network, Arachnean and other texts (Deligny)
1
"The random chances of existence have led me to live within a network rather than otherwise, by which I mean in another mode.
A network is a mode of being.
It doesn’t take much – a simple passage from masculine to feminine – for le mode, mode of being or doing, to become la mode, trend or fashion; the word remains the same but the thing evoked is no longer the same thing.
Thus I have lived through the random chances of existence in a network rather than otherwise, and in the randomness of what I choose to read there is always some sort of network to be found.
It’s a bit like the story of the nook in the wall and the spider that ended up meeting: if the spider indeed sought out the nook, we may also say that the nook was waiting.
And it is true that I sometimes reach the point of telling myself that a network is waiting for me at every turn. The specific network of which I speak, our network, is almost fifteen years old – which, for a network, is quite an advanced age – and its project is to bring autistic children into close contact.
These days I wonder if this project is not a pretense, the true project being the network itself, which is a mode of being.
Actually, networks abound, and it does seem as though their proliferation reaches its peak in moments when historical events – which according to Friedrich Engels are products of a blind, unconscious form – are intolerable, and it must be said that historical events are endowed with a propensity for being intolerable.
Thus there are events that grow, as we say a tree grows, or the walls of a house rise, and there are networks that spin and weave themselves like so many spider webs, in nooks and in the forks of trees; until birds pass by, or a housekeeper’s broom.
I have always had the utmost respect for spiders; today, I can tell myself that this was a matter of intuition. There must be some mistake in the signs of the Zodiac: mine is supposed to be Scorpio, but I am convinced that I was born under the sign of the spider.
I was predestined for my work; from my earliest years I have always had some network to weave."