Epigraphs

11
Epigraphs: Notes Toward a Theory It may be true, as the critic Wayne C. Booth has observed, that epigraphs and titles assume a particular importance in modernist writing, where " .... they are often the only explicit commentary the reader is given .... " All the same, they are hokey; one more bit of window‐ dressing before we get to the goods. John Barth, "Epigraphs," The Friday Book (quoted from J. B.: "Epigraphs," in The Friday Book) Though collecting quotations could be considered as merely an ironic mimetism . . . it was [Walter] Benjamin's conviction reality itself invited—and vindicated—the once heedless, inevitably destructive ministrations of the collector. In a world that is well on its way to becoming one vast quarry, the collector becomes someone engaged in a pious work of salvage. The course of modern history having already sapped the traditions and shattered the living whole in which precious objects once found their place, the collector may now in good conscience go about excavating the choicer, more emblematic fragments. Susan Sontag, On Photography Why does it make us uneasy to know that the map is within the map and the thousand and one nights are within the book of A Thousand and One Nights? Why does it disquiet us to know that Don Quixote is a reader of the Quixote, and Hamlet is a spectator of Hamlet? I believe I have found the answer: those inversions suggest that if the characters in a story can be readers or spectators, then we,

Transcript of Epigraphs

Page 1: Epigraphs

Epigraphs:NotesTowardaTheory

I t may be t rue , as the cr i t i c WayneC . Booth has

observed, that ep igraphs and t i t les assumea

part icu lar importance in modern is t wr i t ing ,

where " . . . . they are o f ten the on ly exp l ic i t

commentary the reader i s g iven . . . . " A l l the

same, they are hokey; one more b i t o f w indow‐

dress ing before weget to the goods .

John Barth , "Ep igraphs ," The Fr iday Book

(quoted f romJ . B . : "Ep igraphs ," in The Fr iday Book)

Though co l lect ing quotat ions cou ld be cons idered as mere ly an i ron ic

mimet ism . . . i t was [Walter ] Ben jamin 's conv ic t ion rea l i ty i t se l f

inv i ted—andv ind icated—theonce heed less , inev i tab ly destruct ive

min is t rat ions o f the co l lector . In a wor ld that i s we l l on i t s way to

becoming one vast quarry , the co l lector becomes someoneengaged

in a p ious work o f sa lvage . The course of modern h is tory hav ing

a l ready sappedthe t rad i t ions and shattered the l iv ing whole in which

prec ious ob jects once foundthe i r p lace , the co l lector may now in good

consc ience go about excavat ing the cho icer , more emblemat ic

f ragments .

Susan Sontag , On Photography

Whydoes i t make us uneasy to knowthat the

map i s w i th in the mapand the thousand and

one n ights are w ith in the book of A Thousand

and OneN ights? Whydoes i t d i squ iet us to

knowthat Don Quixote i s a reader o f the

Quixote , and Hamlet i s a spectator o f Hamlet? I

be l ieve I have foundthe answer : those

invers ions suggest that i f the characters in a

s tory can be readers or spectators , then we,

Page 2: Epigraphs

The Collected Works of David Lavery 2

the i r readers or spectators , can be f i c t i t ious . In 1833 Car ly le observed

that un iversa l h is tory i s an in f in i te sacred book that a l l menwr i te and

read and t ry to understand, and in which they too are wr i t ten .

Jorge Lu is Borges , "Part ia l Enchantments o f the Quixote"

I

In John Barth 's The Fr iday Book , a co l lect ion of the occas iona l wr i t ings o f that

qu intessent ia l modern is t , we f ind , as part o f the book 's protracted f ront matter

(which inc ludes—in typ ica l Barth ian fash ion—select ions ent i t led "The T i t le o f Th is

Book," "The Subt i t le o f Th is Book," an "Author 's In troduct ion ," in add i t ion to the

usua l "Tab le o f Contents" ) , a sect ion ent i t led "Ep igraphs ." I t i s not , o f course ,

unusua l for an author to inc lude a s ign i f i cant quotat ion or twoas a pre lude to the

text to fo l low. But Barth 's "Ep igraphs" are not typ ica l .

They beg in , in medias res , w i th an e l l ips i s :

. . . shou ld be avo ided. There i s someth ing hokey about an ep igraph,

even a s t ra ight forward ep igraph: a posture of awebefore somepa l impsest ic

Other Text ; a k ind of rhetor ica l a t t i tud in iz ing .

An ep igraph which argues that ep igraphs shou ld not be used ( la ter in a footnote

Barth o f course cr i t i c i zes the use of footnotes) i s obv ious ly se l f ‐ re ferent ia l , but

Barth 's ha l l o f mirrors does not s top there . The ep igraph goes on to der ide ep igraphs

as "one more b i t o f w indow‐dress ing before weget to the goods" ( see the ep igraph

above) . Ep igraphs , we are to ld , on ly remind the reader that "he might better spend

h is t ime" with the "super ior author" whopennedthe ep igraph rather than with the

author o f the text i t se l f . Thus ep igraphs become"ta i l s that wag the i r dogs , but f rom

in f ront , l i ke an awkward f igure of speech." Barth 's appendedquotat ion i ron ica l ly

s ing les out for spec ia l c r i t i c i sm"comic i ron ic ep igraphs ."

A secondep igraph goes on to in formus that the on ly th ing worse than a

s ing le ep igraph i s "a brace of ep igraphs , espec ia l ly whenthe second i s employed in

Tanta l i z ing I ron ic Counterpo int to the f i r s t , as i t a lmost a lways w i l l be ," and judges

themto be annoy ing and need less " throat c lear ings and instrument tun ings" which

on ly prevent the author f romgett ing on with the work at hand.

Nows ince the source of these ep igraphs , we are in formed, i s " J . B . :

'Ep igraphs , ' in The Fr iday Book" (a f ter the secondep igraph, Barth mere ly p laces an

Page 3: Epigraphs

The Collected Works of David Lavery 3

" Ib id" ) , we must o f course judge Barth h imse l f to be gu i l ty o f many of the fau l ts the

ep igraphs themselves name: o f employ ing ep igraphs in the f i r s t p lace , o f us ing

comic‐ i ron ic ep igraphs , o f o f fer ing a "brace of ep igraphs ," o f de lay ing gett ing on

with the s tory . And yet he cannot be accused of postur ing in awebefore "a super ior

author"! A l l in a l l , these Mobius‐s t r ip ep igraphs , l i ke a double negat ive , add up to a

pos i t ive test imony in favor o f the i r use , whatever the i r words exp l ic i t ly say . These

are ep igraphs which b i te the i r ta i l .

When I f i r s t d iscovered Barth 's p layfu l exerc ise , before I rea l i zed the i r

humorous intent , I was momentar i ly taken aback , indeed insu l ted . In fact , I took h is

seeming cr i t i c i smof ep igraphs qu i te persona l ly . As an inveterate user myse l f , I

w inced at h is compla ints aga inst themand wondered i f I was not myse l f gu i l ty to

somedegree of the postur ing he d iscerns in the obsess ive ep igrapher . When I

g radua l ly rea l i zed that Barth was g iv ing back with one hand what he was tak ing away

with the other , I fe l t somewhat better about mycraf t . But the need to defend

myse l f , and in so do ing to exp la in myse l f , remained.

The fo l lowing thoughts might a l so have been ca l led "The Confess ions o f an

Ep igraph Addict ." Though myu l t imate mot ives are theoret ica l , these "notes toward a

theory ," however whims ica l they may seem, shou ld be understood as wel l as part ly

apo log ia . For myownobsess ion with the ep igraph—I nowf ind i t very d i f f i cu l t to

wr i te an essay , or even a poem, without beg inn ing with severa l—has , to mysurpr ise ,

insp i red many a sarcast ic comment (not un l ike Barth 's compla ints ) f rommy

co l leagues , and I would thus l ike to take th is opportun i ty to engage in a formof

d iscourse wemight ca l l "ep igraphy"1 to v ind icate myse l f aga inst myaccusers .

I I

I have of ten joked with f r iends about s tart ing a profess iona l ep igraph serv ice .

P lac ing ads (or "author 's not ices" ) in The Chron ic le o f H igher Educat ion , PMLA,

Wr i ter ' s Market , Publ i sher ' s Week ly , and The NewYork T imes Book Rev iew , I would

then of fer myserv ices to f ind the proper ep igraph (or ep igraphs) for that a lmost ‐

complete scho lar ly ar t ic le about to be sent out to a target journa l . Or , for a much

larger fee , I would orchestrate the ep igraphs for an ent i re book, w i th spec ia l rates

1The word "ep igraphy," o f course , or ig ina l ly re ferred to the h is tor ica l s tudy of

inscr ipt ions appear ing on monuments or ru ins , but i t would seemto be the proper name for the act iv i ty in which I amengaged here .

Page 4: Epigraphs

The Collected Works of David Lavery 4

for the complete package: ep igraphs for the f ront isp iece , parts , chapters , and

sect ions .

I would promise to f ind , a f ter actua l ly hav ing read the art ic le or book in

quest ion , the exact ly r ight "short quotat ion or p i thy sentence p laced at the

commencement o f a work , a chapter , e tc . to ind icate the lead ing idea or sent iment"

( I amquot ing the OEDdef in i t ion) to serve as a br idge and/or extrapo lat ion f romthe

exact ly r ight t i t le to the about‐ to‐ fo l lowappropr iate introduct ion . Myguarantee to

subscr ibers would promise that the quotat ion(s ) prov ided would do what every good

ep igraph shou ld . They would act as mottoes , prepar ing the reader for the text to

fo l low, pav ing the way for the author 's thes is , or announc ing the mind‐set w i th

which the pages ahead shou ld be read. I f asked to supp ly themfor an ent i re book, I

would see to i t that they showthe i r owndeve lopment , the i r ownr i s ing act ion ,

c l imax , and denouement , echo ing , enhanc ing , counterpo int ing , and fu l f i l l ing one

another in a ver i tab le fugue. Myep igraphs would be more that " throat ‐c lear ings"

and " instrument‐ tun ings ." Myep igraphs would have resonance.

No doubt there i s a need for such a serv ice . A f ter a l l , a co l league of mine was

recent ly asked by a un ivers i ty press , to which he had submitted a book manuscr ipt

for cons iderat ion , to f ind ep igraphs for h is chapters pr ior to i t s i s su ing a contract for

the book. The press 's readers had recommendedthe book for pub l icat ion , but not

unt i l i t had ep igraphs!

Myconsu l t ing serv ice would be espec ia l ly appea l ing to l i terary c r i t i cs . For my

market research c lear ly ind icates the use of ep igraphs i s on the r i se among th is

segment o f the populat ion . Both the o ld guard and the avant‐garde use them

l ibera l ly . M. H . Abramsand Frank Kermode, for example , would not th ink o f do ing

without them. Both usua l ly beg in a chapter w ith severa l ( somet imes no less than ha l f

a dozen in Natura l Supernatura l i sm and an equa l number in The Sense o f an End ing ) .

The works o f Gaston Bache lard , to c i te another example , would lose

much of the i r d is t inct iveness w ithout h is ec lect ic and of ten en igmat ic

mottoes , drawn f romh is w ide read ing in the poetry o f severa l

languages .

Page 5: Epigraphs

The Collected Works of David Lavery 5

And Jacques Derr ida , not surpr is ing ly , i s an inveterate ep igrapher ,

though h is quotat ions , l i ke h is ownprose , are o f ten unreadab le and

p lead for deconstruct ion themselves .

Every t rendy art ic le or book shou ld certa in ly have ep igraphs . Ass is tant

professors would be wise to master the art in order to he lp thembreak into the

pages o f the prest ig ious journa ls but , fa i l ing that , they can a lways re ly on meto

supp ly the correct , c lever , eye‐opening ep igraphs necessary to get the i r work

not iced . Hav ing mastered many of the nuances o f the art , I o f ten look on d ismayed at

the amateur ishness , the c lass ic mistakes , o f other , na ive ep igraphers : a t ep igraphs

which are bor ing and unent ic ing ; a t books which use ep igraphs for somechapters but

not for a l l ( thereby v io lat ing the reader 's need for symmetry and pour ing co ld water

on h is or her a l ready aroused ep igraph ica l expectat ions) ; a t authors whorefuse to

exp lore the end less poss ib i l i t ies o f ep igraphs at a l l , o r ep igraphers who l im it

themselves , w i th excess ive t id iness , to on ly one quotat ion whenobv ious ly there

ex is ts , in th is Borges ian un iverse o f ours , an in f in i te number o f poss ib le ep igraphs

for any essay , chapter , or book.

Myc l iente le would not be l im ited to academics however . Many t rade non‐

f ic t ion works—fromMar i lyn Ferguson 's The Aquar ian Consp i racy to Car l Sagan 's

Cosmos and Fr i t jo f Capra 's The Tao of Phys ics ( to namebut a few, chosen at

random)—also use ep igraphs prominent ly , o f ten qu i te creat ive ly . But sure ly not a l l

the authors o f these pro l i ferat ing , t rendy, "NewAge" books—onthe newphys ics and

Eastern wisdom, or consc iousness ra is ing , or futuro logy , or b io feedback , or space

exp lorat ion—find the numerous ep igraphs which decorate the i r pages themselves .

Sure ly both pub l i sher and author would need myexpert ass i s tance .

I m ight even make myserv ices ava i lab le , I suppose , to c reat ive wr i ters as

wel l , those who, in the t rad i t ion of T . S . E l io t , have rea l i zed that an ep igraph ica l

a l lus ion (perhaps in Lat in ) a t the beg inn ing of an obscure poemor s tory i s abso lute ly

de r igger . 2

2A favor i te example of a recent l i terary ep igraph: a co l lect ion of Woody

A l len 's wonderfu l short p ieces bears the t i t le Without Feathers , an en igmat ica l cho ice unt i l we d iscover the book 's ep igraph ( f romEmi ly D ick inson) : "Hope i s the th ing with feathers ." A l len 's t i t le thus consp i res w ith h is ep igraph to he lp lay the foundat ion for the book 's character i s t ic comic pess imism. Obv ious ly Mr. A l len wi l l not need to employ myagency .

Page 6: Epigraphs

The Collected Works of David Lavery 6

Myqua l i f i cat ions for mastermind ing such a serv ice are c lear . A f ter a l l , I have

been a fanat ic quotat ion gatherer for years , keeper o f a commonplace book which

nowf i l l s three , three hundred page Ch inese d iar ies , s tu f fer o f a ha l f ‐dozen

shoeboxes o f 3 x 5 notecards on each of which appears a p i thy quote ( I se ldomseem

to take notes , or to paraphrase , but on ly to quote)—each long ing to be someone's

ep igraph. In a sense , I read in order to search for l i ke ly quotat ions and ama lways

de l ighted when I d i scover a book fu l l o f ep igraph ica l potent ia l , wh ich I then set

about gutt ing .3And I pract ice what I preach , o f course , expert ly us ing ep igraphs in a l l

my ownwr i t ing . A f ter read ing a pub l i shed essay o f mine , which synerg is t ica l ly

combined quotat ions f romAdr ienne R ich and the Tao Te Ch ing , an astute co l league

commented that a l l my essays seemto have the i r incept ion , the i r insp i rat ion , in my

ep igraphs , as i f I wrote the essays themselves to fu l f i l l the i r ep igraphs ' potent ia l .

(Would i t surpr ise you to knowthat when, as an undergraduate , I read Moby‐D ick , I

ident i f ied not w ith Capta in Ahab or w ith I shmael , but w ith that " la te consumpt ive

usher to a grammar school" whogathered those ten pages o f ep igraphs concern ing

whales ca l led "Etymology" which precede that s tupendous nove l? Were he s t i l l a l ive ,

I would make a h ima fu l l partner in myep igraph serv ice . )

Pr ior to open ing mydoors , o f course , I would need to input (and complete ly

c ross ‐ indexed) myowncommonplace books into a computer , and mybook she lves at

the company of f ice would need to be f i l led with the proper re ference l ibrary :

Bart let t ' s , the Penguin D ic t ionary o f Modern Quotat ions , Se ldes ' The Great Ideas ,

Auden 's A Certa in Wor ld , The Oxford Book of Aphor isms , and the l ike . But th is work

would be a labor o f love , and of course I ownmost o f these books a l ready .

I would love to share with you a l l o f my ins ights in to ep igraphy, in the hope

that I m ight prevent you f romgo ing astray in the future , but to do so would be to

pu l l the rug out f romunder myown future smal l bus iness enterpr ise . I don ' t want to

d isc lose a l l my t rade secrets I w i l l have to l im it mycomments to a fewmodest

observat ions on the s tate o f the art . I w i l l be content i f I manage to shed l ight on the

t rue meaning of the ep igraph.

I have d iscovered that I amnot a lone in th is preoccupat ion: the great Germancr i t i c Walter Ben jamin was s imi lar ly obsessed. H is f r iend Hannah Arendt has observed that "noth ing was more character i s t ic o f h im in the th i r t ies than the l i t t le notebooks w ith b lack covers which he a lways carr ied with h imand in which he t i re less ly entered in the formof quotat ions what da i ly l i v ing and read ing netted h imin the way of 'pear ls ' and 'cora ls . ' On occas ion he read thema loud, showedthemaround l ike i tems f roma cho ic and prec ious co l lect ion ." For Susan Sontag 's exp lanat ion of Ben jamin 's mot ives , see the secondep igraph at the head of the present essay .

Page 7: Epigraphs

The Collected Works of David Lavery 7

I I I

Whydoes an author use an ep igraph? When I f i r s t learned the art , my mot ives

were s imple : I w ished to impress my teachers . When I put that quote f rom

Dosto ievsk i a t the head of mypaper on Moby‐D ick , I hoped myAmer ican l i terature

professor would th ink , pr ior to read ing mysophomor ic thoughts on "metaphys ica l

rebe l l ion" in the nove l , that the paper had been wr i t ten by a qu i te erud i te

undergraduate . Myep igraph was thus both a boast and a s ignature ; i t would , I

hoped, beg the quest ion of the d is t inct iveness o f a qu iet s tudent 's mind. Certa in ly

the rat iona le for myundergraduate ep igraphs a lso l ies beh ind many a sophomor ic

scho lar ly ep igraph today . Ep igraphs are o f ten used pedant ica l ly to spec ia l p lead in

advance for the author 's w ide read ing . ( I , o f course , have outgrownsuch

pretent iousness . )

A secondposs ib le mot ive : authors o f ten use quotat ions out o f context in

ep igraphs as arguments‐ f rom‐author i ty on the beha l f o f the i r own, about‐ to‐be‐

presented thes is . When James H i l lman ( in Re‐V is ion ing Psycho logy ) quotes f rom

Wi l l iamBut ler Yeats ' "Sa i l ing to Byzant ium"—"man i s but a pa l t ry th ings ,/A tat tered

coat upona s t ick , un less/Sou l c lap i t s hands and s ing . . . "—the reader , he

presumes, w i l l in fer that Yeats has thereby sanct ioned the very spec ia l meaning the

archetypa l psycho log is t w i l l la ter breathe into the word "sou l . "

A b latant , and reprehens ib le , example of such a pract ice comes to mind. An

astrophys ic i s t namedT . A . Heppenheimer uses the fo l lowing l ines f romE l iot ' s "L i t t le

G idd ing" ( in Four Quartets ) as an ep igraph to Towards D is tant Suns , a book‐ length

paean to space exp lorat ion and co lon izat ion:

Wesha l l not cease f romexp lorat ion

And the end of a l l our exp lor ing

Wi l l be to arr ive where wes tarted

And knowthe p lace for the f i r s t t ime.4

NowHeppenheimer intends , o f course , that we interpret E l io t ' s poet ic v i s ion as

support for h is ownextraterrestr ia l ambit ions : man's t rue home, h is p lace of or ig in ,

4These part icu lar l ines may wel l be the most "ep igraphed in a l l modern

l i terature . I have seen themquoted as ep igraphs in at least a dozen books and art ic les in the last f ive years .

Page 8: Epigraphs

The Collected Works of David Lavery 8

weare supposed to th ink , i s in fact the cosmos. In h is zea l to support h is argument

w ith prefatory ev idence , thus imply ing that both s ides in the war betweenthe " two

cu l tures" are at least in agreement about chas ing a f ter d is tant suns , Heppenheimer

bad ly misreads , indeed betrays , E l io t ' s very Chr is t ian and earthboundwisdom, as the

l ines which fo l lowthose he does quote—descr ib ing the g lor ies o f " the last o f earth

le f t to d iscover"—clear ly show. But Heppenheimer , whoprobab ly foundE l iot ' s words

a l ready quoted—out of context—in a book of toastmaster 's quotat ions and not in the

actua l poem, ev ident ly d id not expect that an Eng l i sh professor would be read ing h is

text and b lowing the cover o f f h is fa l lac ious ep igraphy.

Yet a th i rd , re lated , mot ive i s d iscern ib le . As Haro ld B loomhas chron ic led for

us ad nauseum, wr i ters suf fer f romthe "anx iety o f in f luence ," and th is i s , I suppose ,

as t rue of scho lars as i t i s o f poets . Compuls ive ep igraph ing (not to ment ion

compuls ive footnot ing) may thus be the resu l t o f a bad dose of such anx iety . A fra id

o f speak ing for themselves , scho lars o f ten resort to ep igraphs in order to estab l i sh

up f ront the i r ped igree , to showthey are not a lone in th ink ing as they do , to evoke

precedent for the i r somet imes dub ious pass ions . Whereas ,

accord ing to B loom, every poet seeks to pretend he i s not

p lay ing ventr i loqu is t ' s dummyto the vo ice o f a greater poet ic

fa ther in the t rad i t ion , scho lars , however , seemto embrace

that vo ice whenthey a l low i t a homeat the beg inn ing of the i r

text in an ep igraph.

Ep igraphs may a lso prove to be creat ive in the i r own

r ight , o f fer ing ins ights which cou ld be comeupon in no other

way. In Susan Gr i f f in 's Womanand Nature : The Roar ing Ins ide

Her , a rad ica l femin is t re ‐ read ing of the Western inte l lectua l t rad i t ion , the author 's

juxtapos i t ion of ep igraphs i s centra l to her unusua l modeof inqu iry . For example , a t

the top of a sect ion ent i t led "Terr i tory" (which dea ls w i th the conquer ing of the

"v i rg in land" o f the Amer ican cont inent) , she br ings together quotat ions f romthree

seeming ly d isparate sources : 1 ) the inventor o f the specu lum, 2 ) a patr i s t ic

theo log ian , and 3) S i r Walter Ra le igh :

I saweveryth ing as no manhad ever seen before . . . I fe l t l i ke an exp lorer in

medic ine who f i r s t v iews a newand important terr i tory .

Mar ion S ims, M.D. (on the invent ion of the specu lum)

Page 9: Epigraphs

The Collected Works of David Lavery 9

Cons ider H imwhochose to be born of a v i rg in . . . . F ree ly he penetrates

v i scera knownon ly to H imse l f and with greater joy enters paths where none

has ever been. These l imbs , He fee ls , a re H is own: unso i led and unshared by

any man. . . .

Fortunatus (b ishop of Po i t iers 530‐609) , Opera Poet ica

. . . a countrey that hath yet her maydenhead, never sakt , turned. nor

wrought .

S i r Walter Ra le igh , "D iscovery o f Gu iana"

The reader i s immediate ly s t ruck by the pattern of sex ism—theub iqu i tous metaphor

o f the wor ld o f knowledge as a v i rg in female in medic ine , theo logy , geography—

revea led by the meet ing of these quotat ions . In th is case ep igraphs have becomefor

Gr i f f in a revea l ing means of psychohis tor ica l exp lorat ion .

Whatever the rat iona le for the i r use , i t seemsc lear that ep igraphs are now

very much " in"—aminor but revea l ing passage in the labyr inth of post ‐modern is t

l i terature—andour c r i t i ca l understand ing wi l l l i kewise need to deve lop i f we are to

comprehendthe meaning of th is evo lv ing subtext (or shou ld I say "ep i text"? ) .

IV

Have you not iced that ep igraphs f romDerr ida , Foucau l t , Lacan , et a l a re very

much the order o f the day? In the 1970s Derr ida was a v i s i t ing professor at mya lma

mater . S ince then, I have du ly noted, the scho lar ly ar t ic les o f a number o f i t s facu l ty

are headedwith ep igraphs f romthe arch‐boa‐deconstructor (as Geof f rey Hartman

has ca l led h im) , in one instance fo l lowedby an introductory paragraph which began

( i f memory serves mer ight ) , "As Jacques Derr ida sa id to me . . . " Obv ious ly my

former professors knowvery wel l howto get pub l i shed in these days when"the

French d isease" ( the term—andthe insu l t—is James H i l lman 's ) a f f l i c ts the scho lar ly

estab l i shment .

Or cons ider the example of a recent ar t ic le on movie mus ica ls which featured

a quotat ion f romFoucau l t ( someth ing about the incapac i ty o f language for captur ing

rea l i ty ) fo l lowedby a comparab le observat ion f romA l Jo lson in The Jazz S inger : "You

a in ' t heard noth ing yet ." Thereby imply ing , or so I fe l t f ree to in fer , that Foucau l t ' s

ins ights are not that or ig ina l a f ter a l l . Such a use of what Barth ca l l s "comic‐ i ron ic

ep igraphs" ca l l s to mind the rad ica l juxtapos i t ion of d isparate th ings which

Page 10: Epigraphs

The Collected Works of David Lavery 10

surrea l i smhad patented. "As beaut i fu l as the chance encounter o f a sewing mach ine

and an umbre l la on a d issect ing tab le ," wrote Lautreamont in Maldoror . Miche l

Foucau l t meets A l Jo lson i s a no less s t range encounter . But the art ic le was pub l i shed

in a good journa l , and I suspect that i t s s t r ik ing ep igraphs had much to do with i t s

appearance there .

Another s t r ik ing ep igraph ica l techn ique—andan emerg ing t rend in the

genre—is to leave the ep igraph un ident i f ied , even in a footnote . A var iat ion on the

o ld E l io t s t ratagemof leav ing the Lat in or Greek untrans lated , th is gambit , o f course ,

sets us to wonder ing about the ident i ty o f the ep igraph 's author and not

concentrat ing very much on the text a t hand. A permutat ion of

th is techn ique might , o f course , be an un ident i f ied quotat ion

in a fore ign language—thebest o f both wor lds . Other

permutat ions are l ike ly to becomecommon: f i c t iona l

ep igraphs , for example , as p ioneered a l ready by Borges and

Doug las Hofstadter , a re an emergent t rend. Or perhaps

ep igraphs in which an author quotes h imse l f . . .

As an ep igraph to h is Where the Waste land Ends ,

Theodore Roszak quotes Ephes ians 6 : 12 : "For our content ion i s not w ith the f lesh

and b lood, but domin ion and author i ty , w i th the wor ld ‐ru l ing powers

o f th is dark age , w i th the sp i r i t o f ev i l in th ings heaven ly ." Certa in ly

ep igraph ica l quotat ion f romthe NewTestament i s noth ing new. But

Roszak appends a note a f ter h is c i tat ion which reads : "quoted by

Wi l l iamB lake on the t i t le page of Vala . " Thus Roszak intends h is

ep igraph to be a double a l lus ion—tothe b ib le and to the Romant ic

v i s ionary—thereby summoning the support o f both for Roszak 's

about‐ to‐unfo ld exp lorat ion of "Po l i t i cs and Transcendence in Post ‐

Industr ia l Soc iety ."

The reference induces a k ind of in te l lectua l vert igo , however , s imi lar to what

we fee l in read ing Barth 's ep igraphs , but a l l the more perp lex ing for i t s seeming lack

o f se l f ‐consc iousness . For the thought occurs : what i f I were to nowuse Roszak 's

(B lake 's [Ephes ian] ) ep igraph as an ep igraph in an essay o f myown—this one for

example? Would I not then have to note that the quotat ion had been used by Roszak ,

and thus make i t Lavery 's (Roszak 's [B lake 's {Ephes ian} ] ) ep igraph? Fromsuch an

i l lusory ha l l ‐o f ‐mirrors there may be no escape. I t was inev i tab le , I suppose that

Page 11: Epigraphs

The Collected Works of David Lavery 11

epigraphs in our t imewould—l ike the nove l , f i lm, and drama—becomese l f ‐

re ferent ia l , oroboro ic . Are not ep igraphs about to beg in b i t ing the i r ownta i l s?

But the oppos i te tendency—away f rom invers ion and toward complete

autonomy for the ep igraph—cana lso be observed. Af ter a l l , Walter Ben jamin , Susan

Sontag in forms us , had env is ioned ha l f a century ago a work o f c r i t i c i smwhich would

"cons is t ent i re ly o f quotat ions , and would thereby be devo id o f anyth ing that might

betray empathy ." The work was never completed , but the insp i rat ion remains , for

here l ies yet another poss ib le newd i rect ion: such a work , a f ter a l l , would be pure

ep igraph, do ing away with the need less bothersometask o f c reat ing a text .

And yet , i f Car ly le/Borges i s correct , i f "un iversa l h is tory i s an in f in i te sacred

book that a l l menwr i te and read and t ry to understand, and in which they too are

wr i t ten ," the art o f the ep igraph, whatever metamorphoses i t undergoes , remains a

revea l ing formof express ion . For as metonymous windowsopening into the other

pages o f the in f in i te book of humanthought , ep igraphs acknowledge, a lmost

apo loget ica l ly , the part ia l i ty o f the add i t iona l pages nowabout to be addedto i t

wh i le excavat ing the "emblemat ic f ragments" o f a co l loquy—what R ichard Rorty has

ca l led " the conversat ion of mank ind"—in which the present author recogn izes

h imse l f to be but one smal l vo ice .