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MY GHOST IN THE BUSH OF LIES
AUTHOR: PAUL WESSELS
PUBLISHER: DEEP SOUTH PUBLISHING (ISBN:0-9584542-8-0)
PRICE R85,00
“This is the end, my offence, my word-bomb, disturbing the populace. My poem starts with everything and ends in nothing. I need some sort of skin. I’m all out of my own.â€
My Life In The Bush Of Ghosts is the landmark African novel (by Amos Tutuola) that fused folklore with sci-fi and created a blueprint for a specific version of modernity that might be described as “ancient to the futureâ€. But, instead of a literary parody of the classic Tutuola work, the title of Paul Wessels’ debut novel (?) My Ghost In The Bush Of Lies seems to be referring to the Brian Eno-David Byrne sonic collaboration that took its name from the Tutuola novel, and in transposing his medium of reference from the written word to the ghostly dub echoes and shimmering electronic soundscapes of the 1980 post-new wave classic, Paul Wessels has done his readers a great service.
“Dad comes into my room speaking Egyptian, which I don’t understand. He is saying that he’s come to narrate my history. I’m sitting on a bench in the city, he says, and I’m with this other guy. We light up. It’s Jean Baudrillard. Hello manno, he says. Fuckit, I say. So we get up and walk through the deserted streets. Take a short cut through the Carlton Centre. Walk up the escalators. On the landing is a beautiful woman, luminescent blue. She’s lying in a pool of water, dressed in a ballerina’s tutu. It’s cherry, says Baudrillard. Yes we’ve got to get that train, I say. So we pick her up, and carry her back to Baudrillard’s place. Walking across the fields, I try to do flips but I keep dropping Cherry, so I stop trying.â€
The second difficulty concerns Paul Wessels’ use of masks. Navigating his literary masks can be exhausting and can produce a feeling of falling through his texts (the text suddenly flipping into the opposite of its apparent sense). This can occur within the pages of a single chapter, or even within a paragraph. “People who think deeply feel themselves to be comedians in their relationship with others because they have to simulate a surface in order to be understood.†These masks, or “simulated surfaces†occur throughout Wessels’ novel (?). Deep thinkers, according to Wessels, not only need and love masks, but “around every deep spirit there continually grows a mask.â€
Three masks that Wessels wears while listening to himself playing My Ghost In The Book Of Lies: 1.The mask of Paulus Nomad, a providential idler, drug addict, whore, terrorist, madman, farmer, philosopher and writer. The book starts with his arrest and detention. 2. The mask of the literary critic. Nomad (or Wessels) reviews from his prison cell, three works of philosophical literature, by De Sade, Baudrillard and Nietzsche. These three reviews comprise a large chunk of the bulk of this 94 page novel (?). 3. The mask of the literary game player. The text of Wessels’ book is continually interrupted by lengthy italicised “interventions made up of the first complete sentence on page 15 of some books in my possession at various times of writing.â€
Whilst wearing this third mask Wessels unfortunately falls prey to some snobbism perhaps inherent in using this technique and we are given tanatalising clues as to what sort of books were in his possession – lots of literary theory, Hegel, Kant, Raymond Quenau. These “interventions†would perhaps have worked better if the source material of the samples was less high-brow, Louis Lamour westerns for example, or Wilbur Smith.
If everything I’ve written thus far give an indication of a tough, obtuse, opaque, difficult to read text then I’ve failed miserably. Wessels’ great service to his readers is that he has brought a media savvy jouissance to South African writing, one I’ve not yet encountered elsewhere. His writing is an invitation to read quickly, to skim, its density of texture doesn’t slow the reader down but actually accelerates the pace of reading. In this sense My Ghost In The Book Of Lies is a hypertext, a mask of literature that would fit more readily on a computer screen, or a cell phone – SMS it in compact bursts to your entire mailing list, a work to be spread virally – that he has chosen to present the work as a novel (?) might turn out to be a mistake. It’s so furiously “post-modern†a work I can’t imagine many “novel†readers taking to it.
The truth is that Paulus Nomad doesn’t “go†anywhere and has absolutely nothing to say. The more he speaks the less he says. Whilst studying at Rhodes University, Grahamstown, he was forced to go into hiding for planting a word bomb. In prison he recognised chunks and phrases of theory, philosophy, prose, his own dreams. Some he did not recognise. “I suppose that’s more rubbish froom the rubbishâ€. What actually happens in My Ghost In The Book Of Lies is that Paul Wessels and his literary alter ego Paulus Nomad fuse. When you wear the mask of a lie for long enough it becomes the truth. “Life is political.â€
Paul Wessels should not be taken seriously, that is, literally. We should spare him the indignity. he is far too important for that. He can not stop himself from believing that “every word uttered has a purposeâ€. And that purpose is to be unmasked! Every artist, every great artist, wants to get busted, to be revealed.
“I am deep in the bush. I am a double agent. We are under fire. My comrade in a red overall is shooting at us. He does not know that I am here. The bullets zip past my head. My cover is blown. They see through my eyes and see how I deliberately fire off-target, and now force me to take straight aim before firing. DO I GET OUT OF THE BUSH ALIVE, NOW THAT MY COVER IS BLOWN?â€
The concept of My Ghost In The Bush Of Lies is to cut through the ossified notions of culture that belong to the analogue period.
We’re in the digital future now and our literature should reflect that, our cinema should reflect that. Paul Wessels’ book is a model of this new digital awareness that is medium specific in an entirely novel(?) way.
Aryan Kaganof
Howdy all., This is a public service announcement.
Am on a trip, am broke, am an artist, etc.
I was chatting to a friend yesterday about how there are all kinds of publications around the internet and in print that make money; people pay for them, too, even tho, in private, they complain about the content. But here I am online doing a public service, for free, trying to support the scene, and you don’t even want to know how many complaints I get about what I cover (or don’t) on this blog. (Again, if you are of that vein, please write me and volunteer to contribute – I’ve never said no to anyone who wanted to guest blog yet!) Not that you have no right to offer criticism – but please do so in context of the above, constructively, and certainly, please, join in and help me out…. I’d love more crit and art and engagement from those who can offer more – saying I suck does very little (tho it is kind of fun, I admit).
In the same vein, if you want to help but are not a public person (I’m also open to a noms de plum if you want to be scathing but don’t want to get into trouble), feel free to try and help cover my costs! I will accept donations (contact), but more reasonably, as of a little while ago, I’ve added some ads to my site – these are on the right-hand side the blog. I’m using google adsense, which gives directed ads of what my viewers are (supposedly) interested in, based on their browsing and the content of the blog. I only get paid when people click (and not so much), so please do so if you ever (and whenever you) see anything interesting there! They always change.
Of special interest are the little banners, which I get credit for if you follow through on them from this site, directly. One allows those of you with sites to place ads on your own – they are relatively non-invasive, adaptable, and targeted. Even better is the Firefox ad – Firefox is the best browser around. Fast, least bugs, most compatible with most sites, easy to use for beginners (ask Kathryn Smith!), but also has lots of advanced features and plug-ins for super users (I’m sure AJ Venter will agree)… And the latest version comes with google built in to the browser bar! Please click and download and try direct from this page! Free and open source, it really is the best thing to come to the internet since Mosaic. Thanks all.
I gave a talk at the the upgrade! Boston last night, which took place at the experimental art interactive gallery space. (Thanks to Jo green and Turbulence for setting it up!) Check out the link to see the pretty cool GlowLab exhibition (which I guess, in theory, I’m a part of now – cool projects that jumped out at once include soundbike and opsound) and learn more about "the only game in town" (what Jo Green from turbulence calls this hot spot art space).
There was a nice li’l crowd of trickle ins and trickle outs, mostly artists. It felt great to hear some feedback on documentation and the work (Compressionism went down the best, and there were all kinds of thoughts around bringing it to new levels, and having The First Exhibition of the Compressionists), as well as have a full-on discussion about where the two (documentation and work, that is) collide in the displacements between body and text, work and body, work and documentation, and where social anthropology (and cultural studies) play into all of the above. The crowd was mostly artists, and I will be googling them all as soon as I get their surnames from Jo.. Want a few places to start? Check out Michael Mittelman’s Aspect DVD magazine, or kanarinka (aka Catherine D’Ignazio, AI’s co-director) and friends’ the institute for infinitely small things.
Nicole and I are giving a li’l talk at Brown University today. 7pm, Grant Auditorium, corner in the music department – you can see it on a map here.
The Implicit Body
Nicole Ridgway and Nathaniel Stern ( http://nathanielstern.com ) will discuss their concept of the implicit body: the body as an emergent locus of exchange. Showing contemporary examples of interactive and immersive work, The Implicit Body explores questions of affect and perception, and embodiment as performance. This will be followed by a closer look at Stern’s own video, performance and interactive pieces.
nicole ridgway is an interdisciplinary scholar and public intellectual who currently teaches at the Wits School of Arts, University of the Witwatersrand. She teaches in the fields of cultural, visual and gender studies across the divisions of film, drama, art, and interactive media. In 2000 she was awarded a Markle Foundation Fellowship to explore the teaching of Digital Arts in South Africa, and in 2001 spent a year as a Visiting Professor in the Interactive Telecommunications Program at New York University. Her two most recent publications address the question of interactivity and new media art (“In Excess of the Already Constituted: Interaction and Performanceâ€) and the anthropological concept of culture appropriated as a form of prophylaxis in popular discourses around HIV/AIDS (“Culture, Contact and Contamination; Or, If I Touch You Will I get what you’ve Got?â€).
nathaniel stern is an internationally exhibited installation and video artist, net.artist and performance poet. His interactive installations have won awards in New York, Australia and South Africa, and his net.art has been featured in festivals all over Europe, Asia and the US. nathaniel’s collaborative physical theatre and multimedia performance work with the Forgotten Angle Theatre Collaborative has won three FNB Vita Awards and has seen three main stage features at the Grahamstown Festival. His poetry repertoire includes CBGBs and the Nuyorican Poets Cafe, the US National Poetry Slam and the South African HIV/AIDS Arts, Media & Film Festival.
If on Rhode Island, please drop in! Many thanks to Todd Winkler and noah wardrip-fruin for organizing!
Nice li’l article on p-comp in South Africa by Carine Zaayman in Artthrob this month. Granted, I’m more than biased, since it’s mostly about Ralphy Borland and me, but it’s really cool to see such a staple arts publication making a statement like that. Must read if you have no idea what the title of this post means….
With regards to finding info on p-comp in SA, Ralphy Borland’s site has way more than mine, but I gotta give props to Tom Igoe, and the book he wrote with Dan O’Sullivan for getting started. If in Natal, no need to feel left out — Colleen Alborough has a beautiful p-comp installation up at KZNSA for another few weeks! She used the aforementioned book (with a little help from Borland) to teach herself how to hook up alarm-based motion sensors to her computer , and use them as triggers for projected animations and sonic treats.
And speaking of community, I am still taking guest bloggers on: contact me if you are interested in writing on this site. No restrictions on anything other than image sizes! Oh, and no porn or torrentz (I’m not The Man, please be reasonable)…. Would love to get some SA peops outside of the Gauteng area for a change (tho am still accepting writers IN that area).
w00+