Naked Lunch

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
Naked Lunch
Written by: William S. Burroughs
Central Theme:
Synopsis: "a series of loosely connected vignettes" (Wikipedia)
Genre(s): Surrealism
First published: 1959
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My God, how do you summarize the 1959 novel Naked Lunch in mere words? The seminal work of beat generation author, William S. Burroughs.

A dystopian sci-fi meets Dante's Inferno, but experienced by a heroin addict in the 1950s. A carnival of everything middle-class America apparently feared at the time: experimental sexuality, drug abuse, foreigners, interracial relations, 'forbidden sciences', gang violence and mob rule. A Take That against traditional American values and perceived hypocrisies which reads like a collaboration between Allen Ginsberg and Encyclopedia Dramatica.

Some editions of the book include an author's foreword, where Burroughs explains the title. The phrase "naked lunch" is meant to describe the unvarnished truth about what people do to survive in society. The specific lunch that Burroughs wants to unclothe is the custom of capital punishment. He objects to the fact that many people who endorse capital punishment are still reluctant to pull the switch, throw the first stone, or otherwise take on the moral responsibility for what he considers murder. In a sense, "naked lunch" is the opposite of euphemism. Thus his famous quote, "Let them see what is at the end of that long newspaper spoon." Of course, Burroughs, by his own admission, doesn't remember writing most of the actual text of the book, so the author's foreword could very well be Retcon.

Naked Lunch (film):

David Cronenberg released a 1991 film adaptation of 'Naked Lunch' that used very little of the book's material, claiming a literal adaption would be not only impossible, but "banned in every country in the world". Instead, he creates a heavily fictionalized biopic about William S. Burroughs, in which Burrough's long time avatar, William Lee, is working as exterminator and gets high off his bug powder. He later flees to Interzone after the now-legendary shooting of his wife, Joan Vollmer, where he becomes tangled in a world of surreal espionage, through contact with several giant bug-shaped, alien typewriters who talk out of their asses. You read that right.

Since it has so little to do with the book, it needs its own page.

Tropes used in Naked Lunch include:
  • Accent Relapse: While probably theatrics on Benway's part, he'll sometimes speak in an effeminate, stereotypically gay voice, and at other times speak like an American Southerner. Also: "Benway's voice drifts into my consciousness from no particular place... a disembodied voice that is sometimes loud and clear, sometimes barely audible, like music down a windy street."
    • Also Salvador Hassan O'Leary, who is said to lapse into broken English in times of stress. "His accent at such moments suggests an Italian origin."
  • All Gays Are Promiscuous: In fairness, it's the '50s. Gay culture didn't have the stability to really support monogamy when this was written.
  • Alternate Universe: Interzone is a dystopian caricature of Tangier, Morocco.
  • Anachronic Order: The chapters are arranged in the order in which they came back from the printer; Burroughs and his friends decided that they couldn't really improve on it. Burroughs was famous for doing this 'cut-up' in his other poetry, as well. Except for the section where Lee kills Hauser and O'Brien. It was originally supposed to happen near the beginning, but was moved to the end, creating another contradiction in space and time where Lee is presumably back in America, after having traveled through Mexico and South America into Africa.
  • And I Must Scream: "Did I ever tell you about the man who taught his asshole how to talk?"
  • Arc Words: Certain phrases and descriptions are repeated constantly throughout Burroughs's body of work. Most during his Nova Trilogy and Red Night Trilogy, but Naked Lunch has a few, as it is the culmination of all of his early work; 'blank insect eyes', 'like music down a windy street', 'shitting and pissing in terror', 'No glot. C'lom Fliday'.
  • Ax Crazy: A.J., who, after crashing Hassan's orgy dressed like a pirate, decapitates middle-aged women while singing 'Yo Ho Ho And A Bottle of Rum'.
  • Black and Grey Morality: Even the Factualists, the Interzone political party that Lee supports, are a bunch of psychos. It's just that they don't believe in what the other parties are doing -- like melting people (Liquefactionists), cloning themselves (Divisionists), or experimenting with Mind Control (Senders).
    • And even so, the other parties are not all as separate in practice as they are in the abstract.
  • Black Comedy
  • Bury Your Gays: But only if they're Camp Gay.
    • Partially averted in the movie, where the Camp Gay Kiki is eaten by a giant centipede Julian Sands but the the equally camp Allen Ginsberg stand-in makes it out alive.
  • Cement Shoes: Alluded to several times in Burroughs's word mosaics.
  • Clone Degeneration: The Divisionists' replicas need to recharge (through physical -- but not necessarily sexual -- contact) with their original body or 'mother cell', but are dyed and altered with body molds to disguise the fact that they're replicas.
  • Contemplate Our Navels: Behind all the filth and horror, Burroughs is crying.
  • Continuity Nod: The opening pages contain many very brief mentions of characters and events from Burroughs's first two novels, Junky and Queer, such as Bill Gains in someone else's overcoat and Lupita, Lee's Mexico City pusher, seated like an Aztec Earth Goddess. Hell, even the description of the Mugwump eerily recalls a suspicious individual mentioned towards the end of Junky.
  • Crapsack World
  • Creator Breakdown: Burroughs always said that he would never have become a writer if not for Joan's death. This is portrayed in the film... sort of.
  • Creepy Monotone: William S. Burroughs's legendary voice, imitated by more than one character in the movie (mostly the beetles and the Mugwump.)
  • Crystal Spires and Togas: Naked Lunch begins Burroughs' proud tradition of juxtaposing the horrors of a paranoid futuristic delusions with Aztec and Mayan iconography. This is taken to new levels in his next book, The Soft Machine.
  • Culture Clash: Interzone, although primarily Tangiers, seems to incorporate elements of the American Deep South (Cunt Lick County), the South American rainforests (The Upper Baboonsasshole), and socialist Europe (Annexia).
  • Dead Baby Comedy
  • Death by Sex: Orgasm Death is a reoccurring phrase in Burroughs's work, as is the image of a hanged man jizzing in his pants at the moment of death - which has been known to happen in real life, by the way.
  • Does This Remind You of Anything?: The reptiles giving oral to the Mugwumps for a drug that prolongs life.
    • In the movie, the Mugwumps' semen is sort of a metaphor for Burroughs' own narcotics use. It gives him brilliant creative ideas, yes, but it's also destroying him.
  • Erotic Asphyxiation: He has a habit of writing scenes where teenage boys very sensually get their necks broken via noose.
  • Erotic Dream: In fact, surreal pseudoporn makes up about a fourth of the book.
  • Everybody Must Get Stoned: The Black Meat and Mugwump fluid, metaphors for the horror of addiction.
  • Fantastic Caste System: The Parties of Interzone.
  • Fantastic Racism: Thanks to the Divisionists. "If some citizen ventures to express a liberal opinion, another citizen invariably snarls: 'What are you? Some stinking nigger's bleached-out replica?'"
  • First-Person Peripheral Narrator: William Lee
  • Foreshadowing: Hassan is referred to by several of his many aliases ('The Shoe Store Kid', 'Placenta Juan the Afterbirth Tycoon') before actually appearing.
  • Fur and Loathing: 'Guard in a uniform of human skin...'
  • Genre Roulette: An undercover look at drug culture, raunchy porn, biting social satire, science-fiction and some hard boiled noir thrown in for good measure.
  • A Good Name for a Rock Band: The band Steely Dan got their name from a dildo in this book.
    • The group Clem Snide took theirs from a recurring Burroughs character who appears for the first time in Naked Lunch.
  • Gorn: Lots of it.
  • Heroic Sociopath: A.J. again. He's not actually heroic at all, but he's slightly less evil than most of the other characters (with the exception of Lee himself).
  • I Just Shot Marvin in the Face: Subverted. In the film, Clark Nova explains that Lee was 'programmed' to shoot his wife, Joan. Although this is based on a tragically straight Real Life example.
    • Burroughs went on to write the book for The Black Rider, a stage musical (with songs by Tom goddamn Waits) whose plot also revolves around a man being supernaturally manipulated into shooting his own wife. In the opera on which it's based, Der Freischutz, the bullet is deflected by the wife's wedding wreath and there's a happy ending. In the Burroughs' version... not so much.
  • Immodest Orgasm: Described as 'like a shooting star'.
  • Interspecies Romance: The Mugwump and a blonde boy in the book, Cloquet and Kiki in the film. Cloquet looks human enough... at first.
  • It's Not Porn, It's Art: Slashtubitch's opinion on his 'blue movies' and, of course, the book itself as decided by the Supreme Court.
  • Jigsaw Puzzle Plot: Whether or not there even is a plot is up for debate. Regardless, every scene reveals something more is going on then we're being told.
  • Kill It with Fire: Bradley the Buyer; suggested for The Complete All American Deanxitized Man
  • Large Ham: THE GREAT SLASHTUBITCH!
  • Mad Scientist: Dr. Benway, played hilariously straight.
    • Nor is he the only one, judging by the references to Dr. Limpf, Dr. Tetrazzini (who saw surgery as an art form), and 'Fingers' Schaeffer, the Lobotomy Kid.
    • And then there's Doctor Berger, of the Mental Health Hour, who claims proudly to have cured the neuroses of all kinds of patients, from homosexuals to writers. "I got enough health for the whole fuckin world!"
  • Magic Genetics: The Divisionists cut off chunks of their flesh and grow full replicas of themselves in petri dishes.
  • Making Love in All the Wrong Places: Usually on the gallows.
  • Mind Screw: Literally at one point ("This brain atrophy already").
  • Multiple Endings: While not present in the book, a short in the Burroughs anthology, Interzone contains a story called The Conspiracy that acts as an alternate ending to the Hauser and O'Brien section. Instead of calling the police station from a desolate payphone, Lee hides at a female acquaintance's apartment for a few days and muses about his fate.
  • Nasty Party: Hassan's Orgy
  • No Celebrities Were Harmed: Lee is an obvious standing for Burroughs himself. The film also includes two characters who are pretty clearly Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg.
  • No Ending: After a succession of rambling, the book seems to end with an unseen cataclysm.
  • Not So Stoic: Doctor "Fingers" Schaeffer.( "Clarence!! How can you do this to me?? Ingrates!! Every one of them ingrates!")
  • Obstructive Bureaucrat: The County Clerk, and most of his employees in the Old District Court House.
  • People Puppets: Senders control people by telepathically transmitting their thoughts. This was the inspiration behind another movie by David Cronenberg.
  • Perfect Pacifist People: The Freeland Republic, which is "clean and dull my God." An earlier passage in the book implies that Freeland is inspired by Burroughs' experiences in Scandinavia.
  • Police Are Useless: Hauser and O'Brien chase Lee all the way to Interzone (or maybe just around New York, we're not sure) then get killed by pistol fire after Lee shoots up some dope.
  • Properly Paranoid: With all the weird shit running around, it makes perfect sense for Lee to flee the country as fast as he can.
  • Refuge in Audacity: A terror attack at a political conference, wherein the terrorist detonates a grenade he shoved up his own ass.
  • Refuge in Vulgarity
  • Ruritania: In the brief bit of it we see in the film, Annexia's border guards are wearing little fur hats and speak in Russian accents.
  • Screw Yourself: "Sex with a replica is strictly forbidden and almost universally practiced."
  • Title Drop: For the sub-section Ordinary Men and Women.
  • Toilet Humor
  • Too Kinky to Torture: Most of the lynching and dismemberment is completely consensual because they're all actors in a very grandiose and pretentious porno movie.
  • Very Loosely Based on a True Story: The film isn't as much based on the book, as it is based on Burroughs's own life with elements of the book incorporated. Then again, Burroughs very heavily drew on his experiences traveling abroad and that's the scary part.
  • Villainous Crossdresser: Benway, in the film.
  • Villain Protagonist: A. J. is the intended hero of the book, a 'laughable lovable eccentric' whose track list of pranks include spiking the punch at a Fluoride Society meeting with a vine that melts the gums; spraying himself with bug spray, then releasing a swarm of potent, aphrodisiac insects into the New York Metropolitan, creating a massive orgy; and initiating a riot at a Five Star restaurant that ends with the owner being eaten by famished hogs.
  • Walking the Earth: Essentially what Burroughs did in the fifties, migrating from Chicago to New York to Mexico to South America to Tangiers to London. Junky, Queer, and Naked Lunch are all based on these experiences.
  • What Do You Mean Its Not Symbolic: Burroughs wrote in the preface that the hanging scenes were a tract against capital punishment 'in the style of Jonathan Swift'. One would find that easy to believe if he hadn't gone on to write about three more books about hanging, which makes the whole thing dubiously reek of Author Appeal.
  • What Do You Mean It Wasn't Made on Drugs?: Well, actually, it was. Burroughs claimed, in the original foreword, that he wrote the first draft in a drug-cocktail haze and had no recollection of actually writing it -- although he later admitted that he was exaggerating.
    • This is referenced in the movie, where Lee has no memory of writing his manuscript, and suspects that it may not have even been him.
  • William Telling: In The Film of the Book, William Lee is shown shooting a glass of whiskey off of Joan Lee's head in what they called their "William Tell act." That's... basically how it happened in real life.
  • Word Salad Title: Created accidentally by Burroughs' friends Allen Ginsberg and Jack Kerouac; while the work was still in progress, Ginsberg was reading aloud from the book (a portion, ironically, that was cut in later drafts), and Kerouac misheard two words and blurted out something like: '"Naked lunch?" What the hell does that mean?'
  • Writer on Board: Burroughs isn't afraid to express his opinions on whatever he wants, usually in the form of condemning farce. Also, the entire movie is about writers talking about writing; and at one point a typewriter sprouts an erect penis-like appendage when pornography is written on it.
  • Zero-G Spot