{"id":4140,"date":"2022-01-10T22:17:50","date_gmt":"2022-01-11T06:17:50","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/localhost:8000\/?page_id=4140"},"modified":"2023-03-29T20:44:15","modified_gmt":"2023-03-30T03:44:15","slug":"the-basketball-diaries-writing-as-a-weapon","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/www.catholicboy.com\/WP\/research\/academic-studies-of-jim-carroll\/masters-thesis-1990-basketball-diaries-and-forced-entries\/the-basketball-diaries-writing-as-a-weapon\/","title":{"rendered":"The Basketball Diaries: Writing as a Weapon"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p class=\"ext-thesis-heading\"> <span class=\"ext-eyebrow\">Chapter Two<\/span><br><em> <span class=\"ext-thesis-title\">The Basketball Diaries<\/span><\/em><span class=\"ext-thesis-title\">: Writing as a Weapon<\/span><br> <span class=\"ext-thesis-title\">Jim Carroll&#8217;s <em>The Basketball Diaries<\/em> and <em>Forced Entries<\/em><\/span><br> By Cassie Carter <\/p>\n\n\n\n<hr class=\"wp-block-separator has-alpha-channel-opacity\"\/>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"ext-thesis-submenu\"><a href=\"https:\/\/www.catholicboy.com\/WP\/research\/academic-studies-of-jim-carroll\/masters-thesis-1990-basketball-diaries-and-forced-entries\/\" data-type=\"page\" data-id=\"4148\">Title Page<\/a> &nbsp; <a href=\"https:\/\/www.catholicboy.com\/WP\/table-of-contents\/\" data-type=\"page\" data-id=\"4510\">Table of Contents<\/a> &nbsp; <a href=\"https:\/\/www.catholicboy.com\/WP\/research\/academic-studies-of-jim-carroll\/abstract\/\" data-type=\"page\" data-id=\"4141\">Abstract<\/a> &nbsp; <a href=\"https:\/\/www.catholicboy.com\/WP\/research\/academic-studies-of-jim-carroll\/shit-into-gold\/\" data-type=\"page\" data-id=\"4139\">Chapter One<\/a> &nbsp; <strong>Chapter Two<\/strong> &nbsp; <a href=\"https:\/\/www.catholicboy.com\/WP\/research\/academic-studies-of-jim-carroll\/masters-thesis-1990-basketball-diaries-and-forced-entries\/1990-ma-thesis-conclusion-writing-as-redemption\/\" data-type=\"page\" data-id=\"4045\">Chapter Three<\/a> &nbsp; <a href=\"https:\/\/www.catholicboy.com\/WP\/research\/academic-studies-of-jim-carroll\/masters-thesis-1990-basketball-diaries-and-forced-entries\/1990-ma-thesis-conclusion-writing-as-redemption\/\" data-type=\"page\" data-id=\"4045\">Chapter Four<\/a> &nbsp; <a href=\"https:\/\/www.catholicboy.com\/WP\/research\/academic-studies-of-jim-carroll\/a-jim-carroll-chronology\/\" data-type=\"page\" data-id=\"4046\">Appendix<\/a> &nbsp; <a href=\"https:\/\/www.catholicboy.com\/WP\/research\/academic-studies-of-jim-carroll\/notes\/\" data-type=\"page\" data-id=\"4033\">Notes<\/a> &nbsp; <a href=\"https:\/\/www.catholicboy.com\/WP\/research\/academic-studies-of-jim-carroll\/masters-thesis-1990-basketball-diaries-and-forced-entries\/works-cited\/\" data-type=\"page\" data-id=\"4034\">Works Cited<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n<hr class=\"wp-block-separator has-alpha-channel-opacity\"\/>\n\n\n\n<div style=\"height:50px\" aria-hidden=\"true\" class=\"wp-block-spacer\"><\/div>\n\n\n\n<pre class=\"wp-block-verse\">I may get my ass beat occasionally,<br>but I always get the last word<br>--Jim Carroll<br>(BBD 170)<\/pre>\n\n\n\n<p>In 1980, after having published two volumes of poetry, and<br>just before the release of his first rock &#8216;n&#8217; roll album, <em>Catholic<br>Boy<\/em>, and the second publication of his <em>Basketball Diaries<\/em>,<br>ex-heroin addict, ex-male prostitute, ex-art-scene initiate, poet, and<br>rock star Jim Carroll told Lynn Hirschberg, &#8220;It&#8217;s really insane that most<br>people don&#8217;t live exactly the same life as me&#8221; (25).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Carroll was 12 years old when he realized he was immersed<br>in a world rife with corruption, where respectability was synonymous with<br>hypocrisy, where proper appearances merely concealed depravity, where<br>authority figures used their power to oppress others, and where it seemed<br>someone was always trying to &#8220;steal the light from [his] eyes.&#8221; <a href=\"notes.asp#6\"><sup>[6]<\/sup><\/a><br>It was 1962, and a war was raging in Vietnam. On the<br>home front, air raid sirens wailed as Khrushchev warned, &#8220;We will bury<br>you,&#8221; and &#8220;your children will live under Communism&#8221; (Morris 19); racism<br>ran rampant, and Jim Carroll, a street punk and a star basketball player<br>from the lower east side of Manhattan, sought some way to rise above the<br>desolation and insanity of his circumstances.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Carroll was essentially a natural-born athlete, and<br>basketball was his ticket out of his everyday life and out of himself.<br>Unlike the rest of his world, basketball made sense. It had logical rules,<br>its values were absolute, and he could display and hone his natural agility<br>and grace on the court. As a way of authenticating this talent, he entered<br>a basketball league. Yet, ironically, his victorious acceptance into the<br>Biddy League turned sour as he discovered that membership tainted the<br>purity of basketball. It turned out this &#8220;authentic&#8221; league was populated<br>with racist, &#8220;dick snatch[ing]&#8221; coaches feigning righteousness (36), and<br>he found that every time he tried to do something the &#8220;honorable&#8221; way,<br>he was victimized.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Because of this, Carroll had to find a way to be part<br>of this society and shine in spite of its hypocrisy; to persevere and<br>transcend its corruption by virtue of his own integrity and talent. As<br>with Harold Jaffe, Carroll had to &#8220;swallow the poison in order to become<br>immune to it or reconstitute it.&#8221; The poison became more toxic, however,<br>as his initiation continued and his world enlarged. He entered Catholic<br>grammar schools and an elite Catholic high school, finding that the priests<br>there were no different from his basketball coaches. Meanwhile, racial<br>tensions exploded into riots, superpowers threatened to drop the atomic<br>bomb at any moment, and narcotics raids induced paranoia on every street<br>corner.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>His entire world was rotten to the core, with its facade<br>of order and righteousness concealing an empty morality, like &#8220;all them<br>executive creeps in uniform with their little fedoras and them dumb little<br>cases they carry that usually got nothing but a pencil in them every time<br>I see a dude open one&#8221; (119). Being a basketball star couldn&#8217;t save him:<br>he had to find a new way to transcend the emptiness and hypocrisy of his<br>world. So, in the midst of this, at the age of 12, Carroll began to write.<br>&#8220;After reading Kerouac&#8217;s <em>On the Road<\/em> and seeing how life could<br>be shaped into art&#8221; (Milward 142), Carroll began keeping what he called<br>&#8220;basketball diaries.&#8221;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Jamie James calls <em>The Basketball Diaries<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>a literary miracle; a description of the formation<br>of an artistic sensibility written by the artist, not in retrospect,<br>but in the process. It is a portrait of the artist not just as<br>a young man but as a child, written by the child, and thus free<br>of the mature artist&#8217;s complicated love of himself in pain.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>In the dedication of <em>The Basketball Diaries<\/em>, Carroll<br>offers &#8220;Special thanks to Ann Waldman, Ted Berrigan, Patti Smith and Bill<br>Berkson,&#8221; writers whose faith in his &#8220;artistic sensibility&#8221; helped him<br>emerge victorious from his circumstances through writing. But the book<br>is also dedicated: &#8220;IN MEMORY OF PHIL OCHS.&#8221; Ochs was a politically active<br>folk singer during the 1960s who, apparently out of despair that the peace\/protest<br>movement wasn&#8217;t working and that he was unable to make a difference, wound<br>up committing suicide by hanging himself in 1976.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Marc Eliot notes that, &#8220;To many on the East Coast, Phil<br>was a victim of the American system, sucker-punched in the great chase<br>for fame and fortune, beaten down and left for dead&#8221; (292). Likewise,<br>Carroll describes Ochs in <em>Forced Entries<\/em>, circa 1973, as looking<br>like &#8220;someone who&#8217;s been hit and run by time.&#8221; This disturbs Carroll because,<br>&#8220;Around my fourteenth year of life, this dude forever changed <em>it<br>all<\/em> for me&#8221; (73-74). Likewise, in the first stanza of his poem<br>&#8220;Heroes (for Phil Ochs),&#8221; he writes:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>Fallen one, your private ghosts are<br>stepping on you from the heights<br>where you left them off. Their necks are<br>tiered like a noose . . .<br>. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br>You changed my life. I sat in the rain<br>with <em>The New York Times<\/em> to get your act down. (BN 131)<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>In many ways, <em>The Basketball Diaries<\/em> exalts all victims<br>of the American system who, like Ochs, have been left battling &#8220;private<br>ghosts.&#8221; But the beauty of the book is its optimism: more than anything<br>it is about the potential an individual has to transcend the victimization<br>of a corrupt system. Carroll shows it is possible to make a difference<br>both in the way he lives his life and by <em>creating<\/em> a better world<br>through art.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Hence, in action and in word, Carroll transforms his<br>chaotic life into a work of art. As James puts it, &#8220;<em>The Basketball<br>Diaries<\/em> is a blow-by-blow account of a season in hell. By the age<br>of fifteen, [Carroll] had experienced more in the way of existential vicissitudes<br>and worldly observations than several middle class lives combined.&#8221; In<br><em>The Basketball Diaries<\/em>, instead of allowing himself to be socialized<br>into a world of empty briefcases, Carroll &#8220;swallows the poison,&#8221; then<br>displays his own corruption, via his diaries, using it as a weapon against<br>the corrupt establishment. He becomes &#8220;the fire&#8217;s reflection&#8221; (as he sings<br>in <em>Catholic Boy<\/em>&#8216;s &#8220;City Drops Into the Night&#8221;), mirroring the depravity<br>of his world in his own decadence. In doing this, he explores and exposes<br>the disenfranchised underside of 1960s America, using his autobiography,<br>the streets and institutions of New York City, and his body, as weapons<br>to attack not just the hypocrisy of the &#8220;establishment,&#8221; but also the<br>lack of absolute values and morals in society as a whole.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Hence, for Carroll, his diaries serve two interconnected<br>purposes. As he imposes order upon the chaos of his life and transforms<br>its ugliness into beauty, he is also assaulting the corrupt social order<br>which made his life chaotic and ugly in the first place. Where the &#8220;establishment&#8221;<br>refuses to acknowledge its own depravity, Carroll sees corruption spreading<br>like a cancer throughout society. And with New York City as &#8220;the greatest<br>hero a writer needs,&#8221; he highlights the cancer, laying bare &#8220;what&#8217;s really<br>going down&#8221; in the streets and throughout his world. In disclosing this<br>reality, he attempts to &#8220;get even for your dumb hatreds and all them war<br>baby dreams you left in my scarred bed with dreams of bombs falling above<br>that cliff I&#8217;m hanging steady to&#8221; (160).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Carroll reveals that, beneath the orderly veneer of<br>morality and justice his world displays, &#8220;Pedro&#8217;s mom is really over there<br>hustling, leaning one foot up on the building and the whole bit&#8221; (10).<br>While the world makes up excuses, Bobby Blake dies of leukemia at 16 (67-68),<br>and Teddy Rayhill falls from a roof while sniffing glue (27).<a href=\"notes.asp#7\"><sup>[7]<\/sup><\/a><br>While the Catholic Church &#8220;push[es] into a bunch of stiff noodle-sized<br>brains that &#8216;Who made us? . . .,&#8217; &#8216;God made us . . .&#8217;,&#8221; the &#8220;&#8216;fine&#8217; Christian<br>Brothers&#8221; are getting their kicks &#8220;running around with their rubber straps<br>beating asses red for the least little goofing&#8221; (35, 18).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>While narcotics forces claim to be out saving the nation,<br>dauntlessly battling the drug epidemic, they&#8217;re &#8220;rapping right out loud<br>to each other how much they ought to give in for evidence and what they<br>ought to keep to sell for themselves back onto the street&#8221; (128). While<br>riot squads take to the streets taming rebellious ghetto dwellers, Carroll<br>buys codeine cough syrup &#8220;right in the shadows of where Malcolm X was<br>gunned down not too long ago&#8221; (81). In the wake of the Harlem Riots, Carroll<br>says, &#8220;I&#8217;m glad to see all the smashed in boarded-up windows of all those<br>white crook storeowners down here all cleared out of their TVs and radios<br>by the people who should have them for once anyway&#8221; (161).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>If society&#8217;s villains are &#8220;them commies,&#8221; &#8220;longhairs,&#8221;<br>&#8220;niggers&#8221; and &#8220;spics,&#8221; &#8220;junkies,&#8221; and &#8220;perverts,&#8221; Carroll <em>becomes<\/em><br>all of the evil things society fears. He grows his hair long, becomes<br>a &#8220;minority&#8221; within minority culture, steals, attends Communist Party<br>meetings and protest marches, gets hooked on heroin, and hustles gay men<br>to support his habit. Most importantly, Carroll does all of this <em>within<\/em><br>&#8220;respectable&#8221; society, playing his &#8220;star basketball player&#8221; identity against<br>his illegitimate &#8220;street punk&#8221; one, and turns the discrepancy into a weapon<br>against the &#8220;system.&#8221; As he puts it:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>Like just what is guilty or who is guilty for fuck<br>sake? Big business dudes make billions come out of their ass and<br>they ain&#8217;t shelling out a reefer&#8217;s worth of tax. Kids walk through<br>some jungle I don&#8217;t know how far away and shoot people, and white<br>haired old men in smoking jacket armchairs make laws to keep it<br>all going smoothly. I swim in the river and have to duck huge<br>amounts of shit and grease and &#8220;newly discovered miracle fibers&#8221;<br>every five feet I move because those smokestack companies don&#8217;t<br>give a flying fuck . . . Shit my man, it&#8217;s so <em>all there<\/em><br>that no one&#8217;s seeing it anymore. (199)<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>Because Carroll can see it, and because he is able to write<br>about it, he inverts the established &#8220;reality&#8221; of heroes and villains,<br>exposing the hypocrisy inherent in a &#8220;respectable&#8221; world unwilling to<br>face itself.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>It is not enough for Carroll to sit back and observe<br>the corruption and hypocrisy that surrounds him like the &#8220;shit and grease&#8221;<br>in the river. As Platenga notes, &#8220;To see clearly one has to DO. The only<br>way to DO is to SEE clearly&#8221;; hence, Carroll jumps into the shit and holds<br>it under our noses. &#8220;Maybe then someone&#8217;ll see,&#8221; says Platenga.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Like most of Carroll&#8217;s critics, Jamie James observes<br>that &#8220;Rimbaud is the name that pops up. . . . One especially thinks of<br>Rimbaud&#8217;s remark that &#8216;The soul has to be made monstrous.&#8217; If one word<br>descries what happens in the <em>Diaries<\/em>, it is monstrous.&#8221; Rimbaud<br>said, &#8220;the problem is to make the soul into a monster, like the comprachicos,<br>you know? Think of a man grafting warts onto his face and growing them<br>there&#8221; (102). Rimbaud believed that becoming a visionary requires one<br>&#8220;to attain the unknown by disorganizing <em>all the senses<\/em>,&#8221; and to<br>become as depraved as possible. As he explained, &#8220;The suffering is immense,<br>but you have to be strong, and to have been born a poet&#8221; (100).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>While Carroll didn&#8217;t read Rimbaud until well into the<br>1970s (Irving 4A), Carroll does follow a program similar to Rimbaud&#8217;s.<br>However, Rimbaud&#8217;s was a planned-out, &#8220;systematized <em>disorganization<br>of the senses<\/em>&#8221; (102). By comparison, as James notes: &#8220;There is nothing<br>so calculated about Jim Carroll&#8217;s excursion into the inferno; if there<br>is an organizing principle here, it is not, refreshingly, the design of<br>an artist preparing himself for writing poetry. He is only obliquely aware<br>that he is a writer, which is exactly the genius of it.&#8221;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Nevertheless, in <em>The Basketball Diaries<\/em>, he is<br>making himself a visionary in the way he lives his life, transforming<br>his life and his vision of his world into a life-long poem. Carroll is<br>a visionary in the sense that, as Rimbaud writes, a poet &#8220;searches himself,<br>he exhausts within himself all poisons, and preserves their quintessences.&#8221;<br>He is Rimbaud&#8217;s &#8220;great criminal&#8221; (102) against the so-called traditional<br>values of society because he dares to swallow all the poisons his world<br>has to offer, transforming and keeping only what is useful to him, and<br>spitting the rest out. Rather than passively allowing himself to become<br>polluted, he seeks out corruption, then filters it through actions and<br>words. His vision of his world is entirely his own, and he paints a portrait<br>of this world in his own language&#8211;in slang and street rap. Finally, through<br>his actions, his clarity of vision, and his street lingo, he uncovers<br>the emptiness of his world&#8217;s values, challenges them, and forges his own,<br>new values through a relentless exploration of himself.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Hence, Carroll descends into the abyss, into the darkest<br>depths of heroin abuse, prostitution, and theft; into the bowels of a<br>corrupt society. But because he adheres to his own code of value, honor,<br>and integrity, and because he is able to write about his experience, he<br>is able to purge himself of this corruption. As he said in 1979:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>Purity means that you always have something up<br>your sleeve, that you have something you&#8217;ve earned, that you have<br>something to move toward, that your vision is intact. Purity,<br>to me, exists within states of what would be thought of as impure.<br>You can live within a state of total decay. You can live in that<br>state and still be totally pure if your vision remains intact,<br>if you know that you&#8217;ve go to keep moving ahead because you haven&#8217;t<br>reached that light yet, the light at the end of the tunnel. (Hirschberg<br>27)<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>In <em>The Basketball Diaries<\/em>, within a &#8220;state of total<br>decay,&#8221; Carroll seeks to purify himself through the integrity of his own<br>vision. His awareness of the corruption surrounding him on all sides heightens<br>his urgent sense that there must be a &#8220;light at the end of the tunnel,&#8221;<br>and it is up to him alone to reach it.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>The Basketball Diaries<\/em> begins with Carroll&#8217;s<br>acceptance into an &#8220;authentic&#8221; basketball league, which for him is the<br>first time he plays basketball &#8220;for real&#8221;: &#8220;Today was my first Biddy League<br>game and my first day in any organized basketball league. I&#8217;m enthused<br>about life due to this exciting event. The Biddy League is a league for<br>anyone 12 yrs. or under. I&#8217;m actually 13 but my coach Lefty gave me a<br>fake birth certificate&#8221; (3). Admission into the Biddy League legitimizes<br>and formally recognizes his outstanding ball playing (which later gains<br>him admittance to a highly respected private Catholic high school), and<br>it gives him a chance to display his grace and finesse on the court.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>However, his admittance into this &#8220;authentic&#8221; league<br>is illegitimate: he is accepted into this organization only by means of<br>a forged document, the fake birth certificate. This poses two problems:<br>first, Carroll himself is not &#8220;legitimate&#8221; in the eyes of the league;<a href=\"notes.asp#8\"><sup>[8]<\/sup><\/a><br>second, the &#8220;respectability&#8221; of the Biddy League is undermined by its<br>hypocritical flouting of its own rules.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>This first entry introduces many of the key motifs Carroll<br>explores throughout <em>The Basketball Diaries<\/em>. First, where Carroll<br>is considered &#8220;illegitimate&#8221; in society because of his lower-class status,<br>age, drug use, the length of his hair, and so on, it is the establishment<br>in general which is truly unauthentic. For example, coach Lefty, who provides<br>the fake birth certificate, is using his position as a representative<br>of the Biddy League, authority figure, role model, and leader to take<br>advantage not just of other teams (by placing &#8220;ringers&#8221; on his team) but<br>of his own as well. His wholesome appearance merely conceals his underlying<br>depravity:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>Lefty is a great guy; he picks us up for games in<br>his station wagon and always buys us tons of food. I&#8217;m too young<br>to understand about homosexuals but I think Lefty is one. Although<br>he&#8217;s a great ballplayer and a strong guy, he likes to do funny<br>things to you like put his hand between your legs and pick you<br>up. When he did this I got keenly suspicious. I guess I better<br>not tell my mother about it. (3)<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>If Lefty is representative of this &#8220;authentic&#8221; league Carroll<br>has been accepted into, and of society in general, Carroll must find a<br>way to rise above its corruption and hypocrisy.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Because of this, Carroll&#8217;s initiation into &#8220;respectable&#8221;<br>society is a leap into corruption, much like his highly allegorical free<br>fall into the polluted Harlem River:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>Every crowd of young guys has its little games<br>to prove if you&#8217;re punk or not. . . . Here in upper Manhattan,<br>guys jump off cliffs into the Harlem River, where the water is<br>literally shitty because right nearby are the giant sewer deposits<br>where about half a million toilets empty their goods daily. You<br>had to time each jump, in fact, with the &#8220;shit lines&#8221; as they<br>flowed by. That is, there were these lines of water crammed with<br>shit along the surface about five feet long that would come by<br>once every forty seconds. So you had to time your jump in between<br>the lines just like those jitterbugs down in Acapulco got to time<br>their jumps so they hit the water just as the wave is beginning<br>to break. (47)<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>Like the Harlem River, Carroll&#8217;s world is &#8220;literally shitty,&#8221;<br>and throughout the <em>Diaries<\/em> Carroll takes similar leaps into organized<br>societies, including basketball leagues, a &#8220;posh&#8221; Catholic school, and<br>the drug culture (Later, in <em>Forced Entries<\/em>, he leaps into the New<br>York art scene).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>All of these social orders offer a sense of community,<br>all boast an elite status Carroll finds desirable (though each offers<br>a different kind of status), and all give him an opportunity to communicate<br>in one form or another&#8211;be it with his body (basketball, sex), with his<br>mind (drugs), or with his pen. The catch is that he must find a way to<br>exploit his opportunities to communicate and enjoy elite status without<br>being incorporated into the society which bestows these things.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>For this reason, Carroll must prove himself &#8220;punk&#8221; in<br>everything he does. Like Hemingway&#8217;s code heroes, Carroll finds himself<br>in a world devoid of traditional principles of order, value, and honor<br>(Wagner 877). Hence, forced to define a new code for himself, he arrives<br>at &#8220;punk,&#8221; a form of &#8220;hipsterism&#8221; like that of William Burroughs, which<br>rejects the traditional social order. As Jennie Skerl explains, the primary<br>aim of the hipster (like the punk) is to extricate himself from the hypocrisy<br>and corruption impinging on him. And while the hipster&#8217;s is a spiritual<br>quest, it is unlike that of other &#8220;spiritual seekers.&#8221; He &#8220;conducts his<br>life as a quest for alternative values and forms of self,&#8221; and &#8220;his quest<br>proceeds through action, not contemplation&#8221; (7). Most importantly, &#8220;the<br>hipster is amoral by conventional standards, although he adheres to an<br>exquisite standard of perception, honesty, and courage&#8221; (8).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Carroll lives out his &#8220;punk&#8221; code by consciously molding<br>his life into a work of art, playing a dual role as both author and real<br>character of his biography. As Carroll defines it, &#8220;punk&#8221; is a matter<br>of &#8220;presence&#8221;:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>If you never do anything to make yourself seen<br>. . . like really seen, the type that makes people point, then<br>you don&#8217;t deserve to be seen at all. That&#8217;s my theory, and not<br>only on a basketball court, to look good while you&#8217;re doing it<br>is just as important as doing it good, and combine both and you&#8217;ve<br>got it made. Presence is where it&#8217;s at, but not the going out<br>of your way to be noticed presence, but sneaky, shy presence (though<br>it&#8217;s all a part, you&#8217;re still always aware). Presence like a cheetah<br>rather than a chimp. They&#8217;ve both got it, but chimpy gotta jump<br>his nuts around all day to get it, shy cheetah just sits in total<br>nonchalance or moves a sec or two in his sexy strut.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>The key is not to go out of your way to display your presence.<br>On the court it&#8217;s easy: &#8220;you dunk a ball, dribble or pass behind the back<br>. . . make a super layup out of an easy one (but not obvious you had to<br>do it) then get fouled on it, say, and just walk to the line like you<br>don&#8217;t hear no &#8216;ohhs&#8217; and &#8216;ahhs&#8217; . . .&#8221; (BBD 89-90). But the rest of the<br>time it isn&#8217;t so easy. Both in living out his life and in writing about<br>it, Carroll always risks falling on his face.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Because Carroll&#8217;s punk presence depends upon acceptance<br>by an audience\/society which oppresses and victimizes him, he exploits<br>his illegitimate &#8220;street punk&#8221; identity, turning it against his audience&#8217;s\/society&#8217;s<br>inability to see beyond its own expectations and prejudices. In writing<br>the <em>Diaries<\/em>, even, he introduces himself as a street punk not even<br>worthy of joining the Biddy League. Yet he captures his readers&#8217; attention<br>with lurid stories and exciting prose, and pulls us into the system with<br>him; then, from the inside, he dismantles the social structures we hold<br>dear. Because of this, the &#8220;punk&#8221; aesthetic Carroll puts forward in his<br>writing is, in many ways, like &#8220;the &#8216;punk&#8217; aesthetic that evolved in music<br>during the 1970s.&#8221; That is, he forces &#8220;a confrontation between readers<br>and <em>all<\/em> conventions . . . to shock them out of complacent acceptance<br>of heirarchies, received traditions, meanings, stable identities&#8221; (McCaffery<br>218).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Hence, as with his leap into the Harlem River, Carroll&#8217;s<br>process of proving himself &#8220;punk&#8221; is comprised of three parts. First is<br>the moment before the leap, when he is outside of the society and concerned<br>with getting in. Second is the leap itself&#8211;the moment when he has displayed<br>his talents and has been accepted into the society, and has proven he<br><em>is<\/em> punk. The third stage is most important: once he is &#8220;in,&#8221; he<br>must reject, dismantle, and rise above the &#8220;society&#8221; he has just penetrated.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>When Carroll jumps into the polluted river, he must<br>prove himself not only to his companions, who have already taken the leap<br>and have proven themselves &#8220;punk,&#8221; but, more importantly, to an audience<br>of sightseers: &#8220;all the lame couples like old tourists from Ohio, and<br>nuns, and Japanese executives, and other odd N.Y.C. visitors who got fished<br>into paying five beans to sail around the island&#8221; on a Circle Line tour<br>boat. Likewise, Carroll&#8217;s audiences also include his Catholic school teachers,<br>coaches, basketball scouts, neighbors, and even the Pentagon.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>All of these people and organizations supposedly are<br>on his side, cheering him on; yet there they sit, watching him &#8220;go down<br>into the stinking water,&#8221; thinking they&#8217;re above him and <em>knowing<\/em><br>he won&#8217;t be &#8220;legitimate&#8221; until he passes their test. Actually, their lofty<br>evaluation of him is the sickest sort of voyeurism: rather than jumping<br>passionately into the &#8220;stinking water&#8221; along with him, they merely watch,<br>getting cheap thrills off of Carroll&#8217;s self-destruction.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Audiences in general have to do with social acceptance<br>and legitimacy: they observe and pass judgment. When Carroll is before<br>an audience, he is attempting to pass a test. But if he passes the test,<br>displays his grace and presence, and proves himself &#8220;punk,&#8221; he can rise<br>above the audience by virtue of his performance. Once this happens, the<br>scenario reverses: Carroll is watching the audience as it observes rather<br>than participates, like a bunch of voyeurs. After all, &#8220;If you never do<br>anything to make yourself seen . . . then you don&#8217;t deserve to be seen<br>at all.&#8221;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Because of this, along with the leap itself, it is the<br>audience which is most important at first; it is to <em>them<\/em> Carroll<br>must prove\/legitimate himself, and &#8220;That was what really made the jump<br>worthwhile.&#8221; Hence, as Carroll makes his leap into the polluted river,<br>he is acutely aware of &#8220;all the people yelling for me to do it, the sadistic<br>bastards.&#8221; And with this awareness, he jumps, displaying his presence<br>without appearing to go out of his way to do so: &#8220;I hit water hard, but<br>I didn&#8217;t go too deep, coming up to see all the sightseers applauding.&#8221;<br>Because his leap is successful, Carroll has proven himself &#8220;punk,&#8221; he<br>has confirmed his membership in the &#8220;in group&#8221; of &#8220;punks,&#8221; and he has<br>the audience on his side.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>But the last part of this process is most important:<br>&#8220;Then I swam to shore to meet the others and we turned, pulled down our<br>shorts, and flashed our moons to the old sightseeing buggers as the boat<br>pulled away and headed for the Hudson&#8221; (50). Once Carroll has proven himself,<br>the audience becomes a bunch of inferior outsiders awaiting judgment from<br>the &#8220;in&#8221; group. The ruling is three moons, straight across the board.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Proving himself &#8220;punk&#8221; is Carroll&#8217;s driving force, and<br>he must continually prove himself &#8220;punk&#8221; in everything he does. Being<br>&#8220;punk&#8221; is not a static identity but a way of doing things, a code of honor,<br>a kind of style and &#8220;presence,&#8221; and a way of communicating. Because he<br>is entering a world that&#8217;s as &#8220;literally shitty&#8221; as the Harlem River,<br>his &#8220;punk&#8221; code is all he has. So long as he maintains his own integrity<br>and continually sharpens his own performance, his is able to rise above<br>everyone and everything else. While a poor performance would not necessarily<br>mean exclusion from the &#8220;punk&#8221; <em>group<\/em>, belonging to this society<br>is not Carroll&#8217;s main concern. The important thing is to perform well<br>individually <em>and<\/em> win over the audience; the worst possibility would<br>be to perform badly and give the audience the advantage of laughing at<br>him.<a href=\"notes.asp#9\"><sup>[9]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Basketball places Carroll in close contact with the<br>supposedly &#8220;respectable&#8221; world, and enables him to display his &#8220;punk presence&#8221;<br>in its most uninhibited form before an audience. In the hypothetical basketball<br>game Carroll describes in his &#8220;presence&#8221; entry, the audience members are<br>saying &#8220;ooh&#8221; and &#8220;ahh&#8221; because they&#8217;re <em>impressed<\/em> with him and they<br>are <em>accepting<\/em> him. At the same time, though, Carroll is rising<br>above the audience. He&#8217;s pulling one over on the crowd and on the &#8220;dude&#8221;<br>who was guarding him (who underestimated him and is now running around<br>jock-less).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Likewise, one basketball tournament takes him to &#8220;a<br>ritzy neighborhood called Riverdale . . . giant stone private houses .<br>. . lots of ivy and swimming pools, that whole bit.&#8221; In this entry, Carroll<br>plays up his team&#8217;s seedy appearance in order to knock Riverdale off its<br>high horse:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>So we go onto the court and here are these guys<br>we&#8217;re playing all duded up in blue and gold uniforms with little<br>stars all over them, and going through these perfect warm-up drills.<br>We were pretty raggy next to those guys but we went over o.k.<br>with the crowd because we&#8217;re these tough ragamuffins from the<br>lower east side, all poor and shaggy, and all these nice parents<br>who have a few cars and smoke pipes and shit, well, they were<br>gonna cheer the underdogs from the ghetto right along, whippie,<br>that was so nice of them. (15)<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>Because Carroll&#8217;s team comes from a poor neighborhood, the<br>Riverdale crowd sees it as a charity case and, assuming that appearance<br>equals ability, is &#8220;gonna cheer for the underdogs.&#8221;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Of course the tables quickly turn, with Carroll&#8217;s &#8220;ragamuffin&#8221;<br>team proving itself &#8220;punk&#8221; and soaring to victory. Conversely, the Riverdale<br>team&#8217;s &#8220;ritzy&#8221; veneer peels away to reveal what&#8217;s really underneath: &#8220;the<br>pretty boys from Lake Peekskill, or wherever the fuck they were from,<br>didn&#8217;t know what to do. They called a timeout. We stopped the press out<br>of sheer pity. . . . They seemed to all have lead in their asses and never<br>heard of the word &#8216;drive&#8217; . . .&#8221; (16). But strangely enough, the Riverdale<br>people are good sports and take the defeat in stride: &#8220;After the game<br>they gave us free sodas and shit and all the local people stood in the<br>lobby as we left and patted us on the back and said, &#8216;Nice game, son,&#8217;<br>and all.&#8221;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>For Carroll, this is perhaps the worst response of all:<br>&#8220;the whole scene [was] strictly out of &#8216;Leave It To Beaver,&#8217; all the old<br>men Fred MacMurray types in tweed suits and the women, a pack of poodle<br>walkers, standing around with a lot of make-up and sort of thinking how<br>cute we were.&#8221; For Carroll, the fake appearances of these people merely<br>disguise the corrupt reality of the world he sees around him, much in<br>the way <em>Leave It to Beaver<\/em> denies reality. Hence, for his grand<br>finale, Carroll recontextualizes this &#8220;Leave it to Beaver&#8221; situation,<br>showing what the phoney facade conceals: &#8220;They had these teased up bleached<br>hair-dos that reminded me exactly of the higher priced 14th St. whores.<br>I wanted to ask one if she wanted to suck it off. . . &#8221; (16-17).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>At this point it seems appropriate to ask why Carroll<br>is so eager to bring people down, considering the Riverdale crowd was<br>not exactly comprised of &#8220;bad guys.&#8221; In this case, because the audience<br>is made up of judges and critics, it&#8217;s a matter &#8220;us versus them.&#8221; One<br>of the advantages in belonging to any organized society is its exclusive<br>group identity, and the Riverdale crowd&#8217;s group identity excludes Carroll&#8217;s<br>team according to socioeconomic status. Carroll nullifies this by showing<br><em>they&#8217;re<\/em> no &#8220;better&#8221; than <em>us<\/em> no matter how pretty their uniforms<br>are; in fact <em>they&#8217;re<\/em> no better than &#8220;the higher priced 14th St.<br>whores.&#8221;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Ironically, the Riverdale entry prefaces his move to<br>Inwood, a neighborhood in upper Manhattan, and Carroll finds himself immersed<br>in a phony reality just like Riverdale&#8217;s. Before the move, Carroll plans<br>an excursion to his new neighborhood, anticipating the situation: &#8220;Actually<br>I hate that scene &#8217;cause the place is filled with all these Irish Catholic<br>old biddies who gave me a lot of stares one time when I brought a bunch<br>of black guys up there to play ball in the park against my cousin&#8217;s friends,<br>a bunch of black haters too . . .&#8221; (11-12).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Again, the first order of business for Carroll is to<br>be accepted; not only does he have to go to school and live with these<br>people, but he must also enter their &#8220;system&#8221; before he can rise above<br>it. However, it&#8217;s not as simple as he hopes: the rules have changed. In<br>his old neighborhood, proving oneself &#8220;punk&#8221; was a matter of accepting<br>pain and disfigurement stoically: &#8220;On the lower east side they&#8217;d make<br>you press a lit cigarette onto your arm and have it burn all the way up<br>to the filter without the slightest flinch&#8221; (47). But being accepted into<br>Inwood&#8217;s social order requires that he reject his entire punk code, and<br>that he adopt an attitude of bigotry and social conformity.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The prospect of being accepted in the respectable circles<br>of Inwood is about as appetizing to him as gaining Riverdale&#8217;s seal of<br>approval. His adult neighbors are boring, compulsive gossips obsessed<br>with &#8220;their operations, ball scores, or the Commie threat,&#8221; and the &#8220;Guys<br>my age [are] strictly All-American, though most of the various crowds<br>do the beer-drinking scene on weekends.&#8221; For Carroll, &#8220;All American&#8221; is<br>also &#8220;strictly out of &#8216;Leave It to Beaver,'&#8221; and he wants no part of it.<br>At the same time, Carroll dreads the thought of entering yet another &#8220;respectable,&#8221;<br>even more oppressive society:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>the worst bullshit about this move is having to<br>go back to a fucking Catholic school just in the middle of a goof<br>year in a Public joint. That scene is simple, Catholic schools<br>are sheer shit, madmen in fucking collars who in their pious minds<br>can never be wrong, running around with their rubber straps beating<br>asses red for the least little goofing, and pushing into a bunch<br>of stiff noodle-sized brains that &#8220;Who made us? . . .,&#8221; &#8220;God made<br>us . . .,&#8221; horse drip. The old biddy penguins they call nuns are<br>even worse. I&#8217;m cracking back the first cat who tries that &#8220;bend<br>over&#8221; shit, hoping they give me the boot quick.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>As Carroll recognizes, Catholic school hypocritically institutionalizes<br>S&amp;M without acknowledging it.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Carroll&#8217;s solution to these disagreeable situations<br>divides his identity in two. First, he has &#8220;already got a scholarship<br>set for that plush Private School next year, so I&#8217;m going to breeze easy<br>for the rest of this grammar school bit&#8221; (18). Second, &#8220;My cousin Kevin<br>did introduce me to a few weed-heads up here once, and today I ran into<br>them and goofed with some ball playing. Most likely they&#8217;ll be my scene.<br>Nice basketball courts around here at least&#8221; (17-18).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>From the beginning of the <em>Diaries<\/em>, basketball<br>has been paramount, with drugs and petty crime as sidelines of sorts;<br>but up until he moves to Inwood, Carroll has mostly been experimenting.<br>He sniffs Carbona cleaning fluid on the Staten Island ferry (4-5), drinks<br>&#8220;red wine and puke[s] all over the new rug in the hallway,&#8221; and goes with<br>his friends &#8220;to the East River Park and get drunk, do reefer and sniff<br>glue&#8221; (17). However, when Carroll offhandedly decides that &#8220;Most likely<br>[the weed-heads will] be my scene,&#8221; he has chosen to stick to his punk<br>code and extend it, opting to leap into the underground rather than the<br>more &#8220;respectable,&#8221; hypocritical society of &#8220;All-American&#8221; guys. Once<br>he makes this choice, drugs begin to take on a significance rivaling that<br>of basketball, and eventually overshadow basketball entirely.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Basketball and the drug culture are actually quite similar<br>in many respects. Both have established rules and rituals, positions,<br>and goals; also, both have their own unique lingoes, and both offer a<br>set of friends. Of course, both provide a kind of &#8220;high.&#8221; Additionally,<br>the social hierarchy of basketball is analogous to that of the drug culture.<br>In basketball, the most important player is the one who gets the ball<br>and distributes it to the other players. In Carroll&#8217;s case, he is always<br>a guard, and his game plan is always: &#8220;If I get the fucking ball, I&#8217;m<br>shooting it, no matter if they play six thousand varieties of defense&#8221;<br>(88).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The &#8220;dealer&#8221; has it all, controlling who gets the ball,<br>and thus controls who scores; he can also score for himself. Likewise,<br>the most important players in the drug scene are the dealers&#8211;the guys<br>with ability to get all the good drugs and distribute them to others.<br>Finally, the goal for the drug user is get as high as possible for as<br>long as possible. The goal for the individual basketball player is not<br>just to make points for his team, but also to make the crowd say &#8220;ooh&#8221;<br>and &#8220;ahh&#8221; and achieve the &#8220;high&#8221; that comes with both an outstanding performance<br>(e.g. by making a &#8220;super layup out of an easy one&#8221;) and the self knowledge<br>that one has performed well.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>On the other hand, drugs and basketball are parts of<br>two different worlds, and Carroll is at the bottom of the social hierarchy<br>in the drug culture. Nevertheless, the decadent &#8220;underground&#8221; culture<br>allows him to live out his punk code with others who share this code,<br>and to explore new realms of consciousness. At the same time, however,<br>Carroll is looking forward to attending Trinity, that &#8220;plush Private High<br>School,&#8221; on a basketball scholarship. At this point both worlds have claims<br>on him, and Carroll hasn&#8217;t fully committed himself to either. For the<br>moment Carroll is caught in between the two, and his first concern is<br>to get by, maintaining this balance, and &#8220;breeze easy for the rest of<br>this grammar school bit.&#8221;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>As soon as he starts attending the Catholic grammar<br>school, however, he finds that it&#8217;s not going to be such a breeze after<br>all:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>Once a month as an eighth grader in this screwy<br>Catholic school we got to march over to church after school&#8217;s<br>out to got to confession. . . . So we&#8217;re in the giant church and<br>[the Brother] sticks me in line and I say, &#8220;But, I never, I swear<br>. . .&#8221; No good, the dumb bastard don&#8217;t even listen and at that<br>moment let me tell you I hated that fucking school and that whole<br>religion worse than anything before with their tiny dark boxes<br>you enter like they were phone booths to God. They should gun<br>off the whole bunch, they&#8217;re fucking up minds they do not own.<br>(25)<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>But no matter how much he fights it, this system wields<br>a great deal of authority over Carroll, and for him forced confession<br>is just another form of rape. However, because confession is legitimately<br>built into the system, it&#8217;s far worse than the &#8220;funny things&#8221; Lefty did<br>to him. That is, Carroll is not required to submit to Lefty&#8217;s pedophilia,<br>but confession is compulsory.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Furthermore, the basic assumption behind confession<br>is that the confessor has sinned, whether he or she knows it or not.<a href=\"notes.asp#10\"><sup>[10]<\/sup><\/a><br>Hence, the Church institutionalizes the fact that something is &#8220;wrong&#8221;<br>with Carroll, and forces him to admit it. This also carries over into<br>the classroom, as he receives a &#8220;god damm 99&#8221; on his weekly report card,<br>and &#8220;in the &#8216;effort&#8217; column the smart ass Brother gave me a &#8216;D,&#8217; for what<br>reason I can&#8217;t figure.&#8221; Because of this, the principal &#8220;tells me to take<br>a stand over on the side with a bunch of other chumps, mostly guys who<br>failed the whole bit and I get three raps across the hand with this thick<br>rubber strap, it fucking hurt too, and this with a 99 grade, what these<br>mothers expect is beyond me.&#8221;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>But here is the crucial paradox of <em>The Basketball<br>Diaries<\/em>. As Carroll says, &#8220;I know I should just belt back the next<br>prick who hits me, but something holds me back. I guess deep down I think<br>they have the right to boss me around. I&#8217;ve got to break loose&#8221; (27-28).<br>The fact is, even though he knows the system is phoney, that it is being<br>unfair, and that he has in fact done nothing wrong, Carroll somehow believes<br>&#8220;they have the right to boss me around.&#8221; What is scary about authority<br>is that, even though it is itself corrupt, it has the power to portray<br>itself as righteous, then condemn and oppress those in its care.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Furthermore, perhaps the worst aspect of Carroll&#8217;s situation<br>is that he is on foreign turf: Catholic school has nothing to do with<br>his reality, and its standards are alien to him. By comparison, the rules<br>of the basketball court are familiar, and he can deal with the oppression<br>imposed by Lefty or snobbish opposing teams and audiences on his own terms,<br>using his basketball playing and his &#8220;punk presence&#8221; as weapons. Against<br>Catholicism he has no ammunition. Furthermore, in the Biddy League he<br>has his basketball team to back him up before a critical audience, and<br>in his jump into the Harlem River he has two fellow &#8220;punks&#8221; to back him<br>up. In Catholic school he has no one but himself.<a href=\"notes.asp#11\"><sup>[11]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Because he hasn&#8217;t the power or the means to fight back,<br>Carroll&#8217;s only defense is to rebel in word, and to express the incongruity<br>of Catholic dogma with his own. Hence, in between the &#8220;confession&#8221; and<br>&#8220;report card&#8221; entries, Carroll inserts a slice of his own reality:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>Today is our last<br>Biddy League game of the year, but before it all the members of<br>the Boys&#8217; Club have to meet in front of the place to have some<br>kind of memorial service for little Teddy Rayhill. <a href=\"notes.asp#12\"><sup>[12]<\/sup><\/a><br>He&#8217;s a member of the club that fell off the roof the other day<br>while he was sniffing glue. The priest was making a speech about<br>Teddy and tried to pawn off some story about him fixing a TV antenna<br>when he fell off but no one swallowed that shit. Herbie Hemslie<br>and his gang started flinging bricks down from the roof across<br>the street. Everybody had to clear out into the club while the<br>cops chased after Herbie and friends. After it was safe to go<br>out again, everybody filed past Teddy&#8217;s closed casket and if you<br>wanted to you said a prayer. If you didn&#8217;t want to I guess you<br>just stood and felt shitty about everything. (27)<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>Carroll&#8217;s stark, violent world is much more real&#8211;more authentic&#8211;than<br>that of the Catholic school. As Carroll demonstrates in his song &#8220;People<br>Who Died,&#8221; on <em>Catholic Boy<\/em>, death is a reality glossed over in<br>the everyday world, but like Huck Finn, he experiences it in a way that<br>most teenagers never have to face.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In the midst of an otherwise ordinary day for basketball,<br>Carroll&#8217;s team meets for the memorial service of a 12 year old boy. Likewise,<br>events such as Herbie&#8217;s gang throwing bricks off rooftops are everyday<br>occurrences for Carroll, and the mourners take it in stride. Finally,<br>the mourners are not forced to pray or anything else; they simply do whatever<br>they find appropriate. The only incongruity in the scene is the priest,<br>who attempts to conceal the ugly truth about Teddy&#8217;s death; the priest<br>is yet another authority offering up hypocrisy and lies. But here it doesn&#8217;t<br>matter what the priest says; death is death no matter how many lies he<br>offers up in explanation.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Carroll finds that the more direct, no-nonsense methods<br>of his world can sometimes pay off even in Catholic school. When &#8220;One<br>of the &#8216;fine&#8217; Christian Brothers who [teach] in this barb-wire grade school<br>of mine. . . . snagged little Mikey Benavisti cheating on some religious<br>quiz,&#8221; the Brother &#8220;went through his usual &#8216;M.O.'&#8221; As Carroll explains,<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>This routine, all too familiar to us all by now,<br>consists of having Mike go behind closed doors in the coat closet,<br>pull down his trousers and his undies even, and bend over for<br>a solid ten or so whacks of a rubber fan belt in the ass. The<br>process always seems to take an unusually long time . . . Could<br>it be that the good brother is deriving some pleasure out of these<br>dutiful tasks thrust upon him? (35)<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>The next day, &#8220;Right during class, in the middle of a tense<br>spelling bee, as a matter of fact, the door bolts open and in storms Mike&#8217;s<br>big brother Vinnie, a highly reputed neighborhood tough.&#8221; Vinnie &#8220;proceeds<br>to whip off feeble Bro. G&#8217;s specks, rips off his holy collar and flings<br>the dude to shit all over the room.&#8221; Then Vinnie says to Brother G: &#8220;I<br>went to this same school and took beatings, you queer prick, but you didn&#8217;t<br>do that jive to Mikey out of any &#8216;punishment&#8217; . . . so I&#8217;m hauling your<br>ass down to the head man and get things straight, now move ass!&#8221;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>As with Teddy&#8217;s memorial service, Carroll sees his own<br>&#8220;punk&#8221; reality &#8211;the reality of the streets&#8211;in direct confrontation with<br>the reality of Catholic school, and he makes the connection: he sees the<br>truth that&#8217;s been concealed beneath the illusion, that discipline and<br>respectability are mere fronts for something far less honorable. As with<br>Lefty, the Brother&#8217;s authority and virtue are pretexts allowing him to<br>molest adolescent boys. While Carroll &#8220;certainly had been keyed into that<br>scene already by our coach at the Boy&#8217;s Club, Lefty, and various other<br>dick snatchers,&#8221; he hadn&#8217;t recognized it in the Brother. As Carroll puts<br>it, &#8220;The funny thing about this scene was that until Vinnie called the<br>pecker a queer, I had never really thought about it in that light. . .<br>. Now that I thought about it, Brother G. never did pull that closet bit<br>with any ugly guys&#8221; (35-36).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>As he sees the Brother&#8217;s hypocrisy in concrete form,<br>Carroll&#8217;s gradual awakening to the corruption hiding beneath authority&#8217;s<br>fake righteousness expands again. His only option is to &#8220;break loose&#8221;<br>and reject the society the Brother represents. He needs to find a reality<br>that doesn&#8217;t lie to him, and which comes to him directly, without mediation<br>or circumvention.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>It is at this point Carroll finds one particular event<br>in his life significant enough to record in his diary:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>I never did write about the time I too my first<br>shot of heroin. It was about two months back. The funny part is<br>that I thought heroin was the NON-addictive stuff and marijuana<br>was addictive. I only found out later what a dumb ass move it<br>was. Funny, I can remember what vows I&#8217;d made never to touch any<br>of that shit when I was five or six. Now with all my friends doing<br>it, all kinds of vows drop out from under me every day. . . .<br>I was just gonna sniff a bag but Tony said I might as well skin<br>pop it. I said OK. Then Pudgy says, &#8220;Well, if you&#8217;re gonna put<br>a needle in, you might as well mainline it,&#8221; I was scared to main,<br>but I gave in, Pudgy hit it in for me. I did half a fiver and,<br>shit, what a rush . . . just one long heat wave all through my<br>body, any ache I had flushed out. You can never top that first<br>rush, it&#8217;s like ten orgasms. . . . So, as simple as a walk into<br>that cellar, I lost my virgin veins. (30)<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>While Carroll rationalizes this extreme act as a result<br>of peer pressure, the fact is that he sacrifices his innocence, his &#8220;virgin<br>veins,&#8221; to become part of this underground world. As Bart Platenga puts<br>it, &#8220;Even in the framework of Basketball and Catholic School he goes way<br>beyond the rules, beyond winning.&#8221; Carroll&#8217;s first shot of heroin is no<br>symbolic gesture, and his descent into the drug culture is somewhat haphazard,<br>embarked upon without much foresight. Its effect, however, eclipses every<br>&#8220;super layup&#8221; he has made on the basketball court and even the grand finale<br>of his leap into the Harlem River. Carroll effectively moons not just<br>Catholic school but all of &#8220;respectable&#8221; society by plunging headlong<br>into the underground.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Through drugs, Carroll feels he has discovered the honest,<br>direct reality he has been seeking, but which &#8220;respectable&#8221; society denied<br>him. For Carroll, heroin intensifies reality, and &#8220;any ache I had [was]<br>flushed out. . . . it&#8217;s like ten orgasms.&#8221; The &#8220;rush&#8221; Carroll describes<br>is one of pure physical and mental pleasure; however, it is not drugs<br>alone which produce this experience. Only in the underground does Carroll<br>have the freedom to experience pure pleasure; outside he is constrained<br>by rules and rituals, and he must always prove himself to his critics.<br>Once he has tasted the freedom of the underground in its deepest sense,<br>he can&#8217;t turn back&#8211;at least until he discovers that the freedom he is<br>experiencing is yet another prison in disguise.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Once he has entered the underground, Carroll begins<br>exploring his independence from the corrupt &#8220;system.&#8221; In the first &#8220;Spring<br>64&#8243; entry, he is completely disillusioned with the &#8220;respectable&#8221; world<br>and wants only to escape it. As he says, &#8220;I just want to be high and live<br>in these woods. Screw all the rest like Saint Bill down at the caves&#8221;<br>(42). At this point he realizes that only by distancing himself from the<br>corrupt forces surrounding him can he be at peace with himself, yet he<br>feels isolated.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>However, he finds nature is a source of comfort and,<br>as he frees himself from the constraints of the system, he is able to<br>enjoy the beauty of his world for the first time. He becomes part of his<br>city landscape, communing with the universe, and discovering that he too<br>is beautiful: standing naked on the tar roof of his building, &#8220;a totally<br>naked young boy, [I] stare out into the star machine and jerk myself off.&#8221;<br>In one of the most poetic passages of the <em>Diaries<\/em>, Carroll writes:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>I love it this way. My feet bare against the tar<br>which is soft from the summer heat, the slight breeze that runs<br>across your entire body . . . the breezes always seem to hit strongest<br>against my crotch, and you feel an incredible power being naked<br>under a dome of stars while a giant city is dressed and dodging<br>cars all around you five flights down. . . .<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>. . . . it&#8217;s just better under the big ceiling<br>. . . and it&#8217;s much more than sex. In fact, I don&#8217;t really think<br>about anything while I&#8217;m in the process of the actual tugging,<br>least of all going into the heavy sex fantasies I have to resort<br>to indoors. It&#8217;s just me and my own naked self and the stars breathing<br>down. And it&#8217;s beautiful. (42-43)<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>So long as he is free from corrupting forces, he can experience<br>the untainted beauty of himself and his world.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>He immerses himself in the physical beauty of his world,<br>spending more time in the park with his friends, enjoying the pleasures<br>of smoking pot, and &#8220;getting into digging the arc of an airplane crossing<br>the sky and how it made the sky seem so flat&#8221; (44). At the same time,<br>however, he must still live within society and must, therefore, continue<br>to battle its corruption and hypocrisy. He lands a job at Yankee Stadium,<br>a job about as wholesome as they come, finding that, as usual, he is victimized:<br>&#8220;Like on Friday night, with the whole joint filled with Catholics, I get<br>franks! On the coldest night of the season, overcoat weather, I swear<br>I got ice cream. On the scorching hot days it&#8217;s a bet I get salty popcorn<br>in the bleachers, never fails&#8221; (46). However, he uses his marginality<br>to rebel, getting &#8220;canned from [his] shitty job at Yankee Stadium&#8221; for<br>sitting down on the job and &#8220;busting about ten regulations&#8221; (53).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>As Carroll distances himself from the traditional social<br>order, he becomes increasingly amoral by society&#8217;s standards; however,<br>at the same time, his &#8220;punk&#8221; code of honesty and integrity becomes increasingly<br>important. He describes his sexual adventures with Winkie and Blinkie<br>so explicitly it could be considered pornographic, yet he calls it &#8220;a<br>simple All-Midwestern Conference lay in truth, but worth laying down here<br>nonetheless . . .&#8221; (61). Here is where the diary itself becomes paramount<br>to Carroll: he uses it to tell the truth about his experience, without<br>guilt. As far as he is concerned, the scenario is, in fact, perfectly<br>normal. He hasn&#8217;t done anything wrong, and it was fun, besides.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>On the other hand, while Carroll has few qualms about<br>sex, he nonetheless draws the line at the Celia sisters:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>I had gotten a blow job once from Alice Celia and<br>her little sister had quite a reputation herself, so Willie and<br>I headed after them. . . . they were both stone drunk. When we<br>passed by we saw them making out with each other all over the<br>concrete. &#8220;Boy, that really turns me on,&#8221; Willie said to me, then<br>he called for Alice and she came over and said to me, &#8220;I remember<br>you, you came in my mouth and it tasted like strawberries.&#8221; This<br>girl is really fucked up, I thought. She was only fourteen too;<br>her sister was thirteen. &#8220;Want to go to the beach with us?&#8221; I<br>asked.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>On the way to the beach Alice pissed right in the<br>street. But I don&#8217;t want to soil my diary with a description of<br>that.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>Again, the diary is of foremost importance: he doesn&#8217;t &#8220;want<br>to soil my diary with a description of that.&#8221; In this case, he is disgusted<br>with both the Celia sisters&#8217; sexual corruption as well as his own participation<br>in it. As he continues, it is clear he has sexual standards of his own<br>which he will not violate:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>. . . I swear before long the whole fucking town<br>was on the beach waiting for blow jobs. One guy came up to me<br>and asked what was going on. &#8220;These two girls I think are about<br>to give an awful lot of blow jobs,&#8221; I said. &#8220;Get in line,&#8221; someone<br>else told him. Willie and I left that fucking scene, got a ball,<br>and went down to the courts in the dark to practice foul shots<br>for the game tomorrow. (55-56)<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>Furthermore, at the same time Carroll&#8217;s moral code begins<br>to crystalize, and as he becomes increasingly conscious of his diary as<br>an integral part of his experience, he is also starting to write poetry,<br>although he doesn&#8217;t mention this fact in the diaries. Specifically, the<br>&#8220;Winkie and Blinkie&#8221; entry is the first clue as to when Carroll started<br>writing <em>Organic Trains<\/em>. In &#8220;3rd Train (for THE SUMMERS),&#8221; he writes:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>A woman comes up to me<br>and questions the aesthetic<br>value of a red tee shirt<br>this was the same woman<br>who yesterday warned<br>me about clocks<br>I&#8217;m convinced she was a communist. (9)<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>The experience Carroll describes in this poem appears immediately<br>preceding the detailed &#8220;Winkie and Blinkie&#8221; scene, and variations of it<br>evolve in two other poems.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In the diary, Carroll is on a bus to Long Beach, Long<br>Island, having just swallowed two bottles of codeine cough syrup: &#8220;I was<br>trying to cop a short nod again on the bus ride but this crazy old lady<br>keeps giving me shit about being a commie because I got a red tee-shirt<br>on . . . but she goes on insisting that she has this vision that I&#8217;m gonna<br>die within a month because a giant clock was gonna fall on my head&#8221; (58).<br>In <em>Organic Trains<\/em>, he offers two different perspectives on this<br>experience in &#8220;2nd Train (for Frank O&#8217;Hara)&#8221; and &#8220;3rd Train (for THE SUMMERS)&#8221;;<br>a third, uncollected poem, &#8220;Red Rabbit Running Backwards (for A. W.)&#8221;<br>is yet another variation on the same scenario.<a href=\"notes.asp#13\"><sup>[13]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>As Carroll&#8217;s early poems indicate, the effect of his<br>descent into the underground and his experimentation with drugs was a<br>new way of seeing his world. This new vision he applied directly to his<br>writing: now he was more selective about what he put into his diaries<br>and <em>how<\/em> he portrayed his experience. His vision was based on the<br>solidity, the integrity, of his existence and of the world he saw around<br>him. Through writing, he found that he could take possession of this reality<br>and transform it. If his world was chaotic and illogical, he could forge<br>coherence in his diaries and poems. Now he wasn&#8217;t just writing about his<br>life&#8211;he was recreating it and making it beautiful.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Where drugs and basketball earlier were Carroll&#8217;s only<br>means to transcendence, and both competed on equal terms, now writing<br>vies strongly for his attention. So long as he remains in the underground,<br>separate from the corrupting influences of the &#8220;system,&#8221; combining these<br>things is not a problem. Yet, no sooner does he begin to enjoy his ability<br>to see and transform the beauty of his world, he enters yet another oppressive<br>society: Trinity High School.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Carroll&#8217;s situation at Trinity is somewhat ironic. Because<br>of the basketball-academic scholarship he earned, he has been legitimately<br>accepted into a &#8220;respectable&#8221; society for perhaps the first time in his<br>life. However, between the time he got the scholarship and entered the<br>Catholic high school, he rejected the society this school represents,<br>opting to join the underground culture and &#8220;break loose&#8221; from the tyranny<br>of Catholic school. Conversely, his original motive for joining the underground<br>scene was to &#8220;breeze easy&#8221; until he got to Trinity, where he could really<br>do something. Now he finds himself caught between two separate worlds<br>and two separate goals: will he be a basketball star or an underground<br>poet?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The fact is, by the time he gets to Trinity he is firmly<br>identified with the &#8220;underground&#8221; scene, which is also connected to his<br>writing. Furthermore, because he recognizes Trinity as just another extension<br>of the hypocritical society he has rejected in favor of the underground,<br>he&#8217;s not sure he wants to be at Trinity after all:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>It&#8217;s my first day at the ultra-rich private school<br>that I got a scholarship to come to. I had a hard time trying<br>to figure out what I was doing there, and I got funny looks from<br>everyone and thought how funny it was all those Jewish kids singing<br>away those old Christian tunes like that at the chapel service<br>in the morning. Some teacher in back of me kept poking on my shoulder<br>to get me to sing but I just sat there with a bored look on my<br>face. . . . (60)<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>Even worse than his uncertainty about Trinity is that,<br>in spite of his &#8220;legitimate&#8221; status, he <em>doesn&#8217;t<\/em> fit in, whether<br>he wants to or not; this &#8220;elite&#8221; school marginalizes him due to his socioeconomic<br>status. Mr. Brothers, for example, &#8220;keeps me after class and explains<br>how he understands, with mounds of sympathy, how my family are lowly slobs<br>and all but to discipline myself to proper replies and other classroom<br>etiquette.&#8221; Of course Carroll&#8217;s reaction to all of these attempts to train<br>him in proper etiquette is: &#8220;I feel like farting and blowing up the 257<br>years of fine tradition of this place&#8221; (66). He immediately realizes that<br>Trinity&#8217;s &#8220;fine tradition&#8221; is an elitist front for prejudice, as well<br>as an excuse for tyranny.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Carroll&#8217;s rebelliousness quickly rears its head in the<br>face of social snobbery. As with the Riverdale game, Carroll must prove<br>himself &#8220;punk&#8221; to an elite crowd of hypocrites who can&#8217;t see beyond their<br>own prejudices. After observing the school football team at practice,<br>and after holding the ball while a senior &#8220;kicked the thing like it was<br>a bag of shit or something,&#8221; Carroll asks if he can try it: &#8220;I stepped<br>back, took two strides forward, and breezed one over from 32 yards (this<br>is in loafers, don&#8217;t forget) and the guy just knelt there with his mouth<br>hung open. I thought his jock would fall off and roll right down the leg<br>of his clean little uniform&#8221; (66-67). Hence, in his most cheetah-esque,<br>punk manner, Carroll quickly establishes himself within the hierarchy<br>of Trinity&#8217;s elite social order by playing up his tough, &#8220;street punk&#8221;<br>identity, then surprising his snobbish audience with his athletic abilities.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>However, in entering Trinity&#8217;s social order, Carroll&#8217;s<br>intent is not to &#8220;fit in.&#8221; His guiding principle is that, once he is acceptable<br>within the society, he can exploit it to further himself as well as transform<br>the system into a weapon against itself. And this he does, almost immediately,<br>by clashing his marginal, &#8220;street punk&#8221; status against the conformity<br>of his classmates to the school&#8217;s dress code. Where his peers wear &#8220;corny<br>ass little gym shorts and white tee-shirts,&#8221; Carroll says, &#8220;lately I&#8217;ve<br>been wearing blue jeans over instead of that other shit and lagging behind<br>all the other kids, so everything is cool, as long as the headmaster don&#8217;t<br>catch an eye of me and give me another lecture on the &#8220;rules&#8221; of the school.<br>Fuck dumb rules, let me wear what I want . . .&#8221;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Even more importantly, Carroll reveals the hypocrisy<br>of this dress code: &#8220;No trouble from Mr. Doolittle, the cat that runs<br>the phys. ed. here because he&#8217;s the basketball coach too and he never<br>gives me any hassles&#8221; (68-69). Contrary to the values Trinity claims to<br>promote, because he is valuable to the basketball team, Carroll enjoys<br>privileges which actually reinforce his ties to the &#8220;underground&#8221; scene.<br>Paradoxically, the more valuable he is to Trinity&#8217;s social order, the<br>more he can separate himself from it.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Meanwhile, he is now &#8220;hanging around . . . with all<br>the other heads in this dreary neighborhood, at this place called &#8216;Headquarters'&#8221;;<br>as he puts it, &#8220;I&#8217;ve lived here from time to time when my parents gave<br>me the toss&#8221; (80). Headquarters is essentially a drug den and, as Carroll<br>spends more and more time there, he descends further into the underground.<br>Yet he does this while still being Trinity&#8217;s star basketball player; as<br>a result, he <em>becomes<\/em> the corrupt reality Trinity works so hard<br>at concealing. As he descends into the drug culture, Carroll reveals a<br>side of New York City neither Trinity nor the rest of &#8220;respectable&#8221; society<br>wants to see. For example, when he and Brian Browning go &#8220;up to 168th<br>St. to get ourselves a little codeine,&#8221; Carroll realizes the pharmacy<br>is &#8220;right in the shadows of the ballroom where Malcolm X was gunned down<br>not too long ago.&#8221;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Furthermore, Carroll&#8217;s shifting allegiances become evident<br>when the two &#8220;wait outside and discuss the fake names we&#8217;re gonna use<br>in the book you&#8217;ve got to sign when you buy&#8221; the codeine. Brian signs<br>&#8220;James Bond&#8221; on the first run, then &#8220;George Washington&#8221; on the second.<br>Carroll initially signs &#8220;Abe Lincoln,&#8221; but the pharmacist tells him, &#8220;No<br>good, I&#8217;m afraid Abe already got a bottle this morning;&#8221; hence, Carroll<br>says, &#8220;Oops,&#8221; and &#8220;scribble[s] in &#8216;Wilt Chamberlain.'&#8221; Here, Carroll is<br>providing evidence for his fidelity to basketball, yet hints that it,<br>like the &#8220;official&#8221; society represented in George Washington and Abe Lincoln,<br>has become corrupt. Hence, on his second score, Carroll signs &#8220;&#8216;Al Swinburne&#8217;<br>hoping there&#8217;s no literary customers about and I get my second bottle&#8221;<br>(81-82).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Carroll&#8217;s &#8220;literary reference&#8221; doesn&#8217;t just show his<br>growing knowledge of literature (he previously made reference to &#8220;that<br>wise-ass dwarf Alexander Pope&#8221; [67], and later refers to Walt Whitman<br>[149]). More specifically, Carroll&#8217;s reference to Swinburne is a sort<br>of intertextual in joke typical of the range of allusion and control of<br>reference found in the <em>Diaries<\/em>. Like Carroll, Swinburne led a debauched,<br>self-destructive, wild life; &#8220;his predilection for flagellation is infamous.&#8221;<br>His poetry shocked his readers: in <em>Poems and Ballads<\/em>, he rebels<br>against the &#8220;moral repressiveness of dominant middle-class attitudes to<br>sex.&#8221; Also, &#8220;Against the against prejudices of his time, which declared<br>that poets should be morally serviceable, he asserted the right to pursue<br>poetic vocation to express beauty&#8221; (Wynne-Davies 939). Swinburne was &#8220;punk.&#8221;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Also, while Carroll has yet to mention his interest<br>in poetry, his descent into the underground, his marginalization, his<br>decadence, and his desire to be free from social constraints and &#8220;express<br>beauty&#8221; are the driving forces in his writing. The ties between drugs<br>and his expanding poetic vision especially begin to emerge in his diary<br>descriptions of his &#8220;nods,&#8221; or drug-induced experiences. For example,<br>after drinking codeine cough syrup, he writes: &#8220;I was so zonked that I&#8217;d<br>let whole cigarettes burn down to the filter and burn my fingers without<br>taking one drag. We had about six hours more of good solid nods and then<br>sat around and rapped slowly about all our little visual dreams that passed<br>in our heads clear as movies&#8221; (82-83). Likewise, in 1974, Carroll duplicated<br>this imagery in his poetic statement for <em>Rolling Stone<\/em>: &#8220;I find<br>that my poems have all turned into sheer verbal movie, image over image<br>into kind of dream machines in every form, so that the reader depends<br>a lot on the intensity of the final rush. The more capable one is of just<br>plain nodding off and feeling from each line . . . the better&#8221; (Margolis<br>42).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>These passages give some notion of where the title of<br>his second book of poems, <em>Living at the Movies<\/em>, comes from: Carroll<br>attempts to create poems which produce the same &#8220;rush&#8221; as drugs, which<br>to him is like the fleeting, though concrete, images of a film. For him,<br>writing should be as intense as a heroin &#8220;rush&#8221;: the reader and writer<br>alike should experience poetry much as a drug user feels a high&#8211;as a<br>physical, mental, and spiritual rush. Perhaps most importantly within<br>the context of the <em>Diaries<\/em>, this implies that drug use for Carroll<br>is not an escape into oblivion, but (at least initally) an active, disciplined<br>process.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In a later interview with John Milward, Carroll explained<br>that: &#8220;I wanted to see what oblivion was like without staying in that<br>pit. I wanted to see everything that was in me, and junk slowed things<br>down so I could take it all in. . . . it was like sliding into a tunnel<br>of my own design&#8221; (170). In the <em>Diaries<\/em>, Carroll is not being decadent<br>solely for the sake of decadence, nor is he attempting to self-destruct.<br>In the tradition of Coleridge, Rimbaud, Genet, and Burroughs, Carroll<br>uses his &#8220;nods,&#8221; as well as his own corruption, to broaden his vision<br>and see new things, about which he can write afterward.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>As Carroll observed: &#8220;Junk made me alert. . . . for<br>me the nods were magic&#8211;when the cigarette butt would burn your fingers,<br>you&#8217;d jump back in total surprise that you weren&#8217;t actually on that beach<br>with the sun kissing the horizon. But the nods weren&#8217;t like dreaming&#8211;there<br>was no surrealism. Just an intensified reality&#8221; (Milward 142, 170). For<br>Carroll, his experiences on heroin (as well as codeine and LSD) not only<br>inspire his poems and diaries, but his poems and diaries duplicate and<br>produce the same effects as his nods. For Carroll, there is a one-to-one<br>relationship between his drug-induced states and the reality he seeks<br>to portray in his writing. His &#8220;nods&#8221; clarify reality for him and heighten<br>his awareness, enabling him to see more precisely what is happening around<br>him.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>One result of this heightened awareness is his growing<br>obsession with his own oppression, which manifests itself most clearly<br>in various fantasies of victimization. One such fantasy has him warding<br>off a German attack; in another, he gets &#8220;this complete urge to suddenly<br>take a machine gun and start firing&#8221; in his English class (83). Later,<br>this preoccupation intensifies and focuses on the atomic bomb. It is not<br>that Carroll becomes paranoid; rather, he begins to recognize the <em>real<\/em><br>danger produced by the hypocrisy and corruption extending throughout his<br>world, right on up to the top dogs in the government. The scary reality<br>Carroll now sees is that his world is out of control.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>On a more concrete level, however, Carroll&#8217;s awareness<br>of the exploitation happening all around him also results in his accelerating<br>clash with authority figures. His father, for example, is an authority<br>figure of the most traditional sort; he first appears after Carroll attends<br>a Communist Party meeting. Says Carroll, &#8220;I went home and told my old<br>man how the government suppresses the proletariat from his due. &#8216;I am<br>the proletariat, you dumb bastard,&#8217; he said, &#8216;and I think those motherfuckers<br>are off their rockers. Now get the hell inside and do your homework'&#8221;<br>(84). Furthermore, as if to reinforce his emerging awareness of his own<br>victimization, Carroll notes that, at Trinity, &#8220;I can&#8217;t even lay down<br>my pants in the locker room to take a shower without one of these cats<br>rifling my pockets. . . . I mean, man, I&#8217;m the poorest son of a bitch<br>in this institution and I&#8217;m getting cleaned out.&#8221;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Part of the problem here is that exploitation is inherent<br>within the &#8220;system,&#8221; and everyone seems ready to accept this. However,<br>Carroll is not part of the system, and he&#8217;s not willing to be exploited.<br>In the same entry he goes on to say that &#8220;Just yesterday I got clipped<br>for a five and last week some prick lifted me for a lid of dynamite grass<br>I was about to deal&#8221; (84-85). Importantly, it is within the context of<br>victimization that Carroll&#8217;s humor comes most strongly into play. While<br>he is being victimized by &#8220;respectable&#8221; society, he pokes fun at the ridiculous<br>irony of it: the grass he was about to deal, illegally, has been stolen<br>by his supposedly respectable classmates.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>However, Carroll also shows that, while he has moved<br>further away from &#8220;respectable&#8221; society, he has risen in the hierarchy<br>of the drug culture to the status of dealer: he can now take up his philosophy<br>that, &#8220;If I get the fucking ball, I&#8217;m shooting it, no matter if they play<br>six thousand varieties of defense&#8221; (88). As an accomplished thief and<br>member of the subculture, Carroll has the means to get &#8220;all evened out&#8221;<br>which are not allowable in &#8220;respectable&#8221; society. He is no longer adhering<br>to the rules of this society, instead defending his personal code of rules,<br>honor, and integrity&#8211;the code which the &#8220;official&#8221; order suppresses.<br>He refuses to let anyone pull one over on him, so he raids &#8220;all these<br>lockers . . . all chock full of goodies.&#8221;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>As far as Carroll is concerned, sticking to the rules<br>is not conducive toward preventing nor retaliating against his victimization.<br>Hence, to emphasize this, he exaggerates his victimization. In the German<br>attack fantasy he seeks out weapons to protect himself: &#8220;I usually take<br>a hairbrush or comb and hold it like it was a gun. Then I check about<br>to see what <em>real<\/em> weapons I would have if it really happened, like<br>the wooden stick on the plunger, the drainpipe . . . bottles . . .&#8221; (83).<br>Against thieving classmates and German attack, his street-smarts are his<br>defense; he cannot rely upon abstract notions of &#8220;goodness&#8221; or &#8220;honesty&#8221;<br>in a world in which these notions are, in fact, nonexistent.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>However, he discovers his street-smarts aren&#8217;t infallible.<br>Before a basketball game, Carroll misjudges in a gamble with drugs and<br>loses, mistaking &#8220;downers&#8221; for &#8220;uppers,&#8221; and his performance in the game<br>suffers terribly: &#8220;No doubt about it, we took the downest downers I may<br>have ever downed. My legs began to get the feeling someone slit a nice<br>little hole at the top of my thighs and poured in a few gallons of liquid<br>lead, I had a head on that felt like the rock of Gibraltar&#8221; (87-88). If<br>anything is not &#8220;cheetah-ish,&#8221; it is this, and if Carroll ever lost his<br>&#8220;presence,&#8221; he does so here. With this entry, Carroll begins a steady<br>departure from his &#8220;punk&#8221; code, as he becomes more enmeshed in the underground<br>scene and, ironically, less aware of the corruption surrounding him. Where<br>his entrance into the underground initially clarified his vision, now<br>the scene itself leaves him blind to the dangers around him. Only his<br>recognition of this will save him.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Yet another miscalculation takes him even lower when<br>he meets &#8220;this great chick about thirty years old or so, but really foxy.&#8221;<br>The two &#8220;find a movie, of all things, <em>Born Free<\/em>,&#8221; and &#8220;Everything<br>is humming nice when I reach on up her leg and work my way to her thing<br>when, holy shit, I feel it and realize this freak HAS A COCK&#8221; (94). His<br>blind leaps have previously been rewarding; now they lead to his worst<br>nightmares coming true. He gambles with ups and downs, which leads to<br>a humbling performance at basketball for himself and his teammates; when<br>he doesn&#8217;t notice that the &#8220;foxy chick&#8221; is a man, he humiliates himself<br>again. It is becoming increasingly difficult for him to see clearly.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Finally, Carroll&#8217;s behind-the-scenes life is overtaking<br>his public life: in much the way Freddy C. exposes himself earlier in<br>the <em>Diaries<\/em> (32), Carroll&#8217;s decadence is now beginning to show<br>in public. His mother receives a note from Mr. Bluster, the principal<br>at Trinity, which reads: &#8220;Jim has become a constant enigma around here<br>as you might well detect from the report you received last week. . . .&#8221;<br>When his mother asks, &#8220;What the hell does enigma mean?&#8221; Carroll tries<br>to save face: &#8220;I grab the big book and blurt out in dictionary language,<br>&#8216;Enigma: a model of perfection, an example used to have others strive<br>toward. E.g., He was a constant enigma among his math classmates&#8217;.&#8221; It<br>doesn&#8217;t work: &#8220;My old lady heads over to the bookcase . . . this diary<br>fades out with a bad ending&#8221; (96-97).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Carroll is losing control; he is losing his &#8220;punk presence,&#8221;<br>now becoming a &#8220;chimp&#8221; (or &#8220;chump&#8221;) rather than a &#8220;cheetah.&#8221; Earlier,<br>Carroll hinted at this possibility in two adjoining entries, in which<br>he and his friend Kevin Dolon accidentally expose themselves in public.<br>In the first entry, Carroll and a few friends are riding a local when<br>Carroll notices &#8220;all eyes on Kevin, jokers down the other end even pointing<br>at him. We look up and see why. He&#8217;s swinging like an ape [or a chimp]<br>with his zipper full down and his entire cock hanging like a clock.&#8221; Kevin<br>is totally unaware of this, but then he &#8220;looks down and turns nine shades<br>of lobster. . . . Dolon just sat with his head down the whole way uptown&#8221;<br>(78).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In the next entry Carroll&#8217;s team is playing against<br>&#8220;a very lame squad from St. Hilda&#8217;s,&#8221; and Carroll is making his &#8220;presence&#8221;<br>known in a rather chimp-like fashion:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>every time I&#8217;d dunk a ball in the warmups or made<br>an impressive play the chicks in the stands let out a bunch of<br>&#8216;oohs&#8217; and &#8216;ahhs&#8217; and seemed to throw a leg spread that increased<br>to a wider and wider position in direct proportion to each &#8220;ooh&#8221;<br>that by the time I dunked one backwards I could almost distinguish<br>what color panties each chick sitting there was wearing as I peeked<br>over coming down the court.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>As the game goes on, Carroll &#8220;came back out to pull some<br>fancy-ass passes and dribbling to show off in the second half but instead<br>ended up embarrassing the shit out of myself,&#8221; essentially replaying Kevin<br>Dolon&#8217;s humiliating moment:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>Everything is cool until . . . I hear a giant rippp<br>. . . between my legs, I look down but don&#8217;t notice a thing until<br>I start dribbling downcourt.. The entire gym is in stitches. I&#8217;m<br>dribbling fast and peek down to discover the entire crotch of<br>my pants is ripped apart and they were like a skirt . . . nothing<br>holding them from beneath! The shorts are bobbing up and down<br>and my total ass (since all I&#8217;ve got under &#8217;em is a jock) is totally<br>exposed on each bob up. (79)<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>Unlike Kevin, though, Carroll does not hang his head in<br>shame. Instead, he turns ugliness and disgrace into triumph: &#8220;I trot to<br>the exit blushing face and blushing ass. Everyone pointing and goofing,<br>I stop near the exit, bend over, and throw a giant moon . . . I left,<br>a slight pink, through the exit with the whole gym giving me a mock standing<br>ovation&#8221; (80).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>However, with the ill-fated venture with the &#8220;ups&#8221; and<br>&#8220;downs,&#8221; the letter from the principal, and the drag queen episode, Carroll<br>seems to be losing the edge which got him a standing ovation; he is still<br>getting by, but he is no longer &#8220;punk.&#8221; His recognition of this is revealed<br>in the &#8220;Spring 65&#8221; entries, in which Carroll again juxtaposes descriptions<br>of flop performances against his own. The first of these entries is the<br>unnerving &#8220;drag queen&#8221; episode, which Carroll deals with in his usual<br>manner. Next is Carroll&#8217;s first mention of Bobby Blake, &#8220;a kleptomaniac,<br>speed-freak friend,&#8221; who is out on bail after having been arrested for<br>breaking into Gussie&#8217;s Soda Fountain. Bobby &#8220;Tactlessly . . . threw the<br>door of an old refrigerator . . . through the glass window,&#8221; attempted<br>to raid the cash register, then proceeded to fix himself an ice cream<br>soda and grilled cheese sandwich. When the police arrived, &#8220;not believing<br>for sure anything they see,&#8221; Bobby &#8220;rapped the cop for ten minutes about<br>how he worked there and just happened to be passing when he saw what happened<br>and was wishing for an ice cream soda besides&#8221; (94-96).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>When Bobby Blake appears again, after the &#8220;enigma&#8221; entry,<br>he is handing out free clothes from Jack&#8217;s Clothing Shop. The police accost<br>Bobby, who &#8220;in his usual manner, stood his ground and offered the man<br>a free pair of work pants as they dragged him off to the station&#8221; (97-98).<br>Clearly, Bobby Blake is flaunting rules left and right and not getting<br>away with it. Except for the fact that he doesn&#8217;t get caught, Carroll&#8217;s<br>blatant defiance of rules is no different.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In the fifth entry Carroll breaks school rules by leaving<br>campus to get stoned; this time, not only does he nearly overdose, but<br>he also almost gets caught when &#8220;a cop car stops and pulls us over. We<br>got our school blazers on so he asks us what we&#8217;re doing coming out of<br>that basement and I tell him, glassy-eyed . . . that we are on a social<br>work project and are taking a survey in that building. They swallow, we<br>split&#8221; (98-99). For Carroll, this is a close call; easily he could have<br>ended up in jail like Bobby Blake, yet his flair for a good story prevailed.<br>In fact, the diary is itself a terrific example of the ability which saved<br>him: in his street lingo he displays the seediness of the scene, but inserts<br>humor and his own ridiculous lie to the cop so that his &#8220;innocence&#8221; is<br>almost unquestionable.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Since his descent into the underground, Carroll&#8217;s confrontations<br>with authority so far haven&#8217;t come to much, in that he has never had to<br>face either his own corruption or the law. However, he is walking a thin<br>line, knowing his double life will catch up to him somehow. In fact, the<br>attack issues from his own disillusionment with the victimization he has<br>imposed upon himself rather than confrontations with the law: he is now<br>blatantly defying his own moral code.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>His heroin habit forces him to the &#8220;Rack,&#8221; where he<br>hustles gay men for money; in essence, he has made himself into an anonymous<br>piece of meat&#8211;food for sexually depraved businessmen. The first time<br>Carroll mentions he has been hustling gay men, it is with pure disgust:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>The fag hustling scene gets hairier and hairier<br>all the time. I mean what happened to the old fashioned homo who<br>just wanted to take you home and suck your dick? . . . You just<br>don&#8217;t know what the next trick you pick up is gonna whip out of<br>his attache case these days . . . . I&#8217;d rather go back to ripping<br>off old ladies or something sensible. (104)<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>Carroll is essentially collaborating in the same con game<br>he rejected upon entering the underground. His &#8220;customers&#8221; are more extreme<br>versions of his coaches and Catholic school teachers: they appear proper<br>and respectable, yet beneath their uniforms of office they are sexually<br>and morally perverse.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>For example, one of the hustling scenarios Carroll cites<br>involves &#8220;some CPA [who] gets me up in his hotel room and leads me into<br>the bathroom.&#8221; Says Carroll:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>He&#8217;s got a cat tied to the seat of the toilet and<br>a bubble bath all set for someone to jump in. I excused myself<br>for a second and went over to the kitchenette and popped a couple<br>of Valiums . . . I was already loaded on junk but I could see<br>this was going to be strictly from fruit. When I got back in the<br>john he was already naked and in the tub frosted in bubbles .<br>. . the poor cat was still chained to the john seat, yelping away.<br>The guy laid his plan on me. He wants me to whip the cat dead<br>after I first piss on him in his bubble bath, then when the cat<br>has had it I&#8217;m to jerk off into his mouth while he&#8217;s still in<br>the tub. Out from under the bubbles he hands me a whip, a tiny<br>cat size whip with leather fringes laced with broken ends of razors.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>Carroll must draw the line somewhere, and the CPA has crossed<br>Carroll&#8217;s limit of decency. Just as the Celia sisters did earlier, this<br>CPA has violated Carroll&#8217;s private moral code, and Carroll wants nothing<br>to do with this plan.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>For the first time, he physically lashes out against<br>his victimizer and refuses to collaborate in this horrendous &#8220;game.&#8221; Appropriately,<br>he reinterprets the CPA&#8217;s instructions in more suitable terms, now becoming<br>the aggressor and punishing the CPA for his crimes:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>I untied the cat, he tried to get up and stop me,<br>I punched his chump face, he landed back on his ass in the tub<br>and I gave him the whip across the chest . . . a nasty wound.<br>. . . I grabbed his hair, opened his mouth and pissed in it .<br>. . he spit it out, the piss mixing with the blood oozing from<br>his lip from the punch and he let out a slow motion yell at the<br>sting of urine dripping into the cuts on his chest. He sank under<br>water to cool the burn, I rifled his wallet for sixty bucks, picked<br>up the kitty and split. (105-6)<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>Up to this point he has been somewhat acquiescent, and<br>therefore defenseless against his oppressors. Earlier he says regarding<br>Catholic school, &#8220;I know I should just belt back the next prick who hits<br>me, but something holds me back. . . . . I&#8217;ve got to break loose&#8221; (28).<br>Here again Carroll faces the same challenge. He is fed up with being used<br>like a piece of meat, and it&#8217;s time to do something about it. In the next<br>entry he is riding the &#8220;A&#8221; train:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>There&#8217;s this chick that gets on at 175th St., a<br>real secretary-stewardess type with big tits and the beehive hair<br>job. She&#8217;s right across the way from me, hardly any people in<br>the car, and she&#8217;s tossing this spread toward me so wide I can<br>see her powder blue panties. What do these faces want out of me,<br>an athletic youth trying to enjoy a nice heroin head and harmless<br>magazine? Finally I got up and went over to her and asked her<br>if she could please close her legs, I&#8217;m barely fifteen years old<br>and it&#8217;s distracting and, frankly, lewd. (106-7)<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>Again, Carroll deals with his victimization by joking about<br>it. Nevertheless, he is discovering that brazen sexuality is pervasive<br>in his world, extending from &#8220;secretary-stewardess type[s]&#8221; to Sharron<br>and Lou-Lou, who are actually little boys dressed in drag (110-12). However,<br>it is not so much the sexuality that bothers Carroll as the brazenness<br>of it; as he asks, &#8220;What do these faces want out of me . . . ?&#8221; These<br>&#8220;faces&#8221; are trying to rape him, but he now refuses to submit and takes<br>action against his oppressor by <em>saying<\/em> something.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Writing becomes Carroll&#8217;s means to transcendence, and<br>he uses it to regain and display his &#8220;punk presence.&#8221; In one of the funniest<br>passages in the <em>Diaries<\/em>, Carroll suggests that, &#8220;If there were,<br>say, a book like &#8216;The Pervert&#8217;s Guide To New York City,&#8217; the bathroom<br>at Grand Central Terminal should, without any doubts, figure in it.&#8221; Again,<br>the rape theme is evident, yet by describing what he sees, stripping away<br>the respectable veneer of New York City businessmen and revealing their<br>hypocricy and corruption, he transcends his victimization:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>Man, all those business cats just lined up along<br>the piss machines . . . and all these eyes peeking down at the<br>guy next to me who&#8217;s peeking down at me along with the guy on<br>my other side and jacking off like madmen, forty arms like pistons<br>pumping back and forth at incredible rates. Not a bit of class<br>in the entire place. . . .<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>As he reveals here, the businessmen haven&#8217;t &#8220;a bit of class&#8221;;<br>they have no sense of morality, integrity, or value. As he continues,<br>their depravity becomes even more overt, while his own moral code prevails:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>But the peeky-boo scene is old hat and that goes<br>on in any john, it&#8217;s just that here you suddenly feel a hand moving<br>across your leg and grabbing your fucking cock. No raised eyebrows<br>about it from anyone, fuck, I&#8217;m beginning to think I&#8217;m the only<br>person in the place that just came down for normal body functions.<br>I jumped back in the middle of pissing while this stately chap<br>grabbed me and I wound up spraying all over the Brooks Brothers<br>number the guy was wearing. . . .<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>In his observation, Carroll establishes his refusal to be<br>victimized, but he also discloses the sleazy underbelly of New York City.<br>Perhaps on the surface his world is as well-pressed and squeaky clean<br>as a Brooks Brothers suit, but behind the scenes, &#8220;vice-presidents of<br>toothpaste firms are fighting over the piss machine&#8221; closest to a 14 year<br>old boy, and that 14 year old boy is &#8220;spraying all over the Brooks Brothers<br>number&#8221; (109-10).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Carroll&#8217;s clear-sightedness reveals that the &#8220;Brooks<br>Brothers&#8221; appearance of &#8220;respectable&#8221; society not only camouflages its<br>innate corruption, it also nurtures its anonymity and relieves it of responsibility,<br>empathy, and guilt. With such a sense of detachment, &#8220;respectable&#8221; society<br>has an amazing ability which Carroll has no desire to master: it glosses<br>over the most horrible of realities with the greatest of ease. For example,<br>one morning Carroll greets the day only to find &#8220;blood splashed all over<br>the pavement&#8221; from &#8220;dry dive&#8221; case. Stoned as he is, and anonymous as<br>the &#8220;dry dive&#8221; case is, Carroll nevertheless feels for the victim:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>She must have been about twenty-five and a pretty<br>face under the red and tangled hair all knotted by blood. I can&#8217;t<br>do anything but hold her hand and look around at everyone else.<br>. . . this chick had taken a dry dive. Joey nodded as I looked<br>at the window . . . I was the last one to figure it out. And she&#8217;s<br>still clutching me and I keep letting these soft gestures out<br>. . . What the fuck am I supposed to say?<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>Like Holden Caulfield and Huckleberry Finn, he feels empathy,<br>where the general public feels nothing. When the police arrive, &#8220;They<br>want to know why Deborah and Ned keep fainting on each other if we don&#8217;t<br>know who she is&#8221; (107-108).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Businessmen, secretary-stewardess types, cops, coaches,<br>and priests&#8211;all of these &#8220;respectable&#8221; characters are indifferent, uncaring,<br>and numb, and consider human beings nothing more than slabs of meat. Furthermore,<br>their sexual exploitation of Carroll is representative of the impersonal<br>tyranny extending throughout his world. This indifference takes on its<br>most terrifying proportions in the form of the Atomic bomb, which indiscriminately<br>transforms everyone into anonymous slabs of well-cooked meat. The bomb<br>terrifies Carroll, mostly because society refuses to take responsibility<br>for it. Here again, his &#8220;punk poetry&#8221; becomes a powerful weapon with which<br>he lays bare the fact that &#8220;respectable&#8221; society&#8217;s denial is <em>dangerous<\/em>,<br>and that its accusing finger is pointed in the wrong direction. As he<br>sees it, blaming the &#8220;commies&#8221; is &#8220;some dream you dreamed up to take the<br>rap for you.&#8221; The fact is, &#8220;I don&#8217;t give a royal screw what a commie is.<br>. . . The Russians are drags too, you&#8217;re all old men drags, scheming governments<br>of death and blinding white hair&#8221; (126-27).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Appropriately, in some of his best &#8220;punk poetry&#8221; in<br>the <em>Diaries<\/em>, Carroll associates the bomb with hustling and kinky<br>sex. The bomb becomes the ultimate rapist, anonymous sex partner, and<br>unfeeling victimizer:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>It&#8217;s always been the same, growing up in Manhattan,<br>especially when I was a little younger, the idea of living within<br>a giant archer&#8217;s target . . . for use by the bad Russia bowman<br>with the atomic arrows. Today I was hustling around Times Sq.<br>and thought about it and got a strange rush of unknown sex giddiness<br>off the idea of leaning here and now against a wall in leather<br>pants throwing pouting eyes at customers strolling by dead in<br>the center of the target . . . ground zero in one big fireball<br>Island. I thought of the explosion&#8217;s eye as one giant plutonium<br>red cunt that would suck me up and in and just totally devour<br>and melt me into its raw wet walls of white heat in pure orgasm.<br>. . . After all these years of worry and nightmares over it .<br>. . I think by now I&#8217;d feel very left out if they dropped the<br>bomb and it didn&#8217;t get me. (114)<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>Rather than letting the unfeeling force victimize him, he<br>has to make it see him, and make himself seen. In writing about this,<br>he displays his &#8220;presence like a cheetah,&#8221; placing himself in the center<br>of everything.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>After this entry, Carroll returns again to the basketball<br>court to explore yet another sort of victimization; specifically, this<br>entry addresses racism. Throughout the diaries, Carroll has shown bigotry<br>to be pervasive in his world, but because he is white, he has never been<br>personally affected by it. In this entry, however, rather than his brilliant<br>playing standing out, &#8220;each move . . . I make sticks out like a hardon<br>because I&#8217;m the only whiteman on the court and looking around, in the<br>entire fucking place, in fact; my bright blond-red hair making me the<br>whitest whitey this league has ever seen. . . .&#8221;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Because he is white, Carroll finds himself marginalized<br>even on the basketball court, the one place he has always been able to<br>shine. Here, the only thing that shines is his &#8220;bright blond-red hair&#8221;<br>and his white skin. His status as an outsider is reinforced when he not<br>only is denied a trophy, but also his place in the team picture. Carroll<br>supposes, &#8220;I guess I would have messed up the texture of the shot or something.<br>Or maybe they didn&#8217;t want to let the readers get to see that the high<br>scorer was a fucking white boy&#8221; (115-16). Ironically, in Harlem, racism<br>works in reverse and Carroll is the shunned minority. As Carroll is aware,<br>no amount of talent or &#8220;presence&#8221; is enough to overcome that stigma.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Literally, Carroll has become a &#8220;nigger&#8221; in every sense<br>of the word, and he doesn&#8217;t like it. With disgust he underscores his exile<br>as he picks &#8220;up the clap over the weekend.&#8221; But most importantly, his<br>infection&#8211;as well as his marginality&#8211;springs directly from so-called<br>&#8220;respectable&#8221; society: he catches the affliction &#8220;from some debutante<br>little beaver in &#8216;posh&#8217; Rye, N.Y. Never know where the fuck it&#8217;s gonna<br>get yer&#8221; (120). While this is yet another example of the corruption hidden<br>beneath respectability, at this point Carroll is mainly disgusted with<br>himself. He emphasizes his revulsion by describing the affliction in gruesome<br>detail:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>it&#8217;s quite a bringdown waking up with your underwear<br>a mass of red-brown blotches, all stiff as cardboard except where<br>the gooey fresh blobs are. I got up and pissed. It felt like I<br>was shooting boiling water out of me. I noticed when I changed<br>my undies that the drip was changing colors on me now. It was<br>becoming puss green.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>Carroll has become the mirror image of his world by taking<br>on its disease and ugliness.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>As Rimbaud put it, &#8220;Think of a man grafting warts onto<br>his face and growing them there&#8221; (102). Carroll&#8217;s ailment and his exile<br>are the reflection of a diseased, alienated society as a whole; as such,<br>his own corruption and his explicit description of his disease illuminate<br>the corruption of &#8220;respectable&#8221; society. The main problem here is that<br>Carroll doesn&#8217;t want to bear society&#8217;s diseases, and he doesn&#8217;t want to<br>be a monster: he must reconstitute the poison he has swallowed. The &#8220;clap&#8221;<br>was imposed upon him without his permission, and is just another example<br>of the victimization he must overcome.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Perhaps even worse is the fact that all of the things<br>which previously liberated him from such victimization and offered sanctuary<br>from oppression are now becoming prisons. Basketball turned against him<br>through racism, and sex led to hustling and the &#8220;clap.&#8221; Now he realizes<br>that:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>I&#8217;m gonna be fifteen soon and the summer&#8217;s &#8220;Pepsi-Cola&#8221;<br>heroin habit is tightening more and more around me. I&#8217;m getting<br>that feeling for the first time since I lost my virgin veins at<br>thirteen that I gotta start getting my ass together &#8217;cause school&#8217;s<br>coming mighty quick and no way of doing that scene with a habit.<br>. . . So now I look in the mirror and realize I better cut loose,<br>no jiving myself any longer.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>For the first time, Carroll admits he has been deluding<br>himself, and is therefore no better than the corrupt society he despises.<br>He has lost control of his heroin use and is now an addict, yet all along<br>he kept telling himself, &#8220;First just one last one, you can start quitting<br>tomorrow.&#8221; But now, with school coming up, he realizes he expects more<br>from himself; he wants to do well in school. As he concludes the entry:<br>&#8220;I used to laugh at the corny monkey phrase too, I had it under &#8220;control&#8221;<br>all the way to sitting and sneezing a lot on this fucking lice sofa wanting<br>to scream my balls off&#8221; (121-122).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Once Carroll realizes that heroin is yet another tyrant<br>in disguise, apparently he stays away from it for a while. Most importantly,<br>however, he has to transcend the sexual decadence, disease, and racism<br>into which he has been immersed not by attacking it (as in his Harlem<br>River leap, after which he moons the sightseers) but rather by seeking<br>beauty. This time, when he returns to Headquarters, his motive is not<br>escapism or rebellion; instead, he seeks a sense of harmony with his friends,<br>his surroundings, and within himself. Headquarters is filthy by most standars,<br>with &#8220;wet floors from spilt beer and flaked with bottles, cans, cigarette<br>butts, etc. covering the deck inch to inch. Not to mention dirty socks<br>and underwear, ripped up and come-upon playmates of the month and all<br>the other junk shit items.&#8221; But Carroll puts it in perspective:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>We&#8217;re all used to it though. Messy house don&#8217;t<br>matter, dirt don&#8217;t matter (if it does we might as well all stop<br>breathing). Keeping your head in order is what counts, tidiness<br>never saved anyone the good times we have, and all that means<br>freedom. Like to sit in this awful mess and maybe smoke some dope<br>and watch some innocuous shit on a dumb glass tube and feel fine<br>about it and know there&#8217;s really nothing you have to do, ever,<br>but feel your warm friend&#8217;s silent content is what this place<br>is about.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>Most importantly, this &#8220;life of doing nothing&#8221; allows<br>Carroll to experience a form of beauty that comes with belonging. As with<br>his rooftop experience earlier in the book, when he separates himself<br>from the corrupting forces of society, his vision expands. As he says,<br>&#8220;You don&#8217;t feel guilty about not fighting a war or carrying signs to protest<br>it either. We&#8217;ve just mastered the life of doing nothing, which when you<br>think about it, may be the hardest thing of all to do&#8221; (127-28). Freed<br>from guilt, he can see beauty even in the most ordinary or ugly circumstances.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Furthermore, with his new lifestyle, a new consciousness-expanding<br>drug of choice comes into play:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>Up in the country for the weekend and took some<br>L.S.D. again with a friend at midnight. All night we walked on<br>dirt roads and fields lit only by moon and star glow and I watched<br>the trees to see which were friendly and which were evil. We could<br>tell easily, and sat finally near a beautiful willow and watched<br>its sad sway and its special glow until morning. At dawn light<br>came in shafts and led me to some fields nearby to watch the tall<br>reeds wave and then become fingers calling me over. I rolled in<br>the dew drenched things as though they were lifting me across<br>and through them with the fingers and my body did no work at all,<br>in fact, I forgot all about any body I had and left it behind<br>finally, thinking I was just a spirit flashing incredibly fast<br>all through, wiping up the dew invisibly. . . . (128-29)<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>Likewise, he watches a lunar eclipse &#8220;in slow motion and<br>understood it&#8221; (134). On L.S.D. Carroll is beautiful, he is part of his<br>world, and everything makes sense. There is no craziness; the atomic bomb,<br>homosexual coaches and priests, kinky businessmen, racists, hypocrites&#8211;all<br>of them fade into oblivion. And where heroin increased his awareness of<br>his physical body, L.S.D. allows him to forget &#8220;about any body I hand<br>and left it behind.&#8221; Freed from his physical circumstances, Carroll is<br>finally able to commune with his world without corrupting influences tainting<br>his experience.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Finally, the culmination of Carroll&#8217;s drug experiences<br>and his mastery of &#8220;the life of doing nothing&#8221; is a poem:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>A note found on one of those homework pads you<br>cop for ten cents at Gussie&#8217;s . . . I wrote on an experience with<br>L.S.D. a while ago:<br>&#8220;Little kids shoot marbles<br>where the branches break the sun<br>into graceful shafts of light . . .<br>I just want to be pure.&#8221;<br>I found it all crumpled up in these old pants in history class<br>this morning. (140-41)<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>Carroll seems surprised at himself, almost in awe that he<br>should produce such a thing. But the fact is, given a chance, he can create<br>beauty for himself, and he can be beautiful. And given refuge from his<br>world&#8217;s corrupting influence, he does see beauty, hope, and the possibility<br>of discovering a coherent world. Finally, so long as he can see clearly,<br>he can purify himself. Once he discovers the beauty lying latent within<br>his world, he knows there is something beyond the decay of his existence<br>that he can shoot for; and so long as he continues to reach for that &#8220;light<br>at the end of the tunnel,&#8221; he can deflect the horrors imposed upon him<br>and become pure.<a href=\"notes.asp#14\"><sup>[14]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The insight Carroll cultivates during this brief period<br>gives him hope for a brighter future, and with this hope he is able to<br>analyze the conflict with his father optimistically. He realizes that<br>&#8220;The real culprits in the nonending rift between my old man and me&#8221; are<br>the empty but tyrannical moral beliefs which rule society as a whole.<br>However, his rationalization for his father succumbing to these redneck<br>&#8220;values&#8221; is that, &#8220;No doubt in my mind it&#8217;s the assorted big-mouthed bergs<br>of shit that float in and out of that joint that he sweats his ass off<br>tending bar in all day.&#8221; These &#8220;All American&#8221; citizens, &#8220;For all their<br>jobs as cops and construction workers, for all their crewcuts and their<br>&#8216;Bomb Hanoi Now&#8217; buttons,&#8221; have brainwashed his father:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>They constantly lean over the bar in giggly whispers<br>. . . &#8220;Hey, what the hell is with your son with all that hair<br>down to his shoulders and those funny clothes he wears, I thought<br>he was a big star ballplayer . . . he ain&#8217;t one of them an-ti-war<br>creeps, huh? What the hell they telling him in that fancy pinko<br>school he goes to, huh? huh? I mean, Christ, you oughta have a<br>talk with him, huh? yer know? I mean, Jesus . . .&#8221; (139-40)<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>In other words, Carroll wants to believe that his father<br>does not willfully oppress him; so long as he believes this he can laugh<br>about it.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>However, Carroll&#8217;s humor and optimism soon turn to disillusionment.<br>Heroin makes its comeback, Carroll again says it&#8217;s &#8220;time I better get<br>my ass together&#8221; (144), and the ugly reality of everyday life comes roaring<br>back:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>Lately my scene at home has dissolved to total<br>bullshit. What to say? My old man . . . . bitches about how my<br>hair&#8217;s too long, that the protesters suck, about nigger this and<br>spic that, the same old shit and I don&#8217;t answer &#8217;cause he don&#8217;t<br>listen anyway. It&#8217;s all so simple it&#8217;s the most complicated shit<br>I ever had to put up with. . . . And I don&#8217;t bother anymore. I<br>just refuse to give the slightest fuck anymore and o.k. if I&#8217;m<br>all fucked up and, yes, every other race, creed &amp; color sucks<br>and the war in Nam is sanctioned by the Pope who is flawless of<br>course and if I could just bend in half I could suck myself off<br>all day and load up on some good scag and live in a closet because<br>you can&#8217;t beat them but you can ignore and induce ulcers and heart<br>pangs and give them grey hair so to drive them stone bust on beauty<br>parlor tint-up jobs and then you begin to cry in the closet because<br>your veins are sore and you can&#8217;t get over the fact that you love<br>them somehow more or at least always. (144-45)<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>While Carroll was earlier able to joke about and blame the<br>&#8220;peckers&#8221; who probably &#8220;dress up in the old lady&#8217;s underwear,&#8221; he realizes<br>his father is part of the society these men represent: his father is a<br>redneck, too. The problem is that Carroll&#8217;s earlier remark, &#8220;I guess deep<br>down I think they have the right to boss me around&#8221; (28), is nowhere more<br>true than in the case of his father.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Against the weapons of traditional society&#8211;racism,<br>narrow-mindedness, religious sanction&#8211;Carroll has no defense and no escape;<br>these barbs are built into the system which surrounds him on all sides<br>and flourishes even in his own family. Furthermore, Carroll cannot &#8220;ignore&#8221;<br>either; he can&#8217;t forsake this world entirely, nor can he become independent<br>from it. Because he <em>cares<\/em> about the state of his world, and he<br>loves his parents as representatives of this world, his dilemma is that<br>he must find a way to face this heartless world, whose deeply-ingrained<br>hypocrisy not only is self-defeating and self-destructive, but which also<br>directly affects his body and his mind. He must find a way to fight the<br>system without being swallowed by it, and without succumbing to its indifference<br>or callousness.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>However, Carroll&#8217;s options are becoming increasingly<br>limited. Like Phil Ochs, Carroll realizes that even the peace movement,<br>which offered the hope of changing the system through nonviolent means,<br>has become institutionalized, thus displaying the hypocrisy and corruption<br>of the system it sought to change:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>I think today was about the last peace march I&#8217;m<br>gonna make. . . . Like they got these &#8220;Marshalls&#8221; telling you<br>how you gotta keep in straight lines and all and that&#8217;s the shit<br>that we&#8217;re marching against in the first place. . . . Most of<br>the cats marching are only there to get laid anyway, and nobody<br>in the fucking Pentagon is getting the hint, so maybe it&#8217;s time<br>to fling a few bricks around instead of boring speeches, we need<br>more street people kicking and biting instead of a bunch of walking<br>boots. (145-46)<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>As with hustling, it seems physical violence is Carroll&#8217;s<br>only recourse, and again his fantasies turn violent as he imagines making<br>&#8220;swiss cheese out of&#8221; his English class with a tommy gun (149).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>While violence would lower Carroll to &#8220;their&#8221; level<br>and would defeat his purpose, his &#8220;punk poetry&#8221; has come into play: writing<br>about this fantasy, and writing about it beautifully, is more effective<br>than acting on it. The fact is, he wants to create, not destroy; he wants<br>to find and create beauty and unity, not leave a trail of debris filled<br>with the fragments of his world. He wants to transform his world and himself<br>into beautiful things, and fuse the two together into a powerful weapon<br>against the ugliness and tyranny social mores force upon him.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>With this in mind, he looks again to the bomb, his ultimate<br>enemy:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>I was thinking about how I can divide my past into<br>lumps of time in which I had myriad, &#8220;important&#8221; reasons to wish<br>(and earlier, say from seven to nine or so, to pray) that the<br>end of the world, that the pushing of the button would wait just<br>a little while longer until each of these particular &#8220;reasons<br>to hang on a bit longer&#8221; had seen itself through. . . . [but]<br>anything that was worth looking ahead to, well, that&#8217;s when it<br>always seemed the sirens were gonna start the death chant.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>Like his coaches and teachers, cops and businessmen, the<br>bomb is yet another passionless victimizer; it is almost a living (though<br>unfeeling) force Carroll is pushing against, trying to overcome through<br>his own integrity and &#8220;presence.&#8221;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Furthermore, like Catholicism and the other &#8220;systems&#8221;<br>which wield power over him, the bomb and the &#8220;system&#8221; in general are manipulating<br>Carroll through fear. In much the same way as Phil Ochs&#8217;s despair defeated<br>him, the terror the bomb provokes could potentially overshadow any sense<br>of hope Carroll has and blind him to all beauty; his fear of the bomb<br>could easily paralyze him: &#8220;I can see it a little clearer now, that fear<br>is their tool . . . and it works very well . . . and they use it very<br>well. And I am still using it to measure my time, only I don&#8217;t give a<br>screw about trips to camp anymore, or basketball games two weeks from<br>now.&#8221;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Carroll will not let himself be crushed by tyranny,<br>and he now knows he has a weapon with which he can fight back: &#8220;It&#8217;s just<br>gotten bigger now . . . will I have time to finish the poems breaking<br>loose in my head? Time to find out if I&#8217;m the writer I know I can be?<br>How about these diaries? Or will Vietnam beat me to the button? Because<br>it&#8217;s poetry now . . . and the button is still there, waiting . . .&#8221; (150-51).<br>The stakes are higher now, and the battle is now between the bomb and<br>Carroll&#8217;s writing. Also, the issue itself has expanded: not only is he<br>contending against time in his race to &#8220;beat the button,&#8221; but his writing&#8211;both<br>in his diaries and his poetry&#8211;has now become antitheses to that which<br>oppresses him. The question is whether the beauty, honesty, creativity,<br>and clear-sightedness of Carroll&#8217;s writing can prevail over the ugliness,<br>hypocrisy, destructiveness, and indifference of the bomb and the &#8220;system&#8221;<br>as a whole.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>With this challege ahead of him, Carroll also begins<br>to flaunt his marginality within the realm of basketball. In Washington,<br>D.C., &#8220;for the very spectacular National High School All Star Basketball<br>Game,&#8221; Carroll gets &#8220;stuck [rooming] with shithead Bobby Bellum, a real<br>jockstrap,&#8221; whose &#8220;father won&#8217;t let him sleep with a spade.&#8221; By comparison,<br>Carroll ends up getting &#8220;a great lay&#8221; from &#8220;this very fine spade chick,&#8221;<br>and playfully connects his trans-racial affair with his long hair and<br>writing: &#8220;She said she liked my long hair so I told her I was a sensitive<br>young artist, as well, who wrote spirited poems of varying length. She<br>asked me if I knew Allen Ginsberg. I told her everybody in N.Y. knew Allen<br>Ginsberg. . . .&#8221;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Finally, when he gets caught coming in late, the coach<br>tells him he and Bax Porter can&#8217;t &#8220;even get dressed for the game two nights<br>from now.&#8221; Carroll knows he&#8217;ll start in the game, but his concerns are<br>elsewhere: &#8220;who gave a shit about the game anyway? I had plenty of dope<br>and that great little black ass downtown. . . . I read &#8216;Music&#8217; by Frank<br>O&#8217;Hara and began thinking about the Plaza Hotel. That poem always reminds<br>me of the Plaza Hotel&#8221; (153-54). He has essentially decided that it is<br>poetry and his underground life that are important, not basketball.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>While Carroll still loves basketball, his disillusionment<br>grows as he sees the game becoming more and more corrupt. Again, Carroll<br>is on a team whose coach, Benny Greenbaum, &#8220;plays with my ear&#8221; and who<br>demonstrates proper guarding techniques first by rubbing &#8220;his knee against<br>my balls, &#8221; then demonstrating &#8220;on every player on the team&#8221; (155); later<br>Benny tries &#8220;to deal some blowjobs to us&#8221; (156). Furthermore, Carroll<br>himself flaunts the integrity of the game, as when &#8220;someone discovers<br>that Sammy Fulton, a center from Clinton, has incredible amounts of very<br>up pills. We all go to practice stoned.&#8221; Finally, Carroll&#8217;s double life<br>is now public knowledge: &#8220;I read in the Washington newspapers a story<br>about me entitled &#8216;Beatnik Basketball Player&#8217; telling all about my shoulder<br>length hair and my strange hobbies off the court&#8221; (155).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Most of this is somewhat innocuous, but the final clincher<br>comes as these sidelines overtake the game. While Carroll&#8217;s status in<br>the drug culture grows, with &#8220;Carroll, Clutcher, and Neutron Inc.&#8221; being<br>&#8220;the main dealing outfit in the school&#8221; (164), Carroll realizes that:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>It is common knowledge around the entire school<br>that Marc Clutcher, Anton Neutron and myself are fucking up our<br>basketball team by taking every drug we can get our hands on before<br>games. It&#8217;s common knowledge to the rest of the teams in the league<br>too, mainly because we wear our hair ten times the normal length,<br>and drop games to lame teams by fucking around on the court and<br>not giving a shit. Now our coach is getting wise and today, after<br>we lost to Riverdale by two points last night, the headmaster<br>called me into his office and told me he had a report about me<br>taking ups before the game. (163)<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>Carroll is no longer playing by <em>his<\/em> <em>own<\/em> rules;<br>he is violating his own punk code. The fact is, Carroll, Clutcher, and<br>Neutron&#8217;s highly visible &#8220;fucking around on the court&#8221; causes the team<br>to lose to <em>Riverdale<\/em>&#8211;the team with the &#8220;blue and gold uniforms<br>with little stars all over them&#8221; and the audience of &#8220;Fred MacMurray types&#8221;<br>and &#8220;poodle walkers&#8221; (17).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Finally, the last time Carroll mentions basketball in<br>his diaries is when Benny Greenbaum&#8217;s thinly veiled perversity explodes<br>into blatant molestation (157-59). He &#8220;calls me on the phone and tells<br>me that he wants me to play on his team, <em>The Flyers<\/em>, and that I<br>should come over to his big beautiful apartment to get fitted for one<br>of those famous <em>Flyer<\/em> uniforms and get a free pair of expensive<br>sneakers to boot&#8221; (159). Of course it turns out these treasures are merely<br>bait for Benny&#8217;s trap, as he has lured Carroll to his apartment only for<br>sex. With this entry, not only is Carroll&#8217;s objectification and victimization<br>total, but Benny expects Carroll to prostitute himself in exchange for<br>nothing less than a basketball uniform. That is, Benny has attempted to<br>rape both Carroll and the game the boy loves, using basketball as currency<br>to buy Carroll&#8217;s body. Again, as with the CPA and the cat (106), Carroll<br>resorts to violence, &#8220;picks up the kitty&#8221; (the uniform), and splits.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>With this entry, Carroll abandons basketball for writing,<br>composing one of the most powerful diaries of the book:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>The more I read the more I know it now, heavier<br>each day, that I need to write. I think of poetry and how I see<br>it as just a raw block of stone ready to be shaped, that way words<br>are never a horrible limit to me, just tools to shape. I just<br>get the images from the upstairs vault (it all comes in images)<br>and fling &#8217;em around like bricks, sometimes clean and smooth and<br>then sloppy and ready to fall on top of you later. Like this house<br>where I got to sometimes tear out a room and make it another size<br>or shape so the rest make sense . . . or no sense at all. And<br>when I&#8217;m done I&#8217;m stoned as on whatever you got in your pockets<br>right now, dig?<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>With this entry, Carroll concentrates his entire arsenal<br>of weapons into his writing. When he became disillusioned with protest<br>marches, he suggested that &#8220;maybe it&#8217;s time to fling a few bricks around&#8221;<br>(146); now the bricks he flings are words and images. Where drugs previously<br>offered his only vehicle toward finding a coherent reality, writing enables<br>him to create a reality of any &#8220;size or shape,&#8221; and leaves him &#8220;stoned<br>as on whatever you got in your pockets right now.&#8221;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>As the diary continues, the explosive relationship between<br>Carroll&#8217;s writing and his world comes into focus:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>Now I got these diaries that have the greatest<br>hero a writer needs, this crazy fucking New York. Soon I&#8217;m gonna<br>wake a lot of dudes off their asses and let them know what&#8217;s really<br>going down in the blind alley out there in the pretty streets<br>with double garages. I got a tap on all your wires, folks. I&#8217;m<br>just really a wise ass kid getting wiser, and I&#8217;m going to get<br>even for your dumb hatreds and all them war baby dreams you left<br>in my scarred bed with dreams of bombs falling above that cliff<br>I&#8217;m hanging steady to. Maybe someday just an eight-page book,<br>that&#8217;s all, and each time a page gets turned a section of the<br>Pentagon goes blast up in smoke. Solid. (159-60)<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>Now that Carroll has &#8220;swallowed the poison,&#8221; he can transform<br>it <em>through writing<\/em>. And where he may not have realized it<br>earlier, his <em>diaries<\/em> are the weapon he has been seeking. Through<br>writing, he transcends the chaos, ugliness, corruption, and hypocrisy<br>of his world by telling the truth about it. And as he reveals the truth,<br>he becomes the &#8220;fire&#8217;s reflection,&#8221; displaying his own corruption as the<br>mirror image of his world. New York City is likewise a microcosm of a<br>corrupt world as a whole: he strips away its veneer of &#8220;pretty streets<br>with double garages&#8221; and paints its true portrait, forcing the established<br>order to deconstruct itself. He can make a difference, and his street-level<br>vision of his world has given him the power to do it.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>However, even with such a powerful weapon at his disposal,<br>there is yet a more powerful force. Whatever victories he has won are<br>quickly eclipsed by his growing heroin addiction, as his desire to stay<br>high becomes his prime concern: &#8220;Just such a pleasure to tie up above<br>that mainline with a woman&#8217;s silk stocking. . . . It&#8217;s been hard, the<br>writing, lately. Just all comes in beautiful fragments, like nods now<br>. . . so high . . . guess I&#8217;d rather sleep forever this sleep and forget.<br>. . .&#8221; (162). Heroin rules him, body and mind. Describing his affair with<br>an &#8220;older woman,&#8221; Carroll says, &#8220;Though she is without doubt at her peak<br>of horn growth (actually she is out and out insatiable), I am, on the<br>other hand, ready for all she wants in my head but my body is sometimes<br>so pumped with junk when I see her that I&#8217;m only good for a couple of<br>rounds a night&#8221; (167-68).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>It also turns out that Carroll&#8217;s &#8220;old lady lover&#8221; is<br>&#8220;always good for plenty of junk money.&#8221; When Carroll uses &#8220;up the weekday<br>allowance she lays on me a little early this week,&#8221; he drops in on her<br>and asks for more. She complies, but Carroll quickly discovers that she<br>has been exploiting his addiction. In spite of the fact that he is going<br>through withdrawals and is in no condition for sex, &#8220;the bitch was all<br>over me. I told her she had no idea how I felt and to just let me lie<br>down and sweat out the wait. Her slightest touch set little stinging grenades<br>off in my head. . . . But she didn&#8217;t seem to comprehend my condition and<br>continued to paw me&#8221; (171-72). Since she has paid for his drugs, she demands<br>sex in return, regardless of Carroll&#8217;s physical condition. The fact is,<br>Carroll was not this woman&#8217;s lover; he was her whore.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Carroll is beginning to feel his exile very deeply.<br>While he renounced so-called &#8220;respectable&#8221; society because of its hypocrisy<br>and indifference, he now finds himself utterly isolated, trapped in sick,<br>empty &#8220;relationships&#8221; built entirely upon lust and exploitation. Whether<br>the relationships have to do with basketball, sex, or drugs, their sickness<br>is perpetuated through manipulation of Carroll&#8217;s physical and emotional<br>needs. Carroll knows that somewhere there must be something better:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>I woke up screaming early this morning. It was<br>a dream, not a nightmare, a beautiful dream I could never imagine<br>in a thousand nods. . . . I saw this girl next to me who wasn&#8217;t<br>beautiful really until she smiled. And I felt the smile come at<br>me and heat waves following, soaking through my body out my fingertips<br>in shafts of color. . . . and I held her for a minute and she<br>cried and left. . . . And all day I knew there was an incredible<br>love somewhere in my world . . . and I felt sad, needing to explain<br>it but I can&#8217;t because it belonged to me, to anyone else it was<br>just wet images. And I got this incredible warm beautiful pain<br>in my veins now trying to sort it all out. . . . (176-77)<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>Part of Carroll&#8217;s task as a writer is to show that there<br>is &#8220;an incredible love somewhere in [his] world,&#8221; and if he can&#8217;t find<br>it, he must create it. But this is a difficult task: while he knows and<br>feels that beauty exists, sharing that knowledge through writing is another<br>matter. He must, somehow, &#8220;sort it all out&#8221; enough that he can release<br>and convey the feelings presently trapped inside of him.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Furthermore, both the corruption of the outside world<br>and his drug use make it increasingly difficult to see love and beauty,<br>or to believe that either exists. His heroin addiction lands him in &#8220;Riker&#8217;s<br>Island Juvenile Reformatory doing three months for possession of three<br>bags of heroin and a syringe,&#8221; and the &#8220;system&#8221; almost succeeds in crushing<br>him: at Riker&#8217;s, he is &#8220;not interested in keeping this diary going. .<br>. . Maybe later. Right now I&#8217;m not interested in anything.&#8221; Yet Carroll<br>is not broken; he still has hope, and the possibility of finding love,<br>and someone who loves him, keeps him going. &#8220;Huddled in a broom closet<br>for hours each day&#8221; at Riker&#8217;s, Carroll wonders who his godparents are;<br>he thinks about &#8220;what a nice concept&#8221; it would be to have someone out<br>there who is there for him, whom he can depend upon. And even though his<br>&#8220;mother refuses to visit me here,&#8221; he looks forward to seeing her just<br>to find out who his godparents are (178-79).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>When Carroll is released from Riker&#8217;s after one month,<br>he is ecstatic with a sense of new-found freedom: &#8220;I walked out the gates<br>of Riker&#8217;s Island yesterday, a &#8216;free man,&#8217; feeling like a cartoon about<br>to run off its reel. So this morning I woke up in a place where, for the<br>first time in thirty-one days I could walk out into the pleasures of concrete<br>and sun at my own will. . . . &#8221; However, the desperate hope he felt in<br>prison has transformed into outright contempt of his experience; he is<br>outraged and disgusted at the horrors he has been forced to see and endure:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>I&#8217;m putting this past month behind me for now and<br>for later, and we won&#8217;t have any more about it. Suffice to say<br>I am finished with the asshole bandits of shower room rape; suffice<br>to say that those swine for guards won&#8217;t draw blood from my ankles<br>again; suffice to say nobody will hang himself one night on the<br>other side of a wall six inches thick from where I sleep; suffice<br>to say I won&#8217;t have to watch anymore fourteen-year-old Puerto<br>Ricans carving their initials in forearms with filthy dull forks<br>they stashed, taken off to the infirmary a week later for blossoming<br>gangrene; suffice to say no black cell-block kings will stab fat<br>little Jews here . . . suffice to say that I found a broom closet<br>at the end of my cell-block where I could hide from the ugly screws<br>and filthy cock and sad-eyed forms and learn to love silence and<br>suffice to say that, though I spent four hours a day in that closet,<br>I didn&#8217;t become pure on Riker&#8217;s Island. (183-84)<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>This is the second time he has mentioned his desire to be<br>&#8220;pure,&#8221; yet he still has not purged himself of the poisons his world has<br>force-fed him. He is still unable to transform the ugliness of his experience,<br>as represented in the conditions of Riker&#8217;s, nor is he able to rise above<br>it.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>However, with all of this behind him and freedom before<br>him, Carroll is at a turning point, and he has the potential of transcending<br>the horrors of Riker&#8217;s and the world in general. But he doesn&#8217;t:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>Mancole did me the honor of preparing me a syringe<br>filled with &#8220;the finest junk in upper Manhattan.&#8221; I almost refused<br>. . . it was a moment I had both dreamt of passionately and cursed<br>even more . . . but with the dream in front of me again I found<br>that it was quite easy to curse . . . but so much harder to refuse.<br>(183)<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>Even if Carroll is free from the literal prison at Riker&#8217;s,<br>he is quite aware of the prison his heroin addiction has become. Initially,<br>heroin seemed like a way to escape the corruption and hypocrisy Carroll<br>saw closing in on him from all sides. However, the escape has now become<br>a trap.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Furthermore, Carroll&#8217;s other drug of choice, L.S.D.,<br>which has opened up the broadest vistas of perception, offered the most<br>complete sense of freedom, and which launched Carroll&#8217;s most beautiful<br>mind adventures and inspired his poetry, now turns against him as well:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>End of L.S.D. era last night . . . very bad scene,<br>like getting gulped up in a dream. Gulped by the big city. . .<br>. Reach the Museum of Modern Art and I began to feel my oats.<br>Those flowers they leap right off that canvas at me. Those flowers,<br>they choke. And it is right then that I realize something is happening<br>that has never happened before: I AM ALONE . . . and not just<br>me doctor, WE&#8217;RE alone. Alone forever and who&#8217;s at the end of<br>that forever tunnel I run through up Fifth with wallpaper of skyscrapers?<br>And I&#8217;m thinking, after all those beautiful trips, that this is<br>one of those <em>bad<\/em> ones . . . and, shit, they are bad indeed.<br>Alone. . . . Alone is white. (185)<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>His drug dream has transformed into a nightmare. Where L.S.D.<br>once opened his vistas of perception, gave him the greatest sense of belonging<br>in the world, and once enabled him to commune with the universe, it now<br>leaves him utterly isolated.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>His vision has become so clear that he discovers a terrifying<br>truth: he is &#8220;ALONE.&#8221; Carroll&#8217;s exile is now total; even worse, he has<br>nothing but a heroin habit, and &#8220;not a soul in the neighborhood is holding&#8221;:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>Yep, I&#8217;m good and sick without that fix now and<br>my rap of being the one who can keep it all under control is in<br>that breeze cluttered with the same raps a million times run down<br>by a million other genius wise ass cats walking like each other&#8217;s<br>ghosts around these same sick streets in my same sick shoes.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>Hence, not only is he completely alone, but he hasn&#8217;t even<br>his code of honor to sustain him: he has flaunted his own punk code, allowing<br>a drug to determine his existence, and now has nothing but his own corruption.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>However, as he says earlier, &#8220;I may get my ass beat<br>occasionally, but I always get the last word&#8221; (170). Even in the state<br>he is in, Carroll does pull off the final triumph by turning his unreal,<br>sick reality upside down. His body has been corrupted and prostituted;<br>if he didn&#8217;t want to be Rimbaud&#8217;s &#8220;man grafting warts onto his face and<br>growing them there,&#8221; Carroll is that man now. All he need do is transform<br>his decadence into a weapon. He must show that his &#8220;warts&#8221; are the reality<br>of the world he lives in, and that in his corruption and prostitution,<br>he is the mirror image, the &#8220;fire&#8217;s reflection,&#8221; of the &#8220;respectable&#8221;<br>society which produced him.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Carroll achieves this victory both in action and in<br>writing. He finds himself in the restroom of a porno theater where he<br>could again be the victim of sexual exploitation. But this time, as &#8220;a<br>quick shuffle breaks out&#8221; for the urinal beside Carroll, he takes control<br>and becomes a victimizer himself. While his horny neighbor &#8220;starts wacking<br>his doodle, . . . I work mine up hard, stick out my hand flashing three<br>fingers, he takes out thirty bills slow and somber . . . and shoves it<br>into my pocket, climbs down the fingers to his blood-throbbing purchase<br>and gives a few nimble yanks on it. . . .&#8221;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>This relatively simple hustling scenario metamorphoses<br>into an act of vengeance as Carroll tears &#8220;from my soul&#8217;s depths, out<br>of faithfulness to the muse of truth, and admit the strange pleasure cast<br>on me by this naughty act of perversion for profit . . .&#8221; Essentially,<br>Carroll rounds up all of the forces which have oppressed him throughout<br>the <em>Diaries<\/em>, corrals them in a porno theater and, through the magic<br>of his &#8220;punk poetry,&#8221; transmutes the porno theater into an &#8220;archer&#8217;s target&#8221;<br>with himself at the center, and transforms his body into a weapon. As<br>he scans his audience,<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>some weird sensation <em>did<\/em> shoot a blood rocket<br>up my zone as an incredible rush of power shook me with all those<br>faces staring at my body fucking a mouth on its knees . . .<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>. . . I&#8217;ve seen then all &amp; I see them now,<br>slobbering fat heroes . . . some jacking off right open, others<br>just clutching it inside, sometimes swapping feels off each other.<br>I begin to fantasize on each as I start getting hotter and hotter:<br>I see all the teachers I&#8217;ve ever had, fat principals, basketball<br>coaches, an old superintendent from 6th Street age seven, famous<br>poets from all times down . . . a giggling drag queen unshaven<br>in the corner, he&#8217;s all the girls I&#8217;ve ever fucked; I see cops<br>who busted me, judges, oh yes, <em>all<\/em> the judges, drooling.<br>. . (188-89)<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>With these &#8220;slobbering fat heroes&#8221; in their proper place,<br>Carroll continues to upend the established &#8220;reality&#8221; of heroes and villains,<br>exposing the hypocrisy inherent in a &#8220;respectable&#8221; world unwilling to<br>face itself. Says Carroll: &#8220;People are always branding junkies the slob<br>wastes of society. Not so, chumps. The real junkies should be raised up<br>for saying fuck you to all this shit city jive, for going on with all<br>the risks and hassles and con, willing to face the rap&#8221; (189). He goes<br>on to describe the various sorts of junkies. First there are the &#8220;rich<br>dilettante square ass&#8221; types who merely dabble, but always have the means<br>to cut out when necessary. Next are the &#8220;weekend dope heads&#8221; and &#8220;preppies,&#8221;<br>who have brought the &#8220;social virus&#8221; of drug abuse to public eye.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Finally, while Carroll may be a junkie and a &#8220;slob waste&#8221;<br>in the eyes of respectable society, his mind still transcends the austere<br>prosaism of the establishment. Not only does he see through &#8220;respectable&#8221;<br>society&#8217;s hypocrisy and lies, but his imagination (with a little help<br>from peyote buttons, in this case) takes him &#8220;somewhere all you bald headed<br>generals and wheelchair senators could never imagine&#8221; (197).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>However, there is still the last category of junkies<br>to contend with, and since this is the category in which Carroll finds<br>himself, this is where the problem lies. He has finally admitted the trap<br>he has laid for himself, almost too late:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>Then there&#8217;s us street kids that start fucking around<br>very young, thirteen or so, and think we can control it ourselves<br>and not get strung out. It rarely works. I&#8217;m proof. So after two<br>or three years of control, I wind up in the last scene: strung<br>out and nothing to do but spend all day chasing dope. Any way<br>counts, folks. No way to any Riviera and no rich momma to run<br>to. Like you just know when you&#8217;re in the real junkie thing when<br>you wake up in the morning and say to yourself and know it and<br>go through with it, &#8220;Today I either get my fix or get my ass busted<br>into the Tombs, fuck it all.&#8221; (189-91)<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>He finds himself &#8220;sitting on the john seat in Headquarters,<br>been up sick for three days trying to kick cold, but the habit has really<br>caught up with me this time and got me licked real nasty.&#8221; Suffering &#8220;horrible<br>flashes of heat. . . and the rushes of cold . . . And then the cramps<br>in the guts and the horrible shitting. . . ,&#8221; Carroll realizes that, like<br>it or not, &#8220;I have to kick this now because I got to get back to fucking<br>HIGH SCHOOL in two weeks! What a fucking joke, I mean I just can&#8217;t believe<br>how unslick I feel&#8221; (197-98).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>As he recognized earlier, he expects more from himself<br>than this, and he does want to do well in school. This time, however,<br>Carroll&#8217;s attempt to quit &#8220;cold turk&#8221; fails. As he puts it:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>To tell the truth my &#8220;withdrawal&#8221; only lasted one<br>more day before I shot up a bag of smokin&#8217; stuff I snuck out of<br>Mancole&#8217;s coat pocket. Now I&#8217;m back as good or bad as ever, hustling<br>around . . . three of us just took off some dog walker in the<br>park today for his watch and wallet, which means I&#8217;m back to the<br>old knife and gun holding scene too. I don&#8217;t dig that shit really<br>but I&#8217;m so disgusted with hustling queers that it&#8217;s my only way<br>out now. . . .<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>For Carroll, &#8220;Resorting to sticking knives up to people&#8217;s<br>necks for junk money is always an indication to me that things are pretty<br>bad off . . .&#8221; (199). After all he has been through trying to denude the<br>hypocrisy of &#8220;executive creeps in uniform with their little fedoras and<br>them dumb little cases they carry that usually got nothing but a pencil<br>in them every time I see a dude open one&#8221; (119), Carroll discovers he,<br>too, is part of the immoral world he thought he was above. &#8220;You just got<br>to see that junk is just another nine to five gig in the end, only the<br>hours are a bit more inclined toward shadows&#8221; (198-99).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Perhaps two entries best sum up Carroll&#8217;s situation<br>at the end of the <em>Diaries<\/em>. He meets Ju-Ju Johnson, the &#8220;fattest<br>junkie I know,&#8221; and they &#8220;rapped about our old con trick we used to pull<br>every couple of months for a pile.&#8221; This &#8220;con trick&#8221; involved visiting<br>a welfare office; Carroll plays JuJu&#8217;s son, and together the two spin<br>a sob story worth &#8220;a fat emergency relief check with extra for me, the<br>dutiful son.&#8221; The day following these fond recollections, Carroll visits<br>JuJu to see if they could pull this scam off again; instead, JuJu points<br>out the truth Carroll does not want to hear: &#8220;&#8216;No chance,&#8217; he lays it<br>down, &#8216;that long hair of yours, your features filling in, naw, like you<br>got the junk halo now all over. No more innocence, man. And frankly you<br>look totally seedy'&#8221; (205-6).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Not only does Carroll have &#8220;the junk halo now all over,&#8221;<br>but he also sees his friend and fellow junkie Jimmy Mancole &#8220;in complete<br>sickness and hugging his last nerves.&#8221; The two &#8220;must have knocked on every<br>door and checked out every street corner among all these possibilities<br>and not one dealer was holding a single bag.&#8221; Jimmy &#8220;had considered suicide<br>close to fourteen times and must have stopped on every third corner to<br>puke,&#8221; and by the time they &#8220;made it down to my old neighborhood on 29th,&#8221;<br>&#8220;Mancole was reeling in total madness&#8221; (206-8). On the road Carroll is<br>travelling, and he is just behind Jimmy Mancole, it&#8217;s &#8220;No more innocence&#8221;<br>and no more sanity.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The final entry of <em>The Basketball Diaries<\/em> finds<br>Carroll at the bottom of the pit, in the darkest depths of excess, stoned<br>for four days straight. However, as he comes out of his drug-induced stupor,<br>he looks around, realizing for perhaps the first time the depths he has<br>reached. Yet, while he has physically lost all control and dignity, and<br>while his environment is filthy and disgusting, his writing prevails.<br>He details what he sees so poetically, and with such striking precision,<br>that the scene becomes beautiful:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\">\n<p>In ten minutes it will make four days that I&#8217;ve<br>been nodding on this ratty mattress up here in headquarters. Haven&#8217;t<br>eaten except for three carrots and two Nestle&#8217;s fruit and nut<br>bars and both my forearms sore as shit with all the little specks<br>of caked blood covering them. My two sets of gimmicks right along<br>side me in the slightly bloody water in the plastic cup on the<br>crusty linoleum, probably used by every case of hepatitis in upper<br>Manhattan by now. Totally zonked, and all the dope scraped or<br>sniffed clean from the tiny cellophane bags. For days of temporary<br>death gone by, no more bread, with its hundreds of casual theories,<br>soaky nostalgia (I could have got that for free walking along<br>Fifth Avenue at noon), at any rate, a thousand goofs, some still<br>hazy in my noodle. . . . (209)<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>As he says in &#8220;City Drops Into The Night,&#8221; &#8220;When the<br>body at the bottom \/ That body is my own reflection \/ It ain&#8217;t hip to<br>sink that low \/ unless you&#8217;re gonna make a resurrection.&#8221; As Carroll&#8217;s<br>clarity of vision returns, he takes &#8220;A wasted peek into the mirror,&#8221; finding<br>that &#8220;I&#8217;m all thin as a wafer of concentrated rye.&#8221; He is ready to make<br>that resurrection; he is ready to purge himself of the poison and become<br>an artist:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<pre class=\"wp-block-verse\">I can feel the window light hurting my eyes: it's<br>like shooting pickle juice. What does that mean? Nice June day<br>out today, lots of people probably graduating. I can see the Cloisters<br>with its million in medieval art out the bedroom window. I got<br>to go in and puke. I just want to be pure . . . (210)<\/pre>\n\n\n\n<div style=\"height:100px\" aria-hidden=\"true\" class=\"wp-block-spacer\"><\/div>\n\n\n\n<figure class=\"wp-block-table is-style-stripes\"><table><tbody><tr><td>Previous: <a href=\"https:\/\/www.catholicboy.com\/WP\/research\/academic-studies-of-jim-carroll\/shit-into-gold\/\" data-type=\"page\" data-id=\"4139\">Shit Into Gold<\/a><\/td><td class=\"has-text-align-right\" data-align=\"right\">Next: <a href=\"https:\/\/www.catholicboy.com\/WP\/table-of-contents\/\" data-type=\"page\" data-id=\"4510\">Writing as  Penance<\/a><\/td><\/tr><\/tbody><\/table><\/figure>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"ext-copyright\">\u00a91990 Cassie Carter. This material may not be reprinted except by permission from the author.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Chapter Two The Basketball Diaries: Writing as a Weapon Jim Carroll&#8217;s The Basketball Diaries and Forced Entries By Cassie Carter Title Page &nbsp; Table of Contents &nbsp; Abstract &nbsp; Chapter One &nbsp; Chapter Two &nbsp; Chapter Three &nbsp; Chapter Four &nbsp; Appendix &nbsp; Notes &nbsp; Works Cited I may get my ass beat occasionally,but I &hellip; <a href=\"https:\/\/www.catholicboy.com\/WP\/research\/academic-studies-of-jim-carroll\/masters-thesis-1990-basketball-diaries-and-forced-entries\/the-basketball-diaries-writing-as-a-weapon\/\" class=\"more-link\">Continue reading <span class=\"screen-reader-text\">The Basketball Diaries: Writing as a Weapon<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"parent":4148,"menu_order":4,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","template":"","meta":{"advanced_seo_description":"","jetpack_seo_html_title":"","jetpack_seo_noindex":false,"jetpack_post_was_ever_published":false,"footnotes":""},"folder":[83],"class_list":["post-4140","page","type-page","status-publish","hentry"],"jetpack_sharing_enabled":true,"jetpack_shortlink":"https:\/\/wp.me\/P9VlUH-14M","jetpack_likes_enabled":true,"jetpack-related-posts":[{"id":4510,"url":"https:\/\/www.catholicboy.com\/WP\/research\/academic-studies-of-jim-carroll\/masters-thesis-1990-basketball-diaries-and-forced-entries\/table-of-contents\/","url_meta":{"origin":4140,"position":0},"title":"Table of Contents","author":"catholicboy.com","date":"January 10, 2022","format":false,"excerpt":"Table of ContentsJim Carroll's The Basketball Diaries and Forced EntriesBy Cassie Carter Title Page \u00a0 Table of Contents \u00a0 Abstract \u00a0 Chapter One \u00a0 Chapter Two \u00a0 Chapter Three \u00a0 Chapter Four \u00a0 Appendix \u00a0 Notes \u00a0 Works Cited Abstract Summary of the thesis. Chapter One - Introduction: Shit Into\u2026","rel":"","context":"Similar post","block_context":{"text":"Similar post","link":""},"img":{"alt_text":"","src":"","width":0,"height":0},"classes":[]},{"id":4043,"url":"https:\/\/www.catholicboy.com\/WP\/research\/academic-studies-of-jim-carroll\/masters-thesis-1990-basketball-diaries-and-forced-entries\/home-research-academic-studies\/","url_meta":{"origin":4140,"position":1},"title":"Thesis TOC","author":"catholicboy.com","date":"January 10, 2022","format":false,"excerpt":"Home > Research > Academic Studies Table of Contents Shit Into Gold: Jim Carroll's The Basketball Diaries and Forced Entries By Cassie Carter Title Page If you want to cite this thesis, here's where you find the bibliographic information. Table of Contents This page. Abstract Summary of the thesis. Chapter\u2026","rel":"","context":"Similar post","block_context":{"text":"Similar post","link":""},"img":{"alt_text":"","src":"","width":0,"height":0},"classes":[]},{"id":576,"url":"https:\/\/www.catholicboy.com\/WP\/works\/literary-works\/diaries-and-fiction-by-jim-carroll\/the-basketball-diaries\/","url_meta":{"origin":4140,"position":2},"title":"The Basketball Diaries: Editions","author":"Cassie Carter","date":"August 15, 2021","format":false,"excerpt":"Carroll wrote his autobiographical tales of \"growing up hip\" on New York's mean streets\" between the ages of 12 and 16, from 1962 to 1966. Carroll earned a scholarship to a posh private school (see\u00a0Trinity Yearbook page) and spent his time playing basketball, stealing, hustling gay men to support his\u2026","rel":"","context":"Similar post","block_context":{"text":"Similar post","link":""},"img":{"alt_text":"","src":"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.catholicboy.com\/WP\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/08\/bd1cov.jpg?resize=350%2C200&ssl=1","width":350,"height":200},"classes":[]},{"id":8649,"url":"https:\/\/www.catholicboy.com\/WP\/works\/literary-works\/diaries-and-fiction-by-jim-carroll\/the-basketball-diaries\/the-basketball-diaries-first-edition\/","url_meta":{"origin":4140,"position":3},"title":"The Basketball Diaries (First Edition)","author":"Cassie Carter","date":"March 6, 2025","format":false,"excerpt":"The Basketball Diaries: 1963-1966First EditionBy: Jim CarrollPublished: 1978Publisher: Tombouctou Press (Bolinas, CA)Format: PaperbackCover photograph: Rosemary Klemfuss The first edition of\u00a0The Basketball Diaries, the only one (from what booksellers tell me) that has any value as a collectors' item, has a number of distinctive characteristics. First, the cover photograph, by Rosemary\u2026","rel":"","context":"Similar post","block_context":{"text":"Similar post","link":""},"img":{"alt_text":"Jim Carroll- First Edition of The Basketball Diaries 1978","src":"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.catholicboy.com\/WP\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/08\/bd1cov.jpg?resize=350%2C200&ssl=1","width":350,"height":200},"classes":[]},{"id":4141,"url":"https:\/\/www.catholicboy.com\/WP\/research\/academic-studies-of-jim-carroll\/masters-thesis-1990-basketball-diaries-and-forced-entries\/abstract\/","url_meta":{"origin":4140,"position":4},"title":"Abstract","author":"catholicboy.com","date":"January 10, 2022","format":false,"excerpt":"Abstract Jim Carroll's The Basketball Diaries and Forced Entries By Cassie Carter Title Page \u00a0 Table of Contents \u00a0 Abstract \u00a0 Chapter One \u00a0 Chapter Two \u00a0 Chapter Three \u00a0 Chapter Four \u00a0 Appendix \u00a0 Notes \u00a0 Works Cited By the time Jim Carroll was 16 years old, he was\u2026","rel":"","context":"Similar post","block_context":{"text":"Similar post","link":""},"img":{"alt_text":"","src":"","width":0,"height":0},"classes":[]},{"id":3993,"url":"https:\/\/www.catholicboy.com\/WP\/works\/literary-works\/diaries-and-fiction-by-jim-carroll\/the-basketball-diaries\/the-basketball-diaries-5th-ed\/","url_meta":{"origin":4140,"position":5},"title":"The Basketball Diaries (5th Edition)","author":"Cassie Carter","date":"January 10, 2022","format":false,"excerpt":"The Basketball Diaries5th EditionBy:\u00a0Jim CarrollPublished:\u00a01998Publisher:\u00a0PenguinFormat:\u00a0PaperbackCover photo:\u00a0Michael ZagarisCover design:\u00a0Edward ODowd The fifth edition of\u00a0The Basketball Diaries\u00a0uses a blue-tinted, closeup version of the same photo used on the\u00a0audiobook\u00a0version, and from the same photo session as the\u00a01980 Bantam (2nd) edition. This edition was issued simultaneously with the\u00a0second edition of Forced Entries. See Also\u2026","rel":"","context":"Similar post","block_context":{"text":"Similar post","link":""},"img":{"alt_text":"Cover Art: The Basketball Diaries (1998 edition) - By Jim Carroll","src":"https:\/\/i0.wp.com\/www.catholicboy.com\/WP\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/08\/bd5.jpg?resize=350%2C200&ssl=1","width":350,"height":200},"classes":[]}],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.catholicboy.com\/WP\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/4140","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.catholicboy.com\/WP\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.catholicboy.com\/WP\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/page"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.catholicboy.com\/WP\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.catholicboy.com\/WP\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=4140"}],"version-history":[{"count":4,"href":"https:\/\/www.catholicboy.com\/WP\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/4140\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":7185,"href":"https:\/\/www.catholicboy.com\/WP\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/4140\/revisions\/7185"}],"up":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.catholicboy.com\/WP\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/4148"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.catholicboy.com\/WP\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=4140"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"folder","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.catholicboy.com\/WP\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/folder?post=4140"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}