Thursday 5 December 2019

Hyborian Bridge 92

The mousepad of Harlan Ellison’s I Have no Mouth and I Must Scream occupies a place of pride in my domain. Harlan, who spoke against the onrushing tide of human flotsam that desecrates the wild aspects of culture, be it a 20s Sullivan skyscraper or the sea stacks on the Isle of Lewis, or a darting swallow on a Granada tile.
“The world is getting sick of these ridiculous excuses.” Virginia Roberts
I just picked that as typical of the ego that attaches itself to the octopus tendrils of global media. They have an unnatural affinity; they deserve eachother. Because the head is unnaturally attracted to propaganda.
Let’s go back in time a short way to when instead of electronics there was neon bathing city-dwellers in an ambient glow, head to foot, swirling along the sidewalks of your mind. Say about 1979, when city countryside were more-or-less demarcated by light and sound.
BACK TO THE NIGHT1-20 in (spot the joke at 1-25)
“I like the skinny burlesque queen”. That’s romance – the city of yesteryear. I remember it well from the Soho of London. I noticed Picaddilly Circus has an immersive proactive digital ad display – all aimed at the head, not the burlesque body of gay romance gone by.
So, neon needn’t be bad so long as it’s surrounded by dancing types, and is not just a stage on the way to total immersion by “sons of neon”. Yes, the romance of city lights almost goes back to Biblical times; harlots at street corners.
Where everything is pitched at the head, the naïve gaiety of dancing and running, riding and hunting are lost. The Bible – O.T. – has a naïve honesty with regard to pleasures of the flesh.
I mean, all of that is to do with movement and line; the dynamics of the body. Fashion accentuates line to supplement the feminine mystique. When Prince Andrew said recently, “sex is a positive act” (prev) I think he was being naively honest in the same way. Someone who is active as a rider, a hunter tends to have a physical turn of mind.
Joan “Armor-plating” I also see as something of a naïve genius. Her songs more than hint at physical infatuation, all done in a gay, romantic loose-rhythm style that is really sublime. Guileless beyond hope’s imagining. Byron
So, romance – whether medieval or city lights – has a physical naivety which really undermines the totalitarian head of digital propaganda and advertising. It’s almost like saying Joan os more medieval than we are today – or how far down the road we have gone in this new millennium to a society that is not sensual nor virile nor feminine (DH Lawrence Hyborian Bridge 82 etc)

All of these are the product of movement and line.
Hyborian Bridge 22
The Song of Red Sonja is a story with music and emotion. It is bewitching even if a mite clichéd. Everything I’ve said here is completely abrogated by a society of information which bypasses the naïve nervous disarming actions of the body – whether on the lamplit street or in some medieval nunnery.
One could reel off a list of pre-modern/post-medieval books/heroes/heroines. From Robin Hood, Friar Tuck, Maid Marion to Moll Flanders and Huck Finn. All the content and style is completely outside of a society of information and completely inside of the charm of the active body in its pursuits and adventures.
Howard’s fantasies are not really so different, just a shade bloodier. Like the previous stories, they are honest and morally straight, and most of the reason is down to their physicality.
A lot of the moral ambiguities in modern literature and entertainment is down to the dishonest pitching of jokes and emotion at the head – verbally as opposed to using the shape and power of the body in active, fluid, dancing pursuits
(this was my dig at Phoebe Waller-Bridge).
Millet
Pictorial 11

The body has a shape and it has a power, and clothing accentuates both.
Ruth
Pictorial 7
Howard’s stories and characters are naively truthful in the Biblical sense, outside of modern ambiguities (Conan’s hot kisses to in Hour of the Dragon). All that really comes from movement and line which are outside of rational information, and as much to do with fantasy as reality (heroic romance).
All literature is fantasy. The Bible is a history that is literary, so contains both aspects. I say that because fantasy is the creative-unconsious speaking to us.
To live in a world without psyche is to be told all that is hocus-pocus, when it is really the beliefs of the psyche which influence events (in reality Hyborian Bridge 89)
This points to the fact that a world (our own) of rational information is a parallel reality without psyche, without physical power (of body, dance in rural pursuits). The parallel reality appeals to the ego (of acolytes) but it is fearful of the primeval physicality (Biblical, O.T. Hyborian Bridge 91)