Discipline and Anarchy: Disrupted Codes in Kathy Acker's Empire ofthe Senseless
Autor
Conté, JosephFecha
1999Resumen
Kathy Acker’s novel, Empire of the Senseless (1988), investigates the relationship
of discipline and anarchy in a postmodern Paris that has fallen to Algerian terrorists
and libertine pirates. The competing principles of pain and pleasure, intentionality
and impulse, control and freedom are inextricably linked in the novel. Acker’s
writing articulates a treatise of anarchism: she plunders the cultural storehouse of
Western literature, liberating the classics through plagiarism; she violates every known
taboo, revels in obscenity, smashes genre rules, and commits violence on her characters
that would make the Marquis de Sade blanch. But like Sade, she displays a penchant
for discipline as control as well as punishment. She envisions her novel as a
three-part structure with a rather deliberate progression of effects: the deconstruction
of the patriarchal order, the liberation that follows from an end to repression and
inhibition, and the formation of a new society on the very ground of transgression.
Anarchism eventually runs its course without resistance, entropically feeding on the
fuel of stale and repressive social order until it is exhausted. And discipline carried to
any restrictive extreme at last inspires revolt.