wittgenstein once reminded us, is digestion; it’s that
much a part of who we are.
If you don’t use your own imagination, Ron Sukenick once reminded us,
somebody else is going to use it for you.
For me, here, now, for all of us, here, now, there needless to say exists a
plethora of presents, a number of imaginings, many of which are flat and faded
as last month’s best-seller list, last week’s New Yorker, the six
simplistic book reviews in yesterday’s NYTBR: instance after instance
of the bland leading the bland.
Many of these imaginings are written by the same author.
(This is a secret few people know.)
Many of these imaginings are written by the same author and published by the
same publishing company and carry the same message: Everything will work out
in the end. Every story is the same story because every person is the same person.
There is nothing new under the Ecclesiastes. Don’t worry. Be happy. Be
sad for a little while, obviously, but then be happy. Characters are plump people.
Plot is pleasant arc. Language is plain transparence. The body is boring, politics
passé, gender stable, realism real, the page a predictable arrangement
of paragraphs. Go to sleep.
But the imaginings that have interested me most, the ones that have kept me
awake the longest, are the relatively covert ones, culturally speaking: the
imaginings you can most often find at FC2 that acknowledge our continual condition
of ontological and epistemological inbetweenness while searching for adventurous
forms that can express that condition with convulsive beauty and the disquieting
surprise many of us feel inhabiting these first few seconds of a new century,
a new webwork of potential presents, potential futures.
The imaginings, that is, which engage with what I have come to think of lately
as Narratological Amphibiousness.
How might fiction and hence perception become richer, these imaginings ask—these
are the imaginings, it almost (but not quite) goes without saying, that refuse
to tell—how might fiction and hence perception become richer by living
commensally alongside, in, and/or among several structures and genres and modes
of being and seeing at once?
What might happen, for instance, at the intersection(s) of fiction and, say,
photography, music, video, theory, poetry, hypertext, drama, sculpture, painting,
computer-generated collage-image?
Or, on a more local scale, at the intersection(s) of, say, transgressive fiction
and speculative fiction, surfiction and detective fiction, avant-pop appropriation
and surrealist game, vampire fiction and fake memoir?
In other words, narratologically amphibious imaginings are fictive possibility
spaces that encourage us to contemplate and converse about what happens at the
horizon of Both/And, at the precise instant boundaries become permeable and
commence giving rise to all tomorrow’s parties and step back and invite
us to enter.