literature and the postmodern - a conversation with brian mchale

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an international and interdisciplinary journal of postmodern cultural sound, text and image Volume 3, May 2006, ISSN 1552-5112 Literature and the Postmodern: A Conversation with Brian McHale Brian McHale and Adriana Neagu Adriana Neagu: As we advance into the twenty first century there has been less and less talk of postmodernism, speculation of its death and after-life. Soon after crossing the millennial threshold it became quite clear that there was life after postmodernism after all. Could it be that indeed we are past the postmodern age altogether? In Postmodernist Fiction you describe postmodernism as emerging from modernism with ‘historical consequentiality’. What does postmodernism, with its radical questioning of historicity, seem to be logically and consequentially preparing the way for? Is it now possible to say with the benefit of hindsight, what postmodernism is prior to, in order to discern a foreseeable posterity in current This image cannot currently be displayed.

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Poetics of Postmodernism

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  • an international and interdisciplinary journal of postmodern cultural

    sound, text and image

    Volume 3, May 2006, ISSN 1552-5112

    Literature and the Postmodern: A Conversation with Brian McHale

    Brian McHale and Adriana Neagu

    Adriana Neagu: As we advance into the twenty first century there

    has been less and less talk of postmodernism, speculation of its

    death and after-life. Soon after crossing the millennial threshold it

    became quite clear that there was life after postmodernism after all.

    Could it be that indeed we are past the postmodern age altogether?

    In Postmodernist Fiction you describe postmodernism as emerging

    from modernism with historical consequentiality. What does

    postmodernism, with its radical questioning of historicity, seem to be

    logically and consequentially preparing the way for? Is it now

    possible to say with the benefit of hindsight, what postmodernism is

    prior to, in order to discern a foreseeable posterity in current

    This image cannot currently be displayed.

  • tendencies? Or else, how different is your take on the postmodernist

    experience today from that formulated in Postmodernist Fiction?

    Brian McHale: The narrower question is that of whether I do stand

    by my own poetics of postmodernism and I think I do. I think I dont

    have any regrets, not important ones, about the position I stake out

    there. I still think its tenable, given that its a limited position, i.e. its

    ambitions are limited to a poetics of postmodern fiction, and given

    those parameters, poetics and fiction, I think I am still able to stand

    by it. My position in the second book, Constructing Postmodernism

    was that this after all is an entirely heuristic view of postmodernism

    and it does not make strong claims about its own status. So it

    organises, still pretty much to my satisfaction, a range of texts; it

    establishes some family resemblances; it establishes a sort of range

    and some umbrella concepts. As far as Im concerned, as long as

    one accepts the limitations of that project, I think it still works quite adequately. So, Im not very interested in going back and undoing

    that; I think thats still satisfactory, to me, anyway. If you wanted to

    challenge it at the level of its failure to integrate postmodernist

    fiction in a larger whole, you might say that it doesnt have a very

    strong explanatory scheme, its explanatory scheme is entirely

    internal to the literary-historical dynamics and does not respond in

    any systematic way to larger historical developments. As long as

  • youre not looking for that larger historical sequence or history, then

    I think the poetics still stands. So thats an answer at that level of

    the issue. At the level of the fate of postmodernism altogether, here

    I have to plead agnosticism. Im actually not a futurologist -- Im not

    in the business of predicting the future, Im in the business of literary

    history, which is to observe what has happened, and to think to

    some degree historically, in the literary-historical sense, about the

    present moment. But I think I have too good a sense about how

    many variables you would have to be thinking about, not to mention

    how many unexpected irruptions from elsewhere you would have to

    be taking into account, to talk about the future, so I dont pretend to

    have anything useful to say about where were going. Im

    sympathetic to the idea, as I suggested in my Edinburgh lecture of 2

    days ago, What Was Postmodernism? Or, The Last of the Angels,

    that you heard the other day, that postmodernism may be

    exhausting itself, that it may be reaching a kind of limit, but beyond

    that, I dont have anything more sensible to say than anyone else

    would. Nobody should treat as reliable anything that I or anyone

    else for that matter-- might say about what is coming next,

    especially in the light of the ongoing transformation of the whole

    media ecology. It is distinctly possible that talking about

    postmodernist literature will be rendered obsolete. Im not going to

    endorse that view either actually, but it is a possibility. I think its

  • more likely that what were seeing in the present will continue, which

    is to say, verbal literatures place in the whole media ecology is

    going to change as the new media and forms of expression in new

    media take up different niches in the overall system. Literature will

    shift sideways, parts of it will be superseded by new media, parts of

    it will develop new functions, and new niches. So I dont think I have

    to take the apocalyptic view that this may be the last literature

    generation or something like that, but I do think its a good guess

    that literatures place will be quite different in the future mediascape

    than it had been and that it is now. And that being the case, really,

    one is in no good position to speculate about what the next thing is

    likely to be.

    AN: Of a whole plethora of reference works on postmodernism,

    Postmodernist Fiction and Constructing Postmodernism are among

    the rare few that offer an actual poetics of its forms, a systemic and

    periodical understanding of its articulations with Modernism. The

    formalist method that you then applied to the analysis of

    postmodernist discourse proved enormously enabling and

    productive, particularly in its valorisation of the Jacobsonian notion

    of dominant. By resorting to a similar mindset, can we distinguish a

    High Postmodernism, frozen, canonised, fossilised already, and is

    that the unavoidable condition of all literary phenomena, the fate

  • inscribed, inevitably, as you put it in Postmodernist Fiction, in their

    historicity?

    Do you think that the obsolescence, the exhaustion that may be

    profiling itself is to do with the becoming canonical of postmodernist

    forms in literary discourse?

    BM: I can see that view of the matter and its partly a satisfying

    view. Yet, I never bought into the idea, which is a sort of another

    apocalyptic idea, that postmodernism was a radical break, a leap

    into the unknown, that there was no continuity and no way back

    from it to where we had been before. Im more of the view that

    postmodernist literary expression, and maybe postmodernism in

    general, behaves like earlier cultural periods and phenomena

    behaved, which is to say that precisely the mechanism you were

    talking about is working, that a canonical version of it will be or is

    being or has been crystallised now, which has its own life cycle, and

    that the dynamics of change from the inside and change from the

    outside are going on all along. I have no problem thinking about it in

    those terms, so I expect to see that being played out. On the other

    hand, Im also attracted to Lyotards view of a sort of perpetual

    postmodernism, which is not I think at all incompatible with the other

    view. Lyotard, as you know, reserves the name postmodernism for

    what cannot be accommodated by the canonical system its

  • always what is left over for future recuperation. Therefore, we can

    talk apparently paradoxically, to me not paradoxically at all, about a

    postmodern that precedes the modern.

    AN: An ingrained avant-garde nature, inbuilt in postmodernism,

    preventing ossification, keeping the ball rolling?

    BM: Exactly. Im quite reconciled to the idea that thats happening

    even as we speak, and that some excluded aspect or part or range

    of postmodernism will be left for future generations to make

    something of, to take up and shift to the centre all those dynamics

    which derive from the Russian formalists. I dont see any

    incompatibility between Lyotards model and what was essentially a

    formalist, in part structuralist view that I was using in Postmodernist

    Fiction.

    AN: In retrospect, if we step back, how much about cultural

    postmodernism was media hype and vogue?

    BM: I think a nuanced answer would be that, in the first place, the

    general media embrace of postmodernism comes very late in the

    day. Many of the things we recognise now as being postmodernist

  • preceded the coinage of the word altogether, and date from the

    50s-60s. Even after the coinage of the word in the 1970s it had

    been coined earlier, but its de facto coinage, its availability, dates

    from the seventies -- even in the course of the 70s there is not

    much media interest in postmodernism. If you go back and search

    mass media, the term hasnt been taken up yet. So, even though

    the term is already available in certain areas, to academics and

    architecture critics, it still circulates in fairly limited circles, and really

    only gets taken up as a media buzzword in the 80s sometime and

    into the 90s. So its certainly the case that it was a media

    buzzword and a fashion statement, but all that comes rather late in

    the cycle, really after the most interesting uses of the term had

    occurred in the academy and art practice. In other words, of course

    there was exaggeration, of course there was hype and of course

    there was a sort of media false consciousness about the

    postmodern, but I dont think it interfered with the actual emergence

    of the term, or the actual creation of what we see as its most

    distinctive works, or the works likely to have the longest shelf life,

    literary-historically speaking, or art-historically speaking. I think

    those all predate the use of the term in mass media.

    AN: And implicitly any meta-thinking, any form of self-representation

    somehow.

  • BM: Thats right.

    AN: Outlooks too are subject to the cycle of ideas hence bound to change. In rethinking your findings in Constructing Postmodernism

    and the developments and refinements to the poetics of

    postmodernist forms that the book contributes, is there anything that

    you would do differently in methodological terms? And what

    prompted the work on The Obligation toward the Difficult Whole?

    BM: I think not radically different, certainly not conceptually

    different. Rhetorically the book is not entirely satisfactory now, there

    are ways that I could have made it a more integrated book in

    particular, but conceptually I think I still stand by it, and when I have

    had occasions to reread, especially the Introduction, I think on the

    whole Im satisfied with that. You asked about what prompted me to

    move to the third book and it wasnt actually dissatisfaction with the

    conceptual position of the preceding books, but a sense that really

    there was a whole range of writing, which is to say mainly poetry,

    that I didnt accommodate and didnt address in the first two books

    and it was this that stimulated work on the third book. Out of that I

    learnt something valuable, I think, which is that there is no reason to

    assume that the model holds across all genres or across all cultural

  • practices, so that what I think makes a pretty sound argument in the

    context of fiction, doesnt look nearly as sound in the case of poetry.

    Poetry from certain points of view had been postmodern before the

    postmodern, or had always already been postmodern.

    AN: By definition

    BM: Yes. And from other points of view, perhaps never

    postmodernised. Im able to entertain both of these possibilities.

    What this says is that the model that allowed us to discern the

    transition in the history of the novel doesnt allow that kind of sharp

    transition in the history of poetry; that poetry rather is a kind of

    range, the umbrella under which you can group it is a much broader

    one, and on the whole, the account of poetry has to be less

    integrated by the nature of the object.

    AN: Comparatively, how did you find the application of a formalist

    and structuralist method to verse or perhaps not very productive

    given the plurality that you are describing?

    BM: Its not so much that its unproductive, its just that when you do that, the results are much more various. You get a much wider

    variety of findings. So, I think thats a net gain actually. One comes

  • away from this saying, well, after all, theres not a single unifying

    postmodernism across cultural practices. Of course, theres really

    no reason to imagine that there wouldve been. Despite Fredric

    Jamesons very persuasive attempts to make all postmodernism

    responsive to a single cultural logic, its hard to do, and that

    probably has to do with the interference between, indeed the

    intersection between, so to speak, exterior history and the interior

    histories of each of these disciplines or practices, which are being

    driven by their own internal dynamics, at the same time that theyre

    all subject and responding to the cultural logic of late capitalism. And out of that come these different chronologies, these different

    sequences, and different strands of development. As I try to show in

    the Introduction to The Obligation toward the Difficult Whole, if you

    looked at the postmodernisms of different disciplines, you would

    immediately see that some have strong postmodernisms, in the

    sense that its almost inconceivable to talk about the history of that

    field without the use of the term, and some have weak

    postmodernisms, in the sense that plenty of people get along just fine without talking in those terms. And theres some correlation

    between the strength of their postmodernism and the strength of

    their modernism, so there is such a thing as modern dance in a very

    sharply defined way, and consequently postmodern dance is a

    relatively clear profile. Equally, modern architecture and postmodern

  • architecture have strong profiles, whereas its much less inevitable

    to talk about postmodern painting -- some people do, but its not

    mandatory. You might talk about the postmodern in the field of the

    visual arts, but even that is not as mandatory as it is in the case of

    dance and architecture, and by the time you get to something like

    postmodern music, then really its purely optional, and maybe

    useless. So rather than assuming uniformity, that everything in lock

    step crossed the same threshold at the same time, we should rather

    assume that there are different thresholds that are crossed at

    different times.

    AN: And this within what might be construed as a plural, eclectic,

    yet cohesive dynamics?

    BM: Right. And possibly weakly or strongly cohesive at that.

    AN: Speaking of degrees of internalisation, do you ever worry that

    your paradigm for understanding postmodernism may be taken too

    literally or appropriated in a reductionist, prescriptive even way?

    BM: Sure and of course it has been. That comes with the territory,

    its nothing to be worried about. And that happens despite all the

    disclaimers that I did or might write -- it doesnt make any difference,

  • people will still believe what they please. You cant worry about it,

    but when you get the chance, you complicate it for them, saying,

    yes, but or no, it cant be as straightforward as that, can it, and

    you just keep reiterating, that this is a heuristic device, this is a construction, its not something Ive found out in the world, but Ive

    made it in order to accommodate the things that I found out there in

    the world. On the one hand, its very flattering and its very affirming,

    because it means that people have found it handy, but it also means

    that I have to be philosophical about the applications of it that look

    misguided, or, as you say, reductive. I cant have those satisfactions

    without also having the dissatisfactions.

    AN: 9-11 and the fateful validations of the millennial anxieties that it

    brought, became a periodical term, indeed an almost civilisational

    marker. Can we see its reverberations on the scene of the

    contemporary as a sudden relapse into an epistemological order, in

    identity terms and otherwise? A catch term with Postmodernism

    repeated like a mantra by its theorists was its politics of plurality and

    multiculturalism. Did 9-11 mark the foundering of the

    multiculturalism project?

  • BM: There are two things here. First, Ive always been suspicious

    of the conflation of postmodernism and postcolonialism. In fact, Im

    suspicious of the conflation of all the posts. I dont think

    poststructuralism, postmodernism and postcolonialism are all the

    same posts -- quite the reverse, Im fairly confident that theyre

    each responding to different historical sequences, that they are the

    fruits of different historical logics. Postcolonialism is coming out of

    its own logic, and even its acknowledgement of, let alone its identity

    with, postmodernism, is fairly weak; it doesnt actually need

    postmodernism. There would have been a poscolonialism even if

    there never were a postmodernism, Im fairly confident of that. The

    conflation of postmodernism and poststructuralism I think is also a

    mistake -- its a misunderstanding of intellectual history. The

    assumption that the postmodernists were illustrating postructuralist

    theory, I think, is very easily disproved just by virtue of the dates. Poststructuralism in North America, where arguably the first

    postmodernisms became self-aware, became aware of themselves

    as such, wasnt available at the time when the first postmodernisms

    were being put in place. North Americans werent reading Foucault

    and Derrida in the original, and translations werent available yet.

    The most that one can say, therefore, is that they share some

    common ancestors, which is probably demonstrably true. So

    postructuralism and postmodernism are more like cousins than

  • parent and child. But thats an aside. As for the 9-11 events,

    Randall Stevenson and I, working on our coda to our edited volume

    on the Twentieth-Century Literatures in English, have been trying to

    work out our position about the end point of the twentieth century.

    Were now thinking about a double end point, instructively double:

    there is the endpoint that in prospect we imagined would be the

    terminus, which is to say, New Years Day of the year 2000, a day

    that had been anticipated, arguably, in all kinds of ways,

    eschatological as well as utopian. If you remember, there was

    anxiety about the possibility that the entire technological system

    was going to break down that day because of software bugs, and

    then when it didnt happen, there was this sort of anti-climactic

    sense, almost a disappointment, certainly outright disappointment

    on some peoples part because they thought that all this was going

    to be a great opportunity, that all would be swept away and wed

    start all over again. After the fact there was a certain amount of

    resentment, of cynicism, suspicion that it was all hyped, it was all

    marketing device, and conversely, a certain ambiguity; the software

    engineers version of the story at least, is that in fact, they fixed it in

    time, that in fact there was going to be a disaster, but that they

    managed to patch up the software in a big rush in the few years

    before the New Years Day 2000, and consequently they staved off

    the system crash. We may never know how much truth there was

  • behind this; its very difficult to talk about something that

    conspicuously didnt happen. So that gives us one model of an

    endpoint to the century; its a kind of ironical and paradoxical model,

    a model of how a period, a century could be imagined as ending,

    prospectively -- all the millennial expectations and dreads, the

    momentum building, and then nothing happens -- which reveals in a

    very useful and instructive way the fictionality of that endpoint.

    Turning over the calendar is after all an artificial dating system,

    really only fairly recently put into place, and coming quite late in the

    history of civilisation, adjusted several times, and resting on very infirm foundations, and conventional in the end. You might recall

    there was actually quite a great deal of debate at the time about

    whether that was the proper date to be celebrating the millennium

    anyway. It ought to have been on the New Years Day 2001, the

    purists said. Nobody went out and had the millennial party that

    night, but still the purists were right, from a purely mathematical

    point of view, so the whole thing is a sort of exposure to view of the

    fictionality of these sorts of thresholds and endpoints. Then,

    conversely, the events of 9-11 give us the alternative model, which

    is the violent irruption of history into what we thought was a

    sequence, a continuous measured sequence, now suddenly

    interrupted at a point we never anticipated, by means we never

    imagined, literally unthinkable, out of the blue as they say, and

  • literally so, and imposing on us a threshold that we never imagined

    having to cross. So theres the other model of how change enters

    history and how we might measure endpoints and starting points;

    not what we expected, but what we didnt expect; not what we had

    bargained for, the apocalypse that we were being readied for, but

    the one that catches us unawares. And thats a kind of parable.

    There are these ways of thinking about measuring out units of

    cultural time and periodising, one which we think we have under

    control -- we can use the calendar to predict it -- and the other which

    we have no control over, and which arrives unbidden and unlooked

    for. It also changes our orientation, i.e. Y2K we looked forward to, 9-

    11, we look back from, because now we have an endpoint that we

    didnt expect and what we had understood in one way about the

    history leading up to that, we must now understand in a different

    way, in fact we must understand as a history leading up to 9-11,

    instead of as a history leading up to something else, leading up to

    Y2K. Now suddenly we begin to perceive a different order in the

    cultural history of the twentieth century. In literalistic or pragmatic

    terms we understand what was misunderstood about the 80s and

    the 90s, about what was unnoticed or misconstrued, the historical

    developments that we did not take seriously enough or didnt

    recognise for what they were, or other points that we failed to see

    were on the same line. But then also in our cultural imaginations we

  • begin to see anticipations where we did not see them before, we

    didnt recognise them as anticipations, and we recontextualise all

    our apocalyptic imaginings and the imagination of disaster, we see

    dress rehearsals, and sometimes uncanny anticipations that were

    invisible before because without the event, there was nothing for

    them to anticipate. On American radio in the days after 9-11,

    several times over you heard recitations of W. H. Audens poem

    September 1939, which is hair-raisingly apropos, although to read

    it that way is surely anachronistic, because Auden was talking about

    the onset of a different war, a different set of circumstances. But its

    almost impossible, and in future, for students and readers further

    away from the events, will be impossible for the poem not to be read

    in the light of 9-11.

    AN: As though the poem was inscribed with readings of the event?

    BM: Pre-inscribed, which is very bad history in some sense, its

    pure anachronism, but, at this point, impossible not to see. And so,

    as you now reread the twentieth century, it has all to be reread

    retrospectively, in the light of this event, ironically and uncannily.

    AN: I find it a master-irony as well to think of an entire postmodern

    dystopian horizon, the notorious post-holocaust, post-apocalyptic

  • fictions and recontextualise these in light of their premonitory value.

    Once charged with a defective historical consciousness,

    postmodern authors may in retrospect appear historically prescient,

    postmodern readings of the contemporary culture, almost prophetic.

    AN: Or at any rate, it looks that way now. Its exactly the dynamics

    of Borges essay on Kafkas precursors. Without Kafka, the

    precursors are not related to each other, but as soon as theres

    Kafka, they are. Without that shock of 9-11, there is no recognisable

    history that leads up to 9-11, and now there is, and hence it is

    impossible not to see it in a certain way.

    AN: Do you then think that the fateful day, has inevitably triggered

    a sui generis radically different understanding of the

    postmodernisms relation with history, perhaps a rehabilitation of its

    ethics even?

    BM: I couldnt say that. For one thing, were too near to the event,

    and this is also part of my reluctance to be a futurologist -- I dont

    know how thats going to turn out. As I was indicating in my lecture

    at the University of Edinburgh, the other day, I do think there is a

    waning of some postmodernist features around 9-11, or maybe its

    even more correct to say that theres a notable silence around 9-11,

  • with regard to matters that you would expect to be expressed. My

    account of the rise and fall of the angels is partly motivated and also

    partly enhanced by the observable fact that around 9-11 there were

    relatively few manifestations of this angel imagery -- not that there

    were none, but that, given how angel images proliferated throughout

    the 90s, you would think that on this occasion of all occasions the

    angels would return in a big way. But in fact theyre rather sparse,

    which suggests that in spite of 9-11 this sign of postmodernism, the

    postmodern angel, is winding down of its own accord, that the life

    cycle of postmodernism is coming to its end, as it must out of its

    own internal logic, rather than having been brought to an abrupt end

    by 9-11. So, in the end, 9-11 is another fictitious boundary; it really

    is an irruption out of another order of things and it will be used

    maybe as the marker of the end of a development, but it hasnt

    been experienced that way; it will be another fiction.

    AN: The vision of postmodernism articulated in your two poetics

    stood out also in the positive note it sounded on the phenomenon,

    on its discursive and plural nature. Do you subscribe to fellow

    theorist Ihab Hassans thesis that in part at least, the legacy of

    postmodernism can be viewed as in fact an aesthetic of trust? Too

    easyDo you see that happening at all or being the case?

  • BM: Again, Im reluctant to speculate, but I see at least some signs

    of restriction of plurality, or I suspect thats coming into force -- a

    kind of retreat from the full multiculturalism to which we at least

    gave lip-service once.

    AN: At least from its frenzied, celebrational dimension.

    BM: Yes, and on the whole, I think its a bad sign because it looks

    like it is in response to 9-11 and the threat of the clash of

    civilisations, and that whats being installed in its place is a new

    kind of dualism; at least in some quarters thats sort of the desired

    outcome of all this, that people are now going to be sobered up by

    this shock of reality and will renounce the luxury of indulging in

    pluralism, and that they will now confront the reality principle of

    opposition and polarity. But theres such a tone of relief in the

    quarters where youre hearing this from that its very suspicious.

    After all, theyve been waiting for this all along, theyve been trying

    to undo the plurality of the postmodern from the beginning; in North

    America, and I think also in Europe, plurality is often coded in the

    terms of the 60s and the undoing of the 60s. The 60s really is only

    a figure of speech, its only a synecdoche really, but the cultural

    warfare has been conducted in these terms. Its the 60s and a kind

  • of policing of the 60s thats at stake, and a call to order after the

    excesses of the 60s, which is then recapitulated as a call to order

    after the excesses of the 80s, again and again a call to order, which

    in effect is simply the recoil from pluralism and the nostalgia for the

    rather stable organisation of the Cold War years. Its really a

    nostalgia for the clear-cut polarities and divisions of the Cold War,

    and now of course you have to reorganise in order to have a

    different set of poles, and one can claim the New Europe as your

    allies against this other threat, but the structure is the same -- the

    names have been changed but the structure is the same. So I think

    theres more than a trace of that going on. I dont welcome it, and I

    hope its resisted. For all the kind of centrifugal aspects of those

    episodes of pluralism, I think thats preferable and less dangerous in

    the long run. Ive lately been teaching in a course on science fiction

    a novel by Samuel Delany called Trouble on Triton, which is from

    the midst of the 70s, a book written in 1976, reflecting a sort of

    utopian projection of that pluralisation, a world in which all kinds of identities, sexual and otherwise, plural identities and consecutive

    identities are made available by technological means, and life is

    hard because you always have to be making these choices, always

    continuously renegotiating the parameters of identity, and my

    students, looking at the text, found it actually a dystopia. It was a

    very unsettling project to them. They certainly were able to see that

  • it belonged to its historical moment, not to the future but to 1975-6.

    But on the whole I think Delany was right, this is a sort of version of

    utopia, living among the multiplicity of choices and the pain of

    choice, rather than fleeing into the security of that Manichean world

    view that the Cold War had provided and that after all almost

    destroyed us many times over.

    AN: Somehow Ive always been suspicious of postmodern plurality,

    thinking that its only a shallow form of plurality, stemming precisely

    from the refusal to choose, the pathological condition of liminality of

    the postmodern logic.

    BM: Of course it can be a shallow plurality, but why not, why not

    have a shallow plurality rather than none? And its not just a shallow plurality, one that can be easily recuperated by consumer

    culture, that comes down to the choice between Classic Coke and

    Diet, which amounts to nothing. But just because thats one version of it doesnt mean that one wants to ban plurality altogether, and I

    think there are deeper possibilities and potentialities. I could tolerate

    the shallow pluralism of the marketplace if I felt confident that the

    other plurality was also available and secure somehow. The fear is

    well be left only with the plurality of the marketplace and in other

  • respects well be locked back into the Cold War, well be back in

    what my friend Alan Nadel calls the culture of containment.

    AN: Which would be anomalous.

    BM: Yes, but not unthinkable. The first time around the culture of

    containment was about consumer choice and containment of every

    other choice, and theres no reason to think that it couldnt be

    revived.

    AN: You have worked with a broad range of authors whose

    cataloguing as postmodern comes almost automatic these days.

    One of the misconceptions in circulation for sometime in the 90s

    among consumers, critics even of postmodern literature was that

    writers across the ocean have done a lot more at the level of

    innovation and experimentation than on this side of the Atlantic. As

    with all clichd judgement, there will be a grain of truth in the otherwise sweeping generalisation. From the poeticians point of

    view, have North American authors, particularly insofar as the

    practice of the novel is concerned, better served the vast panorama

    of diversity and multiplicity available in postmodern forms?

  • BM: Im not sure I believe that. There are different national

    chronologies, different national histories of postmodernism, and

    then different national traditions which inflect it in different ways. So

    I think it might be arguable that the Americans are first,

    chronologically, for reasons which have to do with the internal

    dynamics of American literature, and therefore available as models

    for imitation, but I dont think that that means that they offer a

    greater range, or that they exhaust the possibilities or anything like

    that. I think thats not true, and in fact theres plenty of reasons to

    think that, in particular French literature had what we are now willing

    to call a postmodernism thats not a term that was available to

    them then, and to this day theyre not very interested in the term

    but it functioned for the American readers and the American writers

    as a model of how to proceed in a postmodern direction. So I think,

    given the different national histories and the different chronological

    sequences, we can think of plenty of European examples that are

    not closely related to American models; and even when they are

    related, theres always a crucial element of mutual

    miscomprehension which is absolutely essential to literary history.

    Everyone is always, systematically getting it wrong, and without that

    there would be no literary history. Raymond Federman, for instance,

    has had an enormous career in Germany, in German translation,

    and he is by now almost entirely unknown in the United States, hes

  • pretty much disappeared from sight, and the reasons for it are quite

    extrinsic to his reputation in the States, or to the progress, the cycle

    of his career in the States, and has everything to do with the

    German reception of a certain kind of Holocaust literature. While it

    would be incorrect and naive to say the Germans have

    misunderstood Raymond Federman, its true in a certain sense

    that Germans have a different appreciation of his work compared to

    the Americans, but this is an entirely productive misprision, and

    keeps happening all the time.

    AN: Which brings us back to the larger cycle and the old equation:

    literature-reality, and the postmodernist adventure in it. What are to

    you the implications of the waning of postmodernism upon the

    adventure of mimesis? Are we contemplating a return to realism in

    mutated forms, a postmodern realism?

    BM: This is the sort of question that I could evade rather than

    answer by saying, if you understand realism in the way in which

    Jacobson talks about it, which is to say as a historical dynamic,

    where what is regarded as realistic in one generation is

    subsequently regarded as purely conventionalised, stylised in the

    next, and the violation of those conventions then becomes a new

    realism if that is the dynamics of realism, which I think is arguably

  • so, then, firstly, postmodernism was never unrealistic, and secondly,

    the new realisms, whatever they will be, will follow the same

    dynamic. They wont be a return to some imaginary originary

    realism, they will be realisms produced by the dynamic of the

    response to the last realism, in this dialectical way. So, many of the

    postmodernists that Im aware of, and especially the ones that I

    knew personally, always protested that they were strictly speaking

    realists, exactly in this Jacobsonian sense -- that the realisms that

    were currently available were inadequate to the experience of

    reality. This is the John Barth or Ron Sukenick story; they would

    say, well, thats not the way reality seems to me, thats the kind of

    reality which you would only get in a conventionalised fiction. Now

    Im going to show you what reality seems like to me and the only

    way to get there is by exploding the forms of the old realism. From

    that point of view, postmodernism was never unrealistic or anti-

    realistic or irrealistic. It follows from this that the next moves will be,

    structurally, the same sort of move, though the outcomes are

    unforeseeable. People will say once again, as they do all the time,

    as they are saying now, the forms available to me dont capture the

    reality that I experience, therefore I must invent the new forms,

    violate the old ones, and the distance from the old forms is the

    measure of my achieving my new realism. There is of course a

    historical form of realism, which, however, we can describe in terms

  • of a set of conventions, the historical realism that finally reaches its

    crystallised form in the nineteenth century; we can point to that and

    say, yes, thats the historical form of realism, but that surely is not

    what the postmodernists had in mind; they dont do historical

    realism, they may parody or pastiche it, but they certainly arent

    faithful to it, rather they are flagrantly unfaithful to it, and its unlikely

    that any future realism will merely return to that. If it did, it would be

    a pastiche, an ironic rewriting of historical realism in the way that

    some of those postmodernist versions were ironic rewritings.

    AN: And yet we seem to witness an insatiable appetite these days

    for various forms of life writing, autobiography, memoirs, as well as

    biography. The question arises to what an extent this can be viewed

    as an erosion of the postmodernist subversive potential?

    BM: Indeed all kinds of documentary writing, all kinds of grey-zone

    writing between fiction and other forms, all the forms of life writing

    are emerging, but its unsurprising that they should arise. I think this

    is not a retreat from postmodernism, but the response, in the same

    spirit, to the awareness that there must be some other way to

    capture the reality that I experience, and to complexify it. And those

    forms of biography and life writing dont look very much like classic

    autobiography, or classic biography, or classic documentary genres

  • of any kind, they look strange, and they look strange in order to

    make it strange, make their experience strange.

    AN: Back to Russian formalism. Professor McHale, thank you for

    de-familiarising the postmodern again at this particular juncture.

    Edinburgh, 16 June 2005

    an international and interdisciplinary journal of postmodern cultural sound,

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    Volume 3, May 2006, ISSN 1552-5112

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