\input zine.sty

\lline{\hl Dig Our Heroes Out Of The Trash}
\lline{Steve Abbott}

It's no secret to HOMOCORE readers that American education¨
sucks. Our true history's distorted and denied as we're force-fed¨
a boring history of our oppressors. No wonder many of us vomit at¨
the mere mention of ``literature''. The garage band and `zine¨
movement is a good start in creating our own stories and¨
identities.

But the punk anarcho-queer `zine movement also has a history. In¨
fact for as long as there's been an ``official'' history, there's¨
been a radical opposition -- even if the ruling class has trashed¨
our punk ancestors out of the school books. Its' tim we fight¨
back and reclaim our history.

My proposal is this: make a list or ``map'' of your¨
\underbar{own} influences and heroes. This could include bands,¨
artists, film makers, `zines, political militants, etc. I've made¨
several such ``maps'' over the years because I find it gives me¨
strength. It clarifies my ideas, sparks my creativity, and gives¨
me solidarity with others on the fight against boredom and¨
oppression. To know where we've been not only makes me proud, it¨
also sharpens my ideas about where I want to go.

This ``Hippie Histomap'' (which I did in the early 80's) is more¨
linear than one I'd do today. Today my map might look more like a¨
DNA spiral with different size circles to show how much influence¨
I've taken from different places. But create your own histomap in¨
whatever way you want. It's \underbar{your} life so be your own¨
teacher. This said, here's some notes on some of my own fave punk¨
ancestors.

{\bf Lautramont} (1846 -- 1870) was a tall, skinny nervous kid¨
with a squeaky voice who died at age 24. Born in Uruguay, he¨
lived the last couple years of his life in Paris where he wrote¨
\underbar{Maldoror} and \underbar{The Poesies}. He wrote only at¨
night, punctuating his sentences with loud chords on the piano as¨
he declaimed them (a Johnny Rotten before his time). Even by¨
today's standards, Lautramont's stuff is hardcore.

{\bf Rimbaud} (1854 -- 1891) started writing at age 13. At 17 he¨
became boyfriends with Verlaine (who was 20 years older) and he¨
wrote some really hot shit for the next couple years. Snubbed by¨
Verlaine's wife and the pompous literary scene in Paris, Rimbaud¨
became as socially obnoxious as possible (he'd put lice in his¨
hair so he could pick it out at parties; he diddled with Verlaine¨
under cafe tables as they drank absinthe). \underbar{Season In¨
Hell} is his classic. Gay Sunshine published some of his and¨
Verlaine's dirtiest poems in a book called \underbar{A Lover's¨
Cock}.

The late 1890's was the beginning of the punk `zine movement. In¨
England {\bf Oscar Wilde} and {\bf Aubrey Beardsley} contributed¨
to \underbar{The Yellow Book} (Wilde was jailed shortly¨
thereafter cuz he was fucking a rich dude's kid; Beardsley died¨
young of consumption). In Germany a similar `zine was¨
\underbar{Die Yungend} (The Youth). The proto-punk gang in France¨
included {\bf Baudelaire} (who dyed his hair green), {\bf Nerval}¨
(who walked lobsters on a leash), {\bf Huysmans} (who praised the¨
dark and unnatural over the natural), {\bf Raymond Roussel}¨
(whose weird novels are great) and the painter {\bf Odilon Redon}¨
(who illustrated a book of poetry for the Belgian Satanist Iwan¨
Gilkin).

{\bf Edgar Allen Poe} was the only weirdo America could boast of¨
before 1900. {\bf Walt Whitman} celebrated queer sex in his¨
poetry but you'd never know it from what you're shown in high¨
school.

In pre-Nazi Germany there was an anarchist gang of artists,¨
musicians and writers in Berlin called New Community. One, {\bf¨
Erich Muhsam} (whose first published essay defended homosexuality¨
as an innate tendency) did a monthly `zine called¨
\underbar{Fanal} from 1926 -- 1931. It's first issue proclaimed¨
as it's goal ``to assist in the preparation for revolution''.¨
After serving five years in jail for revolutionary activity,¨
Muhsam published an anthology of agitational song lyrics in 1925¨
which was so popular that he was taken to court again because his¨
book ``prepared the way for civil war''. The Nazi SS arrested¨
Muhsam the night of the Reichstag fire. He was tortured for 15¨
months and finally beaten to death in the office of the¨
commandant of Oranienburg concentration camp.

Although thousands of workers attended Muhsam's plays and¨
performances, this gay anarchist hero has been completely shut¨
out of official histories of the Weimar Republic. Only recently¨
has the German anarchist youth  movement revived interest in his¨
work. Muhsam's spirit can be seen in the Tunix manifesto: ``We're¨
fed up with it here\dots the beer tastes flat like bourgeois¨
morality. They've bossed as around long enough inspecting our¨
ideas, rooms, passports.''

The 1920's and 30's saw some wild stuff in Paris too. The¨
Dadaists and Surrealists are well known so I'll focus on {\bf¨
George Bataille}'s circle which is only lately getting attention¨
in America. Bataille (1897 -- 1962) turned Marx on his head by¨
arguing that economy is based upon waste, not production. He¨
defined humans not as workers but as creatures who need to play.¨
Breton and Sartre hated Bataille because he championed the dirty,¨
the excessive, the kinky, the useless and the mystical. Start¨
with \underbar{Story of the Eye} (a porn novel) and¨
\underbar{Visions of Excess} (Essays). If you dig that, go on to¨
\underbar{Eroticism}, \underbar{Literature and Evil}, and the¨
other stuff. Everything the Situationists say derives from¨
Bataille.

{\bf Laure} (1903 -- 1938) broke with her rich family and flirted¨
with radical politics in Paris, Berlin and Russia. She belonged¨
to the secret society {\bf Acephale} with Bataille and Leiris (in¨
fact, Bataille was her last boyfriend). Laure's best work is the¨
obscenely poetic \underbar{Histoire D'une Petite Fille} which¨
still hasn't been translated into English (although Kathy Acker¨
did a spin-off of it in my \underbar{Soup 3}). If rock'n'roll¨
existed when Laure was alive, she'd have knocked the socks off¨
Patti Smith.

{\bf Rene Crevel} (1900 -- 1935) was a fast-lane friend of¨
Laure's whose open homosexuality and drug taking scandalized¨
literary bigwigs such as Gide, Breton, Pound and Dali. Two of his¨
novels are available in English: \underbar{Difficult Death} and¨
\underbar{Babylon}. Hounded about his lifestyle and torn by¨
political factionalism of his day, Crevel committed suicide in a¨
fit of depression.

These writers have left us ideas we can still use as weapons to¨
plunge into our enemies hearts. Work by Laure, Crevel, Muhsam and¨
others is available in \underbar{Soup 3} for \$4 (checks to¨
``Steve Abbott'', 545 Ashbury \#1, San Francisco CA 94117). I'd¨
like to see some HOMOCORE letters about other readers' fave¨
ancestors.

{\it Steve is also the author of the radical queer sex novel¨
\underbar{Holy Terror} (Crossing Press)}

\bye
