"To write is to become disinterested. There is a certain renunciation in art"
About this Quote
Writing, for Burgess, is a kind of self-administered cold shower: the moment you turn lived experience into sentences, you step out of it. “Disinterested” isn’t boredom; it’s the old aesthetic ideal of detachment, the ability to look at human mess with a steady hand. The line flatters no romantic myths about art as pure self-expression. It insists on craft as a discipline that takes your private heat and turns it into something shareable, structured, and therefore less yours.
The “renunciation” is the price of admission. To make art, you give up certain comforts: the right to remain the hero of your own story, the indulgence of moral certainty, even the immediacy of feeling. Burgess’s novels often treat consciousness like a machine you can take apart and reassemble, with language as the screwdriver. A Clockwork Orange is the obvious exhibit: he renounces easy empathy by filtering brutality through a musical, invented slang, forcing the reader into an uncomfortable complicity while keeping the authorial voice cool. The detachment is ethical as much as aesthetic; it resists propaganda, including the propaganda of one’s own emotions.
Context matters here: Burgess was a linguist, a composer manque, and a public intellectual who distrusted sanctimony. Postwar Britain offered plenty of reasons to be “interested” in the crude sense - political camps, moral panics, culture war certainties. His claim is that serious art requires refusing those easy alignments. The writer renounces not life, but the desire to possess it unmediated. The reward is paradoxical: by stepping back, you see more.
The “renunciation” is the price of admission. To make art, you give up certain comforts: the right to remain the hero of your own story, the indulgence of moral certainty, even the immediacy of feeling. Burgess’s novels often treat consciousness like a machine you can take apart and reassemble, with language as the screwdriver. A Clockwork Orange is the obvious exhibit: he renounces easy empathy by filtering brutality through a musical, invented slang, forcing the reader into an uncomfortable complicity while keeping the authorial voice cool. The detachment is ethical as much as aesthetic; it resists propaganda, including the propaganda of one’s own emotions.
Context matters here: Burgess was a linguist, a composer manque, and a public intellectual who distrusted sanctimony. Postwar Britain offered plenty of reasons to be “interested” in the crude sense - political camps, moral panics, culture war certainties. His claim is that serious art requires refusing those easy alignments. The writer renounces not life, but the desire to possess it unmediated. The reward is paradoxical: by stepping back, you see more.
Quote Details
| Topic | Writing |
|---|
More Quotes by Anthony
Add to List




