
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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::LIDIA YUKNAVITCH::
STATE OF THE ART, OR ART OF THE STATE?
A question I carry around with me like my own skin, like
dna, like dreamecho: in the clusterfucked world of American publishing, with
its market-driven glitz and hype, its television-on-the-page drama and ineloquent
plot thuds, its selling-is-the-center godhead, can fiction still interrupt capitalism?
If certain fiction cannot be “sold,” does it have any value? And
more specifically to my body, does innovative fiction writing by women speak
at all? I am moved to use women writers as an example because I think of their
bodies—corporeal and textual—as epistemological sites.
It used to be that serious innovative fiction was about art and aesthetics.
I think of Gertrude Stein, of Marguerite Duras, of Monique Wittig, Clarice Lispector,
and Christa Wolf. I mean a woman could literally point to the language of the
text and see art and aesthetics in play, moving with and against the grain of
culture.
As the novel called capitalism has overtaken art and aesthetics in this country,
innovative fiction writing has suffered from a seemingly insurmountable obstacle:
few people want to purchase a product which so self-consciously wrestles the
knot between art and culture through the crucible of language. Bookclubs and
talk shows have consumed artistic integrity and the risk to speak the truest
language about one’s experience. There are times when I wonder if fiction
can stake out its territory at all against such monolithic and simultaneously
vacuous odds.
Then I’ll read something so alive my heart’s own beating nearly
takes me out:
Night jasmine. Already?
On this slowly moving couchette.
Not yet.
Tell me everything that you want.
Wake up, Ava Klein. Turn over on your side. Your right arm, please.
Tell me everything you’d like me to—your hand there, slowly. (AVA,
4)
And I’ll think, who published this, this textual
experience generating a value interruptive of capitalism, or more precisely,
the texture of the present’s monolithic money drive?
The independent small press lives, breeds, creates, carries. The experimental
fiction text interrupts, voices, embodies.
What hope we have rests in the idea that hope doesn’t always come from
looking “up” (I put that in quotations to emphasize the capitalistic
goal of money and power). What I mean is that we can yet ground ourselves in
the “work” (I put that in quotations to emphasize a definition which
is contra the superficial corporate and government- generated one). Because
there are writers who yet interrupt the motion of the “present”
(the one being sold to us via television, talking power heads, and consumer
culture) with a different moment(um): Carole Maso, Rikki Ducornet, Leslie Scalapino,
Lynne Tillman, Anne Carson. And there are presses, namely FC2, who remain willing
to take on the “work” of women and men who have not forgotten that
language is a medium and a socially and politically relevant space.
Sometimes that “work” will manifest on the page as formal innovation.
Other times it will surface in terms of themes and contents which do not—either
from blindness or fear or both—succumb to the dictates of the market.
Still other times it will simply be work which makes the heart beat faster or
breathing still for a moment . . . newly emerging hybrid forms, fictional frontiers,
irreverent makings.
It is toward this vision that innovative fiction writers and the publishers
who carry their bodies—corporeal and textual—must lean, shoulders,
skin, voice, alive, noisy, and unflinching.