About this item:

684 Views | 2,642 Downloads

Author Notes:

Jonathan Basile is pursuing a PhD in Emory University’s Comparative Literature program, and is also the creator of an online universal library, libraryofbabel.info.

His non-fiction has been published in The Paris Review Daily, Guernica, and Electric Literature, and his fiction has been published in minor literature[s] and Litro.

It goes without saying that his work is also available in the Library of Babel, if you know where to look.

First published in 2018 by dead letter office, babel Working Group an imprint of punctum books, Earth, Milky Way.

The babel Working Group is a collective and desiring-assemblage of scholar–gypsies with no leaders or followers, no top and no bottom, and only a middle. babel roams and stalks the ruins of the post-historical university as a multiplic-ity, a pack, looking for other roaming packs with which to cohabit and build temporary shelters for intellectual vagabonds. We also take in strays.

Subjects:

Research Funding:

This work was partially funded from Emory University's Open Access Publishing Fund.

Keywords:

  • anarchitecture
  • archives
  • Babel
  • combinatorics
  • computation
  • digital humanities
  • geometry
  • Jorge Luis Borges
  • librarianship
  • literary criticism
  • mathesis
  • possibilitarianism
  • technology
  • textuality

Tar for Mortar: "The Library of Babel" and the Dream of Totality

Tools:

Publisher:

Publication Place:

Publication Date:

Edition:

First

Type of Work:

Book | Final Publisher PDF

Abstract:

Tar for Mortar offers an in-depth exploration of one of literature’s greatest tricksters, Jorge Luis Borges. His short story “The Library of Babel” is a signature examplar of this playfulness, though not merely for the inverted world it imagines, where a library thought to contain all possible permutations of all letters and words and books is plumbed by pious librarians looking for divinely pre-fabricated truths. One must grapple as well with the irony of Borges’s narration, which undermines at every turn its narrator’s claims of the library’s universality, including the very possibility of exhausting meaning through combinatory processing. Borges directed readers to his non-fiction to discover the true author of the idea of the universal library. But his supposedly historical essays are notoriously riddled with false references and self-contradictions. Whether in truth or in fiction, Borges never reaches a stable conclusion about the atomic premises of the universal library — is it possible to find a character set capable of expressing all possible meaning, or do these letters, like his stories and essays, divide from themselves in a restless incompletion? While many readers of Borges see him as presaging our digital technologies, they often give too much credit to our inventions in doing so. Those who elide the necessary incompletion of the Library of Babel compare it to the Internet on the assumption that both are total archives of all possible thought and expression. Though Borges’s imaginings lend themselves to digital creativity (libraryofbabel.info is certainly evidence of this), they do so by showing the necessary incompleteness of every totalizing project, no matter how technologically refined. Ultimately, Basile nudges readers toward the idea that a fictional/imaginary exposition can hold a certain power over technology.

Copyright information:

© 2018 by Jonathan Basile

This is an Open Access work distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).

Creative Commons License

Export to EndNote