La Chambre (after Balthus)
“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
I can’t hold together, in my head, these two
things: on the one hand, my knowledge that myself and my cohort have loaded up
the future with the unimaginable horror of climate change – the effects of
which abound for anyone with the eyes to see – and on the other hand, my boy
Adam, whose last day in third grade – CE2 – is today. In my regular life, my
organic life, the second hand outweighs the first. Adam is looking forward to
getting out and summer vacation. I have this feeling in my chest like my heart
swallowed all the fallen leaves of autumn – or, at least one leaf. An ache of
nostalgia, knowing that Adam is not passing by these monuments again, that he
is growing up.
For the first hand – I have only a cringing
fear. I wrote a piece a long long time ago for the Austin Chronicle in which I
compared humans to sperm whales. I love whales, but whales do not exist in the
hundred millions. I’ll quote myself – a form of auto-affection one shouldn’t do in public, Louis CK notwithstanding, but I
can’t resist:
“Americans in particular, who are born to a degree of power unimaginable
even a mere hundred years ago, might want to consider the consequences of
lifestyles which require, for each of us to get through our normal day, as much
energy as is used by the sperm whale. The sperm whale weighs about 40 tons.
Americans talk about obesity, but in ecological terms, the real problem is this deep obesity, the structural obesity built into our lives,
which is condemning those marvelous sensory worlds proper to all manner of
swimming, creeping, and flying beasts to irreversible nothingness.” (by the
way, my comparison of humans to whales was in advance of the little
controversy, in 2010, created when the physicist Geoffrey West was quoted in Time
Magazine as saying: Americans now burn through energy at a rate of 11
kilowatts per person. “What you find is that we have created a lifestyle where
we need more watts than a blue whale.” But did Time Magazine tip its hat to yours
truly? No.)
There’s a
philosophical conundrum, called the Molyneux problem: if a man born born blind
could, by some operation, be made to see, would this man recognize visually shapes
that he had previously experienced tactilely. In larger terms, this is a
problem about connections that concerns us all: can we recognize, in our
sensual lives, shapes that we know “only” intellectually? We, blindly, have put
our fingers around the world. Will there come a day when the scales drop from
our eyes and we recognize what we have done?
During the Cold War, anti-communist historians were
unanimous on one topic: the Communists were liars. Their statistics were lies,
their trials were lies, the bones of millions in the Gulag testified to their
lies
In the period after the Cold War, the anti-communist historians
made an exception to the rule. Ex KGB men and archives recording the opinion
and testimonies of NKVD and KGB men were solid truths. Not a single
exaggeration, not a story made up for social promotion, not a taint from lives
otherwise dedicated to lying. Here, here was the truth. Here was the proof that
lefties and softies in the West were in contact with, or on the payroll of, or
otherwise spying for the Soviets.
This went along with the blackmail by archive that helped
Eastern European nationalists and conservatives sweep away the tainted
socialists and their ilk.
At the same time that the NKVD files were being studied,
pilfered, and marketed to the highest bidder, the files in the West were being….
Well, redacted and released if the FOIA requester had guessed the right
classification. Basically, we know very little about such matters as the
strategy of tension in Europe – which happened in Italy, Belgium and to an
extent in Germany – from the point of view of the Western intelligence agencies
because they don’t want any snoopers looking at who hired who to do what, and
at what price.
This gives us a dissymmetric history of twentieth century
Europe – as well as all the other continents.
Alas, the motivated gullibility of historians and the enormous
gaps in the political history of, for instance, all the countries of Europe has
persisted even now, thirty years after the end of the Cold War.
Anyone who reads continental philosophy or the philosophical
essayists will soon be impressed by the almost obsessive mooning over the
concept of absence.
This has no parallel in Anglophone philosophy – absence is
at most treated as a simple description of a physical phenomenon. Jack doesn’t
show up for the exam – he is absent. There is nothing here for the analytics
(or post-analytics) to get moony about, or so they say.
Nevertheless, there is something strange about the absence
of absence in Anglophone philosophy. The unexamined master-trope of that
philosophy is substitution. Surely it if were examined, understanding
substitution should encourage us to look at absence more closely.
Substitution implies that a place is preserved – in logical
or physical or social space – that is filled with one or another variable. In a
sense, the presence of the variable isn’t total, since it isn’t identical to
the place. One can find another variable to put in that place.
The latest metaphor in the analytic tradition to designate
this is “candidate”. A candidate – whether as an explanation or as a particular
– is always being considered as the solution to some problem. Whether it is
materialist accounts of cognitive states, theories of the reduction of the
biological to the physical, etc., etc., the papers I edit in philosophy are
built upon comparing one ‘candidate’ with another.
Although analytic philosophers go about closely peering at
language with the fervor of a myopic seamstress threading a needle, they are
curiously indifferent to their own use of language – so I have not read any
account of how suddenly the candidate metaphor appeared in all the right
journals. It is easy to see, though, that it is a metaphor that tells us
something about how absence is thought of here. The implication is that the
“place” where substitution takes or can take place is like an office. It is a
position created by a political system. The politics may only be bureaucratic –
it may be a position in a firm, in which the candidates compete against each
other without seeing each other, before a hiring person or board. Or it may be
a political system in which they compete against each other consciously, before
a voting constituency. The main thing is that the competition is about filling
the position. The binary in place is between the filled place and the empty
place – or potentially empty place. These are pre-eminently relative states –
the dialectic between them is deflected onto the system which determines them,
and which has the power to simply get rid of the place – or multiply it.
The metaphysics of substitution writ large would tell us a
great deal about the anthropology of the
capitalist era – or perhaps I should say industrialist era, by which I mean the
era marked by the fact that the treadmill of production achieved a velocity
that allowed societies to escape from the Malthusian trap. This was a perilous
escape, indeed. If the notion of substitution – the notion that ultimately
place is a placeholder, forever and ever – had not been so woven into the
thought of the populace, it might never have happened. I believe that this weaving
was achieved by literacy itself, or perhaps, a more modest claim, that the
spread of literacy was the pre-condition to loosening the peasant grasp on the
unique and the eternal – of the possession of land, of the relations between
members of the family, of the relations between men in the polity, of the
relation of the created to the creator. That chain of being, which was a chain
indeed, the heaviest chain, was lifted, gradually, by the notion that all
relations are between placeholders, rather than places. Place itself is nowhere.
There’s no there, there, is the motto of capitalism, forever. Actually, I
should say: it is the motto of all contenders for political-economic dominance
in the modern era. Although, to appease the peasant spirit that inhabits all of
us, this dissolution has been amply camouflaged.
Janet Malcolm - one of the four angels of the 70s and 80s, with Joan Didion, Renata Adler and Elizabeth Hardwick - is dead. Damn. One of the few essayists who I read on name only - if it was by Malcolm, I read it. The NYT remembers her for the line about how journalist's practice an immoral profession - that burns them up. Of course, in the age of neoliberal BigMedia, we see them more as minions of the billionaires. Still, we can honor her as being the founder of modern cancel culture. From the beginnning, the the big male poobah - in this case, Joe McGuiness - never got cancelled. The poobahs piped us into every neoliberal disaster, every foreign policy cul de sac, every moral panic, and they keep going.
1. Hugo Hofmannsthal published The Letter (which is almost always translated into English as The Letter from Lord Chandos) in 1903. In tur...