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Publication details
The Death of Joan Vollmer and Decoding William S. Burroughs’ Work
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Year of publication | 2019 |
Type | Appeared in Conference without Proceedings |
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Description | When the writer William S. Burroughs suggested to his common-law wife Joan Vollmer that they do their William Tell act for their guests, little did he know that it would result in him accidentally killing Vollmer. While research undertaken in the last two decades shows that they performed this act on a regular basis, Burroughs vehemently denied ever performing the William Tell act with Vollmer for most of his life and even changed the story several times. Soon after Vollmer’s death, he started working on what eventually became Naked Lunch, a novel composed of semi-episodic stories directly resisting interpretation. This experimental aspect of his writing—resisting the process of signification—was further amplified by his cut-up method in subsequent novels. Together with his interest in linguistics, the occult, Mayan calendar, or Scientology, his writing is charged with a singular purpose—to break free from the control mechanisms affecting us, Burroughs believed, throughout our lives. Finding a method of regaining control is then one of the dominant themes of his writing, yet, as some of his later diary entries suggest, all of this had one unconscious motivation—finding a rational explanation for him fatally shooting Joan Vollmer. |