|  
        Scott Rettberg’s Writerly 
          Text, “The Meddlesome Passenger”:Reading as Writing/Consumption 
          as Production
Robert Ford It is often noted that hypertext 
        fiction provides a medium through which structuralist and poststructuralist 
        theories can be put into practice. Scott Rettberg’s short story “The 
        Meddlesome Passenger” is an example of such a piece of hypertext fiction. 
        Rettberg, best known for his collaborative work on “The Unknown,” begins 
        his story with Roland Barthes; that is, he begins it with the death of 
        an author. The reader is immediately told by the only witness, the narrator 
        of the text, that he has killed the author. What ensues is a story that 
        pits the intentions and interests of the author, narrator, and reader 
        against one another. The reader looks to the narrator for a story, but 
        the narrator cannot, because of the death of the author, provide one. 
        At least, he cannot provide a traditional “readerly” text as Barthes would 
        have defined it; the narrator of the text does not have a fixed, predetermined 
        story for the reader to follow because his author has been killed. In 
        fact, the narrator continually appeals to the reader for a story. The 
        major conflict of Rettberg’s story occurs between the reader and narrator. 
        The reader wants to consume a story told by the narrator, while the narrator 
        wants the reader to act in place of the dead author and produce a story. 
         The purpose of Rettberg’s
          story  is to pose, in a rather playful and irreverent way, structuralist
          and 
        poststructuralist questions. Where does a text begin and end? Who or
          what  controls, disseminates, and generates meaning in a text? Should
          a reader 
        be a consumer or a producer of a text? Rettberg draws particularly on
           Barthes’ concept of the “writerly” text to pose these questions. Literary
            theorists, such as Barthes, usually give precedence to the author,
           text, 
        or reader in their theories. For Barthes, the reader is most important;
            the reader is the active agent who produces meaning in a story. Rettberg
           
        applies Barthes’ principle in his story. He incorporates two games that
         require his readers to literally write the story. He also draws on more
        
        general postmodern concepts, such as inter-, intra-, and meta-textuality
         and the floating, endless, and de-centered narrative, all of which require
        
        his readers to make choices when navigating through the story. Ultimately,
         Rettberg’s story meanders more than meddles, but not without first poking
          some fun at, while also posing some serious questions about, our basic
         
        assumptions about what a text and reader can and should do.  The central postmodern concept 
        at work in the story is Barthes’ writerly text. The story is not theoretically 
        written by an author. The reader is told by the narrator on the first 
        page that he has killed the author. The reader is then frequently told 
        by the narrator to produce his own story. This fact is mentioned throughout 
        the text; near the end of the story, for example, the narrator states, 
        “Somewhere there is a blind oracle 
        who knows everything that will happen. Unfortunately, he is no longer 
        with us. He is in a hospital somewhere, or a morgue. He is beyond our 
        help. Come, let's forget about him” (53)* 
        . The oracle is, of course, the murdered author. Without him, the narrator 
        has no vision, no sense of direction. There is no fixed story for the 
        narrator to tell and the reader to follow. The narrator tells the reader 
        to “forget about him” so that the reader can find his own vision. It is 
        significant that Rettberg chooses to refer to the author as a “blind oracle” 
        instead of, perhaps, a dead oracle; the passage seems to indicate that 
        the author still has a presence in the story at some level. When you click 
        on the word “oracle” in the story, for instance, a flashing message appears 
        that reads “give me back my fucking eyes.” It is never entirely clear 
        who is saying this, but it could be coming from the author. In this sense, 
        the author is still present in some form, desperately trying to regain 
        his vision. He becomes a god-like figure who is not physically present 
        in the story, but who maintains a spiritual presence within it.  Nonetheless, without the vision 
        of the author, the narrator cannot direct the action of the story. He 
        states on page 61, for instance, “Back to that omniscient, omnipotent, 
        omnipresent being; a delightful idea and the solution to all our problems. 
        A benevolent knower of all that is seen and unseen. As if there were one. 
        All I know is that it is certainly not me. Damn.” Presumably the reader, 
        voicing frustration at the fact that the narrator is not taking the story 
        anywhere, has asked the narrator where the “omniscient, omnipotent, omnipresent 
        being” (the author) is. The narrator again acknowledges that an authoritative 
        “being” would solve all their problems and would give them a much needed 
        “sense of direction,” but ultimately the being does not exist (anymore). 
        Again, the reader must take over for the absent author. Rettberg also 
        includes on page 61 a statement that directly aligns his story with Barthes’ 
        theory. The word “control” 
        appears with a hyperlink (like the previously noted word, “oracle”). When 
        clicked, a flashing message appears that reads, “Are you reading me or 
        am I writing you?” Rettberg, following Barthes, connects reading with 
        writing. The act of reading “The Meddlesome Passenger” becomes the process 
        by which the story is written.   Is this the same poststructuralist
           song and dance we have seen in print? Not quite. Rettberg incorporates
          
        two games in the story that require the reader to take an active role
           in the telling of the story. The story is not entirely clear until
          these 
        games are completed by the reader. The games appear on pages 48 and 68;
           the reader is given the opportunity to click on the word “gaming” 
        or “games,” 
        respectively. On page 48, the reader is taken to a new screen that asks
         him to fill in six fields. After he fills in the fields he clicks on “Tell
          Story,” and a new screen appears entitled “The Author is Dead Game.” The
           new screen has a paragraph that has the reader’s words inserted into
           it.  The paragraph essentially tells the story: “It was a [insert
           adjective]  day”; an author was killed by a “nasty reader” by the
           name of [insert  name]. The link on page 68 is set up in the same
           way. These “games” force 
        the reader to interact with and write, at least to some extent, the story
            that he is reading. These games bring the Barthesian writerly text
           back 
        in a refreshing and important way. They achieve what could not be achieved
            in the print medium. In print, a writerly text asked its readers
           to imagine 
        that they were simultaneously reading and writing a text. Rettberg does
            not ask his readers to imagine it; he has constructed a story in
           which 
        the system requires that they simultaneously read and write the text. 
         “The Meddlesome Passenger” 
        uses other features common to both hypertext and postmodernism to strengthen
             the relationship between the story and Barthes’ concept of the writerly
              text. First, the narrative and the various links within the narrative
             
        create different inter-, intra-, and meta-texts. Throughout the text
             there are individual words that can be clicked to either send the
             reader
             to 
        a new place or to present new text. I have noted two such instances above.
              By clicking on “oracle” or “control,” for example, a flashing text
              message  appears at the bottom of the story screen. This is the
              dominant type of 
        link in the story. Most of these messages are asides, jokes, or anecdotes,
               and it is not always clear who is saying them. They essentially
              provide 
        a subtext or intra-text to the story. These subtexts provide another
               example of how the reader has control over how the narrative is
              constructed. 
        The words have to be clicked for the text to appear. The reader has control
               over what text is clicked, written, and read.  There are other links, though,
           that send the reader to new places. The three most obvious examples
          of 
        this are the links to the Doritos, Coca-Cola, and Slim-Jim Web sites.
          While  on his “journey” with the reader, the narrator frequently alludes
          to Coca-Cola, Doritos, and Slim-Jim. When the words appear in the text
          they
        are linked
        to the companies' Web sites. In one respect, these allusions to junk
          food simply serve to enhance the basic storyline. At the moment the
          narrator
        alludes to these products, he is traveling with the reader on the road;
        Doritos, Coca-Cola, and Slim-Jim are all convenience store products that
        you would find on the road. More importantly, though, these links provide
        an explicit connection between reading and consumer culture. The narrator
        frequently alludes to the relationship between reading and consuming.
        Take the following passage for example: “You swallow. Me, that is. You
         digest me. You construct me, churn me through your bowels. Then you
        excrete 
        me” (13). The narrator’s argument is that the process of reading a text
         has become much like the consumption of junk food. The narrator wants
        
        to get the reader to produce his own story, rather than simply consume
         one. The company Web sites play a significant role in the development
        of 
        the overall theme of consumptive v. productive reading.  The narrative of the short
           story is de-centered and free-floating, common tropes of postmodern
          fiction, 
        as well. The fact that there is theoretically no author de-centers the
           narrative immediately. There is no “omniscient, omnipotent, omnipresent
            being” who determines the fate of the reader and narrator (61). The
            hierarchy  of traditional narrative breaks down. The narrator and
            reader embark on 
        what the narrator frequently calls a journey to nowhere. They travel
            by  plane, train, and car in the story, but in the end they never
            arrive anywhere. 
        The narrator speaks of this endless and floating narrative in the following
             passage: “It's not easy for me, you know. Signifier. Nothing? Traces.
              A footprint in the sand. Leading to no particular place, with no
             apparent 
        purpose. I'm floating on the geist, if I'm floating at all. Drift, isn't
              it?” (63). In this passage, the narrator pointedly connects his
              story  to the words “float” and “drift.” There is “no apparent
              purpose” in the 
        story. That is, there is no predetermined destination controlled by an
               omniscient, god-like author. In fact, the reader is told later
              that he 
        is the one who determines the destination: “you’re the one in the paint
         shop who blends it all together” (63). The reader becomes the producer
          of the text, the person who organizes the story and determines where
         and 
        when the text begins and ends.  “The Meddlesome Passenger”—despite
          its irreverent and meddling narrator—is a serious piece of
         hypertext fiction that is clearly designed to engage with Barthes’ concept
          of the writerly text. The story itself is the story of the death of
         the 
        author. The reader is forced from page one to write his own story. Rettberg
          uses links and other interactive devices to force the reader to interact
         
        with and, to some extent, write the story. The links are also used to
          construct subtexts to the story or to draw direct thematic connections
         
        between reading and consuming. Rettberg and his narrator want us to know
          that, without an author, we are free to mix, blend, read, and write
         stories 
        as we see fit.  
 *Rettberg’s 
        short story is divided into 70 pages of varying length, each of which 
        can be accessed through the left hand side of the story’s interface. I 
        have used MLA style in-text citations to reference the text. An in-text 
        citation that reads “(Rettberg 53)” means that the text was taken from 
        page 53 of the short story. back to text  
 Works Cited Rettberg, Scott. “The Meddlesome 
        Passenger.” May 2002. Beehive. April 2003 <http://beehive.temporalimage.com/content_apps51/app_b.html> |