''Pataphysics', a term coined by
French writer
Alfred Jarry (1873 – 1907), is a
philosophy dedicated to studying what lies beyond the realm of
metaphysics. It is a
parody of the
theory and methods of modern science and is often expressed in
nonsensical language. A practitioner of 'pataphysics is a '
'pataphysician' or a '
'pataphysicist'.
History
The term first appeared in print in Alfred Jarry's play text "Guignol" in the
28 April,
1893 issue of ''L'Écho de Paris littéraire illustré''. Jarry later defined it as "the science of imaginary solutions, which symbolically attributes the properties of objects, described by their virtuality, to their lineaments" (''Gestes et opinions du Docteur Faustroll'', II, viii).
Raymond Queneau has described 'pataphysics as resting "on the truth of contradictions and exceptions."
Jarry mandated the inclusion of the apostrophe in the orthography "to avoid a simple pun," the pun possibly being ''patte à physique'' (leg of physics), as interpreted by Jarry-scholars Keith Beaumont and Roger Shattuck, or possibly ''pas ta physique'' ('not your physics'), or maybe "Pâte à physique" ('physics-dough').
The '''Collège de 'pataphysique''', founded on
May 11,
1948, in Paris, is a group of artists and writers interested in the philosophy of 'pataphysics. The motto of the college is ''
Eadem mutata resurgo'' ('I arise again the same though changed'), and its head is His Magnificence, Baron Jean Mollet. According to Warren Motte, noted members of the college have included
Noël Arnaud (Regent of General 'Pataphysics and Clinic of Rhetoriconosis, as well as Major Confirmant of the Order of the Grand Gidouille),
Luc Étienne also known as
Luc Etienne Périn (Regent),
Latis (Private General Secretary to the Baron Vice-Curator),
François Le Lionnais (Regent),
Jean Lescure (Regent of Anabathmology), and
Raymond Queneau (Transcendent Satrap). As such, its members are linked with
Oulipo. Publications of the college include the ''Cahiers du Collège de 'Pataphysique'' and the ''Dossiers du Collège de 'Pataphysique''.
The French authors
Raymond Queneau,
Jean Genet,
Boris Vian and
Jean Ferry have described themselves as following the 'pataphysical tradition. The philosopher
Jean Baudrillard is often described as a 'pataphysician and did consider himself as such for some part of his life. One American writer, Pablo Lopez, has even developed an extension of the "science" called the
pataphor.
Although France had been always the center of the 'pataphysical globe, followers have grown up in different cities around the world. In 1966 Juan Esteban Fassio was commissioned to draw the map of the Collège de 'Pataphysique and its institutes abroad. In the 1950s, Buenos Aires and Milan were the first cities to have 'Pataphysical institutes. London, Edinburgh, Budapest, and Liege—as well as many other European cities — caught up in the sixties. In the 1970s, Germany, Sweden, Switzerland, Canada, The Netherlands, and many other countries showed that the internationalization of 'pataphysics was irreversible.
In the
1960s 'pataphysics was used as a
conceptual principle within various
fine-art forms, especially
pop-art and
popular culture. Perhaps the most famous mention of 'pataphysics remains
The Beatles' 1969 song "
Maxwell's Silver Hammer." (Source: ''Beatles Complete Guitar'', Hal Leonard Corporation, 1986) Actual works within the 'pataphysical tradition tend to focus on the processes of their creation, and elements of chance or arbitrary choices are frequently key in those processes. Select pieces from
Marcel Duchamp and
John Cage characterize this. At around this time,
Asger Jorn, a 'pataphysician and member of the
Situationist International referred to 'pataphysics as a new
religion.
Rube Goldberg and
Heath Robinson were artists who contrived machines of a 'pataphysical bent.
During the Communist Era, a small group of 'pataphysicists in Czechoslovakia started a journal called PAKO, or Pataphysical Collegium. Apparently, Alfred Jarry's plays had had a short but lasting impression on the underground philosophical scene there.
The London Institute of 'Pataphysics
The
London Institute of 'Pataphysics was established in September 2000 to promote 'pataphysics. It organised the .
It has six departments:
★ Bureau for the Investigation of
Subliminal Images
★ Committee for
Hirsutism and
Pogonotrophy
★ Department of
Dogma and
Theory
★ Department of
Potassons
★ Department of Reconstructive
Archaeology
★ The Office of
Patentry
In music
★
The Beatles' song "
Maxwell's Silver Hammer" (from ''Abbey Road'') discusses Joan, a student who "was quizzical / studied 'pataphysical'' science in the home." (Source: ''Beatles Complete Guitar'', Hal Leonard Corporation, 1986)
★ Professor Andrew Hugill, of De Montfort University, Leicester, is a practitioner of pataphysical music. A CD, 'Pataphysics'', was curated by Dr. Hugill for the
Sonic Arts Network's CD series. http://www.sonicartsnetwork.org
★ The
Soft Machine songs Pataphysical Introduction Parts I and II from The Soft Machine Volume Two.
★ The Zru Vogue song "Nakweda Dream" from 1981 imagines Alfred Jarry reincarnated as a 34-year-old teenager and mentions 'pataphysics in the last verse: "I’ll do the job of mystics / I’ll study ‘pataphysics / I’ll take up elocution / I’ll find my own solutions / God is infinitely small / I am infinitely tall / I bought a new revolver / I keep it at my bedside" (lyrics copyright 1980 by Andrew L. Jackson).
Pataphor
The ''pataphor'' (
Spanish: ''patáfora'',
French: ''pataphore''), is a term coined by writer and musician Pablo Lopez (
"Paul Avion"), for an unusually extended metaphor based on Alfred Jarry's "science" of 'pataphysics. As Jarry claimed that 'pataphysics existed "as far from metaphysics as metaphysics extends from regular reality," a pataphor attempts to create a figure of speech that exists as far from
metaphor as metaphor exists from
non-figurative language. Whereas a metaphor is the comparison of a real object or event with a seemingly unrelated subject in order to emphasize the similarities between the two, the pataphor uses the newly created metaphorical similarity as a reality with which to base itself. In going beyond mere ornamentation of the original idea, the pataphor seeks to describe a new and separate world, in which an idea or aspect has taken on a life of its own.
[1] [2]
Like ‘pataphysics itself, pataphors essentially describe two degrees of separation from reality (rather than merely one degree of separation, which is the world of metaphors and metaphysics). The pataphor may also be said to function as a critical tool, describing the world of "assumptions based on assumptions," such as belief systems or rhetoric run amok. The following is an example.
Non-figurative
:Tom and Alice stood side by side in the lunch line.
Metaphor
:Tom and Alice stood side by side in the lunch line, two pieces on a chessboard.
Pataphor
:Tom took a step closer to Alice and made a date for Friday night, checkmating. Rudy was furious at losing to Margaret so easily and dumped the board on the rose-colored quilt, stomping downstairs.
(The pataphor has created a world where the chessboard exists, including the characters who live in that world, entirely abandoning the original context.)
[3]
See also
★
Absurdism
★
Brazil (band), an
Indiana band with a small following- the organization of ‘Pataphysical Odd Occurrences- dedicated to the literature of their
lead singer.
★
Dada
★
Oulipo
★
Patapsychology
★
Pseudophilosophy
★
Situationist International
Bibliography
★
Alfred Jarry: A Critical and Biographical Study, Beaumont, Keith, , , St. Martin's Press, 1984, ISBN 0-3120-1712-X
★
Beatles Complete Guitar, Schonberg, Bo, , , Hal Leonard Corporation, 1986, ISBN 0-88188-605-X
★
Roger Shattuck's Selected Works of Alfred Jarry: Ubu Cuckolded, Exploits and Opinions of Doctor Faustroll, Shattuck, Roger, , , Grove Press, 1980, ISBN 0-8021-5167-1
★ Taylor, Michael R.(2007). ''Thomas Chimes Adventures in 'Pataphysics''. U.S. Philadelphia Museum of Art. ISBN 978-0-87633-253-5
1. (Spanish) Luis Casado, Pataphors And Political Language (El Clarin: Chilean Press)(2007)
2. The Cahiers du Collège de Pataphysique n°22 (December 2005), Collège de 'Pataphysique
3. Computer Programming Using Pataphorical Modeling
External links
★
Collège de ’Pataphysique
★
Philosophie pataphysique
★
London Institute of 'Pataphysics
★
''tout-fait'' article, 'Marcel Duchamp and 'Pataphysics'
★
Novísimo Instituto de Altos Estudios Patafísicos de Buenos Aires
★
Colegio Patafisico de Chile
★
Dr. Andrew Hugill, 'Pataphysical Music
★
Pataphors
★
Jean Baudrillard's Pataphysics by
Joseph Nechvatal
★
A 'pataphysical fiction from Ambit Magazine by Michael Brett