Scott Thompson on Thu, 28 Aug 1997 20:02:45 +0200 (MET DST) |
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<nettime> Walter Benjamin Congress: Day 2 |
---------------------Day 2: Samuel Weber----------------------------- The first full day of the Congress opened with a plenary session at 10:00 a.m. in the Concertzaal. Samuel Weber's "Walter Benjamin and the Citability of Gesture" and Gary Smith's "Benjamin, Scholem and Jonah: Towards a Jewish Theory of Justice" were the featured papers. Anselm Haverkamp chaired the session. In his introduction of the speakers, Haverkamp credited Weber with having set the entire theoretical stage for Benjamin's reception, situating WB within the discipline of "theory," in contrast to "philosophy," where WB is usually situated in Germany. Weber's paper focused on the two versions of Benjamin's essay "What is Epic Theatre?" whose pertinent passages on gesture and citability are worth quoting here: 1. Epic theatre is gestural. The extent to which it can also be literary in the traditional sense is a separate issue. The gesture is its raw material and its task is the rational utilization of this material. The gesture has two advantages over the highly deceptive statements and assertions normally made by people and their many-layered and opaque actions. First, the gesture is falsifiable only up to a point; in fact, the more inconspicuous and habitual it is, the more difficult it is to falsify. Second, unlike people's actions and endeavours, it has a definable beginning and a definable end. Indeed, this strict, frame-like, enclosed nature of each moment of an attitude which, after all, is as a whole in a state of living flux, is one of the basic dialectical characteristics of the gesture. This leads to an important conclusion: the more frequently we interrupt someone engaged in an action, the more gestures we obtain. Hence, the interrupting of action is one of the principal concerns of epic theatre. Therein lies the formal achievement of Brecht's songs with their crude, heart-rending refrains. Without anticipating the difficult study, yet to be made, of the function of the text in epic theatre, we can at least say that often its main function is not to illustrate or advance the action but, on the contrary, to interrupt it: not only the action of others, but also the action of one's own. It is the retarding quality of these interruptions and the episodic quality of this framing of action which allows gestural theatre to become epic theatre. [First version, trans. A. Bostock] 2. The Quotable Gesture: 'The effect of every sentence,' Brecht asserts in a didactic dramatic poem, 'was expected and revealed. And was awaited until the crowd had weighed every sentence.' In short, the play was interrupted by the pauses of the actors. One may reach out further here and recall that interruption is one of the methods fundamental to all shaping. It extends far beyond the precincts of art. It lies, to select only one example, at the basis of quotation. Quoting a text includes an interruption of its context. It is therefore clear that the epic theatre, which is based on interruption, is in a specific sense quotable. The quotability of its text would be in no way peculiar. But with gestures, which, in the course of the play are appropriate, it is quite different. 'To make gestures quotable' is one of the essential tasks of the epic theatre. The actor must be able to space out his gestures as a compositor spaces out words. This effect can be attained, for example, by having the actor on the scene quote his own gesture. Thus we follow how, in Happy End, the girl, Neher, playing the part of a Salvation Army sergeant who, in order to make converts, has sung a song in the seamen's pub - a song all too much in place in a pub - and then has to repeat this song and the gestures that go with it before a Salvation Army council. Thus, in Massnahme, not only the report of the communists, but also, by their acting, a series of gestures of the party-member against whom they proceeded, is brought before the party-tribunal. What, in the epic drama, is an artistic device of the subtlest kind, becomes, in the special case of the didactic play (Lehrstueck), one of the most immediate ends in view. For the rest, the epic theatre, by definition, is one of gestures. The more frequently we interrupt an actor the more gestures we obtain. [Second Version, trans. E. Landberg] Citing these two passages, Weber proceeded to explain the citability of gesture and the importance of interrupting action. The German word 'Zustand' [usually translated as 'condition' or 'state'] was broken down into its components 'Stand' [position, standing, rank] and the preposition 'zu' [to, towards]. The 'conditions' which it is epic theatre's job to represent, rather than developing actions, would best be defined, according to Weber, as 'stances'. The translation of 'Zustand' here as 'stance' elucidates the importance of the mode of representation, the gesture. Epic theatre is a non-aristotelian theatre. 'Einfuehlen' (empathy, sympathetic understanding) and catharsis are dispensed with. Brecht denied the actual ability to 'identify with' the 'other' because this other did not occupy a stable position with fixed contours. While Aristotle considered poetic representation a correlative to mythical representation, Brechtian theatre seeks to interrupt the myth. The gesture interrupts the action, frames it, and serves to comment upon the preceding action. It is a negation. Interruption as the 'Mother of dialectics'. Gesture suspends the animation, and its shock-effect retards thought in the sense of the word 'Nachdenken' ('thinking back on,' 'provoking thought'). The disjunctive nature of the gesture opens up interstices for the formation of public will and decision-making. Epic theatre fills in the orchestra pit, the originally sacred abyss of tragedy separating actor and audience which has lost its original meaning. The stage has become a podium. While Weber's paper deftly elucidated the foregoing points, this participant was struck by its failure to develop Benjamin's ideas. Weber's admirable explanation of the importance of gesture, interruption, citability and so on was really a rehash of an article which has been available in English for fifty years. The relationship of Brecht's epic theatre to current trends in theatre was never discussed. The importance of WB to developments in the media (e.g. internet) was only briefly mentioned. Missing also was any mention of a relationship between gesture, the concept of the 'dialectical image' and the messianic cessation of history. Just as the gesture interrupts theatrical action, framing and commenting upon it, the dialectical image interrupts perception. In his essay "On Fascination: Walter Benjamin's Images" Ackbar Abbas describes the interrupting function of the dialectical image: We can relate Benjamin's Medusan view of history to his interest in photography and in the poetics of quotation. The fascination that photographic images exert can be profoundly unnerving: it was so for Baudelaire. This is largely because photographic images 'paralyze the associative mechanism in the beholder' (One-Way Street, 256). The spark of contingency provides the point of fissure of the image: it prevents it from closing up, from hiding behind the appearance of historical continuity or organic interrelatedness. The fissure of the image ruptures myth: it provides evidence against it. When Atget photographed the scenes of Paris, he photographed them, Benjamin points out, like 'scenes of crime' (Illuminations, 228). In the 'Medusan view of history' modern experience is viewed as a series of shocks. Our experience of 'current events' is an endless series of catastrophes sold as 'news'. But just as the gesture and the dialectical image create ruptures and fissures, 'the messianic cessation of history' interrupts the false historical continuum wielded by the authorities. In Lowenthal's essay "The Integrity of the Intellectual," Burkhardt Lindner is quoted with regard to Benjamin's idea of justice as an interruption of the so-called positive law which merely rationalizes dominance and violence: Justice is the messianic emergence or the purifying, profane power of revolutions. Correspondingly, Benjamin also rejects the notion of world history as world court. Only the revolutionary interruption of history or the messianic cessation of history can disrupt the repressive continuum and pass judgment over what has been. ---------------------Day 2: Gary Smith------------------------------------ The idea of a Jewish concept of justice was the focus of Gary Smith's paper, "Benjamin, Scholem and Jonah: Towards a Jewish Theory of Justice." In his biography of Benjamin, Gershom Scholem discusses the relationship between WB's concept of justice and the world of myth: Benjamin's decided turn to the philosophic penetration of myth, which occupied him for so many years, beginning with his study of Hoelderlin and probably for the rest of his life, was manifested here for the first time and left its mark on many of our conversations. In this connection, at this early date Benjamin spoke of the difference between law and justice, calling law an order that could be established only in the world of myth. =46our years later he elaborated on this idea in his essay "Zur Kritik der Gewalt" ['Critique of Violence,' in Reflections, pp. 277-300]. Benjamin must have been familiar around this time with the writings of Johann Jakob Bachofen and also must have read the works of the ethnologist Karl Theodor Preuss on animism and preanimism; he repeatedly referred to the latter's statements on preanimism. Gary Smith's presentation focused on the Benjamin/Scholem dialogue concerning law and justice, its relationship to their discussions of the Book of Jonah, and the peculiar Jewish concept of justice found in that prophetic book. This discussion was to have played a role in forming the background to the discussions of 'mythic violence' in Benjamin's essay 'Critique of Violence,' a work which shows the influence of both Hermann Cohen and George Sorel. The recalcitrant Jonah's reluctance to prophesy by fleeing the presence of the Lord to Tarshish was rather painfully narrated along with the story of the great fish, the redemption of Nineveh and God's repentence. Though Smith had chosen an engaging topic to discuss, his delivery was simply not up to the task. Obviously unrehearsed, he betrayed a distracting nervousness and lack of confidence, which contrasted markedly with the all-pervasive position he has occupied in the world of Benjamin scholarship. Moreover, his attempts to spontaneously edit his unwieldy work faltered on numerous occasions, resulting in a most choppy and confusing performance. It was clear from scanning the Concertzaal that many faces registered disappointment and boredom. Nor would one be contradicted in saying that Smith's was certainly the weakest effort at the Congress. It is to be hoped that the published paper will find more a favorable reception. Applause was polite, but Anselm Haverkamp's attempt to console Smith with a remark to the effect of "Well, you got through it" registered a blush of humiliation on Smith's face, which this participant could not help but notice. --------------------Day 2: Workshops. First Session------------------------ Nine workshops were held simultaneously between 11.45 and 13.15. Attending Session III-1 in the Shaffyzaal afforded an opportunity to hear G.T.M. Visser (Univ. of Leiden), Geret Luhr (Univ. of Bamberg) and Willem van Reijen (Univ. of Utrecht) briefly read their respective papers: "Erlebnis und Machenschaft" ['Lived Experience and Machination'], "Die Erfahrung von Magie in der Literatur der moderne. Walter Benjamins Auseinandersetzungen mit dem Werk Stefan Georges" ['The Experience of Magic in the Literature of the Modern. Walter Benjamin's Dealings with the Work of Stefan George'] and "Der Schwarzwald und Paris. Metaphorik und mehr in den Philosophien Heideggers und Benjamin." ['The Black Forest and Paris. Metaphor and more in the Philosophies of Heidegger and Benjamin']. Last minute cancellations and alterations of the program aside, it should be emphasized that once one made a choice to attend a particular workshop, one inevitably missed the other 30 papers being presented simultaneously in the other workshops. G.T.M. Visser's paper focused on the concept of Erlebnis ('lived experience' or 'episode') found in the works of Heidegger, Dilthey, Martin Buber and Benjamin. The concept of 'shock' found in WB's 'Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction' was briefly discussed, as was Baudelaire's influence. Heidegger's reading of Buber on 'Erlebnis' was also mentioned. Geret Luhr's presentation on WB's difficult rapport with Stefan George and the George circle continued the discussion of 'Erlebnis' and shock. The centrality of 'experience' in WB's early essay 'On the Program of the Coming Philosophy' was traced back to the influence of Felix Noeggerath, who appears as 'the genius' in WB's correspondence. Noeggerath had also been marginally connected to the George circle. According to Luhr, the traces of George's influence throughout Benjamin's writings (whether directly from George or indirectly through Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Rudolf Borchardt, Friedrich Gundolf, Norbert von Hellingrath, Ludwig Klages or Karl Wolfskehl) have not been adequately pursued by Benjamin scholars. Luhr's short paper was an attempt to redress this oversight. In addition to the central concept of 'experience,' the importance of 'aura' was also traced back to the George circle. Willem van Reijen's presentation on the metaphors of country and city found in Benjamin and Heidegger was rather pedestrian and uninspired. Nietzsche was cited as a predecessor of 'Stadthass' (hatred of cities), and Heidegger's conception of philosophy and its relation to landscape was illustrated with anecdotes about the extremely laconic nature of the 'typical' Black Forest peasant. Such laconic nature was contrasted with the 'empty' loquaciousness of urban dwellers. The attempt made by a number of participants to liken Heidegger and Benjamin resulted in a lively question and answer period, however, which was the highlight of this workshop. It now strikes this participant as odd that Cornelia Vismann, who chaired the session, did not contribute to the lively interchange on WB and Heidegger, for the ideas she expressed in her article "Landscape in the First World War: On Benjamin's Critique of Ernst Juenger" [New Comparison, No. 18, Autumn 1994] would have been most pertinent. Evidently, one of the twenty-odd participants there had been the journalist Christian Schulte, for he has also mentioned the heated exchange concerning this issue in his short article on the Congress which appeared in the Frankfurter Rundschau (July 31,1997). A clear division existed between the philosophy professors, who had located numerous parallel passages and ideas in Benjamin and Heidegger, and those for whom the political differences between the two men obviated any serious consideration of substantial similarity between their respective philosophies. The discussion which grew more and more heated did not abate at 13.15 and continued into the lunch hour. Julian Roberts has called attention to the influence of Ludwig Klages on both Benjamin's and Heidegger's ideas of history, as Richard Sieburth has reiterated in his introduction to the English translation of Folio "'N' [Re The Theory of Knowledge, Theory of Progress]" from the Passagen-Werk (Arcades Project). In addition to Klages, both Benjamin and Heidegger were decisively influenced by Hoelderlin's reverence for the 'holiness of the minute particular'. Furthermore, their understanding of Hoelderlin had been deeply influenced by George and Norbert von Hellingrath. Nonetheless, there are some serious obstacles which will have to be persuasively explained away before many participants of the Congress are convinced that this dialogue between WB and Heidegger is based on any kind of substantial common ground. Moreover, a number of professors who made such assertions were somewhat remiss in their ability to recall pertinent evidence for their positions. In a conversation with the convivial Prof. G.T.M. Visser, this participant questioned this 'common ground' on the basis of numerous barbs aimed at Heidegger in Benjamin's correspondence. When WB's criticisms of Heidegger's dissertation on Duns Scotus were cited as a case in point, Dr. Visser denied that WB had made such an assertion. In fact, Dr. Visser denied that Benjamin had ever read this work. Instead, Visser corrected, it was Heidegger's 'Das Problem der historischen Zeit' which was at issue, and indeed that work had been mentioned by WB as an example of how not to treat the subject. Now, in all fairness to Dr. Visser it should be noted that Benjamin's letter to Scholem on November 11, 1916 did concern 'Das Problem der historischen Zeit'. But in all fairness to the questioning participant, Benjamin did in fact read Heidegger's book on Duns Scotus. In his letter to Scholem on December 1, 1920, Benjamin wrote the following: I have read Heidegger's book on Duns Scotus. It is incredible that anyone could qualify for a university position on the basis of such a study. Its execution requires nothing more than great diligence and a command of scholastic Latin, and, in spite of all of its philosophical packaging, it is basically only a piece of good translating work. The author's contemptible groveling at Rickert's and Husserl's feet does not make reading it more pleasant. The book does not deal with Duns Scotus's linguistic philosophy in philosophical terms, and thus what it leaves undone is no small task. Then there is Benjamin's assertion in a letter to Scholem that he and Brecht "were planning to annihilate Heidegger" Writing to Gretel Adorno on July 20, 1938, Benjamin expressed amusement and dismay that he had figured as a follower of Heidegger in an issue of the German-language journal Internationale Literatur, which was published in Moscow and "hews to the party line." Benjamin considered the journal "quite wretched." As for the supposed similarity in their philosophies of history, Benjamin's own self-understanding of their respective positions indicates the contrary. Writing to Scholem on January 20, 1930 about the epistemological-historical introduction to his Paris Arcades project (Folio 'N'), Benjamin added, This is where I will find Heidegger, and I expect sparks will fly from the shock of the confrontation between our two very different ways of looking at history. Within Folio 'N' can also be found the statement that "Heidegger seeks in vain to rescue history for phenomenology abstractly, through 'historicity'". As these few quotes should indicate, any attempt made to coopt Benjamin by assimilating him into the Heideggerian camp will have to effectively counter and nullify Benjamin's own self-understanding of his project vis-a-vis National Socialism and its "runic humbug," which Heidegger once called "the inner truth and greatness of this movement." --------------------Day 2: Sigrid Weigel------------------------------- The afternoon sessions began at 14.45 in the Concertzaal. Sigrid Weigel began the plenary session with her paper "Lost in Translation. Vom Verlust des Bilddenkens in UEbersetzungen Benjaminscher Schriften" (Concerning the Loss of Pictorial Thinking in Translations of Benjamin's Writings). She was followed by Irving Wohlfarth, whose paper "Walter Benjamin and the Idea of a Technological Eros" presented a detailed discussion of Benjamin's prose poem "To the Planetarium" from One-Way Street. Since Ms. Weigel's soft voice made note-taking for this participant rather difficult, the following remarks will be focused predominantly on Irving Wohlfarth's paper. Because the integrity and uniqueness of the image in Benjamin's German was the central idea of Sigrid Weigel's paper, it was presented in German. The translator's translator, whose essay "Die Aufgabe des UEbersetzers" (The Task of the Translator) belongs among the most celebrated essays on translation ever written in German, was discussed within the context of a persisting Unuebersetzbarkeit [untranslatability] of the images of his language. Examples of the untranslatable nature of certain passages from Japanese were given. The 'Leib- und Bildraum' [Body & Field of Vision] of Benjamin's language, translation vs. transliteration, the dialectical image as a caesura, the threshold between languages, and translation as a kind of probe were discussed. The presentation developed certain themes which can be found in Weigel's recently published work, Entstellte Aehnlichkeit: Walter Benjamin's theoretische Schreibweise [Distorted Similarities: Walter Benjamin's Theoretical Mode of Writing] (Fischer, 1997). --------------------Day 2: Irving Wohlfarth------------------------ Those for whom the discussion of Heidegger and Benjamin was a subject of heated interchange were all the more stimulated by Irving Wohlfarth's penetrating discussion of WB's "To the Planetarium." Though Wohlfarth's presentation was in English, he followed Weigel's lead in quoting the passage in the original after Edmund Jephcott's English translation had been given to the participants. Concluding Einbahnstrasse [One-Way Street], "To the Planetarium" could be seen as a precis of Benjamin's philosophy, which George Steiner claimed could be summarized in the concept of Tikkun Olam. from Lurianic kabbalah. Wohlfarth, however, chose the Greek concept of apocatastasis, the final restitution of all things at the coming of the Messiah. It is precisely this sense of cosmic experience, cosmic rausch , which separates the ancient world from the modern, postulates Benjamin. The loss and repression of a communal cosmogonic Eros, however, must inevitably lead to Thanatos, the destructive revenge of the repressed. For it is in this experience [Rausch] alone that we gain certain knowledge of what is nearest to us and what is remotest from us, and never of one without the other. This means, however, that man can be in ecstatic contact with the cosmos only communally. It is the dangerous error of modern man to regard this experience as unimportant and avoidable, and to consign it to the individual as the poetic rapture of starry nights. It is not; its hour strikes again and again, and then neither nations nor generations can escape it.... World War I was just such an eruption on a cosmic scale never before experienced. The technological powers unleashed took human beings to the depths of the sea and the altitudes of the clouds. The lack of communal sense demonstrated by capitalist greed, however, turned the cosmic "bridal bed into a bloodbath." Mastery of nature is not and should not become the purpose of the "commingling" of human and cosmic forces, for as Benjamin asks, "who would trust a cane wielder who proclaimed the mastery of children by adults to be the purpose of education?" As he would reiterate in his later essay on "Surrealism," the ever greater frenzies of destruction looming up ahead will be inevitable until the proletariat is seized by this cosmogonic Eros and can conquer destruction in the 'ecstasy of procreation.' As Wohlfarth correctly noted, Benjamin's "To the Planetarium" betrays the influence of Ludwig Klages's Vom Kosmogonischen Eros. The anti-militarist Klages, whose writings on "Dream-Consciousness" and graphology deeply influenced WB, had also left Germany for Switzerland during WWI. Regarding 'mind' and 'spirit' [Geist] as the rationalist enemies behind militarism, Klages advocated a return to 'soul' through the rebirth of matriarchal mystery religions like the Eleusinian mysteries. His anti-semitism, which became progressively more pronounced, ultimately found in WB a hostile critic, and in his correspondence with Adorno and Horkheimer Benjamin mentions his plan of an attack on both Klages and C.G. Jung. For Wohlfarth, however, "To the Planetarium" reads like 'left-wing Klages'. The forces of the irrational contained in Klages's 'hair-brained metaphysical dualism' (WB) cannot simply be ignored, and are to be appropriated by the left. But rather than reinstitute the mysteries and some neofascist "ancestor worship" (Ahnenerbe), the pagan powers of rausch are to be won for German Jewishness and Jewish messianism. Here Wohlfarth has noticed the possible influence of Sabbatianism, the heretical kabbalist messianism which Gershom Scholem was investigating. Wohlfarth also noted the importance of this prose poem for WB's essay "Theories of German Fascism" (1930), which reviewed a collection of war recollections edited by Ernst Juenger. --------------------Day 2: Workshops. Second Session------------------------ Eight parallel workshops were held between 16.30 and 18.00. Session III-6 in the Bungehuis featured Gale R. Mauk (Emory University, Atlanta), Scott Thompson (Independent, San Francisco), Sytze Steenstra (Univ. of Maastricht) and Warren S. Goldstein (New School of Social Research) reading their respective papers: "Reciprocal Gaze and the Mute Language of Things: Walter Benjamin's Aesthetics of Communion"; "From Rausch to Rebellion: Walter Benjamin's Writings on Hashish"; "God and the Subject Playing Peek-a-Boo in Benjamin's Philosophy"; and "Walter Benjamin's Montage of Messianism and Marxism." Mauk's paper focused on the concept of aura and the ability of things to return the subject's gaze, and the loss of eye-contact in modern society. Benjamin's writings on Baudelaire and the experience of crowds were contrasted with Jean-Paul Sartre's critique of Baudelaire. Thompson's paper can be read on the Walter Benjamin Research Syndicate website and will not be discussed here. Suffice it to say that it was well-received by an audience of approximately thirty people. Steenstra's paper focused on the alternating dimensions of the political and the messianic in WB's writings, particularly his writings on German Romanticism. The idea that WB rejected his earlier and more mystical writings when he became immersed in Marxism was rejected. Warren Goldstein continued the theme by discussing the relationship of Marxism to messianism. Marxism as a secularization of the messianic was explored along with comparisons between Benjamin and Ernst Bloch. WB's "Theological-Political Fragment" and his essay "Karl Kraus" were briefly discussed. -----Day 2: Panel-------------------------------------- Gary Smith, Martin Jay in conversation with Mona Jean Benjamin, Kim Yvon Benjamin, and Michael Benjamin------------------------------------ Between 20.30 and 21.30 Martin Jay and Gary Smith unwittingly supplied comic relief in their panel conversations with Mona Jean and Kim Yvon Benjamin (WB's granddaughters) and Michael Benjamin (WB's nephew). For those who anxiously awaited the divulging of Benjamin family secrets, this was surely a disappointment. The life of Benjamin's son, Stefan, was briefly described. His anxiety in being asked to return Klee's painting Angelus Novus to Scholem was recounted, and it came as no real surprise that, according to the granddaughters, Dora Benjamin had despised both Scholem and Adorno. Dora's own difficult life in England raising Stefan was mentioned, as was her remark to Stefan that she had always wanted a girl instead. Most notable in this session were the revelations about the total absence of Judaism in the upbringing of Stefan and his daughters. Stefan married a Chinese Buddhist, and neither granddaughter has ever set foot in a synagogue. Michael Benjamin described life in East Germany after the war, the similar absence of a judaic upbringing, and the reception of WB there before his reception in West Germany. All in all, it was a chatty, pleasant, and pedestrian session. The granddaughters were amused by the questions and the interest in the 'grampa' they had never met, both of them having been born in the 1970s, and on more than one occasion they burst out laughing: a welcome relief from all the day's pomp and circumstance. ---------------------------------------------End Day 2 --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@icf.de and "info nettime" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@icf.de