this book.....
[Introduction]
• It is strange to live in a time when philosophy has found so many ways to damage if not to destroy itself. One by one all of the clas- sical preoccupations of philosophy have been discredited and dis· carded: eternity, reason, truth, representation, justice, freedom, beauty and the Good. The dismissal of 'metaphysics' is accompa- nied by the unabated search for a new ethics. Yet no one seems to have considered what philosophical resources remain for an ethics when so much oflhe live tradition is disqualified and dead- ened.
• But wisdom WORKS WITH EQUIVOCATION
• In their abstract and general opposition to the state, power, rationality and truth, libertarianism and communitarianism directly and indirectlyaid and abet authoritarian power ofcontrol. They do so directly, by disowning the coercive immediacy of the type of action legitimated, and indirectly, in the way the stance at stake disowns the political implications of legitimated violence and so re·imposes that burden on agents and agencies of the state
• Any account of'freedom' and 'justice' is deemed to depend on the 'metaphysics' of truth. When 'metaphysics' is separated from ethics in this way, the result will be unanticipated political paradoxes.
• However, there is nothing 'ironic' about this outmoded and dualistic contrast between the embrace of the contingency of language versus commitment to objective reality.
• It is conceptually impossible 10 produce a taxonomy which would sequester concepts of justice and the good from concepts of 'self-creation', for the very forma- tion of 'selfhood' takes place in intemction with the mingled ethical and epistemological positings of the other, the partner in the formation of our contingent and unstable identities OKAY
• by disqualifying universal notions of justice, freedom. and the good, for being inveterately 'metaphysical'. for colon!sing and suppressing their others with the violence consequent on the chimera of corre- spondence. 'post-modernism' has no imagination for its own implied ground in justice, freedom and the good.
• ' Despairing rationalism without reason' is, I claim. the story of post-modernism. It is the story of what happens when 'metaphysics' is barred from ethics. THESIS
• it is always possible to take the claims and conceptuality of philosophical works detemlinistically or aporetically - as fixed, closed conceptual structures, colonising being with the garrison of thought; or according to the difficulty which the conceptuality represents by)eaving gaps and silences in the mode of representation.
o I SAY WORKS AND NOT TEXTS: THE FORMER IMPLYING THE LABOR OF THE CONCEPT INSEPARABLE FROM ITS FORMAL CHARACTERISTICS AS OPPOSED TO THE LATTER WITH ITS CONNOTATIONS OF SIGNIFIERS, THE SYMBOLIC AND SEMIOTICS**********
• Here it takes three to make a relationship between two: the devastation between posited thought and posited being, between power and exclusion from power, implies the universal, the third partner, which allows us to recognise that devastation.
• Together, universal and aporia are irruption and witness to the brokenness in the middle. This ethical witness, universal and aporetic, can only act with some dynamic and corrigible metaphys;C5 of universal and singular, or archetype and type, or concept and intuition. Hmmmmm
• Post-modernism in its renunciation reason, power, and truth identifies itself as a process of endless mourning, lamenting the loss of securities which, on its own argument, were none such. Yet this everlasting melancholia accurately monitors the refusal to let go, which I express in the phrase describing post--modernism as 'despairing rationalism without reason'.
• the reassessment of reason, gradually rediscovering its own moveable boundaries as it explores the boundaries of the soul, the city and the sacred, can complete its mourning. Completed mourning acknowledges the creative involvement of action in the configurations of power and law: it does not find itself unequivocally in a closed cin::uit which exclusively confers logic and power. THESIS
• [1: Athens and Jerusalem: a tale of three cities]
• What do we hope for from the ideal of the community?
• We hope to solve the political problem; we hope for the New Jerusalem; we hope for a collective life without inner or outer boundaries, without obstacles or occlusions, within and between souls and within and between cities, without the perennial work which constantly legitimates and delegitimates the transformation of power into authority of different kinds.
• Community idealized in comparison to convention
o old Athens is opposed to New Jerusalem.
• The two cities are the 1. Autonomous and ‘natural, individual and particular and 2. Participation in a collectivity
• Athens, the city of rational politics. has been abandoned: she is said to have proven that enlightenment is domination. Her former inhabitants have set off on a pilgrimage to the New Jerusalem, the imaginal}' community, where they seek to dedicate themselves to difference, to otherness, to love - to a new ethics, which overcomes the fusion of knowledge and power in the old Athens. What if the pilgrims, unbeknownst to themselves, carry along in their souls the third city - the city of capitalist private property and modem legal status? The city that separates each individual into ap rivate, autonomous, competitive person, a bounded ego, and a phantasy life of community, a life of unbounded mutuality, a life without separation and its inevitable anxieties? A phantasy life which effectively destroyes the remnant of political life? THIRD CITY
o SUBSITUTE ‘NEW JERUSALEM’ FOR THE MISSING ANALYSIS OF OLD ATHENS
o This substitution puts the idea of the community, of immediate ethical experience, in the place of the risks of critical rationality.
• Analysis of the ashes of Phocion
o Story goes that wife consumed his ashes to give him tomb. (exact parallel almost with ANTIGONE)
o Sister Wendy presented the gesture of the wife bending down to scoop up the ashes as an act of perfect love - as Jerusalem. She contrasted this gesture of love with the unjust nature olthe city of Athens, which she saw represented in the classical architecture of the huildings, rising up in the combined landscape and cityscape behind the two women.
o The women exert, though, POLITICAL RISK. This is not only an act of infinite love but POLITICAL JUSTICE. No neat separation here.
o To see the built Conns themselves as ciphers o{the unjust city has political consequences: it perpetuates endless dying and endless tyranny, and it ruins the possibility of political action.
o Jerusalem vs. Athens, and even Jerusalem on its own isn’t as tidy as we might think. It’s the third city that troubles this.
To clarify the THIRD CITY IS THE ACTUAL IMAGINED JERUSALEM: IT IS AS MUCH REASON AS NOT, AND WE MUST RECONCILE THIS.
• A FOURTH CITY: Auschwitz
o A measure for demonic anti-reason
o Much of this work judges that generalising explanations are in themselves a kind of collusion in what should not be explained but should be left as an evil, unique in human and in divine history; and it caJls for silent witness in the face of absolute horror. But to name the Nazi geno- cide 'the Holocaust' is already to over-unify it and to sacralize it, to see it as providential purpose
o Reason is revealed by the Holocaust to be contaminated, and the great contaminator, the Holocaust itself, becomes the actuality against which the history, methods and results hitherto of reason areassessed.11lc Holocaust provides the standard for demonic anti-reason; and the Holocaust founds the call for the new ethics.
o Auschwitz is called a 'post- historical city', and is shown gruesomely to fulfil the five functions of the classic model of the five-square city - Athens. These five functions are said to be veneration of the dead, celebration of the future, government, which concerns the active present, dwelling, which concerns the passive present, and sustenance or trade.
o Working at Auschwitz has, however, convinced me that the apparently unnegotiableand expiatory opposition between reaso n and witness, between knowledge/power and new ethics, or between relativisingexplanation and prayer. protects us from con- fronting something even more painful, which is our persistent and persisting dilemma, and not something we can project onto a onc- dimensional, demonic rationality, which we think we have dis- owned. New Jerusalem, the second city, is to arise out of Auschwitz, the fourth city. which is seen as the bUrning cousin - not the pale- of the first city, Athens. Might not this drama of col- liding cities cover a deeper evasion - fear of a different kind of continuity between the thIrd city and Auschwitz, which itself gives rise to the iII·fated twins of the devastation of reason and the phantasmagoric ethics of the community?
o New Jerusalem relatavises the evil which it explains. And why should it not? The answer would be: because that shows norespect for those who died such terrible deaths, and, that it depends on discredited methods of knowledge
o A deeper fear: that we would be part of that relativity without there being any overarching law determining our participation.
• Back to the boundary wall of Athens, with ANTIGONE and the WIFE OF PHOCION MOURNING
o By insisting on the right and rites of mourning, Antigone and the wife of Phocion carry out that intense work of the soul, that gradual rearrangement of its boundaries, which must occur when a loved one is lost
o To acknowl- edge and to re-experience the justice and the injustice of the partner's life and death is to accept the law, it is not to transgress it - mourning becomes the law.
o When completed, mourning returns the soul to the city, renewed and reinvigorated for participation, ready to take on the difficulties and injustices of the existing city. The mourner returns to negotiate and challenge the changing inner and outer boundaries of the soul and of the city; she returns to their perennial anxiety.
o To oppose new ethics to the old city, Jerusalem to Athens, is to succumb to loss, to refuse to mourn, to cover persisting anxiety with the violence of a New Jerusalem masquerading as love.
• Levinas’ Other
o Knowledge, power and practical reason are attributed to the model of the autonomous, bounded, separ- ated, individual self, the sell within the city, 'the alllance of logic and politics'. The self, according to this new ethics, cannot expe- rience truly transConning loss, but plunders the world for the booty of its self-seeking interest. To become ethical, this self is to be dev- astated, traumatised, unthroned, by the commandment to sub- stitute Ihe olher for itself. Responsibility is defined in this new ethics as 'passivity beyond passivity', which is inconceivable and not representable, because it takes place beyond any city - even though Levinas insists that it is social and not sacred.
This new ethics denies identity to the other as it denies identity to the actor, now passive beyond passivity, more radically passive, that is, than any simple failure to act. But the other, too, is dis- traught and searching for politicaJ community - the other is also bounded and vulnerable, enraged and invested, isolated and inter- related. To command meto sacrifice myself in sublime passivity for the other, with no political expression for any activity, is to command in ressentiment an ethics of waving,
• [2 Beginnings of the day—Fascism and representation]
• Holocaust ethnography vs Holocaust piety
o The former permits the exploration of the representation of Fascism and the fascism of representation to be pursued across the production, dis- tribution and reception of cultural works.
• Fascism and Aesthetic Representation
o Cheyette’s Review of Schindler’s List: 'Schindler's List fails only when it. too (like Kencally's original fictionalisation Schindler's List. becomes a seductive and self-confident narrativc at the cost of any real understanding of the difficulties inherent in representing the ineffable'
o Gross’ response to that review exhibits Holocaust piety by rejecting Cheyette’s review in the name of ‘ineffability’
To argue for silence, prayer, the banishment equally of poetry and knowledge, in short, the witness of 'ineffability', that is, non-representability, is to mystify something we dare not understand, because we fear that it may be all too understandable, all too continuous with what we are - human, all too human. HMMMM IM NOT SOLD HERE LOL
Sueh plasticity of history, such pragmatics ofgood and evil, such continuity between the banality of Schindler's benevolence and the gratuity of Gaeth's violence, should mean that the reader, and, pari passu, the audience, experience the crisis of identity in their own breasts. Instead, we enjoy vicarious revulsion at the hand- some sadist, Gaeth, who appears invincible in the film, but is imprisoned much earlier on in the book, and we applaud the bon- vivant Schindler in his precarious outwitting of him. Okay im with this
The sentimentality of the ultimate predator. HELL YEAH
Comparing book and movie: If the book is 'glib', it is because the story it tells is glib - the ironic, sustained glibness of the style is its integrity: it leaves the crisis to the reader.
The film depends on the sentimentality of the ultimate predator. It makes the crisis external: on first viewing, one is perpetually braced in fear of obscene excess of voyeuristic witness.
In a nature film, we could be made to identify with the life cycle of the fly as prey of the spider, and we could be made to identify with the life cycle of the spider as prey of the rodent We can be made to identify with the Peking Opera singer who is destroyed by the CUltural Revolution, and we can equally be made to identify with the rickshaw man, for whom the Cultura1 Revolution was 'the beginning of Paradise'. It is only the ultimate predator whose sym- pathies can be so promiscuously enlisted. Only the ultimate preda- tor who can be made to identify exclusively and yet consecfcutively with one link or another in the life cycle, because she can destroy the whole cycle, and, of course, herself. Since she is the ultimate predator, she can be sentimental about the victimhood of other predators while overlooking that victim's own violent predation; and she may embellish her arbitrary selectivity of compassion in rhapsodies and melodramas. JESUS
The limits of representation arc not solely quantitative: how much violence, or even, what kind of violence, can I, and should I, tolerate? More profoundly, the limits of representation are con· figurative: they concern the relation between configuration and meaning.
It is my own violence that I discover in this film.
However, Shoah raises questions of the interestedness of memory and recall on the part of the interviewer and the inter- viewed. DAMN
Tadeun: Borowski's account in the selection published under the title This Way for the Gas, Ladies and Gentlemen (1967). Borowski was a Pole but not a Jew, who killed himseU in 1951. His attount of being a prisoner in Auschwitz deals with many things which Levi spares us. Above all, Borowski represents himself, a deputy Kapo, as both executioner and victim, and deprives the dis- tinction 'ofall greatness and pathos'. While Borowski never denies his ethical presupposition - for otherwise not one sentence could have been written - he makes you witness brutality in the most dis- turbing way, for it is not clear - Levi a1wa~ is - from what posi- tion, as whom, you are reading. You emerge shaking in horror at yourself, with yourself In question, not in admiration for the author's Olympian serenity (Levi).
BAD REPRESENTATIONS: PASSIVE SOBRIETY OR SENTIMENTALITY OF WITNESS
GOOD: ACTIVE RECOGNITION IN ONESELF OF THE NIHILISM OF DISOWNED EMOTIONS AND THE PERSONAL AND POLITICAL DEPREDATIONS AT STAKE
WE MUST NOT EMERGE WITH SENTIMETAL TEARS, WITH EMOTIONAL AND POLITICAL INTACTNESS, BUT WITH DRY EYES OF DEEP GRIEF WHICH BELONGS TO THE RECOGNITION OF OUR INELUCTABLE GROUNDING IN THE NORMS OF THE EMOTIONAL AND POLITICAL CULTURE REPRESENTED
• Fascism and Philosophical Representation
o REPRESENTATION OF FASCISM LEAVES THE IDENTITY OF THE VOYEUR INTACT
o FASCISM OF REPRESENTATION beyond the limit of voyeurism, provokes the grief of encountering the violence normally legitim- ised by the individual moral will, with which we defend our own particular interests, and see only the egoism of the other - these may be interests of disinterested service, race, gender, religion, class.
• [3 The comedy of Hegel and Trauerspiel of modern philosophy]
o In the work of mourning and the search for tile new elllies, in which philosophy is currently engaged in the wake of the per- ceived demise of Marxism and, equally, of the disgrace of Heidegger's Nazism, the comedy of Hegel (by which I mean not what Hegel says about comedy but the movement 0/ the Absolute as comedy) is, nevertheless, once again being ignored and maligned by the nco-nihilism and antinomianism which continue - but at increasingly crippling cost - to evade their inner self-per- ficient impulse.2 As a result, mourning cannot work: it remains melancholia;] it remains aberrated not inaugurated;( pathos of the eoncept in the place of its logos. Instead of producing a work, this self-inhibited mourning produces a play, the Dauenpiel, the interminable mourning play and lament, of post-modernity.
o The body of Marxism arrayed in its shroud may finally rest in peace, for its vital spirit, its anima, has been thoroughly ethereal- iscd and floats in a heaven of archi.original Messianic justice. But wait! - the resurrection of the dead ill their flesh was a dogma developed for the Hebrews, who could not conceive in Hebrew of the immortality of the Greek soul - psyche - separated from the Greek body - soma. Language to the Hebrews was physical: the idea oC an eternity without body not bliss but unimaginable torture. Let us therefore tarry with those bleached bones; for as we seek to pay them their last respects, they seem to be rearranging themselves in an articulate and urgent configuration.
o LET US CONTINUE TO CHASE SPIRITS BACK INTO THEIR BODIES, back into the history ortheirdevelopment, in order to comprehend their law and their anarchy and to complete the work of mourning. Re- incarnated, put back into their bodies, as it were, 'spectres' in Marx, 'ghosts' in Heidegger, join up with class conflict in the former and with heterogeneous-originary iterable violence in the latter which deconstruction owns as its primordial and hence undeconstructable justice. THESIS