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Reading in Reverse [Part I of III]

As you may have noticed I’m a big fan of Daniel Levin Becker’s Many Subtle Channels a book about the Oulipo and potential literature. Which is why I asked Matt Rowe to review this for us. Well, he did. But in epic, multi-part style. (Matt Rowe is a true Three Percenter in that regard.) Today I’m posting Part I (and then jumping on a plane to St. Louis) and will get the next two parts up ASAP. Enjoy!

Daniel Levin Becker, Many Subtle Channels: In Praise of Potential Literature (Harvard University Press, 2012)

Many Subtle Channels is the first book in English for a popular audience on the Paris-based group of writers known as the Oulipo. For a few of you, that description will be enough for you to know you need to read it; for others, it鈥檚 all you need to know to dismiss it out of hand. But to dismiss the Oulipo would be to miss one of the most original and powerful of recent approaches to thinking about literature, creativity, and thinking itself. Certainly the members of the Oulipo and the works they create are fascinating in themselves, but properly understanding the Oulipo could also change the way you think about your own writing and reading. If Daniel Levin Becker鈥檚 book doesn鈥檛 fully explore every one of the Oulipo鈥檚 鈥渕any subtle channels鈥濃攁n impossible task for a single book鈥攊t鈥檚 nonetheless an excellent place to start.

What is the Oulipo? Spelling out the acronym 鈥Ouvroir de Li迟迟茅谤补迟耻谤别 Potentielle鈥 and translating it doesn鈥檛 help much: What is a 鈥渨orkshop for potential literature鈥? 鈥淧otential literature,鈥 Levin Becker explains, 鈥渋s both the things that literature could be and the things that could be literature.鈥 That potential is expressed in the form of rules or constraints for writing. The Oulipo is thus usually described as a group of writers who follow formal or procedural constraints鈥攐ften, but not always, mathematical in origin鈥攖o create their work. The most notorious examples are George Perec鈥檚 novel without the letter e, translated by Gilbert Adair as A Void, and Raymond Queneau鈥檚 slim book of One Hundred Thousand Billion Poems. The group鈥檚 only official definition is 鈥渞ats who build the labyrinth from which they plan to escape,鈥 though Levin Becker also describes it as 鈥渁 sort of literary supper club,鈥 because for more than fifty years the Oulipo has met monthly in Paris to eat, drink, and talk about writing.

The bulk of Many Subtle Channels answers the What question, though sometimes in a bare informational sense, with a survey of the Oulipo鈥檚 history and present practice. The Oulipo was founded in 1960 by writer/editor Raymond Queneau (Pr茅sident-Fondateur) and mathematician/polymath Fran莽ois Le Lionnais (Fr茅sident-Pondateur). It now counts thirty-nine members, of whom seventeen are dead and thus excused from attendance at meetings, and one imaginary. Many of its most famous members are excused: Queneau himself, Italo Calvino, Georges Perec, Oskar Pastior, and鈥攃ertainly famous, though not as an Oulipian鈥擬arcel Duchamp. But Harry Mathews, Jacques Roubaud, Jacques Jouet, Marcel B茅nabou, and Herv茅 Le Tellier are alive and working.

Daniel Levin Becker is himself the youngest member, having been coopted in 2009. The first third of Many Subtle Channels recounts his experience of discovering, meeting, and finally joining this strange group. Levin Becker first encountered the Oulipo as a Yale student, when George Perec鈥檚 story 鈥淭he Winter Journey鈥 was assigned in his French class. After college, he was awarded a Fulbright fellowship to go to France with a (he admits) ill-defined project to study the Oulipo. He soon found himself put to work as the group鈥檚 鈥渟lave,鈥 organizing its archives; only after he had left France did he learn that he had been elected to membership himself. He invites us to 鈥渢hink of the Oulipo . . . as a search party for those of us who don鈥檛 know what we鈥檙e looking for.鈥 You can鈥檛 call in that kind of search party: if you ask to be a member of the Oulipo, you are permanently ineligible. When I met Levin Becker in April 2009, he was still a little shell-shocked by his recent election. He鈥檚 since become the reviews editor of The Believer, but cannot regularly participate in Oulipo meetings for the practical reason that he lives in San Francisco, not Paris. This personal story is interesting primarily as a frame for the rest of the text; as Levin Becker accumulates a more substantial body of work, presumably much of it oulipian in nature, his story may take on greater resonance.

Levin Becker really hits his stride in the final two chapters of Many Subtle Channels, where he turns from the What question to So What. The key to understanding the Oulipo is the distinction dating back to the group鈥檚 earliest days between anoulipism, or oulipian reading/discovery, and synthoulipism, or oulipian writing/invention. They are closely related, and as Fran莽ois Le Lionnais wrote in the group鈥檚 First Manifesto, there are 鈥渕any subtle channels鈥 between them.

Anoulipism is where the group applies its idea of 鈥減lagiarism by anticipation,鈥 the Oulipo鈥檚 way of claiming the allegiance of its literary forbears. It is by no means a serious accusation of intellectual theft, rather just a playful claim of affinity. Constrained writing has a long history, from medieval acrostics, sonnets, and sestinas, through the puzzles of Edgar Allan Poe and Lewis Carroll, to Raymond Roussel鈥檚 espionage-worthy writing procedures. The Oulipo identifies its precursors both to promote the further exploration of their techniques and to promote itself by association.

Synthoulipism is the development of new constraints and the production of works which follow them. Oulipian writing has expanded from its earlier focus on formal constraints on the finished product to now include procedural constraints on the act of writing itself; it also encompasses both transformative constraints and procedures (which build on existing works) and generative ones. Here there is a tension between the original goal of contributing to posterity by expanding the repertoire of writing in general and crowd-pleasing linguistic acrobatics which call for public performance (鈥淥ulipo Light鈥 according to some within the group). In France and to a growing extent elsewhere, Oulipo has become a brand name.

The Oulipo鈥檚 work is now pervaded by a tension between performance and permanence. Officially the group鈥檚 work is all about the potential, about discovering and documenting the constraints, not the work they may be used to generate, 鈥渂ut at the end of the day the people who invent or find or resurrect them are the ones who get to use them first, and thus the ones most likely to reap their rewards.鈥 Between the reach of anticipatory plagiarism and the power of the Oulipo brand, it starts to sound like a game that鈥檚 amusing chiefly to those playing it, while everyone else gets taken for suckers鈥攁nd in that light it鈥檚 easy to understand why someone might misunderstand and dismiss the group. Many Subtle Channels is an attempt to explain the Oulipo鈥檚 legitimate importance, though its narrative structure foregrounds the attempt rather than the answer, however provisional, that it finally achieves.

[Part II Coming Soon]



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