At the
risk of being overly simplistic, Jacque Derrida’s concept of
deconstruction/post-structuralism (whichever you want to call it) is at heart
the perspective any ideological paradigm can be picked apart, bone by bone,
until the skeleton lies in shambles on the floor. The purpose not nihilistic in nature, it is
intended, rather, to cast a wrench of relativity into such lofty ideals as
modernism, and the rigid mindset of structuralism that came in tow. In practice, I have yet to read a science
fiction text that deconstructs the Silver Age better than Philip Joe Farmer’s
1967 Riders of the Purple Wage. From its irreverent title to the telling conclusion, the bones are dust.
Anything
but a modernist vision of man as hero among the stars in his gleaming space
ship, Riders of the Purple Wage is a
satirical vision of the future. Like Ray
Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451, Farmer
creates a futuristic setting to comment upon contemporary issues. But, where the life of Guy Montag is
described in terms the reader can easily access, Farmer places a blackly
sardonic spin on the narrative, the mood and imagery becoming surreal. And the surreal is seen lexically, as
well. Written in irreverent prose that
boils and bubbles into some of the most bizarre, dense, and oddball usage of
language, the story of Chibiabos Elgreco Winnegan is an obtuse dystopian stone
skipping in Alice in Wonderland
waters.
Civilization having evolved
to the point resources are plentiful and well-distributed, people in Chib’s
world are given money for doing nothing and are left to spend it as they
will—their name for this form of welfare the titular purple wage. As complacent as can be, people are
overweight, bask in sex and sex toys, sit in front of the fido (tv-radio) all
day, and, in general, revert to simple pleasures in a wasting lifestyle. With so much time on hand, there is a
flowering of the arts in all sorts of bizarre directions as well, and in
following, an even larger number of critics and theories of more bizarre
conception. Chib a 3D painter, he spends
his days in light rebellion of government, investing ‘vitriol’ in his art. Needing government sanction to continue
working as an artist, however, puts him in a place of need, and an upcoming
exhibition is to be his proving grounds.
How the exhibition turns out, however, may have more to do with the
exigiencies of social and home life brought by the purple wage.
Extremely dense, convoluted
prose (satire on prose itself, it seems at times), Riders of the Purple Wage utilizes the idea of ‘purple’ a few
ways. Word play, puns, and phrasing that
is poetic, experimental, and intentionally disassociating are abound. Purple to some, experimental to others, the
usage of language is, to say the very least, facile. As unpredictable lyrically as the weather, wonderful
lines such as “Grandpa laughs deeply, a
lion’s roar with a spray of doves” are balanced by such opaque, poetically
overburdened lines as:
It grows out and
out until weight and length merge to curve it over, a not-yet weeping willow or
broken reed. The one-eyed red head peeks over the edge of bed. It rests its
chinless jaw, then, as body swells, slides over and down. Looking monocularly
this way and those, it sniffs archaically across the floor and heads for the
door, left open by the lapsus linguae of malingering sentinels.
But it can also be as fun
and clever as: He speaks, thinks, lives
in the present tensely.” But I
digress, and will suffice at saying the reader should know whether they enjoy
reading highly atypical prose or not, and let that be the main criteria on
which they decide whether or not to read this story.
In the
end, Riders of the Purple Wage is,
and will always be, one of the most unique texts the genre has to offer, and
for this will be extremely divisive. If
you are not interested in science fiction as literature and prefer narratives
of the writers Farmer is indirectly commenting upon (Burroughs, Heinlein,
Asimov, and in today’s context, Reynolds, Willis, Scalzi, et al.), then you
should probably skip this one. Yes, it
won a Hugo award, but it was at a time when the organizers and voters were a
more tightly focused group aware of the genre’s place in literature and culture
rather than the overblown popularity contest that is today’s farce—I mean award. Knowing deep down its place in time and the
genre, the novella is one of the major highlights of the American New Wave
science fiction movement and a driving force behind the success of Harlan
Ellison’s classic Dangerous Visions
anthology. Certainly other New Wave writers
owe something to Farmer’s ovoid fornixation vision of pop art and its
vaudeville portrayal critics in a Wall-e
world. Linguistically something to dig
in and chew on, it fulfills an ideal of Derrida, leaving the standard Silver
Age science fiction narrative in shambles.
This is one of the more positive recent reviews of the story I've seen. Sounds like The New Wave at its best. Thankfully I just procured a copy of Dangerous Visions :)
ReplyDeleteI'm interested in the word 'recent'. You must visit better blogs and sites than me. :) The majority I see these days would not consider Riders of the Purple Wage to be in their wheelhouse of 'good story'. It's just too esoteric, too atypical lexcially, too outright bizarre for most genre readers...
DeleteI'll be curious to see
Although I've been reading science fiction since the 1950s, I'm going through Dangerous Visions for the first time. Most of the stories are quite readable, & I would cite Leiber's "Gonna Roll the Bones" as outstanding: imaginative prose conveying a forceful plot with engaging characters. On the other hand, "Riders of the Purple Wage" is one of the most unreadable tales I've ever encountered, full of sophomoric puns & word plays, unnecessarily obscurantist & pretentious. Jonathan Swift parodied such writings in the early 18th century in his "Tale of a Tub."
ReplyDeleteStill surprises me that in his introduction Ellison emphatically declares it the best story in the collection. In length and style it doesn't even fit the collection in my opinion but then variety is important too. I think I would have preferred 4-5 more accessive, "coneventional" stories that this self-indulgent novella.
Delete