Hey All (or Fellow Ghosts in the Machine),

Just thought I'd share a recently published Pirsig-related article that appears 
in this month's Journal of American Culture (09 August 2020), "Zen and the Art 
of Chickenman" by Matthew Teorey.

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/jacc.13180

"On the surface, Phaedrus and Chickenman are so starkly arrogant, 
self‐interested, and needy that most readers or listeners consider themselves 
unlike these foolish characters. However, as Orkin asserted, radio audiences 
respond positively to Chickenman because they unconsciously recognize their 
kinship with him (“How to Make”), which allows them to laugh at their own 
foibles and strive to be less self‐centered. Moreover, because “the Fool stands 
at the border of one reality and is ready to drop off into the next” (Tafoya 
49), listeners and readers eagerly follow Chickenman and Phaedrus into the 
realms of the unknown and the absurd in order to escape the foolish values, 
attitudes, and expectations of Western society, and seek self‐actualization and 
social improvement."


It's a fun read. If you're unable to access a full-text version, this let me 
know, I may be able to help.

Arlo
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