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David H Lukenbill Website

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Category Archives: Unpublished Work: Criminal World Glamour

Unpublished Work: Metaphysical Prestige of Crime

08 Sunday May 2016

Posted by David H Lukenbill in Unpublished Work: Criminal World Glamour, Unpublished Work: Metaphysical Prestige of Crime

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This website is the home site of my criminal reformation apostolate; here you can find details about the Lampstand Foundation which I founded as a 501c (3) nonprofit corporation in Sacramento, California in 2003.

I have written ten books and each one of my books is a response to a likely objection to Catholicism that will be encountered when doing ministry to professional criminals; and for links to all of the Lampstand books which are available at Amazon, go to http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss?url=search-alias%3Daps&field-keywords=david+h+lukenbill

I also maintain a daily blog, The Catholic Eye, https://catholiceye.wordpress.com/

Lampstand also keeps track of rehabilitative programs that fail, and the one or two that appear to work, with the findings available at https://catholiceye.wordpress.com/2011/11/07/evaluation-of-reentry-programs-3/

The work connected to the apostolate is listed under the home page categories (to your left) which I will be expanding as needed.

________

Unpublished Work: Metaphysical Prestige of Crime

I came across this great description of what I have been writing about for years as the glamorization of criminals—and their essential spiritual core—in an essay by Ann Douglas “Punching a Hole in the Big Lie”: The Achievement of William S. Burroughs, in the book Beat Down to Your Soul: What Was the Beat Generation?, where she wrote:

“The critic Lionel Abel thought that Burroughs and his Beat colleagues had established the “metaphysical prestige” of the drug addict and the criminal; though modern skepticism destroyed the belief in transcendence, the human “need for utterness,” not to be denied, had found its satisfaction in “trans-descendence.” (pp. 145-146) 

Her note revealed the term originated in a review of Burroughs’s book, Naked Lunch, by Lionel Abel in the Winter 1963 issue of the Partisan Review.

Here are the relevant sections:

“A quarter century ago in Paris, the philosopher Jean Wahl gave a lecture, now famous, in which he made the point that transcendence—the act of going beyond appearances—may move upward or downward: one may transcend upward toward God, or clear values, or downward toward obscure values, or the “dark gods” of whom Lawrence wrote. And Wahl, in making his point, coined two new words: trans-ascendence and trans-descendence.” (p. 110)

“One wonders: if there is a metaphysical impulse, a real need for Being, why is this need not satisfied today in so-called higher experiences? Modern skepticism, no doubt, has destroyed the prestige of God, moral decision, speculative wonder, love or rapture. But why has it not destroyed the metaphysical prestige of crime or drug addiction? There is an interesting saying by a somewhat criminal-minded Sabbatian Cabbalist of the eighteenth century: “When the brave knights are beaten and the wise men want to retreat, a know-nothing will sneak in through a sewer and take the castle by stealth…” (P. 111)

Lionel Abel. (Winter 1963). Partisan Review, Beyond the Fringe (pp. 109-112) online at http://hgar-srv3.bu.edu/collections/partisan-review/search/detail?id=326060

Foucault, also writing about events—executions in particular—in the 18th century where:

“In these executions, which ought to show only the terrorizing power of the prince, there was a whole aspect of the carnival, in which the rules were inverted, authority mocked and criminals transformed into heroes.” (p. 61)

Michel Foucault. (1975). Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison. New York: Pantheon Books.

But this is different, this is the singularly restricted form of glamorization, the Bonnie & Clyde public devotion to rebels who are sticking it in the eye of authority on a case by case basis; while the theologyfication emanating from Beat literature, is a rejection of the entire previous culture in an attempt to replace it with another; which found little permanence except within the criminal/carceral world, and its wanna-be subculture of the hip/social justice warriors who still today favor the attire and mannerisms of the penal world.

It is not hard to see the attraction, especially by the young—of the Beat world and todays replicators—for much of what they produced and still produce is beautiful and art of a high order whether in literature, music, or visual.

The Beats were most taken in by the intellectuals, as Anatole Broyard writes:

“The intellectuals manqués, however, the desperate barometers of society, took him into their bosom. Ransacking everything for meaning, admiring insurgence, they attributed every heroism to the hipster. He became there “there but for the grip of my superego go I.” He was received in the Village as an oracle; his language was the revolution of the word, the personal idiom. He was the great instinctual man, an ambassador from the Id. He was asked to read things, look at things, feel things, taste things, and report. What was it? Was it in there? Was it gone? Was it fine? He was an interpreter for the blind, the deaf, the dumb, the insensible, the impotent.

“With such an audience, nothing was too much. The hipster promptly became, in his own eyes, a poet, a seer, a hero. He laid claims to apocalyptic visions and heuristic discoveries when he picked up; he was Lazarus, come back from the dead, come back to tell them all, he would tell them all. He conspicuously consumed himself in a high flame. He cared nothing for catabolic consequences; he was so prodigal as to be invulnerable.” (pp. 48-49)

Ann Charters. (Editor) (2001). Beat Down to Your Soul: What Was the Beat Generation? New York: Penguin Books.

Creating heroes of criminals/drug addicts moved from the Beats to the prison reform movement in California in the 1970’s and on, when criminals were seen as the “vanguards of the revolution”, which ended in the particularly bloody mess of the SLA in Los Angeles?

What all of this means is that many criminals feel their way of life—even if they are now in prison and if so, they will not tell this to non-criminals if the obverse guarantees more reward—is superior to all others and what they really have to do, rather than rehabilitate, is to become a better criminal.

The heroization in the criminal/carceral world is now of the victim; criminals are victims, of mass incarceration, a criminal justice system stacked against them, demands they reveal themselves on job applications, etc. etc.; but the same underlying movement tries to make bad seem good, to hide evil and make it inconsequential; all movements as old as time, all movements directed by the prince of this world, who always, still, loses.

Unpublished Work: Criminal World Glamour

02 Tuesday Feb 2016

Posted by David H Lukenbill in Unpublished Work: Criminal World Glamour

≈ Leave a comment

This website is the home site of my criminal reformation apostolate; here you can find details about the Lampstand Foundation which I founded as a 501c (3) nonprofit corporation in Sacramento, California in 2003.

I have written ten books and each one of my books is a response to a likely objection to Catholicism that will be encountered when doing ministry to professional criminals; and for links to all of the Lampstand books which are available at Amazon, go to http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss?url=search-alias%3Daps&field-keywords=david+h+lukenbill

I also maintain a daily blog, The Catholic Eye, https://catholiceye.wordpress.com/

Lampstand also keeps track of rehabilitative programs that fail, and the one or two that appear to work, with the findings available at https://catholiceye.wordpress.com/2011/11/07/evaluation-of-reentry-programs-3/

The work connected to the apostolate is listed under the home page categories (to your left) which I will be expanding as needed.

________

Criminal World Glamour

The law-abiding criminal/social justice practitioner who interviews the criminal after arrest or during treatment, in addition to bringing their law-abiding sense of moral judgment to the table, often brings a certain wonder at the criminal’s ability to act with such freedom.

I cannot count the numerous times revealing my criminal/carceral past garnered admiration from people who should have known better.

This makes getting at the truth of criminal causation conflicted. What the criminals say, in their private and contemplative companionship mostly happening inside prisons or jails, is a story of having their way with the world and getting away with it.

For a time, during the turbulent 1960s and 1970s, a proponent of the criminal’s victimization by the conditions of society has been the often Humanism-driven relativist and the Marxist-driven radical, to whom the criminal is an exotic creature whose acts are threatening to the foundations of order and stability—which they also wish to shake—and they would have had criminals in the vanguard of their army.

The relativist and radical has—and even still, sadly, does—proclaimed in literature, film, drama, and poetry that the criminal is special and privileged to know things that terrify the common man.

Crime and the attractiveness of it to youth are strong, and though the forces against crime grow stronger, the attraction has reached so deeply into the life of Americans that there is widespread agreement it is a major social problem and it is one of the bedrock issues that has propelled social conservatives into political power.

Many social reformers feel that a return to the values of an earlier time will change the criminal world’s great attraction for youth. It won’t. The imperative of social evolution will not let us. Crime is as old as time and ever since the acts of the first criminal it has adapted to accommodate new realities.

Many people are beginning to understand that the ancient way of Christians in reclaiming the prodigal son—love that flows from knowledge of liberation—is the only way of criminal transformation that works.

The criminal world is an immense and powerfully compelling world that has clearly shown it has the ability to drive the agenda and change individual behavior on a very large scale. It offers sensuality, excitement, danger, and the possibility of a mastery of mystery, a coming to terms with darkness and fear.

Within each criminal/carceral ethnic culture there are stories from their cultural pasts; Aztec stories, Viking stories, Arabian stories, African stories, which shape criminal/carceral reality; one, centered on the life of the legendary pimp, Iceberg Slim, has particular resonance within black urban culture with many of those cultural leaders adopting forms of his name into their own.

Many major movie actors—past and present—have at some point in their acting career felt it imperative to play a prisoner, thus facing, even if only in a make-believe way, the terrifying reality of prison life, which the non-criminal sees as the most horrific reality they could ever face, but which the criminal sees as merely a part of their life with little to fear and much to learn.

 

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