I am slowly recovering from the biennial meeting of the New Chaucer Society held just this past week in Portland, Oregon, where I participated in a really invigorating seminar session organized by Ruth Evans on the Descriptive Turn in literary studies, which brought together myself, Julie Orlemanski, Sarah Stanbury, Carolynn Van Dyke, and Ardis Butterfield to discuss some of the key texts of the recent discussions and debates over new reading modes and flatter ontologies within the humanities, and here is how Ruth framed the session itself:
Originally coined by the French intellectual historian Francois Dosse, the "descriptive turn" refers to practices of "flat reading" in the social sciences, practices that reject the traditional humanist categories of experience, consciousness, depth, and motivation in favour of close observation of human subjects and attention to description rather than interpretation. In the words of Bruno Latour, in Reassembling the Social, "No scholar should find humiliating the task of sticking to description." At issue is a question of responsibility: of doing justice to human subjects by refusing to impose on them the interpretation of the critic (and, yes, of course, this cannot easily be avoided).
Although descriptive reading is a form of "surface" reading, I do not want the session simply to repeat the terms of the recent forum in Representations 108 (2009) on "surface" vs. "symptomatic" reading. Rather I would like us to address various questions about our discipline and about Chaucer studies in particular. What might it mean to sacrifice richness of interpretation for descriptive models? To replace deep reading with descriptive close reading? What might be the gains and what the losses? What are the continuities as well as the breaks with the political ("symptomatic") readings of the 80s and 90s? And how might we think about questions of interdisciplinarity -- about the intersection of literary studies/medieval studies with other disciplines (medical humanities immediately comes to mind), intersections that might be crucial for the continued visibility and even viability of our own discipline, given an institutional context in which the humanities are undergoing severe defunding?
In proposing this session I am not asking that medieval studies perform its own turn in the direction of descriptive and documentary practices. I want us rather to think hard about what constitutes the cornerstone of the discipline of English: close reading. In part, I am conscious of the fact that very few of the contributors to the inaugural issue of postmedieval (on the topic: "when did we become post/human?") took up the question of what close reading might mean in a post/human world. I am also conscious of the various challenges that have recently been posed to historicism within medieval studies, challenges that also touch on issues of close reading. And I am also conscious of the ways in which medievalists have responded to "symptomatic" readings by a turn not to description but to affect (but are they necessarily opposed?). Love's outlining of the issues facing the discipline seems to me to be particularly acute. As she argues, "Disengaging from the operations of close reading promises a more fundamental rethinking of the grounds of the discipline than earlier challenges to the human subject, the canon, or the referential capacities of language."
The essays for discussion in the seminar were:
- Heather Love, "Close, But Not Deep: Literary Ethics and the Descriptive Turn," New Literary History 41 (2010): 371-391.
- John Frow, "On Midlevel Concepts," New Literary History 41 (2010): 237-252.
All of the presentations framed really interesting and provocative ways of responding to Ruth's framing of the discussion, and I decided to mainly respond to Heather Love's essay from a kind of object-oriented & speculative realism perspective. Here is an *expanded* version, with footnotes, of the presentation I made:
- Simon Gaunt, "A Martyr to Love: Sacrificial Desire in the Poetry of Bernart de Ventadorn," Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies 31 (2001): 477-506.
Some Celestial Nourishment: A New Commentariat
Whatever
the art object does, it does not do it to us, actively, like a
headmaster with his cane. . . . The art object does not teach, exhort, arouse,
aid, and so forth. It does not ‘help us to see’ like an optometrist; it does
not ‘make us realize’ like a therapist; it does not ‘open doors for us’ like a
butler. . . . The art object does not do to us; rather, it presents to us.
~Annie
Dillard, Living By Fiction
Weak ontologies . . . offer . . . figurations of
human being in terms of certain existential realities, most notably language,
morality or finitude, natality and the articulation of “sources of the self.”
These figurations are accounts of what it is to be a certain sort of creature: first, one entangled with
language; second, one with a consciousness that it will die; third, one which,
despite its entanglement and limitedness, has the capacity for radical novelty;
and, finally, one which gives definition to itself against some ultimate
background or “source,” to which we find ourselves always already attached, and
which evokes something like awe, wonder, or reverence.
~Stephen K. White, Sustaining Affirmation: The Strength of Weak Ontology in Political
Theory
The image of the carnival is meant as a reminder
that the world is far more bizarre than we usually remember: philosophy is
above all else an exile amidst strangeness and surprise.
~Graham Harman, Guerilla Metaphysics
First, let’s get a big (and maybe baroquely ridiculous) question out of the way: what is
literature good for? I honestly don’t know anymore -- I mean, it’s good for
lots of things or nothing at all, depending on who you ask, and I’m not talking
about academics. For some it’s just a bunch of lies people make up to amuse
themselves and has no social value, and you do it (read, that is) if you have
the time, oh . . . lucky you, I mean, some of us are working real jobs in the
real world and save our spare time for more practical pursuits like playing
Angry Birds on our iPhones, but, whatever, cuz I don’t read. For others,
literature enriches our lives and thus the world: literature builds character
and enlightens and ennobles its readers who become more wise and humane and
whatever through reading, although Tolstoy’s story about the wealthy woman who
weeps in the theater while her carriage driver shivers in the cold outside
should give us pause on that one. Some people just like to read, but don’t
necessarily want to talk about “Literature.” Some people go on and on about how
it changes history, or reveals experience and truth. I’m not saying any of this
is true or not true -- it’s just what people say and think. Among other things.
For the
first time in my life, as a teacher, I’m starting to feel scared, and
occasionally hopeless, about what to tell my students about why they should want to read literature, how it matters,
what you can do with it, what it does to
and for you, how it poses important questions
that never cease to be meaningful even when irresolvable, how it makes life
more pleasurable, thickens one’s experience of the world and one’s own life,
etc.[1] I
teach at a university where most of my students, and especially those at the
M.A. level, are working more than one job, have children, are overwhelmed by
debts, are tired and exhausted and stressed and thinking all the time about
what’s going to happen to them after
they finish their courses, which means they can’t actually fully concentrate on
those courses, and even worse, they can’t enjoy themselves -- they can’t enjoy reading. What I’m saying is, they’re not
having fun and they’re losing heart. In the past two to three years especially,
my M.A. courses have turned into counseling sessions for a kind of severe group
depression. I’m worrying a lot these days about the shrinking of my students’
horizons, financially and otherwise, but even more so about the fact that
literature often does not enchant them: it’s a job, like everything else in
their lives. When I was their age, I chose to major in English because it was
fun and I liked it and I never thought for one moment I needed more reasons
than that. In other words, desire led me to certain texts and it still does. In
short, without desire, which is all about propulsion, there is no future, and
yes, I know desire can also be scary and pathological, I’m not stupid, but we
need to talk more about desire, enjoyment, and enchantment and how the humanities must
attend to those.[2]
I do not think it is wise any more to
argue for either the usefulness or uselessness of literature and literary
studies, when instead, we could simply argue for the meaningfulness of
literature, or, following the thinking of Annie Dillard, for the ways in which
the art object “presents to us, in a stilled and enduring context, a model of
previously unarticulated or unavailable relationships among ideas and
materials.”[3]
The study and teaching of literature has something to do with textual “events”
of ontological presencing,[4]
and to articulate what this presencing might be and how it matters in relation
to issues of sentience, subjectivity, sociality (co-existence, if you like), and
well-being (of human and nonhuman creatures and actants; more largely, of world and worlding) might be the real work of the humanities, but what we should likely
aim for in our defenses of this idea is something like Stephen White’s “weak ontology,”
where our deepest commitments can be seen to be both “fundamentally important and
contestable.”[5]
The idea, too, would not be to argue for the kinds of positive effects
the study of literature might have on particular persons’ lives or the world
more largely (we don’t want a “morality” of literature -- that is both banal and possibly evil), but rather to keep
affirming that literature possesses ontological weight -- it takes up real space
in the world, has existence -- and the job of literary interpretation is
important because, again following Dillard, it helps us “to extend the boundaries
of sense and meaning.” You see, it’s
possible that the universe has no meaning whatsoever (if, by “meaning,” we mean
something like providential origins and ends, a master-plan, whathaveyou), or
perhaps has too much of it (system-crashing meaning overload = chaos), and literature
professors are part of a diminishing tribe who are felicitously clinging to the
ideas that:
1) meaning must be conveyed -- literally, carried and borne somewhere (which is also a form of
care, and one hopes, of endless transfigurations conducive to personal and more
collective sustenance);
2) some meanings are better than others and worth arguing
over, endlessly even; and
3) the reservoir of any meaning or sense in a culture is in
its arts.
I think what I’m also
saying here is: we need more, and not less, meaning (and you never know where that meaning might come from: humanists do not have a purchase on meaning, but given how our brains have developed, we may have a special role to play in making certain things more legible, and this is also where writing will always matter although, admittedly, we're always writing to and for other human persons, but some of us are also now trying to raise awareness about our entangled enmeshment with everything else, and therefore our writing, while always an extension of our human mind-bodies, might also light out for other territories where we might better "lose" ourselves). We need not just one
world, but a whole cosmos of possible worlds. We need speculation, both in the
sense of mining (analytic critique) and also of creative wondering, or as W.G.
Sebald once described his writing practice, of “adhering to an exact historical
perspective, patiently engraving and linking together disparate things in the
manner of a still life” so as to “understand the invisible connections that
determine our lives.”[6]
As much as
I love and respect the work of Heather Love, I am not in total agreement with her
argument that we should turn away from hermeneutic reading models that value
the “richness” and “singularity” of individual texts, or that we should eschew
the “ethical charisma of the literary translator or messenger.”[7] I
actually think spending until the end of eternity investigating the specialness
of the “literary” and what it can do in and for
the world should be one of the primary labors of our discipline, and that
means, yes, I believe in the singularity of literature and also in the ways in
which the contemplation of and commentary upon its rich Otherness is a valuable
ethical practice.[8]
If texts are not singular and rich, and we have to shuck our charisma (what
little we have, ethical or otherwise), and if “documentation” is to be valued
over empathetic witness, as Love also argues, well, I just lost my desire for
this. I fell out of love. On the other hand, I totally agree with Love (and
others) that we’re facing some amazing opportunities right now to fundamentally
rethink the grounds of our discipline, especially as regards different modes of
reading (from close to distant, human to machine, and everything inbetween) and
as regards creative collaborations with other disciplines (the medical
humanities comes to mind, as does cognitive literary studies, new media
studies, the digital humanities, speculative realism, and so on), and I
personally want to advocate for the value of the so-called “descriptive turn,”
but not in the way Love suggests by going for “thin” and “flat” instead of
“thick” and “deep.”[9]
Speaking of which, let’s first
begin, however, by not framing this
discussion as “surface” versus “symptomatic” reading or “flat” description versus
“depth” hermeneutics or humanist versus post-humanist critique (as if we have
to choose one or the other, as if these methodologies are somehow monolithic
enough to mean only one type of reading practice to be enthusiastically
embraced or junked). And let’s try to resist having pendantic possibly overly-simplified arguments about how
there’s no such thing as objective description without interpretation and vice
versa, or how symptoms are always already on the surface (so surfaces are too
cluttered all the time to be described “flatly” or “thinly”), and oh, by the
way, no one can agree (from Euclid forward) what a surface actually is (so
everything is always already “deep” texturized/geometrically dimensionalized or always somehow non-approachable as completely "flat"), and flat ontologies are ethically and
politically suspect because they assume everything is exactly the same without
distinction, and on and on. Many of these arguments stem from a lack of
generosity to other thinkers who -- guess what? -- are actually trying to make
our lives and careers within the university more interesting, maybe even more
humane (and this is why I also actually want Love to do what she is doing, but not prescriptively; also, I do not want to let go of the "literary" as a special mode of action-thought with important ethical implication). I only mention this to say something like: this is the humanities, we think in here, and that means
anything is possible (there’s nothing groovier in this universe than brain
power, human or otherwise). Don’t throw false binaries at me or tell me what to
do: you do what you want to do and I’ll do what I want to do and that’s called freedom and that’s also something the
humanities should be safe-guarding. So, please excuse this little excursus, but
I’ve never liked Occam’s razor. I think we should be making things more, and
not less, complicated. We should be attending to the pluralism of our
approaches, making them and the texts we study more ample and voluptuous,
richer, and more strange, like the pearls that were in Alonso’s eyes as his
magical body sunk into the deep of Shakespeare’s ocean.
So this
brings me to the subject of attention, and to what I hope could be descriptive
reading modes as forms of attention (which would also be a type of care) to
texts that are singular and rich in order to try to capture the traces of the strange voluptuosity and
singular (and unique) tendencies of textual objects (but without mystifying texts and/or risking some kind of new "sanctity" or "theology" of texts). And yes, with Love, and
many others working today on models of thinking and reading in which the human
is displaced as the primary center of our attention, I’m very interested in
working on ways to see what happens when I start looking for things in texts
that don’t typically get observed because they don’t easily correspond or
answer to traditionally humanist questions and concerns. And I’m intrigued to
see what happens when I work to recognize better how inhuman and weird texts
and their figures are when I recall that through a magical process called lying
to myself I turn a small, rectangular object filled with black marks called a
book into a world teeming with persons, animals, mountains, buildings, butterflies,
continents, weather, cashmere sweaters, beer bottles, baseball teams, streetcars,
crannied walls, centipedes, magical acts of transfiguration, and so on. And the
idea might then be, not to necessarily “make sense” of a literary text and its
figures (human and otherwise) -- to humanistically re-boot the narrative by
always referring it to the Real (context, historical or otherwise, for example,
or human psychology) -- but to better render the chatter and noise, the
gestures and movements, the appearances and disappearances of the weird worlds that are compressed in
books, and to see better how these teeming pseudo-worlds are part of my brain already, hard-wired into the black box of a kind of co-implicate, enworlded subjectivity in which it is difficult and challenging to trace the edges between "self" and "Other." This would be a reading practice that would multiply and thicken a text’s
sentient reality and might be described as a commentary that seeks to open and
not close a text’s possible “signatures.” Let’s maybe “get medieval” now and use
the humanities as a base station for a new commentariat, a kind of monastic
beehive of scribblers and scriveners seeking to build a vibrant archive for
what Ian Bogost has termed an “alien phenomenology,” where medievalists would be
the slow tuning-recording devices and
panexperientialists of a
retro-future.[10]
I think this is akin to where Eve Sedgwick
was headed in her work on the ontologically intermediate “queer little gods”[11]
in Proust’s novels -- nymphs and dyads and other little “tutelary spirits” --
but also other ontologically intermediate forces, such as the weather, or a
character whose body is also a barometer, miniaturized water fountains, and so
on, in order to have new ways to explore self-world relations that would take
better account of the chaos and complexity of those relations, and of the world
itself. In her essay, “The Weather in Proust,” Sedgwick writes,
For Proust, the ultimate guarantee of the vitality of art is
the ability to surprise -- that is, to manifest an agency distinct from either
its creator or consumer. “It pre-exists us” is one of the ways he describes the
autonomy of the work, and only for that reason is it able to offer “celestial
nourishment” to our true self.
For Sedgwick,
Proust’s work offers access to a psychology of “surprise and refreshment,” and
this is, in a sense, a “mystical” world (one that believes in resurrections,
for example, and ghosts), but it is one that emphasizes the “transformative
powers of the faculties of attention and perception.” Aesthetics may constitute
a domain of illusions, but these illusions posses their own material reality and
are co-sentient with us. As Timothy Morton has written, the existence of an
object is irreducibly a matter of coexistence.[12]
How to better reckon this state of
affairs in our encounters with texts, which are also events that “pre-exist” us
in the way Proust believed? And at the same time as we might work toward better
reckoning these weird “realities”
(and this is why it’s important now to also talk about how object-oriented
ontology and speculative realism might help us to do that, in addition to the
Latourian and Erving Goffmanesque microsociological approaches Love favors), we
also need to be enchanted with those
weird realities. Literature is the realm of enchantment, or as the poet Milosz
described it, a “tanglewood”: a “refuge that is strange and complex, somewhat embarrassing, and yet a valuable
source of spiritual interiority for those who suffer in the midst
of history” (and for “spiritual,” substitute “magical,” or “sustaining”). Instead
of seeing the future of the humanities, and of literary and medieval studies in
particular, as tied to how other disciplines might need us to learn how to read
and describe reality, or how we need them to understand the “real world” or
social “realities” better, I think we should get deeply weirder on our own,
singular corpus (which is also at the same time an adventure into realism), while also engaging in acts of temporary strategic maneuvers
into other disciplines to poach stuff that is cool, and then altering and
twisting it however we want if we think it will help us to amplify what Graham
Harman calls the “allure” of objects (in our case, literary texts), which I
think is very similar to Sedgwick’s “queer little gods,” and which Harman also
describes as a “fleeting kiss”: neither the deep reality of the object itself,
which is always partially hidden from us (call this history, or interiority),
nor merely its surfaces (what “appears” before us, as a sort of shifting series
of spatio-temporal facades), but “a
special and intermittent experience in which the intimate bond between a
thing’s unity and its plurality of notes somehow partially disintegrates,”
almost as if in our hands.[13]
We are the handlers and clerks of this disintegrating allure.
[1]
For along while now, I have relied heavily on two books especially for helping
me to make these cases: Annie Dillard, Living
By Fiction (New York: Harper & Row, 1982) and Milan Kundera, The Curtain: An Essay in Seven Parts
(New York: Harper Perennial, 2007). There are many books pitched at a general
audience that discuss the values and pleasures of reading literature, but these
two have been mainstays for me.
[2]
On this point, especially, see Jane Bennett, The Enchantment of Modern Life: Attachments, Crossings, and Ethics
(Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2001) and L.O. Aranye Fradenburg, Sacrifice Your Love: Psychoanalysis,
Historicism, Chaucer (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2002),
especially Chap. 1 and the Epilogue, and “Group Time: Catastrophe, Periodicity,
Survival,” in Karen Newman, Jay Clayton, and Marianne Hirsch, eds., Time and the Literary (New York:
Routledge, 2002), 211–38.
[3]
Dillard, Living By Fiction, 184.
[4]
Here, I find the too little known French philosopher Claude Romano’s “evential
hermeneutics” increasingly exciting and helpful for reconfiguring the
experience of reading as an “event” or “eventiality” (in Romano’s terms) which requires
an advenant (the one to whom the ontic “event” comes, or is assigned
-- in this case, a reader, a person, a hermeneut) who is “constitutively
open to events” and whose “intrinsic possibilities” are reconfigured in the act
of reading. As Martin Jay has written of Romano’s thinking,
Romano provide[s] a fine-grained
phenomenological analysis of the event as opposed to a mere happening or
occurrence. Developing what he calls an “evential hermeneutics,” he argues that
there is a link between “event” and “advent,” which in French also invokes the
future (“avenir”). Advent, moreover, must be understood in connection with the
unforetold adventure that it spawns. Rather than instances of a static
ontology, events cum advents are more like what Nietzsche called “lightning
flashes,” which are radical breaks in the status quo. They happen without
intentionality or preparation, befalling us rather than being caused by us.
See Martin Jay, "Historical Explanation and the Event: Reflections on the Limits of Contexualization," New Literary History 42 (2011): 551-71. See also Claude Romano, Event and World, trans. Shane Mackinlay (New York: Fordham
University Press, 2009).
[5]
Stephen D. White, Sustaining Affirmation:
The Strengths of Weak Ontology in Political Theory (Princeton: Princeton
University Press, 2000).
[6]
W.G. Sebald, Campo Santo, trans.
Anthea Bell (New York: Modern Library, 2005).
[7]
Heather Love, “Close, but Not Deep: Literary Ethics and the Descriptive Turn,” New Literary History 41.2 (2010): 374
[371–91]. I would also like to point out here that while I might disagree with Love about
how a documentarian, microsociological, and flat descriptive “turn” might be
the best way for literary studies and English departments to form alliances
within the university that could possibly strengthen our institutional position
while also helping us to better attend to certain social “realities,” at the same time, I share
her enthusiasms completely with all of the new “sociologies on literature,”
which include work on history of the book, analytical bibliography, new media
studies, and the tools of the digital humanities, just to name some. I think we
should be fostering every possible avenue that opens up new models for reading
and interpretation and also collaboration with scholars in other disciplines,
but I am not overly fond of prescriptives
for reading in one particular way
that supposedly better secures our
place within the university of the future, supposedly
better attends to “reality” (whatever the hell that is), and which also means
giving up practices and ways of thinking that are supposedly too “humanist” or
supposedly outmoded somehow (we shouldn’t cling too tightly to our
methodologies just because “we’ve always done it this way” -- that would be
intellectually regressive, and potentially suicidal -- but at the same time, we
should not just be a “service” discipline to other disciplines; id est, I don’t
want to hear any more defenses or proposals for literary studies that are
pitched as, “we’ll survive when we can convince other fields how useful we are
to them”). I think what we need now are new critical post/humanisms (emphasis
on the plural) in which, yes, the “human” must of necessity be somewhat
de-centered, and a more capacious and “baggy” set of interpretive and descriptive practices emerge for
understanding the world and everything in it more systemically and in more
complex ways, but at the same time, the “human” remains, importantly, as a
special vector for creative acts of thinking and feeling in ways that would
contribute to a more general well-being. On my further thinking on new critical
post/humanisms, see Eileen A. Joy and Christine Neufeld, “A Confession of
Faith: Notes Toward a New Humanism,” Journal
of Narrative Theory 37.2 (2007): 161–90.
[8] So, for example, I am in
agreement with Derek Attridge that the “occurrence” of the artwork is “a
particular kind of event” that has
important implications in the ethical realm, albeit literature “does not serve
a political or moral program”; nevertheless, it has effects, these effects can
never be fully rationally accounted for nor fully instrumentalized, and thus literary
works possess a certain valuable alterity or Otherness, such that thinking
about the “literary” allows us to think more deeply about how the Otherness
that enters culture through “invention” reshapes the cultural sphere and
introduces new realities into our world that we otherwise would never see nor
be able to grasp (understand). The value of these new realities (or truths) can
likely never be measured or mapped, but continuing to always think about our
relation to them means there is “no permanent settling of norms and habits.” In
short, we need inventiveness, the “novel,” and openness to change, and that is
the domain of the literary. For Attridge, the
attempt “to do justice to literary works as events, welcoming alterity,
countersigning the singular signature of the artist, inventively responding to
invention, combined with a suspicion of all those terms that constitute the
work as an object, is the best way to enhance the chances of achieving a vital
critical practice”: Derek Attridge, The
Singularity of Literature (London: Routledge, 2004), 137. Much in sympathy
with this viewpoint, I believe is the current thinking of Aranye Fradenburg:
see especially her recent essay “Living Chaucer,” Studies in the Age of Chaucer 33 (2011): 41–64.
[9]
I would like to point out here (again) that I actually admire Love’s project to
work on new, microsociological methods for reading/describing/interpreting
literary texts (and thus also social-historical realities), especially as she
does so in order to re-interrogate our discipline at the structural (and not just
the methodological) level, and also because she, like me and many others, wants
to displace or at least disturb the overly human-centered values that often
inform our reading practices, even when we are claiming to be post-human. But I
also see her call to resist or leave behind (or temporarily set aside) a
so-called depth hermeneutics as simply too austere for my own pursuits of the
literary text and the literary as a mode of thought, and I think “richness” can
be reclaimed in truly post-humanist, speculative realist modes of thought. I
can’t emphasize enough, however, how much I believe that the university serves
as one place in which experimentation itself, period, must be valued and
fostered, and therefore I am not against Love’s project (ridiculous!), so much
as I would urge her to reconsider some of her own terms, especially “singular,”
“richness,” and “ethical exemplarity,” as not necessarily negative.
[10]
See Ian Bogost, Alien Phenomenology, or
What It’s Like to Be a Thing (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press,
2012), where he writes that the task of philosophy today, and cultural studies
more generally, is to speculate creatively, a kind of “benighted meandering in
an exotic world of utterly incomprehensible objects,” and where our task would
be to “amplify the black noise of objects to make the resonant frequencies of
the stuffs inside them hum in credibly satisfying ways.” I borrow the term
“panexperentialism” from David Ray Griffin, Unsnarling
the World Knot: Consciousness, Freedom, and the Mind-Body Problem
(Berkeley: University of California Press, 1998), which he describes as a
“nondualistic interactionism” that allows for humans to have mind-bodies shaped
by experience and spontaneity.
[11]
Sedgwick borrowed the phrase “queer little gods” from the poetry of C.P.
Cavafy, and especially his poem, “The Footsteps.” See Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick and
Michael D. Snediker, “Queer Little Gods: A Conversation,” The Massachusetts Review 49.1-2 (2008): 209–11 [194–218]. See also Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, The Weather in Proust, ed. Jonathan Goldberg (Durham: Duke University Press, 2011).
[12]
See Timothy Morton, The Ecological
Thought (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2010) and also
“Objects as Temporary Autonomous Zones,” continent.
1.3 (2011): 149–55.
[13]
This definition of Harman’s allure comes from the online “Dictionary of
Concepts for Graham Harman’s Object-Oriented Philosophy,” available here: http://avoidingthe
void.wordpress.com/dictionary-of-concepts-for-graham-harmans-object-oriented-philosophy-draft-work-in-progress/.
Harman himself explains allure as the “mechanism by which
objects are split apart from their traits even as these traits remain
inseparable from their objects. Above all else, it seemed to be aesthetic
experience that splits the atoms of the world and puts their particles on
display.” Further, objects do not “confront each other directly, but only
brush up against one another’s notes, like shadow governments communicating
through encryptions or messenger-birds. . . . When we say that one object
encounters another, what this means is that it makes contact with strife between the unitary
reality and specific notes of its neighbor.” Allure is important, because it
“is that furnace or steel mill of the world where notes are converted into
objects. The engine of change within the world is the shifty ambivalence of
notes, which both belong to objects and are capable of breaking free as objects
in their own right. Allure invites us toward another level of reality (the
unified object) and also gives us the means to get there (the notes that belong
to both our current level and the distant one). It puts its objects at a
subterranean distance, converts the notes of those objects into objects in
their own right, and rearranges the landscape of what we take seriously”
(Graham Harman, Guerrilla Metaphysics:
Phenomenology and the Carpentry of Things [Chicago: Open Court, 2011], 174,
179).
Yet another reason I wish I'd been in Portland. (Alas, life prevented it!)
ReplyDeleteEileen, you have articulated some of my deepest beliefs about literature here, and assuaged some of my worries. I've always tended to think of critics as falling into two rough camps: those who are talented at looking at a complex picture and offering a simple thesis or narrative about it, and those who look at a seemingly-simple scene and tease out the details and complications. My own talents fall squarely in the latter camp. And I've often worried about this, because it would really be so much nicer to offer a single powerful thesis about the massive change that happened in the 12th/14th/17th century to everyone, or the one thing that an author means or that moment when the human was invented. But I can't.
In fact, I think there's space for both kinds of critics (representing of course two unrealistic extremes for the sake of discussion). We need people who give the broad story that is teachable and memorable. But we also need people who look beyond simplicity. And I think the latter are particularly necessary for medieval literature, partly because of the way the vocabularies of medieval European languages often work. The same Middle High German word will be translatable by five or so modern High German lexemes. Same with OE. You know the story. The point is, medieval literature is particularly deceiving at first sight, "primitive" even, but I don't have to tell anyone here how much of a lie that is.
And as for the stuff I believe about literature that you didn't cover here... well, thanks for reminding me that I have to do that work!
(PS. Financial worry leaves little time for leisure, it is true, but I think the history of, oh, all of humanity teaches us that sick, poor, hungry people can turn to the arts, yea, possibly get more out of the arts than the healthy, wealthy, and well fed.)
Although I have never been particularly interested in the post-humanism/object-oriented methods of which you are such a vocal (and eloquent!) proponent (after all, I am a human being, such that, whenever I think about the relationships between objects, it is still I, the human, who is doing the thinking about them, thus foregrounding my human interests in any project I undertake), I want to thank you for this excellent apology for the virtues of creative complexity. (I'm reminded of the epiphany of President Bartlet's staff in the fourth season of The West Wing, to wit, that complexity is not a vice.)
ReplyDeleteI am especially enamored by your unapologetic rejection of Ockham's Razor, since the "scientific" critics of my own sub-discipline (historical theology) lean so heavily on the Franciscan's bequest to bludgeon theism. I hope you don't mind if I add your proud declaration in favor of delicious weirdness as its own exploration of the real to my own justificatory corpus.
Thanks to Irina and Nathaniel for your comments here [and yes, Nathaniel, you are more than welcome to add this to your own justificatory corpus!]. Also, Irina, I take your point about how art may (better) sustain the underprivileged more so than the overprivileged. And there will always be room, at least in my scheme of things, for more rather than less critics [hence my rather tortuous footnotes here, where I try to make clear that in somewhat disagreeing with Love, I am not at the same time saying, I don't think anyone in literary studies should use the microsociological approaches she advocates for: I want more, and not less, methods for our studies].
ReplyDeleteEileen, I'm not even thinking just of priviledge or the lack of it, though my language implies that. I'm also thinking of illness, imprisonment... for some reason, I always have Gregory the Great and his stomach issues in my mind. A life filled with physical pain need not mean being distracted from letters, despite how easy it is to assume it would be. Or imprisonment -- here I think of the Romanians, but also of Boethius... though I guess an argument could be made for jail being a kind of leisure too.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.cresc.ac.uk/sites/default/files/JohnLawAssemblingTheBaroqueWP109.pdf
ReplyDelete-dmf
What is literature good for? Good question, Eileen, one I've been thinking about from my own peculiar perspective. And I've sketched out an answer: Unity of Being:
ReplyDeleteIn real time, unity of being is, well, unity of being. I don’t mean to be perverse, but I don’t know of any general term, though perhaps Csikszentmihalyi’s concept of flow will do, or the phrase “being in the moment.” As far as I know flow always happens spontaneously in that we cannot flip the mind’s flow switch at will—I rather doubt there’s such a thing as a flow-switch, rather it’s a matter of balance. But we can do things that will increase the likelihood that the mind will flip into flow.
One of those things is to read, in the basic ordinary sense of the word, a literary text. Or listen to a story, watch a play or movie. Whatever. In this sense, unity of being is psychological, it happens in the mind/brain in real time.
But unity of being, I believe, is also a reasonable way to talk about how individuals and peoples live their lives in the large, from years to decades to centuries. One wants everything one does, 24/7/365, to fall into a coherent pattern. A pattern more or less attributed to the nature of the world. To the extent that one cannot achieve unity of being one feels, well, perhaps alienated is the most general concept for it.
And, as such, literature calls for ethical criticism.
Now, mind you, this is VERY DIFFERENT from the sorts of issues I've been thinking about for years and even decades. Which, I supposed, is why I'm thinking about it now.
As for the descriptive turn, I'm in favor more description, but description of the right kind. And THAT's a tricky matter, more than I can pack into a comment. And one of the reasons we need more description is that our texts are in fact richer than we've so far accounted for. So-called "close reading" was never that close.
But I could go on that rant forever. And I've been doing here and there at New Savanna. I've just spent a big chunk of the summer blogging about Disney's Dumbo, all 64 minutes of it, and have logged over a dozen posts, some quite long, and 100s of screen shots. All because I wanted to get at the richness of that film, which is about mothers and infants and trains and elephants and electricity and Fordism and modernity and clowns and hierachy and solidarity and race and metamorphosis and speaking, not-speaking, play and and and. You need description to get a handle on all of it, and then . . . .
As for Heather Love, the curious thing about "Close, but Not Deep" is that it doesn't engage in description. It's ABOUT Morrison's use of description, but it is not itself descriptive of Morrison's text.