The Futurist Sensibility
F. T. Marinetti, 1909
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F. T. Marinetti, 1909 Futurism was an international
art movement founded in Italy in 1909. It
was in strict contrast to the weepy sentimentalism
of Romanticism. The Futurists loved speed,
noise, machines, pollution, and cities; they
embraced the exciting new world that was
then upon them rather than hypocritically
enjoying the modern worldís comforts while
loudly denouncing the forces that made them
possible. Fearing and attacking technology
has become almost second nature to many people
today; the Futurist manifestos show us an
alternative philosophy. There have been authors
like Karen Pinkus who recently tried to describe
Futurism with the notion of "Proto-Punk"
(in an article in Speed Kills magazin). The
musical output of futurism is quite negligable.
The musical works often cling to romantic
musical forms and rarely reach the radical
consistence of the manifestos. It is therefore
worthwhile to study the Futurists' manifestos.
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THE FUTURIST SENSIBILITY
Destruction of Syntax-Imagination without
Strings-Words-in-Freedom
F. T. Marinetti
My Technical Manifesto of Futurist Literature,
with which I invented essential and synthetic
lyricism, imagination without strings, and
words-in-freedom, deals exclusively with
poetic inspiration.
Philosophy, the exact sciences, politics,
journalism, education, business, however
much they may seek synthetic forms of expression,
will still need to use syntax and punctuation.
I am obliged, for that matter, to use them
myself in order to make myself clear to you.
Futurism is grounded in the complete renewal
of human sensibility brought about by the
great discoveries of science. Those people
who today make use of the telegraph, the
telephone, the phonograph, the train, the
bicycle, the motorcycle, the automobile,
the ocean liner, the dirigible, the aeroplane,
the cinema, the great newspaper (synthesis
of a day in the world's life) do not realize
that these various means of communication,
transportation and information have a decisive
influence on their psyches.
An ordinary man can in a day's time travel
by train from a little dead town of empty
squares, where the sun, the dust, and the
wind amuse themselves in silence, to a great
capital city bristling with lights, gestures,
and street cries. By reading a newspaper
the inhabitant of a mountain village can
tremble each day with anxiety, following
insurrection in China, the London and New
York suffragettes, Doctor Carrel, and the
heroic dog-sleds of the polar explorers.
The timid, sedentary inhabitant of any provincial
town can indulge in the intoxication of danger
by going to the movies and watching a great
hunt in the Congo. He can admire Japanese
athletes, Negro boxers, tireless American
eccentrics, the most elegant Parisian women,
by paying a franc to go to the variety theater.
Then, back in his bourgeois bed, he can enjoy
the distant, expensive voice of a Caruso
or a Burzio.
Having become commonplace, these opportunities
arouse no curiosity in superficial minds
who are as incapable of grasping any novel
facts as the Arabs who looked with indifference
at the first aeroplanes in the sky of Tripoli.
For the keen observer, however, these facts
are important modifiers of our sensibility
because they have caused the following significant
phenomena:
Acceleration of life to today's swift pace.
Physical, intellectual, and sentimental equilibration
on the cord of speed stretched between contrary
magnetisms. Multiple and simultaneous awareness
in a single individual.
Dread of the old and the known. Love of the
new, the unexpected.
Dread of quiet living, love of danger, and
an attitude of daily heroism.
Destruction of a sense of the Beyond and
an increased value of the individual whose
desire is vivre sa vie, in Bonnot's phrase.
The multiplication and unbridling of human
desires and ambitions.
An exact awareness of everything inaccessible
and unrealizable in every person.
Semi-equality of man and woman and a lessening
of the disproportion in their social rights.
Disdain for amore (sentimentality or lechery)
produced by the greater freedom and erotic
ease of women and by the universal exaggeration
of female luxury. Let me explain: Today's
woman loves luxury more than love. A visit
to a great dressmaker's establishment, escorted
by a paunchy, gouty banker friend who pays
the bills, is a perfect substitute for the
most amorous rendezvous with an adored young
man. The woman finds all the mystery of love
in the selection of an amazing ensemble,
the latest model, which her friends still
do not have. Men do not love women who lack
luxury. The lover has lost all his prestige.
Love has lost its absolute worth. A complex
question; all I can do is to raise it.
A modification of patriotism, which now means
a heroic idealization of the commercial,
industrial, and artistic solidarity of a
people.
A modification in the idea of war, which
has become the necessary and bloody test
of a people's force.
The passion, art, and idealism of Business.
New financial sensibility.
Man multiplied by the machine. New mechanical
sense, a fusion of instinct with the efficiency
of motors and conquered forces.
The passion, art, and idealism of Sport.
Idea and love of the "record".
New tourist sensibility bred by ocean liners
and great hotels (annual synthesis of different
races). Passion for the city. Negation of
distances and nostalgic solitudes. Ridicule
of the "holy green silence" and
the ineffable landscape.
The earth shrunk by speed. New sense of the
world. To be precise: One after the other,
man will gain the sense of his home, of the
quarter where he lives, of his region, and
finally of the continent. Today he is aware
of the whole world. He little needs to know
what his ancestors did, but he must assiduously
discover what his contemporaries are doing
all over the world. The single man, therefore,
must communicate with every people on earth.
He must feel himself to be the axis, judge,
and motor of the explored and unexplored
infinite. Vast increase of a sense of humanity
and a momentary urgent need to establish
relations with all mankind.
A loathing of curved lines, spirals, and
the tourniquet. Love for the straight line
and the tunnel. The habit of visual foreshortening
and visual synthesis caused by the speed
of trains and cars that look down on cities
and countrysides. Dread of slowness, pettiness,
analysis, and detailed explanations. Love
of speed, abbreviation, and the summary.
"Quick, give me the whole thing in two
words!"
Love of depth and essence in every exercise
of the spirit. So these are some elements
of the new Futurist sensibility that has
generated our pictorial dynamism, our antigraceful
music in its free, irregular rhythms, our
noise-art and our words-in-freedom.
Words-in-freedom
Casting aside every stupid formula and all
the confused verbalisms of the professors,
I now declare that lyricism is the exquisite
faculty of intoxicating oneself with life,
of filling life with the inebriation of oneself.
The faculty of changing into wine the muddy
water of the life that swirls and engulfs
us. The ability to color the world with the
unique colors of our changeable selves.
Now suppose that a friend of yours gifted
with this faculty finds himself in a zone
of intense life (revolution, war, shipwreck,
earthquake, and so on) and starts right away
to tell you his impressions. Do you know
what this lyric, excited friend of yours
will instinctively do?
He will begin by brutally destroying the
syntax of his speech. He wastes no time in
building sentences. Punctuation and the right
adjectives will mean nothing to him. He will
despise subtleties and nuances of language.
Breathlessly he will assault your nerves
with visual, auditory, olfactory sensations,
just as they come to him. The rush of steam-emotion
will burst the sentence's steampipe, the
valves of punctuation, and the adjectival
clamp. Fistfuls of essential words in no
conventional order. Sole preoccupation of
the narrator, to render every vibration of
his being.
If the mind of this gifted lyrical narrator
is also populated by general ideas, he will
involuntarily bind up his sensations with
the entire universe that he intuitively knows.
And in order to render the true worth and
dimensions of his lived life, he will cast
immense nets of analogy across the world.
In this way he will reveal the analogical
foundation of life, telegraphically, with
the same economical speed that the telegraph
imposes on reporters and war correspondents
in their swift reportings. This urgent laconism
answers not only to the laws of speed that
govern us but also to the rapport of centuries
between poet and audience. Between poet and
audience, in fact, the same rapport exists
as between two old friends. They can make
themselves understood with half a word, a
gesture, a glance. So the poet's imagination
must weave together distant things with no
connecting strings, by means of essential
free words.
Death of free verse
Free verse once had countless reasons for
existing but now is destined to be replaced
by words-in-freedom.
The evolution of poetry and human sensibility
has shown us the two incurable defects of
free verse.
Free verse fatally pushes the poet towards
facile sound effects, banal double meanings,
monotonous cadences, a foolish chiming, and
an inevitable echo-play, internal and external.
Free verse artificially channels the flow
of lyric emotion between the high walls of
syntax and the weirs of grammar. The free
intuitive inspiration that addresses itself
directly to the intuition of the ideal reader
finds itself imprisoned and distributed like
purified water for the nourishment of all
fussy, restless intelligences. When I speak
of destroying the canals of syntax, I am
neither categorical nor systematic. Traces
of conventional syntax and even of true logical
sentences will be found here and there in
the words-in-freedom of my unchained lyricism.
This inequality in conciseness and freedom
is natural and inevitable. Since poetry is
in truth only a superior, more concentrated
and intense life than what we live from day
to day, like the latter it is composed of
hyper-alive elements and moribund elements.
We ought not, therefore, to be too much preoccupied
with these elements. But we should at all
costs avoid rhetoric and banalities telegraphically
expressed.
The imagination without strings
By the imagination without strings I mean
the absolute freedom of images or analogies,
expressed with unhampered words and with
no connecting strings of syntax and with
no punctuation.
Up to now writers have been restricted to
immediate analogies. For instance, they have
compared an animal with a man or with another
animal, which is almost the same as a kind
of photography. (They have compared, for
example, a fox terrier to a very small thoroughbred.
Others, more advanced, might compare the
same trembling fox terrier to a little Morse
Code machine. I, on the other hand, compare
it with gurgling water. In this there is
an ever vaster gradation of analogies, there
are ever deeper and more solid affinities,
however remote.) Analogy is nothing more
than the deep love that assembles distant,
seemingly diverse and hostile things. An
orchestral style, at once polychromatic,
polyphonic, and polymorphous, can embrace
the life of matter only by means of the most
extensive analogies.
When, in my Battle of Tripoli, I compared
a trench bristling with bayonets to an orchestra,
a machine gun to a femme fatale, I intuitively
introduced a large part of the universe into
a short episode of African battle.
Images are not flowers to be chosen and picked
with parsimony, as Voltaire said. They are
the very lifeblood of poetry. Poetry should
be an uninterrupted sequence of new images,
Or it is mere anemia and greensickness.
The broader their affinities, the longer
will images keep their power to amaze.
-Technical Manifesto of Futurist Literature
The imagination without strings, and words-in-freedom,
will bring us to the essence of material.
As we discover new analogies between distant
and apparently contrary things, we will endow
them with an ever more intimate value. Instead
of humanizing animals, vegetables, and minerals
(an outmoded system) we will be able to animalize,
vegetize, mineralize, electrify, or liquefy
our style, making it live the life of material.
For example, to represent the life of a blade
of grass, I say, "Tomorrow I'll be greener."
With words-in-freedom we will have: Condensed
metaphors. Telegraphic images. Maximum vibrations.
Nodes of thought. Closed or open fans of
movement. Compressed analogies. Color Balances.
Dimensions, weights, measures, and the speed
of sensations. The plunge of the essential
word into the water of sensibility, minus
the concentric circles that the word produces.
Restful moments of intuition. Movements in
two, three, four, five different rhythms.
The analytic, exploratory poles that sustain
the bundle of intuitive strings.
Death of the literary I Molecular life and
material
My technical manifesto opposed the obsessive
I that up to now the poets have described,
sung, analyzed, and vomited up. To rid ourselves
of this obsessive I, we must abandon the
habit of humanizing nature by attributing
human passions and preoccupations to animals,
plants, water, stone, and clouds. Instead
we should express the infinite smallness
that surrounds us, the imperceptible, the
invisible, the agitation of atoms, the Brownian
movements, all the passionate hypotheses
and all the domains explored by the high-powered
microscope. To explain: I want to introduce
the infinite molecular life into poetry not
as a scientific document but as an intuitive
element. It should mix, in the work of art,
with the infinitely great spectacles and
dramas, because this fusion constitutes the
integral synthesis of life.
To give some aid to the intuition of my ideal
reader I use italics for all words-in-freedom
that express the infinitely small and the
molecular life.
Semaphoric adjective Lighthouse-adjective
or atmosphere-adjective
Everywhere we tend to suppress the qualifying
adjective because it presupposes an arrest
in intuition, too minute a definition of
the noun. None of this is categorical. I
speak of a tendency. We must make use of
the adjective as little as possible and in
a manner completely different from its use
hitherto. One should treat adjectives like
railway signals of style, employ them to
mark the tempo, the retards and pauses along
the way. So, too, with analogies. As many
as twenty of these semaphoric adjectives
might accumulate in this way.
What I call a semaphoric adjective, lighthouse-adjective,
or atmosphere-adjective is the adjective
apart from nouns, isolated in parentheses.
This makes it a kind of absolute noun, broader
and more powerful than the noun proper.
The semaphoric adjective or lighthouse-adjective,
suspended on high in its glassed-in parenthetical
cage, throws its far-reaching, probing light
on everything around it.
The profile of this adjective crumbles, spreads
abroad, illuminating, impregnating, and enveloping
a whole zone of words-in-freedom. If, for
instance, in an agglomerate of words-in-freedom
describing a sea voyage I place the following
semaphoric adjectives between parentheses:
(calm, blue, methodical, habitual) not only
the sea is calm, blue, methodical, habitual,
but the ship, its machinery, the passengers.
What I do and my very spirit are calm, blue,
methodical, habitual.
The infinitive verb
Here, too, my pronouncements are not categorical.
I maintain, however, that in a violent and
dynamic lyricism the infinitive verb might
well be indispensable. Round as a wheel,
like a wheel adaptable to every car in the
train of analogies, it constitutes the very
speed of the style.
The infinitive in itself denies the existence
of the sentence and prevents the style from
slowing and stopping at a definite point.
While the infinitive is round and as mobile
as a wheel, the other moods and tenses of
the verb are either triangular, square, or
oval.
Onomatopoeia and mathematical symbols
When I said that we must spit on the Altar
of Art, I incited the Futurists to liberate
lyricism from the solemn atmosphere of compunction
and incense that one normally calls by the
name of Art with a capital A. Art with a
capital A constitutes the clericalism of
the creative spirit. I used this approach
to incite the Futurists to destroy and mock
the garlands, the palms, the aureoles, the
exquisite frames, the mantles and stoles,
the whole historical wardrobe and the romantic
bric-a-brac that comprise a large part of
all poetry up to now. I proposed instead
a swift, brutal, and immediate lyricism,
a lyricism that must seem antipoetic to all
our predecessors, a telegraphic lyricism
with no taste of the book about it but, rather,
as much as possible of the taste of life.
Beyond that the bold introduction of onomatopoetic
harmonies to render all the sounds and noises
of modern life, even the most cacophonic.
Onomatopoeia that vivifies lyricism with
crude and brutal elements of reality was
used in poetry (from Aristophanes to Pascoli)
more or less timidly. We Futurists initiate
the constant, audacious use of onomatopoeia.
This should not be systematic. For instance,
my Adrianople Siege-Orchestra and my Battle
Weight + Smell required many onomatopoetic
harmonies. Always with the aim of giving
the greatest number of vibrations and a deeper
synthesis of life, we abolish all stylistic
bonds, all the bright buckles with which
the traditional poets link images together
in their prosody. Instead we employ the very
brief or anonymous mathematical and musical
symbols and we put between parentheses indications
such as (fast) (faster) (slower) (two-beat
time) to control the speed of the style.
These parentheses can even cut into a word
or an onomatopoetic harmony.
Typographical revolution
I initiate a typographical revolution aimed
at the bestial, nauseating idea of the book
of passéist and D'Annunzian verse, on seventeenth-century
handmade paper bordered with helmets, Minervas,
Apollos, elaborate red initials, vegetables,
mythological missal ribbons, epigraphs, and
roman numerals. The book must be the Futurist
expression of our Futurist thought. Not only
that. My revolution is aimed at the so- called
typographical harmony of the page, which
is contrary to the flux and reflux, the leaps
and bursts of style that run through the
page. On the same page, therefore, we will
use three or four colors of ink, or even
twenty different typefaces if necessary.
For example: italics for a series of similar
or swift sensations, boldface for the violent
onomatopoeias, and so on. With this typographical
revolution and this multicolored variety
in the letters I mean to redouble the expressive
force of words.
I oppose the decorative, precious aesthetic
of Mallarmé and his search for the rare word,
the one indispensable, elegant, suggestive,
exquisite adjective. I do not want to suggest
an idea or a sensation with passéist airs
and graces. Instead I want to grasp them
brutally and hurl them in the reader's face.
Moreover, I combat Mallarmé's static ideal
with this typographical revolution that allows
me to impress on the words (already free,
dynamic, and torpedo-like) every velocity
of the stars, the clouds, aeroplanes, trains,
waves, explosives, globules of seafoam, molecules,
and atoms.
Thus I realize the fourth principle of my
First Futurist Manifesto: "We affirm
that the world's beauty is enriched by a
new beauty: the beauty of speed."
Multilinear Lyricism
In addition, I have conceived multilinear
lyricism, with which I succeed in reaching
that lyric simultaneity that obsessed the
Futurist painters as well: multilinear lyricism
by means of which I am sure to achieve the
most complex lyric simultaneities.
On several parallel lines, the poet will
throw out several chains of color, sound,
smell, noise, weight, thickness, analogy.
One of these lines might, for instance, be
olfactory, another musical, another pictorial.
Let us suppose that the chain of pictorial
sensations and analogies dominates the others.
In this case it will be printed in a heavier
typeface than the second and third lines
(one of them containing, for example, the
chain of musical sensations and analogies,
the other the chain of olfactory sensations
and analogies).
Given a page that contains many bundles of
sensations and analogies, each of which is
composed of three or four lines, the chain
of pictorial sensations and analogies
(printed in boldface) will form the first
line of the first bundle and will continue
(always in the same type) on the first line
of all the other bundles.
The chain of musical sensations and analogies,
less important than the chain of pictorial
sensations and analogies (first line) but
more important than that of the olfactory
sensations and analogies (third line), will
be printed in smaller type than that of the
first line and larger than that of the third.
Free expressive orthography
The historical necessity of free expressive
orthography is demonstrated by the successive
revolutions that have continuously freed
the lyric powers of the human race from shackles
and rules.
In fact, the poets began by channeling their
lyric intoxication into a series of equal
breaths, with accents, echoes, assonances,
or rhymes at pre-established intervals
(traditional metric). Then the poets varied
these different measured breaths of their
predecessors' lungs with a certain freedom.
Later the poets realized that the different
moments of their lyric intoxication had to
create breaths suited to the most varied
and surprising intervals, with absolute freedom
of accentuation. Thus they arrived at free
verse, but they still preserved the syntactic
order of the words, so that the lyric intoxication
could flow down to the listeners by the logical
canal of syntax.
Today we no longer want the lyric intoxication
to order the words syntactically before launching
them forth with the breaths we have invented,
and we have words-in-freedom. Moreover our
lyric intoxication should freely deform,
reflesh the words, cutting them short, stretching
them out, reinforcing the center or the extremities,
augmenting or diminishing the number of vowels
and consonants. Thus we will have the new
orthography that I call free expressive.
This instinctive deformation of words corresponds
to our natural tendency towards onomatopoeia.
It matters little if the deformed word becomes
ambiguous. It will marry itself to the onomatopoetic
harmonies, or the noise-summaries, and will
permit us soon to reach the onomatopoetic
psychic harmony, the sonorous but abstract
expression of an emotion or a pure thought.
But one may object that my words-in-freedom,
my imagination without strings, demand special
speakers if they are to be understood. Although
I do not care for the comprehension of the
multitude, I will reply that the number of
Futurist public speakers is increasing and
that any admired traditional poem, for that
matter, requires a special speaker if it
is to be understood.
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