July 22, 2008
Lee Rourke's top 10 books about boredom
"Boredom has always fascinated me. I suppose it is the Heideggerian sense of 'profound boredom' that intrigues me the most. What he called a 'muffling fog' that swathes everything - including boredom itself - in apathy. Revealing 'being as a whole': that moment when we realise everything is truly meaningless, when everything is pared down and all we are confronted with is a prolonged, agonising nothingness. Obviously, we cannot handle this conclusion; it suspends us in constant dread. In my fictions I am concerned with two archetypes only, both of them suspended in this same dread: those who embrace boredom and those who try to fight it. The quotidian tension, the violence that this suspension and friction creates naturally filters itself into my work."
1. William Lovell by Ludwig Tieck
From the German Romantic literary cannon sprang this extraordinary yet - these days - relatively unread novel. Within its pages existence and being are seen as a perpetual spiral of boredom. William Lovell, the novel's eponymous anti-hero, stands on the peripheries of society waiting for a world to satisfy him completely. Of course, it doesn't and nor can it, creating a wonderful tension throughout. This is one of our first novels solely about boredom - a novel that was possibly too modern for its own time and a perfect starting point for this list.
2. Mercier and Camier by Samuel Beckett
Beckett's boredom was an ugly boredom. Endlessly repeated. And through this ugliness, this grotesque repetition a strange, eerie comedy was born. Anything written by Beckett is wholly spellbinding to read and this lesser read masterpiece perfectly sums up the continuing theme of boredom throughout his oeuvre. Mercier and Camier is a short novel of chance meetings and missings - a theme repeated by Beckett almost mercilessly. The banal that he unearths and reuses in his fictions gives it a sense of post-history, a sense that his voice is appearing from elsewhere, something other.
3. The Book of Disquiet by Fernando Pessoa
For me this simply has to be the definitive book on boredom. I sometimes forget I am breathing when I find myself lost in passages from it, so engrossingly beautiful are they to read.
Posted by Robin Varghese at 01:54 PM | Permalink










Comments
So many interesting books on the impossibility of escaping boredom!
Posted by: Jared | Jul 22, 2008 2:18:20 PM
I agree completely with Lee Rourke's brief takes on The Book of Disquiet and Hunger, which, far more than being definitive works on boredom, are undoubtedly among the best books ever written. I read both of them for the first time last year, and both possessed not only a singular mundaneness, but an original art that throttled me to the core.
Posted by: ghostman | Jul 22, 2008 2:52:22 PM
On boredom, Freud, famously wrote that it was a lack of libidinal discharge.
Meaning that the psychic forces were blocked from expression for lack of an outlet.
To me it makes sense...
Thanks for posting.
Posted by: Felix E F Larocca MD | Jul 22, 2008 3:23:32 PM
_Oblomov_ should be here, too.
Posted by: Elatia Harris | Jul 22, 2008 9:05:27 PM
Pessoa's book is about disquiet, about the unsettled mind's search for some sort of peace in meaning, and about a quiet mind's inability to avoid being unsettled. Far from boredom, if you ask me, but instead the great secret drama of all people.
Posted by: Philip Graham | Jul 23, 2008 12:59:03 PM
Good to see you around, Philip. Former student here (you know who). I think you're right. The book is about disquiet, not boredom. But it does deal definitively with the idea of boredom, in that it destroys it. It shows us 'boring' — the quiet office, the passing cloud, the lone individual — then shatters the supposed mundaneness with what the author of the article called great poetry, and what you have called the great secret drama of all people.
On a related note, I cannot think of another book, excerpt perhaps Bely's Kotik Letaev, that so consistently conjures up such startlingly original images of otherwise familiar life.
Posted by: ghostman | Jul 23, 2008 3:25:49 PM
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