Truth and Consequences in Evolution

Evolutionary theory is presented in its truth, not in its consequences. As theory, it presents the consequences of natural relations, and calls this “history,” and yet it never inquires into its consequences as theory. Truth-value supersedes and conceals effect as criterion for acceptance. This should be called its truth-structure. It remains to be investigated why and how evolutionary theory in particular has this truth-structure and why and how metaphysico-theology does not. This would be a genealogical, not natural-historical, as well as a logical and linguistic investigation.

the uncandy

The celebrity seduces, and every seduction must be taken seriously. For it is never the known and familiar pleasure, but the promise of an unknown pleasure, that seduced; even, perhaps, the pleasure of the unknown. Happiness is the name for this promise of pleasure. Every age has its own happiness, its own seductions: these are felt everywhere in the suspension of their realization, but recognized, if at all, only at the peripheries. Thus the celebrity comes to us in dreams.

Yet these dreams can be interpreted only in the sobriety of philosophical reflection. Hence the strange power of the music video, of music television (music television, the vision of music from afar — an unfathomed dialectical subtlety hides here): that odd companion to my adolescence. Not just sober revelry, Apollo and Dionysus, the tragedy packaged, made consumable: like those candied apples that in my childhood my mother forbade me to eat.

Brian Wilson composed “California Girls” while tripping for the first time. The most powerful utopian vision is never subtle, yet it is born of terror. And perhaps psychedelic drugs, at least in late capitalism, had little to do with exploring consciousness, and everything to do with dangling at the threshold between the divinatory and the childish — like Alice in Wonderland, the Nutcracker, or Charlie and the Chocolate Factory— bringing to its fulfillment a  motif born in the furnaces of industrial capitalism. The ground beneath our feet, the walls of our house, becomes edible. The commodities begin to dance. And if the Christmas sweet, hidden away in cardboard chambers and meted out with the days of the month, was the only form of eschatology that could insinuate itself into an absolutely secular upbringing, then perhaps only this remains of the Christian God: a sugar daddy.

Uncanny, the uncandy. A bad pun, no doubt: but it gives a name to this feeling that grips me as I watch this video for the Nth time, trying to trace out the slight, strange, sinuous convulsions in that resonance machine of a soul that has already been infiltrated, and left tender, by world spirit.

Fine, fresh, fierce — the triune aspect not only of the commodity come to life, and the flesh turned into commodity, but a moment of revelation. Not to be ignored is the contradictory nature of these attributes: what could be at once refined and savage, fresh and yet processed, new to the world like a child and yet already inducted into its ways. At once consumer and consumed. Hence the numbing repetition of a candied-over fellation: oral intercourse, in which the delectable becomes delector, is the iconic gesture of late capitalism.

disjecta membra dexteri

The novelization, dramatization, and serialization of the serial killer is perhaps the last expression of a genuinely epic form. The serial killer, as it were, is an epic hero without an epic world, and without the least trace of a world-renewing idealism. His gestures are artistic and creative, and stand precisely opposed to the interpretive labors of the detective. But the creativity of giving form, precisely because it can only give form and not content to life, has no place in the world. Thus it can only appear as the destruction of bare life.

The ideology of the present consists in the forced choice between nature and nurture; genetics and environment. The only freedom still permitted is the choice between two determinisms. Ideology means, above all, being condemned to make this choice; forced to choose how to annihilate oneself. The great rigor of Dexter consists in its insistence that the serial killer is neither born nor made, but born again. The birth of the serial killer is baptism in blood. Murder follows a logic of proselytization, and initiation.

The three murders of the trinity killer, the series within the series of killings in a series about a serial killer, provide a dissection of the crucifixion: bleeding from the wounds, height and falling, and the hammering of the nails. And the first in series, discovered last —the  burying alive of young boy at the moment he takes on the name of  the killer— is the rebirth that follows death.  An incomparable theological rigor, and rigor mortis, is at work here.

The trinity killer’s sister Vera died in the bathtub. She was taking a shower when, startled at the sight of her brother peaking at her from behind the door, she fell. The glass partition shattered, cutting her leg, and she bleeds out almost instantly. The serial killer is born is his sister’s baptism in blood.  The Suendenfall begins, once again, with shame at one’s nakedness, but this time mediated through the doubled gaze of voyeur caught in the act.

Vera — does it mean faith (as in Russian), or truth? Either way, and perhaps the double entendre alone is decisive, what matters most is that it is sutured to Venus, the name of her favorite song, the haunting masterpiece of a young Frankie Avalon.  Venus: the goddess whose nature is so ambiguous that one could only surmise, as in the Symposium, that she is not one but two — earthly and heavenly.  Is it truth and beauty, or faith and love: the serial killer is poised on he threshold between the pagan and the Christian.

The song, played from a single on the sort of turntable that a child might have had in his bedroom, is the quintessence of that uncannyness peculiar to American suburbia of the late fifties and early sixties. And he plays it to his victim  in a bomb shelter. With the threat of nuclear oblivion hanging in the air, one burrowed into the earth — as if Kafka’s mole had anticipated the air-raid siren that was implemented in World War II, heard in its silence throughout the cold war, and finally rendered irrelevant in the age of terrorism.

First his sister dies accidentally, then his mother commits suicide, and finally he bludgeons his father to death: first Zufall, then Fall, then Ueberfallen. Could it be that the ever-repeated series of serial killers provide a Gliederung of Verfallenheit? But if his family shattered so easily with one wayward glance, was it not because death was in the air. Already in Homer, epic narrative begins with the — Dionysian — suspension of Apollonian Luftkrieg.  Epic might again be possible in the post-nuclear holocaust, — this is the premise of so much science fiction —, but the threat of nuclear war evacuated the world of all epic qualities. In Homer death has its poignancy because it was looked at with childish awe, even by those who did its work, as an affront to life and joy. With nuclear war, death has consumed everything, and what remains of life is only a sort of surreal afterlife. The serial killer revives epic by creating one more death : individual, personal, even, in its way, sincere. A death so superfluous that it cannot but demand, in its turn, a refusal of the superfluity of individual life.

Was Frankie Avalon the last, in the history of Western poetry, to invoke a pagan goddess, and none other than Venus, with such sincerity? It is no accident that the trinity killer’s song would tie up, in this way, to the Latin epic of Lucretius and Virgil.  Perhaps it is only then, at the verge of the venereal revolution, that desire, ambiguously sexual and romantic, could take the form of prayer.  To think that a teenage boy could be alone in his bed and dream of a beautiful woman without masturbating takes a power of imagination of which no one is capable anymore. (In how many sitcoms, since Seinfeld, after all, does masturbation appear as the transcendental signified that fills out every void in  meaning?).  Thus the words of Frankie’s chaste prayer to Venus can only appear, with a half a century elapsed, sinister and perverse:

Hey, Venus! Oh, Venus!
Hey, Venus! Oh, Venus!

Venus, if you will
Please send a little girl for me to thrill
A girl who wants my kisses and my arms
A girl with all the charms of you

Venus, make her fair
A lovely girl with sunlight in her hair
And take the brightest stars up in the skies
And place them in her eyes for me

Venus, goddess of love that you are
Surely the things I ask
Can’t be too great a task

Venus, if you do
I promise that I always will be true
I’ll give her all the love I have to give
As long as we both shall live

Hey, Venus! Oh, Venus!
Make my dreams come true

Hey, Venus! Oh, Venus!

The haunting power of these lyrics has everything to do with the fact that the serial killer is, in his way, a hero of fidelity. Repetition compulsion is memorialization.  But above all, the serial killer is faithful to details. The Miniature Killer in CSI, endowed with a preternatural memory, leaves behind an exact replica of the scene of the crime.  (Not incidentally, both the Miniature Killer and the Trinity Killer are born when one sibling — from jealousy or incest — kills the other.  In each case, biblical motifs come to the fore) The detective also partakes of this fidelity, but in their case it is negative and reactive. Only the serial killer creates details.

Did Adam and Eve take a last look around when the left the garden of Eden? One imagines that they were too busy getting their affairs in order. Too preoccupied with the uncertain future that awaited them, they did not think how important in might be, in the future, to remember what paradise had looked like. They did not realize that a precise memory of the most fleeting details might have sustained them in their despair. The descriptive poverty of the Torah testifies to this oversight, and the human race still suffers its consequences. Perhaps all our poetry, at its most sublime, is just filling in the blanks. And so too the serial killer, in his fidelity to details, gives us an imagined memory of the paradise that only comes into being with its destruction.

Dare to go mad

The most important and overlooked aspect of Nietzsche’s so-called madness is the question what sanity would mean, in Nietzsche’s case. This in turn would depend on a general idea of the health of the psyche and the powers of a whole mind. The debate over whether Nietzsche was actually mad, or just feigning, or about the nature and origin of his madness is a false path, designed to lead you away from the heart of the matter. When you compare it to the simple question: is anyone who writes not mad?—a species of the question: is anyone not mad, and, in turn, how many madnesses are there—this reproach, this label, this stigma, this smear that amounts to a poor biologicization of biography clearly disregards Nietzsche’s own theory of the soul as an agon of wills, his theory of human dispositions under the nihilistic state of submission to “knowledge” in Europe, and his exposure of all the false claims about mind and spirit that go along with philosophy and Christianity. Madness is as inexistent as the Geist that it is supposed to afflict. The question is whether we, born this late, have any better chance of understanding Nietzsche’s mad texts, early and late. In point of fact, the later texts become progressively less mad, in comparison, let’s say, to Zarathustra or BGE, the maddest and most maddening.

One would like to recommend psychotherapy not to Nietzsche but to critics obsessed with his madness. Perhaps, with time, they would come to see their obsession as a reflection of their own fears that the great mind, their ego-ideal, will have utterly let them down.

How willing are we to be driven mad? This is the bittingest question.

Nameless History

There is no history of history; that is an illusion and a pernicious one. Any historiography that represents itself as a history of history or a representation of all histories that have been constructed or all types of history has failed to understand history’s basic gesture, to recast everything in a different shape, with different meanings, different relations, different orders, and different tendencies, such that historiography would be one among many meanings, relations, orders, tendencies, one in which everything is again recast, and thus it wouldn’t represent anything about the histories it claimed to represent, each of which would have presented its viewpoint as unique and total, inclusive of everything worthy of including. The one thing, we could say, that a history can never do is represent events as autonomous and whole. This prohibition applies to itself above all. History is total, but it cannot show it, and especially if, in these democratic times, it seeks to represent itself as one viewpoint among others. Nevertheless, it offers us a whole of which other viewpoints are elements of its holism, and not accidents, tangents, chaff, or invisible things, non-beings. Even the most distanced views of history writing—like much of what goes under the name of “philosophy of history”—that claim to include what was excluded from other moments, from other historiographies, itself makes another totalizing and exclusive perspective. The task for the theorist of history, for the thinker about history, is to describe this peculiar refusal of an overview without pretending to give it an image or even perhaps a name. We should rigorously distinguish this from the concepts of history, progressive certainly, that show its general shape to be something like a set of shifting constellations or a movement between dispersal and collection, construction and destruction, or any universal, any structure. On the contrary, such absorption, revision, and totalization, underlined by a recurring amnesia differs fundamentally from a universal, a form, or an idea. Precisely how remains to be formulated. Even Derrida can’t. Neither difference nor différance achieve this. Both of these noble words are spoken in too much ignorance, too much knowledge.

One chance

The tricky situation in which historians, but also artists, as well as speakers of the language find themselves, even when they don’t see it, should be put in the form of a strong injunction. Go through what has been or it will have already gone through you. This is not just a more refined version of Santayana’s much quoted curse. It refuses the alternative he gives, which is not to repeat what has been. This is plainly impossible. You will repeat, so repeat with the utmost attention to detail and make it impossible to forget, and your repetition becomes inimitable and what’s more, singular. Do it again for the first time, this is the somewhat intricate demand. We could conjecture that weak engagements with the past almost always have multiple analogues that precede them, analogues that are barely distinguishable precisely because they repeat incautious repeating. Perhaps this is the origin of the infamous “everyday,” which, arising in a passionless act of history, thinks it is new, since it cannot think that how it moves, looks, does, is done to is not. But these are all citations; stop and cite something, something else even. Guillotine the past or it will guillotine you. This may be your only chance.

When it all happened

The great mistake of the historian of ideas or the intellectual historian is not to be at the same time an historian of words. What a combination that would be! Given: these things are often at odds. Ask an historian what is meant by history in this sentence or that; this should be enough to get at the problem. Put coarsely, words don’t have ideas’ staying power or the intellect’s unity. Words are vulgar, fleeting, shifty; they are chaff to be beaten off until the kernel is bared. How many times must we witness this gruesome spectacle, the all-out race for the ktéma es aei?

One sign of bad philology (and bad writing) in intellectual history is an abundance of lists—author names, book titles, conceptual terms. This alone is a kind of word magic. Seeing the names together on the page evokes a pleasant feeling of solidarity between them in the reader. Just so, when Sartre, Levinas, Blanchot, Kojève, and “of course” also Heidegger critique or refute “humanism” (this word, these many words)—in a recent book positing a history or trend of ‘anti-humanism’—the positions get established through condensation, established for the first time, i might add, for the first time, we could say, for the first time again. Certainly in the sentence that links them they seem established for the first time altogether and once and for all. Made into synonyms, homonyms, uninyms, they are then made into shills for the author’s thesis. Who doesn’t write this way? Who doesn’t try to avoid it?

Be that as it may. Someone says that Levinas’s, Sartre’s, Blanchot’s, Kojève’s, and of-course-Heidegger’s “humanism” are the same or even similar enemy or target. There can hardly be a question, however, that their “anti” or “antis” are different, even radically so, and so a variety of relations should be imagined. Some Hegelian, one Kafkan, one perhaps Mosaic, some Heideggerian, probably misunderstood, there are many negations in effect across this list, and, we might add, different no’s from different contexts, with shades and more than shades of unheard of, coming, or arcane Nichts, nots, less-thans, otherwises, and so on.

Who is to say what is similar enough to be described as a trend? Shouldn’t one know what similarity means first? By right as well as by nature this idea alone can be similar to nothing. No one can write a history of similarity, not without, perhaps, going mad. Similarity is the strangest, most worldless, distant thing, unlike anything you’ve known and unlike what you think it might be, if thinking is like making likenesses.

And beyond these irreducible paradoxes, shouldn’t one know what violence the mere assertion of similarity does and be sure of its politics before proceeding? What violations against texts, intentions, oeuvres, traditions, let alone against languages—against them last of all! them last of all?—are allowable? How will the violations be classified and by whom? And if this is asking too much, why is it too much to ask?

One of intellectual history’s great gifts to thought, we could say, taking some liberties with the genre, is unease. It gives, without reservation, the sense that a manifold has been illicitly, at night, behind the watchman’s back and for the good only of the insomniac, against history but moving toward history as its founding crime, stuck together, puttied, and whitewashed. In its hands, one effectively concedes that history produced those thoughts, not writers, languages, or other contingencies. This is comforting and also disconcerting, since clearly what is out of place here is the stuck-together whole, in which all the lively discrepancies, whose usual refuge is language, are barely concealed.

The last celebrity

The latest video on YouTube to have gone viral: Jewel, her appearance obscured, singing her own songs at a Karaoke bar. The celebrity, defeated by reality television, has no choice left, if she is to  preserve her aura, than pass back through the veil of obscurity. She must be born again from the everyday.  One person, we read, “was heard comparing Karen to “an American Susan Boyle.”‘  There was a time when celebrity and the parody of celebrity were still separate, even if the parodist could become a celebrity in his own right. Now they have collapsed almost into one.  In a gesture ripe with the futility of the Endzeit, celebrity has become its own parody.  A question of no small significance for the philosophy of history: what is the significance of this last sliver, now perished, of the seriousness of the life of the people?

Dephotography

This peculiar and so popular act, the act of _taking_ a photo as one says in English, rips a piece out of the world and makes it into a thing. Without fail, there is one thing, most often at or near the center, in a photograph. Even those photographs destined to remain undeveloped or stay in files have this quality of storing a thing, separated, sifted, withdrawn from interaction, weighed, and set aside for later. Any aspect of any place, any node in an operating relay, a shade of a meaningful conjunct, loop in a pattern, etc. can be uprooted and added to your trove. Focus, zoom, exposure, capture, frame, among other words, indicate the amount of thought behind the scopic mechanics of the act of photography: reduction and removal that make available for reflection, examination, analysis and other abstractions. Almost no matter what the wielder of the camera does, there is always a subject, and almost always a single subject, of a photograph, in a way that is not true of painting, and much less of the other arts. Perhaps this has to do with the transparency of photographic style. Even in cases where it reflects on this obsession and plays with it, photography holds out a target and shoots it, be it other photographs, or people with cameras, or windows that frame their own subjects, these framed in turn by the ironic shutter, whose opening is always followed by shutting. When it becomes art, photography strains against its shutter. It ceases to imagine itself as shooting, focusing, framing out, or closing in. Freed from the compulsion to depict, it leaves things, like memory does, barely distinguishable in places and circling in relays outside themselves.

Another way to say something similar: dephotography does not let the eye rest, even within the putative edges of the frame, but makes you circle around and slip in and out.

Photographs by Dan Abbe ~ http://street-level.mcvmcv.net/

Timeless Art

There are artworks that seem less of their time than of ours. To us, it is as though they transcended the difference. Still, only our narcissism makes us call them timeless.

On Standpoint in Criticism

Following an unwritten rule critics must take into account their position vis a vis the cultural objects they write about. Today this often means telling a story about a personal interaction with it. “When I first read Huck Fin…” “In Rome I saw Titian’s portrait of…” The first person pronoun is the minimum of reflection on standpoint in contemporary criticism. It makes an empirical encounter between an individual and an artwork the paramount relation, in the framework of a lifetime, for a person influenced by predilections (for novels, ice cream, The Stones), plans (higher education, intellectual avocation, dayjob), and accidents (fads, anti-fads). The personal standpoint determines an enormous amount of writing on the internet, but also operates with surprising frequency in the “review” form in edited newspapers and magazines. In this kind of criticism, as happens so often in American discourse, authority for what is said derives almost exclusively from the personality of the author. Celebrities, then, make the highest critics, because their experience is the most real, and criticism becomes a species of gospel, a report on the divine. Other sources of authority, not to mention constraints on it, as well as the sources for this illusion of authority itself, remain concealed.

Reflection on the idea of standpoint in criticism can lead us toward the origins of this tendency. For one thing, there is less risk in presenting critical remarks as personal, as issuing from a person, because no one can argue with the content. Personal criticism has all the marks of doxa in a democratic milieu. It represents itself as one among a plurality of opinions, fallible and susceptible to corruption, the expression of an internal and thus unverifiable content of mind or soul, one different perspective on an object that itself does not differ, and, in the most extreme instance, a claim to a right, the right to freedom. To attack the personal reference in criticism is to seem to attack freedom of expression, and thus to attack the person him or herself in the heart of her personhood.

We could trace this structure to the fracturing of the confessions in post-reformation Europe. In the priesthood of believers, sacred was not only my right to confer directly with God but also my idiosyncratic manner of doing it. Anabaptists immersed themselves twice, Quakers quaked, and believers related to God through Their own souls. Drawing its rules from the interpretation of scripture, this mode of criticism evokes the freedom of confession and at the same time enforces a dogmatic resistance to criticism each time it says “I.” Personal criticism is as uncriticizable as faith. To reflect on the origins of this stance, let alone to reject it outright, seems in the best case tasteless (a senseless attack on another’s taste) and in the worst case a violation of the rights of man.

The problem with this somewhat elevated standard is that the personal and confessional, barricaded in its bastion of belief and right, conceals questions of historical and intellectual importance. Why choose this manner of speaking, this mode of authority, this cultural object, and why choose them now? Insofar as the answers go without saying, it is not, strictly speaking, criticism. To a large extent the metaphor “standpoint” misleads us and belongs to this democratization of belief. A truly historical or intellectual criticism might use the terms context, epoch, influence, system, drawing its authority, rather than from belief, from knowledge, reasoning, speculation, and invention; it might well seem unauthorized, as though it issued from a less than reputable source, and it may be very difficult to pass around.

To be sure, there are times when a personal standpoint is critical and criticizable, but this only happens when, through historical or intellectual circumstances, the personal mode becomes objectively critical. Augustine comes to mind. Factors both intrinsic to his method and arising from the context in which he wrote made confession an historical turn about and a critical intervention, a turn against the normal attitude in Christian thinking and an intervention in writing practices, not to mention in theories of memory and time. The factors that make the personal critical in this book are too many to go into, but one salient factor should be mentioned. The conversation between one single confessor and God is anything but private, anything but tucked away safe in the soul. Augustine unfolds his soul in order to demonstrate the nothing inside it, nothing, that is, except for the most public questions about what should be inside it and isn’t. The difference, we could say, between a confession like Augustine’s and confessional criticism is that the former dedicates all its energies to exposing each and every motivation, conceit, assumption, error, and paradox in the seeming personal relationship, in order to illuminate the prior structure that creates it. The latter, in contrast, bathes these in the sheen of normalcy, as if there were nothing prior.

Let us try to write impersonal criticism, which has at least three modalities. In the first modality, the cultural object historicizes itself; I do not show where I stand, I let the text or film or image show its stance in relation to a tradition or a series of other works that share an author, an age, a discipline, a method, or style, in short by repetition and difference. We see what has become of our past by peering into a work that makes it again, repeats it. A work, in this view, crystallizes a fraction of the past, and reading it can tell us a little something about the fate of all we hold dear. Almost automatically in this mode one reflects on the choice of object. Historically speaking, the object is not presented as the choice of the critic, however; it appears as a decision of history and the result of a virtually infinite series of events, some accidental, such as an artist’s birth, some essential, such as the books an author read. A critical object is always self-justifying, no matter how much the critic must work to demonstrate the self-justification of the object.

In the second modality, not fully separable from the first, the object destroys itself and abandons its autonomy. Insofar as no one sees it, the artwork remains itself. Yet artworks are crystal balls in whose surfaces the reflection of the looker and the refraction of the image projected out of the past overlap. Criticism must read the mixed image as a whole, for it will no longer be sifted. Nevertheless it must break the new, critical object down into its elements, analyze it to pieces. Why? Because we do not see the work, we see our figures, distorted, in it, looking back toward our gaze. This is our only mirror, our only history, this distortion our only chance to piece together an image of our desires, however partial, twisted, or false.

The third modality is the oddest, yet it is also the most purely critical. Criticism of critics has the potential to expose the assumptions behind a standpoint, behind the concept of standpoint, beyond the concept of criticism; it has the power to reveal the structure of history assumed in a critical gesture. Critiquing the critics, this is the most desirable and the most undesirable act.

Coincidence and Intellectual Character

Two unexpected ways to place intellectual work.

1. Trace intellectual identities to one text or even a passage in a text that formed them, even perhaps without their express knowledge. This is Rober Bresson’s idea, when, in Diary of a Country Priest, he has the old wise priest tell the young martyr priest that all religious men can be known by the part of the Gospels they begin from. On hearing this theory, the young priest recognizes instantly that all his personal and doctrinal problems stem from his spiritual origin, to be found in John 18. In the olive grove where Jesus is betrayed, his suffering style of thinking gets its shape.

2. Know what a writer was reading immediately before or while producing a text. Having just read Plato’s Sophist, for example, Hegel wrote the greater logic. Having just read Sei Shonagon, one might surmise, Borges wrote the “Library of Babel.” Did W. V. O. Quine write From a Logical Point of View having just read The Catcher in the Rye? What was Derrida reading while he wrote Grammatology? Gibbon while he wrote his Rise and Fall? Was it Tennyson? Hayek The Road to Serfdom? Could it have been Finegan’s Wake?

lady gaga

Eternity used to fall upon the work like a shooting star: this was so for Homer, but Virgil made eternity his work. Then Ovid, in his teasing, bitter melancholy, fixed the star of eternity back in its place, and made the work the place of its birth.

Can this dialectical thread guide us through the labyrinth of popular music?What has changed is this: the new technologies of reproduction at once promise absolute ephemerality and absolute permanence. Information, completely disposable, is also completely in-disposable.  The tension between the two moments, which once had been kept apart through the distance separating performance and reception, has collapsed. It is now a torsion, involved in every moment. Before the theme of the work (think of Achilles’ dilemma)  served as a commentary on this tension: now there is nothing but this tension, and every mood resonates with it.

(Hölderlin saw this with great clarity, and his theory of tonal alteration was nothing less than an attempt to save a certain classical form  from within this collapse.)

Beyond Hölderlin there is only this: the abandonment of nature as the naive point of return.  This is where Baudelaire begins. Popular music comes into its own only when it can do the same: otherwise it remains either “classic rock” or crap.  Was Michael Jackson the first, or was it David Bowie, or Queen? Crucial were two things: the suffusion of rock with fashion, and the rejection of heterosexual norms. (The naive-natural moment in rock has always been bound up with a certain exaggeration of male virility and female passivity. This is the one naturalness that you could still hope to find even in the most desolate industrial waste-lands)  Many followed, and perhaps some came before. The history of this transformation remains to be written.

But at the end of this history, who else may we hope to find than Lady Gaga —this big monster, a patron of so many little monsters, born between the city of cities and the primordial, Saturnine dilapidation of the Jersey shore.

For doesn’t she bring us back to Baudelaire.  The carapace of fashion, taken to a pitch of apocalyptic brutality, encases her body. Around her orbit a rococo collage of disjointed emblems of luxury and technology. Science fiction again finds its home in the Baroque.  But an eye of almost infinite tenderness and sad intimacy gleams out : and glimpses herself, in her passing.  As if in a decaying city that has spread out over everything, she, at once the one who will last only a moment and the immortal eye of fame, had a chance encounter with herself.

Or de Sade: but one for whom Justine, that un-breached citadel of virtue and Innigkeit, has become her own tormentor. (But wasn’t she, unknown to herself, this already) But perhaps this justly perverse auto-eroticism is also the last reservoir of the one form of naturalness that still haunts us.  The last revanant of Christianity.  Did she not tell King Larry, that crafty Aesopian fox who brings everything down to earth, that her desire to be a performer originated in her mother’s womb, which is to say, with reception and conception? Her mother’s, or Madonna’s…

electrocardiogram

I remember certain devices from my childhood, already relics then and even more so now, which exerted a sinister if oblique charm that removed them far from the spheres of ordinary life.  You put your hand somewhere, a touch was necessary: and it gave you a reading — a message on an index card, typed in some office far away, foretelling your future, perfectly arbitrary. There is still one of these, I think, tucked away in a curiosity shop in New Hope, floating in the midst of  absurd costumes, memorabilia, kitsch, and obscene gags.

The EKG has this charm. I always ask the nurse or doctor to show me the printout; though not for the strange squiggles from the many leads, which for the initiated would contain a wealth of information, but for the few words, the computer’s own interpretation, and the final verdict: “Normal EKG” or “Abnormal EKG.”  Or sometime: “Otherwise normal EKG.” Medically, this can only mislead. It is not yet “confirmed” by the doctor. But still, for the moment, the doctor, the master of medical knowledge, has become unnecessary.

The language of the descriptions fascinates: “Atrial Fibrillation,” “Atrial Flutter,” “Normal Sinus Rhythm, “Tachycardia,” “Brachycardia,” “1st degree block,” “2nd degree block (Mobitz I), “Premature Atrial Contractions,” “Frequent Premature Ventrical Contractions with Bigeminy (is this a cross of bigamy and hegemony), “Nonspecific Abnormal ST interval.”  Other readings await those less fortunate. The first poetry, it has been said, was the rhythmic language of the rhythms of life. This is perhaps too romantic to believe any more. Still: could one not say that this purely technical language is itself a kind of Urpoesie: giving voice to the most central rhythm of the body, teasing them out from the heart. Here the romantic dreams of Galvanism, of dead flesh brought to life with a shock, find their more sober sense.  No need to make monsters: we are them already. And the machine is also a kind of monster-oracle: transforming noise into prophesy.

patience

Doctors, Socrates explains, speaks differently to slaves and the free-born.  To the latter they only prescribe and command; only with the former is it necessary to explain the cause of disease and the nature of the cure, and to persuade them of the need for the given remedy. This distinction is critical: it has everything to do with the nature of philosophy, and the logos.  But above all it suggests the political decisions and distinctions that underly metaphysics. If philosophy is a kind of therapy, this does not allow us — as the analytic tradition wants us to believe — to look past the historical and political dimensions, or the need for decisions and interpretations that defy positivist grounding.  Philosophy is a therapy, perhaps; but every therapy begins with a decision, which for the most part it finds itself already thrown into, about what it means to therepeuein, and who the subject is whose health, and what health, is to be achieved.

But the decision now, nevertheless, is not the same one that Socrates’s doctor faced. The distinction between the free and the enslaved can no longer be made in the same way, and not only because, under the economic conditions of capitalism, these categories no longer have the same binding force. It is also because the expansion of technological knowledge, and its saturation of our very notion of self, world, and action, has made it clear that, in vast realms of our existence, we can no longer hope to fully understand the forces at work in us.  The self-willed stupidity of metaphysics — Socrates was very clear about this in the Phaedo consisted in accepting as an explanation only the sorts of things that could be grasped by reasoning, and thus disregarding material causes in all their vast complexity.  But this subterfuge, without which philosophical rigor would have never been possible, has been called increasingly into question.

The logic of technology, of instrumental reason, and of bare life, comes down, in the end, to this: we are neither free or enslaved, no line of demarcation between the two is possible, since we are free in our enslavement and enslaved in our freedom. The soul, which in its immortality, separation, and divinity had been the guarantee of our freedom, has dispersed completely into the body. But if the soul, for Socrates, could become assured in its freedom merely by  understanding the true, non-material nature of causality, the body-soul becomes free through submission to the necessity that governs over it through the mystifying, but never absolutely mysterious, process of life.  Knowledge of life is fateful precisely because it is possible: the wondrous agency of God, who could enter through the cracks of a perfect opacity, has been excluded by a limited transparency.

Modern medicine is a practice not only for doctors, but for patients. And it is for the latter, rather than the former, that it gains its fullest significance. The doctor, qua doctor, is shielded from medicine in his or her very activity as agent. Needed then, more than anything, is a phenomenology of patient-hood; of patience — of the practice of an active suffering.

There are no facts, only interpretations. True. But one could just as easily say: there are no interpretations, only facts. The boundary between facts and interpretations is fluid, though not imprecise, and the difference can only be conceived in relation to time. An interpretation is a fact in the process of becoming; a fact an interpretation that confronts us in its having-already-been-made.

The aim of critique is to immerse the facticity of facts in the openness of interpretation. But this task loses all meaning when the identity of fact and interpretation, the desideratum of criticism, has been taken as a done deal, a fait accompli.

To expose a fact to interpretation is not to make it cease to exist as a fact; let alone to turn it into something subjective. The interpretation does not  change the facts, but gives them a sense that they did not, could not, have. The fact, nevertheless, can only exist in the light of this sense. And yet: only as a fact. Hard to grasp is this: that it is facts, in their facticity, that must be thought in light of interpretations. Just as it is interpretations, in their nature as interpretations, that can only be thought in reference to facts.

If criticism does not pass through the resistance of the factual — the otherness of the text — it can only ever reproduce the superficiality of a glib mindset that take its disillusionment for wisdom and imagines itself relieved by the earnest of history of the need to take anything seriously. But if scholarship does not pass through the digressions of interpretation it is no less senseless.  In reading the text with painstaking, neurotic precision, the scholar commits the hubris of imagining that the text has been written for one like himself.

This critic must always be a scholar; the scholar a critic. The two activities do not coincide, but each, at every point, touches upon the other.

Precision and Scholarship

Interpretation is not for them. They are gone: it is for us, through them. Insofar as we may be them, or made out of them, they are not gone, and the situation grows exponentially more imbricated.

Why, if we believe this, do we ask for precision in scholarship? When we read a text it already conforms to our desires; this is at least partly–some say wholly–why we read it. Precise scholarship, philology if you will–of a certain kind–should help prevent the text from corresponding completely to our desires, or put another way, from being solely a matter of our interpretation. Research is there to find what you do not expect; thus true scholarship should repel us, until, in lucky cases, it transforms our desires. Fashion springs from research.

On the contradiction between scholarship and interpretation, then, we can say that it is not enough to accuse, or confess, that scholarship is a kind of interpretation, according to the rule that everything is interpretation, through and through. For even if we accept this rule, in order for it not to be simply tautological (as opposed to complexly or enfoldedly so), we must admit that there are hues of interpretation, intensities of interpretation, modalities of interpretation, and of course: interpretations of interpretation (the highest instance). So, scholarship is one modality, deconstruction another, critique yet another. How do they relate to one another? In an ideal situation, scholarship relates to critique as an instrument, a tool to gauge its lines more deeply, to shock its opponents, to scare even itself. Scholarship on the notion of critique would do this.

The simple hermeneutic tautology runs something like this: if all facts are interpretations why bother to look for facts? On the contrary, the distinction between facts and interpretations is  crucial and operative and true, but it is a question of modality and of habit. For what is truly irksome about hermeneutics is that, when it gives itself completely over to itself, it loses itself in glibness, repetitiveness, and vacuity. Nothing ever changes if everything is just an interpretation. In contrast, if facts serve interpretations, if the precise, even pedantic or silly minute details of coming to write a text, the author’s private life, education, family history, political activities, and so forth, not to mention the most careful analysis of the marks of the text itself, if these small fulcra are used to shift our interpretations by a millimeter, they will have shifted the world by this much as well, or perhaps more.

One conclusion to be drawn from this is the following: interpreters who scoff at scholars are equally as wrong as the reverse. Another is: both are historical, in the political sense.

the celebrity and the virtuoso

The structure of the celebrity-fetish is simple enough: the virtues of the celebrity are social virtues, qualities that only exist in the medium of social interactions, yet they can only be represented as the special qualities of the exceptional, celebrated individual.

But what are these social virtues? Here things become tricky, and the limits of a Marxist analysis emerge.  The first power of the social, made manifest through celebrity, is not the power of production, but of observation, contemplation. The social is an active sensorium that allows to appear, that opens up, ever anew, the space of appearance and truth.  The illusion of the celebrity is belief that appearance itself could be the work of one.

Plato was not off when he recognized the danger of the magician and wonder-worker, and, in turn, the artist and sophist. But he failed to see that the problem is not the illusory nature of their productions, but their demagogic effacement of the social.  The theory of forms, far from rectifying this error, turned it into an absolute foundation. The philosophical misunderstanding of democracy begins with this.

The celebrity is opposed to the virtuoso.  The celebrity is the master of fashion: they allow the coming to appearance of the new appear as a function of their personal whim. (Fashion is not a change in production, but vision — or rather, it is the insistence that vision is only possible through change and contrast) They allow us to see, hear, and feel things only by grace of their special existence, as if the world would cease if they were no longer there. The virtuoso, in contrast, has enfolded into their body a social mode of production.  The virtuoso offers the solution to a paradox: how is the social vision of social vision possible?

(I hesitate, needless to say, to use the word social, which has become laden with heavy and problematic overtones. Perhaps it would be better to refer to the “distracted” sensorium…)

Paparrazi are to the celebrity as the Socratic gadfly to the ancient polis: they expose its emptiness. It is appropriate, then, that the tool of the paparrazi is the camera, which they wield against the celebrity with the brutal precision of the surgeon’s knife.  Their aim is to get infinitely close to the celebrity, but this is possible only because the celebrity, like the demagogue, knows no proper distance.  And this could not be otherwise: the proper distance is the telling sign of a social, distracted sensation.  Without a discipline of proper distance, an art of touching, seeing, and listening, the public space, the space of appearances, must collapse.

Put another way: the public space must be thought of as a space of friendship, for want of the better word. Here friendship does not imply a certain degree of friendship, but only a reciprocity and equilibrium. It is opposed to love, which has always been characterized by the pathological and permanent failure of balance,   and which is thus the personal equivalent of a state of exception.  Friendship exists whenever there is no longer the need for a one-sided violence of repulsion to counter a one-sided violence of attraction.

Just as the celebrity brings the pathologies of love to their maximum extension, and thus paves the way for a totalitarian cult of personality, the virtuoso does the same for the sober passions of friendship. And thus he allows us to glimpse what we might, provisionally and reluctantly, call a true politics.

Thought putrifies in the wrong hands

There are two regimes in the university, and they are constantly at war. One is a remnant of the medieval system, in which there always had to be a full complement of apprentices and masters moving through to guarantee the stability and longevity of the institution. What is meant by institution is always the physical structures and the people who maintain them as well as the intellectual structures that motivate the construction and maintenance of the physical structures. The stability of the institution is hierarchical; its longevity depends on marketing.

This is of course the regime of teaching and learning, and it reaches up past the school years into the tenure process, with its ceaseless kowtowing. The second regime, constantly and secretly at war with the first, is the regime of ideas. Or rather, it would be better to say that the first regime makes war on the second regime, a war of lords and vassals against beasts. Their weapons are made for fighting other lords, and so they are inadequate, and often lead to comedy or to accidentally wounding themselves.

Academic books should be seen as vengeful attacks on those who follow the path of ideas to the detriment of the hierarchy. In them, the masters appropriate and use vocabulary they barely understand, in order to warp it beyond recognition. A second reason for the misuse is that, when they quote Derrida or Deleuze without citing them, for as long as they remain unintelligible, their students can’t catch up with them. Some are content, for this reason, to remain unintelligible during their whole careers. They destroy the very ideas that are the beasts’ only sustenance by taking them out of context, applying them where they make less than sense, mixing together terms and arguments in a way that reduces their historical effectiveness. The worst of the misuses is perpetrated by the older professor who, in a late book, lets go all inhibitions and writes a book of “theory.” In this type of book the half-digested remnants of others’ rigorous thinking come back to stink up the bookshelf.

No one should be astonished when the beasts, who use the language of the tradition with care, deepening it, critiquing it, but with respect–awe even–for its precise meanings, before tearing it apart… no one should be astonished, however, when the beasts of ideas fail to excoriate the masters and their fawning vassals for abusing their language and thought. They need these warped receptions, these hunched men and women who hear but cannot listen. These ears are the echo chamber of their thoughts, and through them they can gauge precisely how far from the institutional sandtrap they are, by the level of misprision with which their words are reiterated. In the institution but not of it, the beasts, the clear-headed, cause enormous damage. What is it that the masters master in their apprentices? The desire to become beasts.

To think historically

involves first and foremost a thought of history, with the caveat that what comes “first and foremost” in a truly historical thinking in fact comes last. Let us avoid mentioning the obvious and unavoidable convection of these concepts and processes. Task: to place this cataract at the center of what we call “thought” and to remove the one understanding of thought that endangers both thinking and its vortex: the one in which thought means the activity of removing its Daedalian element.

teens and telephones

There are certain struggles which, frivolous and insignificant, and hence so easily forgotten, nevertheless contain the greatest social, historico-political, even metaphysical weight. Consider the battle between teenagers (and, above all, teenage girls) and their parents over the household telephone.  (That this was, above all, a staple of domestic comedy does not speak again its significance).  Much was at stake:  for the parents the home telephone was, above all, the channel through which the world of work was able to insinuate itself the domestic sphere. The telephone’s ring announced professional emergencies. It shattered the private sphere from within with the constant intimation of the contingency upon which everything natural and essential (love, children, food, happiness) depended. But for the teenager, it became the means for the pure pleasure of friendship and gossip.  Of course: this was also true for the housewife during the daytime hours, but then no conflict could emerge. The house, and its appurtenances, was her uncontested dominion.

In the end: teenagers won. When I was growing up, having a private telephone line was the unique privilege of the gratuitously wealthy and hopelessly spoiled.  But now, the telephone has become a private affair, and the tensions animating its use have dissipated. But this victory, like so many, turned against the victors.  The parents, and the government, had the last laugh.  If before the private was interrupted by the outside, now it is wholly subsumed: and it is no longer a question of monitions and directives, but of constant surveillance.

It is interesting, in this regard, that the use of email and social networking has been so strictly confined to the purely social. There has been so little talk of using Twitter as a emergency warning system, and even when appropriated by politicians it serves the cult of celebrity rather than the immediate ends of the state.  There is nothing surprising in this, though: surveillance, if it is to be effective, requires a very light touch.

ergo sum

For many nights, I have dreamed only this: I am walking back home, in the deep hours of the night. I pass briskly through the sidewalks and down through deep underpasses. Shadowy figures, with fierce dogs, congregate on the corners. I bend my path against the storefront to keep from being caught by their bite. Suddenly, an immeasurable fatigue. I keep walking, through the dark, but slumber has fallen over me.  My body moves forward, but my eyelids sink. No act of will can keep them open. I am dreaming my own sleep. And know that I am sleeping, and dreaming, and coming home: all at once.

Another dream, bound intimately to the first. I am in a space: large, open, filled with light. It is crowded with bodies. I am more alone with by body than I have ever been. But there are others.  We move together in an odd, clumsy accord, following the directions that have been given to us. The teacher has disappeared into the shadows. This feeling alone consumes me: an incomprehensible purity.

How often have I awoken from a dream, with the thought: I have always been dreaming yet without knowing it before. These dreams are our secret friends. They follow us through life, and emerge, suddenly, from the depths, to give us a hint. No interpretation is possible, though. They are not even hieroglyphs. But only the comfort of still having possibilities.

Aftermash

Television dramas do not spin-off. Rather they become franchises, either (as in CSI or Law and Order) demonstrating the inescapable universality of crime and justice, or — as in Beverly Hill 90210 and Melrose Place — revealing, in properly tragic fashion, the intensification of the vices that plague the privileged.

Only the sit-com spins off. The gripping power of the spin-off consists in this above all: it casts a penetrating light into the tension between the novelty of the sitcom as cultural commodity, and the tedium of its content. The sitcom star, spun-off into another world, seems to have conquered his tedious fate. Yet if he has somehow worked himself free, the very fact that we, as viewers, cannot escape him — that the actor, as it were, has transcended his situational fate by remaining bound to it, continuing his same life somewhere else — imposes, in even more brazen fashion, the tedium which, in capitalism, has taken the place of fate.

There is something oddly moving, even poignant, about these attempts, so often pathetic, to extract the last value from a cultural commodity, as if following a perverse formulation of Ricardo’s law.  The desperation of the cultural industry, and of those (both viewers and the viewed) caught within, appears in resplendent clarity. Klinger has escaped the war, he is no longer a transvestite. He has settled into a comfortable middle-class existence with an imported, Asian wife.  History comes to an end, it ceases to produce “situations”: but capitalism refuses this.

Inimitation (Personality III)

To be the root of similarity among persons, personality must follow a rule. Let us try to imagine it. More than likely, it would take something like this form: all true imitations, becoming like someone or something else, draw their power from the inimitable. This can best be explained by showing the other extreme, that of fake imitationlessness. Those who convince others and act as though their actions and convictions flow from a single, originary, potent source, have in fact placed the imitable beyond imitation, rather than imitating the inimitable. In falling back on this beyond they merely show their bereftness of the power of imitation, while mimicking nothing or almost nothing—which is the greatest restraint of imitation, and still a great imitation: of those who restrain their greatest power. These characters are inflexible, brittle almost to the point of breaking. George W. Bush is a good example of this extreme emulation of a self-delusion.

It is perhaps not the most multifarious and flexible of imitators—actors, mimes, comics, children, the imagination, sunlight—that approach nearest to the inimitable. These may well stay comfortably within the realm of what can be imitated, however rarified their targets may be. A toddler imitates a barn animal. A mime imitates a prisoner. Between barely imitating (Bush) and rabidly imitating (Robin Williams) there is another figure: one who says yes to no and no to yes, miming what has not heretofore been enacted. Walter Benjamin’s favorite example is the adoption by the 1789 revolutionaries of the style of dress and language of the Roman Republic. Their Titus-head hairstyles and Latin slogans, however, while they stretched the boundaries of Paris fashion, cutting a loop into the mix-tape of history, although surely shocking, remained in the realm of the possible.

The inimitable must be two things: what has never for the first time been enacted and what is so singlar it cannot be imitated. Artists practice the first, insofar as they imitate imitation. Art made in this way sneaks up on consciousness, disguised as something replicated and replicable; soon it shows its stripes. It must be looked at again and again, since the anxious eye finds over and over that the Vorstellung still does not quite correspond to it. Art against thought, where thinking is thought to be a process of copying. Imitating imitation, these sorts of artists might better be said to discopy. Euripides does this with tragedy; Robert Walser with fiction; Borges with the scholarly essay. One’s habit of sliding from imitation to imitation—producing the illusion of a world of sameness—gets dislodged from its routine in these types of works.

Inimitation of the second kind requires the utmost of patience and the very least narcisism. I almost do not believe there is a world, for the privilege of saying “world,” one step shy of saying what world is (philosophy), is too high to belong to me. De imitatione nullius et contemptu omnium vanitatum mundi. Between not imitating and imitating imitating lies imitating not imitating, a seeming nothing that gives the lie to all the fake nothings of religion, politics, science, and culture. Faking not faking, this personality hardly registers, but it is on the basis of it that all future similarity takes shape, for this snail, this beetle, which may arouse boredom, or perhaps a dulled disgust, by refusing to imitate any part of the inifinite imitable, reveals each true imitation as a one-of-a-kind arrangement of marks.

On Personality II

Once personality is stolen from the grip of metaphysics, that is, from psychologists, and defined as imitation of imitation, or imitability, as a new relation between personae and their masks, a new relation between persons can be glimpsed. The intellectual world begins to appear as a traveling theater troupe, and one wonders often when someone will write them new material.

A prolegomenon to a different script may be a catalogue of the stock characters in the present comedy. These would include: Alain Badiou, the pundit; Agamben, the Messiah; Slavoj Zizek, the clown; Jürgen Habermas, the ernest—these limitations, these monopotentials, these revelations of impotencies.

Where are the janus-faced, the dangerous ones? Not the split personalities but the manifolds. You might suggest Zizek as an answer, and you would not be wrong. There are two ways to reach the apathy of the nerd, however: by rejecting all but one object and by apoplectically accepting all possible objects. There is such a thing as too much personality. As an intellectual style, this appears as a steaming, roiling charisma that changes its spots so fast it is as though nothing ever changes. One name for this is “mashup,” another “method.”

On Personality I

On intellectual styles: observations on the interface between personality and thought.

We would have to imagine a slope in which the influence the personality exercises over thinking increases in proportion to the strength of several factors. The first would be age: in youth, personality plays an inordinate role in intellectual matters. This is largely because personality is still in formation—it forms, we can say, before the intellect and is thus the ground not only for intellectual formation, but for non- and anti-intellectual formations. Personality is the beyond intellect in which the very inclinations toward and against development of intellect take place. What training or education of the intellect does then, over time, is tame and restrain personality and the basic inclinations, replacing it with another kind of personality, the intellectual style, which, in order to assert its supremacy, erases the memory of a more primary personality, projecting an inborn “genius.” This may go so far as to deny the effects of education—as is the case with Einstein. A bad student thus may either be a hidden genius or one whose personality (now pathologized and psychologized, most likely also medicated) does not incline toward thinking.

In developing and developed intellects (in practice there is little difference), the drives and stamps of personality may be shunted toward the edges, or else they may reappear surreptitiously at the center of thinking, as its most basic motivations. Contrasting examples may be helpful here. All nerds are the same, but there is only one Heidegger. The latter is inseparable from his distinct “pathway” of thought, not to mention from the German language, a feeling or affinity for a certain Germanness, a pathos for pre-industrial social forms, and, most likely, bad taste in art. Charisma is an important ingredient here—allowing the amplitude of personality to attract students, voters, readers, acolytes, apostles. The former is inseparable from a dastardly removal or diminishment of these factors. Indifference to all circumstances other than the narrow project of constructing or gathering information characterizes nerds; this is perhaps what separates mere obsession from thinking, although thinking without obsession quickly becomes dilettantish. Every thinker has a nerdish side to her personality, but nerds have a one-sided personality. One undergoes crises–the best call their life a continual crisis (Nietzsche), the other continual stasis. A great nerd sits among her circuit boards and hoarded facts for as long as possible—ideally a lifetime. A great thinker periodically abandons the bases of her thought.

Task: to wrest the concept of personality from the psychologists. One way to save it would be the following. Personalities are more or less coordinated structures, rising in order from a grab-bag of tendencies, traits, masks that can be donned willy nilly (madness) to a crystaline molecule. At both extremes the availability for more and different elements remains open. Where do these traits come from? This is the point at which psychology–or any other metaphysical system–asserts its interest. From God or from childhood, in sin or in an unconscious, the mysterious ground of personality demands its priests. A creature without the need for a priest to interpret it: Nietzsche gives us one suggestion, become an over-man, one who has gotten over the category “man,” but he gives us no instruction manual. One who explained personality would have to explain how they differ, how they relate to intellect, and how some creatures have more and some less strong ones.

Imagine personality as the potential to take models and imitate them, to become different. The potential for personality would depend then on whether the person (an amalgam of imitations in a singular order or disorder) had, as a primary object of imitation, an imitating personality. Imitation of an imitator defines the richest of personalities, one with the highest tendency toward change.

Easy Street

The old time rock and roll soothed the soul for one reason at least: we were frustrated. Existence in late capitalism is supremely frustrating. It is frustrating to be young, frustrating to be old, and frustrating to be middle aged, or it used to be. Life meant: the angry young man (Fonzie, James Dean) gave way to the angry middle-aged man (Gordon Gecko, Woody Allen), which yielded eventually to the most perfect and wise frustrated soul, the angry old man (Archie Bunker, George Burns). Nothing was easy enough for the struggling young, nothing was satisfying enough for the balding sourpuss, and no revenge was sweet enough for the lost opportunities and the speed with which the world abandoned him of the cranky curmudgeon. Life piled up the unkept promises of work, democracy, science, family. The old went to their death in protest.

Frustration is the index of ideals not met, for a network of ideals whose ties were still intelligible, even if the ultimate meaning had withdrawn. Frustrations are minute traces of this withdrawal, distorted echoes of the cry “God is dead,” signaled sometimes with laughter, sometimes with rage. Nihilism will have reached its zenith when these last resistances disappear. This may have already happened. When frustration goes completely over into convenience, ease of use, mechanization, when leisure-like activities fill the workday and the laptop extends the workday until after bedtime, when virtual reality trumps physical reality, which is to say, when capital will have smoothed the way to consumption so thoroughly that inertia does not have to be overcome and time does not matter nothing will ever change again. If one day they discover how to make the engine work without money, this would be the coup de grace—since it is keeps half the world from shopping—these truly live, since they are the only ones still frustrated. Credit, one must admit, did in the last of this kind of frustration in America.

Frustration is the practical equivalent of thaumazein, surging up from a corporeal aporia. A materialist understanding of philosophy would be most penetrating here, where its own wellspring of activity is in fact grounded in an affect, or the lack of an affect. Obviously not outright pleasurable, frustration is also not merely painful: it is the advent of a blockage to both and (this is not to be overlooked) a challenge to overcome it. Perhaps life is all frustrations now, perhaps they have not gone away; what is disappearing is the interpretation of them as seductions to climb, deviate, invent, to grow more powerful, monstrous, angry, to imagine a different outcome, to imagine that the imagination is the blockage and find new faculties…

What if the two names for this frustration of frustration are technology and psychoanalysis? The one makes human activities infinitely easy, the other makes human thought infinitely difficult.

Moral Evolution

The rationale for statements of evolutionary truth is moral. It gives permission to say: had not this or that adaptation taken place, your species would have died out long ago, which is to say, your existence depends on our logic, which is to say, you must not think for yourself. This may be the form that all dogmatisms take: a commandment not to think otherwise. And like all moral commands, except perhaps Kantian ones, they want to lead you to passivity. At least, however, biblical commandments admit their dogmatic quality—they must be followed because God said so—and at least they do not cloak their unsubstantiated claims in the green robes of nature, now higher than any god ever was. Evolution exceeds other dogmatisms in that it does not only determine what a creature should do, which is to say what it can, may, or might do, but a creature’s very existence. Thus statements of evolutionary truth imply a prereflective, ontological determinism.

A few in our epoch are rattling the chains: who will strike a strong enough blow to break them? It may have to come from science, by paying as much attention to the effects of its theories as to their causes.

TV Time

“In the history of network television, no remake of a previous hit series has ever become a hit itself on network television.” Bill Carter in the New York Times, December 27, 2009

We could learn a lot about the culture of the moment by asking why what attracts viewers to the movies repels them in their livingrooms. TV may rip off, revive, and rerun a series, but it may not remake it. Cinema may remake a film, but it may not rerun it or revive it, unless it quarantines the revival to a small, out-of-the-way screen. Of course, films may be rerun on television—and are all the time, with success. Ripping off material is as common in film as in television, so this must be less interesting—a common feature of one theory of art making, based on a concept of history as the accumulation of materials, whose basic element is “the concept.” Concepts may be presold, stolen, modified—and they do not degrade; they travel, yet do not wear away like dialogue, camera work, or stars.

Television programs are already repeats; there is little difference if one catches an episode in its timeslot or when it is broadcast again in early morning or on the weekend. An accomodation for workers, this inbuilt repeatability (not iterability)—in fact a kind of repetitiveness—is already part of the episodic structure, such that no episode depends on an event-character to be meaningful; rather, it depends on the recurrence of the weekday. This structure is, without fail, repeated within the situational comedy or drama. Today and yesterday, we are back in the same place, along with the same people and objects. This may explain why most fictional TV shows treat the working day—detectives, doctors, even TV executives: all these are shown at work, as if, after a long workday, viewers might be in danger of experiencing the night differently. As it is, what they do in the day is what they are allowed to imagine at night. Even the show “Nightrider” is disappointing in this regard. He seems always to ride at noon.

The shadowless noontime of repeat television broadcasts reaches its brightest and also darkest point in reruns. When a program is successful enough to bring audiences back again and again, 5, 6, 7 years running, it comes back as reruns. In this way it can educate successive generations into its logic, starting each child from the very beginning. It thereby enters into a twilight of history and culture whose effect is generally to comfort the public in the face of great change. The Korean war, stand-in for the Vietnam war, was the setting for an exemplary sempiternity of reruns. M.A.S.H provided triage for a shell-schocked nation, while in the process reducing culture to thin gruel. A comic-tragic mashup, a “dramedy,” its mess of vaudeville pranks and faux-mourning comes back night after night—now orbiting the cable ether—since its final “new” episode in 1983—to anaesthetize yet another patient.

When the dead awaken for one more episode, fans rush home to watch. Fandom thus carries a residue of cultic practice; the aura that clings to the original actors and the set brings the audience back one more time for reunion shows. Such a happening has as little significance as a highschool reunion: it offers a pale reflection of the failure of one’s plans, viewed in the unstoppable aging of another. Since there is no attempt to recreate the original, the anxiety produced by a remake is avoided.

The true time signature of television can be deciphered in the failure of remakes. The nature of a “hit” is precisely that, to strike a public where it least expects to receive a blow. Yet it is not the singularity of the hit that makes it unremakeable, but rather its repetitiveness. Yes, although cultishness survives in celebrity fandom, this attaches to the names and faces of the characters—even more than the actors. In this way TV also differs from cinema, where the stars own names rise above the film title. Here the actors become inseparable from their characters, much like in reality TV. A show becomes a hit, however, not because of its stars, and not even because of its characters. A hit hits, so to speak, when it hits again. For a hit is not judged by its opening night, as movies are judged by their first-weekend box-office take. A program may have a terrific viewership for the first episode, perhaps for the first few—but if it trails off, if it fails to produce a return, to show up in bedrooms and livingrooms and be saved on TiVo—it will not have hit. Like a comet, it can only be seen by its brilliant and long tail.

Imagine Jerry Seinfeld playing Hawkeye on M.A.S.H. Imagine George Clooney as Sam on Cheers. A series becomes a hit by repeating itself without changing direction or disturbing its delicate balance of charismatic characters and ever new identical situation. New episodes, repeats, and reruns creep into our houses on the back of the family dog, are carried into the most private chambers, where Americans do not regularly invite strangers. New programs grow popular on a suspected power to become familiar, a promise that whatever sheen of difference they display each week will quickly rub away. Even cliffhangers ring a famliar tone, just as the most heinous torture does.

To call anything that appears on television art would be extremely presumptuous. “Arts” channels or programs regularly show other arts—film, music, theater, dance, but television itself makes little if any claim to produce art. Television conceals what art conspicuously displays: its status as a made thing. Even when it shows the other arts, they are rarely current or contemporary, but usually classics held in their cultural place by the box’s little frame. Remakes, in contrast, are akin to artworks: they expose the highly artificial and constructed nature of the medium. Here are the same characters—father, mother, sister, brother, dog, give or take one—beset by grotesquery. What are these masks, these distortions? We will even accept a wax model of the cast on a poorly painted rendition of the set, but we will not accept a remake. The family has been eaten by aliens. Distorting a familiar sight almost beyond recognition, the remake shares an operation with parody. Its torture is executed on the viewer rather than on an effigy of a foreign spy. Remakes are true nighttime experiences; in them the day returns without repeating.

Evolution and Innovation

Evolution and computing can be described as counter-poles in contemporary American culture, as though that which transforms very fast required, to maintain some cosmic balance, a partner that changed correspondingly slowly. This is not just a felicitous figure: there are deeper grounds. Homo faber, in realizing the power to shape the experience of fellow producers to the minutest degree, which is to say, the power to change producers into users and finally into avatars, feels the earth quake beneath his feet. Homo naturalis, in realizing nature’s great loss of power, the de-potentiation of the land, the seasons, the arc of the sun, the stages on life’s way, Marxism and capitalism as we know them, even death, gazes across a mounting technological junkyard.

Earthquake and junkyard, the deepest downsides of the two opposed ideals, are also the points at which each falters and threatens to swallow up the other. Depotentized phusis goes even so far as to relinquish its claim, through physics, that nature’s basic forms, space and time, apply also to the user—this is the sign of the virtual. Depotentized production, as exemplified by the green movement and strict evolutionists (in this they are akin to creationists), sees homo faber either as a plague or as a recent and minor vexation—this is the sign of an intransigent messianism. What will it take to show that the one is the reflex of the other?

Hope for the messianic return of a romantic landscape appears atop the earth in the locovore’s garden and in its hidden strata where the evolutionary scientist digs. Both the attempt to cover over and to claw away the artificial, the fabricated, carry a sense of impatience with them. Evolution is too slow for the recapture of the earth. Here the good-willed, earth-loving would benefit from religion—the rapture reclaims the earth in an instant. Hopes for a constant dynamic redesign of the user’s environment also show an overweening impatience. In the end, the one, technology, becomes the instrument of the realization of the other, nature.

And so the antipode is illusion: since the means to revive nature in a technological epoch can no longer be natural, and since technologists have not yet discovered another goal for their drudgery than the reproduction of nature, we are left with the most superficial of differences, masquerading as a war. We seem to be very quickly engineering ourselves a paradise in which the endless junkyard is paved over with beautiful semblances.

Innovation and evolution, our culture’s two supposed poles, one our consciousness, the other our unconscious. We are unable to think of technology except as a new nature; we are unable to understand evolution in any other way but through technology. It is not just chance that Darwin fled to the Galapagos at the high point of the industrial revolution in England. The speed with which technology changes—the cultural equivalent of consciousness—projects, imagines, mines, and always returns anxiously to a slow substrate whose illusion it has already digitized.

If, on the other hand, there has always only been history whose course is bent as much by phusis as by techne, this deceptive duality would have to be replaced. But with what?

breaking bad

The most powerful fantasies of the sitcom are directed against the capitalist mode of production, which they seek either to dismantle through humor or dissolve into irrelevance.  Hence the two poles of the sitcom, following a typology that, as Benjamin argued, became sedimented in the 19th century: the work-sitcom and the home-sitcom.  Most are hybrids, and the dream of this hybridization — the utopian moment in the sitcom — is to make the relation of work and home as organic and natural as possible.  This is achieved in numerous ways, and the multitude of these different solutions would constitute the essential history of the sitcom.

The most rudimentary is the simultaneous and reciprocal naturalization of both work-life and family-life : one thinks of the Flintstones and the Jetsons. Blue-collar and white-collar labor appear, respectively, as the correlate of a historical epoch whose essential timelessness is revealed, in each case, through the constancy of social structures. The Simpsons did nothing more than combine these two worlds into one.  The nuclear power plant, hovering over Springfield like Dracula’s castle, is at once pre-historic and futuristic.  If dystopia has overcast utopia, this can be known, above all, from the mortality of pets and occasional humans, and, above all, the mutations of animal and vegetable life.

In the work-sitcom, humor dissolves the office into a family.  Conflict does not disappear, of course: it is, after all, the very heart of humor. But it takes on a benign form.

In the “friends in the city” sitcom, work appears almost inessential, and family is permissible only if it can be taken up within the structure of friendship. Finding fitting work and fitting relationships coincide as the tasks through which life becomes meaningful.  Or, in the case of Seinfeld: through an ingenuous subterfuge, the situation reproduces itself, explicitly, as its own sitcom. Humor becomes a profession: a source of income in a world of increasingly intangible commodities (but this also has a long precedent). And also the essence of eroticism. What appears to some unsubtle critics (Jedediah Purdy) as irony is in fact the absolute and unambiguous triumph of the organic and utopian over the facts of life.

But if work always strives to get back home, home, in the sitcom, always seeks to put itself to work. This explains the obsession of the sitcom with cottage industry. A family recipe or curious invention turns into a business — as if the heart of a business were the unique dreams and capacities of individuals, and not the generalizing principle of capital. (the caterer, like Monica in Friends, is another modification of the dream synthesis of housewife and businessnesswoman, home and business). The perverse denouement of this conceit is the ordinary(i.e. white, middle-class, educated) person-become-drug dealer. Grandmother’s brownie recipe finds its fulfillment in a chemistry’s teachers almost perfectly pure meth. Dealing drugs is the last reserve for the fantasy of a home business that would make money starting from almost nothing. Yet even this dream, already toxic as it is, soon gives way to reality:  even crime is organized (so the Wire), and cannot escape from the general law.

The Shoah and Cinema

The critical dogma that says, “the shoah is unrepresentable,” immortalized in the word “holocaust”–everything burns up–produces a kind of cheap mysticism that doesn’t understand its theological origins. One intention behind this dogma is to produce an untouchable event that corresponds to the mantra “never forget.” Behind this there are several hazy moral impulses. What gets forgotten almost immediately upon intoning this mantra is the fact that the event has become perhaps the most represented in all history, memorialized in museums, enshrined (negatively) in law, recurred to in books both historical and more than historical, reported in the millions of documents that represented it as it was happening, and dipped in bronze by the cinema, which in a very special way seems to derive a good deal of its power from this particular event.

One clue that unrepresentability is widely exaggerated is the fanaticism with which the Nazis documented their destruction. From the beginning then, from before the beginning, it–if it can be called one–was prepared for representation, by representation, insofar as it was tabulated, planned, and executed as though it had been a priori an image. Indeed the holocaust is the easiest to represent. What is lacking between the lines of naked, emaciated men and women headed for the gas chambers and the corpses piled up after? The link between the two is the idea of fate at work in the 30s and early 40s that in some ways corresponds to the idea of memorialization after 1945. “Never forget” means “produce the corpses.”

One problem with this freeze-frame is that it fails to say what if anything should be remembered. Like any mysticism, it is the structure and the distances within it that must be protected, and this can be done precisely because it is almost empty. And yet, since one cannot not forget nothing, the thing must be perpetually represented, with details, size, shape, color, personality; and this is, we suspect, precisely what disappoints the holocaustic imagination. Because only a sublime thing can impose such an injunction on us, each representation must carry with it the proviso that this representation fails to live up to the ideal representation whose fantastic appearance, in night and fog, more than likely in deep sentimentality and an inauthentic relationship to one’s own death, always asserts its right to remain unexplored and uncriticized.

The uncriticizability of the ideal holocaust depends on the crisis produced by the double bind “you must represent, you can’t represent,” which in the same blow denies history and gives birth to holocaust studies, which in response never gets beyond the cul-de-sac where it lives.

It is too easy to represent the holocaust, where representation means a failed attempt at reaching the ideal encompassing of an ideal event. To be sure, no one expects to capture these ideals; they make do with the distance to the ideal that in this operation becomes calculable. An antecedent to this structure is undoubtedly the biblical prohibition on images, but at least there it is explicit–the procedure of idealization and preservation of distance that make the sacred absolutely sacred and history meaningful as a continual degradation.

A first step, which is sorely needed, is a return to the ancient recognition born with monotheism: eternal memory (representation) profanes, the ever repeated impossibility of memorializing preserves by emptying the event out until it can stand as super-historical. This leads to, in the cinema, a proliferation of kitchy, comic-book-like melodramatic portrayals, laden with pathos or else cold and documentary, and in criticism, polemical slogans.

the phenomenology of the fanatic

The enthusiast is carried away by an unrealizabe ideal; the fanatic by that which is most real, and yet does not yet seem real, since it remains a fragment — unintegrated into the world as the seamless context of meaning.

The extreme intention of the enthusiast is political and utopian: he seeks to realize the ideal in this world. And in this he must always fail: the world is never ready for it. The extreme intention of the fanatic, in contrast, is not only apolitical, but antipolitical: to turn the object of fanaticism (that which he celebrates) into a world sufficient unto itself.  Yet this antipolitical intention also has a true political sense. If every utopian project must fail, it is because it could only conceive of the ideal abstractly, as form: the myriad contents of the ideal elude it.  The fan, with his fanatical reverence, nourishes these contents. Or indeed, he first creates them as it were from nothing.

The Romantic obsession with a “new mythology” had everything to do with fanaticism.  Hegel lost sight of it, and the dualities through which Marx would overturn him emerge only when the problematic of fanaticism has disappeared from view.  For the fan, the material and spiritual are one. Or rather, both converge in gesture. And historical materialism appears as the opposite face of utopianism: it becomes necessary to choose between them only because we have lost touch with the space of dreams: that mysterious threshold that borders on both the real and the ideal without mediating between them.

The “Sixties” is one proper name for the transition from enthusiasm to fanaticism. Communes, new-ageism, nudism, the psychadelic drug culture, Charles Manson, even Scientology are confused, reactionary expression of this rift in  historical time.  But nostalgia for enthusiasm would be misplaced. Fanaticism, even in its most dubious forms, is the element in which the dream life of the multitude will take place. Here a new mythology will come into being.  The virtue of this new mythology will be to denude itself. The celebrity becomes a vestment: impersonation the first form of worship.

Nostalgia for the serious is the most debilitating affliction of the philosopher. If the philosopher needs to become a cultural critic, turning away from the highest concerns towards the most paltry, it is to effect a violent cure of a nostalgia that has been building up since Plato. And perhaps, since Plato,  philosophy has always taken the form imposed on it by the exigency of purging itself of this nostalgia. The hardest thing to learn is that what is truly serious (in thought, and in politics as well) must always appear divested of all the forms of dignity that have adorned it in the past.  What appears dignified in the present is always the parody of past forms of dignity. But this thought alone is liberating.

Two traps await fanaticism.  On the one hand: the fanatic tends to confuse the fanatical intention with its object, regarding the celebrity not merely as the intentional correlate of his fanaticism, the seed around which it will form, but as a sort of living divinity. But, Hoelderlin reminds us, it is also possible to fall into the heights : the other trap is the idea. Plato, eluding the one trap, ran into the other. The fanatic must neither deny celebrity, nor deify it: the celebrity must become a dream celebrity: the fanatic must do everything in his power to keep the celebrity suspended in the medium of dreams. The celebrity must become of focus of a rigorous discipline of collective dreaming.  (Apuleius’s The Golden Ass is the first initiation into this strange discipline, which has preoccupied the history of the novel. )

Dreams have nothing to do with magic. Indeed, the one is the antithesis of the other. Magic refuses to be thought of merely as a technology, art, or skill. Every dream, in contrast, demands the existence of the technology whose possibility it envisioned, and through which, in turn, it will be brought into existence.

the iv drip

There are three rites of initiation. You are given a wrist band with a number. You change into the patient’s uniform, a shirt and pants of crude, loose-fitting fabric. And finally, the most intimate rite: the needle is pressed into a vein. This has its own little ceremony. The nurse, looking carefully at my arm, finds a blue line beneath the skin. She traces it in an act of mysterious concentration, slaps my skin a few times, and then begins again. My veins seem to have hidden away. She looks at me apologetically. I cannot help thinking of the condemned man who had to wait forty minutes on the gurney before they could find a way to get the poison into him. Finally it works: she has found her way in. I am torn between repulsion and curiosity, and she senses my distress. Now I belong here completely. I am hooked up. A tube runs from the needle up to a plastic connector, and then other tubes lead to the bags, which hang suspended from a wire loop. When I used to pass through the hospital, I saw the patients walking slowly through the lobby, carefully pushing these things — they look like wheeled coat hangers — in front of them. The patients seemed so different back then. Now I am one of them. I, too, don’t need to do anything anymore to live. I can just lie here, and the water and nutrients and electrolytes will flow silently into me. My little gadgets rest on the sill next to my bed. I brought them with me as a distraction. But now I am one of them. I too am plugged in.

There are hierarchies everywhere here: of diseases, of places, of staff. But there is also a hierarchy of patients, immediately evident through the bags hanging from the hooks. Everyone has water. Some have only this. They are still eating ordinary food. Most, like myself, also have the pale, piss-yellow liquid. And one patient, groaning as he lies next to me, has blood dripping into him.  (As I waited what seemed like hours for a procedure, observing the lulling rhythm of the gurneys joining and leaving the queue, my thoughts kept on running up against the hazy threshold of dreams. The same thing happens to me as a plane picks up speed on the runway. And we all seemed then like airplanes lining up to take off.)

The contraption joining the different tubes, mixing them together into a single stream, has a special place for injecting medications. I find charm in this: as a child, I measured the preciousness of toys by the multitude of their functions. The nurses come by every two hours, open up the spigot, press the needle into a plastic opening, and slowly empty the contents into my blood. “Antacid,” they say, in awkward English. Even in the night these visitations continue. And one time, around four in the morning, the nurse comes into my room, removes the tubes from the needle, and draws a vial of blood. These procedures, unpleasant as they might seem, are done so graciously that I begin to look forward to them. I feel my body lying there in a state of total passivity. The embarrassment of having a body is a secret shared between us. My thoughts drift off again. I wonder if these same half smiles were once shared between the emperor and his slaves. Did such a glance fall, even once, on the condemned prisoner. All distinctions seem to fall apart.

figure skating

The summer Olympics always seemed like a travesty of classicism. But the winter Olympics (thanks to Yu-na, and Benjamin, I see this now)  is something else: the nightmare, and dreams, of modernity; a fragment of the future. In the summer sports, the energy comes from within the body alone. With no gliding, no slick surfaces (the bicycle events are a telling exception) force remains the immediate expression of muscles, which are exposed to full view.  The body remains as it was for Aristotle. Falling, leaps, and horses — primordial forms— come closest to danger.

Winter sports, in contrast, are full of contrivances.  The body stores energy given to it by subterfuge, and accumulates speed to the point of terror.  It is Newtonian. Every surface becomes a kind of track. Behind them all, the railroad is hidden. And behind the railroad, the law of fate: of sysiphean torments transformed into joys by  the leisure industry.   The turn is necessary, liberating. (The railroad forbids turns. And thus the car emerged as a false ideology of the railroad: release from the limits that it had imposed. The dream of the car is the motorcycle, the nomad.)

But in figure skating, the turn turns into redemption. The figure of all figure skating is the arabesque: the translation of forward velocity, progress, into turns and jumps and spins. Speed becomes ornament. And  sometimes, rarely, grace emerges, the grace which is lost — as it was to Kleist’s youth — so long as we seek it in a classical form.

The winter Olympics is an allegory. One need only put the elements in the right order: from the bobsled to the women’s free skate. But with this year’s Olympics, the allegory found what it had been groping after for so many years. It began with a luger’s death, and ended with Yu-na’s transcendence.  Only Hockey, like America, gets in the way.

(I write this passing through a land without snow, and without seasons. Out over the quay, a sublime monstrosity is being built. At first, I could not believe my eyes. It did not seem to belong to this world. I almost did not see it, even though it loomed before me.  Three high rise buildings with a park on top. The dream of the floating city)

The dream celebrity

Yu-na came to me in a dream, and I awaken with a strange feeling of unrest. I know this will stay with me for many years. When I was younger this was the unrest of sexual awakening, but now sexual pleasure seems nothing but a veil thrown disingenously over a much more intoxicating, unsettling, voluptuous charm. Sex, After all, allows for possesion. It can be experienced in an ordinary way. But celebrity — true celebrity, the celebrity of dreams — is something else.

Only this remains of a dream feeling that has no correlate in waking, everyday life. She needed me: but only to watch. (Is man god’s celebrity? An unfathomable, perverse thought. Yet inescapable. All the attributes of god belong to the viewer. Homer knew this well enough.)

the mall rat

The shopping mall has a special relation to time. Even if the individual retail spaces change hands countless times, and are constantly refurnished and updated, they cannot escape the obsolescence of the whole.  From the start, they become marked by the ruination peculiar to the suburbs: nothing will break off or fall apart, nothing will turn derelict and dilapidated, everything  will remain in working order. No dust will accumulate. But a slight hue of grime insinuates itself deeper and deeper into artificial substances  that were designed to last forever, but never to age.

Experience has this sense above all for consumerism: it is the experience of the new, latest thing. The mall turns shopping itself into an experience: the venue itself, where the commodity is put on display and up for sale, becomes a commodity, and every subdivision of the venue becomes a genre of experience.  But in this way, the logic of the commodity is turned upside down: it loses its status as the primary fetish. The venue itself becomes the source of the attraction and charm of the thing, and the thing nothing more than an empty signifier of the venue.  It is not that the thing has only exchange value, but that it no longer even has this. Exchange value itself only stands in for the charms of the site of exchange, whose only real charm, however, is the attractive force of its emptiness.

If one ever purchases anything, it is out of an odd sense of guilt: as if to redeem oneself post facto of the charge of having loitered.

The economics of the mall demands that the customer pass through, but the charm of the venue rests on the prospect of indefinite loitering.  It is a place where time itself could be consumed, where it is possible to pass time, yet without the melancholic solitude that we must feel whenever we allow ourselves to become occupied with things.  The obsolescence of the mall is the direct function of this contradiction. 

A secret correlation exists between the mall rat and the grime in the linoleum.  And every new mall begins with the dream of getting rid of both, of restoring the pristineness of retail space, and resurrecting its (impossible) function as a place of pure transit.   

The utopian moment of the internet is to enable an existence of absolute loitering.  But it is a loitering without the  traces of obsolescence.  And hence without true boredom.

The personal computer

The secret of our present-day existence is contained in this odd expression, which in a few decades has lost all of its mystique, its shock-value, its rapture. How is it that this commodity, which has long since become so completely everyday, has not yet shed an adjective that, for every other commodity produced within a system within which private consumption is the norm, would seem redundant, if not absurd. Do we have personal cars? Personal houses? Personal clothes? Or personal books? Or even personal calculators, radios, and TVs?

The personalness of the personal computer, turned by Apple into a grammatical prefix, is the personalization of the system of production in the most general sense: the industrial-military-informational complex, indeed the entire network. It is the promise of a magical transubstantiation, in which the private individual would become identical to the system itself and the idea of the system.

The garage has always been set off within suburbia as a liminal hybrid space. It is where the transitory and static, the network of traffic and the domestic refuge, public and private meet. A place for bums, suicides, and teenagers who have outgrown their homes but not their dependency. Housewives scurry through, but their husbands dwell, given over to past-times nostalgic for lost freedoms: rock bands, fixing and making things, crime. Not surprising that it is here, according to the myth, that Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak made the first personal computers.

In those early years, when the personal computer was still a rare and coveted oddity, and seemed as out-of-place in the living room as a robotic butler, one was still aware of the fantasy — at once strange and childish, and absolutely radical — that would revolutionize the world. Thus in the film WarGames the hacker, having hacked his way into the military’s most intimate and secret places, saves the world from a nuclear catastrophe that he had himself, accidently, initiated. None of which could have happened had the systems engineers in the military not decided that the entire system of nuclear deterrence could not be trusted to human hands, but would have to be entrusted to the control of a supercomputer designed to constantly model the outcome of possible nuclear wars. Simulation and reality, risk assessment and effective action, come to coincide perfectly.

And in a way the personal computer did vanquish the cold war, and the catastrophe system of mutually assured destruction. Barely eight years after Wargames the Soviet Union would fall. It is said that, afraid of the vulnerability of transistors to electromagnetic pulses, they never invested in them. How could they keep up with Moore’s law?

Terrorism (of the personal WMD) and the internet (which at once personalizes the network as never before and depersonalizes the personal computer) obey the same fundamental principle: everyone can be the system (as hacker or hacked, terrorist or victim), but no one can be the whole system. It is, in the strictest sense, a baroque logic, the monadology come to life — the absolute suspension of the simulacrum eschatology of the cold war.

The serial television show began to thrive in the age of terrorism. This is no accident. The cold-war serial was always, in the end, the Christian-tragic hero of the movies: the rebel with or without a cause, the outcast, at best, as in Star Treck, the explorer. In Magnum PI and Knight Rider the hero was fused with his car. He was, in the end, a cowboy. In every case, nothing but a pale, worldly reminiscence of Christ. Just as every bad-boy in the end seeks only redemption, the true desire of every cold-war serial is to be remade into a movie. Buffy, in contrast, began as a horrifically bad movie. And indeed the mark of true greatness in a serial is to achieve absolute resistance to transmediation. The very conceit of 24 makes its cinematization impossible.

If the hero of the cold-war serial could not be sacrificed, since then he would become Christ and the world would end, the hero of the serial in the age of terror must be sacrificed over and over again to postpone an end of the world that, as the simulated end of the simulated end of a simulated world, has already happened. In this way, the serial finds its rhythm.

language, no such thing

What if every conversation added a chapter to the descriptive grammar of the language. What if instead of deep or high structure, each utterance provided a model of structure for the next, so that only by listening and responding, imitating and distorting–not by learning or habit, and least of all by innate grammar—language became speakable and hearable. “I hear you” would then mean, I receive this unheard of string, and at the same time, I accept and hold it, borrow it for myself, play it and play with it. Instead of Language or even “a language” then we would find a telephone game of utterances of which no eternal image was possible, only a snapshot of an unrepeatable moment. This would be the confluence of historical linguistics and the theory of language.

30 rock

The utopia of high school is the musical; of adult life (marriage, work), humor.

The essence of the high school musical is transformation constrained within a logic of the typical. (Sandy in Grease is exemplary in this regard)

College, like philosophy, is its own utopia: hence only the cinematic representation of college life is possible, whereas on television college is always either sucked back into the orbit of high school friendships, or becomes the mythic background of adult life. College life always articulates itself into a Platonic schema: pure contemplation, pure ambition, or pure debauchery.

The essence of college, like every self-satisfied utopia, is to be a parody that comes before, rather than after the event.

High school humor is mordant: its principle function is to exclude. It is strictly opposed to, and overcome in, love, which invariably unites opposites. The humor of adult life presupposes the fruit of love — the unity of the situation, — which it holds on to by acknowledging every difference in such a way that it loses all its bite.

The dramatic workplace is always opposed to family life, and can never escape from a tragic law that demands sacrifice. The comic workplace supplements it. The telos of the classical sitcom is cottage industry, even if this is only imaginable in the bazaar conceit of having the family itself become a vaudeville act. And it is in this that the most profound reactionary gesture of the “culture industry” becomes evident: if the essence of post-fordism is the virtuousity of language, then post-fordism always risks falling back into an archaic pre-fordism in which the line between the home and the factory has become blurred.

Seinfeld has little to do with irony: its essential gesture was merely the blurring of the humor of high-school with the humor of the sitcom. Which is to say: the situation of the sitcom became an arrested development, in which mordant humor, instead of having been overcome in the duet of sensual-spiritual intimacy, is carried over into adult life, where it becomes the impossible criterion by which every prospective lover is to be judged and banished.

The most subtle dialectics of modern life are played out in the opposition between friendship and sexual intimacy.

Between Seinfeld and 30 Rock we find the signs of a seismic shift in cultural sensibility. It is no longer the vicious humor, but the utopian musical of high-school, that has become preserved into adult life, and humor no longer devolves from the situation, but has become fused with the spirit of romantic comedy in the continual creation and recreation of a unity no longer limited by the norms that once governed human intimacy. The essence of 30 Rock is a bloodless, asexual promiscuity: a bigamy without bodies.

The husband who remains faithful to his wife in body despite his humorous disdain for her is the elemental type of the sitcom, whereas divorce would lose all its bitter, dramatic pathos if it did not juxtapose the faithlessness of the body to a sentimental fidelity of spirit.

It is odd that the first great post-9/11 New York sitcom is named after, and set in, the sort of spectacular skyscraper whose vulnerability had been exposed. With 9/11 the city and its elevated workplaces lost their innocence: a floating, suspended, endlessly repeating existence, removed from history and even from time, was no longer possible, and the magical skyscapes of the city, long celebrated in late-night television, seemed touched by death and ruin. The situation itself could no longer be taken for granted, but had to be magically conjured into existence week after week.

here too there are gods

There is something slightly paradoxical about the gentle warmth that radiates out from electronic devices.  Electronics is supposed to be cool: The heat — a byproduct of other operations, a sign of an irreducible inefficiency — betrays this coolness.

Can a semiconductor be a superconductor? This is a question for physicists. But this much, at least, seems clear: as long as the world is still warm, there is no way around the needless production of heat.

growing up

The problem of living, and of growing up, always comes down to this: how can we remain true to our youth. Or rather: how can youth remain true to itself.

With each new generation the problem assumes a new form, and sometimes history involves tectonic shifts of a greater order. Every past answer is a preemptive strike against the problem. Perhaps once the idea of ideals was an answer.  But no longer.

Youth is never without idiocy. (childhood is naive, but the youth is idiotic: it sees everything through itself, its own youth, and this is the source of all its passion and compassion, all its generosity)  The idiocy of youth is like a blindfold that allows it to get lost in a labyrinth that, could it see naively (feigning this naivite is the pernicious gesture of ordinary language philosophy), it could not help but escape. True maturity begins with youthful idiocy.

We find our way out of the labyrinth. This is what it  means to grow up.  But there are two threads, and two escapes: the one given us by the future  leads through past, and the other, given by the past, leads into the future.

If we could remain true to youth, it is only by refusing, and every moment, to do away with this impossible decision.

alien graveyard in Rwanda

According to the Weekly World News, Dr. Hugo Childs, the Swiss anthropologist said, “There must be 200 bodies buried there and not a single one of them is human.”

What is so curious here is the idea  of the body that is not human.  The ET is characterized by just this peculiarity: unlike animals, it leaves behind a body and not just a carcass, but this body, the specifically human, is what is not human.  This suggests the hidden affinity between the  popular image of the extraterrestrial, and theological problems of much more ancient provenance.

The envisioning of the extraterrestrial  is perhaps the last great trial of representational art. Everything about the ET is paradox, and the pleasure of ETs is the pleasure of these paradoxes: their body must be at once like ours and not like ours, human and unhuman; unhuman only in so far as we are able to recognize the essence of our humanity, the body and its burial.  They should speak a language absolute different than ours, yet we can communicate perfectly. They travel from light-years away to eat the food that we do not eat: as if they took umbrage at the fact that we had not yet cleaned our plates of vermin. Or they look exactly like us in every way, with the exception of a few superficial characteristics.

And of course: interbreeding is always possible.

As if the body of the alien were at once included and excluded from the human: the zone of indistinction between the human and its double.

Hölderlin/Sade (critique of pleasure II)

“She guards the treasures of daily life, but also of the night, the highest good. This is why the prostitute is a listener. She rescues the conversation from triviality; greatness has no claim upon her, for greatness comes to an end when confronted by her. She has seen every man’s desire fail and now the stream of words drains away into her nights. The present that has been eternally will come again.  The over conversation of silence is ecstasy.”

Walter Benjamin

What is most obscene about de Sade’s heroes is not their voluptuous physicality, but their glibness: the logorrhea of a too clever intelligence — an endless flow of words.

The intellect, as if to leave its domination ever more entrenched, has taken upon itself to speak for the body, and for the pleasures of the body: to justify them, explain them, analyze them away through a specious logic. It says everything. But in saying everything, feels nothing.  And thus the most extreme forms of pleasure become nothing more than the scaffolding of a philosophical argument.

There are perhaps two great political novels from the age of the French revolution: de Sade’s Justine and Friedrich Hoelderlin’s Hyperion. Few writers, and few works are so unlike.  It might seem that  de Sade and Hoelderlin share only their (feigned?) madness.  Of course,  each, in his own way, anticipated Nietzsche’s rediscovery of the Dionysian.  (Justine is struck by lightening…)   But for de Sade pleasure, subjected to the endless pressure of instrumental intelligence, becomes depraved: every utilitarian matrix refers to pleasure, but the variety of pleasures — the manifold complexity of feeling and experience — eludes the calculation of means and end.  De Sade’s perversions all derive from this one: the imposition of the form of instrumentality on pleasure — the demand that pleasure (or feeling, or experience…) be able to explain itself. Hyperion sets things right, if only negatively, and at its limits. Feeling is originary finitude: and experience does not have to justify itself but on its own terms. Hence every experience is its own justification.

There is something quite charming about  more mundane, stupid pornography, portrayed by actors whose words are as clumsy as their bodies are carefree and graceful. In a world where everyone always knows where everything should be put, the adult films’ stars betray, in their half-hearted attempts at acting,  the philosophical embarrassment that all of us feel with our bodies.  They seem like children, playing around insouciantly with gifts that they did not ask for, never expected to receive, and have no idea how to use.  Extravagant pleasure is the correlate not of expertise, but of a certain ignorance.

abstract pleasures

The internet grants an unusual  insight into abstract pleasures: pleasures that are neither physical and sensual, spiritual, or even intellectual — that are not related to the experience of a given faculty of the mind or the body; that have neither the duration of sensation or contemplation, and yet also have no relation to the satisfaction of our needs or to the eventual fulfillment of a certain ideal we have of ourselves.

It is tempting to relate these back to the more substantial, “real” pleasures with which philosophers have long been familiar.  But this would be a mistake.  Perhaps it would be better to say that “abstract pleasures” are the pure form of every real pleasure, and that a reduction, if necessary, should proceed in the opposite direction. For perhaps the pleasure of experience, of enjoying the very reality of our enjoyment,  should itself be ranked among such abstract pleasures.

The concept of “virtual reality” misses what is at stake in these abstract pleasures.  The joy of games of simulation is not that they allow us to mimic reality or live vicariously, but rather that they free abstract pleasures from the pleasure of the real.   The obsession with replicating the experience of reality reflects one of those numbing laws of culture: that the most absurd expenditures of energy and innovations are often devoted to recuperating antiquated forms of experience.

So much of the melancholic barbarism of history has resulted from the attempt to add the pleasure of the real to abstract pleasures that have nothing to do with reality. Accumulation is an abstract pleasure, but when the pleasure of accumulation can only be achieved by way of an elaborate detour through the concreteness of material reality, then it loses all its innocence. Granted: there can be no accumulation without finitude, and the pleasures of finitude.  But we should not suppose that material reality is the only form that finitude can take.

Perhaps some day we will realize that everything that has been said by philosophers about the soul was only a groping attempt to translate back into the language of the real forms of pleasure that have nothing intrinsically to do with the real.  And that the body, like the soul, is nothing but the imprecise location of a certain nexus of abstract pleasures.

Writing has a way of producing a certain abstraction of pleasure. It is, indeed, in this way that we might avoid both psychologism and historicism.  The effect of writing is most clear whenever Epicureans commit their thoughts to paper: the very attempt to communicate the real pleasures of the body graces them with an unreality that, without exactly being spiritual,  exceeds every materialist postulate.  The writings of Lucretius are exemplary in this regard.  The pleasure of reading is at the limit of hedonism.  Yet the effects of writing are no less evident in the writing of Platonists and mystics.

The critique of the metaphysics of presence belongs to the critique of pleasure, and is perhaps nothing more than a special case of the latter.

Gigi: towards a critique of quaintness (Gilmours Girls II)

The Gilmour Girls is the Hesiod of modern television.  It is all about genealogy: the generations have proliferated with a wonton, incestuous power. The present moment barely exists in itself, but is inscribed into the history of birth: a novelty that has already been written over by what it has become. New children are born, and old children appear from nowhere. And in all this, one rule is played out: the parent can only appear through the child, but the child has already been taken in by the parent. The mythic is perhaps nothing else than this circularity in which all becoming gets trapped and negated.

And this mythic circulation, moreover, is enforced through the circularity of the name. The proliferation of names, the trace of novelty in myth, has been collapsed into a single name: etymology comes down to an analytic judgment. Lorelai Gilmour (the first name, taken from Heine’s mythopoetic destruction of the myth of purity, is uncannily perfect) begat Rory Gilmour. And Rory’s half-sister, born of another mother who disappeared into France (like Heine and Hoelderlin, and almost like the Rhine itself), is named Gigi — the repetition of the first two letters of the last name that is not her own. There are no new names, only fragments of the old…

The mysterious essence of divinity in The Gilmour Girls, manifest only in the divisions that it begets, is the conjunction of formal, substanceless power (money, abstract intelligence) and quaintness.  Formal power is Olympian: it sits in its chambers and broods over the world that it controls and yet never experiences. The quaint, on the other hand, includes both the world and the earth: it is the experience of the sense of having experienced. Hence all the town meetings and festivals in Stars’ Hollows remain a diorama:  an ineffectual mock-up of political life.

(An etymological note: quaint derives from cognitus, and means pretty, clever, knowing… even cunning.  Its meaning is not so far off from deinos. As if what remained of the terrible, the wondrous, and the uncanny is nothing else than the quaint…)

The country inn — one thinks of Newhart — is one of the privileged sites of the sitcom.  Comedy follows from so many misplaced attempts to control an idiosyncratic element whose very stupidity and pigheadedness offers the most elemental form of resistance. But the Gilmour Girls, extending the sitcom into a drama, situates the comic conquest of history in a history of its own. Whereas Newhart never allowed comedy to collapse into the fantasy of reconciliation (the joy of the sitcom is its insistence on repetition), in the Gilmour Girls power is graced with dynamic powers of adaption. Lorelai, the daugher of privilege, enters Stars’ Hollow as a subaltern, cleaning toilet bowls and changing dirty sheets. And yet she is not only accepted as a member of the community, but becomes one of its elite.  It is only with her daughter, though, that the adaptive virtuosity of power, its quaint mastery over everything quaint, becomes absolute: Rory (like Hölderlin’s  Achilles) is, indeed, the very grace of power, and thus even the most obnoxious, barbarian of its manifestations (Paris, Logan) become sympathetic, and almost reconciled in her presence.  And thus she whirls from situation to situation, organizing, and softly dominating, everything that she touches.

third culture

The self-serving character of this appropriation should not be underestimated. Third culture, a name given to a principle for a new relationship between the human and the natural sciences. A new principle, implicitly to be compared to an old principle, that, they argue, never worked very well, ergo the division between the two disciplines that C. P. Snow summed up in 1959 as “Two Cultures.” The old division of science and art. Did this ever exist? More to the point, How do we understand the use of the word “culture” in the new formulation? How can there be more than one of them? It certainly does not refer to the purview of one of the two, culture as the object of the human sciences. In fact, Snow applies a metaphor from a discipline at the borderline of both, anthropology, and this analogy is not haphazard or meaningless. Mid-century anthropology was the science that claimed to find the single truth of multiple cultures using techniques adapted from natural science: hypothesis, observation, thesis.

And this is exactly what third culture does today, when it applies itself to the sphere of human production: it insinuates natural scientific methods into the study of cultural objects, artworks, genres, and history. Its most common gesture is to make meaningful human objects and practices meaningful for the new science by referring them to an evolutionary function. This gesture, the universal functionalization of art within a “higher” system (science, called nature), is an attack on the last bastion of freedom in Western thought. Freedom may be a feature of natural history in this schema. For evolution it comes in the shape of accident, collision, mutation, and transformation of environments. It may also play a role in cosmic and subatomic processes. But it is nowhere to be found in thinking, which has given up the inquiry into its grounds, authority, history, and possibilities, including its own productive act, trading this inquiry into thought for cognitive science. Recently I met a linguist who knew only one language besides his own, and that one not to well. Asked what he had been doing in Japan he said, “Mapping brains.”

Thus the claim, made by the proponents of the third culture principle at edge.org, that scientific popularizers are the new intellectuals, means that, whatever is left of art, literature, film, technology—techne in the most general sense—including the writing of the manifesti on cosmology, evolution, genetics, ecology, and so forth that they celebrate as the third culture, becomes subservient to scientific method, and further questioning of the concept of truth underlying it becomes—publicly at least—a great unlikelihood. Look at the newspapers of record today: the Times, the Post, the Globe. Little tension remains. The new explanatory principles are established or almost established. Where the reduction of phenomena to their evolutionary function has not greatly surpassed cultural writing about culture, it has already caught up with it and will soon leave it behind.

pinball

The traditional role of the game, once deprived of a pedagogic, let alone sacral, function, has been to waste time.   Having to gamble is the fate imposed on those who do not labor: when all time is measured as labor time, then true leisure (rather than the recreation time of the laborer) is possible only as the negation of every positive form of productivity. The chance accumulation of money is the paradoxical compensation for having nothing to do in life but waste time.  Being exposed, in the most intimate fabric of existence, to mere fortune marks the exclusion from the realm of the living.  And perhaps one could even say that every idea of happiness as consequence or reward is the vision of estrangement from the true pleasures of the times, which remain in a certain way unimaginable.

But for quite some time, the game has done something different: it makes time.  The principle reward is “staying in the game” — gaining the maximum playtime from a single quarter.  The parlor has been replaced by the arcade: that odd space. at once natural and unnatural, in which the waste of time becomes its birth. One no longer seeks to waste time, but to earn the right, through the confluence of luck and skill (pinball is exemplary in this regard), to waste more and more time.  The time that one can waste is itself earned, while the value, if purely symbolic, of this earned, wasted time is secured by way of a hyperbolic accumulation of points.

Death has not been banished from the world of the arcade: only quantitative loss. Death is inevitable, but it is no less inevitable that one will die with a positive balance sheet. Production and consumption, in this way, have been sundered. Labor time appears as joy of making time and making money — as a pure excrescence on the consumptive cycle of life.

On beauty

It is the serial killer’s responsibility to exceed in beauty every attempt by the cops or the psychologists to apprehend him, and it is always a him. He is an aesthete who, whether his victims are skinned, decapitated, defenestrated, dismembered, skewered, raped, or stewed, always admires them for their appearance, with an utterly uncultured, almost animal taste for their flesh. Maleness is a remnant of an old aesthetic prejudice, but it also implies an atavism and purely physical strength to tear through the layers of cultured nonchalance. The female has fashion models who devour themselves, the male serial killers who eat others.

The rips he makes in the patina of our expectations are the same rips he will make in his victim’s torso, and it is by the sudden jagged partitions that the skin comes to be the focus once again. Skin gets its closeup under the butcher’s knife. Thus the utter perversity of a serial killer who is also a vigilante. Dexter is moral, and so he breaks the only ordinance in the serial killer code: have no concern for morals, or: nothing deeper than the skin. When the serial killers become cops, the cops become wanton murderers, and society is at its end. We know and the television serial killer knows the only violence to do is against morality, since the only thing that is not skin deep is guts, and these are the most beautiful skins of all.

Crimson is the color of lust; even five-day-old blood blazes with it in the televisual understanding. Nowhere else among the old metal furniture and grey walls, hard-boiled detectives with their broken-down marriages and feeble passes at each other, do we find anything like the creamy skin, grasping hands, lecherous glares, and brute physicality of the murderer in his lair.

It is as if the world no longer smells, as if the only scenery left is crime scenery, all the other sets having lost their luster and become merely real. In the drama of the killer who keeps on killing, the pleasure principle and the death drive are one. Freud guessed that they come together in sadism; what he also almost says is that this accompanies the demise of the psyche.

It is no wonder, we note, that a largely pacific society dedicated to freedom of opinion–which means, in effect, balance, envisioned as a single grand debate with two equal sides and no end–and commerce should dream of secret violators who will not be stopped by common sense or by market forces. Like weeds they grow up among the fruitful. Reciprocal justice, the biblical way of morality, plays itself out in this fantasy, where the open wars we have denied ourselves since Vietnam have produced their covert equivalent. Surely this all started in the late 60s, the TV killers, the video games. Have the statistics been calculated? Is it 10 to 1, 20 to 1, 100 to 1?–the tally of victims in TV episodes and video games compared to those in our impoverished, purified reality? Every night a few dozen or so mangled corpses, or more, and now with satellite signal, even the tiniest, most remote village is nightly awash in blood.

Our television goes on so our punishment can go on, and our punishment is the death of the interior and the return of the surface. Serial killers murder victims, but they also murder depth and, with a blow to the head, abandon us to the appearances that we already haunt.

How I met my mother (French Theory, by François Cusset)

The critique of the critique of critique, like the old man in the sphynx’s riddle, is left, in the end, with only one leg on which to stand. Still kritizierbar is this alone — the myth of a heroic beginnings, of grand gestures, of new vistas, new worlds of thought, that might appear (ah… Baltimore… 1966) in a conference paper, written in a mere 10 days.   Master thinkers, and their disciples. A playfulness that was serious.  Now our seriousness is stillborn in its seriousness.

Against the sweet insouciance of Friends, there is something terrifying about this sitcom, which is marketed in Korea under the title: “I love Friends.” As if Friends, and the friend, had already become the object of a pathetic longing. As if, even in this, we must resign ourselves to an Ersatz-friends. With a macabre instinct, someone recognized that the great joke of Seinfeld, the fake cast, had suddenly been recast as a real sitcom.  As if there were a third repetition in history, beyond tragedy and farce.

But this third brings us back to the first: the husband, an architect like Mr. Brady, tells his children how he met their mother.  The purest form of the tyranny of mythopoesis.  As if the children could, or should care.  As if the very idea that they should care, that the mystery of their birth could be reduced to an endless sequence of tawdry vignettes, were not the most terrible offence against childhood. As if the novelty of birth could be seamlessly folded into the life of the parents.

What did Oedipus and Antigone talk about during their long years of wandering?

All myth, every beginning, is perverse.  This silliest of sitcoms brings us to the brink of tragic, Dionysian knowledge. The parents who entertain their child with the story of their prehistoric misadventures demand that the child replicate their own desire for life — without having lived.  They seek nothing less than the confirmation of their own desire for life in the lifeless desire of their children.  This is the prosaic, everyday form of mythic incest. And the tyranny of desire is always this: the desire for obsolete forms of desire.

We who watch are like the children who listen.  We do not live, but we desire to live.  And we late-born theorists (we theorists after theory…) are, in this, not so different than the couch potato. (Hence the critique of television is not the least bit irrelevant for proto philosophia) We do not think, but we desire to think.  We desire the form that thinking once took in its still fresh, but wholly mythic past.  We cannot imagine happiness but in a form that is no longer possible for us. True happiness for us is whatever happiness we cannot have.

The genius of Tristram Shandy suddenly dawns on me:  the sobriety of prose begins with the parody of the myth of our own drunken birth.

I was born then, in 1966, and before this: in Weimar, in Vienna, in Berlin, in Prague, in Jena, in Paris, in Florence, in Rome, and Athens. And also in places far from the cities.  Why do I then feel so melancholy as I read this book by François Cusset:  am I nothing simply because I was not there to watch my birth. Is there greatness only in beginnings?   But hasn’t philosophy, which has created so much from a single matter, always been the next best thing.

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