Sunday, June 19, 2016

The Perception of Chaos

Excerpted from the essay "Peril" by Toni Morrison, in Burn This Book ©2009:

I have been told that there are two human responses to the perception of chaos: naming and violence. When the chaos is simply the unknown, the naming can be accomplished effortlessly—a new species, star, formula, equation, prognosis. There is also mapping, charting, or devising proper nouns for unnamed or stripped-of-names geography, landscape, or population. When chaos resists, either by reforming itself or by rebelling against imposed order, violence is understood to be the most frequent response and the most rational when confronting the unknown, the catastrophic, the wild, wanton, or incorrigible. Rational responses may be censure, incarceration in holding camps, prisons, or death, singly or in war. There is however a third response to chaos, which I have not heard about, which is stillness.  Such stillness can be passivity and dumbfoundedness; it can be paralytic fear. But it can also be art.


 

1 comment:

  1. ...this is a great excerpt ... I am not a fan of Toni Morrison's writing, but I agree with the spirit of her words here...

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