Marxist Literary Critics Are Following Me!
May 27, 2001 6:53 AM Subscribe
"Several months ago I was approached by an individual who I have reason to believe belonged to a covert organization involving politics, illegal weapons, etc., who put great pressure on me to place coded information in future novels 'to be read by the right people here and there,' as he phrased it. I refused to do it."
How Philip K. Dick betrayed his academic admirers to the FBI.
posted by thirteen at 7:56 AM on May 27, 2001
My favorite PKD is The Man in the High Castle; when I read it, it was the only one of his books in print in hardcover. His rep certainly has soared, though there's a more mature view of sf these days. Dick was a premier fantasist.
posted by dhartung at 10:09 AM on May 27, 2001
And there's a reason people saw him as an anti-establishment writer (other than his work) -- Dick had very strong anti-war sentiments (fictionalized in Radio Free Albemuth):
"At Berkeley my anti-war convictions were actually the reason why I had to drop out. It was just before Korea, you had to belong to the military training corps. I disassembled my M1 rifle and refused to reassemble it – it’s probably in pieces to this day because I dropped one small piece inside another so no one could get it out. I was very left wing.
(Quote from this PKD article.)
Of course, he goes on to talk about how the subculture (c. 1974) is so dangerous that he has to carry a gun...
posted by snarkout at 10:28 AM on May 27, 2001
There's traditionally been a lot of turgid rumor and disinformational screed surrounding Dick, including greasy political quasi-history of this ilk. Rarely are documents produced.
One day someone without an agenda will care enough to bring evidenced realism to the tale of Dick's life and blow all this pallid innuendo and hangover imagineering out to sea.
posted by Twang at 1:54 PM on May 27, 2001
After having read The Transmigration of Timothy Archer, I think Dick was sane up until he end. He was just seeing too much at once.
posted by Ezrael at 4:32 PM on May 27, 2001
posted by lagado at 7:10 PM on May 27, 2001
Being an author is without a doubt, a truly insane lifestyle of weaving lies within lies and selling them as another kind of truth.
Between failing mental health and severe mind expanding drug use, I cannot doubt that Dick would easily fall prey to his own worlds of fantasy. The harder you try to convince your reader of a particular reality, the more you must be able to be one step ahead, always around the next corner, always weaving the edges unseen.
I wonder if I myself am sane after all the stories I have worked hard to weave.
I feel bad for Mr Dick, yet I feel, as earlier statements have suggested we should leave his sad life out of our judgement of his well crafted work.
If we all could be so lucky as to have a fantasy life so vividly real as to spring full form into our existence.
......gimmie a white rabbit to chase any day, synthetic or otherwise.
posted by Azaroth at 9:53 PM on May 27, 2001
That's true although these documents are not terribly hard to find. For example, you can take this (apparently obtained under FOI) one for what you think it's worth.
posted by lagado at 10:03 PM on May 27, 2001
For the New Left critics, the whole Pink Beam episode was an embarrassment and they never talked about it. It was just another wacky, tawdry Dick thing.If only PKD had language skills like that, I might have more time for his books.
posted by ericost at 10:02 AM on May 28, 2001
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posted by Postroad at 7:20 AM on May 27, 2001