Poetics Today 2000 21(1):1-32; DOI:10.1215/03335372-21-1-1
Duke University Press
Poetics of Avant-Garde Poetries II |
Poetry as Prosthesis
Brian McHale
English, West Virginia
ABSTRACT
When, in 1944, William Carlos Williams defined a poem as "a small (or
large) machine made of words," he had in mind as a model for poetry the
precision machines of speed and power celebrated by other modernist writers
and visual artists. But this was not the only machine model current in the
modernist era, for on the margins of mainstream modernism were
"alternative" machines, machines of reproduction and
simulationwriting-machines, imaging-machines, duplicating-machines
such as those of Alfred Jarry, Marcel Duchamp, Franz Kafka, and,
especially, Raymond Roussel. Such machines have proliferated in the postmodern
period and provide the model for "mechanical" writing practices in
postmodernist poetry. The present essay examines the heterogeneity of
postmodernist machine-writing practices and seeks, however provisionally, to
reduce that heterogeneity to some degree of conceptual order. Four
representative texts are examined in some detail: a short acrostic poem by
Jackson Mac Low; Harry Mathews's exposition of "Mathews's
Algorithm," a method for permuting texts; a text by Raymond Federman
that observes certain rigid formal-compositional constraints; and a prose poem
by Charles O. Hartman, which was generated in collaboration with a computer
program called Prose. Next, I outline five possible typologies of machine
poetry, none of which is fully adequate to the range of phenomena in question,
although the fifth one proves less inadequate than the others. First, however,
two binary partitions of the fieldtexts generated by actual machines
versus those generated by virtual machines and composition by chance processes
versus composition by fixed (arbitrary) proceduresare tested and found
wanting. I then develop a grid of four categories: skeleton procedures,
selection constraints, combination procedures, and combination constraints.
Next I consider two spectra, or scales, to measure the degrees of involvement
in the poem's production (degrees of interactivity) by the reader and the
writer. Finally, I examine some of the consequences of machine poetry,
including its consequences for the notion of the poet's
"authority," for the generic identity of poetry, and, finally, for
the estranging light that machine writing retrospectively sheds on the entire
history of poetry. In that light, all poetry, indeed all language use
whatsoever, appears to be what Donna Haraway terms a cyborg
phenomenona human being coupled to a machineor what David
Wills characterizes as a prosthesis. Mechanical composition functions
in this context as a scale model and a heuristic device, figuring in miniature
the larger language-machine and rendering that language-machine visible.

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Copyright 2000 by Porter Institute for Poetics and Semiotics, Tel Aviv University