I sometimes imagine genius as a very fast moving body of water
Dear Reader,
I sometimes imagine genius as a very fast moving body of water. People naturally slip in and out but it’s impossible to jump in. Or it’s like living in a house, where I’m generally free to wander at will, but the upper floors are boarded up. I know there are people up there, I can hear them, but who knows how they got upstairs, it looks pretty locked to me. This isn’t something to take personally — you either have access or you don’t. And besides, I can’t think of a more appropriate application for that Groucho Marx quote: genius is exactly the kind of club I would resign from if it ever accepted a person like me as a member.
Dear Reader,
I sometimes imagine genius as a very fast moving body of water. People naturally slip in and out but it’s impossible to jump in. Or it’s like living in a house, where I’m generally free to wander at will, but the upper floors are boarded up. I know there are people up there, I can hear them, but who knows how they got upstairs, it looks pretty locked to me. This isn’t something to take personally — you either have access or you don’t. And besides, I can’t think of a more appropriate application for that Groucho Marx quote: genius is exactly the kind of club I would resign from if it ever accepted a person like me as a member.
But why do I think of genius as necessarily exclusionary? This says something about me, but it must also say something about the word. As Jameson (a genius) once wrote, “Always historicize.” He was referring to another Marx altogether but this quote also seems apt. Genius is after all, a term that can be taken in a social, historical, and yes, material context. This issue of the Los Angeles Review of Books Quarterly Journal is dedicated to an examination of that tricky word. There have been, unequivocally, more recognized male geniuses than female, though as Massimo Mazzotti points out in his essay on the filosofessa, there was a brief period in 18th century Italy where the genius of little girls was fostered. Johanna Drucker makes the case for understanding the term in a broader sense — not as something confined to individuals but distributed widely through the world, in systems and organisms. Helen DeWitt talks about the ways in which publishing still defines what literature is or isn’t. Yxta Maya Murray writes about Björk, motherhood, the possible destruction and synergy involved in creation. You will also see many pieces that play with the word, poke fun at it, and redefine it in their own terms.
We also have works in this issue by poets, writers and artists that we’d like to celebrate in the context of genius. Whatever we think of the term, we can at least use it as an acknowledgement of extraordinary accomplishment.
This issue isn’t about pushing anyone out of those upper floors, it is more about investigating the rules of membership. Or, to put genius back in Marxist terms: it is perhaps, a way of giving more people the opportunity to resign.
Medaya
Editor, Quarterly Journal
E S S A Y S
DISTRIBUTED GENIUS by Johanna Drucker
THE RISE AND FALL OF THE FILOSOFESSA by Massimo Mazzotti
A SPLENDID HISTORY: HENRY LOUIS GATES JR. ON AFRICA’S ANCIENT CIVILIZATIONS by Scott Timberg
MARTYR AT THE PICNIC TABLE by Aaron Robertson
NEWS FROM HOME by Sara Jaffe
GENIUS AND DAEMON by AE Stallings
F I C T I O N
IN THE BEGINNING by Isaac Bashevis Singer, translated by David Stromberg
YOUTUBE COMMENT #2 TO BJÖRK… by Yxta Maya Murray
BEHIND THE MOON by Anosh Irani
THE PRINCIPAL’S ASHES by Jac Jemc
UNA GOCCIA by Dino Buzatti, translated by Zoë Slutzky
P O E T R Y
EXCERPTS FROM THE KINGDOM OF SURFACES by Sally Wen Mao
MARINA IN NERVI by David Yezzi
SAM’S DREAM by Jorie Graham
GRADUS AD PARNASSUM by Rachel Hadas
TWO POEMS by Joshua Bennett
VIVIAN MAIER CONSIDERS HEAVEN FROM A BENCH IN ROGERS BEACH PARK CHICAGO by Shane McCrae
S H O R T S
MORE LIKE YOU by Sloane Crosley
THE FAMILY GENIUSES by Zeynep Kayhan
THE WRONG STUFF by Helen DeWitt
LISA BONET by Venita Blackburn
BARE IN MIND by Hilary Leichter
A DEFINITION OF GENIUS by Paul LaFarge