“I’m so bored. I hate my life.” - Britney Spears
Das Langweilige ist interessant geworden, weil das Interessante angefangen hat langweilig zu werden. – Thomas Mann
"Never for money/always for love" - The Talking Heads
Friday, June 07, 2024
the indefinitely postponed real
Thursday, June 06, 2024
The zig zag life of the fabulous Maryse Choisy
There are some people who live lives of such zigs and zags that one feels, summing them up, that they could not have been real. These ziggers and zaggers seem to come out in the great decades – for instance, the 20s and the 60s of the twentieth century. I don’t really have to point out, do I, that the twenty first century still hasn’t had a great decade?
There are still many many undiscovered lives, undiscovered
zig-zags, that ran through the 1920s. Among them, the fabulous Maryse Choisy.
She is forgotten now, for the most part. In the U.S., as far
as I can tell, only her reportage on life in the brothels (she’d taken a job as
a manager in a famous maison close, I believe the Sphinx), A month with the
girls, has been translated. Translated in 1960. The book came out in 1929 came
out. But this is a bullet point of her life up to then:
- become one of the first women at Oxford to take away a
degree in Sanskrit
-moved to India and taught Sanskrit
- moved to Vienna to become a psychoanalyst with Freud.
Disagreed with Freud
-returned to France and became a lion tamer
- became a reporter – in the great reporter tradition. After
reporting on brothels, she went to Mount Athos and reported on monks. Closed
societies, if you will.
This is quite the life. She went on to become a novelist,
report regularly on politics and finance, get a degree in psychoanalysis in the
United States, create the psychoanalytic journal Psyche, fall under the influence of Teilhard de Chardin,
become a guru, wrote about feminism in the 1970s and voyaged to Tibet for Le
Monde to write a series of article about the Dalai Llama.
I’m especially impressed with the part where, arguing with Freud,
she returned to France and took some circus training to become a lion tamer.
Take that, Wilhelm Reich! She wrote an account of lion taming for Gringoire
(this was before Gringoire became the infamous anti-semitic porn sheet). 4 September
1931 was a coup issue for the Gringoire. A story by Marcel Ayme. A column by G.
de Pawlowski, Gaston Pawlowski, known to scifi buffs for his Voyage to the Land
of the Fourth Dimension. And Choisy’s memoire of working in a “foire menagerie”
– a traveling circus zoo.
This is how she begins (oh autofictional muses, gather
round!):
“I appeared with my legs naked, a bit of cocotterie, an
evening dress that was very low cut, in crepe Georgette. The least paw sweep
would be noticeable on my skin. My robe was a bit long. Frank Henry claimed
that I needed a train, that would go well with the supple grace of the
panthers. Me, I am of the short skirt generation. But as long as, in closing
the door behind me, I didn’t get it caught in anything. As long as, in dodging
a panther’s leap, my feet didn’t get entangled in the train, and my nose in the
sand. Panthers are like men: they’ll fall on you when you are down. As long as… I advanced three steps. Took six
steps backwards. Panther on my right. Stool on my left. “
This is the voice of a woman who is only scared of what she
chooses to be scared of. That is the thing with zigzagging – you get tired, but
you find that fear is not something that need surprise you – you can surprise
it. Scare yourself.
The zig zag life is opposed, in its very essence, to the
credentialed life. Later, when Choisy chose to become a psychoanalyst, and even
found one of the big psychoanalytic journals, she had an advantage: she’d been
breathed on by the big cats.
Oh, as a ps - I found a documentary has been made of Un mois avec des filles. HereHere.
Wednesday, June 05, 2024
The rain in Paris
I as a reader in
this twenty first century am bonded to the text by the lesser boredom of the
text in contrast with the greater boredom outside the text of other things to
read or even, horrors, to do. It is in the balance of boredoms that this little
superannuated smartass, this me, shares with the Zeitgeist of other readers of
newspapers and magazines and social media and even sometimes print in what used
to be called, for the yucks, the meat-osphere. Meat, humans that is, on one
side, silicon on the other.
Ennui was once the kind of thing we find in the great Mallarme line, “La chair est triste, hélas ! et j'ai lu tous les livres.”
But some say the age of all the books has passed. I don't believe it. But I do believe that ennui results from something like a reading or looking too long. The optical equipment sifts through the same content, or content that begins to seem the same, from the office job to the commute, from the same old dinner to the same old tv series. Ennui, in Paris this spring, was the weather. I
call it spring because that is the official title of this time between March
and June, but a winterish must never really left Paris for the first half of
the year. The number of days it rained was an amazing 3,000,000, 000 – or maybe
that is just what it seemed like. When I finally cast off my winter coat, about
three weeks ago, I quickly had to rethink my decision.
A. tells me that
they predict a heat wave soon. So from winter mush we will be tipped into New
Delhi hell.
The great Paris
poem about rain is Baudelaire’s fourth Spleen poem, which begins:
« Je suis comme le roi d'un pays pluvieux,
Riche, mais impuissant, jeune et pourtant très
vieux,
Qui, de ses précepteurs méprisant les courbettes,
S'ennuie avec ses chiens comme avec d'autres bêtes. »
It occurred to me
that this poem must reflect a rainy season in Paris, some time in the 1850s
when it was written. I have not found evidence for the date of the composition,
so I cannot connect it, exactly, in all of its Poe funk, with something like
our non-spring. However, it does seem like 1852 stands out as a rainy year. It
was the year that a man named Vener, who wrote little articles for Le Corsair,
the paper Baudelaire contributed to when it was called Le Corsair By
-Satan in 1847. It
was edited, then, by a man named LePoitevan, who wanted to fill it with 40 to
60 line little essayettes. He called them vade retor.
By 1852, much ink
and blood had gone under the bridge, including a revolution and a coup d’etat
which gave France another Napoleon for “emperor”. The Corsaire was still
published, and they still favored the vade retor, or what would be
called the chronicle. Among their house writers was a hardworking man named
Vener. On June 9, 1852, his little piece
was entitled: It rains. It is a clever bit of handwork, and it makes me think
of Baudelaire – Benjamin was right to see Baudelaire as both a poet and an
atmosphere, a general sensibility among writers. He begins by comparing
different types of rain to different types of government: “ – when water falss
with that monotone regularity that tells us that the whole sky is taken; it is
like a bad government; one sadly awaits, with pain, without hope, for a near
end; it seems like it will continue forever.”
Vener makes the
rain the subject of the article that is not the article he should be writing –
he should be writing “reflections on the budget, on Belgium, on the Empire, on
the new state of France; impossible! The rain is against it.
It imprisons my
will, it paralyzes my spirit, it conquers me by a negative force, it annihilates
me; it might be said that its secret power washes away ideas, words, color,
images!”
I rather agree.
The rain, this non-season, has kept me inside our apartment. I lie on the
couch. I sit at the table. I type to no avail, I read to no avail, I age to no
avail.
All of this
non-availing, though, is broken by one pleasant day, one spring day, one
glimpse of sunlight on the plants on the terrace, one breath of fresh breeze
running its fingers over the leafery in the pots. And that spring day is today!
I could be king of
infinite space, today.
Monday, June 03, 2024
Absolutely: the novel
Certain
words are novels – and not just novels, but state of the nation novels, U.S.A.
novels.
Absolutely,
for instance. Exciting or excited.
Actually.
Absolutely
that became fixed as a certain sound in my ear years ago. I was living in Santa
Fe and, for a time, writing lyrics for a band. The singer would say,
absolutely, a lot. The singer was a sweet woman, who couldn’t hold a tune – you
could glue it to her tongue and she would still mess it up.
So we would
go through the song and she would be asked if she heard it, and she would say:
“absolutely”.
Like so
much in the U.S.A, the word came out of some combo of tv, movies, music and
coolhunting. And it ended up in business school.
One could
probably track it through trendy novels. It begins as a sort of Britishy
complement – in phrases like, say, absolutely stunning. It occurs in Less than
Zero – a marker of the eighties if there ever was one – both as an affirmative
and a complement. But only once as the former. Checking into seventies
zeitgeist novels – In Alison Lurie, it occurs in the form of “absolutely sure”
or “absolutely necessary” – holding on as a modifier, and not pushing aside the
“sure” to star by itself.
Ann
Beattie, whose signature method as a short story writer and novelist in the
seventies was to keep as close as possible to the oral tics of the time, used
absolutely the way Alice Lurie did. She only introduced absolutely, as a single
word, after the eighties.
These are
not definitive proofs of the origin of the bogus absolutely, but I’d like to
coordinate its mission creep with the “morning in America” that was the Reagan
era – an era in which the bogus made a comeback, from Wall Street to the shores
of Nicaragua.
Of course,
this mutation is not unrelated to other mutations abroad in the land – for
instance, the systematic skinning of the working class, from their place in the
popular arts to the dignity to their paychecks. “Sure”, the older Americanism, was both the extended hand and a word to be
spoken out of the side of the mouth by private dicks and mobsters. Sure was off
the farm – as was the population, draining into Detroit and Chicago and Los
Angeles and Cleveland, making steel in Youngstown and Pittsburg, waging labor
war in Flint. Sure was familiar with numbers runners and the overflowing
toilets in neighborhood taverns on Friday night. Sure had all beef hotdogs in
its teeth and the ball game on the radio. Sure was Rabbit, especially when yes
means no, as in “sure sure.” A doubling that allows Rabbit to hop away from his
responsibilities in Rabbit Run.
Absolutely is
Rabbit in his desuetude, Rabbit in Florida, Rabbit self-pitying in the strip
club. Absolutely is the fated, that is, planned erosion of the manufacturing
sector. Absolutely is the relentless rise of the service sector. Absolutely is
waitresses setting out jauntily to make money while going to college and ending
up three jobbing it to make payments on the college loan. Absolutely is
the cool music played at Starbucks. Absolutely is emotional labor, while
emotional surplus value is hauled off to be plasticized in the cultural
industries. But absolutely never reaches into the now dominent upper reaches,
who invaded every crannie of the popular arts in the U.S.A. and made it a
mirror of their own vanity. Absolutely is said to them. They never say it back.
Instead, they say things like, I’ll have the Chilean sea bass.
I sure hate
what absolutely did to the States.
Thursday, May 30, 2024
Genius is primarily egalitarian: Emerson and the newspapers
I read the
newspapers like Don Quixote read his romances, fulmination and prophecies race
through my brain and come out of my fingertips, perched on the keyboard, and I
know that I am behind, utterly behind on everything in my life, that what I do
is plunge into what avails not and what I don’t do is what does avail and must
avail and this is my mortal sin, and then the night is here, quicker than I
expect it to be, always.
With this attitude
towards the newspapers, I have long held that not enough is made of the
parallel between the literary culture of the moderns, from the 1700s on, and
the newspapers, which have been the great angels of Chronos during this same period
of time. Even now, as newspapers dwindle down like a pencil too often
sharpened, we see the form find its home and bearings on the internet and the
internet swell with it.
1
I like to think of
certain coincidences. Emerson, writing about the London Times, in English Traits:
“There is no corner and no night.” Emerson happened to visit the Continent, and
especially England, in the wonderful and terrible year, 1848. Year of the
Communist Manifesto, of the French revolution, which Emerson celebrates in his
journal – seeing that this time it is about “socialism”. He notes that Carlyle,
at that point still his friend, never read the newspapers until the Revolution
broke out.
And after 1848,
Marx, in England, becomes the great European correspondent for Emerson’s
sometimes friend, Horace Greeley, whose newspaper, The New York Tribune, was
the great American answer to the Times. Emerson and Greeley met on the lecture
circuit. In 1851, the New York Tribune started publishing articles by the man
the paper called “one of the clearest and most vigorous writers
that country has produced—no matter what may be the judgment of the critical
upon his public opinions in the sphere of political and social philosophy.”
At the time, Greeley was a Fourierist.
Emerson wrote about Fourier in an article in Margaret Fuller’s
The Dial:
“We had lately an opportunity of
learning something of these Socialists and their theory from the indefatigable
apostle of the sect in New York, Albert Brisbane. Mr. Brisbane pushes his
doctrine with all the force of memory, talent, honest faith, and importunacy.
As we listened to his exposition, it appeared to us the sublime of mechanical
philosophy; for the system was the perfection of arrangement and contrivance.
The force of arrangement could no farther go. The merit of the plan was that it
was a system; that it had not the partiality and hint-and-fragment character of
most popular schemes, but was coherent and comprehensive of facts to a
wonderful degree. It was not daunted by distance, or magnitude, or remoteness
of any sort, but strode about nature with a giant's step, and skipped no fact,
but wove its large Ptolemaic web of cycle and epicycle, of phalanx and
phalanstery, with laudable assiduity. Mechanics were pushed so far as fairly to
meet spiritualism. One could not but be struck with strange coincidences
betwixt Fourier and Swedenborg. Genius hitherto has been shamefully misapplied,
a mere trifler.”
2.
I have not found any hint in Emerson that Marx had
crossed his intellectual path – although surely he read some of his articles in
the Tribune. But the coupling of Fourier and Swedenberg predicts, mystically,
the messianic Marxism of Bloch and Benjamin, which crosses Marxism with Klee’s
angels.
There is something else in Emerson’s note on
Fourier that is consistent with his notion of the democratic theme that runs through
the newspaper form: the notion of an egalitarianism founded upon genius.
Our feeling was, that Fourier had skipped no fact but one,
namely, Life. He treats man as a plastic thing, something that may be put up or
down, ripened or retarded, moulded, polished, made into solid, or fluid, or
gas, at the will of the leader; or, perhaps, as a vegetable, from which, though
now a poor crab, a very good peach can by manure and exposure be in time
produced, but skips the faculty of life, which spawns and scorns system and
system-makers, which eludes all conditions, which makes or supplants a thousand
phalanxes and New-Harmonies with each pulsation. There is an order in which in
a sound mind the faculties always appear, and which, according to the strength
of the individual, they seek to realize in the surrounding world. The value of
Fourier's system is that it is a statement of such an order externized, or
carried outward into its correspondence in facts. The mistake is, that this
particular order and series is to be imposed by force of preaching and votes on
all men, and carried into rigid execution. But what is true and good must not
only be begun by life, but must be conducted to its issues by life. … nay, that
it would be better to say, let us be lovers and servants of that which is just;
and straightway every man becomes a centre of a holy and beneficent republic,
which he sees to include all men in its law, like that of Plato, and of Christ.
Before such a man the whole world becomes Fourierized or Christized or
humanized…”
3.
I love it when Emerson just rides.
But to break back into thought from such motion and rhetorical glory - the
newspaper or its form plays a central role in Emerson's intuition that genius is inherently egalitarian - that is, our private lights are, above all, new lights, new courses in the world marked by our ever anonymous and gigantic particularity. I am the we. And as this we, I must go back to the tabloid as Antaeus had to go back to the earth. It is my strength..
Sunday, May 26, 2024
COLLECTING, CULTURAL HISTORY, FETISHISM
“In brief, cultural history only represents a surface strike
against the insight [of historicism], but not that of dialectics. For it lacks
the destructive moment, which certifies dialectical thinking, as well as the experience of the dialectic thinker. It means
to increase the treasures that weigh on the back of mankind. But it doesn’t
give humanity the power to shake this off, in order to take them in its hands. This
is true as well of the socialist educational work at the turn of the century,
which took cultural history as its guiding star.”
This passage from Benjamin’s essay on Eduard Fuchs came to
my mind as I was reading Mel Gordon’s Horizontal Collaboration, his book about
the erotic culture of Paris, which is meant, I think, to be paired with his
earlier (cult) book about the erotic culture of Weimar Germany.
Like Fuchs, Gordon is a collector. Nothing brings together
cultural history, fetishism and a certain sense of hidden forces like
abundantly illustrated books concerning the vintage wanks of yesteryear. But Gordon
utterly lacks a dialectical mindset. For him, pleasure is a unified property –
not something divided between consumer and worker. Thus, he plunges into the
“happy” world of Parisian brothels and comes up with the anecdotes, which take
the place of any ethnology.
This is the blind spot of the fetishism that motivates
pilling up the “treasures”, whether of cheesecake photos or art objects of a
higher order – objects that are so often rooted, in the avant garde visual and
literary culture of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century, in the
same atmosphere of brothels and dance clubs whose photos, placards and
anecdotes spill out over Gordon’s pages – but never gets around to the moral
intellectual shudder that will free us from these things, so that we can recognize
them.
The erotic life, here, is utterly commercial. From the
brothel fuck to the photographer to the spectator – for there was as much a
market for spectacle as there was for tactile sex – “life” is restricted to
what is outside of “normal life”.
In the end, in the late 1960s, the identification of the
erotic with a certain marginal spectacle dissolved before the feminist
critique, which correctly identified pleasure as a heterogenous and often
exploitative property of “liberation.” The revolutionary moment, in the “sexual
revolution”, was all too non-dialectical. It was a revolution in the chains of
a very bourgeois positivism.
And don’t we all, generation after generation, bear the
marks of that lie? We still have not found the open sesame that will give us,
at the heart of normativity itself, our happiness back. Instead, we make our
separate treaties. It is this, I think, that has disempowered the avant garde
in my lifetime.
Thursday, May 23, 2024
Biden's foreign policy: let's bet everything on authoritarianism!
And watch it all slip away
(Por fin se va acabar)
Or leave a garden for your kids to play
(Jamás van a alcanzar)
--- The Black Angels, El JardinThe Black Angels, El Jardin
American foreign policy inhabits the same paradox that
American domestic policy lives in: what does it mean to be a democracy?
During the Cold War period, the paradox, at least on the
foreign policy side, was simplified by the idea that whatever was
anti-communist was democratic. This was, of course, technically not true: from
Nazi Germany to the Pinochet’s Chili, from Syngman Rhee’s South Korea to Thieu’s
South Vietnam, the United States chose authoritarian states over any possible
democratic alternative.
This led to millions of deaths around the world.
At the end of the Cold War, however, there was a sense in
the American foreign policy establishment that perhaps the U.S. could be an
interventionist liberal power. Weighing in on the side of democracy. The last
shreds of this solution were dissolved during the Bush regime. Although we
rhetorically wanted “democracy” in the occupied state of Iraq, it turns out
that we wanted it on our terms, with no interference from the Iraqi population.
We now seem, under Biden, to be reconstructing a Cold War
foreign policy that is even more contradictory than the one forged under
anti-communism. Here, democracy is the equivalent of being pro-Israel, no
matter what Israel does.
The only way any state in the Middle East, or North Africa,
or Central Asia can sustain that as a policy if for that state to be firmly
under the thumb of a dictator – be it Sisi in Egypt or the House of Saud or Jordan’s
“parliamentary” mock democracy. The U.S. policy is entirely dependent, under
Biden, on maintaining and strengthening these authoritarian powers.
This is the kind of paradox that will corrode Biden’s
message in the current election: the message that this is an election of “democracy”
against Trump’s authoritarianism. It is pretty simple to see that this message relies,
in Biden’s politics, on a limit: democracy cannot be entrusted to people like,
say, the Jordanians. This tacit principle makes a mockery of Biden’s domestic
view, that no persons because of race creed or gender should be denied full
civil rights.
Meanwhile authoritarians elsewhere have recognized that
whether Biden or Trump is elected, they have a friend in Washington. In Europe,
the far right has become absolutely loyal to Israel for two reasons: the
historical antisemitic psychopathology, out of which these parties spring, had
one great success, from the antisemitic point of view: the murder of six
million European Jews. That means practically that in a place like the
Netherlands, where the Nazis murdered three quarters of the Jewish community, Jews
now form only a tiny percentage of the population – around 50,000 in a total
population of 17 million. In comparison, the Muslim population – immigrants mostly
from Netherland’s colonies – constitute around a million. The Far Right under
Geert Wilders, which is the coalition partner in the Netherlands, has decided
to use a new tactic – attacking the Moslem population as antisemitic. That the ideological
and real ancestors of Wilders collaborated with the Nazis is now easy to
apologize for – with a grin, of course. Dutch Jews do have reasons to fear
increasing antisemitism among the Islamic population, as that population
absorbs the idea that opposing Israel is antisemitism.
In essence, the far-right part of Europe has been given a
gift by the right in Israel and its biapartisan allies in the U.S. Thus, a
program that was condemned in the 1990s in the war in Yugoslavia – the mass
murder of Bosnian Muslims – has now become less criminal, and more
understandable. Those Muslims were antisemitic! Thus, nobody blinks when
Netanyahu teams up with Orban to demonize the Hungarian Jew Soros.
Bad times are coming, no matter who is elected president in
the U.S.
The new economy is simply a ratio
The New Economy that came into
being in the nineties names, really, a ratio – that is, the rise in the ratio
between price and earnings. Just as the world starts, in the Upanishads, with
the first man, Pragapati, floating in a golden egg that he has somehow
fertilized himself, so too do we find our plutocrats floating in golden eggs
made out of financial instruments which exist solely in order that plutocrats
can grow the most enormous golden eggs the world has ever seen.
In an early era – in the
Progressive era – the p/e ratio had another name: overcapitalization. And
instead of celebrating an economic mechanism whereby speculators are allowed
and encouraged to treat themselves to stunning windfalls, the Progessives justly
saw overcapitalization as waste and fraud.
Lawrence Mitchell, in The
Speculation Economy, has, I think correctly, seen the first two decades of the
20th century in America as the period in which the limits of American
progressive politics – and by extension, the limits of anti-corporationism in the
West – were drawn and hardened. By 1920, the attempt to reform the stock market
from the root had failed.
The high point of the reform
effort came in 1911. In that year, the House of Representatives passed a bill a
bill that was narrowly turned down in the Senate, S. 232. S. 232 would not only
have required federal incorporation of all interstate businesses. Here’s
Mitchell’s description of it:
“It would have replaced
traditional state corporate finance law by preventing companies from issuing
“new stock” for more than the cash value of their assets, addressing both
traditional antitrust concerns and newer worries about the stability of the stock
market by preventing overcapitalization. But it would have done much more.
S. 232 was designed to restore
industry to its primary role in American business, subjugating finance to its
service. It would have directed the proceeds of securities issues to industrial
progress by preventing corporations from issuing stock except “for the purpose
of enlarging or extending the business of such corporation or for improvements
or betterments”, and only with the permission of the Secretary of Commerce and
Labor. Corporations would only be permitted to issue stock to finance
revenue-generating industrial activities rather than finance the ambitions of
sellers and promoters. … S. 232 would have restored the industrial business
model to American corporate capitalism and prevented the spread of the finance
combination from continuing it dominance of American industry.” (137)
Martin Sklar, in The Corporate
Reconstruction of American Capitalism, summarized the spirit of the drafts
prepared during Theodore Roosevelt’s administration that stood in the
background of the bill’s eventual configuration in this way: ‘whenever the amount
of outstanding stock should exceed the value of assets, the secretary would
require the corporation to call in all stock and issue new stock in lieu
thereof in an amount not exceeding the value of assets, and each stockholder
would be required to surrender the old stock and receive the new issue in an
amount proportionate to the old holdings.”
I’ve already manifested my
manifesto for a new Soviet version of 21st century capitalism – one that
destroys the corporate form and replaces it with hundreds of thousands of small
scale enterprises in flexible cooperative structures. It does not overturn
capitalism, but it does radically turn capitalism around. The limitation of
both the corporation and the state is a kind of capitalism with a human face –
which is much more radical than where ‘socialism’ is at the moment. For this
kind of harmony of opposites, of cooperation and competition, to really work,
the speculative economy would have to be radically subordinated to production.
The pleasure palace of the oligarchs, the four hundred trillion dollar
derivatives structure that burdens the earth (even as it actually does not
exist – truly, an extreme case of economic neuroses), will have to be burnt to
the ground. From a historical point of view, instead of a prescriptive one,
however: one has to marvel at what the railroad companies wrought. Most studies of railroads concentrate on
their physical structure, and their role in transport. But if you look at
financial history in the U.S., you find that railroads basically invented the
modern stock market. By overcapitalizing far beyond the needs of stock and
expansion, and by being the model that shaped the constitution of interstate
businesses, they forged the stock market as an instrument of overcapitalization
that it has since become. In the first decade of the twentieth century, state
attorney generals, elected by populists, tried to make railroad companies
adhere to their contractual obligations under state law. Well, that took
state's rights too far, and was overruled by the Federal government. The
Scotus, which piously devolved the rights of women over their own bodies to the
states, would shriek with horror if the states took up the right to regulate
the interstate commerce that comes through it. There is a limit to every
reactionary thing, after all! Common sense, among the plutocrats, has agreed to
this. And who are we to tell the rich assholes no?
Tuesday, May 21, 2024
My slang-ophilia - a history
For a writer with the proper equipment – an ear, curiosity
enough to kill a dozen cats, and a large capacity for laziness - Twitter, Tik Tok, blogs and the infinite
cesspool of comments on Internet is all, somehow, quicksilver, full of slang
mutants that often live have the half-lives of a celebrity goof on a reality tv
show but that flash, in their plunge towards death, some signal from the
Weltgeist. Some unutterable, utterable sadness. The slang, the acronyms, the rapid erasures of
jargon and slogan, I am in love with them beyond any ideological position.
This love of slang: it has a deep history. Before Rabelais,
there were the Roman satirists, like Juvenal, and before Juvenal, Aristophanes,
and before Aristophanes, the scribes of Egypt. I suppose. According to W. Puck
Brecher’s The Aesthetics of Strangeness, the Japanese thematic of kyo, or
madness, which generated a whole subculture in 18th and early
nineteenth century Japan, was attracted to the eccentric possibilities of slang
– which seems to be paralleled by the way obscene slang became politicized
under the French Revolution, particularly by the rather disgusting Hebert, the
writer of Pere Duchesne, a revolutionary journal that made the word fuck a regicidal
weapon. “I am the real Pere Duchesne, foutre” was the slogan of the journal.
Hebert became, by one of those odd throws of the dice of history, one of Marie
Antoinette’s judges, and in a glorious moment, when he accused her of incest
with her boy, she appealed to all the women in attendance to help her – and they
rioted.
The charge was withdrawn.
According to Charles Brunet, Hebert’s biography, the newsboys
in Paris in the 1790s would sell his journal with the catchphrase, “Il est bougrement
en colère
aujourd’hui le Père Duchesne!” “He is bleeding angry today, Père
Duchesne!” Bloody, of course, used to be more vulgar than it is now.
The love of slang in modernism – its use – was part of a
double movement, on the one hand towards erudite reference, on the other hand
towards popular culture: Leopold Bloom’s love of Paul de Kock, or Eliot’s love
of music hall, on the one hand, the footnotes to the Wasteland on the other. Modernism,
whatever it was and is, is a difficult vehicle for straightforward ideological
readings. In France, Marcel Schwob, the great friend of Colette and the great
admirer of Robert Louis Stevenson, wrote a famous essay on slang – argot. The
connection between class, colonialism and the stranger comes out where it
always does, in the metaphoric:
And it isn’t an affair, here, of the slang of the métier, the
technical languages that exercize a necessary influence on the names of
instruments, or of mechanical procedures ; the slang which we study is the
special speech of the dangerous classes of society. An imperious necessity pushes us to produce this
language. The words of our language are neither chased after nor tracked. But
those of raw speech live approximately with the respresentative of social
justice like the miners in Arizona with the Arapahoe Indians. Thus these miners
form a young nation, vivacious, which immigrates and colonizes constantly.
Slang is like a nation of miners which disembarked on our shores with cargos of
immigrants. It is easy to see that these ports of arrival are divided
between high society and low. At the low end, are the workers who gather the
words and carry them towards the center of language. The terms so introduced
are often designated in the dictionaries as « vulgar ».
The metaphor of the miners and the Arapahoes never quite
works, at least in as much as it is supposed to do conceptual work. Slang is
the miner; always colonizing, always emigrating, always tearing up the land and
water. But in this image, the Arapahoes are the social police – which inverts
the usual colonialist hierarchy without making much sense. Schwob moves on to a
more illuminating metaphor when he seizes on the miners as emigrants, making,
in a sense, in their underground tunnels a movement towards the center of
language.
The nearness of slang to “life” is a common trope among the
slangophiliacs. Mencken took from Whitman his interest in “Americanisms” and American
slang, and quoted Whitman’s wonderful demand for a Real Dictionary:
“The Real Dictionary will give all the words that exist in
use, the bad words as well as any. The Real Grammar will be that which declares
itself a nucleus of the spirit of the laws, with liberty to all to carry out
the spirit of the laws, even by violating them, if necessary. . . . These
States are rapidly supplying themselves with new words, called for by new
occasions, new facts, new politics, new combinations. Far plentier additions
will be needed, and, of course, will be supplied. . . . Many of the slang words
are our best; slang words among fighting men, gamblers, thieves, are powerful
words. . . . The appetite of the people of These States, in popular speeches
and writings, is for unhemmed latitude, coarseness, directness, live epithets,
expletives, words of opprobrium, resistance. This I understand because I have
the taste myself as large, as largely, as any one.”
Probably Schwob knew of Whitman, since he was an Anglophile,
and Whitman was a reference in the 1890s. The idea that we put the declaration
of independence in our mouths anytime we speak shakes off the dead forms of
Victorian British English – makes the language live. This battle is always
being waged – as for instance in the battle over black English, which gets a
going over in the movie American Fiction – although there the direction taken
is rather the reverse of what one expects, not a defence of black English but a
glance into how it becomes exoticized, commodified and neoliberalated.
Mencken was inclined to think that slang words were invented
by some particular someone. And this may be, but slang dies if it is just some
cute invention. It is slang because it is taken up, used and evolved. That Jack
Doyle, the “keeper of a billiard academy in New York City”, invented
hard-boiled may or may not be true, but hard-boiled is a mass event, as slang. Like jokes, generally, slang is unsigned. As a
philologist, one might be interested in the fact that John Marston the
Elizabethan playwright invented the word “puffy” – but its manifold use is a
matter of reinvention and readjustment. When I was writing my novel, Made a Few
Mistakes, I had a character who founded a magazine about strip joints, and I
wanted some grasp of stripper slang. I went to Tumblr, which was before it
committed suicide and excluded porno, and found many stripper written sites.
There I had a whole course in the argot of the metier – for instance, I learned
about “rain.” For a writer, the internet is a wonderland -as is a bar, a street
argument, and a group of tourists at Notre Dame.
Sometimes, it is all good.
Friday, May 17, 2024
Pain is Other
Buddhism came to Europe and America in the nineteenth century as a series of text, a philological affair, rather than as a set of practices, rituals, prayers, and sacrifices. It came firstly as intellectual history, rather than as history. The intellectual interest in it was charged by the eighteenth century’s rediscovery of idealism – starting with Berkeley and proceeding to Kant’s thing-in-itself, against which all philosophers and physicists have thrown themselves in vain. This, at least, gives us an outline – a semi-fictitious frame – to understand how Buddhist texts were inscribed by European and American thinkers in their own enterprises in the twentieth century. Stephen Spender said that Eliot, at the time of the Wasteland, said that he would have been a Buddhist if not for being stuck, as it were, in his own culture.
Buddhism , or at least its image, in American poetry in the twentieth century is enormously important.
In Europe, Buddhism did not have the same
poetic force. It was, however, picked at by philosophers who were at the
margins – neither comfortably continental, by which I mean influenced by
phenomenology and Marx, nor analytic. Sages.
Cioran was, if anything, a sage. He was a sage
of suicide, or rather, of the internal death drive that creates a sort of
longing for the end. His journal, which was also a workbook (similar to the operational
method of Emerson) is full of cries and whispers and readings. As a Sage, Ciorna
was an inveterate gloss-er – it was in picking over the lines and textual bits
of others that he could stake a place for his own thought.
I came across this sequence in his journal for 1962:
“What is impermanent is pain ; what is
pain is not-itself. What is not-itself is not mine, I am not this, this is not
me.» (Samyutta Nikaya)
What is pain is not-itself. It is difficult, it is impossible to be in agreement with
Buddhism on this point, this very important point. For us, pain is more it-self
than ever. What a strange religion! It sees
pain everywhere and it declares, at the same time, that it is irreal.
I accept pain. I cannot do without it, and I cannot, in the
name of pity (like the Buddha) refuse it a metaphysical status. Buddhism
assimilates appearance to pain, it even confounds them. In fact, pain is what
gives a depth, a reality to appearance.”
I rather agree with Cioran’s response here.
The mention of “pity” brings into focus this objection to the cold metaphysical
indifference to pain – to pain as not-itself – because pity does not even get
off the ground if pain is, in the end, simply negative, simply the not-self.
Here the dialectic applies, for pain as not-itself does not mean not-pain is
itself – it means, rather, that all that is pain and all that holds the
possibility of pain - all that is sentient - is not. It is the opening wedge of
the Great dissolution. Cioran is in the line of twentieth century thinkers –
like Unamumo – who insist that the tragic, that seemingly aesthetic category,
is at the center of the moral life. I have some sympathy with that, which works
against my otherwise happy American pragmatism. Without the tragic, pragmatism
becomes, in my view, unhinged. It seeks out – as every philosophical instinct
seeks out – an end, an ultimate, and only finds another transaction – which is
why pragmatism accords so well with the cash nexus.
Cioran, that old reactionary, is good to read
against the grain of pragmatism. Interestingly, it is this which makes me
suspicious of the American poetic theme of Buddhism. It is all too much in the
American grain.
Thursday, May 16, 2024
The case of Ilan Pappe: free speech now, free speech forever.
In the midst of #metoo and black lives matter, Harper’s
Magazine felt compelled to defend “free speech”. In a well known manifesto,
Harper’s signatories enthusiastically agreed to the following:
It turns out that what was meant by caustic counter-speech
was black face and calling women cunts. What was not meant was, well, defending
Gaza’s right to self-defense, or putting in question in any way Israel’s
campaign of mass murder that has so far killed, according to U.N. estimates,
7,000 plus children (the UN recently revised its estimates because at least ten
thousand casualties are too blown away to categorize. And this does not include
the estimated 10,000 buried in the rubble).
So, here we are, with the banning of the conference on
Palestine in Berlin, the yanking away of Nancy Fraser’s appointment at a German
university because she – a Jew – turns out not to be the right kind of Jew,
even signing a petition against Israel’s war in Gaza (by some awkward
coincidence, it is estimated that 30 percent of the academics and intellectuals
who have been banned or have had their speech interdicted in Germany are Jews. Hmm).
And then there is the United States, where snipers are set up at Indiana
University to deal with the “dangerous” pro-Palestinian protesters, where
pro-Israeli hooligans are allowed unimpeded access to attack pro-Palestinian
protesters at UCLA, and so on and so forth.
The latest un-upholding of “the value of robust and even
caustic counter-speech” was the detaining of Ilan Pappe, an Israeli historian
critical of Israel’s policy towards Palestinians, by the FBI at the Detroit
airport.
This is his account.
We have yet to hear from the defenders of blackface about Pappe’s
detention. Most likely, they are for it. Because he’s "anti-semitic" – although an
Israeli Jew. Because Netanyahu and the cops determine, now, who is a Jew and who is an un-Jew.
Creating a
false equivalence (Israeli equals Jew) is doing beaucoup service, especially
for the right and right-center, which now can enjoy its long history of
anti-semitism while claiming, righteously, to support "Jews" -
meaning Israelis. It is rather like claiming that Canada and the U.S. are
anglo-saxon countries. Which claim, by some coincidence, has been exactly what
the right has been pushing for forever.
Tuesday, May 14, 2024
On forgetting
Any document entitling itself 'on forgetting' ought to start with a dot dot dot.
…
I have noticed that in speaking, I often experience
– my age, my it, experiences -a moment of de-concentration. It is as if my mind
wanders away from a noun or, especially, a proper name. Forgetting a name is a
basic politeness mistake – when I speak to X, if I forget X’s name, some taboo
in the tribe of Ego and Id is touched upon. I feel embarrassed, as if I made
some blunder, as if flummoxing my part in the ritual. Even though X doesn’t
know what is happening under my facial expression, I feel that X is “feeling”
me. Projection? Or is this the everyday ESP of our meet and greet that I am
boggling. At the same time, I can remember the most esoteric of names – I remember,
for instance, Sieur Lahontan, an obscure French explorer. But the name Ruth, or
Jack, or Jill, will sometimes, tantalizingly, slip through the gaps.
This leads to one of those aging things: the memory
revery. The X encounter might be long gone, the night will be upon us with its
star and moonwork, and I will be following the clues, like Sherlock Holmes on a
case, that will hopefully lead me to X’s name.
The routes of memory, the stimulus that creates the
remembered content – a name, a date, a past certainty – becomes, as you get
older, more hazardous to travel down – parallel to your skill at, say, driving
a car, which also is a matter of going down routes, streets, judging distances,
making turns, stopping at the lights, ignoring certain stimuli, picking up
other. The speed of life within me is such that these blanks occur, as if there
were suddenly too much light coming through the windshield – or too much
darkness. In the heart of too much light, as your eye knows, is the pitchiest
pitch. I have lived among words with a self-proclaimed affinity for them, for
writing them down, for taking them and
making them do rhythmic and semantic things; when simple names escape me, I
wonder if I got my life’s purpose wrong on that long ago day when I decided to
become a writer. On the other hand, the scale of these defeats is not large.
How often am I going to need the word “risotto”, for instance, a word that
somehow keeps disappearing from my lexicon? It is not the key to my heart – I
can take or leave risotto.
What we forget, Freud thought, represented forces
that make us forget: the vertiginous libido pitted against the brutal
death-drive. What an arcade game the human consciousness becomes! This is,
perhaps, not a bad image even for the sensualist program, long preceding Freud,
in which the senses carry with them anything but certainty about the data they
supposedly represent – and yet that wreck of data, that ghost of the world, is
what we must cling to, like victims of shipwreck hanging on the spars that still
float on the surface, waiting for rescue.
Philosophy is no rescue. I have definitely come to
the sage stage in life, or retirement, whatever we want to call it, and I am
beginning to suspect that the calmness of the sage is just a mask for the
amnesia our biology crafts, its last little trap.
ON FREE LUNCHES
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