Thursday, April 2, 2009
what makes a goddess laugh?
According to Alain Roger, a philosopher, art continually references nature and continually denaturalizes it. When we look at art, then, we should be looking for the methods of denaturalization: "In whatever manner it operates, art always proceeds by denaturalization. But this is in turn covered by two opposing forms: by excess or default. The same support, such and such a part of the body, for instance, could, according to the place and the epoch, be made the object of a dilation or as well a reduction, which can go as far as annihilation. Nature erased, or hyperbolized. This is what we see, in a fashion particularly spectacular, in the artistic treatment of vulvas.”
Roger makes his case by going far back as we can go in finding representations of the vulva – he goes back to 30,000 BC and the first “Venus” statuettes found in many digs, such as Laugerie Basse. Roger believes that there is a structural constant here – when the statuette depicts the vulva, it dilates it and abolishes the face. Sometimes the whole head is reduced to a bump.
Roger contends that the whole figure of the woman is ithyphallicized – made into the semblance of an erect penis, “as if “nature”, being thus exhibited, must, at the limit, be denatured in its Other, as if the vulva can only accede to the view in annihilating the vultus, on the one side, and in ithyphallicizing itself, on the other. Nothing, or the Phallus.”
Roger ties this observation to the myth of Baubo. I’ve already mentioned Vernant’s essay on Baubo in a post written in 2007 (how time flies!). Baubo made Demeter laugh by raising her skirt and showing Demeter her privates. Baubo is associated with Gorgo and another Greek monster figure, Mormo. Vernant speaks of a genital face – a sort of folding of the body, or rather, a repetition of or projection of the genitals upon the face. And vice versa: “In place of the vulva, a vultus! This is what made Demeter laugh: a vulva, but vultuary, a turgid, congested, phallic face. She burst out laughing for this, this simulacra, his facetious facies, this fallacious phallus. One could, of course, hold to a much shorter reading: Demeter burst into laughter because, as Aristotle says, “the laughable is a part of the ugly”, especially if one recalls that, in the Parmenides, “the hair, the mud, the dirt” justly make up a part of the laughable, the “geloia”.
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North! Spotting LI's secret weakness, which is an aversion to tatooed penii - don't tell anybody, otherwise I'll get kicked out of the kewl kids Tattooed penii parties. I always say I have to go to the bathroom when it comes my turn to pull it out. Although before that I'm all, rifght, I had them tattoo a Moby Dick, the great white whale, on the incredible length of my member of Parliament, if you know what I mean.
ReplyDeletewe have all got our peculiar fancies for members of parliament, and I have got mine. some people like a giggling member, some a flowery member, and some a jaunty member… none of these members, I must say, exactly hit my taste—perhaps because my taste is somewhat eccentric.
ReplyDeleteAQ 4402 = WE HAVE ALL GOT OUR PECULIAR FANCIES FOR MEMBERS OF PARLIAMENT, AND I HAVE GOT MINE. SOME PEOPLE LIKE A GIGGLING MEMBER, SOME A FLOWERY MEMBER, AND SOME A JAUNTY MEMBER… NONE OF THESE MEMBERS, I MUST SAY, EXACTLY HIT MY TASTE-PERHAPS BECAUSE MY TASTE IS SOMEWHAT ECCENTRIC = THE SPECTRAL, HYPNOTIC INTERPRETATION OF CLASSIC CHICAGO GROOVES EMERGING ON LABELS SUCH AS PERLON, KOMPAKT, PLAYHOUSE, ONGAKU, KLANG ELEKTRONIK AND THE MILLE PLATEAUX FAMILY OF IMPRINTS-MOST NOTABLY FORCE TRACKS AND FORCE INC- AT THE TURN OF THE MILLENNIUM (AQ-216 MICROHOUSE, AQ-480 MICROHOUSE'S FORWARD MARCH).
ReplyDeleteAQ 2045 = SHERBURNE COINED THE TERM "MICROHOUSE" TO DESCRIBE PROMINENT MINIMALIST TENDENCIES IN CONTEMPORARY HOUSE AND TECHNO (AQ-258 AUDIO CULTURE) = I HAD THEM TATTOO A MOBY DICK, THE GREAT WHITE WHALE, ON THE INCREDIBLE LENGTH OF MY MEMBER OF PARLIAMENT, IF YOU KNOW WHAT I MEAN.