Derrida
Derrida
Derrida
2009
page 5 Untranslatable Remnants: the Performance and its Document By Josh Schwebel
page 7 Euripides Pharmacy: Derrida, Deconstruction and Dionysian Drug Dealing By Anders Lindstrm
page 10 Phenomenology and the Question of Religion: Reading Martin Hgglunds Radical Atheism By Jonna Bornemark
page 3 The Beast and the Sovereign: Derridas Last Seminar By Sven-Olov Wallenstein
page 14 1993 Or Singularity was Here the Case of Topolitics By Staffan Lundgren
page 15 Rewriting the Ontology of Politics: An Interview with Fredrika Spindler By Sven-Olov Wallenstein
contents
Tris Vonna-Michell 57: verbal transcription notes, 2009 From the work, Wasteful Illuminations, 2008ongoing Throughout the pages of SITE Tris Vonna-Michell has presented textual excerpts from an ongoing work, Wasteful Illuminations, combined with verbal articulation notes made by the gallery staff at the Baltic in Newcastle earlier in January 2009. The excerpts are taken from a prose-piece which is devised as a chronicle and script for Vonna-Michells performances and installations, while the verbal transcription notes have been constructed by the Baltic staff after listening to selected short verbal-audio-poems composed by Vonna-Michell and translators in Japan, which correlate to the excerpts written narration both the excerpts and verbal-audiopoems were verbalized live in the gallery space; for SITE magazine they have returned to a printed form.
the editors
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Notes 1. Jacques Derrida, Sminaire: La bte et le souverain. Volume I, 20012002 (Paris: Galile, 2008). 2. Cf Derrida, Platos Pharmacy, in Dissemination, trans. Barbara Johnson (Chicago: Chicago University Press, 1981). The Greek pharmakon means several things, color but above all both poison and remedy. It is through this concept that Derrida will read Platos texts. 3. Ibid. 4. I am here referring to an expression by Alain Badiou, who gave homage to and made a luminous reading of Derridas thought in his public seminar, which through and through nourishes this text. Cf Badiou, Logique des mondes (Paris: Seuil, 2006). 5. Derrida, La bte et le souverain, Premire sance, le 12 dcembre 2001, 20f. 6. Cf Derrida, une certain pssibilit impossible de dire lvnement, in Dire lvnement est-ce possible? Seminaire de Montral pour Jacques Derrida (Paris: LHarmattan, 2001).
Alexandre Costanzo is a philosopher, based in Paris and one of the founding editors of the magazine Failles.
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signed a personal pact with God (or any value or instance that would transcend the confines of the commonwealth) can be nothing but the most despicable fraud, and it is what threatens to tear the state apart. On the one hand, the political is what is most proper to man, his universal essence as political animal; on the other hand he must be able to transcend the political in the direction of another essence and another universalityan antinomy which resonates strongly in current debates on the possibility of universal citizenship in the age of globalization, and on which Derrida provides a thoughtful take whose inconclusiveness testifies to the complexity of the issue at hand. ii. Humanity and animality The second theme that runs through the seminar is the problem of the relation between man and animal. This had actually begun to emerge in the early 1980s, with the first text on the theme of Geschlecht in Heidegger, and has been a constant presence in Derrida ever since, leading up to the volume, Lanimal que donc je suis (2006), which is also an unfinished work, assembled posthumously on the basis of recordings and lecture notes. In the seminar Derrida covers much of the same ground, but this time in connection with the issue of sovereignty (although the link admittedly sometimes appears a bit tenuous, and Derrida occasionally has to warn his listeners, in spite of what you think, I have not lost track of our topic). The main protagonist lurking in the background is here of course Descartes, for whom the animal was a simple other, a mechanical assemblage devoid of soul, mind, reason, etc. Derrida however enters the problem via Lacan and the status of animality in psychoanalysis, which in this reading inscribes itself firmly in a Cartesian trajectory. For Lacan, the animal has no access to the symbolic and the signifier, it remains sealed in the domain of the imaginary, and the humanist subject still has all the priorities accorded to it since the Classical age. Consequently, for Lacan, the animal can have no unconscious, and it is outside the fraternity that can only be based on a community of equals. This reading of Lacans decentering and subversion of the subject as caught up in, even one of the ultimate foundations for, an anthropocentric or phallogocentric discourse has a long precedence in Derrida, and we can see it germinating already in the reading of Lacans seminar on The Purloined Letter presented in La Carte postale (1980). More surprising is the inclusion of Deleuzethe thinker of becominganimal, the zone of indiscernability, and the idea of a radical responsibility for everything, even beyond the domain of the livingin such a humanist legacy. Derridas textual evidence is mainly drawn from the chapter on the image of thought in Difference and Repetition and the passages on stupidity (btise), which he understands as a particular privilege of man. Deleuze wants to raise the question of stupidity to a transcendental level, but in performing such a Kantian gesture, no matter how bent he is on transforming the very idea of the a priori into a transcendental empiricism, he in a certain way excludes the animal once more, Derrida suggests. For Deleuze, the bte cannot be bte,
it has no access to stupidity,3 precisely because would dedicate an entire book (Voyous, 2003). stupidity is first and foremost not in the other, The rogue, wolf, or lion (the subject of another but in me, in an ego determined on the basis of of La Fontaines texts) operates on the model a zoon that first and foremost has logos, and thus of the theological causa sui, and also indicates also the capacity to renounce it, and in this he the extent to which the theory of sovereignty in fact remains close to Lacan. What both of them implies a moment of fiction, of which Montaigne finally understand as proper to man, Derrida conand Pascal had reminded us much earlier: In the cludes, is ultimately aligned with a traditional fable, within a narrative that is itself fable-like, humanist gesture that points to a sovereignty it is shown that power itself is an effect of a fable, of the self, capable of responding freely and not of fiction and a fictive word, of a simulacrum only of reacting, which preserves a relation to (291)a theme that Derrida then continues in freedom, to the indetermination of the ground a reading of Paul Celans Meridian Speech, which (247). claims an analogous sovereignty for the power En passant it must be noted that the passages of poetic speech, which should however not be in Deleuze analyzed by Derrida indeed have confounded with some egological narcissism, as a great rhetorical force, and their attack on a Derrida points out in the tenth session, in concertain rectitude of thought reaches a high trasting Heideggers Introduction to Metaphysics level of polemics, or polemosit is almost as if to Celan and the possibility of letting the most we could hear the voice of the Sophists once proper of the time of the other appear (362), more behind the Platonic smokescreen, viciously and in D. H. Lawrences poem Snake, where the attacking Socrates and his feigned Ideas with entanglement of beast and sovereign attains a weapons drawn from the everyday language of particularly complex form, and the idea of a pospassions, affects, and shifts of perspective, all of sible ethics that would include non-human lie which Deleuze would later call a pragmatics once more comes to the fore. of the multiple. But colorful as they may be in In the twelfth and next-to-last session Derrida their aggressive energy, to my mind they remain enters into a debate with Heidegger, Foucault, an impasse in Deleuze, particularly in the way and Agamben, and here one may note something they oppose all of of a cantankerous philosophy as if attitude that mars it were based on the text, particuline 4 one single imalarly with respect ge, as he says, to Agamben. As About to push further, feeling more agitated against which one as the smell of the carriage began to remind early as the third could pit the idea me of the many occupied elevators of my past; session we were of an imageless elevators all somewhat slightly perfumed. referred by Derthought. Later rida to Agambens (in fact, I would Verbal transcription Note: Bus Toilet Homo Sacer I and argue, already (whispered, exept HUMMM loud) its discussion of from Logic of Sense the motif of the and onwards) TT Ghaaast- Ghaaast- Ghaaast-ClipTanySoundswerewolf, but we Deleuze would TanyTany-HUMMM-HUMMM-HUMMMget no substantial acknowledge ClipTanySounds-TanyTany discussions of Aga necessary mulambens claims, tiplicity of such only a series of images, and the unappreciative retask will rather be to allow for the production of marks that bear on certain aspects of his literary divergent images; the two volumes on cinema style, which seem out of place, given the fact that are an obvious case of this, but also a book like there are indeed many points of direct contact What is philosophy?, where the idea of a noology between Agambens and Derridas respective is developed in a fashion that runs contrary to projects. In the twelfth session, this debate is and by far transcends the rather negative, occapursued further, most substantially in relating sionally even simplistic, conception in Difference to the interpretation of certain passages in Arand Repetition. istotles Politics. Derrida disputes the claim that Derrida then pursues this theme in a reading the distinction between politikon as an attribute of Flaubert, and in an analysis of Valrys Monto the living as such, and as specific difference, sieur Teste and the authors political writings can be systematically upheld. both of which pick up the thread from earlier This seems indeed to be a case of a fetishism publications, most importantly the analysis of of small differences, where Derrida perceives the geo-politics of philosophy in Lautre capand the proximity of another thinker as somehow also returns to the question of political authority threatening, and responds with a violent by suggesting that every decisionand soverexpulsionall of which shows, alas, that deconeignty can indeed be defined (if we, for instance, struction is by no means itself exempt from the would follow Schmitt) as the capacity to decide kind of blindness that it often locates in other essentially must be seen an act of madness, and perspectives. contains the risk of relapsing into stupidity. Foucault is treated with much more caution In the eighth session Derrida return to La and respect, but here the differences between Fontaines fable and situates it in the context Derridas and Foucaults projects, both on the of the theory of sovereignty: the wolf needs no level of method and the texts they treat, are so excuses, it justifies its own actions in a tautovast that very little productive exchange seems logical fashion, and in this sense he is like one possible. As the recent publications of Foucaults of those Rogue States, this highly contested lectures from the late 1970sSecurity, Territory, and overdetermined concept to which Derrida Population and The Birth of Biopoliticsshow, both
the reading proposed by Agamben in Homo Sacer I, and by Derrida here, miss the point, albeit in different ways, of Foucaults work, which has to do with the emergence of the idea of freedom and agency that we find in liberalism, connected to the apparatuses of security that displace mechanisms of power based on discipline in a historically specific phase of the development of the modern state. Both Agamben and Derrida are pursuing the question of the ontology of sovereignty, which is precisely what the nominalist methodology proposed by Foucault wants to circumvent. Derridas response to this would probably be that such a nominalism always contains a moment of philosophical naivet (empiricism, as Derrida sometimes calls it) that itself thrives on hidden metaphysical commitments, and that Foucaults historical genealogy always must assume some core of sense in the concepts whose transformations it charts; it is however far from clear that the deconstructive gesture always escapes the danger of an inverted transcendentalism, which establishes links and continuities that lack historical specificity. As Derrida becomes more absorbed in his own reading of the Politics and forgets about polemics, we return once more to the heart of the matter, which is to find the link that connects the beast and the sovereign, which also was the initial question: man is this living being, the zoon, who is caught up in politics, in a zoopolitics (which Derrida prefers over biopolitics). This does not mean, he adds as a final caution on the last page, that Aristotle would have formulated everything that was to come, which would be absurdbut as far as the biopolitical or zoopolitical structure goes, it is named by Aristotle, it is already there and the debate begins here (462).
Notes 1. Jacques Derrida, Seminaire: La bte et le souverain. Volume 1 (20012002). dition tablie par Michel Lisse, MarieLouise Mallet et Ginette Michaud (Paris: Galile, 2008). Henceforth cited in the text with pagination. 2. In The Republic (336b) Trasymachus enters the debate on the nature of justice like a wild beast (hoster therion), and Socrates response in 336c makes an allusion to the Greek popular belief in comparing him to wolf, whose sight was believed to deprive humans of their speech: And I, when I heard him, was dismayed, and looking upon him was filled with fear, and I believe that if I had not looked at him before he did at me I should have lost my voice (aphonos an genesthai). The rest of The Republic could then in a certain way be seen as the gradual recovery of the power of phone and logos in the face of this threatening animality and aphonia. Curiously enough, this wolf does not appear in Derridas otherwise so ambitious and far-reaching lycology. 3. La btise nest pas lanimal, Deleuze writes, since lanimal est garanti par des formes spcifiques qui lempchent dtre bte. Diffrence et repetition (Paris: PUF, 1968), 197.
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formance proposed by Phelan (and the ontology of translation proposed by Felstiner), I suggest that we imagine a form of documentation (as Phelan does of writing) that is sensitive to allowing the performance to disappeara document of lossa document as remnant. This would be a document that permits and encourages the withdrawal of the event. As mentioned, the relation of event to document hinges on a dialectic of presence and absence: the document allows me access to the experience of an event from which I was absent. In other words, the experience of the document anticipates an experience of my own absence, and testifies to the events disappearance. The encounter with the document proposes an encounter that extends beyond presence both mine and the events to an other encounter that is an other singular encounter. The relation to the document is a (mediated) recognition of and relation to the Other. This Other can never be an object for my consciousness, it must always escape my graspand thus always retain its Otherness. The nature of experience presupposes that one can never have an immediate experience (of the Other). The immediate experience (intuition) overwhelms consciousness in its immediacy and exceeds what can be recuperated into the realm of conscious experience. My experience, as such (as experience that is related to me as authoring subject) is thus infinitely mediated, infinitely constructed, and indeed the Other remains infinitely Other to me. Like the text in translation presupposes languages that I do not speak, the document (as document) presupposes that there are places and times that I have not been and will not be, thus rendering an awareness of an Other through a mediated encounter with absence. This absence figures as both my own not being present to the event, and the Others not being present to my act of witnessing. Thus the document carries the trace of the absent original as Other. Both document and translation are haunted by the originalthe original permeates them in its absence. Thus the missing event haunts the document as a spectre. Derrida writes: The spectre is [] of the visible, but of the invisible visible, it is the visibility of a body that is not present in flesh and blood [] Phantom preserves the same reference to phainesthai, to appearing for vision, to the brightness of day, to phenomenality. And what happens with spectrality, with phantomality [] is that something becomes almost visible which is visible only insofar as it is not visible in flesh and blood. (Derrida, Spectrographies, 418419) Phenomenologically, then, the document as haunted remnant ceases to be a means for reproducing the appearance of the performance. Instead, the document becomes a means for sustaining the performances disappearance. This
means that instead of reproducing an insufficient or concerns me without any possible rendition of what happened, the document allows reciprocity [] the father comes before me, us to recall that the performance happened I who am owing or indebted I who am that the event to which the document referred because of him, owing to him, owing him is not present. The document, like the text in everything (Spectrographies, 412). translation, is haunted by the disappearance of its original. For example, consider Germaine Kohs The performance as original originator haunts Self Portrait, a painting housed in the Kelowna the time of the document. The site of encounter Art Gallery that she revisits to age based on with the document is a site for mourningan her present appearance. In this work the relation encounter with a mark that is sustained through between performance and document is continuspace and time. The document haunts by loaning ously renegotiated, and the event, the original, us the time to encounter the performance past. younger Germaine, withdraws deeper and deepLet us now consider the borrowed time of this er into concealment the longer the document encounter with the work of mourning. Derrida exists (of the event that no longer exists). Rather describes, in Of Hospitality, the demise of Oedithan straining to reanimate a dead event, the task pus. In Oedipus at Colonus, Sophocles' third play, of the document is to create a site for mourning Oedipus is a foreigner in a foreign land, blind, that loss. Thus each visit to Kohs painting is guilty of parricide, and dying. Oedipus commits charged with the passage of time, and reflects the Theseus, a stranger, by oath never to reveal the lost event of the location of his previous layer of (Oedipus) tomb paint. The doculine 6 to his (Oedipus) ment provides an daughters. Derencounter with End of a roll, rewinding. Fast approaching final rida provides the lost event, and destination, end of the line. Beginning of a new line. a lengthy its display (an discussion of aspect of the docVerbal transcription Note: Elevator Hiss 2 the particular ument that we (whispered except when indicated) significance of the have avoided thus hidden location far), can be seen StepStepStep-KiTchin Step..StepTchinof Oedipus place as a site to enStepStep -Step..StepKiTchin-Step Step StepTchin of burial. There counter the spec StepStepTchin Step ITSGOINGUP? \\ is no manifest tre of the event DoorsClosing\\ //HISSSSSSS\\SSSSSSSSssssss grave, no visible and to mourn its PING-PONG itsthefifthfloor and phenomenal passing. Kohs tomb, only a sework extends this cret burial, an work of mournungrave, invisible ingeach time she exhibits the work, we are even to his family, even to his daughters (Of granted time to mourn the loss of the previous Hospitality, 113). By suppressing the place where work. he is subsumed beneath the earth and disappears What then is the experience of this spectral from visibility, Oedipus denies his daughters the document? As Derrida puts it, discussing the chance to mourn his death. Thus Oedipus dies: date as it recalls the singularity of the event past, what becomes readable is not, it must be Without a tomb, without a determinable understood, the date itself, but only the poetic place, without monument, [] without a experience of the date (Shibboleth, 8). What is stopping point [] mourning is not allowed. experienced through the document is not the Or, what comes down to the same thing, performance itself (the document only comes to it is promised without taking place, so appear as an incomplete intermediary), but the thenceforth promised as an interminable experience of loss or disappearance that circumourning, an infinite mourning (Of Hospilates as the very ontology of the performance. It tality, 111). shows that there is something not shown (Derrida, Acts of Literature, 413). The document marks Thus we have an invisible originator or father a place in the viewers relation to and through who has denied his progeny a place for mournpresence, manifesting an experience of separaing: these daughters are left hostage to their tion from the original experience. This experience fathers ghost in an interminable state of mournof separation and distance, of absence, is that of ing, and indeed their mourning is compounded being outside of the work, mourning its loss. for they also must mourn the loss of a place to This spectre of the performance, withdrawn mourn. The time for mourning their fathers from the visible surface of the document, watches death can never endthe debt of mourning can us. Derrida writes: never be repaid. The void that Oedipus has left in his wake is thus an infinite absence, an infinite the spectre is not simply this visible invisdebt, a loan that exceeds any accounts. Like the ible that I can see, it is someone who watches singular event, Oedipus grave becomes, the
secret that must not be violated by speech (Of Hospitality, 97). His daughters can never be free of the spectre of their father, since his placeless tomb will forever be nowhere, everywhere, wherever they are. To bring this back to the document of the performance, it is important to see the document as a site for mourning, both to revisit the past event, but also to achieve some detachment from it. The time for mourning must be finite. When Oedipus denies his daughters a place for mourning he is committing them to an endless surveillance by his spectrein other words he denies his daughters a document of his performance. Thus Oedipus ghost haunts infinitely, and his daughters can never be released from his ghostly presence-in-absence. The document gives us a place to encounter and mourn the invisible spectre of the Other. As Derrida writes, the other, who is dead, was someone for whom a world, that is to say, a possible infinity or a possible indefinity of experiences was open. It [the document] is an opening (Spectrographies, 422). The document is thus a position beyond the self so that we may be in relation to the event - to encounter the event, to repay its borrowed time, and to let it disappear. In conclusion, the performance cannot be documented (if the document is meant to preserve), but the document can perform (if the document is meant to let the performance be towards disappearance). Or, the performance cannot not be documentedthe performance, as performance, cannot be as anything but becoming its own not being, in being towards disappearance. And, if the document can perform, which it does, it can perform like the performanceit can reproduce the being of the performance as being towards disappearance. Therefore, the performance is always already its own remnant, and the document need only perform this disappearance.
Bibliography Celan, Paul. Selected Poems and Prose of Paul Celan. John Felstiner, trans. (New York: W. W. Norton and Company, 2001). Derrida, Jacques. Sovereignties in Question: The Poetics of Paul Celan. Thomas Dutoit and Outi Pasanen, ed. (New York: Fordham University Press, 2005).
Joshua Schwebel is an artist and a PhD student in Visual Arts and Culture at the University of Western Ontario.
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Today most of us would perhaps connect the Greek term pharmakon to Jacques Derrida and his inventory of Platos Pharmacy. Needless to say, the pharmakon, with its double attribute of poison and remedy, was not invented by Plato himself.1 On the contrary, the ambiguity of this element has a long history, a history that also presents the pharmakon as a medium of magical qualities. During the classical period of antiquity, Plato in particular will use the ambivalence of the pharmakon to give it a philosophical charge as he is struggling with the sophists, but had the pharmacy, with its winding corridors and mirror clad walls, been explored before Plato? Nietzsche proclaimed in The Birth of Tragedy that Euripides, being closely associated to Socrates, was the sole reason why the art of the tragic poets came to an end.2 We all know Socrates view on mimesis from Platos Republic resulting in the banishment of all poetsbut the question is if, and if so in what way, the pharmacy already was in use in the late works of Euripides? Through his tragedies, being the youngest of the three tragedians, we can closely follow his encounters with the rise of sophistry in Athens. In his last play, the Bacchae, this conflict comes to its violent crescendo in the confrontations between Pentheus, ruler of Thebes, and Dionysus, son of Zeus; between the nomoi of the polis and the unquestioned status of the divine unwritten laws; a clash between rationality and its other. Dionysus, in representing the other, enters the city of Thebes as a man full of many wonders (thaumatn ples, 449) and the leader of the Bacchic revels, and his key-attribute is the pharmakon.3 i. The Pharmacy Already at the entrance of the pharmacy we recognize the ambiguity of the pharmakon. The pharmakon, acting as both remedy and poison, alternately or simultaneously beneficent or maleficent, is a charm of nonidentity with spellbinding powers.4 Moving further into the pharmacy, we notice how the ambivalence of the pharmakon opens up into a maze, into a labyrinth of reflecting mirrors. According to Derrida it is within this labyrinth the pharmakon constitutes the medium that can make oppositions (good/evil, memory/forgetfulness, inside/outside etc.) slide over into the other, a movement where characteristics from one side are turned into their opposite. Through the pharmaceutical force of the pharmacy the reversals take place; the play of differences that Plato tries to dominate and has to stop in his efforts with the spread of sophistic ideas in classical Athens.5 If the pharmakon, in the writings of Plato, is the
element where the transformation takes place, origin of Western rationality, founded in the there seems to be a slight alteration in Euripides Greek logos, as the violent history of a series of distribution of the pharmakon. In the Bacchae oppositionsa polarization that has produced several transformations of opposites are generHistory in its entirety, in the philosophical differated, contrary values sliding over into the other, ence between mythos and logos.7 a play of differences set in motion as Dionysus In Greek tragedy there are no attempts to libenters the city of Thebes. Although Derrida never erate the drama from mythos, on the contrary, the took a real interest in Greek tragedy, what can be mythological framework was a necessary presaid about Euripides Bacchae keeping Derridas requisite for the tragic poets. Logos, on the other account of the pharmacy in mind? In Platos hand, is articulated within this frameworkbut Pharmacy Derrida demonstrates how the in the pharmacy, staged in the tragic collision of pharmakon is caught in a chain of significations, the Bacchae, we can certainly trace the violent a chain that also shows the indeterminacy of this origins of Western rationality. Euripides take on element. Running the nomos/physis from the mythical controversy, a Pharmacia, which line 7 clash that came Socrates mentions with the rise of at the beginning Elevator at gallery. Verbal announcements. Repetition. sophistry in clasof the Phaedrus, Empty corridor. Busy Yokohama streets. Singular figure sical Athens, is to the pharmakon of a dark man on telephone, far right end of frame. also dramatized and the pharwithin this makeus (a magiVerbal transcription Note: Elevator Lady Yoko Goingdown 2 framework of cian or wizard), (whispered, very fast, with few breaths) pharmaceutical to the absence in force and archaic Platos writings ThankYouForVisitingLandMarkTowerSkyDining mythology. These of the pharmakos Today-TheExitIsOnTheFifthFloor-RetaurantIson notions are not (the scapegoat in TowerDiningAndShoppingMore-ItsTheWayItsTheWay simply polarized, the banishment ItsLandMarkPlazaForCustomersForCustomersWho as the cultural of something WouldLikeToGoToTheFloorsBelowTheFifthFloor and philosophievilthe ritual WeAreTerriblySorryTo-CauseYou-Inconvenience- cal aspects are cleansing of the Ohh Please-Change-ToTheEscalatorOrElevatorInLow blended in the city and the posMarKPlaza ThankYourVeryMuchForComingToday dramaturgical sibility of healing HHHH - WeAreNowApproachingTheWayUp hm structure of the the polis in times Bacchae. Pentheus of a crisis). This is not a traditional chain of significasophist, rather tions is also recognizable in the Bacchae. Of course a positivist with an agile tongue. He knows we wont find Platos philosophical agenda in the how to speak, the revered blind seer Teiresias dramatic structure of Euripides tragedy, but the declares: you have a glib tongue, as though in destructive violence that Dionysus unleashes in your right mind, yet in your words there is no the civic of Thebes, in the heart of the Theban real sense (268).8 But Teiresias himself, as both constitution as a state, has a resemblance to the Vernant and Segal has argued, is following a pharmakon Plato unveils in his war on the sophists. sophistic model in his speech, and Dionysus, The ambivalence of the pharmakon is the full of wonders, appears to be the master of ambiguity Plato, through a series of oppositions, sophistic marvels.9 Within the confinement of in the words of the Egyptian king Thamus, atthe pharmacy this comes as no surprise. tempts to master in the Phaedrus. Derrida claims that Plato had to make the legend of Theuth ii. The Pharmakon conform to the necessities of structural laws in At the outset of the Bacchae, Dionysus has arrived his organization of the myth.6 These structural at the gates of the city where he once was born: laws govern and articulate oppositions (speech/ I have come, the son of Zeus, to this land of writing, life/death, father/son, soul/body, day/ the Thebans, I, Dionysus, whom once Cadmus night, sun/moon etc.), an internal structure daughter bore, Semele, brought to childbed by that provides a line of demarcation between lightning-carried fire (14). Disguised as a man, mythem and philosophem. This hierarchical changed to mortal appearance (48), he enstructure of oppositions gives Platos myth a core counters Pentheusruler of Thebes and son of of logos, a core that also encircles the problematic Agaveto prove himself a god and the rightful origin of Western logos. Derrida emphasizes the son of Zeus (42, 47). The citizens are to be pun-
ished for not carrying out his sacred rites and for spreading the rumor that Semele, Agaves sister who died giving birth to Dionysus, was pregnant with the child of a mortal man: For this land must learn to the full, even against its will, that it is uninitiated in my Bacchic rites; and I must speak in defence of my mother Semele by appearing to mortals as the god she bore to Zeus (3942). He has already stung the women in madness from their homes (32), and they are now, stricken in their wits (33), roaming the hillsides of mount Cithaeron in Bacchic frenzy. Teiresias, known for his wisdom, has also come to Thebes. In order to honor the homecoming of Dionysus, he has met up with Cadmus to show respect for the Dionysian rites: to celebrate him as a god in his dances, as the rest of the male inhabitants of Thebes refuse to participate in the Bacchic ceremonies: for only we are sane, the rest are mad (19496). Teiresias accentuates the unparalleled status of the divine laws. They are not to be questioned, as they in their archaic origin always have been present through the ages: Our wisdom is as nothing (ouden sofizomestha) in the eyes of deity, The traditions of our fathers, from time immemorial our possessionno argument casts them down (katabalei logos), not even by the wisest invention of the keenest mind (20003) When the divine unwritten laws, the traditions of our fathers, are concerned, one does not practice sophistry (sofizomestha) in the eyes of deity. Pentheus does not pay heed to the divine laws; instead he puts his trust into the nomoi of the polis. Dionysus, and the rest of the Olympian gods, on the other hand brings to correction those of men who honour foolishness and fail to foster things divine in the madness of their judgement (mainomena doxa) [...] what is held lawful over length of time exists forever and by Nature (physei) (88496). The madness of Pentheus, in his arguments to fight against a god, stubbornly holding on to the nomoi of the polis, is beyond any cure: for you are most grievously mad (main)beyond the cure of drugs (pharmakois), and yet your sickness must be due to them (32627). Pentheus conflict with Dionysus and the divine roots of physis is based on his illusions of having conceptualized the world as a world of reason, of logos if you will, a worldview that will be set in motion by the pharmakon of Dionysus first by staging wonders in the city, and then by striking Pentheus with divine madness. In the Phaedrus, following the legend of Theuth, Socrates claims that if writing cant represent the living words, then writing is nothing but simulacra, like a painting of something living, and as all forms of representation it is of course
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far away from the truth. This is also the reason why poets have to be banned in the Republic: This, then, will apply to the maker of tragedies also, if he is an imitator and is in his nature at three removes from the king and the truth, as are all other imitators.10 The only way not getting your mind distorted by the mimetic nature of the tragedies comes through pharmaceutical force: the pharmakon becomes the antidote, the drug to counteract the delusions of imitation (595b). Plato refers to the world of ideas as knowledge of the real nature of things (to eidenai auta hoia tungkhanei onta). This ontological knowledge is the counterpoison to the tragic poets art of imitation. The world of ideas is a prerequisite for absolute and objective knowledge, but from this passage Derrida concludes that its not the transparency of the forms and ideas that we first acquire, it is the antidote.11 And it is this antidote, the element of the pharmakon, which Derrida describes as a combat zone between philosophy and its other.12 The pharmakon is in itself a complicity of contrary values, a medium of an internal ambiguity that is prior to differentiation in general, an element that has not yet been divided into what Derrida explains as occult violence and accurate knowledge.13 The pharmakon is the element where the transformation of opposites takes placethe bottomless fund from which all dialectics draws its philosophemes.14 iii. The Pharmakeus Dionysus works miracles in the polis, but its all an illusion, a phantasmagoria. Referred to as a magician (gos ep[i]dos, 233), all wonders are dramatized by the god himself, with the aim of breaking down a structure of rationality taken for granted in the ordering of the polis. Pentheus own destructivity strikes back in a Dionysian mirror reflection, which in the long run contrary to the followers who accept the rites of Dionysusis madness without any ambition to cure him from his delusions. When the divine madness hits Pentheus it creates a doubling of his vision: LookI seem to myself to see two suns and a double Thebes (91819). In the labyrinths of the pharmacy he is turned into a Dionysian marionette: Now you see what you should see (922). Dionysus has lifted the veil from a world that has been separated by reason, a world here emerging as a double exposure to Pentheus, as Dionysus refuses him a harmonized vision. In his arrogance (hybris) Pentheus is still concerned with social values in his defense of the polis, but as his one-way reasoning tries to calculate everything within a rational structure, he denies the other. Dionysus shakes the founda-
tions of this hierarchical structure of reason as he repetition: a repetition of truth (altheia) which is undermining the structure of the Greek polis presents and exposes the eidos; and a repetition the divine madness turns into an epidemic disof death and oblivion (lth) which veils and ease, a tribute that has to be paid in the forsaking skews because it does not present the eidos but reof the other: all of the women, I maddened from presents a presentation, repeats a repetition.16 their homes (36). These women are punished Derrida stresses the point that both of these with a distorted picture of reality, when, at the repetitions contains a simultaneousness, they same time, Dionysus own followers of maenads cant be separated, just as we in the pharmacy live in harmony with the world he has exposed cant distinguish the medicine from the poison, them to in his rites. The divine madness contains isolate the evil from the good, the true from the a double attribute of remedy and despair, truth false, since they are repeating each otherthe and falsity, a hallucinogenic poison and at the pharmakon is always the same, simultaneously same time a beneficial medicine. When Dionysus both remedy and poison, it has no identity.17 own thiasos beThe labyrinth comes seeing, as of the pharmacy in two opposing line 8 opens up into a mirrors they see bottomless pit. themselves and Fluorescent tubes made visible at top right-hand Platonism, on the god, the corner of gallery. Aquarium tube out. Green the other hand, Thebans dont see moss balls dormant as ever. Skyscraper depicted. is what DerDionysus.15 They Satisfaction. Moving onwards and upwards. rida depicts as a are punished with powerful effort to a distorted view, Verbal transcription Note: Elevator Yoko Monologue 2 conceal and masa non-harmoniz(whispered, very fast, with few breaths) ter the pharmakon ing illusion of that operates in what they conFromHereWeWillTakeYouToTheObservation the dawn of Westceive to be real. FloorWhichIsTheClosestTheClosestTheClosestTo ern thought18 Dionysus unveils TheSky-WeWillGuideYouToTheSkyCordonSkyCordonthe mirroring the bottomless PleaseLookAtTheSpeedTheSpeedTheSpeedMeteer corridors of foundation of the AboveTheAboveTheDoors-TheStrongWindbyNowIs indeterminacy pharmacy and the FortyFiveKilometersPerHour-ThisIsTheFastestThe which constitute row of mirrors FastestTheFastestTheFastestElevatorInJapan-Japan-.. the passage into falls like tiles in a Hmm..-ThisBuildingisTwoHundredandThirtyMeters philosophy. game of dominos. HighSixtyNineFloors-TheElevatorTake The DionyReturning to sFortySecondsToReachTheTop! sian drug, the the Phaedrus, ambiguity of his Theuthfather pharmakon, in of written letters being a wizard (patr n grammatn), but also god of medicine or enchanter (gos ep[i]dos), can be distributed presents the art of writing as a pharmakon to to ease pain, but is at the same time the element the Egyptian king Thamus: Here, O King, that triggers confusion and divine madness.19 says Theuth, is a discipline (mathma) that will Since Pentheus is acting the way he is, we are make the Egyptians wiser (sophterous) and will given a full-scale exhibition of the magic illuimprove their memories (mnmonikterous): both sions of Dionysus as the pharmakeusa wizard, memory (mnm) and instruction (sophia) have master of phantasms, but foremost the god of found their remedy (pharmakon) (Phaedrus presence (parousia).20 In being the present god, 274e). The King answers that its not a remedy which he is through his different guises in the for memory, but for reminding (oukoun mnmes, drama, the pharmakon of Dionysus is the only alla hupomnses, pharmakon hures) that Theuth filter for a human to extract the false from the has discovered. It only gives a semblance (doxa) of truth: nor is there any other cure from distress wisdom (sophia), not truth (aletheia), which in the (282). Dionysus gives the pharmakon a determinalong run will fill men with the conceit of wisdom tion that it otherwise lacks: only through his (doxosophoi), not true wisdom. divine intervention, mastering the pharmakon as There is according to Derrida, and here his own the pharmakeus, a harmonized world can emerge. agenda becomes discernable, a subtle distinction Could it be argued that Euripides Bacchae, in in the difference between knowledge as memory the Dionysian Aufhebung of contrary values, falls and nonknowledge as rememorationa outside the judgment of tragedy as mimetic in distinction between two forms, two moments, of the way Socrates proclaimed?
iv. The Pharmakos The pharmakon is a prime attribute of Dionysus. The ambiguities of this element corresponds to Dionysus presentation of himself as most terrible and to men most gentle (deinotatos, athrpoisi d pitatos) (86061). He is himself both the poison and the antidote, both the illusory drug and its vaccine. The Dionysian pharmakon is a magical dose (dosis), which he distributes in the polis as he sees fit. This makes Dionysus an elusive god of wonders, a master of illusion, with stunning resemblances to Derridas description of Theuth: He cannot be assigned a fixed spot in the play of differences. Sly, slippery, and masked, an intriguer and a card, like Hermes, he is neither king nor jack, but rather a sort of joker, a floating signifier, a wild card, one who puts play into play. This god of resurrection is less interested in life or death than in death as a repetition of life and life as a rehearsal of death, in the awakening of life and in the recommencement of death. [...] His propriety or property is impropriety or inappropriateness, the floating indetermination that allows for substitution and play.21 In Heraclitus fragment 15 we learn that Hades and Dionysus are the same. The Dionysian pharmakon, not diverging from Plato, is the element where characteristics from one side are turned into its opposite, reverseda play of differences staged in the pharmacy. The movement of the pharmakon contains a simultaneousness of falsity and truth. Its an element of both poison and remedy. One side cant be isolated from the other, as they in their origin cant do anything but to repeat each otherthe pharmacy is bottomless, a winding labyrinth of mirrors, without identity. But Dionysus, contrary to Plato, can crystallize the truth: expel the hallucinating ambiguities of the pharmakon, as the world of the other emerges. Pentheus, after being struck with divine madness, is in an illusory state. He believes that he aloneas Dionysus dresses him in women clothing, deluded that the sacred garments are worn in order to blend with the maenadsis about to cleanse the mountainside from the Bacchic revels: for I am the only man of them to dare this deed (962). This distorted initiation into the Bacchic cult, Dionysus conveys, aims at a ritual cleansing of the city: You alone take on the burden for this city, you alone (963). Pentheus, ruler of the polis, becomes its scapegoat, the pharmakos that is the necessary sacrifice if the whole city is not to be destroyed, and at the same
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time an example of whats in stall for those who turn against the gods.22 The destructive violence of Dionysus is aimed at the whole of Thebes. Pentheus has to become the pharmakos, violently excluded, so the city can be reconstituted in its unity. The sacrifice of Pentheus is an expulsion of evil from the inner sanctions of the polis out of the city. The exclusion of the pharmakos will reconstitute the stability of the polis in the time of a crisis, a crisis that has been triggered by its own ruler. The ritual sacrifice Pentheus encounters on the slopes of mount Cithaeron is a pharmacological reversal, from ruler to pharmakos, from the nomos of the polis to the wild nature of physis, a transformation directed by the Dionysian pharmakon. The attempt to divide nature (physis) and culture (nomos) slides, as Dionysus is the present god, who makes the polarity in the structure of oppositions collapse.23 He masters the contrary values, sets the violent play of differences in motion, a play that he dominates and at will can put a stop to. From the enchantments of Dionysus the illusions and the divine madness emerges that sets all determinations in motion, when he as pharmakeus distributes his magical pharmakon, which makes the polarity of concepts and connotations slide over into each other as he lifts the veil from the other. At the end of the play, Pentheus head is carried home in triumphfrom the Bacchic sparagmos that took place on mount Cithaeronby his own mother: We with unaided hands both caught this beast and tore his limbs apart (120910). In the delusion of her son being a lion, she proudly announced: The Bacchic huntsman wisely, cleverly swung his maenads upon this beast (118991). The ritual sacrifice of Pentheus might show what unforgiving forces are set in motion, as Cadmus argues, in the encounters with the Dionysian pharmakon: You were made mad, and the whole land was possessed by Bacchic frenzy (1295). Agaue, now returning to her wits, responds: Dionysus destroyed us, now I realize it! (1296). The house of Cadmus is certainly destroyed and Dionysus now turns to the founder of Thebes with a pharmaceutical arrangement: you shall be turned into a serpent, and your wife shall change into the savage form of a snake (1330). Cadmus, who sowed in the earth the earth-born crop of the serpent (1025), the race (genos) of Thebans (1314), is now himself transformed into a dragon-like serpent, facing the divine decree of leading into Hellas a motley, barbarian horde (1356).24 The pharmacological force of the Dionysian pharmakon can be argued to follow the chain of
significationspharmakon, pharmakeus, pharma Notes 1. PHARMAKON a medicine, drug, remedy a medicine kosDerrida locates in the writings of Plato. The for disease a poisonous drug, drug, poison an endivine presence we encounter in Dionysus firechanted potion, philtre: also a charm, spell, enchantment: works collapses binary oppositions (logos/mythos, any secret means of effecting a thing. Liddell and Scott, nomos/physis etc.), oppositions structured in a Greek-English Lexicon, Oxford University Press, 1958. 2. In a certain sense Euripides, too, was merely a hierarchical polarization, traceable to the origin mask; the deity who spoke out of him was not of western rationality. According to Derrida we Dionysus, nor Apollo, but an altogether newborn extract meaning by privileging one side over the daemon called Socrates. This is the new opposition: other, which Pentheus, in a logocentristic gesthe Dionysiac versus the Socratic, and the work of art that once was Greek tragedy was destroyed by ture, exemplifies in bringing the supplemented it. Friedrich Nietzsche, The Birth of Tragedy, trans. side (mythos, physis etc.) over to logos, nomos Ronald Spiers, Cambridge University Press (1999), etc. The attempt to master oppositions creates 2008, 60. Henceforth cited as The Birth of Tragedy. instability, as the supplemented side strikes 3. The presentation of Dionysus is inspired by the works of Jeanback, which DioPierre Vernant nysus enacts with and Charles Segal, violent force in line 9 but the discussion the Bacchae. Logois confined within the pharmacy, centrism, Derrida Bench and passageways at dusk, adjoining the within those corargues, creates elevators and entrances of a monolithic slab. ridors of indeterdisturbances, Concrete slab more than slightly elevated off the minacy that seem which seems to be tarmac. Illuminations and light fixtures. to constitute the origin of western reflected already thinking. in Euripides tragVerbal transcription Note: Ferry Drone Perhaps 2 4. Jacques edy, disturbances (constant HMMMMM, tchumtchum quieter each time) Derrida, Platos that will destabiPharmacy,trans. Barbara Johnson, lize the structures H HMMMMMtchumtchumDissemination, of a reason conHMMMMMtchumtchum- HMMMMMtchumtchumChicago (1981) structed by a HMMMMMtchumtchum- HMMMMMtchumtchum2004, 70. hierarchy of opHMMMMMtchumtchum- HMMMMMtchumtchumHenceforth cited as Platos Pharpositions. This HMMMMMtchumtchum- HMMMMMtchumtchummacy. hierarchy generHMMMMMtchumtchum- HMMMMMtchumtchum5. Ibid., 103, 106 ates paradoxes, HMMMMMtchumtchum- HMMMMMtchumtchum& 127. problems formuHMMMMMtchumtchum 6. Ibid., 85. 7. Ibid., 86. lated within the 8. The Bacchae system that cant by Euripides. A be answered. Translation with The sparagmos of Pentheus seems to be a symCommentary by G.S. Kirk, New Jersey, 1970. 9. Vernant, The Masked Dionysus of Euripides Bacbolic dismemberment of a reason that has failed chae, Myth and Tragedy in Ancient Greece, trans. Janet to recognize a world that it itself hasnt constiLloyd, New York (1986) 1996, 403. tuted. A world that cannot be controlled by rea10. Plato, Republic, The Collected Dialogues of Plato, ed. E. son, a world outside those structures that have Hamilton & H. Cairns, Princeton University Press, Princeton, 1961, 597 e. determined what reason constitutes as reality, a 11. Platos Pharmacy, 138. world of rational determinations that Euripides 12. Ibid. in old age raised a critical voice against, but still 13. Ibid. The pharmakon is an element in itself bottoma world that came to be consolidated in Greek less, a drug without substance, without essence, undecidable as Derrida puts it, but the pharmakon is thinking. In following this thread, the Bacchae at the same time the necessary condition for the poscould be read as the last critical instance, before sibility of distinguishing the order of knowledge this hierarchy of oppositions is tiled in the dawn for Plato, since he is pointing in the direction of the of the Westthe (instable) legacy Western hisorigin of ideas, and further, beyond beingness and presence (epekeina ts ousias). tory is built around. The pharmacy never closes.
citizen are not possible to evade in death by trying to escape his punishment in life. 15. It is based on the meeting of two gazes in which (as in the interplay of reflecting mirrors), by the grace of Dionysus, a total reversability is established between the devotee who sees and the god who is seen, where each one is, in relation to the other, at once the one who sees and the one who makes himself seen. Vernant, The Masked Dionysus, Myth and Tragedy in Ancient Greece, 393. To see Dionysus, it is necessary to enter a different world where it is the other, not the same that reigns. Ibid, 394. 16. Platos Pharmacy, 135. This could be a starting point to compare Derridas deconstruction with Heideggers destruction of ontology, as it is presented in Sein und Zeit, in his reading of aletheia as a-letheia. 17. Ibid., 169. In this repetition, which also seems to be the return of the written word as Socrates picks up the fertile trace of writinga discourse he describes as: The sort that goes together with knowledge and is written in the soul of the learner (Phaedrus 276 a)we can distinguish Derridas deconstructive practice in the pharmacy. According to Derrida this repetition makes the opposition between speech and writing collapse, and rather than condemning writing Plato in the Phaedrus seems to prefer one sort of writing over another (149). To write in the soul is the noble art of dialectics which amounts to truth: The dialectician selects a soul of the right type, and in it he plants and sows his words founded on knowledge, words which can defend both themselves and him who planted them (Phaedrus 277 a). But neither maieutics or the re-discovery of truth makes it possible to conceptually handle the world of ideas beyond beingness or presence (epekeina ts ousias). 18. Ibid., 167. 19. Charles Segal, Dionysiac poetics and Euripides Bacchae, Expanded Edition, Princeton University Press (1982), 1997, 232f. 20. Pharmakeus []one who deals in drugs or poisons, a sorcerer, poisoner. Lidell and Scott (1958). 21. Platos Pharmacy, 93. 22. Pharmakos []one who is sacrificed as a purification for others, a scape-goat. Lidell and Scott (1958). 23. In his divine presence hes at the same time the protector of tragedy, and since this is Dionysus first return to Greek soil the sacrificial crisis of the Bacchae is nothing less than the original Bacchanal. Ren Girard, Violence and the Sacred, trans. Patrick Gregory, John Hopkins University Press, Baltimore (1977) 1979, 127. 24. We are told this by a poet who has resisted Dionysus with heroic strength throughout a long lifeonly to end his career with a glorification of his opponent and a suicide, like someone suffering from vertigo who finally throws himself of a tower simply in order to escape the terrible dizziness he can tolerate no longer. The Birth of Tragedy, 60.
14. Ibid., 127. This transformation also takes place in the death of Socrates. To empty the deadly potion of hemlock was as voluntary as a necessary consequence of the laws Socrates had lived by. The content of the cup becomes the pharmakon that others conceive as poison, but to Socrates a remedy to release his soul (when he now is to face the real judges in Hades). Socrates takes the potion for the sake of the state and to not question its laws. The laws that he has committed himself to live by as a
Anders Lindstrm is a philosopher and musician, living and working in Stockholm. His current work deals with the philosophical implications of Greek tragedy
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Phenomenology and the Question of Religion: Reading Martin Hgglunds Radical Atheism
Jonna Bornemark
i. The turn to religion Since the beginning of the 1990s, the idea that there has been a turn to religion within phenomenology has become widespread. A key figure in establishing this notion was Dominique Janicaud, although he used it to criticize a certain tendency within French phenomenology.1 It is, however, debatable whether such a turn in phenomenology ever took place; in fact, from modern phenomenologys very inception in the first decades of the 20th century, the topic of religion has always been present, above all since phenomenology was understood not only as a method for investigating the religion from within, but also as a philosophical reflection that would take religious experience to be a profound philosophical issue, while still having the capacity to pursue such inquiries without itself becoming a religious philosophy. Among the philosophers cited as evidence of a turn we have Emmanuel Levinas, Michel Henry, Gianni Vattimo, Jean-Luc Marion, andsome have arguedJacques Derrida. But it is obviously not only in philosophy that the return of religion has been an issue. In politics and society at large there is an unmistakable new level of interest in religion, and the prophecy that economic and technological development, together with the progress of democracy, would preclude a religious mindset has not been fulfilled. This return of religion in the public sphere has provoked a response from atheists which is centered on a somewhat belligerent argument against what is perceived as dogmatic religion. This type of atheism, which we can find in the writings of, say, Richard Dawkins or Michel Onfray, in fact occasionally takes on the tenor of the fundamentalist religious leaders themselves, since it focuses on debates about creationism or the existence of purgatory, while having little to say about the rich variety of religious experience among non-fundamentalists; and it never touches the core of the philosophical questions motivating the turn to religion within phenomenology. Fortunately, this atheism does not exhaust the philosophical possibilities of atheism, as clearly evidenced by Martin Hgglunds recent book, Radical Atheism: Derrida and the Time of Life.2 Hgglund starts off from the same philosophical discussion that eventually led to the turn to religion within phenomenology, but instead of excavating a common ground, he sees the turn as a residue of a quest for being qua harmony and origin, which deconstruction has broken with once and for all. Whereas a philosopher like John Caputo has explored similarities between Derrida and Augustine, as well as between Derrida and the tradition of negative theology, Hgglund sees in Derrida a radical atheism that disconnects from the religious tradition as always and hopelessly complicit in a metaphysics of presence.
ii. Radical Atheism can never be fully present to itself, there is always Hgglunds approach is refreshing, since he wants a gap between subjectivity as the agent of the not only to give an interpretation of Derridas investigation and subjectivity as a phenomenon work, but to develop the argument in its own to be investigatedin other words, self-conright. His main focus lies on the discussion of the sciousness always comes too late to be fully philosophical thesis, not on the debate on how conscious of itself. The present is thus never to interpret Derrida. This makes Radical Atheism present without the non-presence of the past and impressive in its argumentative strength and in the future. At the heart of presence we find nonthe way that it develops a series of consequences. presence. Husserl was unhappy with these findThe book sticks to a central thesis and investiings since he constantly tried to locate a ground gates its possible applications in different areas: that would allow his own theory to become time, writing, violence, life, and democracy. transparent to itself. After Husserl, especially Religion is thus by no means the only theme, but in French phenomenology, this foundationalist instead functions as a name for a certain kind of project was abandoned, and being as such was ontological thinking. now understood as slipping away from itself, i.e., But this strength is also to some extent a weakfinite being is no longer the trace or reflection ness. Where Derrida opens questions and reof, or a still unfinished process moving toward, a mains elusive because of his constant shifts of perfect being (an idea that Husserl himself often focus, Hgglund entertained: God tends to systemis not so much line 10 atize and simplify beyond being Derridas philosoas he is the end of phy into a single Dual window panel, painted emerald green with a dash time, the infinite thesis that he sees of off-white. Rain formation altered, now upright or telos of history as running through downright downpour. Both windows opened outwards. rationality). Finite all of Derridas being, finitude, writings. This Verbal transcription Note: Hard Rain 2 Whispered, should be underreading obviously Moderate Rhythm Increasing Fast at the End stood exclusively has its advanthrough itself, tages. It makes PitePat PitePata PitePite PitePatatePataPite which sets a defisomething visible Tssssss PitePite - PitePata PitePite PitePatate nite limit to the and it clarifies a Tssssss PitePat PitePata PitePite rationalist project position that can PitePatatePataPite Tssssss Patapitepite that Husserl subundoubtedly be Pitepata - PataPite Tssssss Pitepite Pata scribed to even in found in Derrida, PitePitePite PitePata Pata Tssssss his final works. but at the same Patapitepite Pitepata - PataPite Tssssss Pitepite Derrida is one time it returns Pata PitePitePite PitePata Pata - PitePata of those later pheto a systematiz PitePata PitePata PitePata PitePata PiteP nomenologists ing approach to ePitePePItePePitePitePePe PaPaPaPata. who pick up this philosophy that theme and makes in some respects this structure of may be said to be time as never fully at odds with the idea that Hgglund wants to present to itself into a key argument. One of present. Hgglunds most fascinating analyses deals with A simplified version of Hgglunds thesis would how Husserls analysis of time-consciousness run as follows: all entities are threatened from in Derridas writings is understood as a within themselves, and there can be no perfect becoming-space of time and becoming-time or infinite being beyond finite being in time, no of space. Ever since Husserls interpretation of super-essential being that would be independent time-consciousness, phenomenology has had a of everything else. On the contrary, being is altendency to prioritize temporality over space, ways characterized by a gap, any essence is at its and this is a tradition that Hgglund, drawing center haunted by its opposite, and thus always on Derrida, wants to overcome. He claims that dependent upon it. time, in always losing itself, is immediately In phenomenology, one of the earliest and transformed into spaceand vice versa, that most important discussions that lead up to this the spatialization of time is necessary for the philosophical position was Husserls analysis of possibility of a relation between past and future. time. For Husserl, the lived world is constituted Space is thus what holds life together, and time through a stream of experiences that is itself is what makes its continual movement possible. grounded in an inner time-consciousness. Time It would indeed be worthwhile to explore this turns out to be the founding structure of experitheme further, and I suspect that such an invesence and the very bedrock of transcendental subtigation would transform Hgglunds analysis. jectivity. But since time is a continual movement, The way it is developed now, I cant help asking this also has as a consequence that subjectivity myself whether the preference for temporality at
the expense of space is in fact not continued both in Derrida and Hgglunds work. The theme of non-identity in Derridas argument is developed through the analysis of time, and time has the role of always slipping away from itself, of a continual movement, whereas space as the ground of continuity plays a subordinate role. This question can also be phrased in terms of self-, or auto-affection. It is here that we find the divide between Derrida and those phenomenologists who are most strongly associated with the turn to religion. The debate on self-affection focuses on the question of how the subject at the most fundamental level is given to itself. Already in Husserl there is an argument that the self is given to itself not only through representation, i.e., in a mediated or indirect fashion, but also in a more direct way through a self-affection, which we find for example in kinesthesia, the experience of ones own movements. Husserl understands kinesthesia as an immediate consciousness in which there is no room for words functioning as representations, a structure that seems to imply a sense of self that doesnt objectify itself in order to know itself. This argument has been developed most vividly by Michel Henry, who suggests that such an immanence is the presupposition of all knowledge that is divided into an object and a subject. In his emphasis on this immediate and non-divided knowledge Henry can be taken as the phenomenological counterpoint to Derrida and Hgglund. Derrida criticizes such pure immanence, since it either ends up in a solipsistic subjectivity that needs nothing other in order to know itself, or, in focusing on the passivity of the subject that receives the auto-affection, suggests a religious entity called Life, greater than any individual life, from which the pure immanence receives its undivided life. Hgglund emphatically rejects such an independent essence of Life as the origin of all lives. In fact he even states that the ideal of pure Life could be nothing but the ideal of death, since life in itself can never be pure, but is always haunted from the inside. Immanence as an independent sphere and self-affection without hetero-affection thus runs wholly contrary to the spirit of Derridas thinking. I am not convinced this is an argument against all kinds of self-affection, however. The selfaffection of kinesthesia instead shows a phenomena that is difficult to understand in other terms than as a self-affection, but this self-affection could be understood as a temporalization of space and a spatialization of time, i.e. it continually moves away from itself, yet nevertheless includes a moment of where it as it were touches itself. This is a crucial aspect that remains undeveloped in Hgglunds analysis, i.e. that kinesthetic experience, as a kind of self-affection, takes place in a bodily consciousness. Hgglund emphasizes that all affection is hetero-affection, but in my reading he does not give sufficient
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attention to the dimension of spacing. Both in Husserl and Henry, the experience of the lived body is characterized by self-affection. In Husserl, however, this is immediately transformed into a double hetero-affection: the possibility of experiencing oneself as a lived body and of objectifying oneself, i.e. to be experienced by oneself as well as by others. iii. Towards the ultra-transcendental The spacing of time and/or temporalization of space is such a pervasive themes in Hgglunds model that he even calls it an ultra-transcendental condition, a term that Derrida himself sometimes uses, and links to the concept of diffrance. Ultra-transcendentality, Hgglund suggests, means that there is no limit to the generality of diffrance and [that] the structure of the trace applies to all fields of the living. The claim for ultra-transcendentality thus returns us to the question of foundationalism. Hgglund states that diffrance is a characteristic of being itself, not only of living being, even though the argument is developed only in relation to living beings. One might wonder whether his argument does not end up destroying itself: he argues that there is no sovereign instance, yet there is nevertheless a kind of ultra-transcendental rule. He formulates this in the following way: the unconditional is the spacing of time that undermines the very Idea of a sovereign instance. My simple question here would be: what prevents us from seeing the unconditional as another kind of sovereign instance, and consequently, the spacing of time as an ontological rule that is the foundation of all being (or at least all living beings)? Or, formulated in yet another way: Hgglund states that being is finite, but as long as there is being, its structure must be that of diffrance. Could the structure of being be other than that of diffrance, and if not: is diffrance then not infinite in a certain sense? If the ultratranscendental condition means that everything is haunted from the inside, must not the condition itself then also be haunted from the inside? Would that mean that it is haunted by itself, and if so, would not this be a case of identity with itself, contrary to its own rule? Change as the only stable category is not a new approach to ontology. On the contrary, it is as old as philosophy itself. Change as the only stable category is even a central part of many concepts of God, especially as proposed by the mystics. So one may wonder what is necessarily atheistic about itapart from the prejudice that God must include a hyper-essentiality, which Hgglunds description of the ultra-transcendental escapes. In most mystic texts, God is not one being among other beings, but precisely the ultra-transcendental condition for all beings: a condition that is not necessarily understood as independent from all beings but only realized in finite beings. But Hgglund claims to know
what the essence of religion is, namely the idea instead would take it for granted and thus not of absolute immunity, which includes both the desire it. I agree with Hgglund in that beings idea that there is an absolutely self-sufficient must be thought as finite, and that desiring and positively infinite being, and the idea that them must imply a desire towards the finite, but in God the human being can reach immunity. does this really exhaust the relation between But can we really determine the foundation of desire and a concept such as the infinite? Here all religion in this way? Must religion per definiI would like to point to at least three differtion be inscribed in an onto-theology, or does ent questions: 1) Could desire not be directed Hgglund fall prey to a modern understanding towards an idea of infinity? 2) Could not desire of monotheistic religion? Could not religion for itself be understood as a way to relate to infinity? example also be understood precisely as a way to 3) Is it really true that it is impossible to desire relate to ones own finitude, an attempt to relate the ultra-transcendental? to a beyond of this finitude that the insight At the basis of all three questions lies the idea into ones own finitude makes possible, i.e., as of an infinity that does not equal absolute presan attempt to relate to the transcendence that ence, something that Hgglund seems to take for shows itself negatively in finitude? Such transcengranted. Infinity could instead be understood as dence has throughout our history sometimes always pointing beyond itself, it could be exactly been understood as an other world beyond this that gap and non-self-sufficiency that create the one, but there possibility for are also far more infinity as well as nuanced expresline 11 for desire. sions that attempt The third questo relate to this Transformation of an endnote. A shudder tion would be otherness within worth developing or a camera shutter to welcome an arrival. ourselves and in further. Is it rePassing through the gallery doors. the end do not ally impossible to simply attempt to desire diffrance as Verbal transcription Note: Laughing Men save the self for an ultra-transcenin Yoko 2 Very Loud Whiper eternity, but go dental structure? beyond it. Could not HgOhNoDontTheySayIfYouDoIt Hgglunds glunds own book FallInWithOthers//DontThey?... YoureGoingHome ultra-transcenbe read as a desire ArentYou?... ArentYou?... Byeeee! dental categories towards the ultraare, he says, untranscendental? If deconstructible, ontology cannot not as a construction whose functions would be be described in terms of desire, we would once sure, sheltered from every internal or external again tend towards a type of intellectualismas deconstruction, but as the very movement of if only an impersonal attitude would be capable deconstruction that is at work in everything of naming the ontological, an attitude blind to that happens. De Vries and others have claimed, its own desires. The question that must be asked as Hgglund rightly points out, that this is also is: what is the relation between desire and ontolwhat is at stake in the concept of God, but Hgogy? Maybe desire needs to be thought in relaglund suggests that this is misleading since the tion to what Hgglund calls the infinite finitude trace is not an absolute that can be substituted of life, i.e., in relation to the structure of being for God. Yet what if God too is not an absolute and not only as directed towards beings? that can be substituted for God? What if God On the level of politics, Hgglund gives a too, throughout the history of thought, has been strong argument for democracy as a project used as a concept that points to the infinite that never can be safe or completed. As such, finitude of life? democracy is always threatened from the inside and not just from external enemies. Or put in iv. Desire, democracy, and the infinite a more current vocabulary: the fundamental In one of the books crucial arguments, Hggthreat does not stem from terrorists, but from lund also suggests that it is impossible to how the state responds to terrorism. This is not desire God as long as it is claimed that God an uncommon argument today and it is imis a positively infinite being. Hgglund has a portant that we allow this discussion to remain good point here, since if God were absolute in open, just as the claim that every generation the sense of fully and explicitly present, nothing needs to invent democracy anew, but I feel a would be at stake in religion. God could never certain unease when this claim is supported by be questioned and atheism would be imposan ontology. Hgglund suggests that diffrance as sible. He also claims that ultra-transcendental the ontological and ultra-transcendental strucconditions can not be desired. What is desired ture of life is only truly expressed in democracy. is instead what can be lost, i.e., what is finite. So, after all of history, there would finally be a If it couldnt be lost, we wouldnt notice it, but political system that responds to the structure
of being. To my mind, this does not square with the existential philosophical attitude adopted by Derrida: that we have to argue for our choices and political commitments without support in an ontological machinery. So does this mean that we either have to give up all ontological strivings, or buy into an old metaphysical idea of a sovereign instance? I would argue that the answer is no. A more fruitful approach would be to understand the tradition of ontology and/or metaphysics as a way of reaching out. This would not be a history of mistakes that we, at our present moment, would finally have overcome (an idea that Derrida would dislike). Religious traditions too may be understood as different forms of such a reaching out. God does not only signify a sovereign instance, but just as much points to the experience we have of trying to formulate, in a language that must constantly be at odds with itself, the ultra-transcendental condition of a certain disjointure, or the power of diffrancewhich is indeed not foreign to Hgglunds own project. If we divide history into one religious epoch of onto-theology, and another where the metaphysics of presence is supposed to have been overcoming, it is easy to become blind to the richness and complexity of inherited philosophical concepts, including concepts like God. Perhaps we are in the end aiming for the same thing: a liberation of philosophy and not the end of philosophy. From my point of view, however, this should be done by learning from a history that is replete with attempts to formulate an ontological relation that in the end always will elude us, that does not lend itself to straightforward verbal descriptions, but can only be addressed in a word that itself passes away, a word that needs to be brought back to life through an always renewed act of reading and interpretation.
Notes 1. See his Le tournant thologique de la phnomnologie franaise (Combas : Lclat, 1991). Cf. also Janicauds response to his critics, as well as a development of the argument, in La phnomnologie clate (Paris: Lclat, 1998). 2. Martin Hgglund, Radical Atheism: Derrida and the Time of Life (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2008).
Jonna Bornmark is a philosopher at Sdertrn University, Stockholm. Her forthcoming book deals with early 20th century phenomenology and 13th century German mysticism.
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To write in a digital age is to write in the archive Kate Eichhorn in Invisible Culture 1 In his book Archive Fever: A Freudian Impression,2 Jacques Derrida undertakes an examination of the notion of the archive. It is a short and somewhat odd book, consisting only of beginnings and that which comes after the end: through six chapters it offers nothing more than an untitled introduction, an Exergue, a Preamble, a Foreword, a Theses, and, finally, a Postscriptand yet, there is a certain infinity to its propositions. But perhaps these perpetual beginnings should be left unexamined for now, because, as Derrida says: Let us not begin at the beginning, nor even at the archive. But at the word archiveand with the archive of so familiar a word.3 As we recall, arche names at once the origin and the order, both the commencement and the commandment. In ancient Greece, the archeion was the house, the physical address or residence of the archon, the one who commanded. It was the dwelling place both of the magistrates and the official documents, and the officials were first of all the documents guardians. The archon ensured the safety of the documents, as well as the functions of hermeneutics, interpretation and re-articulation. The documents were spoken by the archon, and the archon spoke the law. Thus the etymology of the word immediately points to the realm of both temporality and law in which Derrida situates the archive, just like it suggests that close connection to politics, power, government and order which has been so notably examined over the last few decades. To some extent, it seems like the notion of the archive has become the perfect analogy of speech, discourse or even language. In a well-quoted passage of The Archeology of Knowledge, Michel Foucault states: The archive is the first law of what can be said, the system that governs the appearance of statements as unique events.4 But to Derrida in Archive Fever, the notion of the archive rather seems to correspond to history. To history, memory, and psychoanalysis. Concerning his hypotheses, he says: They all concern the impression left, in my opinion, by the Freudian signature on its own archive, on the concept of the archive and of archivization, that is to say also, inversely and as an indirect consequence, on historiography.5 This Freudian signature on its own archive constitutes a slightly peculiar loop. Because while the technical structure of the archiving archive also determines the structure of the archivable content even in its very coming into existence and in its relationship to the future, the contentat least in the case of psychoanalysisalso seems to determine
the functioning of the archive. Psychoanalysis, or the means to claim to speak of this [memory namely, is a scientific project which, as one and archive, the history of institutions and of could easily show, aspires to be a general science sciences, the history of history] without having of the archive, of everything that can happen to been marked in advance, in one way or another, the economy of memory. The archive can only by this Freudian impression.7 be understood through psychoanalysis, and psyWe should, then, obviously turn to the psychoanalysis can only be understood as a product choanalytic characterization of the archive. Acof its archival structures. Like two creatures eatcording to Derrida, such characterization would ing each others tails, this loop concerning inside take into account the memorization, the reproand outside could perhaps be illustrated by the duction, and the reimpression of the archive, workings of archive.org: the Internet archive functions which by their very repetition are indisthat archives Internet; the site that, since 1996, sociable from the death drive. And by the death by snapshots archives every single webpage; drive, the destruction drive that conditions the the mystical possibility of any place inside the archival project, line 12 Internet that, by the archive a priori incorporating also works against its content, also The gallery cold a quick glance at the flick-clock time itself. Yet at the constitutes its display; I continually double-checked the same time, as outside. lay-out and cleanliness of the gallery; racing in circles we already have In fact, one of and up and down, in search of nothing other than noted, in the very many central an affirmation of my extra-cautionary neurosis. moment of psyquestions of choanalyzing the Archive Fever Verbal transcription Note: Taxi Radio Directives 2 archive, Derrida could be taken (whispered, very fast, with few breaths ideally none) accounts for how as whether the the archival strucarchive has an ThereIsAPossibilitiyAPossibilityThereIsAPossibilitiy tures have shaped outside. In this TheMissileWillLandWillLandInThisAreaAround the structures of respect, the no TheNational-ProTecTion TheTownReleased psychoanalysis. of Foucault is TheWrongInformationOverWaveRadioOn the early very clear: The PeoplePanickAndPhonedimportance of archive cannot TheEquipmentWasBrokenTheCivilServantRestarted correspondence, be described in TheMachineTheMachineAccidentalyBroadcasted for example, he its totality, and TheWrongInformationTheTownIsSearchingForThe notes that one can in its presence it CausesTheTownApologisises only speculate is unavoidable.6 about what One could quote psychoanalysis an equally clear would look like reply in Archive Fever: after all Derrida says that if Freud, his contemporaries, collaborators and there is no archive without a certain exteriorimmediate disciples, instead of writing thouity; there is [n]o archive without outside. But sands of letters by hand, had had access to MCI perhaps one would then simplify things that are or AT&T telephonic credit cards, portable tape not easily reduced to a logic of yes and no. Partly, recorders, computers, printers, faxes, televisions, because the argument is far from completed teleconferences, and above all E-mail.8 in Archive Fever, and it leads a rather long way Archive, death drive, repetition, email. One back to the notion of diffrance and the critique might think of e-flux, the email service that of Claude Lvi-Strauss in Structure, Sign, and every day anew fills up the inbox with informaPlay in the Discourse of the Human Sciences, tion on contemporary art. Like Derrida, who or to the critique of Foucault in Cogito and the seems to leave the archival analyses for some History of Madness. And in larger part, because time to devote the Foreword (which accounts of how this outside is constituted, and how it for the largest part of the book) to Yosef Hayim relates to the other factor in play: that of psychoYerushalmis reading of Freud and his questions analysis. Thus, the question is as much whether about psychoanalysis as a Jewish science, I too psychoanalysis has an outside. In this lecture wish to deviate a little. Because except for an given in Freuds own housein which we all email service, what is e-flux, if not an archive, or, might very well liveDerrida says: In any given to be more exact, one of the online archives of discipline, one can no longer, one should no loncontemporary art? Or, very well, what is e-flux? ger be able to, thus one no longer has the right E-flux is an email service that reaches
50.000 people around the world with three or four messages daily, announcing exhibitions, publications, discussions and events related to contemporary art. Whereas the vast majority of advertisements in art publications such as Art Forum come from commercial galleries, the e-flux announcements prioritize public institutions, museums, biennials, larger art fairs and non-profit organizations. By its website, e-flux provides an archive of the announcements that have been sent out since the start in 1999. To receive the e-flux emails is free; the postage is paid by the sender. Paying, however, does not guarantee inclusion; like most archives, the process of gathering material is highly selective. There are no official criterions, only formal and stylistic standards: the proposed material is submitted to e-flux, who rejects or accepts it. Yet e-flux is more than repetition of emails. While running a communication based business, e-flux is also an independent, self-financed artist run project. In its totality, e-flux is a work of art: a work that uses circulation (distribution) as both form and content,9 as founder Anton Vidokle puts it. Started in New York by a group of artists in 1999, e-flux has carried out and commissioned art projects since 2001: at first on their website, and then at various physical addresses. In the web-based The Next Documenta Should Be Curated by an Artist, curated by Jens Hoffman in 2003, various artists were invited to write on the relationship between artist and curator, and to propose a concept on how they would curate an exhibition such as Documenta; in Martha Rosler Library from 2005, over 7000 books was borrowed from artist Martha Rosler and made public in a reading room at the e-flux office in New York; in e-flux video rental from 2004, a collection of over 700 film and video works have circulated and visited places like Frankfurt, Seoul, Istanbul, Canary Islands, and Austin, Texas, as a free art video screening and rental; most recently, the web-based e-flux journal was started as both a discursive space and a site for actual art production. Now, Derrida insists that the archive is not only a thing of the past, but more importantly, something that by its nature is constantly geared towards the future: It is a question of the future, the question of the future itself, the question of a response, of a promise and of a responsibility for tomorrow.10 If this underlines the archival aspects of e-flux, the creating of a space that archontically speaks the law, what are then the consequences of being an archivist and an actor in the archive at the same time? What does it mean that e-flux carries out projects within the same sphere of contemporary art that they are a part of defining with their archive?
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Is this another example of when inside and outside seem to inhabit each other? It certainly is; but rather than a problem, this is perhaps the point of the project. To see why, one might consider anotheryet very different and highly problematicconfusion of outside and inside: the events that forced the art critic at the Village Voice, Christian Viveros-Faune, to resign in early 2008. In an interview with Tyler Green on the art blog MAN, it was revealed that while working as an art critic for the influential New York weekly (and consequently, working under journalism ethics), Viveros-Faune was also selecting commercial galleries to be represented in two different art fairs.11 First of all, this is problematic on a whole other level, a level of economics, which is not of primary concern here.12 Secondly, and more interestingly, this is what Tyler Green called the most basic conflict of interest, precisely because the position from which Viveros-Faune writes is supposed to be an outside of interests; a transparent, economically and otherwise unbiased outside. This is the point. The outside of e-flux, the outside from which it is organized and directed, is situated in a private space: the private space of both economic and artistic decisions. e-flux is not a public archive. They do run it as a company, and they are an artist-run project. To demand that the position from which they make the email selection should be unbiased or situated strictly outside their own art production would make no sense. One could perhaps instead argue that the very confusion of inside and outsidethe fact that e-flux is a virtual exhibition space within and through its own archivemakes the inherently legislative function of the archive less mystified. It is the fact that e-flux is an actor within the field of art that gives the legislation a visible author, or an author whose agenda becomes visible by the very projects undertaken. Perhaps one could say that e-flux has its own tail in its archive: it is a legislation that actually provides its own genealogy. Or, perhaps, one could say it with Derridas words: every archive [] is at once institutive and conservative. Revolutionary and traditional.13 Now, the virtues of the archive, as opposed to the seemingly accusatory notion of law, are rather obvious: But the archive is also that which determines that all these things said do not accumulate endlessly in an amorphous mass, nor are they inscribed in an unbroken linearity, nor do they disappear at the mercy of chance external accident [].14 The archival order or commandment is useful, simply because it makes all these things said accessible. Similarly, we could of course appreciate e-flux because it
transmits information that has no place in other scriptural or typographic, that is, the impression media (transcontinental information about art as imprint or inscription, which is later related exhibited and discussed in public and noncomto the trace, to writing and the inscription on the mercial contexts), or that it by its form provides body proper. Here, etymology means that mad information to people that otherwise might have way of opening up a text to infinity. been shut out from it, whether for economical, Archive Fever is a short and somewhat odd book, geographical or geopolitical reasons. But another and its Theses does not account for one of the aspect of e-flux emerges when you look at their longer chapters. But it is in these pages and the projects: the video rental, the Martha Rosler following Postscript that Derrida momentarily Library, the manual of artists instructions do it, seems to release psychoanalysis and the notion the historiographical ambitions with the East. of the archive from their hardening grips around Art.Map of Eastern European artistsbasically, one another, by introducing Wilhelm Jensens they are all archives. They are allor almost novel Gradiva. Derrida notes that whenever all, in one sense Freud talks about or anotheratarchives, he does tempts to gather a line 13 it by way of archevast material and ology: Each time classify it. Quite I returned to survey the layout, this time, just an instant he wants to teach beautifully, e-flux glimpse to create an image of completion to comfort the topology of is an archive and dissuade any potential worries during the journey. archives, that is to that generates say, of what ought other archives. Verbal transcription Note: Walking Generator 2 to exclude or It is the ultimate whispered, strong rhythm, increasing in voice and speed forbid the return archive fever: to the origin, this It is to burn with Step StepChinckStep Quambo - StepChinckStep lover of stone figa passion. It is QuamboQuambo StepChinckStep urines proposes never to rest, inQuamboQuambo StepChinckStep archaeological terminably, from QuamboQuambo StepChinckStep parables.16 The searching for QuamboQuambo StepChinckStep QuamboQuambo novel Gradiva was the archive right StepChinckStep StepChinckStep QuamboQuambo analyzed by Freud where it slips StepChinckStep QuamboQuambo - StepChinckStep in his Delusions away. It is to run Quambo - StepChinckStep QuamboQuambo and Dreams in after the archive, StepChinckStep QuamboQuambo StepChinckStep Jensens Gradiva, even if theres QuamboQuambo StepChinckStep and the story too much of it, QuamboQuambo StepChinckStep QuamboQuambo recounts the fate right where there StepChinckStep StepChinckStep QuamboQuambo of an archeologist is something StepChinckStep QuamboQuambo - StepChinckStep who is obsessed that anarchives QuamboQuambo StepChinckStep with a woman deitself.15 QuamboQuambo StepChinckStep QuamboQuambo picted in a fresco. Except for StepChinckStep QuamboQuambo StepChinckStep After a dream, describing the QuamboQuambo StepChinckStep QuamboQuambo the archeologist archive fever goes to Pompeii and the feverish to seek the traces archives, the of Gradiva, to quote above also offers a glimpse of Derridas use look for any imprint of her toes in the ashes. of both psychoanalysis and etymology in Archive Thus, the elegant scene evoked by Derrida in Fever, creating an interrelated and perhaps infithese last pages is an excavation in Pompeii, an nite weave of desires and word stems. Besides the archeological site of stones being removed one neologism of anarchiving and its many conby one. And the scene is used both as an analogy notations (an+arkhe; the absence or negation of for psychoanalysis and for the archivenow commencement/commandment, anarchy, etc.), placed side by side, rather than in the act of enone might consider the Freudian Impression gulfing each otheras well as an analogy for the of the subtitle: by impression, Derrida wishes to metaphysical desire for a return to the origin, the denote the impression left by Freud in anybody digging for the bottom: that desire for an origin speaking of him, that is, the legacy of Freud; which is described as the vain hope for stones to he also relates it to the complicated matters of talk. Because in Derridas archive, the idea of the translating Verdrngung and Unterdrckung as origin is always contested: perhaps there are only repression and suppression; and he defines it as perpetual beginnings.
Notes 1. To write in a digital age is to write in the archive, but do we also write for and even like the archive? If so, how is the structure of the archive inflected in our writing, especially in emerging genres of writing? See: Eichhorn, K., Invisible Culture: An Electronic Journal for Visual Culture, 12.2008; www.rochester. edu/in_visible_culture/Issue_12/eichhorn/index. htm 2. The text was first given as a lecture on 5 June 1994, at the Freud Museum in London. The original title of this lecture was The Concept of the Archive: A Freudian Impression. 3. Derrida, J., Archive Fever: A Freudian Impression (Chicago and London; The University of Chicago Press, 1995), p. 1 4. Foucault, M., The Archeology of Knowledge (New York; Pantheon Books, 1972), p. 129 5. Derrida, J., op. cit., p. 5 6. Foucault, M., op. cit., p. 130 7. Derrida, J., op. cit., p. 30 8. Derrida, J., op. cit., p. 16 9. Interview with e-flux founder and director Anton Vidokle online: www.dossierjournal.com/read 10. Derrida, J., op. cit., p. 36 11. Tyler Greens blog Modern Art Notes (MAN): www. artsjournal.com/man/2008/01/the_vvviverosfaune_ethical_tra.html 12. Viveros-Faune may have displayed a particularly poor judgment, but while doing so, he certainly made some rather interesting points. Defending his double commitment and his job as a curator, he said: Im interested in curating, and I firmly believe that there is no interest in the art world without a conflict of interest. Now, that may seem counterintuitive, and it is, but I would argue that the art world is counterintuitive in the extreme. In what other industry, for example, does one of the major magazines that chronicles both the creative and the business end of the art world establish an art fair of the same name. Obviously, Im talking about Frieze. And thats nothing. Examine, for second, the practice of writing catalog essays. Later on, regarding consensus, he said: But the issue is: No one disagrees in the art world. There is very little active disagreement in the art world, especially compared to the literary world where people eviscerate each other. You have an argument in the New York Review of Books and you have the writer and his friends piling on []. But in the art world, because success is so based on inside information and insider relations, I find very few people tell you what they really do think. See: www.artsjournal.com/man/2008/01/the_vvviverosfaune_ethical_tra.html 13. Derrida, J., op. cit., p. 7 14. Foucault, M., The Archeology of Knowledge (New York; Pantheon Books, 1972), p. 129 15. Derrida, J., op. cit., p. 91 16. Derrida, J., op. cit., p. 92
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Statement concerning CERN W3 software release into public domain/To whom it may concern/Introduction/The world wide web, hereafter referred to as W3, is a global computer networked information system./The W3 project provides a collaborative information system independent of hardware and software platform, and physical location.//Geneva, 30 April 19931 Some fifteen years ago, in 1993, Bernard Stiegler performed an improvised (yet videorecorded) interview with Jacques Derrida that would later be transcribed, edited, and eventually published as chographies de la television.2 The themes of the session vary, but are nonetheless bound together to some degree by the two philosophers reciprocal interest in (and to certain extent fascination with) the effects and velocity of the technologies of late capitalism. In many ways, a return to this interview a decade and a half later might be considered of questionable value, especially since technologies of the recent past are often regarded as the most obsoleteno longer new, bearing promises of the future, not yet old, bearing along the past. However, to both Stiegler and Derrida, teletechnologiesunderstood as the common denominator for technologies that carry things over spatial distances, i.e. one- or two-way communication systems such as television, telephone, internet, etceterayield a special interest as theyin an exemplary mannerunveil our ever-present faculty of repression and at the same time lend themselves to a philosophical and historico-political analysis of the technologies of making present. Opening the chapter dubbed Acts of Memory: Topolitics and Teletechnology, Stiegler proposes: The technique of alphabetic writing and the widely shared practice it makes possible were the condition of the constitution of citizenship (Echographies 56). Considering this ancient technology to be radically different from that of teletechnologies, in the sense that the former inevitably encompasses not just the possibility of writing but also of reading, Stiegler sees in the latter a lack of competence with regards to the genesis or production of what he [the addressee]
receives. And yet, thanks to technical evolution, namely, for addressees to be able to transform, machines that can receive and, simultaneously, in their turn, what reaches them, the message, produce and or to understand manipulate are how it is made, becoming widely line 14 and how it is available (Echogproduced, in raphies 56). With one leg in and the other leaning out, order to restart This technolI reached into my bag to locate that singular the contract on ogy, then, both all-important document: my passport. different terms has its historical (Echographies 58). predecessor and Verbal transcription Note: Waves and Clunk 2 As this technology represents someWhispered, slowly, End Loud is still regarded thing hitherto as interactive by unseen in that Sloshh Sloshh Sloshh Tap Sloshh dint of its aura this technical Tap Sloshh Sloshh Sloshh //PING! of bilateralism, evolution makes this restart would possible a cultural mean the dawnpolitics aimed at ing of the age of turning the addressee into an actor or agent in a new grounding of politics beyond mankinds production (Echographies 56). Hence teletechtopological rootedness. However what we have nologies at the same time possess the ability to seen so far rather amounts to the opposite. (A overthrow the remnants of an old schemain recent example: the idolization by political appathis case that of producers and consumersas ratchiks all over Europe of the Obama campaign well as, which in part amounts to the same thing, and its use of the web as a means to promote and possessing the ability to annihilate borders and convey their message [as well as raise funds]). boundaries, dissolving the territorial foundaThe Stiegler/Derrida interview dates from the tions of the sovereign, the nation, the citizen, same year as Vernor Vinges notorious paper and democracy as such. Says Derrida: The The Coming Technological Singularity.3 question of democracy, [] may no longer be that Here he proposes the often quoted and from an of citizenship. If [] politics is defined by citizenanthropocentric perspective rather dystopian ship, and if citizenship is defined, as up to now conclusion: Within thirty years, we will have it has been, by inscription in a place, within a the technological means to create superhuman territory or within a nation whose body is rooted intelligence. Shortly after, the human era will in a privileged territory (Echographies 57). be ended. With reference to Ray Kurzweils Even though teletechnologies radically trans2005 book The Singularity is Near, the concept of form or even eradicate the foundations of deSingularity is here understood in terms of an mocracy, or the link between the political and event capable of rupturing the fabric of human the local, the topolitical, as Derrida has put it, history.4 Or in a more lengthy description by they still yield a possibility of intervention or inthe same author: teractivity (a notion that Derrida, and one must agree, calls slightly ridiculous). Derrida notes, The Singularity will represent the culminaas early as the infancy of the most interactive of tion of the merger of our biological thinking these technologies (and eleven years before the and existence with our technology, resultintroduction of the concept of Web 2.0), how the ing in a world that is still human but that means present are not used in a way they could transcends our biological roots. There will or should be, the possibilities inherent dont be no distinction, post-Singularity, between even come close to what we would like to see, human and machine or between physical
and virtual reality. If you wonder what will remain unequivocally human in such a world, its simply this quality: ours is the species that inherently seeks to extend its physical and mental reach beyond current limitations (The Singularity 9). Transcendence returns as the core of humanity, this time by means of a future technology and the coming technological Singularity. In the minds of both Vinge and Kurzweil, this seems to rest upon an understanding of technology as something completely external.
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Moreover, as such, the individual or the subject is not constituted before or outside of a collectivity, rather, these notions are co-constitutive of each other. This makes it impossible to state any right outside of the social context in which the individual is situated, which in turn means that the individuals right is always co-dependent on the formulation of the collective right. In other words, the challenge of any society is to maintain the maximum degree of individual right (that is, what the individual is) while ensuring that this at no moment endangers or lessens collective right. In a wider sense, it is also quite clear to me that the Spinozist and the Hegelian notion of socio-political economy differ essentially, since to Spinoza, it is evident that a state based upon the endless enrichment of particulars is bound to dissolve into chaos before long. The equation he sketches out of a durable and good state, of which the only meaning is to ensure as much freedom as possible to its citizens, is dependent upon not only juridical and theoretical equality but concrete, material right. However, when I state that Spinoza is a democrat in the purest sense, it is precisely because he knows that there can actually be no real alienation of natural right: on the contrary, it is the same principle that must be maintained in whatever civil state we consider, insofar as we wish to have a durable state, since it is only by satisfying any individuals desire to persevere in its own being that will make valid the mere possibility of the civil state. This means that democracy, literally the power of the constituting people, is not as much one possible regime among othersdemocracy versus monarchy, for instancebut rather the power at work in any kind of social context. As such, it is passionate and often dangerous and self-destructivebut also impossible to overcome or alienate: to Spinoza, democracy is primarily an ontological state, the principle within each form of government, as he puts it in the Political Treatise. Thus, paradoxically, democracy is always already at work as soon as a collective existence is formalized. In other words, even the most catastrophic governmentsdespotism, totalitarianism, etc. have in fact a democratic foundation since they have been made possible and have been realized by collective passions that, rather than working in a constructive way, have led to a reduction of both the power of thinking and acting. But here is also the challenge: taking this ontological aspect of democracy in consideration, understanding it, and understanding what kinds of passions and affects are at stake in a given situation, there is also a possibility of conceiving a democratic regime, based upon this knowledge and taking it into account: this, as I see it, is the task of our political philosophy today. sow: Today the split between analytical and continental philosophy often seems to depend on the relation to history, or more precisely the extent to which historicity is a condition of possibility for thought itself. Here too you discern a different proposal in Spinoza, a certain idea of the untimely that will recur in Nietzsche and Deleuze. How should we understand this untimeliness?
fs: There is an an untimeliness in a first and thing in its own essence, that is, as a singular exquite common sense in Spinoza (even if this is pression of the substance. So eternity, to Spinoza, not a term used by him) in the same way there has nothing to do with an after-life (and to him is in Nietzsche or Deleuze: Spinoza was in his the soul is not immortal either). What are the own time (and as I see it, he still is in ours) a consequences of this standpoint for our undersubversive thinker whose whole system and standing of historicity? Firstly, that what we call analysis sharply contrasted with prevalent history is always only a fragmented portion traditions, even if he worked with a seemingly of a course of events, never an all-encompassing classical apparatus of concepts. But in a second process that can be represented. Secondly, that and deeper sense, his untimeliness concerns a history does not actually teach us anything different understanding of the concept of time about what something is or has been in itself, but as such, which in turn implies a different view only on how we have chosen to retain, to tell, to on history and historicity. In short, one could recreate the narrative about something (which say that Spinoza turns quite forcefully against in itself, for Spinoza just as later for Nietzsche, is an idea of time as a linear chronology: this, to interesting enough and makes possible a Foucalhim, constitutes rather what he calls tools of dian analysis of discourse avant la lettre). Thirdly, imagination that we use in order to grasp the that what we call history, precisely because very complex tissue of things in an infinite it is always about a specific narrative, necessarcause-effect-flow. Since this cause-effect-flow is ily ideologically, affectively and contextually way too intricate and complex for us to take in impregnated, must not be understood either as as a whole, we use normative categories of time fate or finality: that history does not have a diso to speak for reasons of comfort, referring to rection, an aim or a completion, but is precisely the past in accordance with a given discourse of a narrative that rather than disclosing knowledge which the contents naturally vary from context about the essence of things and being discloses to context. But how we think of this means that them, in a given we do not have, line 16 perspective. This, strictly or adein turn, means quately speakThe smell of slightly perfumed tyres occupied that Spinoza ing, any real the modestly sized elevator. Scratched silver, worn actually thinks knowledge about foam rubbings etched across the notice panel, that the historical things: the connew information pervading: scent, 3 up and 3 down analysis is indeed texts of cause and ground floor exit Bing doors opening. very important, effect that we can but in the sense take in are always Verbal transcription Note : Department Store Girls 2 that it is the fragmentary Spoken Normally calmly, increasing understanding and incomplete. of how a hisTo Spinoza, any WeAreHavingATimeSaleATimeSaletorical narrative kind of adequate PleaseWeAreHavingATimeSaleATimeSaleATimeSaleis created and knowledge must, ASpecialCompainASpecialCompain transmitted that on the contrary, WeAreHavingATimeSaleATimeSale makes it interestground itself in ASpecialCompainASpecialCompain //ASpecialCompain ing, since this the knowledge of WeAreHavingATimeSaleATimeSale-PleaseAt renders possible the two fundaTheMomentWeAreHavingATimeSale,ATime an understanding mental ontoSale VeryReasonableVeryReasonable ATimeSale of how different logical registers ATimeSale WeAreHavingATimeSale,ATimeSale social, affective constituted by Please - WeAreHavingATimeSale,ATimeSale and political what he calls WeAreHavingATimeSale,ATimeSale structures have durationduratio VeryReasonableATIMESALEATIMESAL arisen: this is the and eternity Everyreasonable itsaSpecialCompainASpecialCompain central theme aeternitas. SPECIALCOMPAINSPECIALCOMPAINATIME of Spinozas Eternity is not to SALEWEAREHAVINGATIMESALEveryreasonable Theologico-Political be understood veryreasonable. Treatise. as something sow: One of more or bethe lines that yond time, but you draw from rather signifies absolute presence of the whole of Spinoza to his great successor Nietzsche, and I nature as suchto put it simply, where a thing is assume to Deleuze, Foucault, and many others seen as a direct expression of a certain degree of today, is the problem of the body. Theres a fathe power of the substance. Duration, however, mous passage in the Ethics where he says that we is the time in which we arethat is, where do not yet know what a body is capable of. And things have a beginning and an end, but where in SpinozaPhilosophie pratique Deleuze has a we see them according to whatever affective conchapter where he says that Spinozas philosophy text we experience them in. It is thus a question takes the body as its guide. What does it mean to of variation in intensity, rather than chronology. take the body as ones guide in philosophy? And what is particular with Spinoza is that he fs: Id say that this means several things. In means that it is in this duration that we experithe first place, it is a statement that is literally ence eternityhe says that we feel and experience overturning a system of values that has lasted eternity, whenever we are capable of seeing a for millenniums: it implies the revalorization of
the body in a philosophical tradition that, with very few exceptions, since Plato and probably even in our time, has privileged the soul or the mind. With Spinoza (the metaphysician, the ontologist!), there is no longer such a hierarchy: body and mind are stated as the two sides of a being, expressive of all that occurs to, within and from this being. In the second place, it implies the elaboration of an immensely interesting and fruitful theory of knowledge, where thought is understood as being based upon an individuals physical interaction with and in the world. For Spinoza, thought is the simultaneous response, to begin with, to whatever happens to the bodyan affection, something making an imprint on us, corresponds to a physical image and a mental thought: this, in turn leads to an alteration (however infinitesimal) of our conatus or essence, the degree of effort by which we persevere in our actual existence. This alteration, or variation of intensity, is the affect, translated mentally in terms of joy or sadness, with a large number of possible derivations. At the core of Spinozist thought we find the idea that the body is constitutive in thinking that a corporeal interaction in the world is synonymous with mental attention and activity. Moreover, this means that the more complex our body is, the more we can think. It is physical complexity with all the needs and complications that may come from it, something which in occidental philosophic traditions has mostly always been treated as a hindrance for thought, which is to Spinoza, on the contrary, the condition for a super-capable mind. The more we can affect and be affected, the more we can think. This is a theory of generosity and change, rather than the traditional valuing of inertia, unequivocal truth and overcoming of the physical condition. sow: What would a Spinozist positon amount to in contemporary theoretical work on the body, say, with respect to phenomenology, or to the current trend towards a complete naturalization of consciousness? fs: I think there are extremely interesting possibilities of Spinozian research in the realm of neurology for instance, as Antonio Damasio has shown with his book from a few years ago (Looking for Spinoza, 2003). Spinozas theory of affectivity, and the correlation between the body and the mind, is currently referred to in this domain by Jean-Pierre Changeux, for instance, and I think there still remains some very fruitful connections to be found here. The radicality with which Spinoza urges us to rethink what it is to berather than havea body, what it is to be thinking rather than to have thoughts, calls for a profound repositioning of whatever we still, unquestioningly and relentlessly, call the subject, be it in philosophy and the human sciences or in the natural sciences where this enigmatic concept still appears to be taken for granted.
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