by J J Cohen
We've just returned from a trip to Bordeaux,
where over the Thanksgiving holiday we visited the family with whom Alex
stayed last year at this time, courtesy of an exchange program at his school. Meeting
Nathalie, Salomé, Augustin and Félix --
people we knew only through descriptions (Alex is an unsentimental
teenager; he neglected to take photographs) -- was affirming. Their cordiality,
and their obvious affection for Alex, inaugurated a tremendously
enjoyable visit. I won't pretend that family travel lacks challenges: the
meltdowns that jet lag and other fatigues trigger, the work required to keep a
group of four united despite their differences, the moments of tedium or
homesickness. Yet all in all this trip provided the best Thanksgiving we've
had. It helped, of course, to be in a country indifferent to the day, and to
eat a meal of galettes bretonnes and crêpes (and for two us, cidre)
on a holiday when most of our friends devour a roasted animal without appeal for us four. And, for reasons not to be dwelt upon here, being away from extended family
was also welcome.
Just before departure I finished the draft of
the first chapter of my book, sixty pages of rumination upon fossils lithic and
textual, and the invitation to deep time they extend. Today I am supposed to
begin work on chapter two, "Radiance," on the forces stones unceasingly
emanate. My heart is not in it. Or maybe I distrust my thesis. My mind is pulled back (by inexorable lithic gravity? an abiding
rocky magnetism?) to the stones that intruded into our journeys of the last week,
unlooked for but recurrent incursions into what was supposed to be family
time. And maybe that repeated inhuman presence that surfaces near the heart of
what is intimate, enclosed, and profoundly human has always been
the spur to this book I have been writing for six years, or perhaps for more
than forty years. Perhaps it is even, quietly, its subject.
-------------
Bordeaux is a city of stone, but not a metropolis a medievalist would call old. Its buildings are 18th century in their splendor. Their regal heft rose by pulverizing the preceding cityscapes. Numerous fountains, the swirl of the Garonne, and a recent mirroir d'eau help to counteract their ponderousness, bringing some fluidity to an architecture that can seem overly decorous. The Atlantic crashes not too distantly. Bord’eaux: intimacy to waters is in the city's name. Yet like the precisely crafted wine for which the region is famous, something feels artfully produced about Bordeaux's historic spaces: the balance of water and stone measured and executed for optimal aesthetic effect. A perfection, yes, but perfections are diffident.
The historic center of Bordeaux is not what
theorists call an "urban palimpsest," or at least it isn't much of
one. An ultramodern tram courses the square in front of the majestic Grand Théâtre (c. 1780), and
though some hundreds of years might separate the two they seem comfortable
companions, alike in their gleam. You have to walk to the city's edge to find
the tower where Eleanor of Aquitaine lived. The ruins of a Roman coliseum are
hidden by some apartment buildings and generally unlisted among tourist
attractions. The ruins are cordoned from the life of the city, at the terminus
of a narrow cul de sac: a nice view
for some apartment dwellers, but there is no possibility of nearing the stones.
It surprised me, therefore, to wander the Jardin Public
and encounter a Neolithic circle. We'd been searching only for the carousel,
yet there it was: ancient rocks, some of them incised, in a classic ring
formation. An imitation of a cromlech from Brittany? A model meant to add
atmosphere to this park not even a few centuries old? I wasn’t sure. The circle
is certainly easy to miss. Mentioned in no guidebook and marked only by a sign
that lost its words years ago, the structure inhabits a shady slope not far from a
see-saw. On nearby benches the Bordelais eat lunch. Some research
later revealed that the circle is authentic – and had in fact been transported
from Lesparre-Medoc in 1875, partly as a historical curiosity, partly to add a
picturesque element to the gardens.
Does the relocation of this architecture suggest
that even though its builders vanished long ago, the stones continue
to exert some power? The ring was not, as many cromlechs have been, fragmented
so that the site could be used for another purpose. It was carefully measured, moved
and restored. It did not suffer the fate of the Roman city that these gardens
are built atop. Deracinated, dislocated, the ring is now nearly silent in its
park. On an autumn day in 2011 it pulled me into its orbit, made me happy that
it had not been consigned to the far side of metal fence on an obscure street
like Burdigala's former amphitheater. And yet a cromlech in a city's midst,
where trees undermine its solidity and air pollution wears its stones and the
oil of human hands stains and children mistake it for a playground is an
architecture that will not be offering its invitations to the contemplation of history
and lost peoples indefinitely. The Cromlech de Lervaut in the Jardin
Public in Bordeaux is a disintegrating time capsule, an archive crumbling into quiet.
Yet there I was photographing the ring, feeling the joy of unexpected
discovery, wondering about the hands that shaped it and the hands that moved it
and the lives that have been and are being lived around its center.
Later in the week we traveled
to Saint-Émilion to visit the église monolithique, a subterranean
church carved from a single block of limestone. We arrived just in time to make
the only tour of the day, which was in French. "I can't possibly translate
for you," the guide stated with annoyance, irked as well at
Katherine’s sudden need to use the toilet when the tour was about to begin.
Since a guide is the only way to enter the church, we were happy to go with her all the same. Her
French was precise and lucid; I had little trouble with it, nor did Alex ...
and eventually she even warmed to Katherine, whose pleasure at the church's
centaur and dragon transcended language. By the end of the visit the guide was
happily speaking in English to her youngest entourage member. It is possible that the église
monolithique is a crusades-era inspiration, the idea of a cave-like
building brought back to France from Turkey with some itinerant knights. Or
possibly its excavation was a convenience: hollow out the hill as you quarry
stone for the town's buildings, and use the space for worship. We can’t know,
because there are no documents: the church’s history is in the church’s stone alone.
There is a power within this hill become a
place of worship. It is difficult not to feel the weight above you as you
regard the pillars soaring into darkness. A cathedral promises sky on its other
side; this church only more stone. Yet this power has not always been perceived. During
the French Revolution the church was sold and its furnishings stripped. A
cooper set up shop in a chapel. The soot from his curing of wine barrels
accidentally preserved the ornate murals on the walls. The church is now privately
owned and little used. Some tourists come to see it as they visit nearby
vineyards and stop at Saint-Émilion for lunch. If this sacred space carved from
singular stone has any transhistorical assertiveness, it seems a power that
waxes and wanes. Most pilgrims to Saint-Émilion would, I think, rather dine at
a café with a view of the orderly grape vines than explore such a dim interior.
Another day trip from Bordeaux took us to
Arcachon. We were pulled, for reasons I can’t fully explain, by the Atlantic:
my family is united in its love of oceans. I was thinking about that gravity a
great deal during this trip, especially as I was contemplating how at the age
of fourteen Alex is a young man I don’t always know. He has unpredictable moods
and desires that come from strange places. He is becoming his own person. And
yet the ocean brings out a contemplativeness in him that he shares with his sister,
mother, father.
A quotation from Jean Cocteau stenciled on
the glass of a café near the beach at Arcahon helped me to understand how
waves, stone and imagination form a unity of time, again and again.
And then to Paris. We walked around the
places we know, and found others to explore – like the catacombs, l’empire de la mort, that pass beneath
much of Montparnasse, and where bones have become a decorative and endless wall.
After all, calcium is stone. “How long does it take,” I asked, “for a body to
be no longer a person or a life, but material that can be moved, that can be used
to construct a place like this?” Not long.
Later we crossed the Pont des Arts and were amused
by the rows of love locks that have been affixed there. Steel clasping steel
above ceaselessly flowing water, they well capture the passions that we want to
make last, the ardor we have to stay bound to this earth and to each other, as
well as the anonymity that ultimately swallows such acts that feel to us
singular. It was hard not to see a convergence of sorts in the beauty of the
locks clasping the bridge and the beauty (why not?) they share with the
architectures of bone beneath the streets of Montparnasse.
We’d never stayed in Montparnasse before, and
enjoyed the way its busy streets yield quickly to everyday neighborhoods. One
of these is a community of the dead, the crowded and stony and weirdly lively Cimetière
du Montparnasse. Alex and I
went there together, and remarked how some graves stood in what seemed to
be eternal splendor, while others had already been obliterated. We were moved
when we came upon a cenotaph, its occupant “disappeared to Auschwitz.” We left
a pebble upon it, observing how strange it was to find a Jewish memorial among
so many crosses. Yet the more we wandered the more familiar the Magen David
became. We placed a pebble upon each grave, until the number of them grew so overwhelming that we knew we could never accomplish this task we’d assumed. The
dead profoundly outnumber the living. Memorialization brings despair. I asked
Alex how long he thought the lifespan of grief might be. When do the daily
visits to the cemetery cease? At what point does one say, I’ll go weekly. I’ll go once a month. I’ll go for the anniversary. I
used to go …
Our final morning in Paris was spent walking
to the Arènes de Lutèce, the remnants of a Roman amphitheatre uncovered in the
nineteenth century. A few summers ago we’d lived not far from the ruins on the
Rue Claude Bernard. I’d enjoyed going to the Arènes, especially in the morning.
In the semi-circle where people died to amuse an audience, young men now practice
soccer and older men play bocce. I’d never photographed the place. This is
where Alex and Katherine’s patience gave out. They were tired of living in my
documentary about stones and the human lives that unfold beside and within them.
They were weary of being human content for my lithic ruminations. They did not
want their pictures taken around the Arènes. So they walked off together, and I
wandered with Wendy or by myself and took photographs that make the place seem
emptier than it is.
I like that the Arènes de Lutèce are nothing like the
coliseum in Bordeaux. They are part of the city’s life, a lived space. They are
also, like many stone monuments that survive into the present day, restored to
the point of being almost a recreation – but nothing lasts as long as we desire,
not even the stone in which we encase our yearnings for an eternity.
On the plane back to DC I watched the Lars
von Trier film Melancholia. Had I
seen it anywhere else I might have been annoyed by its heavy-handed allegories.
A blue planet called Melancholia is headed towards an earth inhabited by melancholiacs
and those whom they suck into their orbits. You might think that you can escape
the sadness (at first it seems that the Weighty Symbolic Planet is going to
miss earth), but you cannot (Melancholia swerves back and crushes our world).
The final scene features a feeble “cave” made not of stone but of several
sticks inside which three of the protagonists huddle. One of them is a child
who is told that he will be safe. He is incinerated like his mother and aunt.
The End.
Blunt, perhaps, but maybe that is the frank lesson
of stone. It is possible that the moon was created when a planet called Theia
smashed us long ago, causing the liquefied earth to reform. We don’t know. We
can’t know. It is possible that the makers of the Cromlech de Lervaut thought
that what they built would always endure, that no one would forget what their
stone ring means and dismantle it to bring to a park. It is possible that those
who cheered in Latin in the stone theaters of Bordeaux and Paris assumed that
Rome would never fall, that the language of their shouts would be the language
of that space for all time. It may well be that those who affix love locks to
Parisian bridges believe their passion will not abate, that their inscribed
names will signify their ardor endlessly. The builders of Saint-Émilion could not have
known that the church would become a barrel maker’s workspace, or that the
effigies upon its stone tombs would lose their faces. The particular is always
rendered anonymous, like bones taken from graves to fashion whimsical arches in
an Empire of the Dead. Those still in graves or those exhumed from them have no
message to bear other than that time erodes memory, time unhooks substance. The
continents we cross on airplanes are plunging slowly into sea. In the cemetery
at Montparnasse someone’s grave had a baby in a shroud atop a mother in a shroud.
Could anything speak loss – of memory, of love, of history, of everything that
matters – more eloquently?
And yet someone else, nearby, had
commissioned for their funereal sculpture an angel that is probably arriving to
take a soul to heaven, but accidentally resembles an incubus embracing his
human lover. I left a pebble here, too. I don’t think this statue will be
around in a millennium. It isn’t the Cromlech de Lervaut. Someone will clear
the cemetery for an apartment complex when no one remembers who is buried beneath
the stones. But there is something defiant in that incubus or angel love
(carnal or spiritual, I can’t in the end tell which), a love that also speaks
of some artist’s passionate collaboration with stone.
I do not believe that anything, lithic or
otherwise, will still speak ten thousand years hence. I do have
some hope that a few messages might endure for centuries, and that sometimes,
but only sometimes, stone forms an alliance with quick paced humans and that
alliance holds force for millennia. That, in the end, must suffice. To live
long enough is to disbelieve the power we once thought we possessed to keep the
things we love. This is sad knowledge, melancholic knowledge, but it does not
end the world. No Blue Planet or second Theia is in the telescope. Yet. We
inhabit an ephemeral landscape.
Stone intrudes and intrudes not because it is
so different from we who build families of whatever kind against the cataclysms
of the world, but because of its deep affinity, its desire for a
permanence that no thing can hold, its strangely inhuman (I don’t know what
else to call it) love.
[photographs mine]
[photographs mine]
On further reflection perhaps the last word of this post should be "companionship" rather than "love." But maybe these are the same thing.
ReplyDeleteA very lively virtual tour. I do wonder about the imputation of sociability to stone as stone. Why shouldn't the bare matter only "desire eternally to be stone," which might mean being entirely in-human, non-attached, despite our deepest artistic/cultural efforts to attach it? Or, to put it another way, is it the stone we love, or the marks we make on it? (There's a great Ikkyu poem I posted on Tim Morton's blog that gets at this point: "I love bamboo how it looks / And because men carve it into flutes.")
ReplyDeleteI'm also deeply interested in the gory details of how you managed the family-cum-academic trip to France, which is on our radar for this coming summer. Even though my obsession is beaches rather than stones, I'm not sure my kids would last as long or be as guideable as your seem to have been. The lure of French pastries, perhaps?
How wonderful to walk in your footsteps and discover yet stranger sites in France. I don't know Bordeaux at all, but think of the stone circle's distant Breton cousins calling forth. I'm trying to figure out the terminology for this moment of transformation: how much human touch makes a stone a sculpture? upending it? carving it? or is it human belief about stone - that it's alive? that it embodies a force? that it's flesh? Pygmalions all around.
ReplyDeleteAbout academic trips with kids - two words: scavenger hunt. (and pastries, and being willing to translate comic books for sale at the Tabac).
A beautiful and moving post; I like especially the idea of the temporary and semi-frozen alliances between stone and humans.
ReplyDeleteSteve: Or, why shouldn't we allow that human and in-human are not really the best categories for dividing the world, that a companionship of the organic and inorganic invites us to consider a world where various elements don't always go about their business in different to each other but sometimes insinuate themselves into networks and create hybridities that can't be well captured by examining matters and beings in their supposed solitudes?
ReplyDeleteI would say: it is stone we love, and the marks we make upon us, and the marks it makes upon us. And I really want to ask the question of what stone loves -- where love is desire, and desire is movement, and all of this is made evident only over great expanses of time. And more qualifiers: where causality is emergent and impersonal. That is, if I am partly anthropomorphize stone it is because I am attempting to partly de-anthropomorphize the human.
Gory details of family travel to come, perhaps in a post of its own next week.
Anne: Pygmalions all around, indeed! Except artists indifferent to human form, artists who love what Galatea-like about rock.
Eileen, thanks!
Jeffrey, I loved both your post and Steve's comment. The place where I stumble is:
ReplyDelete"if I am partly anthropomorphize stone it is because I am attempting to partly de-anthropomorphize the human."
Let me confess a few things: first, I often have trouble with the broad -- let's say capacious -- way "ethics" is used in scholarly discourse. This is probably the result of my own lack of understanding. Second, when I read about the importance of attempts to break down the "human," or as you put it here, to "de-anthropomorphize the human," I worry more than I rejoice. I tried to address this a bit in my paper at the Austin Babel conference, since the CFP really spoke to this issue, but I'm not sure any bit of what I was saying came across. So let me try it again:
If I subscribe to anything like an ethics of literature, it is deeply and irrevocably tied to the place of my birth. And that place was one where, besides lots of interesting events, a tyrannical government carried out a secret, experimental program in wiping away prisoners' humanity. Not coincidentally, the individuals targeted were predominantly educated in the humanities. I'm not talking about deaths or prison camps or general harsh conditions or even physical torture, though these were part of the political constellation -- I'm talking about careful and targeted destruction of prisoners' identity, social bonds, ability to trust, memory, use of language, and so on.
And also not coincidentally, the people who survived (more or less) this experience, did so through the humanities.
So you see, for me the "humanities" is not just a mode of institutional organization or some treasured canon that needs to be questioned. I would certainly define it more broadly than we often do, but to me, it's about as close to truth as it gets in this world. And as seductively beautiful as your writing is -- I've had the pleasure of encountering it both in writing and even more movingly, when you spoke at NYU -- I am so deeply worried about the project of deanthropomorphizing the human. Because sometimes this actually happens -- not virtually, through words or ideas, but really and truly, and in a way that scars people and societies forever.
This may be due to the scars of history that can't be erased, at least when your background is in as embattled a place as Europe. However, I'm not convinced -- as many North Americans are -- that the horrors of the past can't happen again.
And, from a much more trivial perspective, I can't walk to my classroom without seeing dozens of students walking aimlessly, looking down, hypnotized by their phones. It has gotten to the point where I almost never see a student walking outside and looking ahead or around -- even when he or she is with a friend. Frankly, it's creepy. From where I sit, the human is quite happily being deanthropomorphized, entering a radical hybrid human-technological state with no urging at all from us critics, and I'm not wholly convinced it's a positive development. Yes, we have always used technologies -- stone is one too, after all -- but I wonder what those of my students who pay more attention to Facebook and their iPhones than they do to ideas will have to fall back on when someone tries to deanthropomorphize them.
Signed,
Your Neighbourhood Fuddy Duddy...
By the way, I wrote the above comment knowing well that I might come across as the paranoid, joy-killing East European, perhaps also as a bit of a luddite. And frankly, I'm fine with that. Sometimes a little paranoia-based-on-historical-trauma mixed with questioning of "progress" is a good thing. Yesterday's Fresh Air had an interview about privacy rights in the US with GWU law prof Jeffrey Rosen. I didn't hear the whole program, but the gist of what I did catch is that there are practically no restrictions on what corporations can do to invade individuals' privacy in the US. (Actually, the kinds of examples he gave were terrifying.) The front runner in this area has been Germany, where people and businesses can now opt out of Street View, and where Facebook has been heavily challenged for its privacy violations. Germany is sensitive to this issue, as Rosen pointed out, because of its political past. And sure, it's more fun if we can surf Google Street View and see everything, not with blurred-out houses and storefronts, and it's a pain if Facebook's face recognition software can't happily do its thing, but sometimes the scarred, rather wary Old World way of looking at progress and what is done to human beings is pretty valuable too.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Irina, for your moving comments here. I think that the preoccupation with materialism has two origins in the anglophone world: one is our own materialism and obsession with possessions (which is reflected in the conversion of museums into shops) and the other is revulsion against that materialism, the plea not to distinguish people from the planet they consume.
ReplyDeleteThose two roots are both intertwined and in conflict with each other - not least evident in the reliance of a certain kind of ecocriticsm on material consumption and presence (for example of computer networks) and if I were Jeffrey, (which I am not (!) I would make that problem central to my writing.
I think for our discipline the prediliction for materialism can depersonalise the past - compare the funding and energy that goes in to displaying artefacts with that which goes in to making archives accessible - we get the stuff but not the records of the people who engaged with the stuff (making, using, being used by). A counter assertion of the peopleness of stuff (of the importance of their History) would be a radical and maybe even ethical step. I shy away from claiming ethical impact - but I do feel what you say.