William S. Burroughs’ Wild Ride with Scientology

                                by Lee Konstantinou, m.io9.com
May 11th 2011 9:00 AM                                                           
                                                                                
                

In 1959, the same year Olympia Press published his most famous novel Naked 
Lunch, the writer William S. Burroughs visited the restaurant of his friend and 
collaborator, Brion Gysin, in Tangiers. There, Burroughs met John and Mary 
Cooke, a wealthy American hippie couple who were interested in mysticism. 
Burroughs recalled, "There was something portentous about it, as though I was 
seeing them in another medium, like they were sitting there as holograms."

Who were these portentous holograms? Scientologists. Indeed, John Cooke is 
reported to have been the very first person to receive a status of "Clear" 
within Scientology, and was deeply involved in its founding. Cooke had been 
trying to recruit Gysin into the Church, declaring that the artist was a 
natural "Clear" and "Operating Thetan." Ultimately, it was Burroughs, not 
Gysin, who explored the Church that L. Ron Hubbard built. Burroughs took 
Scientology so seriously that he became a "Clear" and almost became an 
"Operating Thetan."

On a research trip to the New York Public Library, I discovered that Burroughs 
had left behind a rich paper trail documenting his exploration of the 
science-fiction inspired Church. 

I was looking into Burroughs' life as part of a bigger project about his 
influence on punk, which led me to the the Henry W. and Albert A. Berg 
Collection at the NYPL. The William S. Burroughs Papers have a range of amazing 
materials related to Burroughs's exploration of Scientology, including 
extensive handwritten notes Burroughs took on Scientological training 
materials, notes from auditing sessions Burroughs conducted, and even a cut-up 
of auditing questions.

According to his biographer, Barry Miles, Burroughs very quickly incorporated 
Scientology into his worldview. In an October 27, 1959 letter to Allen 
Ginsberg, Burroughs wrote: "The method of directed recall is the method of 
Scientology. You will recall I wrote urging you to contact local chapter and 
find an auditor. They do the job without hypnosis or drugs, simply run the tape 
back and forth until the trauma is wiped off. It works. I have used the 
method—partially responsible for recent changes." Burroughs thought that the 
Church was teaching techniques that might help him resist social control by 
erasing negative images called "engrams" and its ideas came to inform his art.

Only two days later, Burroughs wrote again to Ginsberg: "I have a new method of 
writing and do not want to publish anything that has not been inspected and 
processed. I cannot explain this method to you until you have necessary 
training. So once again and most urgently (believe me there is not much time)—I 
tell you: 'Find a Scientology Auditor and have yourself run.'" Scientology 
appears throughout Burroughs's oeuvre, and especially in his innovative cut-up 
trilogy of the sixties and in the avant-garde films he made with Gysin.

Again and again in his writings and interviews, Burroughs mentions the E-meter 
as Scientology's most important contribution to a science of the mind. The 
E-meter, Burroughs thought, was "really a sort of sloppy form of electrical 
brain stimulation… a lie-detector and a mind-reading machine… Not the content, 
only the reactions." Elsewhere Burroughs described the E-meter as a "useful 
device for deconditioning," or the elimination of imposed or habitual reactions 
of symbols and figures. The goal is to achieve something like a "floating 
needle," a therapeutic method Burroughs claimed to sometimes use. In his book 
of interviews, The Job, Burroughs explained his view that Scientology could 
help counter "the Reactive Mind… an ancient instrument of control designed to 
stultify and limit the potential for action in a constructive or destructive 
direction." Burroughs associated the Reactive Mind with Mayan calendars, which 
he described in the same interview as "one of the most precise and hermetic 
control calendars ever… on this planet, a calendar that in effect controlled 
what the populace did thought and felt on any day."

In 1961, Burroughs created a short film in collaboration with Gysin called 
Towers Open Fire (warning: NSFW!), which was a plotless film designed to show 
the process of control systems breaking down-showing Burroughs, in camouflage 
and a gas mask, firing an "orgasm gun"; a boy in underwear; a spinning Dream 
Machine; a shot of a man masturbating; among other disturbing images. Gysin's 
biographer notes that the film even used snippets of dialog taken from a 
Scientology pamphlet.

Scientology appears again disguised as the "Logos" group in Burroughs's 1962 
novel The Ticket That Exploded. As described in the book, Logos has "a system 
of therapy they call ‘clearing'. You ‘run' traumatic material which they call 
‘engrams' until it loses emotional connotation through repetitions and is then 
refilled as neutral memory' When all the ‘engrams' have been run and 
deactivated the subject becomes a ‘clear.'" In the 1964 novel Nova Express, 
Scientology is for the first time openly described in Burroughs's fiction. 
During an interrogation scene in the book, an unnamed character declares "The 
Scientologists believe sir that words recorded during a period of 
unconsciousness… store pain and that this pain store can be lugged in with key 
words represented as an alternate mathematical formulae indicating umber of 
exposures to the key words and reaction index… they call these words recorded 
during unconsciousness engrams sir… The pain that overwhelms that person is 
basic basic sir and when basic basic is wiped off the tape… then that person 
becomes what they call clear sir."

At the start of 1968, Burroughs deepened his relationship to the Church. He 
took an intense two-month Scientology Clearing Course at the world headquarters 
of Scientology in Saint Hill Manor in the UK and Burroughs was declared a 
"Clear," though he later claimed that he had to work hard to suppress or 
rationalize his persistently negative feelings toward L. Ron Hubbard during 
auditing sessions. The Berg has almost a dozen files filled with Burroughs's 
pamphlets from Saint Hill as well as his almost unreadable hand-written notes 
on Scientology courses and questions he prepared for auditing sessions he 
himself conducted. These files include, as I've mentioned, an attempt to create 
a cut-up from auditing questions; from the start, Scientology was very much 
connected to the cut-up technique and Burroughs's theory that language 
constituted a kind of virus that had infested the human host. At Saint Hill, 
Burroughs entered an intense and obsessive period of auditing sessions with an 
E-Meter, including a process of exploring past lives, though he slowly began to 
grow alienated from the Church and what he considered its Orwellian security 
protocols. Burroughs's antipathy for Scientological "Sec Checks" are apparent 
in his strange and violent story, "Ali's Smile," which was published in the 
collection Ali's Smile/Naked Scientology.

Burroughs eventually rejected Scientology—because of what he called "the 
fascist policies of Hubbard and his organization"—but cautiously endorsed some 
of its "discoveries." His break with the Church developed over course of the 
late sixties in the pages of the London-based magazine, Mayfair, where 
Burroughs wrote a series of increasingly hostile "bulletins" about his 
adventures with the organization. These bulletins culminated in Burroughs's 
amusingly titled Mayfair article, "I, William Burroughs, Challenge You, L. Ron 
Hubbard." This piece was republished in the Los Angeles Free Press. In his 
challenge to L. Ron, Burroughs wrote:

Some of the techniques [of Scientology] are highly valuable and warrant further 
study and experimentation. The E Meter is a useful device… (many variations of 
this instrument are possible). On the other hand I am in flat disagreement with 
the organizational policy. No body of knowledge needs an organizational policy. 
Organizational policy can only impede the advancement of knowledge. There is a 
basic incompatibility between any organization and freedom of thought.

For his inquiries, Burroughs reports, he was expelled from the organization and 
in 1968 was put into what Scientologists call a condition of "Treason"; though 
the exact circumstances surrounding this incident remain unclear. Burroughs's 
public battle against the Church continued in a 1972 issue of Rolling Stone, 
where he expressed his support for Robert Kaufmann's exposé, Inside 
Scientology, published by Olympia Press. Here Burroughs uses his harshest 
language yet: "Scientology is a model control system, a state in fact with its 
own courts, police, rewards and penalties." Strangely enough, despite his break 
with the group, Scientology reappeared in the 1972 film Bill and Tony, which 
Burroughs made with Antony Balch (the masturbating guy in Towers Open Fire). In 
Bill and Tony, an image of Burroughs's disembodied floating head recites 
instructions for how to operate an auditing session.

So what are we supposed to make of all this? On one level it's hard to say, but 
what ought to be abundantly clear is that Burroughs took Scientology quite 
seriously indeed for the better part of a decade—during what was arguably his 
most artistically fertile period. Burroughs clearly had his own uses for 
Scientology. Gysin once quipped that Burroughs was probably the first person to 
make more money from Scientology than the organization made from him. This may 
be true, but Burroughs wasn't investigating the Church cynically. Today, where 
so much attention focuses on the science fictional origins of Scientology, it 
is easy to forget how seemingly in harmony the Church was with a whole range of 
countercultural, "New Age," and anti-psychiatric practices in the Sixties.

What becomes clear when you listen to Burroughs talking about Scientology is 
that he associated the group with a range of mind-expanding and mind-freeing 
practices: Wilhelm Reich's trippy Orgone Accumulator, which Jack Kerouac wrote 
about in On the Road; Mayan calendrical mind control systems; hallucinogens 
(especially the plant yagé) and other powerful mind-altering drugs; 
apomorphine, which he used several times to treat his drug addiction; the 
rambling, sarcastic monologues he called "routines"; the Dream Machine 
Burroughs invented with Gysin, a machine that supposedly could simulate 
"alpha-waves"; and of course his ultimate weapon in the Burroughs arsenal, the 
cut-up, which was designed to jam up what he called "the Reality Studio," aka 
the everyday, conditioned, mind-controlled reality. If you spend enough time 
digging through Burroughs's writing, you get the sense that Burroughs thought 
he lived in a very literally real science fictional world.

Absent from Burroughs's writing are any references to body thetans, Xenu, the 
Galactic Confederacy, Douglas DC-8 airliners, volcanic hydrogen bombs, or other 
beliefs more recently associated with Scientology, thanks to the South Park 
episode, "Trapped in the Closet" and Lawrence Wright's epically long New Yorker 
article on the defection of the film director Paul Haggis from the church). 
It's too bad Burroughs didn't achieve a higher OT level; he could have mined 
Scientology's madcap space opera as a source for even more mind-bending books.

Lee Konstantinou is author of the novel Pop Apocalypse, and begins a teaching 
fellowship in English at Princeton in the fall.

                                                                                
                                                                                
                                                                                
                

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