"Like I give a shit what Louis Shalako thinks." |
The other day I had some trouble sleeping,
eventually going thirty hours without sleep.
When I finally laid down at eleven or so, with the
light off, there was a kind of red vaporous mist floating and swirling around
on the inside of my eyelids, like dancing cigarette smoke.
For a while, I was
worried that I really wouldn’t be able to get to sleep. All kinds of crazy
thoughts went though my mind.
And I had the whopper of a story idea.
It was so good I laughed out loud, fist-punping
there in bed, and thinking that for sure I had to write it up. I have a pen and
paper right there on the bedside table, but the light was off and the room kind
of chilly or I would have made a note of it.
The next morning I couldn’t even remember what it
was. That’s frustrating, and I tried several times to regurgitate it back up
out of my subconscious mind, but the next night, or sixteen hours later, it
suddenly dawned on me right out of the blue. (Like a miracle.) I wrote down exactly
nine key words and that afternoon I began work on it.
And it occurred to me that the story might be as
offensive as all get out to a certain group of people, purely on religious
grounds. Something like six hundred million of them, not all of them
non-English speakers, and yet at the same time it is true that many of them
live in secularized nations and some of them might have quite liberal, even
tolerant views of the little idiosyncrasies of the average western writer.
Most, but not all, live halfway around the world.
The trouble is with the combination of the story
elements, the theme, the events that happen in the story, and the way it is
presented. There is no doubt in my mind that this is a ripping good satire.
It’s funny as hell in its own way and that’s what I like to do sometimes.
I have little doubt that I have the right, according
to my own lights, to publish this story or otherwise do as I see fit with it.
We have the right to offend one another, a thought some will find offensive!
And yet they find it so useful, too.
There is also some awareness that other editors, in speculative
fiction or whatever, would be hesitant or at least think twice before
publishing such a story. Maybe the difference is that I don’t have a wife and
three kids.
When I realized that I have indeed written and published
other stories, ones that might have
offended or even simply hurt the
feelings or irritated other folks of
and other faiths or group of
faiths…easily six hundred million of them in the world too, you know.
No one ever seriously objected to Near Death Experience, although one
editor told me it was ‘a political and religious hot potato,’ and eventually
the story was published by Danse Macabre.
The point is that I never really worried too much
about reprisals or repercussions. I never seriously worried that some
Fundamentalist Christian guy would grab a shotgun and jump in a pickup truck
and drive fifteen hundred miles to come and get me. Because some of them
believe in reincarnation too, even though the story was about a Muslim cleric,
while undergoing emergency heart surgery at the hands of a Jewish doctor.
Right?
This forces me to confront not so much the issue of
right to publish, and not even the issue of whether or not someone would
strenuously object to the story.
The real question is one of my own perceptions—am I
responding to a negative stereotype in terms of the average man in the street
in any major city in that part of the world? What about some other part of the
world?
Aren’t we all just trying to get along, and should I
not just keep my mouth shut and my head down?
Surely this would always be the safest course, and
the default position for many.
I’ll rephrase that in more offensive terms. Is the
average Muslim mom or pop really a bloodthirsty killer with no tolerance
whatsoever? I would like to think this is not true. I would like to think most
have some objectivity, some sense of humour, and some sense of human
dignity—even though the story in question is, on the face of it,
uncomplimentary.
It is uncomplimentary to the quest for martyrdom.
And whose standards should I go by, if I could look
at it from their point of view? Would it be middle-of-the-road or
fundamentalist principles that should guide me? From their point of view, I
mean. The point of view of the majority, I mean.
Being grabbed by the wrong band of folks, way back
in the hills in the wrong part of the world, if the wrong guy knew I had
written that story, there’s no telling how it might go. It’s a crap-shoot.
Some guy might laugh his head off, or he might blow
mine off. A bunch of college kids at a party somewhere, that might be a whole
different ball of wax. Even then there’s likely to be a very pious, very
sincere, very offended, and very insecure person who might strenuously object. That’s because a good writer can
make you think they are talking directly to you and you alone. Even though this
blog gets hundreds of hits in a day and fifty people will read this in the
first hour, probably more even.
But there is that whole question of my own
perceptions, my own stereotypes, and just how realistic are those perceptions,
and how realistic can that threat assessment be under those terms of reference?
Trust me, I’m not seeking martyrdom, for surely that
is vanity, and not at all like surrender to the will of God, which is really
more a kind of humility. I don't have that much to atone for, quite frankly. Surely one would have to despise oneself and one's life to do such a foolish thing. Because otherwise it really is vanity.
At least I took it into consideration. I asked the
question and found my own answer—and I touched up the story somewhat, one that
gives reasonable men of any faith an out.
That’s right ladies and gentlemen. I didn’t sensor
it exactly, I rewrote it. That’s all.
I did that for a reason.
I left you an out—an excuse not to act, or even to listen.
I gave you a reason not to bother.
Other than that, I sure hope y’all have a nice day.
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