In Ma Nuit chez Maud, Jean-Louis, the Catholic engineer,
bumps into an old college friend of his, Vidal, who is now a philosophy
professor. Jean-Louis confesses that he is still an observing Catholic; but, he
says, he has his own ideas about Catholicism. For instance, he recently read
Pascal and felt that if Pascal’s rigorism was Christianity, he would rather be
an atheist. Vidal, on the other hand, claims that, as a Marxist, Pascal has a
peculiar meaning to him. His choice of Marxism, he claims, was decided by
something like Pascal’s wager about the existence of God. As Vidal sees it,
there are two ways of looking at history. Either it doesn’t make sense or it
does. If the first view, A, has an 80 percent sense of being true, and the
second a 20 percent chance, it is still rational to bet on the second view – as
it fills one’s life with meaning.
I doubt that there are many Marxists today who would say, with Vidal, that
Marxism is identical to the decision to see a meaning in history. They are far
more likely to explain that Marxism points to the way in which the meaning of
history changes with the historical circumstances of the interpreters – which
tends to undermine any objective claim to discern the meaning of history. And,
to an extent, I would agree with the disabused Marxist. Vidal is the mouthpiece
of a fairly common strain of rhetoric in the years after WWII, when the defeat
of Nazi Germany and decolonization of the Third World seemed to be objective
proof that history was ‘on our side’.
… Which isn't to say that this was the only sense one could see in
history – it could be an infinite abasement, as it appears to have been seen by
Cioran. By the sixties, however, the notion that there was some inevitable
development in history – inevitability being one way to construe the ‘meaning’
of history – was on the wane. The notion that there was a discontinuity in
history tended to make the idea that there was a sense in it seem quaint.
On the other hand, there was also positivist variant that stretches from
the Rotary club booster to the University of Chicago prof, which opined that
the progress of science was, in some general and vague way the progress that
had brought us liberal capitalist society. In the late 80s and 90s, a variant
of this idea was that capitalism as globalism was the end of history. This
sounded more apocalyptic than the Babbit insistence in this snatch of dialogue
from Flannery O'Connor's The Life you Save May Be Your Own:
“Mr. Shiftlet's eye in the darkness was focused on a part of the
automobile bumper that glittered in the distance. "Lady," he said,
jerking his short arm up as if he could point with it to her house and yard and
pump, "there ain't a broken thing on this plantation that I couldn't fix
for you, one‑arm jackleg or not. I'm a man," he said with a sullen
dignity, "even if I ain't a whole one. I got," he said, tapping his
knuckles on the floor to emphasize the immensity of what he was going to say,
"a moral intelligence!" and his face pierced out of the darkness into
a shaft of doorlight and he stared at her as if he were astonished himself at
this impossible truth.The old woman was not impressed with the phrase. "I
told you you could hang around and work for food," she said, "if you
don't mind sleeping in that car yonder."
"Why listen, Lady," he said with a grin of delight, "the monks
of old slept in their coffins!"
"They wasn't as advanced as we are," the old woman said.”
Marx had a strong sense of history. This, it is usually said, is his
inheritance from Hegel; however, even a glance at the Enlightenment and
Romantic culture of Germany would show us that history as a “force” of some
kind precedes Hegel. For Herder, for the translators of the Scots like Gentz, for
romantic critics like Schlegel, history as a force was already part of the
intellectual equipment. And who could blame them? Looking about, it was hard to
find institutions in Germany that would help overthrow the impediments to
modernity - everywhere were crappy small landholders and tax collectors,
peasants and pastors. History was treated as all the more autonomous as the
historian was all the more feudally dependent. The peasant society of the
limited good was particularly strong in the German states, and the distrust of
growth was shared by peasants and Junkers alike. Faith in history as a force
was the face of the modernity longed for by a section of the intelligentsia.
Marx’s original views about history were, I think, entangled with his sense of
Germany’s underdevelopment. The double aspect of Marx’s description of the
capitalist system – on the one hand, as the expression of the revolutionary
force of the bourgeoisie, and, on the other hand, as a system that had to be
overthrown – lead to a certain confusion in reading Marx chronologically. That
double aspect allows Marx a lot of elbow room for his irony – and Marx always
viewed irony as a high intellectual gift. I need to find that passage where he
laughs about the political economist's blindness to irony. That was a fatal
flaw.
It is in the Manifesto that Marx makes certain statements about history that,
themselves, have a history leading up to the conversation of Jean-Louis and
Vidal in Ma Nuit chez Maud. As with Baudelaire’s notion of the modern, history
is obviously a bit of an intoxicant to Marx. And why not? Who has not known the
sublime feeling of standing with the devil above it all, at say 6,000 feet
above all human kind – although it is best not to bow down to the devil at that
moment, no matter what he promises you.
“One speaks of ideas, which revolutionize a whole society; one thus only
expresses the fact, that within the old society have been moulded the elements
of a new one, for the dissoluton of the old ideas keeps pace with the
dissolution of the old relations of life.”
The uncompromising phrase, a “whole society,” seems to infer a unilateral
motion, pressing on all levels of society. Everything goes at once, for all
pieces of the old relations of life are connected to each other. And we do see
this. Who can’t see, for instance, that the old ways of human locomotion –
mainly by walking, sometimes by horse – were so completely swept away, first by
the railroad, then by the automobile, that walking in many places in the
developed world – for instance, Texas – has become a minority option. The old
times – the week it would take to go from London to Edinburgh – have
disappeared – or exist only in the minds and careers of bums and tramps. But
bums and tramps can’t simply walk across the countryside like they could in
1900 or 1800 – they are bounded by the roads they can travel, as they cannot
walk besides a highway, and would certainly draw police attention if they walk
along other roads. At the present time, China, in one of the greatest
engineering feats ever attempted, is automobilizing its human locomotion. All
over the world, the car is uprooting and changing the old relations of life.
And yet, is it true that the surface of life is so homogeneous that it can
simply change like this? The romantic notion now is that beneath the crust,
lifeforces still counter social changes. History has turned into Thanatos – and
the lifeforce, Eros, struggles against it mightily.
Eros is us.
1 comment:
Amen.
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