{"id":28704,"date":"2012-04-03T16:17:02","date_gmt":"2012-04-03T20:17:02","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/fryeblog.blog.lib.mcmaster.ca\/?p=28704"},"modified":"2012-04-03T16:17:02","modified_gmt":"2012-04-03T20:17:02","slug":"frye-borges-and-the-power-of-the-imaginable","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/macblog.mcmaster.ca\/fryeblog\/2012\/04\/03\/frye-borges-and-the-power-of-the-imaginable\/","title":{"rendered":"Frye, Borges, and the Power of the Imaginable"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><a href=\"http:\/\/fryeblog.blog.lib.mcmaster.ca\/2012\/04\/03\/frye-borges-and-the-power-of-the-imaginable\/624px-borges_001-2\/\" rel=\"attachment wp-att-28712\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignnone size-medium wp-image-28712\" src=\"http:\/\/macblog.mcmaster.ca\/fryeblog\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/4\/2012\/04\/624px-Borges_0011-300x288.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"300\" height=\"288\" srcset=\"https:\/\/macblog.mcmaster.ca\/fryeblog\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/4\/2012\/04\/624px-Borges_0011-300x288.jpg 300w, https:\/\/macblog.mcmaster.ca\/fryeblog\/wp-content\/uploads\/sites\/4\/2012\/04\/624px-Borges_0011.jpg 624w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px\" \/><\/a><\/p>\n<p>I\u00a0 just finished teaching, in my last few classes of this term, a number of the remarkable pieces of fiction in Jorge Luis Borges\u2019<em> Labyrinths<\/em>. The more I return to the great Argentinian writer the more I see the deep affinities between his work and another writer I have grown more and more fascinated with, Edgar Allan Poe, \u201cthe greatest literary genius this side of William Blake,\u201d according to Frye. Frye speaks of Poe admiringly in <em>Anatomy<\/em> as being a much more radical and uninhibited archetypal abstractionist than his contemporary romanticist Hawthorne. He means by this that Poe dispenses with the normal constraints of logic, realism, and conventional morality that hobbled a writer like Hawthorne and made him feel he had to contain the world of Ideality within the confines of a morally responsible allegory. Unlike Hawthorne, however, Borges, like Poe, utterly disregarded any \u201cgeneral distinction between serious and responsible literature on the one hand, and the trifling and fantastic on the other.\u201d As Frye points out,\u00a0 such distinctions<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>are not literary categories, or qualities inherent in literary works themselves. They are the primary elements of the social acceptance of or response to literature. Hence what is accepted as serious or dismissed as trifling may vary from one age to another, depending on currents of fashion or cultural attitudes operating for the most part outside literature.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Because he so thoroughly abandoned any such sense of responsibility or seriousness, Poe was able to give himself over completely to a trust in his own imaginative life. Borges followed his own imaginative instincts in the same way. Both writers exemplify the idea of \u201cpure\u201d literature and the sheer power of the conceivable.<\/p>\n<p>In the opening chapter of <em>Words with Power<\/em>, Frye outlines the sequence of modes that make up the verbal universe and shows how each mode (the descriptive, conceptual, rhetorical, imaginative, and kerygmatic) is founded on an excluded initiative, an aspect of the power of words it must deny in order to assert its own ascendent authority.\u00a0 Thus the mythological or imaginative is the excluded initiative of dogma and ideology, and the excluded initiative of the imaginative is the kerygmatic or anagogic, the world of the meta-literary, a prophetic mode responsive to both the existential and the spiritually transcendent. However, the latter is not a negation of the literary, but literature plus: there is not spiritual reality which is not also an imaginative vision. Perversely, with the current dogmatic hegemony of post-structuralism and cultural studies the imaginative is precisely what is\u00a0 excluded from study by many contemporary critics and scholars. It is against this dogmatic tendency, whether from the right or the left, that writers like Poe and Borges assert and champion the pure autonomy of the imagination.<\/p>\n<p>Literature, Frye writes, is the product of<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p style=\"text-align: left\">the need for a more inclusive mode of verbal communication of a type that since the Romantic period has usually been called imaginative. Such a mode takes us into a more open-ended world, breaking apart the solidified dogmas that ideologies seem to hanker for.<\/p>\n<p style=\"text-align: left\">An imaginative response is one in which the distinction between the emotional and the intellectual has disappeared, and in which ordinary consciousness is only one of many possible psychic elements, the fantastic and the dreamlike having conventionally an equal status. The criterion of the imaginative is the conceivable, not the real, and it expresses the hypothetical or assumed, not the actual. It is clear that such a criterion takes us into the verbal area we call literature.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p style=\"text-align: left\">Nowhere is this criterion of the conceivable and the hypothetical more fully at the centre of a writer\u2019s concern than in Borges\u2019 work where the imaginative or subjective element of dreaming and fantasy reigns supreme. In perhaps his most famous tale, &#8220;The Garden of Forking Paths,&#8221; the universe is conceived of as a laybrinthine temporal multi-verse, a maze of time consisting of potentially infinite alternative story-lines: the legendary garden of the demiurge Tsui Pen is in fact a book, a work of fiction (compare Mallarme\u2019s \u201cle monde va s\u2019aboutir a un livre\u201d).\u00a0 It is a parable \u201cwhose theme is time,\u201d an image of the universe as \u201can infinite series of time, in a growing, dizzying net of divergent, convergent and parallel times, of the universe as embracing \u201call possibilities of time.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Another story, &#8220;The Circular Ruins,&#8221; concerns the paradoxical relationship between illusion and reality, creator and creature: a man arrives on the shores of a deserted part of the jungle, where there is a circular ruin, apparently a demolished temple, \u201clong ago drowned by fire\u201d: he is a shaman, a magus, who has come to this place to invoke the power of the fire god in order to engage in the demiurgic feat of creating a man:\u00a0 to do so he must \u201cdream\u201d a man and then insert him, by the fullest concentration of his mind, into reality.\u00a0 After great struggle he succeeds in his task, but suffers from the awareness that his child must some day be awakened to the knowledge that he is nothing but a dream. However, he is now an exhausted old man, ready for death, and as a conflagration engulfs the rebuilt temple of the fire god he stoically walks into the flames. Not feeling any pain, he realizes that he is himself the dream of another man, who is, according to an ironic infinite regress, perhaps himself a dream of someone else, who is dreaming of a man who creates a man by dreaming: \u201cNot to be a man, to be the projection of another man\u2019s dream, what a feeling of humiliation, of vertigo!\u201d<\/p>\n<p>In Borges, the hypothetical and virtual always trump reality. In one of my favorite \u201cficciones,\u201d &#8220;Tl\u00f6n, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius,&#8221; the narrator and his friend and alter ego discover the existence of a complex, centuries-old fictional project undertaken in secret by an elite group of illuminati to create a completely illusory and fictional world: the discovery of a hoax in an encyclopedia about a country called\u00a0Tl\u00f6n leads to the further, astonishing discovery of an entire planet intricately imagined and recorded in an encyclopedia : the fiction is so successful that what is thus imagined takes on the force of an inexorable pressure on the existing world as the fictional universe begins to insert itself into reality.<\/p>\n<p>The impossible, the non-existent, the unreal is actualized, in much the same way as described by Rilke in <em>Sonnets to Orpheus<\/em> (sonnet 2 of the second part), in which a the purely hypothetical creature, the unicorn, appears at least by virtue of those who lovingly imagined it and fed it \u201conly with the possibility that it truly was\u201d:<\/p>\n<p>O this is the creature that does not exist.<br \/>\nThey knew nothing and yet without a doubt<br \/>\n\u2014his gait, his posture, his neck, down<br \/>\nto the silent light of his gaze\u2014they had loved.<\/p>\n<p>Indeed, it wasn&#8217;t real. But because they loved,<br \/>\nit became a pure animal. Always, they gave it space.<br \/>\nAnd in that space, clear and spare<br \/>\nit raised lightly its head and needed scarcely<\/p>\n<p>to be. They nourished it not with grain,<br \/>\nbut with only the possibility that it truly was.<br \/>\nAnd this gave such strength to the animal<\/p>\n<p>that it grew a horn from its brow. But one horn.<br \/>\nIt passed in its whiteness a young maiden\u2014<br \/>\nand appeared in the silver mirror, and in her.<\/p>\n<p>Borges&#8217; writings, like Frye&#8217;s criticism, are always laid on the surest of foundations: the bedrock substance of the possible, the conceivable, the imaginable&#8211; creators of the real.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>I\u00a0 just finished teaching, in my last few classes of this term, a number of the remarkable pieces of fiction in Jorge Luis Borges\u2019 Labyrinths. The more I return to the great Argentinian writer the more I see the deep affinities between his work and another writer I have grown more and more fascinated with, [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":19,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_monsterinsights_skip_tracking":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_active":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_note":"","_monsterinsights_sitenote_category":0,"_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":"","_links_to":"","_links_to_target":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-28704","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-uncategorized"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.2 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Frye, Borges, and the Power of the Imaginable - The Educated Imagination<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/macblog.mcmaster.ca\/fryeblog\/2012\/04\/03\/frye-borges-and-the-power-of-the-imaginable\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Frye, Borges, and the Power of the Imaginable - The Educated Imagination\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"I\u00a0 just finished teaching, in my last few classes of this term, a number of the remarkable pieces of fiction in Jorge Luis Borges\u2019 Labyrinths. 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