"I have written a lot about snakes. There's something pretty primordial about it"
About this Quote
Snakes are doing double duty here: a literal subject Laurie Anderson keeps returning to, and a shorthand for the deep-time circuitry her work likes to plug into. When she says she’s written “a lot” about them, it’s delivered with that dry, almost tossed-off specificity that’s central to her persona: the cool narrator who sounds like she’s reporting a minor obsession, while quietly admitting it’s a lifelong theme.
“Primordial” is the tell. Anderson isn’t praising snakes as beautiful or misunderstood; she’s pointing to the way they bypass taste and go straight to the nervous system. Snakes trigger a pre-verbal mix of fascination and alarm. That’s why they’re so useful in art that’s interested in how stories get under the skin: fear as a kind of ancient software, myth as inherited memory, the body as a recording device. In Anderson’s hands, the snake becomes an instrument for thinking about language itself: how meaning slithers, how a sentence can seduce, how a voice can hypnotize.
There’s also a quiet cultural critique baked in. A “primordial” symbol is a rebuke to the idea that we’re purely rational, modern creatures. Anderson’s work often stages high-tech environments (electronics, media, systems) only to reveal the older instincts humming beneath them. The snake is the perfect emblem for that collision: sleek, minimal, nearly alien, yet older than any of our explanations.
“Primordial” is the tell. Anderson isn’t praising snakes as beautiful or misunderstood; she’s pointing to the way they bypass taste and go straight to the nervous system. Snakes trigger a pre-verbal mix of fascination and alarm. That’s why they’re so useful in art that’s interested in how stories get under the skin: fear as a kind of ancient software, myth as inherited memory, the body as a recording device. In Anderson’s hands, the snake becomes an instrument for thinking about language itself: how meaning slithers, how a sentence can seduce, how a voice can hypnotize.
There’s also a quiet cultural critique baked in. A “primordial” symbol is a rebuke to the idea that we’re purely rational, modern creatures. Anderson’s work often stages high-tech environments (electronics, media, systems) only to reveal the older instincts humming beneath them. The snake is the perfect emblem for that collision: sleek, minimal, nearly alien, yet older than any of our explanations.
Quote Details
| Topic | Writing |
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