Wednesday, March 20, 2019
Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance Essay -- Philosophy Religion
Told by the blurb that we have here iodine of the intimately unique and exciting allows in the history of American letters, one(a) bridles both at the grammar of the claim and at its routine excess. The grammar stays irreparable. But I have a hunch that the assertion itself is valid. Zen and the Art of motorbike Maintenance An Inquiry Into Values, by Robert M. Pirsig (Morrow), is as willfully awkward as its title. It is densely put together. It lurches, with a deliberate shift of its grave ballast, in the midst of fabrication and philosophic discourse, between a private memoir and the conventional impersonality of an engineering or trade journal. As it stands, it is a very vast book, but report has it, and fault lines indicate, that a much longer schoolbook lies behind it. One hears of an eight- hundred-thousand-word draft and feels perversely deprived of it by the sheer sanity and worldliness of the publisher. Zen and the Art is awkward both to populate with and to write about. It lodges in the intelligence as few recent novels have, intensify its grip, compelling the landscape into unexpected planes of order and menace.   The narrative thread is deceivingly trite. Father and son are on a motorcycle holiday, travel from Minneapolis toward the Dakotas, then across the mountains, turning south to Santa Rosa and the Bay. Asphalt, motels, hairpins in the knife-cold of the Rockies, fog and desert, the waters dividing, then the vineyards and the tawny flanks of the sea. Mr. Pirsig is not the first ever to volley Kerouac has been here before him, and Humbert Humbert, a clutch of novels, films, stories, television serials of loners on the move, imbrication the silent miles, toasted or drenched under the big skies, motelling from one neon oasis to the next, and glidin... ... exception. The cracker-barrel voice grinds on, sententious and flat. But the book is inspired, original enough to impel us across gray patches. And as the mountains gentle t oward the sea with father and child locked in a phantasmal grip-the narrative tact, the perfect economy of effect, defy criticism.   A detailed good treatise on the tools, on the routines, on the metaphysics of a specialized skill the parable of a great hunt after identity, after the salvation of mind and soul out of obsession, the hunter being hunted a fiction repeatedly interrupted by, and meshed with, a lengthy meditation on the ironic and tragic singularities of American man- the analogies with Moby Dick are patent. Robert Pirsig invites the prodigious comparison. It is at many points, including, even, the almost complete absence of women, suitable. What more can one say?
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment