Monday, February 9, 2009

philosopher-villains


Klossowski, in the essay on the “philosopher-villain” that begins Sade, my neighbor, uses Sade’s own mocking division between the philosophers in his “own” works, who are decent people, and the philosophers in Justine, where, in an ‘inexcusable clumsiness that was bound to set the author at loggerheads with wise men and fools alike,” “all the philosophical characters in this novel are villains to the core.”

In a sense, what Sade is doing is employing the Russellian distinction between types, here – the philosopher-villains exist in quoted space. In one’s own work, where the citational melts away, the philosophers are decent – as decent as any lab worker who operates on the human product, as they used to say at the AEC when feeding selected American detritus – the poor, the non-white – bits of plutonium.

I remarked last time on Magris’ notion that transgression is embodied in the Nazi bureaucrat and the leader, which I think is a typical argument against Bataille’s notion of transgression. The argument that is mounted against Bataille ignores the opposition to power encoded in it, or claims that the opposition, being circumstantial, falls away from the generality claimed by the transgressor. Opposition is hypocrisy. Resistance is resentment. After all, if one supposes that all ideas and systems strive for power - and didn't Bataille claim not only to be a Nietzschian critic, but, in a sense, to be Nietzsche - than that opposition stands revealed as a hypocritical strategem, thrown away when the transgressor gains power and can do as he wants. Otherwise, it would seem, we are talking about organized futility – as we approach sovereignty, the institutional bonds all dissolve that give sovereignty meaning. Foucault, whose essay on the experience-limit touched that logic, began to backtrack in the seventies, for Magris like reasons – in fact, by becoming popular, transgression was actually lowering the real level of transgression in society.

I like Klossowski’s explanation of the Sadeian strategy, which is based on counter-generality. I like it because it goes so nicely with how the human limit was erased, on the theoretical level, by universal-making – making, for instance, universal history. Making universal emotions. Making universal subjects. Making a universal system of production in which universalized labor leads to infinite substitutability among the workers.

Sade, according to Klossowski, saw how he could game this enlightenment program:

“The peculiarly human act of writing presupposes a generality that a singular case claims to join, and by belonging to this generality claims to come to understand itself. Sade as a singular case conceives his art of writing as verifying such belongingness. The medium of generality in Sade’s time is the logically structured language of the classical tradition: in its structure this language reproduces and reconstitutes in the field of communicative gestures the normative structure of the human race in individuals…

With this principle of the normative generality of the human race in mind, Sade sets out to establish a countergenerality that would obtain for the specificity of perversions, making exchange between singular cases of perversion possible. These, in the existing normative generality, are defined by the absense of logical structure. Thus is conceived Sade’s notion of integral monstrosity. Sade takes this countergenerality, valid for the specificity of perversion, to be already implicit in the existing generality. For he thinks that the atheism proclaimed by normative reason, in the name of man’s freedom and sovereignty, is destined to reverse the existing generality into this countergenerality. Atheism, the supreme act of normative reason, is thus destined to establish the reign of the total absence of norms.” [Sade, my neighbor, trans. by Alphonso Lingis, 14-15]


Sade, then, is rejecting – or perhaps I should say, creating an antithesis - to one of the fundamental enlightenment discoveries – Bayle’s notion that the society of atheists would be every bit as moral as the society of believers. That is, Bayle took it to be a truth about human beings that belief and action are, in practice, forever divided. To believe we should love our neighbor as ourself, and to roust out our neighbor from her house and roast her, as a witch, on the nearest tarred pole, were not anthropologically contradictory things. To believe that the universe came together at random, and to denounce witch burning, were also not anthropologically contradictory things. By which I mean that Bayle did not come to this conclusion by going outward from a logical analysis of belief, but by suspending any analysis of belief and looking at what people said and did.

The image of the moral society of atheists was an immense shock in a culture that had sacralized belief. It runs through the enlightenment like pain ran through the princess after she’d spent the night sleeping on the pea. Tolerance, Mandeville’s cynicism, Adam Smith’s invisible hand, they all come out of the methodological imperative of beginning first with what people did and said, and suspending belief. But, until one gets used to it, this is a highly unnatural stance to take. It seemed to eat away at any belief, since after all, what function did it have?

On the one hand, the space opened up by tolerance made possible the social notion of happiness – for it was intolerance of belief, more than anything else, that had acted the role of nemesis in European culture and in the global conquests of that Europe. On the other hand, it was felt as a sort of numbing of a once vital organ.

Ps – in some ways, the gothic horrors of Sade are too infernal, too brightly lit by the Christianity that follows his every step like a shadow. One could extract another logical line, from the dissolution of all norms to poshlost’ – the world of banality. Magris, in a sense, goes wrong by not putting in this vital step. Contra Hannah Arendt, Eichman’s evil is not something that accidentally arises from banality – banality is the original and primal form of evil in the world. We follow Gogol here, per Merezhovsky. Instead of Juliette, the Petty Demon. From which I take this wonderful extract – Peredonov, the “hero”, a schoolteacher, has just come home to his mistress, Varvara, who he calls his cousin. He’s promised to marry her, but is suspicious that she won’t come through on her end of the bargain, which is to make him an inspector. Besides, Peredenov is suspicious that she is poisoning him. He is also suspicious, every time he hears someone laugh in front of him, that they are laughing at him. And, to finish up this summary of his qualities, he prefers not to think, but believes anything he is told. So Peredenov naturally decides to torment Varvara by making her believe he has been over at the next door neighbors, paying court to their daughter, Marta:

She's covered with freckles," said Varvara, spitefully.
" And she's got a mouth that stretches from ear to ear. You might as well sew up her mouth, like a frog's."
"Anyway, she's handsomer than you," said Peredonov."I think I'll take her and marry her."
" You dare marry her," shouted Varvara, reddening and trembling with rage, "and I'll burn her eyes out with vitriol !"
"I'd like to spit on you," said Peredonov, quite calmly.
"Just try it !" said Varvara.
"Well, I will," answered Peredonov.
He rose, and with a sluggish and indifferent expression, spat in her face.
"Pig !"said Varvara, as quietly as if his spitting on her had refreshed her. And she began to wipe her facewith a table napkin. Peredonov was silent. Latterly he had been more brusque with her than usual. And evenin the beginning he had never been particularly gentlewith her. Encouraged by his silence, she repeated more loudly :
"Pig ! You are a pig !"

This joyful scene is interrupted by the entrance of a friend, Volodin. Drinks and jam tarts are served. And then:

“Suddenly Peredonov splashed the dregs of his coffee cup on the wall-paper. Volodin goggled his sheepish eyes, and gazed in astonishment. The wall-paper was soiled and torn. Volodin asked:
" What are you doing to your wall-paper ?"
Peredonov and Varvara laughed.
"It's to spite the landlady," said Varvara. " We're leaving soon. Only don't you chatter."
"Splendid !' shouted Volodin, and joined in the laughter.
Peredonov walked up to the wall and began to wipe the soles of his boots on it. Volodin followed his example.
Peredonov said :
" We always dirty the walls after every meal, so that they'll remember us when we've gone !"
" What a mess you've made !' exclaimed Volodin,delightedly.
" Won't Irishka be surprised," said Varvara, with a dry, malicious laugh.
And all three, standing before the wall, began to spit at it, to tear the paper, and to smear it with their boots. Afterwards, tired but pleased, they ceased.

Peredonov bent down and picked up the cat, a fat, white, ugly beast. He began to torment the animal, pulling its ears, and tail, and then shook it by the neck. Volodin laughed gleefully and suggested other methods of tormenting the animal.
"Ardalyon Borisitch, blow into his eyes ! Brush his fur backwards !"
The cat snarled, and tried to get away, but dared not show its claws. It was always thrashed for scratching. At last this amusement palled on Peredonov and he let the cat go.”

4 comments:

  1. omg! No, I had not seen that. I definitely had not seen that, dude. I started it, but I can't just ... do it. Bataille's voice, man! What will they did up next - a recording of Baudelaire?
    I mean, in a way, I don't want to see Bataile calmly answering questions in his librarian's suit. Surely the interviewer should have said, fuck it and gotten Bataille to read passages from Le Bleu du ciel. Like the passage about the banners Troppman sees in Vienna that announce the coming of the fascists:

    "Elle ne tombait pas: ellle claquait dans le vent avec un grand bruit a hauteur du toit; elle se deroulait en prenant des formes tourmentees; comme un ruisseau d'encre qui aurait coule dans les nuages. L'incident parait etranger a mon histoire, mais c'etait pour moi comme si une poche d'encre s'ouvrait dans ma tete et jetais sur, ce jour-la, de mourir sans tarder."

    An image that has haunted me since I first read it, in 1989.

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  2. LI, have to admit that I was so stunned to come across that interview clip that I listened to it all the way through, and I have to admit also that I do love Bataille's voice and phrasing. And of course, as you say, it is so incongruous, Bataille in the library suit, saying what he is saying. I thought I detected a glint in his eye at one point as if he just wanted to burst out laughing - damn, I wish he had! This is after all someone who wrote:

    Je pense comme une fille enlève sa robe.

    A poet, Christian Prigent, wrote a fugue variation on this phrase. In a book called - you guessed it - Le Professeur. Here's an extract:

    Le professeur dit la chute de ta robe est comme ma pensée ma pensée tombe avec ta robe la chute de ma pensée est ce à quoi je pense quand je pense au moment où ta robe tombe le professeur dit ma pensée est une tombe où penser se dérobe ma pensée se dérobe dans l'envie de toucher ce que ta robe tombée enrobe de pensée le professeur dit ma pensée touche au dérobé de la pensée il faudrait touchait ça dans la nudité de la pensée tombée dans le dérobé de la pensée il faudrait touchait ça dans la nudité de la pensée tombée dans le dérobé de la pensée il faudrait penser dans la pensée déshabillée de toute pensée.

    ....

    LI, that is quite the passage you quote from Le Bleu du Ciel. It is seared into me as well, as is much of that "book" with its itinerary from the city where Marx died to the one where he was born. I'll never forget reading Bataille for the first time - totally out of the blue as it were - and I was fucking 15! Then as now, I cannot get the reading - laudatory or dismissive - of these texts which takes transgression as jolly jolly, so easily "accomplished". Eh, no, it is anything but.

    LI, as you know, the ways of the third life are strange in their crossings. But some of your recent posts, particularly the one about "spies in the house of love" - which is fucking incredible - have me wanting to try again to write about these texts that continue to haunt me. (Which would be pretty hilarious at this particular point of my life.)

    Back when the Long Sunday folks kindly invited me to participate on their site, my initial post somehow inevitably involved Bataille as well as one of the profs/philosphers that I studied with, that reading Bataille led me to. It is not much of a post at all as I never followed up on it as promised. But it does have a couple of quotes that the one from Le Bleu du Ciel reminded me of. So pardon my indulgence in linking to it rather than copying the quotes. To be continued.

    http://www.long-sunday.net/long_sunday/2005/08/reasons_to_writ.html

    Amie

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  3. To make that work as a link, you need to put it in html, thus.

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  4. Mr. PML, thanks very much for correcting my mistake and providing the link. Also, for replying to my question in the earlier post.

    Amie

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