Let’s face it; William Burroughs never really had any job. He didn’t really need to work in
his whole life the lucky bastard. Therefore, it only makes sense that he
assigned himself certain tasks; tasks designed to substitute a man’s daily
working routine (either academic work or the scavenger’s smelly mission). These
goals had to be fulfilled in a precise and accurate way, that’s for sure.
When he felt like orienteering himself around the
streets of a city by walking on “color association lines,”
he was following an order coming from the more absolute kind of a boss one can
have in his/her life: your own individual and eternal self.
I’m sure he had many other
tasks to be completed on a day’s time the way an ordinary clerk working on the
company’s downtown offices has it. I’m also quite sure that he reached
perfection while taking care of these inescapable responsibilities as I’m
perfectly sure that 99, 3% of the ordinary clerks fail to do so.
But that’s life, don’t you think? Life is full of losers + a bunch of
winners-losers. Winners-losers like William S. Burroughs.
+
“I have met
Burroughs quite a few times over the last fifteen years, and he always strikes
me as an upper-class Midwesterner, with an inherent superior attitude towards
blacks, policemen, doctors, and small-town politicians, the same superior attitude
that Swift had to their equivalents in his own day, the same scatological
obsessions and brooding contempt for middle-class values, thrift, hard work,
parenthood, et cetera, which are just excuses for petit-bourgeois greed and
exploitation. But I admire Burroughs more than any other living writer, and
most of those who are dead.”
J.G. Ballard
on William Burroughs
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