Rhapsody: Notes on Strange Fictions (15 page)

BOOK: Rhapsody: Notes on Strange Fictions
8.28Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

—The cat sat on the mat, we are told.

—Fair enough, we say. We’ll go with you on that. We’ve seen cats sit on mats, after all. We know it
never happened
. But we’ll pretend, for the sake of the story, that it
did happen
.

This is not subjunctivity level though. With the modal auxiliary
did
versus
could
, we are dealing with an epistemic modality rather than an alethic modality. The latter is equivalent to subjunctivity, but the former is not, a judgement of actuality rather than possibility.

The difference is a matter of facts versus potentials, so we might look at it in terms of reportage.

News reports may be false; articles may be inaccurate; history texts may be wrong: all by failure or by intent. As long as these remain within the realm of what’s possible though, they have an alethic modality, a subjunctivity level, of “could have happened.” It’s quite possible for a man to bite a dog. As factual claims, they also have an epistemic modality of “might have happened” though, so we can read sceptically, or we can
forsake
disbelief and ascribe these factual claims an epistemic modality of “did happen.” We can trust in the veracity of the reportage and project an artificial epistemic modality onto the text.

Where fiction is seen as naturalistic, realistic, mimetic, the ersatz reality it claims to be rendering is so closely modelled on the world we live in that the events described “could have happened,” such that we can do something sim
ilar in play. We don’t forsake disbelief, knowing fine well it’s all made up, but we do suspend it, sustain an artificial epistemic modality.

Even strange fiction contains naturalism in that sense, the mimesis of se
ntences that carry an alethic modality of possibility and to which we ascribe this (artificial, projected) epistemic modality. There are bound to be cats sitting on mats
somewhere
in the text. What makes some fiction strange is that it
also
involves a shift of alethic modality from “could have happened” to “could not have happened,” as the narrative performs a sentence that is harder to read as simply mimetic. Delany’s example, “The red sun was high, the blue low,” would serve as example of a rupture in the mimetic weft, introducing an alethic modality (subjunctivity level) of “could not have happened,” but for ease I’ll stick with my alternative:

 

The crescent sun was high, the moon low.

 

The above sentence representing something impossible—a “crescent sun”—these sort of word-combos that fuck with the reader’s suspension-of-disbelief are, of course, what I’ve been talking about as
quirks of impossibility
. My example is a chimera, Delany’s a novum; mine breaches the laws of nature, his known science—a technical impossibility because we can’t yet stand on a planet in a binary system. It’s a comparable impossibility to that of the novum’s closer bedfellow, the quirk that plays with known history as the novum plays with known science: the
erratum
. Where the novum is a conjuring of what could not be, not
yet
, the erratum is a conjuring of what could not be, not
now
, an historical impossibility because we have already passed the point where events might have hypothetically played out otherwise to produce it.

How do we swallow these alethic quirks? There are people who don’t read fiction at all because they cannot suspend disbelief even in the most mimetic narrative. They cannot entertain (or cannot see the point in entertaining) an artificial epistemic modality. They read a story and know it has the epistemic modality of “this never happened,” and if it never happened, why should they care? This may be significant when it comes to those who can’t suspend di
sbelief in strange fiction, and when it comes to those who can: that some clearly can’t see the point in entertaining texts with an alethic modality of “could not happen” suggests that those who can, insofar as they
do
, are playing a comparable game of make-believe—i.e. sustaining an artificial
alethic
modality.

Contrary to Delany, I’d argue that the continued engagement with the text, the co
ntinued suspension-of-disbelief requires that in some way the “could have happened” alethic modality
persists
. Which is to say, rather than a quirk causing our reading to flip from one alethic modality (“could have happened”) to another (“could not have happened”) in an act of
correction
, it is an act of
addition
that takes place, with the secondary alethic modality introduced and entering into a state of tension with the primary or base level. To illustrate this with an example:

 

The man stood on the balcony, gazing at the clear sky. The crescent sun was high, the moon low. He smiled.

 

In the first sentence, a baseline alethic modality is introduced with a bit of simple mimesis:
could have happened
. In the second, in Delany’s model, the introduction of the “crescent sun” causes an act of correction on the part of the reader, alethic modality flipped:
could not have happened
. But given that the third sentence is entirely as plausible as the first, has nothing strange about it at all, in and of itself, what alethic modality do we read into
it
? Should we not simply perform another act of correction and flip back to “could have happened”? Would we really deem that shift in the second sentence irreversible, reading the narrative as fantastic (to hold with Delany’s term for now) from there on in if no other quirk was introduced into the text to reinforce our reading? Or would we, at some point, decide that the “crescent sun” was just some metaphor, metonym or even misprint that has thrown us, that the text never actually deviated from the basic alethic modality of “could have happened”?

We must, I suggest, entertain
multiple
subjunctivities simultaneously during the reading experience. Even when reading a purely fantastic work, where we’re asked to swallow, for the sake of the story, a complete impossibility such as a crescent sun, some part of us is still playing along with the game of make-believe, continuing to work on the principle that “this could have happened.” For the epistemic modality to persist, that alethic modality upon which the suspension-of-disbelief is founded must persist as a baseline, even as the strange sentences dealing with crescent suns interject themselves among the otherwise mundane paragraphs dealing with men standing on balconies, gazing at skies, and smiling.

The text becomes, then, a pattern of tensions formed by playing these two conflicting subjunctivity levels off against each other, by disrupting the equ
ilibrium of suspension-of-disbelief with the incredulity that attaches to the quirk. It becomes a rhythm: could; could
not
; could; could; could
not
; could; could, could
not
; could
not
; could; could. It becomes the accumulating medley as each voice of a sentence joins the chorus, pitched baritone low or soprano high, singing theme or counterpoint. It becomes the soundscape of those strange sentences sustaining, the note of impossibility from one fading out as the next comes in, or enduring to be built on with even bolder and more brazen strangeness.

 

A Lesser Impossibility

 

The red sun was high, the blue low.

Samuel R. Delany

 

In Delany’s model of subjunctivity level and genre, any such physical impossibilities theoretically render a work no longer s-f, as Delany refers to it—
speculative-fiction
, decapitalised and hyphenated. This is a fairly orthodox view. With all the talk of plausibility and possibility, science and magic, there are many who would argue that the alethic modality of “could not have happened” breaches the rigours of the genre, that SF only ever deals with things that “could not have happened
yet
,” things that therefore “never happened (but could).”

But this is where the problem lies when we consider the jaunting of Bester’s
The Stars My Destination
. In Delany’s model, jaunting would have to manifest an epistemic/alethic modality of “never happened (but could)” in order for the work to qualify as SF. But it’s wishful thinking to imagine it does; it’s the Contingency Slip Fallacy, the Paradigm Shift Caveat. In fact, what we have is the “could not have happened” alethic modality that Delany ascribes to fantasy, manifest in an act which
clearly
breaches what we know of the laws of nature. It’s a magic, a metaphysical causation which requires no power, involves manipulating matter in a jaw-dropping way, and which is instigated by mere will, placing it in the same category, ultimately, as Dracula transforming into a bat. Even allowing for a level of uncertainty, a degree of implausibility, this is surely at odds with the exclusion of impossibility required to map the “could have happened” alethic modality directly to SF.

What we can do, though, is expand on Delany’s idea. Stepping through my example sentence as Delany steps through his, you’d reach the end, having corrected your reading a number of times, (having gone through various po
ssibilities such as the crescent sun being an image on a flag, or a metaphor for an Islamic culture) and settle on an alethic modality of “could not have happened,” having realised that it’s intended to be read literally.

—Ah, you’d say, this is a fantasy story.

Follow Delany’s theory, and if jaunting reads more like a crescent sun than a binary system, then the alethic modality of the jaunting sequences in
The Stars My Destination
would similarly place the book in fantasy rather than SF. If we don’t assume a single subjunctivity level though, then no such instant taxonomic judgement need be made. If the process of reading is one of continual correction we can suspend our ultimate decision, read the text with the multiple alethic modalities it has, taking one sentence as SF the next as fantasy, either switching back and forth in one’s attitude to the text or just being in two minds about it, so to speak.

Stealing that famous SF sentence of Heinlein’s and splicing it together with my own, suppose you kick off a story with this paragraph:

 

The door dilated. The man stepped out onto the balcony, gazed up at the clear sky. The crescent sun was high, the moon low. He smiled.

 

The dilating door is a quirk just as the crescent sun is, but it is a different kind of quirk; like Delany’s twinned suns, it is only a
technical
impossibility rather than a
metaphysical
impossibility, a breach of known science rather than the laws of nature, a novum rather than a chimera. Still, it
is
a quirk.

So is this going to be an SF story or is it going to be fantasy? If the story goes on to work almost entirely in the mimetic “could have happened” mode or limits itself to hypothetical nova, we’d probably suspend our decision, waiting for some revelation which explains the crescent sun and places the story firmly in the realm of SF. (Oh crap, it’s a VR story!) If it goes on with the metaphysical chimerae mounting, we might expect a revelation which throws away our reality altogether and places it in the realm of fantasy. (Oh crap, the hero’s dead!) Or indeed, we might happily sustain it as SF. (Oh cool, it’s a PKD story!)

Other books

My Happy Days in Hollywood by Garry Marshall
Damiano by R. A. MacAvoy
Bella Tuscany by Frances Mayes
A Lotus For Miss Quon by James Hadley Chase
Never Smile at Strangers by Jennifer Minar-Jaynes
Stolen by Erin Bowman
Case Without a Corpse by Bruce, Leo
The White and the Gold by Thomas B Costain