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Pig

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A triptych of interconnected short works of alternative fiction comprises Jeff Nuttall’s Pig, which was first published in 1969, shortly after his landmark cultural study, Bomb Culture. ‘I’ll manage some voices next time,’ says a character in ‘The Train’, but in fact a gallery cast of voices and characters emerges throughout the work that includes ‘The Rain’ as well as ‘The Coast’. There’s Jurgens, Mrs Flanders, Mickey/Mickey Boy/Mike Flanders, Andrew Hand, Doctor Gnome, Elvira Death, Miss Fawnfoot, George Gland (‘a man who looks like a pig’), and others, all painted onto a tableaux that ranges from the coast to the pub, from the doctor’s surgey to the train lines of the north, from east London to the Midlands. Rich in language that is finely nuanced, as in all Jeff Nuttall’s work, Pig ultimately goes to the heart of the human condition. Befitting the period in which it was constructed, it also reflects the work of other champions of experimentation, such as Gysin, Beilles, and of course William S Burroughs whose work Nuttall was the first to promote in the United Kingdom.
‘A beautiful and unique structure…. Jeff Nuttall touches his words’
William S Burroughs


‘Jeff Nuttall… was a catalyst, perpetrator and champion of rebellion and experiment’
Michael Horowitz

96 pages, Hardcover

First published April 4, 2013

26 people want to read

About the author

Jeff Nuttall

64 books9 followers
'Performance artist, poet, novelist, jazz musician, teacher, theorist, painter and sculptor, Jeff Nuttall is the only all-round genius most of us are likely to meet in our lifetime. And let the sceptic beware: this is no exaggeration. His talents usually control at the limits of human exuberance. His skills are both highly local and deeply embedded in European twentieth-century arts. In a culture exemplified by tepidly isolated skills, greed, pop repetitions and art trivia, Jeff Nuttall's work is bracing and joyful, celebrating another world of values, ones that last.'
Eric Mottram (Notes for CALDERDALE LANDSCAPES exhibition at ANGELA FLOWERS GALLERY, London 1987)

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