THE SUPRAMUNDANE CHARACTER
OF THE HEGELIAN WORLD SPIRIT
THEODORE ADORNO (1966)
1903-1969
PART THREE
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Translation: © 2005 Dennis Redmond; CopyLeft:
translation used with permission, Creative
Commons (Attribute & ShareAlike); Original
German: from Suhrkamp Verlag as: Theodor
W. Adorno. Collected Works, Volume 4; Transcribed:
by Andy Blunden.
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Minima Moralia by Theodor Adorno
Part Three
1946/47
Avalanche, veux-tu m'emporter dans ta chute?
French: Avalanche, won’t you carry me away
in your fall? Baudelaire
101
Hothouse plant. – The talk of early or late
development, seldom free of the death-wish
for the former, is not binding. Whoever develops
early, lives in anticipation. Their experience
is an a prioristic, intuitive sensibility,
which gropes in pictures and words for what
is later redeemed in things and human beings.
Such anticipation, satiated in itself, as
it were, turns away from the external world
and lends the color of something neurotically
playful to the relationship to the latter.
If early developers are more than just the
possessors of skills, they are thus compelled
to catch up, a compulsion which normal people
are fond of dressing up as a moral commandment.
One who develops early must painfully conquer
the space of the relation to the objects,
which is encompassed by one’s ideation [Vorstellung]:
they must even learn to suffer. The feel
for the not-ego, which hardly ever bothers
supposed late developers from within, becomes
an urgent necessity for early developers.
The narcissistic direction of the drives,
indicated by the preponderance of imagination
in its experience, is precisely what delays
their development. They make their way retrospectively,
with crass violence, through the situations,
fears, and passions which were softened in
their anticipation, and these latter transform
themselves, in conflict with the narcissism
of the former, into something sickly and
consuming. Thus early developers fall prey
to what is childish, which they once mastered
all too slight exertion and which now demands
its price; they become immature and even
silly, while the others, who were at every
stage precisely what they were expected to
be, are mature, and these now find unpardonable,
what overwhelms formerly early developers
outside of all proportion. Early developers
are stricken by passion; sheltered all too
long in the security of autarky, now they
reel helplessly, where they once built castles
in the air. It is not for nothing that the
handwriting of early developers warns by
its infantile traits. They are an embarrassment
to the natural social order, and malicious
good health feeds on the danger which threatens
them, just as society mistrusts them as the
visible negation of the equalization of success
and exertion. What is fulfilled in their
internalized economy, is the unconscious
yet implacable punishment which was always
in store for them. What was once proffered
to them with illusory good will, is now cancelled
out. Even in psychological destiny, an authority
watches over to ensure that everything is
paid for. The individual law is a puzzle-picture
of the exchange of equivalents.
102
Always more slowly ahead. – Running on the
street has the expression of terror. The
fall of the victim is imitated in the very
attempt to escape the fall. The posture of
the head, which would like to remained raised,
is that of someone who is drowning, the tense
face resembles the grimace of torture. They
must look straight ahead, cannot even glance
back, without stumbling, as if the pursuer
[Verfolger: follower, persecutor] whose sight
would cause them to freeze were breathing
down their necks. Once one ran from dangers
which were too desperate to stand and face,
and those who are running after a bus speeding
away still testify to this, without knowing
it. The flow of traffic no longer has to
reckon with wild animals, but at the same
time it has not pacified running. This last
estranges the bourgeois walk. The truth becomes
apparent, that something is not right about
security, that one must constantly evade
the unrestrained powers of life, even if
these are only vehicles. The body’s habit
of walking as something normal stems from
the good old days. It was the bourgeois manner
of getting somewhere: physical demythologization,
free from the bane of the hieratic step,
the homeless fellowship of the road, the
breathless flight. Human dignity insisted
on the right to the gait, a rhythm not drilled
into the body by command or terror. Going
on promenades, being a flaneur were private
ways of spending time, the legacy of the
feudal pleasure-jaunts of the 19th century.
Walking is dying out along with the liberal
epoch, even where autos are not being driven.
The youth movement, which groped for such
tendencies with unmistakable masochism, challenged
the parental Sunday excursion and replaced
it with the voluntary march of power, which
they christened with the medieval name of
trip [Fahrt: journey, travel], while the
Ford model quickly became available to the
latter. Perhaps the cult of technical speediness,
just as in sports, conceals the impulse of
mastering the terror of running, by turning
it away from one’s own body and at the same
time high-handedly outbidding it: the triumph
of the increasing mile-marker ritually attests
to the fear of being pursued. Whenever however
human beings are told: “run,” ranging from
the children, who are supposed to fetch the
mother a forgotten handbag from upstairs,
all the way to the prisoners, who are commanded
by their escorts to flee, in order to have
a pretext for murdering them, then the archaic
violence becomes audible, which otherwise
inaudibly directs every step.
103
Boy from the heath. – What one most fears
for no real reason, apparently obsessed by
a fixed idea, has the unnerving habit of
occurring. The question which one would at
no price like to hear, is asked by an assistant
in a perfidiously friendly manner; the person,
who one most wishes to keep distant from
one’s beloved, will end inviting the latter,
even if the former is three thousand miles
away, thanks to a well-meaning recommendation,
leading to precisely the circle of acquaintances,
from which the danger threatens. It is an
open question as to what extent one invites
such terrors oneself; if one perhaps elicits
that question from the malicious one by an
all too eager silence; if one provokes the
fatal contact, by requesting the mediator,
out of a foolishly destructive trust, not
to mediate. Psychology knows, that whoever
envisions the calamity, also somehow wishes
for it. But why does the latter seem to eager
to meet them? Something appeals, in the reality,
to the paranoid fantasy which distorts such.
The latent sadism of all unerringly guesses
the latent weakness of all. And the persecution
fantasy is infectious: whoever encounters
it as a spectator is irresistibly driven
to imitate it. This succeeds most easily,
when one gives it justifiable grounds, by
doing what the other fears. “One fool makes
many” – the abyssal loneliness of delusion
has a tendency towards collectivization,
which cites the picture of delusion into
life. This pathic mechanism harmonizes with
the socially determining one of today, wherein
those who are socialized into desperate isolation
hunger for togetherness and band together
in cold clumps. Thus folly becomes epidemic:
vagrant sects grow with the same rhythm as
large organizations. It is that of total
destruction. The fulfillment of persecution
manias stems from its affinity to bloody
being [Wesen: nature, essence, character].
Violence, on which civilization is based,
means the persecution of all by all, and
those with persecution manias miss the boat
solely, by displacing what is wrought by
the whole onto their neighbors, in the helpless
attempt to make incommensurability commensurable.
They burn, because they wish to immediately
grasp, with their bare hands, as it were,
the objective illusion which they resemble,
while the absurdity consists precisely of
the perfected mediacy [Mittelbarkeit]. They
fall as victims to the perpetuation of the
context of delusion. Even the worst and most
senseless conception of events, the wildest
projections, contain the unconscious effort
of consciousness, to recognize the fatal
law, by virtue of which society perpetuates
its life. The aberration is actually only
the short-circuit of adaptation: the open
foolishness of the one mistakenly calls,
in others, the foolishness of the whole by
its correct name, and the paranoid are the
mocking image of the right life, by choosing
on their own initiative to make it similar
to the wrong one. Just as sparks fly in a
short-circuit, so too does delusion communicate
with delusion truly like lightning. Points
of communication are the overpowering confirmations
of persecution manias, which mock the one
who is ill for being right, and thereby only
push them in deeper. The surface of existence
immediately closes up again and proves to
them, that things are not that bad and that
they must be mad. They anticipate subjectively
the condition, in which objective madness
and the powerlessness of the individual pass,
unmediated, into each other, as in Fascism,
where the dictatorship of those who are persecution
maniacs realizes the fears of persecution
of its victims. The question of whether an
exaggerated suspicion is paranoid or realistic,
the faint private echo of the tumult of history,
can thus be solely determined retrospectively.
Psychology does not reach into horror.
104
Golden Gate [in English]. – What dawns on
those who are embarrassed or spurned, illuminates
as harshly as the violent pain which wracks
the body. They recognize, that in the innermost
core of deluded love, which knows nothing
of this and may know nothing, lives the demand
of what is undeluded. They have been wronged;
they derive their claim of justice from this
and must at the same time reject it, for
what they wish, can only come out of freedom.
In such urgent necessity, those who are rejected
become human beings. Just as love inalienably
betrays the generality to the particular,
by which alone the generality is honored,
so too does the generality now turn fatally
against love, as the autonomy of those who
are nearest. Precisely the rejection, by
which the generality asserts itself, appears
to the individual [Individuum] as being excluded
from the generality; whoever loses love,
feels deserted by all, which is why they
despise consolation. In the senselessness
of the withdrawal they come to feel what
is untrue of all merely individual fulfillment.
Thereby however they awaken to the paradoxical
consciousness of the generality: of the inalienable
and unimpeachable human right, to be loved
by the beloved. With their petition, founded
on no title or claim, they appeal to an unknown
court, which out of mercy accords to them
what belongs to them and yet does not belong
to them. The secret of justice in love is
the sublation of rights, to which love points
with speechless gestures. “So must love,
deceived / silly yet everywhere be.” [lines
by Hölderlin from Tränen, “Tears"]
105
Only a quarter of an hour left. – Sleepless
night: there is a formula for this, agonizing
hours, stretching without prospect of end
or dawn, in the vain effort to forget the
empty duration. Horrifying, however, are
the sleepless nights, in which time shrinks
and runs fruitlessly through one’s fingers.
One turns the light out in the hope for long
hours of rest, which would assist one. But
while one cannot still one’s thoughts, the
healing nourishment of the night is squandered,
and when one is finally ready, to see no
more under the burning eyelids, one knows
that it is too late, that soon the terrifying
morning will arrive. The final hours of those
who are condemned to death may elapse the
same way, irresistibly, unused. What however
is revealed by such a contraction of hours,
is the counterpoint [Gegenbild] of fulfilled
time. If in the latter the power of experience
breaks the baleful spell of duration and
gathers what is past and what is future into
the present, then duration creates unbearable
horror in the hurried, sleepless night. Human
life becomes a moment, not by sublating duration,
but by decaying to nothing, awakening to
its futility in face of the bad infinity
of time itself. In the overly loud ticks
of the clock, one perceives the mockery of
the eons for the span of one’s own existence.
The hours, which are already past like seconds,
before the inner senses have grasped them,
and sweep the latter away in their fall,
register, how one including all of memory
is ordained to forgetting in the cosmic night.
Human beings are made compulsorily aware
of this today. In the condition of complete
powerlessness, what life-span remains to
the individual [Individuum] appears as little
more than a brief reprieve from the gallows.
One no longer expects to live out one’s life
to the end. The prospect of violent death
and martyrdom, present to everyone, perpetuates
itself in the fear that the days are numbered,
that the length of one’s own life stands
under the sway of statistics; that becoming
old has become an unspoken advantage, as
it were, derived by beating the averages.
Perhaps the life-quota provided for by society,
revocable at any time, has been used up.
The body registers such fear in the flight
of hours. Time flies.
106
All the little flowers. – The sentence, most
likely from Jean-Paul, that memories are
the only property which cannot be taken from
us, belongs in the storehouse of a powerlessly
sentimental consolation, which would like
to think that the self-renouncing withdrawal
of the subject into interiority is precisely
the fulfillment, from which the consolation
turns away. By establishing the archive of
oneself, the subject commandeers its own
stock of experience as property and thereby
turns it once more into something entirely
external to the subject. The past inner life
turns into furniture, just as, conversely,
every piece of Biedermeier furniture was
memory made wood. The intérieur [French:
interior], in which the soul stores its collection
of curiosities and memorabilia, is invalid.
Memories cannot be preserved in drawers and
file cabinets, but rather in them is indissolubly
interwoven what is past with what is present.
No-one has them at their disposal in the
freedom and arbitrariness, whose praise resounds
in the swollen sentences of Jean-Paul. Precisely
where they becomes controllable and objective,
where the subject thinks of them as wholly
secure, memories fade like soft wall-papers
under harsh sunlight. Where however they
retain their energy, protected by what is
forgotten, they are endangered like anything
which is alive. The conception of Bergson
and Proust, aimed against reification, according
to which what is contemporary, what is immediacy,
constitutes itself only through memory, the
reciprocity of what is now and what is then,
has for that reason not merely a providential
but also an infernal aspect. Just as no earlier
experience truly exists, which was not detached
from the rigor mortis of its isolated existence
by involuntary memorialization, so too is
the converse true, that no memory is guaranteed,
as existing in itself, indifferent towards
the future of the one who harbors it; nothing
which is past is safe from the curse of the
empirical present, through the transition
into mere representation [Vorstellung]. The
most blissful memory of a human being can,
according to its substance, be repealed by
a later experience. Whoever loved and betrayed
love, does something awful not only to the
picture of what has been, but to this last
itself. With incontrovertible evidence, an
unwilling gesture while awakening, a hollow
cadence, a faint hypocrisy of pleasure, inveigles
itself into the memory, making the nearness
of yesterday already into the alienation,
which it today has become. Despair has the
expression of what is irrevocable not because
things couldn’t go better next time, but
because it draws the previous time into its
maw. That is why it is foolish and sentimental,
to wish to preserve what is past as pure
in the midst of the dirty flood of what is
contemporary. This latter, delivered unprotected
to calamity, is left with no other hope than
to emerge once more from this latter as something
else. To those however who die in despair,
their whole life was in vain.
107
Ne cherchez plus mon coeur. [French: Don’t
search for my heart, line from Baudelaire’s
poem Causerie]. – The heir of Balzac’s obsession,
Proust, to who every mundane invitation seemed
to be the “open sesame” of the reconstituted
life, leads into the labyrinths, where prehistoric
gossip conveys to him the shadowy secrets
of everything which gleams, until this latter
becomes obtuse and cracked under the all
too near and longing eyes. But the placet
futile [French: useless petition], the concerns
of a historically condemned luxury class,
which every bourgeois could calculate as
superfluous, the absurd energy, which is
wasted on the wasters, finds itself more
thoroughly rewarded than the impartial gaze
for what is relevant. The schema of disassembly
[Zerfalls: disintegration, disincorporation],
according to which Proust cites the picture
of his “society” [in English in original],
proves to be one of the great social tendencies
of development. What goes to pieces in Charlus,
Saint-Loup and Swann, is the same thing,
which the entire generation born afterwards
lacked, who no longer even knew the name
of the latest poet. The eccentric psychology
of décadence [French: decadence] outlines
the negative anthropology of mass society:
Proust gives an allergic accounting of what
was later done to all love. The exchange
relationship, which this last partially contradicted
during the bourgeois epoch, has entirely
absorbed it; the last immediacy falls victim
to the distance of all adversaries to all
others. Love freezes from the value, which
the ego ascribes to itself. Its love appears
to it as a loving more, and whoever loves
more, does wrong. They incur the suspicions
of the beloved, and are thrown back on themselves,
falling ill due to their inclination to possessive
cruelty and self-destructive imagination.
“The relation to the beloved,” goes a passage
in Temps retrouvé [French: time recovered,
multivolume work by Proust], “may remain
platonic out of entirely different reasons
than the chastity of the woman and also not
for the sake of the sensual character of
love, which she inspires. Perhaps the lover
is incapable, in the boundlessness of his
love, of waiting for the moment of fulfillment
with adequate dissimulation or indifference.
He meets her incessantly, does not cease
to write to her, attempts to visit her; she
refuses, and he despairs. From this moment
on she understands that if she only grants
him her company or friendship, such a favor
will appear, to someone who had already given
up all hope, so great that she can spare
herself the trouble of giving him any more
concessions, so that she can securely wait,
until he finds himself prepared, because
he is incapable of going without seeing her
any longer, to end the war at any price:
then she can dictate the terms of the peace,
whose first condition is the platonic nature
of the relationship... All this the woman
guesses instinctively and knows that she
can afford the luxury of never giving herself
to the man whose unquenchable desire she
feels, if he is too well-bred to hide it
from her from the very beginning.” The young
male prostitute Morel is stronger than his
high-flying lover. “He always retained the
upper hand, by only refusing himself, and
in order to refuse himself, it probably sufficed
for him to know he was loved.” The private
motive of Balzac’s Duchess Langeais has spread
universally. The quality of each one of the
innumerable autos, which turn every Sunday
evening back to New York, corresponds exactly
to the prettiness of the girl sitting inside.
– The objective dissolution of society manifests
itself subjectively, by the fact that the
erotic drive has become too weak, to bind
self-preserving monads, as if humanity were
imitating the physics theory of the exploding
cosmos. The frigid unattainability of the
beloved’s nature [Wesens], meanwhile an acknowledged
institution of the mass-culture, is answered
by the “unquenchable desire” of the lover.
When Casanova named a woman unprejudiced,
he meant that no religious convention hindered
her from giving herself; today the unprejudiced
woman is one who no longer believes in love,
who doesn’t let herself be taken for a ride,
by investing any more than she can expect
back. Sexuality, for whose sake nevertheless
the whole fuss is presumably about, has turned
into the delusion, which consisted earlier
in renunciation. By leaving no time anymore
in the arrangements of life for a pleasure
conscious of itself, and replacing it with
physiological exercises, uninhibited sexuality
is itself desexualized. Actually they no
longer want the euphoria anymore, but merely
the compensation, which stands for the effort,
which they would like most of all to spare
themselves as superfluous.
108
Princess Lizard. – The imagination is inflamed
precisely by the women whose imagination
has worn away. Those who glow with the most
colorful nimbus, turned unremittingly to
the outside, are entirely sober. Their attraction
stems from their lack of consciousness of
themselves, indeed the lack of a self at
all: Oscar Wilde invented the name of the
unenigmatic sphinx for them. They resemble
their designated pictures: the purer their
appearance [Schein] is, undisturbed by any
sort of impulse, the more similar they are
to archetypes, Preziosa, Peregrina, Albertine,
who hint that all individuation is precisely
mere appearance [Schein] and who nevertheless
must always disappoint again through that,
which they are. Their life is understood
as am illustration or an everlasting children’s
festival, and such perception does injustice
to their needy empirical existence. Storm
has dealt with this in the deeply symbolic
children’s story “Pole Poppenspaeler.” The
Friesian boy falls in love with the little
girl, who is traveling with a group from
Bavaria. “When I finally turned around, I
saw a red dress appear before me; and truly,
and truly, it was the little puppet-player;
in spite of her tattered clothing she seemed
to me to be surrounded by a fairy-tale glow.
I gathered up courage and spoke to her: ‘Would
you like to take a walk, Lisa?’ She looked
at me mistrustfully with her black eyes.
‘Take a walk?’ she repeated at length. ‘Ah,
you – you're the limit!’ ‘Where do you want
to go?’ – ‘I wanna to go to the draper’s
shop!’ ‘You want to buy a new dress?’ I asked
foolishly enough. She laughed out loud. ‘Get
out of here! – No, only a little rag!’ ‘Little
rag, Lisa?’ – ‘Sure thing! Just some scraps
to dress up the doll; costs only a little
bit!’ Poverty forces Lisa to limit herself
to what is shabby – “rags” – although she
herself would be happy if things were otherwise.
Misunderstanding, she must mistrust everything
as exaggerated, which is not practically
justified. Imagination steps too close to
poverty. For what is shabby has magic only
for the observer. And nevertheless imagination
needs poverty, to which it does violence:
the happiness, which it clings to, is inscribed
with the traits of suffering. Thus Sade names
Justine, who falls into one trap of torture
after another, notre intéressante héroine
[French: our interesting heroine], and even
Mignon, in the moment in which she is beaten,
the interesting child. The dream princess
and the whipping-girl are the same, and they
suspect nothing of this. Traces of this are
still evident in the relationship of the
northern peoples to the southern: the well-heeled
puritan seeks in vain from the brunette from
foreign lands, what the course of the world,
which the former commands, severs not merely
from themselves but above all from the vagrants.
Those who are rooted envy the nomads, the
search for fresh pastures, and the green
wagon is the house on wheels, whose path
is accompanied by stars. Infantility, ensorceled
in unplanned movement, the unhappily inconstant,
momentary pressure to continue to live, stands
for something undistorted, for fulfillment,
and yet nevertheless excludes it, similar
to the innermost core of self-preservation,
from which it pretends to redeem itself from.
That is the circle of bourgeois longing for
what is naive. What is soulless in those
who, at the borders of culture, are daily
forbidden self-determination, charm and torture
at the same time, turns into a phantasmagoria
of the soul for the well-heeled, who have
learned from culture, to be ashamed of the
soul. Love loses itself in what is soulless
as in the cipher of what has soul, because
the living are the arena of the desperate
desire for salvation, which has its object
only in what is lost: love arises in the
soul first in its absence. It is precisely
the expression of the eyes, which is closest
to those of an animal – the creaturely expression
– which is human, distant from the reflection
of the ego. In the end the soul is itself
the longing of the soulless for salvation.
109
L'inutile beauté. [French: useless beauty].
– Women of especial beauty are condemned
to unhappiness. Even those to have all the
advantages, who have birth, wealth, and talent
on their side, seem as if pursued or obsessed
with the pressure to destroy of themselves
and all human relationships, in which they
enter. An oracle puts before them the choice
of dooms. Either they cleverly exchange beauty
for success. Then they pay with happiness
for its condition; since they can no longer
love, they poison love to others and remain
empty-handed. Or the privilege of beauty
gives them the courage and security, to defy
the exchange-contract. They take the happiness
seriously, which is promised in them, and
do not limit themselves, thus confirmed by
the attraction of all, that do not at first
have to prove their worth. In their youth
they have the choice. This makes them indiscriminate:
nothing is definitive, everything can be
replaced. Quite early, without much consideration,
they marry and dedicate themselves to pedestrian
conditions, relinquishing [entäussern: to
relinquish, disclose, realize] to a certain
extent the privilege of infinite possibility,
degrading themselves to human beings. At
the same time however they hold fast to their
childhood dream of hegemony, which their
life flashes before them, and do not cease
– therein unbourgeois – to throw away what,
tomorrow, could be something better. That
is their type of destructive character. Precisely
because they were once hors de concours [French:
outside of the competition], they are rendered
subalterns in the competition, which they
now manically pursue. Solely the gesture
of irresistibility remains, while the latter
already disintegrates [zerfällt]; magic disintegrates
[zerfällt], as soon as expresses itself as
domesticated, instead of portraying itself
as hope. She who resists however is simultaneously
the sacrifice: she ends up under the social
order, which she once flew over. Her generosity
is given punishment. The fallen woman as
well as the obsessive one are martyrs of
happiness. Incorporated beauty has in the
meanwhile turned into a calculable element
of existence, a mere replacement for the
non-existing life, without reaching beyond
the latter in the slightest. She has broken
her promise of happiness to herself and others.
She however, who stands for this happiness,
takes on the aura of calamity and is herself
overtaken by calamity. Therein the enlightened
world has completely and utterly absorbed
mythos. The envy of the gods has outlived
them.
110
Constance. – Everywhere bourgeois society
insists on the exertion of the will; only
love is supposed to be involuntary, the pure
immediacy of the feelings. In the longing
for this, which means the dispensation from
labor, the bourgeois idea of love transcends
bourgeois society. However by unmediatedly
putting up what is true as what is universally
untrue, it inverts the former into the latter.
It is not merely that pure feelings, as far
as they are still possible in the economically
determined system, socially turn thereby
into the alibi for the domination of interest
and testifies to a humanity, which does not
exist. But rather the involuntariness of
love itself, even where it is not arranged
quite practically in advance, contributes
to that whole, as soon as it establishes
itself as a principle. If love is supposed
to portray in society a better one, then
it is capable of doing so not as a peaceful
enclave, but only in conscious resistance.
That however requires just that moment of
caprice, which the bourgeois, to who love
can never be natural enough, forbids it.
Love means the capacity to not allow immediacy
to wither from the ubiquitous pressure of
mediation, of the economy, and in such fidelity
it is mediated in itself, as tenacious counter-pressure.
Those who love are only those who have the
energy to hold fast to love. If social advantage,
sublimated, still preforms the sexual drive-impulse,
causes, through a thousand shadings of what
is confirmed by the social order, now this
person and now that one to appear spontaneously
attractive, then the attraction which has
once taken root contradicts this, by persisting
where the gravity of society, above all in
the intrigue which is regularly taken into
society’s service, does not wish it to be.
The test of the feelings is whether they
endure beyond the feeling through duration,
even if it were only obsession. The kind
which, under the appearance [Schein] of unreflective
spontaneity and proud of its presumed uprightness,
rely completely and utterly on what it considers
to be the voice of the heart, and runs away,
as soon as it no longer thinks it perceives
those voices, is in such sovereign independence
precisely the tool of society. Passively,
without knowing it, it registers the numbers,
which roll out of the roulette wheel of their
interests. By betraying the beloved, it betrays
itself. The command of fidelity, which society
legislates, is the means of unfreedom, but
only through fidelity does freedom realize
its insubordination against the command of
society.
111
Philemon and Baucis. [Greek mythology:] –
The household tyrant has his wife help him
into his coat. She eagerly does the service
of love and accompanies him with a glance,
which says: what am I supposed to do, let
him have his little joys, that’s the way
he is, only a man. Patriarchal marriage revenges
itself on the man through the indulgence,
which the woman practices and which has turned
into a formula in the ironic lament of male
vulnerability and dependence. Inside of the
lying ideology, which posits the man as superior,
lies a secret, not less untrue one, which
reduces him to something inferior, to the
victim of manipulation, maneuvers, deception.
The hen-pecked husband is the shadow of the
one who must venture out into hostile life.
Children size up adults with the same narrow-minded
perspicacity as the wife vis-à-vis the husband.
In the disproportion between his authoritarian
claim and his helplessness, which necessarily
comes to light in the private sphere, something
ridiculous is concealed. Every married couple
appearing together is comic, and this is
what the patient understanding of the wife
attempts to balance out. There is scarcely
any long-married woman, who does not disavow
their spouse by whispering about small weaknesses.
False nearness stimulates malice, and in
the realm of consumption, those who have
their hands on things are stronger. Hegel’s
dialectic of master and slave is as valid
then as now in the archaic social order of
the house and is strengthened, because the
wife tenaciously holds fast to the anachronism.
As suppressed matriarch she becomes the master
there, where she must serve, and the patriarch
need only appear as such, in order to become
a caricature. Such a simultaneous dialectic
of the epoch has presented itself to the
individualistic gaze as the “battle of the
sexes.” Both opponents are wrong. In the
disenchantment of the man, whose power rests
on the earning of money which pretends to
be human rank, the woman expresses at the
same time the untruth of the marriage, in
which she seeks her entire truth. No emancipation
without that of society.
112
Et dona ferentes. [Latin: fragment of “Timeo
Danaos et dona ferentes,” “I fear the Greeks
though bearing gifts."] – The German
philistines of freedom have always put great
store in the [Goethean] poem of God and the
Bayadere [bayadere: Hindu temple dancing-girl],
with the closing fanfare that immortals raise
lost children in their fiery arms to heaven.
The approved warm-heartedness is not to be
trusted. It thoroughly appropriates the bourgeois
judgment on bought love; it attains the effect
of all-fatherly understanding and forgiveness
only by impugning the lovely one to be saved
with shuddering delight as someone who is
lost. The act of mercy is bound up with reservations,
which make it illusory. In order to earn
redemption – as if an earned redemption could
be anything of the sort – the girl may herself
participate in the “bed’s pleasant festival,”
“neither for pleasure nor gain.” Well, then
why else? Doesn’t the pure love expected
of her clumsily touch the magic, which Goethe’s
dance-rhythm winds around her figure and
which then indeed is no longer to be cancelled
out by the talk of deep perdition? But she
is supposed to become the sort of good soul
throughout, who forgets herself only once.
In order to be admitted to the enclosure
of humanity, the paramour, whose toleration
humanity brags about, must first cease to
be one. The deity of penitent sinners rejoices
[quotation from Goethe’s poem]. The entire
expedition to where the last houses are,
is a kind of metaphysical “slumming party”
[in English in original], an event of patriarchal
meanness, inflating itself twice over, by
first raising the distance between the male
Spirit [Geist] and female nature into something
immeasurable and then draping the supreme
power, which takes back even its self-created
distinction, as the highest benevolence.
The bourgeoisie needs the bayadere, not merely
for the sake of pleasure, which they simultaneously
begrudge her for, but in order to feel like
a god. The closer they approach the edge
of their realm and forget their dignity,
the crasser the ritual of violence. The night
has its pleasure, but the whore is nevertheless
burnt. The rest is the idea.
113
Spoilsport. – The affinity between asceticism
and euphoria, noted by the humdrum wisdom
of psychology, the love-hate between saints
and whores, has the objectively valid ground,
that asceticism accords to fulfillment more
of its rights than cultural installment-payments.
The hostility to pleasure is certainly not
to be separated from the consensus with the
discipline of a society, which has its essence
[Wesen] in demanding more than it grants
in return. But there is also a mistrust against
pleasure which comes from the intuition,
that the latter is in this world nothing
of the sort. A construction of Schopenhauer
unconsciously expressed something of this
intuition. The transition from the affirmation
to the repudiation of the will to life occurs
in the development of the thought, that in
every delimitation of the will by a barrier
“which is placed... between it and its former
goal” there is suffering; in contrast, “its
attainment of the goal” would be “satisfaction,
well-being, happiness.” While such “suffering,”
according to Schopenhauer’s intransigent
cognition, could easily enough grow to the
point that death itself would be preferable,
the condition of “satisfaction” is itself
unsatisfying, because “as soon as a shelter
is granted to human beings from urgent necessity
and suffering, boredom is so close at hand,
that it requires the killing of time. What
occupies all living beings and keeps them
in motion, is the striving for existence
[Dasein]. They don’t know what to do with
existence, however, what it is assured: thus
the second thing, which they set into motion,
is the striving to be free of the burden
of existence, to make it imperceptible, ‘to
kill time’, that is, to escape boredom.”
(Schopenhauer, Collected Works, Grand Duke
Wilhelm-Ernst Edition, Volume I: The World
as Will and Idea. I. Introduction by Eduard
Grisebach. Leipzig 1920, pg 415). But the
concept of this boredom which is sublated
to such unsuspected dignity, is something
which Schopenhauer’s sensibility, which is
hostile to history, would least like to admit
– bourgeois through and through. It is, as
the experience of antithetical “free time,”
the complement of alienated labor, whether
this free time is supposed to merely reproduce
expended energy, or whether it is burdened
by the extraction of alien labor as a mortgage.
Free time remains the reflex of the rhythm
of production as something imposed heteronomously,
to which the former is compulsorily held
fast even in periods of weariness. The consciousness
of the unfreedom of all existence, which
the pressure of the demands of commerce,
and thus unfreedom itself, does not allow
to appear, emerges first in the intermezzo
of freedom. The nostalgie du dimanche [French:
Sunday nostalgia] is not homesickness for
the workweek, but for the condition which
is emancipated from this; Sundays are unsatisfying,
not because they are observed, but because
its own promise immediately represents itself
at the same time as something unfulfilled;
like the English one, every Sunday is too
little Sunday. Those for who time painfully
extends itself, who wait in vain, are disappointed
that it failed to happen, that tomorrow goes
past once more just like yesterday. The boredom
of those however who do not need to work,
is not fundamentally different from this.
Society as a totality imposes, on those with
administrative power, what they do to others,
and what these latter may not do, the former
will scarcely permit themselves. The bourgeoisie
have turned satiety, which ought to be the
close relation of ecstasy, into an epithet.
Because others go hungry, ideology demands
that the absence of hunger should count as
vulgar. Thus the bourgeoisie indict the bourgeoisie.
Their own existence, as exempt from labor,
prevents any praise of laziness: the latter
would be boring. The hectic bustle, which
Schopenhauer refers to, is due less to the
unbearable nature of the privileged condition
than to its ostentation, which according
to the historical situation either enlarges
the social distance or seemingly reduces
such through presumably important events
and ceremonies, which are supposed to emphasize
the usefulness of the masters. If those at
the top truly felt bored, this stems not
from too much happiness, but from the fact
that they are marked by the general unhappiness;
by the commodity character, which consigns
the pleasures to idiocy, by the brutality
of command, whose terrifying echo resounds
in the high spirits of the rulers, finally
by their fear of their own superfluousness.
Noone who profits from the profit-system
is capable of existing therein without shame,
and it distorts even undistorted pleasure,
although the excesses, which the philosophers
envy, may by no means be so boring as they
assure us. That boredom would disappear in
realized freedom, is something vouchsafed
by many experiences stolen from civilization.
The saying omne animal post coitum triste
[Latin: all animals are sad after mating]
was devised by bourgeois contempt for humanity:
nowhere more than here does what is human
distinguish itself from creaturely sorrow.
Not euphoria but socially approved love elicits
disgust: the latter is, in Ibsen’s word,
sticky. Those who are deeply moved by erotic
sentiment transform fatigue into the plea
for tenderness, and momentary sexual incapacity
is understood as accidental, entirely external
to passion. It is not for nothing that Baudelaire
thought the bondage of erotic obsession together
with the illuminating spiritualization, naming
kiss, scent and conversation equally immortal.
The transience of pleasure, on which asceticism
stakes its claim, stands for the fact that
except in the minutes heureuses [French:
happy minutes], in which the forgotten life
of the lover radiates from the arms and limbs
of the beloved, there is no pleasure yet
at all. Even the Christian denunciation of
sex in Tolstoy’s Kreutzer Sonata cannot entirely
cancel out the memory of this in the middle
of all the Capucin-style preaching. What
he reproaches sensuous love for, is not only
the grandiosely overweening theological motif
of self-denial, that no human being may turn
another into an object – actually thus a
protest against patriarchal control – but
at the same time the memorialization of the
bourgeois malformation of sex, in its murky
entanglement with every material interest,
in marriage as a humiliating compromise,
however much of an undercurrent of Rousseau’s
resentment against pleasure raised to reflection
runs in this. The attack on the period of
the engagement is aimed at the family photograph,
which resemblance the word “bridegroom.”
‘And moreover there was that ridiculous custom
of giving sweets, of coarse gormandizing
on sweets, and all those abominable preparations
for the wedding: remarks about the house,
the bedroom, beds, wraps, dressing-gowns,
underclothing, costumes.’ [The Kreutzer Sonata,
trans. R. Gustafson, Oxford UP: 1997, pg
107] He similarly mocks the honeymoon, which
is compared to the disappointment after visiting
an ‘extremely uninteresting’ fairground booth,
extolled by a hawker. The exhausted senses
are less to blame for this dégoût [French:
disgust] than what is institutionalized,
ordained, prefabricated in pleasure, its
false immanence in the social order which
adjusts it and turns it into something deathly
sad, in the moment it is decreed. Such contrariness
may grow to the point that all euphoria ultimately
prefers to cease, inside renunciation, rather
than violating the concept of euphoria through
its realization.
114
Heliotrope. – Those awaiting the visit of
the parents’ guests, find their hearts beating
with greater expectation than before Christmas.
It is not due to the presents, but to a transformed
life. The perfume, which the lady guest places
on the bureau, while one is permitted to
watch the unpacking, has a scent like memory,
even when it is inhaled for the first time.
The luggage with the stickers from the Hotel
Suvretta [famous hotel in St. Moritz, Switzerland]
and Madonna di Campiglio [famous hotel in
Domolite mountains of Italy, near Trentino]
are chests, in which the precious gems of
Aladdin and Ali Baba, wrapped in expensive
cloth, the kimonos of guests, are borne out
of the caravanserais of Switzerland and south
Tyrol on sleeping-wagon cushions for sated
observation. And just as fairies talk to
children in fairy-tales, so too does the
guest talk earnestly, without condescension,
to the children of the house. They ask knowledgeably
about lands and peoples, and the guest, not
acquainted with their daily habits and seeing
nothing but the fascination in their eyes,
answers with profound statements about the
feeble-mindedness of a brother-in-law and
the marital spats of the nephews. Thus the
children feel accepted at a stroke into the
mighty and secret alliance of adults, the
magic circle of reasonable people. The rules
of the day are suspended – perhaps tomorrow
they may even be allowed to skip school –
along with the borders between the generations,
and whoever has not been sent to bed by eleven
o'clock has an inkling of true promiscuity.
The single visit ordains Thursday as a festival,
in whose euphoria all of humanity seems to
be invited. For the guest comes from far
away. The guest’s appearance promises the
children something beyond the family and
reminds them that this latter is not the
only thing. The longing for inchoate happiness,
in the pond of salamanders and storks, which
the child painfully learned to restrain and
which is distorted by the bogeyman of the
black man, of the villain who wishes to kidnap
them – here the children find that longing
again, without fear. Amidst the nearest and
dearest, there appears the figure of what
is different. The fortune-telling gypsy,
who is let into the front door, is absolved
in the lady visitor and transfigured into
a rescuing angel. She dispels the curse on
the happiness of what is nearest of all,
by wedding it to what is most distant. The
entire being [Dasein] of the child waits
for this, and whoever does not forget the
best part of childhood, must still be able
to wait like this. Love counts the hours
until the moment the parents’ guests step
over the threshold and once again reconstruct
the washed-out life through something imperceptible:
“Here I am again / back from the wide world.”
[lines from Mörike’s Peregrina]
115
Pure wine [part of figurative German expression,
“to give someone pure wine,” i. e. to tell
someone the unvarnished truth]. – There is
an almost foolproof criterium for determining
whether a human being means you well: how
they pass on unfriendly or hostile comments
about you. Such reports are mostly superfluous,
nothing but pretexts for expressing ill-wishes
without responsibility, even in the name
of what is good. Just as all acquaintances
feel the inclination, to occasionally say
something bad about someone, probably because
they rebel against the greyness of the acquaintance,
so is everyone simultaneously sensitive to
the views of everyone else and secretly wish
that they were loved, even where they do
not love: the alienation between human beings
is no less indiscriminate and universal than
the longing to break through it. The news-hawker
blossoms in this climate, for there is never
any lack of material or calamities, and they
can always count on the fact that those who
wish to be liked by all, are agog to hear
news of the opposite. One should relay derogatory
remarks only when they immediately and transparently
influence common decisions, to judgments
of human beings one must rely upon, or with
whom one has to work. The more disinterested
the report, the murkier the interest, the
suppressed pleasure, in inflicting pain.
It is still harmless, if story-tellers simply
wish to set two parties against each other
while simultaneously putting their own qualities
in the spotlight. More often they represent
themselves as the unelected arbiters of public
opinion and thereby impress, precisely through
their affectless objectivity, the entire
violence of anonymity upon the victim, before
which this last is supposed to bow. The lie
becomes visible in the unnecessary concern
for the honor of the one injured, who knows
nothing of the injury, for clear relationships,
for inner purity: upholding these latter
in the entangled world only encourages, on
the model of Gregers Werle [character in
Ibsen’s Wild Duck], entanglement. By virtue
of moral fervor, the well-meaning turn into
destroyers.
116
And just hear, how evil he was. – Those who
have unexpectedly ended up facing life-threatening
dangers, sheer catastrophes, often report
that they were to a surprising extent free
of fear. The general terror does not turn
specifically against them, but strikes them
as mere inhabitants of a city, members of
a larger association. They adapt to what
is accidental, what is inanimate, as it were,
as if it didn’t really concern them. The
lack of fear has its psychological explanation
in the lack of readiness to be afraid vis-à-vis
the overpowering blow. The freedom of eyewitnesses
has something damaged about it, something
related to apathy. The psychic organism,
like the body, is compatible with experiences
of an order of magnitude similar to itself.
If the object of experience is raised out
of proportion to the individual [Individuum],
then the latter actually doesn’t experience
it anymore, but registers the former unmediatedly,
through the non-intuitive concept, as something
external to itself, something incommensurable,
to which the latter relates as coldly as
to the catastrophic shock. There is an analogy
to this in what is moral. Whoever commits
acts, which are egregiously unjust according
to acknowledged norms, such as taking revenge
on enemies, or refusing to be sympathetic,
is scarcely conscious of their guilt and
comes to realize this only with painful effort.
The doctrine of reasons of state, the separation
of ethics [Moral] and politics is not untouched
by this state of affairs. Its meaning stems
from the extreme opposition between public
essence [Wesen] and individual existence.
The major crime presents itself to the individual
[Individuum] in large part as a mere misdemeanor
against convention, not merely because the
norms which it injures are themselves something
conventional, frozen, unbinding on the living
subject, but because their objectification
as such, even where they are founded on substance,
evades the moral innervation, the realm of
the conscience. The thought of specific acts
of tactlessness however, the microorganisms
of injustice, which perhaps no-one else noticed
– that someone sits down too early in company,
or put the guests’ name-tags down during
tea-time, rather than at dinner, as is customary
– such trivialities may fill the delinquent
one with irreproachable remorse and a passionately
bad conscience, at times with such a burning
shame, that they cannot allow themselves
to be pardoned by any other human being and
preferably not even by themselves. They are
therein by no means as noble as all that,
for they know, that the society which has
no objections against inhumanity, objects
all the more strongly to misconduct, and
that a man who sends away his lover and vouches
for himself as an upright man, can be sure
of social approval, while the man who respectfully
kisses the hand of an overly young girl from
a good family, earns himself ridicule. However
these luxuriously narcissistic concerns afford
a second aspect: that of the refuge of experience,
which rebounds from the objectified social
order. The subject reaches into the smallest
features of what is correct or incorrect
and is capable of vouching for itself therein
as acting rightly or wrongly; its indifference
towards moral guilt, however, is tinged with
the consciousness that the powerlessness
of one’s own decision grows with the dimension
of their object. If one established in retrospect,
that by failing to call one’s girlfriend
after an ugly quarrel, this in fact ended
the relationship, then there is something
faintly comic in the conception of this;
it sounds like the mute girl in Portici [character
in Daniel Auber’s 1828 opera The Mute Girl
of Portici]. “Murder,” goes an Ellery Queen
detective novel, “is so... newspapery. It
doesn’t happen to you. You read about it
in a paper, or in a detective story, and
it makes you wriggle with disgust, or sympathy.
But it doesn’t mean anything.” [Quote in
English in original] That is why authors
like Thomas Mann have described the catastrophes
broadcast in the newspapers, ranging from
train accidents to crimes of passion, grotesquely
– ensorceling, as it were, the irresistible
laughter which the solemn pomp of a burial
would otherwise provoke, by making it the
affair [Sache] of the poetic subject. In
contrast to this, minimal violations are
for that reason relevant, because we can
see good and evil in them, without smiling,
even if our earnestness is a bit delusory.
In them we learn to deal with what is ethical
[Moralischen], feeling it in our skin – as
blushing – making it the subject’s own, the
subject which glances as helplessly at the
gigantic moral-law in itself as at the star-studded
heavens, which the former is badly modeled
after. That these occurrences would be amoral
in themselves, while nevertheless spontaneously
good impulses, human sympathy without the
pathos of maxims, also occurs, does not devalue
the infatuation in what is proper. For by
expressing the generality straightaway, without
bothering about alienation, the good impulse
easily enough permits the subject to appear
as something alienated from itself, as a
mere agent of commandments, with which that
subject imagines itself to be as one: as
a splendid human being. Conversely, those
whose ethical impulse is oriented to what
is external, fetishistic convention, is capable
of grasping the generality, in the suffering
of the unsurpassable divergence of inner
and outer – indeed by holding fast to this
divergence in its hardening – without sacrificing
themselves and the truth of their experience
to such. Their over-voltage [Überspannung]
of all distance intends reconciliation. That
is why the behavior of monomaniacs is not
without some justification in the object.
In the sphere of daily interactions, on which
they insist, all aporias of the false life
return, and what their blind alley has to
do with the whole, is that only there can
they carry out the paradigmatic conflict
in strictness and freedom, which otherwise
escapes their reach. In contrast, whoever
conforms in their mode of reaction with social
reality, finds their private life conducting
itself as formlessly, as the estimation of
power-relations which compels its form on
them. They have the inclination, wherever
they escape the supervision of the external
world, wherever they feel at home in the
expanded realm in their own ego, to reveal
themselves to be inconsiderate and brutal.
They revenge themselves on those who are
near to them, for all the discipline and
all the renunciation of the immediate expression
of aggression, which was imposed on the former
from a distance. They behave politely and
with courtesy on the outside, towards objective
enemies, but with coldness and hostility
in friendly circles. Where civilization as
self-preservation does not compel them towards
humanity, they give free reign to their rage
against such and rebut their own ideology
of home, family and community. It is against
this which ethics [Moral], however micrologically
deluded, is aimed. It detects in the relaxed
familiarity, in what is formless, the mere
pretext for violence, the appeal to be good
to each other, in order to be as malevolent
as one wants to be. It subjugates what is
intimate to the critical claim, because intimacies
alienate, grope towards the inconceivably
fine aura of the other, which first crowns
them to a subject. Solely the acknowledgment
of distance in who or what is most near [Nächste]
mitigates foreignness: accepted into consciousness.
However the claim of undiminished, already
achieved nearness, the flat denial of foreignness,
does the utmost injustice to the other, virtually
negating them as particular human beings
and thereby what is human in them, “adds
them up,” incorporates them into the inventory
of property. Wherever what is unmediated
posits and ensconces itself, the bad mediacy
of society is thereby insidiously affirmed.
The issue [Sache] of immediacy can be taken
up only by the most cautious of reflections.
The test of this is made in the smallest
of all things.
117
Il servo padrone. [Italian: the master as
servant] – In regards to the dull-witted
tasks, which are demanded by the ruling culture
from subordinate classes, these latter become
capable of such solely through permanent
regression. Precisely what is unformed in
them is the product of social form. The creation
of barbarians through culture is however
constantly deployed by this latter, in order
to preserve its own barbaric essence. Domination
delegates the physical violence, on which
it rests, to the dominated. While these latter
are given the opportunity of letting off
steam with their warped instincts in what
is collectively justified and proper, they
learn to practice what the noble ones require,
so that they have what it takes to let the
noble ones remain noble. The self-education
of the ruling clique, with all of the discipline,
throttling of every immediate impulse, cynical
skepticism and blind pleasure in command
it demands, would not exist if the oppressor
did not inflict, through those who are oppressed,
a piece of the oppression on themselves,
which they inflict on others. That is why
the psychological differences between the
classes are so much slighter than the objective-economic
ones. The harmony of what is irreconcilable
comes to benefit the continuation of the
bad totality. The nastiness of the higher-ups
and the gutsiness of the low-born understand
each other. From the servants and governors,
who bully the children of good households
to teach them a lesson about life, to the
teachers from Westerwald, who drive the usage
of foreign words as well as all pleasure
in language out of them, to the officials
and clerks, who make them stand in line,
the petty officers, who step on them, things
go straight as a rail to the torturers of
the Gestapo and the bureaucrats of the gas
chambers. The impulses of the upper classes
themselves speak early in favor of the delegation
of violence to the lower ones. Whoever fears
the good breeding of the parents, flees into
the kitchen and warms themselves on the energetic
expressions of the cook, which are secretly
given over to the principle of parental good-breeding.
The fine people are drawn to the unrefined
ones, whose brutality deceptively augurs,
what the culture of the former is supposed
to bring. They do not know, that what is
unrefined, which appears to them as anarchic
nature, is nothing but the reflex of the
compulsion, against which they stiffen themselves.
What mediates between the class solidarity
of the upper classes and their ingratiation
towards the delegates of the lower classes
is their justified feeling of guilt towards
the poor. Whoever who doesn’t fit in, who
learns however to fit in, who is saturated
by “that’s how things are done here” into
the innermost core, ultimately turns into
one themselves. Bettelheim’s observation
on the identification of the victims with
the executioners of the Nazi camps contains
a judgment on the higher seeding-grounds
of culture, the English “public school” [in
English in original], the German officer
academy. The absurdity perpetuates itself:
domination reproduces itself all the way
through the dominated.
118
Downwards and ever further. [quote from Schubert
song] – The private relations between human
beings seem to form themselves according
to the model of the industrial “bottleneck”
[in English in original]. Even in the smallest
community, the level is determined by the
most subaltern of its members. Whoever says
something in a conversation which is beyond
the grasp of a single person, becomes tactless.
For the sake of humanity, the conversation
is restricted to what is nearest, most dull-witted
and banal, even if only one inhuman visage
is present. Since the world has stolen speech
from human beings, those who cannot be talked
to are in the right. They need only stubbornly
insist on their interest and their constitution,
in order to prevail. The fact that the other,
trying in vain to establish contact, ends
up using a pleading or soliciting cadence,
makes them weaker. Since the “bottleneck”
[in English in original] knows no authority,
which would be higher than what is factual,
while thought and speech necessarily refer
to such an authority, intelligence turns
into naïvété, and this is what the knuckleheads
irrefutably perceive. The official fealty
to what is positive acts like gravity, drawing
everyone down. It shows its superiority to
the opposing impulse, by refusing to even
deal with the latter. Those who are more
differentiated, who do not wish to perish,
remain strictly constrained by the consideration
of everyone who is inconsiderate. These latter
need no longer be plagued by the disquiet
of consciousness. Intellectual weakness,
confirmed as a universal principle, appears
as the energy to live. Formalistic-administrative
task management, the desk-drawer separation
of everything which only has meaning as something
inseparable, the bull-headed insistence on
arbitrary opinions in the absence of any
foundation, in short the practice of reifying
every stage of the failed ego-formation,
withdrawing the latter from the process of
experience and then maintaining it as a final
“that’s just how I am,” suffices to conquer
impregnable positions. One may be as certain
of the understanding of others, who are similarly
malformed, as of one’s own advantage. In
the cynical self-trumpeting of one’s own
defect lurks the intuition, that the objective
Spirit [Geist] is liquidating the subjective
one at the contemporary stage. They are “down
to earth” [in English in original] like the
zoological forebears, before these latter
stood erect on their hind legs.
119
Model virtue. – It is well-known how oppression
and ethics [Moral] converge in the renunciation
of the drives. But the ethical ideas do not
merely oppress other ones, but are immediately
derived from the existence of the oppressor.
Since Homer, the concepts of good and wealth
are intertwined in the Greek language. The
kalokagathie [Greek: perfection], which was
upheld by the humanists of modern society
as a model of aesthetic-ethical harmony,
has always put a heavy emphasis on property,
and Aristotele’s Politics openly confessed
the fusion of inner value with status in
the determination of nobility, as “inherited
wealth, which is connected with excellence.”
The concept of the polis [Greek: city-state]
in classical antiquity, which upheld internalized
and externalized nature [Wesen], the validity
of the individual [Individuum] in the city-state
and the individual’s self as a unity, permitted
it to ascribe moral rank to wealth, without
inciting the crude suspicion, which the doctrine
already at that time courted. If the visible
effect on an existent state establishes the
measure of a human being, then it is nothing
but consistency to vouchsafe the material
wealth, which tangibly confirms that effect,
as the characteristic of the person, since
the latter’s moral substance – just as later
in Hegel’s philosophy – is supposed to be
constituted on nothing other than their participation
in the objective, social substance. Christianity
first negated that identification, in the
phrase that it would be easier to pass a
camel through the eye of a needle than for
a rich person to enter heaven. But the particular
theological premise on voluntary chosen poverty
indicates how deeply the general consciousness
is stamped by the ethos [Moralität] of property.
Fixed property is to be distinguished from
the nomadic disorder, against which all norms
are directed; to be good and to have goods,
coincided from the beginning. Good people
are those who control themselves as their
own possessions: their autonomous nature
[Wesen] is modeled on material disposition.
The rich are therefore not to be accused
of being unethical – that reproach has ever
belonged to the armature of political oppression
– but given to understand, that they represent
ethics [Moral] to others. In this latter
is reflected having [Habe]. Wealth as goodliness
[Gutsein: having goods/being good] is an
element of the mortar of the world: the hard-bitten
appearance [Schein] of such identity hinders
the confrontation of the moral idea with
the social order, in which the rich are right,
while at the same time determinations of
what is ethical different than those derived
from wealth cannot be conceptualized. The
more that the individual [Individuum] and
society later diverged in the competition
of interests, and the more the former is
thrown back on itself, the more stubbornly
do individuals hold onto the conception of
moral nature [Wesen] as wealth. It is supposed
to vouch for the possibility of reunifying
what has been divided in two, into inside
and outside. That is the secret of the inner-worldly
asceticism, which Max Weber wrongly hypostatized
as the limitless exertion of the businessman
ad majorem dei gloriam [Latin: to the greater
glory of God]. Material success binds individual
[Individuum] and society not merely in the
comfortable and meanwhile dubious sense,
that the rich can escape loneliness, but
in a far more radical sense: if the blind,
isolated self-interest is driven only far
enough, then it passes over, along with the
economic one, into social power and reveals
itself to be the incarnation of a universally
binding principle. Whoever is rich or acquires
wealth, experiences what is attained by the
ego, “by one’s own initiative,” as what the
objective Spirit [Geist], the truly irrational
predestination of a society held together
by brutal economic inequality, has willed.
Thus the rich may reckon as benevolence,
what testifies only to its absence. To themselves
and to others, they experience themselves
as the realization of the general principle.
Because this latter is injustice, that is
why the unjust turn regularly into the just,
and not as mere illusion, but borne out of
the hegemony of the law, according to which
society reproduces itself. The wealth of
the individual is inseparable from progress
in society as “prehistory.” The rich dispose
over the means of production. Consequently
the technical progress, in which the entire
society participates, is accounted for primarily
as “their” progress, today that of industry,
and the Fords necessarily appear to be benefactors,
to the same degree which they in fact are,
given the framework of the existing relations
of production. Their privilege, already established
in advance, makes it seem as if they were
giving up what is theirs – namely the increase
on the side of use-value – while those who
are receiving their administered blessings
are getting back only part of the profit.
That is the ground of the character of delusion
of ethical hierarchy. Poverty has indeed
always been glorified as asceticism, the
social condition for the acquisition of precisely
the wealth in which morality [Sittlichkeit]
is manifested, but nevertheless “what a man
is worth” [in English in original] signifies,
as everyone knows, the bank account – in
the jargon of the German merchants, “the
man is good,” i. e. they can pay. What however
the reasons of state of the almighty economy
so cynically confesses, reaches unacknowledged
into the mode of conduct of individuals.
The generosity in private intercourse, which
the rich can presumably allow themselves,
the reflected glow of happiness, which rests
on them, and something of this falls on everyone
who they consort with, all this veils them.
They remain nice, “the right people” [in
English in original], the better types, the
good. Wealth distances itself from immediate
injustice. The guard beats strikers with
a billy club, the son of the factory-owner
may occasionally drink a whisky with the
progressive author. According to all desiderata
of private ethics [Moral], even the most
advanced kind, the rich could, if they only
could, in fact always better be than the
poor. This possibility, while truly indeed
left unused, plays its role in the ideology
of those who do not have it: even the convicted
con artist, who may anyway be preferable
to the legitimate boss of the trusts, is
famous for having such a beautiful house,
and the highly paid executive turns into
a warm human being, the moment they serve
an opulent dinner. Today’s barbaric religion
of success is accordingly not simply counter-ethical
[widermoralisch], rather it is the home-coming
of the West to the venerable morals [Sitten]
of the fathers. Even the norms, which condemn
the arrangement of the world, owe their existence
to the latter’s own mischief [Unwesen]. All
ethics [Moral] is formed on the model of
what is unethical [Unmoral], and to this
day reproduces the latter at every stage.
Slave-ethics [Sklavenmoral] is in fact bad:
it is still only master-ethics [Herrenmoral].
120
Knight of the rose. [Opera by Richard Strauss]
– Elegant people are attractive due to the
expectation that they are free in private
from the greed for the advantages, which
flow to them from their position, and from
the stubborn prejudice in the closest relationships,
which is caused by the narrowness of these
last. One has confidence in their pleasure
of adventure in thought, sovereignty vis-à-vis
the state of their own interests, and refinement
of forms of reaction, thinking that their
sensitivity would turn at least in Spirit
[Geist] against the brutality on which their
privilege depends, while the victims scarcely
have the possibility to recognize what makes
them such. If however the separation of production
and the private-sphere ultimately proves
to be a piece of necessary social appearance
[Scheins], then this expectation of unbound
spirituality must be disappointed. Even the
most subtle snobbery has nothing of dégoût
[French: disgust] vis-à-vis its objective
prerequisite, but rather seals itself off
from its cognition. It is an open question
as to what extent the French aristocracy
of the 18th century took part, playfully-suicidally,
in the enlightenment and the preparation
for the revolution, a participation which
the antipathy against the terrorists of virtue
was so glad to imagine. The bourgeoisie in
any case has kept itself free in its later
phase from such inclinations. No-one dances
anymore on the volcano, otherwise they would
be declassed. Subjectively, too, the “society”
[in English in original] is so thoroughly
stamped by the economic principle, whose
manner of rationality concerns the whole,
that the emancipation from interests – even
merely as intellectual luxury – is forbidden.
Just as they are not capable of enjoying
their immeasurably expanded wealth, they
are equally incapable of thinking against
themselves. The search for frivolity is in
vain. What helps to eternalize the real distinction
between the upper and lower strata, is the
fact that the distinction between the modes
of consciousness, both here and there, is
vanishing more and more. The poor are prevented
from thinking by the discipline of others,
the rich from that of their own. The consciousness
of the rulers is inscribing in all Spirit
[Geist], what previously religion endured.
Culture turns for the high bourgeoisie into
an element of representation. That one is
clever or educated, is ranked under the qualities
which make one worthy of invitation or marriage,
like horse-riding skills, love of nature,
charm or a faultlessly tailored suit. They
are not curious about cognition. Free of
cares, they mostly busy themselves with mundane
details, just like the small bourgeoisie.
They furnish houses, throw parties, make
hotel and airplane reservations with virtuosity.
Otherwise they nourish themselves on the
refuse of European irrationalism. They bluntly
justify their own hostility to the intellect
[Geistfeindschaft], already suspecting –
and not unjustly – something subversive in
thinking itself, in the independence from
anything which is already given or already
existing. Just as in Nietzsche’s time, when
educated philistines believed in progress,
the uniformly higher development of the masses
and the greatest possible happiness of the
greatest possible number, so too do they
believe today, without quite knowing it,
in the opposite: the revocation of 1789,
the incorrigibility of human nature, the
anthropological impossibility of happiness
– actually only that things are all too good
for the workers. The profundity of yesteryear
has recoiled into the most extreme banality.
Of Nietzsche and Bergson, the last canonized
philosophers, nothing remains but the murkiest
anti-intellectualism in the name of the nature,
which its apologists mutilate. “Nothing is
more annoying to me about the Third Reich,”
said in 1933 the Jewish woman of a general
director, who was later murdered in Poland,
“than the fact that we can no longer use
the word earthly, because the Nazis have
impounded it,” and even after the downfall
of the Fascists, the attractive Austrian
lady of a wealthy house, on meeting a labor
union leader at a cocktail party with a reputation
as a radical, knew no better way to express
her enthusiasm for his personality than the
bestial expression: “and moreover he is totally
unintellectual, totally unintellectual.”
I remember my own shock, when an aristocratic
girl of shadowy origins, who could barely
speak German to me with a thick foreign accent,
expressed her sympathy for Hitler, with whose
picture her own seemed incompatible. At that
time I thought, sheer idiocy prevents her
from seeing who she is. But she was more
clever than I, for what she represented,
no longer existed, and by cancelling out
her individual determination, her class consciousness
helped her being-in-herself, her social character,
to break through. Those at the top are integrating
with such iron force, that the possibility
of subjective deviation falls away and nowhere
can difference be sought anymore than in
the distinguished cut of an evening gown.
121
Requiem for Odette. [female character in
Proust’s Swann’s Way] – The Anglomania of
the upper classes of continental Europe is
based on the fact that feudal practices are
ritualized on the British isle, which are
supposed to suffice in themselves. Culture
is maintained there not as the divided sphere
of objective Spirit [Geistes], as participation
in art or philosophy, but rather as a form
of empirical existence. The “high life” [in
English in original] wishes to be the beautiful
life. It brings those, who partake in it,
ideological pleasure-winnings. By turning
the shaping of existence into a task, in
which one follows guidelines, preserves artificial
styles, and keeps the delicate equilibrium
of correctness and independence, existence
itself appears as meaningful and calms the
bad conscience of those who are socially
superfluous. The incessant demand, to say
and do that which is exactly appropriate
to one’s status and situation, demands a
kind of moral effort. It becomes difficult,
to be who you are, and this is believed to
be sufficient for the patriarchal noblesse
oblige [French: obligation of the high-born].
At the same time the displacement of culture
from its objective manifestations into the
immediate life dissolves the risk that one’s
own immediacy will be shaken by the Spirit
[Geist]. This last is reproached for disturbing
assured styles, for being tasteless, although
not with the embarrassing brutality of the
East Prussian Junker, but rather according
to a spiritual criterion, as it were – the
aestheticization of everyday life. This gives
rise to the flattering illusion, that one
has been spared the split between superstructure
and infrastructure, culture and corporeal
reality. But rituals fall, in all their aristocratic
trappings, into the late bourgeois habit
of hypostatizing the attainment of something
meaningless in itself as meaningful, degrading
the Spirit [Geist] to the doubling of that
which exists anyway. The norm which one follows
is fictive, its social prerequisites have
vanished along with its model, the court
ceremony, and it is acknowledged not because
it is experienced as binding, but for the
sake of legitimating the social order, from
whose illegitimacy one benefits. Proust thus
observed, with the incorruptibility of someone
susceptible to seduction, that Anglomania
and the cult of a form-driven mode of living
are to be found less in aristocrats than
in those who wish to ascend into the heights:
it is only a step from snob to parvenu. Thus
the affinity of snobbery and Jugendstil [Art
Nouveau], the attempt by a class defined
by exchange, to project themselves into a
picture of vegetable beauty, as it were,
purified of exchange. That the life which
organizes its own events is not any more
of a life, becomes apparent in the boredom
of the cocktail parties and the weekend invitations
to the countryside, in the golf, symbolic
of the entire sphere, and in the organization
of “social affairs” [in English in original]
– privileges, where no-one has any real fun
and with which the privileged only deceive
themselves, about how little opportunity
for joy in the unhappy whole exists even
for them. In the latest phase, the beautiful
life is reduced to what Veblen characterized
it as throughout the ages, ostentation, the
mere being-selected, and the park offers
no other pleasure anymore than that of the
wall, against which those outside can press
their noses. What can be crassly observed
in the upper classes, whose malice is in
any case being irresistibly democratized,
is what has long been true for society: life
has turned into the ideology of its own absence.
122
Monograms. – Odi profanum vulgus et arceo
[I hate the vulgar rabble and shun it], said
the son of the freed slave.
When it comes to truly evil people, one cannot
really imagine them dying. To say “we” and
to mean “I” is one of the choicest of all
slights. Between “I dreamt” [es träumte mir]
and “I dreamed” [ich träumte] lie ages of
the world. But which is truer? So little
do spirits send dreams, so little is it the
ego which dreams. Before the eighty-fifth
birthday of an in all respects well cared-for
man, I dreamed that I asked myself the question,
what could I give him which would make him
truly happy, and immediately received the
answer: a guide through the realm of the
dead. That Leporello complained about insufficient
provisions and too little money, is a reason
to doubt the existence of Don Juan. In early
childhood I saw the first snow-shovelers
in thin shabby clothes. In answer to my question:
those are men without work, who were given
this job so they can earn their bread. Serves
them right, that they have to shovel snow,
I cried out angrily, bursting into uncontrollable
tears. Love is the ability, to perceive what
is similar in what is dissimilar. Parisian
circus advertisement before WW II: Plus sport
que le théâtre, plus vivant que le cinéma
[French: more sporting than the theater,
more living than the cinema]. A film which
followed the code of the Hays Office to the
strictest letter might succeed in being a
great work of art, but not in a world in
which a Hays Office exists. Verlaine: the
pardonable unpardonable sin [literally: the
venial mortal sin]. Brideshead Revisited
by Evelyn Waugh: socialized snobbism. Zille
gives misery a slap on the butt. Scheler:
the bedroom in philosophy [in French in original].
A poem of Liliencron describes a military
fanfare. First it goes: “And around the corner
crashing brays, like thumping tubas on Judgment
Day,” and it closes: “Did a bright butterfly
dart / ching-ching boom, around the corner?”
A poetic philosophy of history of violence,
with Judgment Day at the beginning and the
butterfly at the end. In Trakl’s Along there
is the verse: “Say how long we have been
dead”; in Däubler’s Golden Sonnet: “How true,
that we have all long since died.” The unity
of expressionism consisted of expressing
the fact that the human beings into which
life has withdrawn, wholly alienated from
each other, are turned thereby into the dead.
Among the forms which Borchardt tested, there
is no lack of reworkings of folk songs. He
avoided saying “In peoples’ tone,” and wrote
instead: “In the tone of the people.” This
sounds however just like “in the name of
the law.” The restorative poet recoils into
the Prussian police officer. Not the least
of the tasks which stands before thought,
is putting all the reactionary arguments
against Western culture into the service
of advancing enlightenment. The only true
thoughts are those, which do not understand
themselves. When the little old woman dragged
wood to the stack of kindling, Hus called:
sancta simplicitas [Latin: oh holy simplicity].
But what about the reason for his sacrifice,
the Last Supper in both its forms? Every
reflection seems naive beside the higher
one, and nothing is simple, because everything
becomes simple in the disconsolate flight-path
of forgetting. You are loved, solely where
you may show yourself as weak, without provoking
strength.
123
The bad comrade. – Actually I should have
been able to deduce Fascism from the memory
of my childhood. It sent its emissaries there
in advance, like a conqueror into the most
distant province, long before it arrived:
my school comrades. If the bourgeois class
harbored since time immemorial the dream
of the wild popular community, the oppression
of all by all, then children with first names
like Horst and Jürgen and last names like
Bergenroth, Bojunga and Eckhardt, theatrically
staged the dream, before the adults were
historically ripe enough to realize it. I
felt the violence of the image of horror
they were striving for so clearly, that all
happiness afterwards seemed to be revocable
and borrowed. The outbreak of the Third Reich
did indeed surprise my political judgment,
yet not my fearful premonitions. So closely
had all the motifs of the permanent catastrophe
brushed against me, so inextinguishably were
the warning signs of the German awakening
burned into me, that I recognized each one
all over again in the features of the Hitler
dictatorship: and often it appeared to my
foolish horror, as if the total state had
been invented solely against me, in order
to inflict on me what I had been hitherto
spared in my childhood, that state’s prehistory.
The five patriots who attacked a single schoolmate,
beat him up and, when he complained to the
teacher, defamed him as a classroom snitch
– aren’t they the same ones, who tortured
prisoners, in order to prove the foreigners
wrong, who said that torture was occurring?
Whose hullaboo knew no end, when the smartest
student made a mistake – didn’t they surround
the Jewish camp prisoner, grinning and embarrassed,
making fun of him, after he all too clumsily
sought to hang himself? Who couldn’t write
a single decent sentence, but found every
one of mine too long – didn’t they abolish
German literature and replace it through
their scribing [Schrifttum]? Many covered
their chests with mysterious insignia and
wanted to become naval officers in a landlocked
country: they declared themselves leaders
of storm troopers and detachments, the legitimizers
of illegitimation. The involuted intelligent
ones, who had as little success in class
as the gifted tinkerer without connections
under liberalism; who for that reason curried
favor with their parents with woodsaw work,
or indeed drew for their own pleasure on
drawing-boards with colored inks during long
afternoon days, helped the Third Reich to
its cruel efficiency and are being betrayed
once again. Those however who always defiantly
stirred up trouble against the teacher and,
as one called it, disturbed the lesson, the
day – indeed, the hour – they graduated from
high school, they sat down with the same
teachers at the same table with the same
beer, as a confederation of men, who were
born followers, rebels, whose impatient blows
of the fist on the table already drummed
the worship of the masters. They need only
stay put, to catch up with those who were
promoted to the next class, and revenge themselves
on them. Since they, officials and candidates
for death sentences, have stepped visibly
out of my dreams and have expropriated my
past life and my language, I don’t need to
dream of them any longer. In Fascism, the
nightmare of childhood has realized itself.
[written in] 1935
124
Puzzle-picture. – Why, in spite of a historical
development which has driven towards oligarchy,
workers are ever less able to know that they
are such, can be gleaned from many observations.
While the relationship of property-owners
and producers is objectively congealing ever
more rigidly, subjective class-membership
is fluctuating more and more. This is abetted
by economic development itself. The organic
composition of capital demands, as has often
been noted, control by technical managers
rather than factory owners. These latter
were the counter-party, as it were, to living
labor, the former corresponded to the share
of machinery in capital. The quantification
of technical processes, however, its compartmentalization
in the smallest operations, for the most
part independent of experience and education,
turns the expert status of the new-styled
directors to a considerable extent into a
mere illusion, behind which is concealed
the privilege of being appointed. That technical
development has reached a state, that all
functions would actually be accessible to
all – this immanent-socialistic element of
progress is travestied by late industrialism.
Membership in an elite appears achievable
for everyone. One waits only for the cooptation.
Eligibility consists in affinity, ranging
from the libidinous cathexis of all wheeling
and dealing, to sound technocratic sensibility,
to freshly-cured realpolitik. They are experts
only of control. That anyone can do such,
has not led to its end, but only that everyone
may be called upon to do such. Preference
is given to those who fit in most exactly.
While the chosen ones certainly remain a
vanishing minority, the structural possibility
suffices to successfully preserve the appearance
[Schein] of an equal chance under the system,
which has eliminated the free competition
which lived on that appearance [Schein].
That the technical forces would permit a
non-privileged condition, is credited by
all, even those in the shadows, to the social
relationships, which hinder it. In general,
subjective class-membership today shows a
mobility, which causes the fixity of economic
social order to be forgotten: what is rigid
is also what can be moved about. Even the
powerlessness of the individual, to calculate
out its economic destiny, contributes to
such a consoling mobility. What decides on
the fall is not lack of proficiency, but
an opaque hierarchal web, in which no-one,
not even at the very top, may feel safe:
the egalitarianism of the condition of being
threatened. When the heroic flying captain
returns home, in the most successful blockbuster
film of the year, to be bullied by petit
bourgeois caricatures as a “soda jerk” [in
English in original], he does not only satisfy
the schadenfreude of the spectators, but
even strengthens them moreover in the consciousness,
that all human beings are truly brothers
[reference to the 1946 The Best Years of
Our Lives]. The most extreme injustice turns
into the deceptive image of justice, the
disqualification of human beings into their
equality. Sociologists however are confronted
with the grimly joking question: where is
the proletariat?
125
Olet. [Latin: pecunia non olet, “money does
not stink"]- In Europe, the pre-bourgeois
past has survived in the shame of having
personal services or favors paid for. The
new continent knows nothing of this anymore.
Even in the old one, no-one did anything
for nothing, but this was felt as a wound.
To be sure, exclusiveness, which stems from
nothing better than a ground-monopoly, is
ideology. But it was nevertheless imprinted
deeply enough into the character, to stiffen
its neck against the market. The German ruling
class disparaged any way of earning money
outside of privileges or control of production
well into the 20th century. What was considered
disreputable about artists or the educated,
was what these latter most rebelled against,
remuneration, and the private tutor Hölderlin
as well as the pianist Liszt, had therein
precisely those experiences, which set them
in opposition to the ruling consciousness.
Well into our day, the membership of human
beings in the upper or lower classes has
been crudely determined by whether they took
money or not. At times the bad arrogance
recoiled into conscious critique. Every child
of the European upper crust blushed at the
gifts of money, which relatives gave them,
and although the primacy of bourgeois utility
quelled such reactions and overcompensated
for them, doubts remained nonetheless as
to whether human beings were made merely
for exchange. The remnants of what was older
were, in the European consciousness, the
ferment of what was new. In America by contrast
no child of similarly well-off parents has
any qualms about earning a few cents through
newspaper deliveries, and such thoughtlessness
is expressed in the habitus of adults. That
is why Americans appear to untutored Europeans
on the whole as a people without dignity,
ready for paid services, just as conversely
the former are inclined to consider the latter
vagabonds and cardboard royalty. The self-evidence
of the maxim, that there’s no shame in working,
the guileless absence of any snobbery vis-à-vis
what in the feudal sense is dishonorable
in market relationships, the democracy of
the principle of commerce contributes to
the continuation of what is utterly anti-democratic,
of economic injustice, of human degradation.
It occurs to no-one, that there might be
certain services which would not be expressible
in exchange-value. That is the real prerequisite
for the triumph of that subjective reason,
which is not even capable of thinking something
which is true and obligated to itself, perceiving
it solely as something which exists for others,
something exchangeable. If pride was the
ideology over there [i. e. Europe], here
it is delivering to customers. This applies
as well to the creations of the objective
Spirit [Geistes]. The immediate self-advantage
inherent in the act of exchange, thus what
is subjectively most limited, prohibits the
subjective expression. Valorizability [Verwertbarkeit],
the a priori of production consistently oriented
to the market, does not permit the spontaneous
need for such, for the thing itself, to arise.
Even the cultural products produced and distributed
throughout the world with the greatest of
expenditures, repeat the gestures – even
if only by virtue of an opaque machinery
– of traveling musicians, who keep an eye
peeled on the plate by the piano, while hammering
out the favorite melodies of their patrons.
The budgets of the culture industry run into
the billions, but the law of form of their
productions is the tip. What is excessively
blank, hygienically clean in industrialized
culture, is the sole rudiment of that shame,
an adjuratory picture, comparable to the
suits of the highest hotel managers, who,
in order not to look like head waiters, outclass
the aristocrats in elegance and thereby make
themselves recognizable as head waiters.
126
I. Q. – The modes of conduct appropriate
to the most progressive technical state of
development are not limited to the sectors,
in which they are actually promoted. Thus
thinking submits to the social supervision
of its services not only where it is forced
to do so by its occupation, but comes to
resembles such in its entire complexion.
Because thought has been well-nigh inverted
into the solution of tasks assigned to it,
what is not assigned is also dealt with according
to the schema of the task. Thought, having
lost its autonomy, no longer trusts itself
to comprehend something real for its own
sake, in freedom. This it leaves, with respectful
illusion, to the highest-paid, and makes
itself measurable for this. It tends to behave,
for its own part, as if it had to unceasingly
portray its usefulness. Even where there
is no nutshell to crack, thinking turns into
training [in English in original] for some
sort of exercise or other. It relates to
its objects as mere hurdles, as a permanent
test of its own being in form. Considerations,
which would like to be responsible for the
relation to the material [Sache] and thereby
for themselves, invite the suspicion that
they are vain, overblown, asocial self-satisfaction.
Just as the neo-positivists split cognition
into the scrap-heaps of empiricism and logical
formalism, the intellectual activity of the
types, who regard the unity of the sciences
as written on their foreheads, is polarized
in the inventory of the known and the test
sample of the capacity for thought: to them,
every thought turns into a quiz of whether
they are informed or of their qualifications.
Somewhere the correct answers must already
be posted. Instrumentalism, the latest version
of pragmatism, has long since become not
merely an affair of the application of thinking,
but rather the a priori of its own form.
When oppositional intellectuals caught in
such a spell wish to approach the content
of society differently, they are crippled
by the shape of their own consciousness,
which is modeled in advance on the needs
of this society. While their thought has
forgotten how to think for itself, it has
simultaneously turned into the absolute exam-authority
of itself. Thinking means nothing other than
checking at every moment, as to whether one
can think. Thus the asphyxiating quality
of every seemingly independent intellectual
production, the theoretical ones no less
than the artistic ones. The socialization
of the Spirit [Geistes] holds it, roofed
over, ensorceled, under a glass, as long
as society is itself trapped. Where thinking
previously internalized obligations imposed
from outside, today it today incorporates
its integration into the all-embracing apparatus,
and goes to pieces, even before its economic
and political verdict can overtake it.
127
Wishful thinking. [In English in original]
– Intelligence is a moral category. The separation
of feeling and understanding, which makes
it possible to say, free and blessed are
the knuckleheads, hypostatizes the historically
achieved splintering of human beings into
functions. The praise of simplicity [Einfalt]
resonates with the anxiety that whatever
has been separated might reunite and thus
put an end to the mischief. “If you have
understanding and a heart,” goes a couplet
by Hölderlin, “show only one of each / Both
condemn you, if you display them together.”
[from Hölderlin’s poem Good Advice] The denigration
of restricted understanding in comparison
with infinite reason which echoes in philosophy,
a reason which, as infinite, is at the same
time undiscoverable by the ultimately finite
subject, echoes in spite of its critical
justification the old saw: “Be ever true
and faithful” [quotation from Mozart song].
When Hegel demonstrated to reason its stupidity,
he not only brought the isolated determination
of reflection, the positivism of every name,
to its measure of untruth, but became complicit
in the ban on thought, severing the negative
labor of the concept, which the method claimed
to achieve, and swears by the highest height
of speculation like the Protestant priest,
who recommended to his flock to remain one,
instead of relying on their own weak light.
Rather, it is up to philosophy to seek out
the unity between feeling and understanding
precisely in their contrast: in the moral
unity. Intelligence, as the power of judgment,
opposes in its carrying out what is already
given, by simultaneously expressing it. The
capacity of judgment, which seals itself
off from the drive-impulse, does justice
to this last precisely by a moment of counter-pressure
against the social one. The power of judgment
is measured by the staunchness of the ego.
Thereby, however, also in that dynamics of
the drives, which is handed over by the division
of labor of the soul to the feelings. Instinct,
the will to stand fast, is an implication
of the meaning of logic. By forgetting itself,
showing itself incorruptible, the judging
subject wins its victory. By contrast, just
as the narrowest circle of human beings dumb
themselves down, where their interests begin,
and then turn their resentment against what
they do not wish to understand, precisely
because they could understand it all too
well, so too is the planetary stupidity,
which prevents the contemporary world from
seeing the absurdity of its own arrangement,
the product of the unsublimated, unsublated
interest of the rulers. Short-term and yet
irresistible, it hardens itself into the
anonymous schemata of the historical trajectory.
This corresponds to the stupidity and obstinacy
of the individual; the incapacity, to consciously
unite the power of bias and bustle. It is
regularly found in conjunction with moral
defects, a lack of autonomy and responsibility,
while so much is true in Socratic rationalism,
that a clever person, whose thoughts are
directed at objects and do not circle formalistically
around themselves, can scarcely be conceived
of as evil. For the motivation of evil, blind
prejudice in the contingency of what is one’s
own, tends to dissipate in the medium of
thought. Scheler’s comment, that all cognition
is founded in love, was a lie, because he
demanded that love be something immediately
viewed. But it would become the truth, if
love pressed for the dissolution of all appearance
[Scheins] of immediacy and thereby, to be
sure, became irreconcilable with the object
of cognition. Neither the synthesis of psychic
compartments, alienated from each other,
nor the therapeutic displacement of the ratio
with irrational ferments, is any help against
the splitting of thought, but rather the
self-constitution of the element of the wish,
which antithetically constitutes thinking
as thinking. Only when that element is completely
dissolved, without any heteronomous remnant
in the objectivity of thought, does it drive
towards utopia.
128
Regressions. – My earliest memory of Brahms,
and certain not only mine, is Cradle Song.
A complete misunderstanding of the text:
I didn’t know that Näglein [flowers] was
a word for lilacs or in many districts for
pink flowers, but imagined the word meant
little nail, the numerous pins by which the
curtain around the heavenly bed, my own,
was fastened, so that the child, protected
in its darkness from every trace of light,
could sleep endlessly long, without fear
– “until the cows come home,” as they say
in Hessen. How distant the blossoms remain
from the tenderness of such curtains. For
us, nothing stands for undiminished brightness
other than the unconscious dark; nothing
for what we once could be, other than the
dream, that we had never been born.
“Sleep in peace, sleep / close your little
eyes so sweet / listen to the rainfall drip
/ hear the neighbors’ doggy yip / Doggy bit
the beggar man / tore a hole in his pants
/ past the gate, the beggar flees / sleep
in peace, sleep.” The first line of Taubert’s
lullaby is terrifying. And yet both its final
lines bless sleep with the promise of peace.
This is not entirely due to bourgeois hardness,
the comforting thought, that the intruder
was scared off. The sleepily listening child
has already half-forgotten the exile of the
foreigner, who looks in Schott’s song book
like a Jew, and intuits in the verse “past
the gate, the beggar flees” peace without
the misery of others. So long as there is
even a single beggar, goes a fragment in
Benjamin, there is mythos; only with the
disappearance of the latter would mythos
be reconciled. Would not violence itself
be forgotten as in the onrushing wave of
the child’s sleep? Would not in the end the
disappearance of the beggar nevertheless
entirely compensate, for what was done to
him and which could not be compensated for?
Doesn’t there lurk in all persecution by
human beings, who, along with the little
dog, incite the whole of nature against the
weak, the hope that the last trace of persecution
would be extirpated, which is itself the
share of what is natural? Would not the beggar,
who is forced out of the gates of civilization,
find refuge in his homeland, which is emancipated
from the bane [Bann] of the Earth? “Now rest
and let your worries pass, the beggar comes
home at last.” For as long as I can think,
I've been happy with the song, “Between mountain
and deep, deep valley”: by the two rabbits
who were stuffing themselves with grass,
who were shot at by hunters, and upon realizing
they were still alive, ran off. But I only
understood the lesson quite late: reason
can endure only in despair and crisis; it
requires the absurd, in order to not be overcome
by objective madness. One should act exactly
like the rabbits; when the shot rings out,
fall foolishly to the ground as if dead,
collect oneself and one’s senses, and if
one still has any breath, run like blazes.
The energy to fear and that for happiness
are the same, the limitless state of open-mindedness
for experience, raised to self-sacrifice,
in which the one who is overcome can find
themselves again. What would any happiness
be, which did not measure itself according
to the immeasurable sorrow of what is? For
the course of the world is deeply unsettled.
Whoever cautiously adapts to it, partakes
of its madness, while only the eccentric
holds fast and commands the absurdity to
halt. Only the latter may navigate the appearance
[Schein] of calamity, the “unreality of despair,”
and innervate from this, not merely that
one still lives, but that there is still
life. The cunning of the powerless hares
redeems, along with themselves, even the
hunters, whose guilt they pilfer.
129
Customer service. – The culture industry
sanctimoniously claims to follow its consumers
and to deliver what they want. But while
it reflexively denigrates every thought of
its own autonomy and proclaims its victims
as judges, its veiled high-handedness outbids
all the excesses of autonomous art. It is
not so much that the culture industry adapts
to the reactions of its customers, as that
it feigns these latter. It rehearses them,
by behaving as if it itself was a customer.
One could almost suspect, the entire “adjustment”
[in English in original], which it claims
to obey, is ideology; that the more human
beings try, through exaggerated equality,
through the oath of fealty to social powerlessness,
to participate in power and to drive out
equality, the more they attempt to make themselves
resemble others and the whole. “The music
listens for the listeners,” and the film
practices on the scale of a trust the despicable
trick of adults, who, when speaking down
to a child, fall over the gift with the language
which suits only them, and then present the
usually dubious gift with precisely the expression
of lip-smacking joy, that is supposed to
be elicited. The culture industry is tailored
according to mimetic regression, to the manipulation
of suppressed imitation-impulses. Therein
it avails itself of the method, of anticipating
its own imitation by its viewers, and sealing
the consensus that it wishes to establish,
by making it appear as if it already existed.
What makes this all the easier, is that it
can count on such a consensus in a stable
system and can ritually repeat it, rather
than actually having to produce it. Its product
is by no means a stimulus, but a model for
modes of reaction of nonexistent stimuli.
Thus the enthusiastic music titles on the
silver screen, the moronic children’s speech,
the eye-winking folksiness; even the close-up
of the start calls out “How beautiful!,”
as it were. With this procedure the cultural
machine goes so far as to dress down viewers
like the frontally photographed express train
in a moment of tension. The cadence of every
film however is that of the witch, who serves
soup to the little ones she wants to ensorcel
or devour, with the hideous murmur, “Yummy
soup, yummy soup? You'll enjoy it, you'll
enjoy it...” In art, this kitchen fire-magic
was discovered by Wagner, whose linguistic
intimacies and musical spices are always
tasting themselves, and who simultaneously
demonstrated the entire procedure, with the
genius’ compulsion of confession, in the
scene of the Ring, where Mime offers Siegfried
the poisoned potion. Who however is supposed
to chop off the monster’s head, now that
its blond locks have lain for a long time
under the linden tree? [Unter den Linden:
famous boulevard in Berlin]
130
Grey and grey. – Not even its bad conscience
can help the culture industry. Its Spirit
[Geist] is so objective, that it slaps all
its subjects in the face, and so the latter,
agents all, know what the story is and seek
to distance themselves through mental reservations
from the nonsense which they create. The
acknowledgment, that films broadcast ideology,
is itself a broadcast ideology. It is dealt
with administratively by the rigid distinction
between synthetic day-dreams on the one hand,
vehicles of flight from daily life, “escape”
[English in original]; and well-meaning products
on the other hand, which promote correct
social behaviors, providing information,
“conveying a message” [in English in original].
The prompt subsumption under “escape” [in
English in original] and “message” [in English
in original] expresses the untruth of both
types. The mockery against “escape” [in English
in original], the standardized outrage against
superficiality, is nothing but the pathetic
echo of the old-fashioned ethos, which denounces
gambling, because it cannot play along with
such in the prevailing praxis. The escape-films
are so dreadful not because they turn their
back on an existence squeezed dry, but because
they do not do so energetically enough, because
they are squeezed just as dry, because the
satisfactions which they pretend to give,
converge with the humiliation of reality,
with renunciation. The dreams have no dream.
Just as the technicolor heroes don’t allow
us to forget for a second that they are normal
human beings, typecast prominent faces and
investments, what is unmistakably revealed
under the thin flutter of schematically produced
fantasy is the skeleton of cinema-ontology,
the entire prescribed hierarchy of values,
the canon of what is unwanted and what is
to be imitated. Nothing is more practical
than “escape” [in English in original], nothing
is more wedded to bustle: one is kidnapped
into the distance only to have it hammered
into one’s consciousness, that even at a
distance, the laws of the empirical mode
of life are undisturbed by empirical deviations.
The “escape” [in English in original] is
full of “message” [in English in original].
That is how the “message” [in English in
original], the opposite, looks, which wishes
to flee from flight. It reifies the resistance
against reification. One need only hear experts
talk about how a splendid work of the silver
screen has, next to other merits, also a
constitution, in the same tone of voice that
a pretty actress is described as even having
“personality” [in English in original]. The
executive can easily decide at the conference,
that the escape-film must be given, next
to more expensive additions, an ideal such
as: human beings should be noble, helpful
and good. Separated from the immanent logic
of the entity, from the thing, the ideal
turns into something produced on tap, the
reform of ameliorable grievances, transfigured
charity, thereby simultaneously tangible
and void. They prefer most of all to broadcast
the rehabilitation of drunks, whose impoverished
euphoria they envy. By representing a society
hardened in itself, according to anonymous
laws, as if good will alone were enough to
help matters, that society is defended even
where it is honestly attacked. What is reflected
is a kind of popular front of all proper
and right-thinking people. The practical
Spirit [Geist] of the “message” [in English
in original], the tangible demonstration
of how things can be done better, allies
itself with the system in the fiction, that
a total social subject, which does not exist
at present, can make everything okay, if
one could only assemble all the pieces and
clear up the root of the evil. It is quite
pleasant, to be able to vouch for one’s efficiency.
“Message” [in English in original] turns
into “escape” [in English in original]: those
swept up in cleaning the house in which they
live, forget the ground on which it was built.
What “escape” [in English in original] would
really be, the antipathy, turned into a picture,
against the whole, all the way into what
is formally constituted, could recoil into
a “message” [in English in original], without
expressing it, indeed precisely through tenacious
asceticism against the suggestion.
131
Wolf as grandmother. – The strongest argument
of the apologists for film is the crudest,
its massive consumption. They declare the
drastic medium of the culture industry to
be popular art. The independence of norms
of the autonomous work is supposed to discharge
it from aesthetic responsibility, a responsibility
whose standards prove to be reactionary in
relation to film, just as in fact all intentions
of the artistic ennoblement of film have
something awry, something badly elevated,
something lacking in form – something of
the import for the connoisseur. The more
that film pretends to be art, the more fraudulent
it becomes. Its protagonists can point to
this and even, as critics of the meanwhile
kitschy interiority, appear avant-garde next
to its crude material kitsch. If one grants
this as a ground, then they become, strengthened
by technical experience and facility with
the material, nearly irresistible. The film
is not a mass art, but is merely manipulated
for the deception of the masses? But the
wishes of the masses make themselves felt
incessantly through the market; its collective
production alone would guarantee its collective
essence [Wesen]; only someone completely
outside of reality would presume to see clever
manipulators in the producers; most are talentless,
certainly, but where the right talents coincide,
it can succeed in spite of all the restrictions
of the system. The mass taste which the film
obeys, is by no means that of the masses
themselves, but foisted on them? But to speak
of a different mass taste than the one they
have now, would be foolish, and what is called
popular art, has always reflected domination.
According to such logic, it is only in the
competent adaptation of production to given
needs, not in consideration of a utopian
audience, that the nameless general will
can take shape. Films are full of lying stereotypes?
But stereotyping is the essence of popular
art, fairy-tales know the rescuing prince
and the devil just as films have the hero
and villain, and even the barbaric cruelty,
which divided the world into good and evil,
is something film has in common with the
greatest fairy-tales, which have the stepmother
dance to death in red-hot iron shoes.
All this is can be countered, only by consideration
of the fundamental concepts presupposed by
the apologists. Bad films are not to be charged
with incompetence: the most gifted are refracted
by the bustle, and the fact that the ungifted
stream towards them, is due to the elective
affinity between lies and swindlers. The
idiocy is objective; improvements in personnel
could not create a popular art. The latter’s
idea was formed in agrarian relationships
or simple commodity economies. Such relationships
and their character of expression are those
of lords and serfs, profiteers and disadvantaged,
but in an immediate, not entirely objectified
form. They are to be sure not less furrowed
by class differences than late industrial
society, but their members are not yet encompassed
by the total structure, which reduces individual
subjects to mere moments, in order to unite
them, as those who are powerless and isolated,
into the collective. That there are no longer
folk does not however mean that, as Romanticism
propagated, the masses are worse. On the
contrary, what is revealed precisely now
in the new, radical alienated form of society
is the untruth of the older one. Even the
traits, which the culture industry reclaims
as the legacy of popular art, become thereby
suspect. The film has a retroactive energy:
its optimistic horror brings to light what
always served injustice in the fairy-tale,
and evokes in the parade of villains the
countenances of those, which the integral
society condemns and whose condemnation was
ever the dream of socialization. That is
why the extinction of individual art is no
justification for one which acts as if it
its subject, which reacts archaically, were
the natural one, while this last is the syndicate,
albeit unconscious, of a pair of giant firms.
If the masses themselves, as customers, have
an influence on the film, this remains as
abstract as the ticket stub, which steps
into the place of nuanced applause: the mere
choice between yes and no to something offered,
strung between the discrepancy of concentrated
power and scattered powerlessness. Finally,
the fact that numerous experts, also simple
technicians, participate in the making of
a film, no more guarantees its humanity than
the decisions of competent scientific bodies
vis-à-vis bombs and poison gas. The high-flown
talk of film art stands indeed to benefit
scribblers, who wish to get ahead; the conscious
appeal to naïvété, however, to the block-headedness
of the subalterns, long since permeated by
the thoughts of the master, will not do.
Film, which today clings as unavoidably to
human beings, as if it was a piece of themselves,
is simultaneously that which is most distant
from their human determination, which is
realized from one day to the next, and its
apologetics live on the resistance against
thinking through this antinomy. That the
people who make films are by no means intriguers,
says nothing against this. The objective
Spirit [Geist] of manipulation prevails through
rules of experience, estimations of situations,
technical criteria, economically unavoidable
calculations, the entire deadweight of the
industrial apparatus, without even having
to censor itself, and even those who questioned
the masses, would find the ubiquity of the
system reflected back at them. The producers
function as little as subjects as their workers
and buyers, but solely as parts of an independent
machinery. The Hegelian-sounding commandment,
however, that mass art must respect the real
taste of the masses and not that of negativistic
intellectuals, is usurpation. The opposition
of film, as an all-encompassing ideology,
to the objective interests of human beings,
its entanglement with the status quo of the
profit-system, its bad conscience and deception
can be succinctly cognized. No appeal to
a factually accessible state of consciousness
would have the right of veto against the
insight, which reaches beyond this state
of consciousness, by disclosing its contradiction
to itself and to objective relationships.
It is possible, that the Fascist professor
was right and that even the folk songs, as
they were, lived from the degraded cultural
heritage of the upper class. It is not for
nothing that all popular art is crumbly and,
like films, not “organic.” But between the
old injustice, in whose voice a lament is
still audible, even where it transfigures
itself, and the alienation which upholds
itself as connectedness, which cunningly
creates the appearance [Schein] of human
intimacy with loudspeakers and advertising
psychology, there is a distinction similar
to the one between the mother, who soothes
the child who is afraid of demons with a
fairy-tale in which the good are rewarded
and the evil are punished, and the cinema
product, which drives the justice of each
world order into the eyes and ears of audiences
of every land harshly, threateningly, in
order to teach them anew, and more thoroughly,
the old fear. The fairy-tale dreams which
call so eagerly for the child in the adult,
are nothing but regression, organized by
total enlightenment, and where they tap the
audience on the shoulder most intimately,
they betray them most thoroughly. Immediacy,
the community produced by films, is tantamount
to the mediation without a remainder, which
degrades human beings and everything human
so completely to things, that their contrast
to things, indeed even the bane [Bann] of
reification itself, cannot be perceived anymore.
Film has succeeded in transforming subjects
into social functions so indiscriminately,
that those who are entirely in its grasp,
unaware of any conflicts, enjoy their own
dehumanization as human, as the happiness
of warmth. The total context of the culture
industry, which leaves nothing out, is one
with total social delusion. That is why it
so easily dispatches counter-arguments.
132
Expensive reproduction. [Piperdruck] – Society
is integral, before it ever becomes ruled
as totalitarian. Its organization encompasses
even those who feud against it, and normalizes
their consciousness. Even intellectuals who
have all the political arguments against
bourgeois ideology handy, are subjected to
a process of standardization which, whether
in crassly contrasting content or through
the readiness on their part to be comfortable,
brings them closer to the prevailing Spirit
[Geist], such that their standpoint objectively
becomes always more arbitrary, dependent
on flimsy preferences or their estimation
of their own chances. What appears to them
as subjectively radical, objectively belongs
through and through to the compartment of
a schema, reserved for them and their kind,
so that radicalism is degraded to abstract
prestige, the legitimation of those who know
what today’s intellectuals should be for
and against. The good things, for which they
opt, have long since been acknowledged, their
numbers accordingly limited, as fixed in
the value-hierarchy as those in the student
fraternities. While they denounce official
kitsch, their sensibility is dependent, like
obedient children, on nourishment already
sought out in advance, on the cliches of
hostility to cliches. The dwellings of young
bohemians resemble their spiritual household.
On the wall, deceptively original color prints
of famous artists, such as Van Gogh’s Sunflowers
or the Café at Arles, on the bookshelf derivative
works on socialism and psychoanalysis and
a little sex-research for the uninhibited
with inhibitions. In addition, the Random
House edition of Proust – Scott Moncrieff’s
translation deserved a better fate – exclusivity
at reduced prices, whose exterior alone,
the compact-economic form of the omnibus,
is a mockery of the author, whose every sentence
knocks a received opinion out of action,
while he now plays, as a prize-winning homosexual,
the same role with youth as books on animals
of the forest and the North Pole expedition
in the German home. Also, the record player
with the Lincoln cantata of a brave soul,
which deals essentially with railroad stations,
next to the obligatory eye-catching folklore
from Oklahoma and a pair of brassy jazz records,
which make one feel simultaneously collective,
bold and comfortable. Every judgment is approved
by friends, they know all the arguments in
advance. That all cultural products, even
the non-conformist ones, are incorporated
into the mechanism of distribution of large-scale
capital, that in the most developed lands
a creation which does not bear the imprimatur
of mass production can scarcely reach any
readers, observers, or listeners, refuses
the material in advance for the deviating
longing. Even Kafka is turned into a piece
of inventory in the rented apartment. Intellectuals
themselves are already so firmly established,
in their isolated spheres, in what is confirmed,
that they can no longer desire anything which
is not served to them under the brand of
“highbrow” [in English in original]. Their
sole ambition consists of finding their way
in the accepted canon, of saying the right
thing. The outsider status of the initiates
is an illusion and mere waiting-time. It
would be giving them too much credit to call
them renegades; they wear overlarge horn-rimmed
glasses on their mediocre faces, solely to
better pass themselves off as “brilliant”
to themselves and to others in the general
competition. They are already exactly like
them. The subjective precondition of opposition,
the non-normalized judgment, goes extinct,
while its trappings continue to be carried
out as a group ritual. Stalin need only clear
his throat, and they throw Kafka and Van
Gogh on the trash-heap.
133
Contribution to intellectual history. – In
the back of my copy of Zarathrustra, dated
1910, there are publisher’s notices. They
are all tailored to that clan of Nietzsche
readers, as imagined by Alfred Körner in
Leipzig, someone who ought to know. “Ideal
Life-goals by Adalbert Svoboda. Svoboda has
ignited a brightly shining beacon in his
works, which cast light on all problems of
the investigative Spirit of human beings
[Menschengeist] and reveal before our eyes
the true ideals of reason, art and culture.
This magnificently conceived and splendidly
realized book is gripping from beginning
to end, enchanting, stimulating, instructive
and has the same effect on all truly free
Spirits [Geister] as a nerve-steeling bath
and fresh mountain air.” Signed: Humanity,
and almost as recommendable as David Friedrich
Strauss. “On Zarathrustra by Max Ernst. There
are two Nietzsches. One is the world-famous
fashionable philosopher, the dazzling poet
and phenomenally gifted master of style,
who is now the talk of all the world, from
whose works a few misunderstood slogans have
become the intellectual baggage of the educated.
The other Nietzsche is the unfathomable,
inexhaustible thinker and psychologist, the
great discerner of human beings and valuer
of life of unsurpassable spiritual energy
and power of thought, to who the most distant
future belongs. To bring this other Nietzsche
to the most imaginative and serious-minded
of contemporary human beings is the intent
of the following two essays contained in
this short book.” In that case I would still
prefer the former. The other goes: “A Philosopher
and a Noble Human Being, a Contribution to
the Characteristics of Friedrich Nietzsche,
by Meta von Salis-Marschlins. The book grabs
out attention by the faithful reproduction
of all the sensations which Nietzsche’s personality
evoked in the self-conscious soul of a woman.”
Don’t forget the whip, instructed Zarathrustra.
Instead of this, is offered: “The Philosophy
of Joy by Max Zerbst. Dr. Max Zerbst starts
out from Nietzsche, but strives to overcome
a certain one-sidedness in Nietzsche... The
author is not given to cool abstractions,
it is rather a hymn, a philosophical hymn
to joy, which he delivers in spades.” Like
a student spree. Only no one-sidedness. Better
to run straight to the heaven of the atheists:
“The Four Gospels, German, with introduction
and commentary by Dr. Heinrich Schmidt. In
contrast to the corrupted, heavily edited
form, in which the gospels have been delivered
to us as literature, this new edition goes
back to the source and may be of high value
not only for truly religious human beings,
but also for those ‘anti-Christs’, who press
for social action.” The choice is difficult,
but one can take comfort from the fact that
both elites will be as agreeable as the synopticists:
“The Gospel of Modern Humanity (A Synthesis:
Nietzsche and Christ) by Carl Martin. An
astounding treatise of edification. Everything
which is taken up in the science and art
of the present has taken up the struggle
with the Spirits [Geistern] of the past,
all of this has taken root and blossomed
, in this mature and yet so young mind [Gemüt].
And mark well: this ‘modern’, entirely new
human being creates for itself and us the
most revivifying potion from an age-old spring:
that other message of redemption, whose purest
sounds resonate in the Sermon on the Mount...
Even in the form of the simplicity and grandeur
of those words!” Signed: Ethical Culture.
The miracle passed away nearly forty years
ago, plus twenty more or so, since the genius
in Nietzsche justifiably decided to break
off communication with the world. It didn’t
help – exhilarated, unbelieving priests and
exponents of that organized ethical culture,
which later drove formerly well-to-do ladies
to emigrate and get by as waitresses in New
York, have thrived on the posthumous legacy
of someone who once worried whether someone
was listening to him sing “a secret barcarole.”
Even then, the hope of leaving behind a message
in a bottle amidst the rising tide of barbarism
was a friendly vision: the desperate letters
have been left in the mud of the age-old
spring, and have been reworked by a band
of noble-minded people and other scoundrels
to highly artistic but low-priced wall decorations.
Only since then has the progress of communication
truly gotten into gear. Who are we to cast
aspersion on the freest spirits [Geister]
of them all, whose trustworthiness possibly
even outbids those of their contemporaries,
if they no longer write for an imaginary
posterity, but solely for the dead God?
134
Juvenal’s error. – It’s difficult to write
satire. It is not merely because of a condition,
which needs the latter more than ever, which
mocks all mockery. The means of irony have
ended up in contradiction with the truth.
Irony convicts the object, by taking it for
what it claims to be, and without judgment,
by blocking out, as it were, the reflecting
subject, measuring it by its being-in-itself.
It points out the negative by confronting
the positive with its own claim to positivity.
It sublates itself, as soon as it adds the
interpreting word. It thus presupposes the
idea of what is self-evident, originally
of social resonance. Only where a compelling
consensus of subjects is assumed, is subjective
reflection, the fulfillment of the conceptual
act, superfluous. Those who have laughter
on their side, don’t need proof. Historically,
over the millennia, all the way to the age
of Voltaire, satire has been happy to consort
with those who are stronger and could be
relied upon, with authority. Typically it
agitated for older strata, threatened by
the newer stages of the enlightenment, which
sought to support their traditionalism with
enlightened means: its immemorial object
was the decline of morals [Sitten]. That
is why what once flashed like a rapier, appears
to those born to later generations like a
thick truncheon. The double-tongued spiritualization
of the appearance [Erscheinung] always wishes
to show the satirist as amusing, as the height
of progress; the metric however is that which
is endangered by progress, which remains
nevertheless so widely disseminated as a
valid ideology, that the phenomenon singled
out for denunciation is dismissed, without
even being granted a fair trial. The comedies
of Aristophanes, in which obscene tales are
supposed to expose fornication, functioned
as the modernistic laudatio temporis acti
[Latin: praise for times past] for the rabble,
which it defamed. With the victory of the
bourgeois class in the Christian era, the
function of irony loosened up. It has at
times run over to the side of the oppressed,
especially where these latter were in truth
no longer anything of the sort. Admittedly,
as something imprisoned in its own form,
it has an authoritarian legacy, which never
totally divested itself of an unprotesting
nastiness. Only with the decline of the bourgeoisie
did it sublimate itself into the appeal of
an idea of humanity, which no longer permitted
any reconciliation with the existent and
its consciousness. But even to these ideas,
self-evidence was what counted: no doubt
in the objective-immediate evidence arose;
no witticism of Karl Kraus hesitates to decide
who is responsible and who is a scoundrel,
what is Spirit [Geist] and what is stupidity,
what is language and what is a newspaper.
The vehemence [Gewalt: violence, power] of
his sayings is due to his quick-wittedness.
Just as they stop at no question, in the
lightning-quick consciousness of the matter-at-hand
[Sachverhalts], so too do they leave no question
open. The more emphatically however the prose
of Kraus posits its humanism as an invariant,
the more it takes on restorative qualities.
It condemns corruption and decadence, the
literati and the Futurists, without having
anything to commend itself over the zealots
of the natural condition other than the cognition
of their awfulness. That in the end the intransigence
against Hitler showed itself to be yielding
in the case of Schuschnigg, does not attest
to a lack of courage, but the antinomy of
satire. This latter needs something to hold
on to, and he, who called himself the grouch
[Nörgler], bent to its positivity. Even the
denunciation of Schmock [stereotypical hack
journalist] contains, beside its truth, its
critical element, something of the “common
sense” [in English in original], which cannot
stand the fact that someone talks in such
windy terms. The hatred of those who would
like to seem more than what they are, holds
them fast with the facts of their constitution.
The incorruptibility vis-à-vis what is artificial,
for the simultaneously unredeemed and commercially
oriented pretension of the Spirit [Geistes],
unmasks those who failed to measure up to
what stands before their eyes as something
elevated. This elevation is power and success
and stands revealed, through the botched
identification, as itself a lie. But the
faiseur [French: miracle-worker] always embodies
at the same time utopia: even false jewels
radiate with a powerless childhood dream,
and this latter is condemned, because it
failed, adducing itself, as it were, before
the forum of success. All satire is blind
to the forces, which are released during
disassembly [Zerfall: disintegration]. That
is why terminal decline has absorbed the
powers of satire. The scorn of the leaders
of the Third Reich for emigres and liberal
state officials was the latest version of
this, a scorn whose power consisted solely
in muscle-flexing. The impossibility of satire
today is not to be blamed, as sentimentality
would have it, on the relativism of values,
on the absence of binding norms. Rather,
consensus itself, the formal a priori of
irony, has turned into the content-based
universal consensus. As such, it would be
the sole worthy object of irony and simultaneously
pulls the rug from underneath it. Its medium,
the difference between ideology and truth,
has vanished. The former is resigned to the
confirmation of reality through its mere
duplication. Irony once expressed: this is
what it claims to be, but that is what it
is; today however the world alleges that
things are just so, even in the radical lie,
and that such a simple finding coincides
with what is good. There is no crack in the
sheer cliff of the existent, to which the
grasp of the ironist may cling. Those who
fall are regaled by the hellish laughter
of the treacherous object, which disempowers
them. The gesture of the non-conceptual “that’s
that” is exactly the one which the world
turns against each of its victims, and the
transcendental consensus, which dwells in
irony, becomes ludicrous before the real
consensus of those which it should attack.
Against the blood-drenched seriousness of
the total society, which has absorbed its
counter-authority as the helpless objection
which irony formerly struck down, there stands
solely blood-drenched seriousness, the understood
truth.
135
Sacrificial lamb. – Dictating is not merely
more comfortable, and is not merely a spur
to the concentration, but has in addition
an objective advantage. Dictation makes it
possible for the author to slide into the
position of the critic during the earliest
phases of the production process. What one
puts down is non-binding, provisional, mere
material for reworking; once transcribed,
however, it appears as something alienated
and to a certain extent objective. One need
not fear establishing anything, which ought
not to remain, for one does not have to write:
one takes responsibility by playing a practical
joke on responsibility. The risk of formulation
takes the harmless initial form of effortlessly
presented memos, then work on something which
already exists, so that one can no longer
even perceive one’s own temerity. In view
of the difficulty, which has increased to
desperate levels, of any theoretical expression,
such tricks are a blessing. They are a technical
means of assistance of dialectical procedure,
which makes statements, in order to take
them back and nevertheless hold them fast.
Thanks however are due to those who take
dictation, when they flush out the author
at the right moment through contradiction,
irony, nervousness, impatience and lack of
respect. They draw rage to themselves. This
rage is channeled from the storehouse of
the bad conscience, with which authors otherwise
mistrust their own texts and which the author
would be that much more stubborn about leaving
in the presumably holy text. The emotional
affect, which ungratefully turns against
the burdensome helper, benevolently purifies
the relation to the matter [Sache].
136
Exhibitionist. [in English in original]-
Artists do not sublimate. It is a psychoanalytic
illusion to think that they neither satisfy
their desires nor repress them, but transform
them into socially acceptable achievements,
into their entities [Gebilde]; incidentally,
legitimate works of art are today without
exception socially unacceptable. On the contrary,
artists display violent, free-floating instincts,
which simultaneously collide with reality
and are marked by neurosis. Even the petty
bourgeois stereotype of the dramatist or
violinist as a synthesis of nerve-bundles
and heart-breaking is closer to the mark
than the no less petty bourgeois drive-economy,
according to which the Sunday’s children
of renunciation are let loose in symphonies
and novels. Their part is rather a hysterically
exaggerated lack of inhibition vis-à-vis
all humanly conceivable fears; a narcissism
driven to the borders of paranoia. Against
what is sublimated, they have idiosyncrasies.
They are irreconcilable to the aesthetes,
indifferent to cultivated milieus, and they
recognize in the tasteful mode of life the
inferior reaction-formation towards the propensity
for what is inferior, as surely as the psychologists
who misunderstand them. They have been attracted,
everywhere from the letters of Mozart to
his young Augsburg cousin to the word-jokes
of the embittered tutor, to what is off-color,
foolish, improper. They do not fit into Freudian
theory, because it lacks an adequate concept
of expression, in spite of all its insight
into the functioning of symbolism of dreams
and neuroses. It is certainly illuminating,
that an uncensored drive-impulse, once expressed,
cannot be called repressed, even when it
no longer wishes to demand a goal which it
does not find. On the other hand, the analytic
distinction between locomotor – “real” –
and hallucinatory satisfaction points in
the direction of the difference of satisfaction
and undistorted expression. But expression
is not hallucination. It is appearance [Schein],
measured by the reality-principle, and would
like to bypass this latter. What is subjective
never seeks, however, to substitute itself
through the appearance [Schein] in delusive
fashion, as through a symptom, in place of
reality. Expression negates the reality,
by holding up to it, what does not resemble
it, but it does not deny it; it looks at
the conflict straight in the eye – the conflict
which otherwise results in the blind symptom.
What the expression has in common with repression,
is that the impulse finds itself blocked
by reality. That impulse, and the entire
context of experience which belongs to it,
is denied immediate communication with the
object. As expression it comes to the unfalsified
phenomenon [Erscheinung] of itself and thereby
of resistance, in sensuous imitation. It
is so strong, that it experiences its modification
to a mere picture, the price of survival,
without being mutilated on its way outside.
Instead of setting the goal of its own subjective-censoring
“processing,” it sets something objective:
its polemical revelation [Offenbarung]. This
distinguishes it from sublimation: every
successful expression of the subject, one
might say, is a small victory over the play
of forces of its own psychology. The pathos
of art stems from the fact that precisely
by withdrawing into the imagination, it gives
the hegemony of reality what is its due,
and nevertheless does not resign itself to
adaptation, does not perpetuate the violence
of what is externalized in the deformation
of what is internalized. For that reason,
those who achieve this must without exception
pay dearly as individuals, because they are
left helplessly behind their own expression,
which outpaces their psychology. Thereby
however they awaken, no less than their products,
doubts in the ranking of works of art under
cultural achievements ex definitione [Latin:
by definition]. No work of art can, in the
social organization, evade its membership
in culture, but none, which is more than
arts-and-crafts, exists which does not turn
to culture with a dismissive gesture: that
it became a work of art. Art is as hostile
to art as artists. In the renunciation of
the drive-goal it keeps faith with this drive-goal,
unmasking what is socially desirable, which
Freud naively glorified as sublimation, which
in all likelihood does not exist.
137
Small pains, great songs. – Contemporary
mass culture is historically necessary not
merely as the consequence of the embrace
of the entire life by monster enterprises,
but as the consequence of what today seems
most utterly opposed to the prevailing standardization
of consciousness, aesthetic subjectification.
Indeed the more that artists went towards
the inner, the more they learned to renounce
the infantile fun of imitating of what is
external. But at the same time, they learned,
by virtue of reflecting on the soul, to control
themselves more and more. The progress of
its technics, which constantly brought greater
freedom and independence from what is heterogenous,
resulted in a kind of reification, the technification
of inwardness as such. The greater the virtuosity
by which artists express themselves, the
less must they “be” what they express, and
the more what is to be expressed, indeed
the content of subjectivity itself, becomes
a mere function of the production process.
Nietzsche sensed this, when he accused Wagner,
the tamer of expression, of hypocrisy, without
recognizing that it was not a question of
psychology, but of a historical tendency.
The transformation of expressive content
from an unguided impulse into a material
for manipulation makes it however simultaneously
tangible, presentable, salable. The lyric
subjectification in Heine, for example, does
not stand in a simple contradiction to his
commercial traits, rather what is salable
is itself a subjectivity administered by
subjectivity. The virtuoso usage of the “scale,”
which has defined artists since the 19th
century, crosses over out of its own drive-energy
into journalism, spectacle, and calculation,
not primarily through betrayal. The law of
movement of art, which amounts to the control
and thereby the objectification of the subject
by itself, means its downfall: the hostility
to art of film, which administratively looks
over all materials and emotions, in order
to deliver them to the customer, the second
exteriority, originates in art as the increasing
domination over inner nature. The oft-cited
play-acting of the modern artists, however,
their exhibitionism, is the gesture, through
which they put themselves as goods on the
market.
138
Who is who. [in English in original] – The
self-flattering conviction of the naivety
and purity of artists or professors lives
on in its inclination, to explain away difficulties
by the cunning interestedness, the practically
calculating Spirit [Geist] of the counter-parties.
But just as every construction, in which
one is justified and the world is unjustified,
every insistence on one’s own title, tends
to justify the world in oneself, so too do
things stand with the antithesis of pure
will and slyness. The intellectual outsider,
who knows what to expect, behaves reflectively
today, steered by a thousand political tactical
considerations, cautious and suspicious.
The ones who understand each other, however,
whose realm has long since converged across
party lines on the way to living-space [Lebensraum:
notorious term of Nazi propaganda], no longer
consider the calculations necessary, which
they were once capable of. They are so reliably
committed to the rules of reason, their state
of interests have sedimented themselves so
transparently into their thought, that they
have once again become innocuous. If one
investigates their shadowy plans, their judgments
are metaphysically true, because they are
related to the gloomy course of the world,
but psychologically false: they end up in
the objectively increasing persecution-mania.
Those who commit betrayal and iniquity according
to their function and sell themselves and
their friends to power, require no cunning
or ulterior motivation for this, no planning
institution of the ego, but conversely need
only rely on their reactions and the unthinking
satisfaction of the demands of the moment,
in order to easily fulfill, what others could
achieve solely through tortuously complex
machinations. They inspire trust, by proclaiming
it. They watch to see how things fall out
for them, live hand to mouth, and recommend
themselves as simultaneously unegoistic and
as subscribers to a condition, which ensures
that they will lack for nothing. Because
all of them solely pursue their particular
interest, without conflict, this interest
appears once more as general and disinterested,
as it were. Their gestures are open, spontaneous,
disarming. They are nice and their critics
are evil. Because they are not even left
with the independence of action, which would
oppose the interest, they depend on the good
will of others and are themselves of good
will. The abstract interest, as something
entirely mediated, creates a second immediacy,
while those who are not yet completely encompassed
are unnaturally compromised. In order to
not be ground beneath the wheel, these latter
must thoroughly outbid the world in worldiness
and are easily convicted of clumsy overcompensation.
Suspicion, lust for power, lack of camaraderie,
falsity, vanity and lack of seriousness are
what they are compulsively reproached for.
Social enchantment unavoidably turns those
who do not play along into self-seeking types,
while those without a self, who live according
the reality principle, are called selfless.
139
Address unknown. – Cultivated philistines
are wont to demand that the work of art should
give them something. They are no longer outraged
at what is radical, but draw back with the
shamelessly modest assertion, that they just
don’t understand. This latter clears away
the resistance, the last negative relation
to the truth, and the offending object is
catalogued with a smile under its own, under
consumer goods, between which one has a choice
and which one can reject, without incurring
any responsibility. One is just too dumb,
too outmoded, one just can’t keep up, and
the smaller one makes oneself out to be,
the more reliably do they participate in
the mighty unison of the vox inhumana populi
[Latin: inhuman voice of the people], in
the guiding force [Gewalt] of the petrified
spirit of the age [Zeitgeist]. What is not
comprehensible, from which no-one gets anything,
turns from an outraging crime into mere foolishness,
deserving of pity. They displace the temptation
along with the spike. That someone is supposed
to be given something, by all appearances
the postulate of substantiality and fullness,
cuts off these latter and impoverishes the
giving. Therein however the relationship
of human beings comes to resemble the aesthetic
one. The reproach that someone gives nothing,
is execrable. If the relation is sterile,
then one should dissolve it. Those however
who hold fast to it and nevertheless complain,
always lack the organ of sensation: imagination.
Both must give something, happiness as precisely
what is not exchangeable, what cannot be
complained about, but such giving is inseparable
from taking. It is all over, if the other
is no longer reachable by what one finds
for them. There is no love, that would not
be an echo. In myths, the guarantor of mercy
was the acceptance of sacrifice; love, however,
the after-image of the sacrificial act, pleads
for the sake of this acceptance, if it is
not to feel itself to be under a curse. The
decline of gift-giving today goes hand in
hand with the hardening against taking. It
is tantamount however to that denial of happiness,
which alone permits human beings to hold
fast to their manner of happiness. The wall
would be breached, where they received from
others, what they themselves must reject
with a sour grimace. That however is difficult
for them due to the exertion which taking
requires of them. Isolated in technics, they
transfer the hatred of the superfluous exertion
of their existence onto the energy expenditure,
which pleasure requires as a moment of its
being [Wesen] all the way into its sublimations.
In spite of countless small moments of relief,
their praxis remains an absurd toil; the
squandering of energy in happiness, however,
the latter’s secret, they do not tolerate.
That is why things must go according to the
English expression, “relax and take it easy”
[in English in original], which comes from
the language of nurses, not the one of exuberance.
Happiness is outmoded: uneconomic. For its
idea, sexual unification, is the opposite
of being at loose ends, namely ecstatic tension,
just as that of all subjugated labor is disastrous
tension.
140
Consecutio temporum. [Latin: sequence of
tenses] – When my first composition instructor
tried to drive the atonal nonsense out of
me and failed to persuade me through tales
of the erotic scandals of the atonal composers,
he fell back on trying to pin me down, where
he thought my weakness lay, in the wish to
be up-to-date. The ultra-modern, so ran his
argument, was already no longer modern, the
stimulus I sought had already faded away,
the figures of expression, which excited
me, belonged to an outmoded sentimentality,
and the new youth had, as he liked to call
it, more red blood cells in them. His own
pieces, where orientalist themes were regularly
extended through the chromatic scale, proved
such hyper-subtle considerations to be the
maneuvering of a concert director with a
bad conscience. But I was soon to discover,
that the fashion which he upheld against
my modernity, did in fact resemble, in the
Ur-homeland of the great salons, what he
had cooked up in the provinces. Neoclassicism,
that type of reaction which does not acknowledge
itself to be such, but goes so far as to
portray the reactionary moment as advanced,
was the leading indicator of a massive tendency,
which under fascism and in mass-culture quickly
learned to deal with the tender considerations
of the artistes, who were always hypersensitive
anyway, and to unite the spirit [Geist] of
Courths-Mahler with that of technical progress.
What is modern has truly become unmodern.
Modernity is a qualitative category, not
a chronological one. The less it can be reduced
to an abstract form, the more necessary is
its rejection of the conventional superficial
context, of the appearance [Schein] of harmony,
of the social order, which is reinforced
by mere duplication. The Fascist street thugs,
who clamored furiously against Futurism,
understood more in their rage than the Moscow
censors, who put Cubism on the index of banned
works, because it remained behind the Spirit
[Geist] of the collective times in private
impropriety, or the impudent theater critics,
who find a play by Strindberg or Wedekind
passé [French: obsolete], but find an underground
news report “up-to-date” [in English in original].
Nevertheless the smug banality expresses
a dreadful truth: that in the wake of the
train of the entire society, which would
like to dragoon all expressions into its
organization, what remains behind is what
opposes the wave of the future, as the wife
of Lindbergh called it – the critical construction
of essence [Wesen]. This latter is by no
means merely ostracized by a corrupted public
opinion, but the absurdity affects the matter
[Sache]. The hegemony of the existent, which
constrains the Spirit [Geist] to do exactly
what it does, is so overpowering, that even
the unassimilated expression of protest assumes
the aspect of something tacked together,
disoriented, clueless vis-à-vis the former,
and recalls that provincialism, which once
prophetically suspected modernity of being
retrograde. The psychological regression
of individuals, who exist without an ego,
goes hand in hand with a regression of the
objective Spirit [Geistes], in which dull-wittedness,
primitivity and the sell-out push through
what has long since historically decayed
as the most modern historical power and thereby
consign everything which does not enthusiastically
join the train of regression to the verdict
of yesteryear. Such a quid pro quo of progress
and reaction makes orientating oneself vis-à-vis
contemporary art nearly as difficult as vis-à-vis
politics, and moreover cripples production
itself, such that whoever holds fast to extreme
intentions is made to feel like a backwoods
hick, while the conformists no longer sit
shyly in their arbors [Gartenlaube: arbor,
also the name of 19th century family magazine],
but barrel ahead like rockets into the pluperfect
tense.
141
La nuance / encor’. [French: “nuance / once
more”; quotation from Verlaine’s Poetic Art]
The demand that thinking and knowing should
renounce nuances is not to be summarily dismissed,
as merely giving in to the prevailing dull-wittedness.
If the linguistic nuance could no longer
be perceived, then that would concern it
itself and not merely reception. Language
is, according to its own objective substance,
social expression, even where it separated
itself as something brusquely individual
from society. The changes which it encounters
in communication, reach into the non-communicative
material of the author. What is spoiled in
the words and speech-forms of common usage,
arrives in the sequestered workshop as damaged.
However the historical damage cannot be repaired
there. History does not merely influence
language, but also occurs in the midst of
it. What continues to be used in spite of
customary usage, presents itself as fatuously
provincial or unhurriedly restorative. All
nuances are so thoroughly attacked and inverted
into “flavor” [in English in original], that
even advanced literary subtleties recall
degraded words like gleaming, thoughtful,
snug, aromatic. The institutions against
kitsch become kitschy, artsy-craftsy, with
an overtone of something idiotically consoling
from the world of women, whose soulfulness,
replete with flutes and folk-costumes, became
standard issue in Germany. In the obligatory
level of junk, with which happily surviving
intellectuals apply to the vacant posts of
culture, what yesterday still stylized itself
as consciously linguistic and hostile to
convention reads today like Old Frankish
foppery. German culture seems to be faced
with the alternative of a dreadful second
Biedermeier or paper-administrative banality.
The simplification, however, which is suggested
not merely by market interest, but from excellent
political motives and finally from the historical
consciousness of language itself, does not
so much overcome the nuance, as tyrannically
promote its decay. It offers the sacrifice
to the omnipotence of society. But this latter
is, precisely for the sake of its omnipotence,
as incommensurable with the subject of cognition
and foreign as it was in more innocuous times,
when it avoided daily language. That human
beings are being absorbed into the totality,
without the totality being mastered by human
beings, makes institutionalized speech forms
as void as the naively individual valeurs
[French: standards], and the attempt to refunction
such by accepting them into the literary
medium remains just as fruitless: the engineering
pose of those who cannot read a diagram.
The collective language, which lures authors,
who mistrust their isolation as Romanticism,
is no less Romantic: they usurp the voices
of those for whom they cannot at all immediately
speak, as one of them, because their language,
through reification, is so separated from
them as everyone is from everyone else; because
the contemporary shape of the collective
is in itself speechless. No collective today,
which is entrusted with the expression of
the subject, is already a subject. Whoever
does not follow the dictates of the official
hymn-tone to festivals of liberation, which
are supervised by totalitarians, but means
in earnest what Roger Caillois ambiguously
enough recommended as aridité [French: aridity],
experiences the objective discipline solely
as privation, without getting back a concrete
generality for this. The contradiction between
the abstraction of that language, which wishes
to clean house with what is the bourgeois-subjective,
and its expressly concrete objects, lies
not in the incapacity of the author, but
in a historical antinomy. That subject wishes
to cede itself to the collective, without
being sublated in it. That is why precisely
its renunciation of the private maintains
something private, something chimerical.
Its language mimics, on its own initiative,
the strict construction of society and imagines
that it could make the very cement speak.
As punishment, the unconfirmed common language
incessantly commits faux pas [French: misstep,
mistake] of materiality [Sachlichkeit] at
the expense of the material [Sache], not
so different from the bourgeoisie, when they
wax rhetorical. The logical consequence of
the decay of nuance is neither to obstinately
hold fast to what is decaying, nor to extirpate
every single one, but wherever possible to
outbid the very quality of being nuanced,
to drive it so far, until it recoils from
subjective shading into the purely specific
determination of the object. The writer must
take the greatest care to ensure that the
word means the thing and only this thing,
without sidelong glances, in connection with
the chiseling of every turn of phrase, listening
with patient effort for what bears the linguistic,
in itself, and what does not. Those who are
afraid, however, of falling in spite of everything
behind the spirit of the times [Zeitgeist]
and of being thrown on the trash-heap of
discarded subjectivity, are to be reminded
that what is newly arrived and what is, according
to its content, progressive, are no longer
as one. In a social order, which liquidates
the modern as retrograde, then what may befall
what is retrograde, if it is overtaken by
the judgment, is the truth over which the
historical process rolls. Because no truth
can be expressed, than the one which is capable
of filling the subject, the anachronism becomes
the refuge of what is modern.
142
Which follows German song. [conclusion of
Hölderlin’s Patmos] – Artists like George
have rejected free verse as an inferior form,
as a hybrid of meter and prose. They are
rebutted by Goethe and Hölderlin’s late hymns.
Their technical gaze takes free verse, for
what it considers itself. They are deaf to
the history, which stamps its expression.
Only in the epoch of its decay are free rhythms
nothing but intermittent prose sections,
set in an elevated tone. Where free verse
proves itself to be a form of its own essence
[Wesens], it has emerged from the metrical
strophe, pressing beyond subjectivity. It
turns the pathos of the meter against its
own claim, the strict negation of what is
most strict, just as musical prose, emancipated
from the symmetry of the eight-beat meter,
is due to the implacable principles of construction,
which matured in the articulation of what
is tonally regular. In free rhythm, the rubble
of artistically rhymeless antique strophes
finds its voice. These latter, foreign, extend
into modern languages and serve, by virtue
of such foreignness, to express what is not
exhausted in communication. But they give
way, unsalvageably, to the flood of language
in which they were raised. They signify,
with brittleness, in the midst of the realm
of communication and not to be separated
from the latter by any caprice, distance
and stylization – incognito, as it were –
and without privilege, until the wave of
dreams washes over the helpless verses, as
in Trakls lyrics. It is not for nothing that
the epoch of free verse was the French revolution,
the debut of human dignity and human equality.
But isn’t the conscious procedure of such
verse similar to the law, which language
above all obeys in its unconscious history?
Isn’t all worked prose actually a system
of free rhythms, the attempt to provide cover
for the magic bane [Bann] of what is absolute
and the negation of its appearance [Scheins],
an exertion of the Spirit [Geistes], to rescue
the metaphysical force [Gewalt] of the expression
by virtue of its own secularization? If this
were so, then a ray of light would fall on
the labor of Sisyphus, which every prose
author has taken on themselves, since demythologization
has passed over into the destruction of language
itself. Linguistic quixotry has become a
commandment, because every sentence structure
contributes to the decision as to whether
language as such, ambiguous from Ur-times
to the present, falls prey to the bustle
and the dedicated lies, which belong to such,
or whether it becomes a sacred text, by making
itself demure towards the sacred element,
from which it lives. The ascetic sealing
off of prose against verse is tantamount
to an oath of fealty to song.
143
In nuce. [Latin: in the kernel] – The task
of art today is to bring chaos into order
[Ordnung: social order].
Artistic productivity is the capacity of
volition in involition. Art is magic, emancipated
from the lie of being the truth. Since works
of art were at one time derived from the
fetishes – can one blame the artists, when
they behave just a little fetishistically
towards their products? The art-form which
since time immemorial raised the representation
of the idea to the highest pitch of spiritualization
[Vergeistigung], drama, is simultaneously
according to its innermost prerequisites
oriented towards an audience. When Benjamin
remarked, that the dumb language of things
is translated in painting and sculpture into
a higher, yet related one, then one can assume
in the case of music that it rescues the
name as pure sound – but at the price of
its separation from things. Perhaps the strict
and pure concept of art is to be derived
only from music, while great poetry and great
painting – precisely the greatest – necessarily
carry along with them something material,
something which strides beyond the aesthetic
ensorcelment, something not dissolved into
the autonomy of form. The deeper and more
consequential aesthetics becomes, the more
inappropriate it is to, say, the significant
novels of the 19th century. Hegel perceived
this interest in his polemic against Kant.
The belief disseminated by aesthetes, that
the work of art, as an object of immediate
intuition [Anschauung], is to be understood
purely out of itself, is not valid. The work
of art has its boundary by no means merely
in the cultural prerequisites of an entity,
its “language,” which only the initiated
can follow. Rather, even where there are
no such difficulties in the way, the artwork
demands more, than just abandoning oneself
to it. Whoever wishes to find the Fledermaus
beautiful, must know, that it is the Fledermaus:
their mother must explain to them, that it
is not about an animal with wings but about
a costume mask; they must remember, that
someone said: tomorrow you may go to the
Fledermaus. To stand in the tradition meant:
to experience the work of art as something
confirming, affirming; in it, one takes part
in the reactions of all those who ever saw
it before. If that once falls away, then
the work is exposed in its bareness and fallibility.
The production turns from a ritual into idiocy,
the music turns from a canon of meaningful
phrases into stale and worn-out ones. It
is truly no longer so beautiful. Mass culture
draws from this its right to adaptations.
The weakness of all traditional culture outside
of its tradition delivers the pretext, to
improve it and thereby to barbarically violate
it. What is consoling in the great artworks
lies less in what they express, than the
fact that they succeeded in defying existence
[Dasein]. Hope is closest of all to those
who are inconsolable. Kafka: the solipsist
without ipse [Latin: something] Kafka was
an enthusiastic reader of Kierkegaard, but
he is connected to the existential philosopher
only insofar as one can speak of “annihilated
existences.” Surrealism breaks the promesse
du bonheur [French: promise of happiness].
It sacrifices the appearance [Schein] of
happiness, which mediated every integral
form, to the thought of its truth.
144
Magic flute. – That culturally conservative
ideology, which casts enlightenment and art
as a simple opposition, is untrue insofar
as it fails to recognize the moment of enlightenment
in the genesis of what is beautiful. Enlightenment
does not merely dissolve all the qualities,
which adhere to what is beautiful, but simultaneously
posits the quality of what is beautiful in
the first place. The disinterested pleasure
which works of art excite according to Kant,
can only be understood by virtue of a historical
antithesis, which trembles in every aesthetic
object. What is considered with disinterest
is pleasurable, because it once claimed the
most extreme interest and exactly thereby
cancels out contemplation. This latter is
a triumph of enlightened self-discipline.
Gold and precious gems, in whose perception
beauty and luxury are still mixed up in each
other, were venerated as magical. The light
which they reflected, counted as their selfsame
essence [Wesen]. What was struck by that
light, fell sway to their bane [Bann]. That
bane served early attempts to control nature.
They saw in them instruments to subjugate
the course of the world with its own energy,
cunningly wrested from such. The magic adheres
to the appearance [Schein] of omnipotence.
Such appearance [Schein] fell apart with
the self-enlightenment of the Spirit [Geistes],
but the magic lived on as the power of luminous
things over human beings, who once trembled
in awe of them, and whose eyes remained ensorceled
by such a view, even where its stately claim
was seen through. Contemplation, as the remainder
of the stock of fetishistic worship, is simultaneously
a stage of its overcoming. By giving up its
magical claim, by renouncing the violence,
as it were, with which the subject endowed
it and thought to practice with its help,
luminous things transform themselves into
pictures of something free of violence, into
the promise of a happiness cured of the domination
over nature. That is the Ur-history of luxury,
which has migrated into the meaning of all
art. In the magic of what reveals itself
in absolute powerlessness, of what is beautiful,
complete and void in one, the appearance
[Schein] of omnipotence is negatively reflected
back as hope. It has escaped every test of
strength. Total purposelessness denies the
totality of what is purposeful in the world
of domination, and only by virtue of such
repudiation, which the existent fulfills
in its own principle of reason out of the
latter’s consequentiality, has the existing
society, to this day, become conscious of
a possible one. The bliss of contemplation
consists of disenchanted magic. What radiates,
is the reconciliation of mythos.
145
Art-figure. – To the unprepared, the heaped
up atrocities of household ornaments are
shocking due to their affinity with art-works.
Even the hemispherical paperweights, which
show a fir-tree landscape under glass with
the title, greetings from Bad Wildungen,
somehow recalls to mind Stifter’s green Fichtau,
and the polychrome garden gnome recalls a
wight out of Balzac or Dickens. Neither the
subjects nor the abstract similarity of all
aesthetic appearances [Scheins] are at fault
here. On the contrary, the existence of foolish
and blatant junk expresses the triumph, that
human beings managed to produce out of themselves
a piece of what otherwise ensorcels them
as toilers, and symbolically break the compulsion
of adaptation, by themselves creating what
they feared; and the echoes of the same triumph
resonate from the mightiest works, even though
they renounce that triumph and style themselves
as pure selves without relation to something
imitated. In both cases, freedom from nature
is celebrated and remains thereby mythically
entangled. What human beings were in awe
of, turns into their own disposable thing.
What pictures and postcards have in common,
is that they make the Ur-pictures tangible.
The illustration “L'automne” [French: autumn]
in the reading-book is a déjà vu [French:
already seen], the Eroica [Beethoven’s Third
Symphony], like great philosophy, represents
the idea as total process, yet as if this
latter were immediately, sensuously present.
In the end the outrage over kitsch is the
rage, that it wallows shamelessly in the
happiness of imitation, which has meanwhile
been overtaken by a taboo, while the power
of art-works is still secretly being fed
from imitation. What escapes the bane [Bann]
of existence, its purposes, is not only what
is better and protests, but also what relates
to self-preservation as what is less capable
and dumber. This stupidity grows the more
that autonomous art idolizes its divided,
allegedly innocent self-preservation, instead
of the real, guiltily imperial one. By presenting
the subjective institution as a successful
rescue of objective meaning, it becomes untrue.
What convicts it of this is kitsch; the latter’s
lie does not even feign the truth. It draws
hostility to itself, because it spills the
beans about the secret of art and the affinity
of culture to what is savage. Every work
of art has its indissoluble contradiction
in the “purposefulness without purpose,”
by which Kant defined the aesthetic; by representing
an apotheosis of making, the capacity to
control nature, which posits itself as the
creation of second nature – absolute, free
of purpose, existing-in-itself – while nonetheless
the making of things, and indeed the radiance
of the artifact, is inseparable from precisely
the purposeful rationality which art wishes
to break out of. The contradiction between
the making of things and the existent is
the life-element of art and circumscribes
its law of development, but it is also its
shame: by following, however mediatedly,
the preexisting schema of material production
and “making” its objects, it cannot for its
part escape the question of the “what for,”
whose negation is precisely its purpose.
The closer the mode of production of the
artifact stands to material mass production,
the more naively, as it were, does it provoke
that fatal question. Works of art however
seek to silence the question. “What is perfect,”
in Nietzsche’s words, “should not be something
which has become.” (Human, All Too Human,
Vol. I, Aphorism 145), namely it should not
appear as something made. The more consequentially
however it distanced itself by perfection
from the making of things, the more brittle
its own existence, as something made, necessarily
and simultaneously becomes: the endless pains
taken to wipe away the trace of the making
of things, damages artworks and condemns
them to something fragmentary. After the
disassembly [Zerfall: disintegration] of
magic, art has undertaken to preserve pictures
for posterity. In this work however it avails
itself of the same principle which destroyed
pictures: the root of its Greek name is the
same as that of technics. Its paradoxical
interweaving in the process of civilization
brings it into conflict with its own idea.
The archetypes of today, synthetically prepared
by film and hit-songs for the desolate intuition
of the late-industrial era, do not merely
liquidate art, but blast the delusion into
existence, through flagrant idiocy, which
is already immured in the oldest works of
art and which lends power to even the most
mature. The horror of the end casts a harsh
light on the deception of the origin. – It
is the chance and limitation of French art,
that it never completely uprooted the pride
in the making of small pictures, just as
it differentiates itself most strikingly
from the German kind, in the fact that it
does not acknowledge the category of kitsch.
In countless significant manifestations it
throws a reconciling gaze on what is pleasing,
because it was skillfully produced: what
is sublimely artistic holds on to sensuous
life through a moment of harmless pleasure
in the bien fait [French: well done]. While
this renounces the dialectic of truth and
appearance [Schein], and thereby the absolute
claim of what has not yet become perfection,
the untruth of those who Hadyn called the
grand moguls is also avoided – those who
would utterly reject the fun of little dolls
or postcards and fall prey to fetishism precisely
by driving out the fetish. Taste is the capacity
to balance in art the contradiction between
what is made, and the appearance [Schein]
of what has not yet become; the true art-works
however, never as one with taste, are those
which develop that contradiction to the extreme
and come to themselves, by going to pieces
on such.
146
Trader’s shop. – Hebbel raises the question,
in a surprising diary entry, as to what “would
take the magic from life in one’s later years.”
“Because we see in all the brightly colored,
jerkily moving puppets, the rotor which sets
them in motion, and because just for that
reason the enticing multiplicity of the world
dissolves into a wooden monotony. When a
child sees the acrobats singing, the musicians
playing, the girl carrying water, the coachmen
driving, it thinks to itself, all this is
happening due to pleasure and joy in the
matter; it cannot even begin to imagine that
these people also eat and drink, go to bed
and get up again. We however know, what it’s
all about.” Namely, about acquisition, which
commandeers all those activities as mere
means, reducing them to abstract labor-time,
as something exchangeable. The quality of
things turns from their essence [Wesen] into
the arbitrary phenomenon [Erscheinung: appearance]
of their value. The “equivalent-form” disfigures
all perceptions: what is no longer illuminated
by light of one’s own determination as “pleasure
in the thing,” pales before the eyes. The
organs do not grasp anything sensual in isolation,
but observe whether the color, tone and movement
is there for itself or for something else;
they grow weary of the false diversity and
submerge everything in grey, disappointed
by the deceptive claim of qualities that
they still exist at all, while they are guided
by the purpose of appropriation, to which
they for the most part owe their existence.
The disenchantment of the world of intuition
is the reaction of the sensorium to its objective
determination as a “world of commodities.”
Only things cleansed of appropriation would
be simultaneously colorful and useful: neither
can be reconciled under universal compulsion.
Children however are not so much entangled
in illusions about the “enticing multiplicity”
as Hebbel thinks, rather it is that their
spontaneous perception still comprehends
the contradiction between the phenomenon
and fungibility, which the resigned one of
adults no longer even dares to reach, and
seeks to escape it. Play is their counterstrike
[Gegenwehr: counter, resistance]. What strikes
incorruptible children is the “peculiarity
of the form of equivalence”: “Use-value turns
into the form of appearance of its opposite,
value.” (Marx, Capital I, Vienna 1932, page
61). In their non-purposive doing they deploy
a feint on the side of the use-value against
exchange-value. Precisely by divesting the
things which they handle of their mediated
utility, they seek to rescue in their interaction
with them whatever has good will towards
human beings, rather than towards the exchange
relationship which deforms human beings and
things in equal measure. The little wagons
on wheels lead nowhere, and the tiny barrels
on them are empty; but they keep faith with
its destination [Bestimmung: determination],
by neither practicing nor taking part in
the process of the abstractions which level
out that destination [Bestimmung: determination],
but rather preserve them as allegories of
what they are specifically are. They wait,
scattered to the winds and nevertheless unentangled,
to see if society finally cancels out the
social stigma on them; to see whether praxis,
the life-process between the human being
and the thing, will cease to be practical.
The unreality of games announces that what
is real, is not yet real. They are unconscious
practice exercises of the right life. The
relationship of children to animals rests
entirely on the fact that in the latter,
which Marx even begrudged the surplus value
they deliver to workers, utopia is cloaked.
Because animals exist without any mission
recognizable to human beings, they represent
their own names as expression, as it were
– as what is utterly not exchangeable. This
endears them to children and makes their
contemplation a joy. I am a rhinoceros, signifies
the form of the rhinoceros. Fairy-tales and
operettas know such pictures, and the ludicrous
question of the woman, who asked how we know
that Orion is really called Orion, rises
to the stars.
147
Novissumum Organum. [The newest organon:
reference to Bacon’s Novum Organum, the new
organon] – Long ago it was shown that wage-labor
formed the modern masses, and indeed has
produced the workers themselves. The individual
[Individuum] is universal not merely as the
biological substrate, but simultaneously
as the form of reflection of the social process,
and its consciousness of itself as something
existing in itself, as the appearance [Schein]
which it requires to raise its capacity of
achievement, whereas individuals function
in the modern economy as mere agents of the
law of value. The inner composition of the
individual [Individuum] is to be derived
in itself, not merely out of its social role.
What is decisive in the contemporary phase
is the category of the organic composition
of capital. What this meant in the theory
of accumulation was, “the growth in the mass
of means of production, compared with the
mass of labor-power which brings it to life”
(Marx, Capital I, Vienna 1932, page 655).
When the integration of society, especially
in the totalitarian states, determines subjects
ever more exclusively as partial moments
in the framework of material production,
then the “transformation in the technical
composition of capital” perpetuates itself
through the technological demands of the
production process in those it not only encompasses,
but indeed first constitutes. The organic
composition of human beings is increasing.
That through which subjects are determined
in themselves as means of production and
not as living purposes, rises just like the
share of machinery vis-à-vis variable capital.
The prevalent talk of the “mechanization”
of human beings is misleading, because it
thinks these latter as something static,
which undergoes certain deformations due
to an “outside influence,” as am adaptation
to conditions of production external to them.
But there is no substrate of such “deformations,”
nothing which is ontically interiorized,
on which social mechanisms merely act from
outside: the deformation is not the illness
of human beings, but the illness of the society,
which raises its children as “hereditarily
disadvantaged,” just as biologism projects
onto nature. It is only by means of the process,
which initiates the transformation of labor-power
into a commodity, permeating human beings
utterly and completely and making every one
of their impulses simultaneously commensurable
and objectified into an a priori variety
of the exchange-relationship, is it possible
for life to reproduce itself under the dominating
relations of production. Its organizational
follow-through [Durchorganisation] demands
the amalgamation of what is dead. The will
to live sees itself referred to the repudiation
of the will to live: self-preservation annuls
life in subjectivity. It follows that all
the achievements of adaptation, all the acts
of conforming described by social psychology
and cultural anthropology, are mere epiphenomena.
The organic composition of human beings refers
by no means only to specialized technical
capabilities, but – and this is something
the usual cultural critique wishes at no
price to reveal – equally to their opposite,
the moment of what is natural, which indeed
for its part already originated in the social
dialectic and now falls prey to it. What
still differs in human beings from technics,
is incorporated as a kind of lubrication
of technics. Psychological differentiation,
as it originally emerged in freedom and out
of the division of labor and the compartmentalization
of human beings according to sectors of the
production process, itself steps in the end
into the service of production. “The specialized
virtuoso,” wrote a dialectician thirty years
ago, “the seller of their objectified and
substantialized [versachlichten] intellectual
capacities... ends up in a contemplative
attitude towards the functioning of their
own objectified and substantialized [versachlichten]
capacities. This structure shows itself most
grotesquely in the case of journalism, where
it is precisely subjectivity itself – knowing
things, moods, the capacity to express –
which turns into something abstract, as independent
from the personality of the ‘owner’ as from
the material-concrete essence of the objects,
which are dealt with independently and nomothetically
[eigengesetzlich] as if by a moving mechanism.
The ‘lack of sensibility’ of journalists,
the prostitution of their experiences and
convictions, is only comprehensible as the
peak of capitalist reification.” [citation
from György Lukács, History and Class Consciousness,
London: 1971, page 100] What was here established
as the “phenomena of degeneration” of the
bourgeoisie, which it itself still denounced,
has meanwhile emerged as the social norm,
as the character of full-fledged existence
under late industrialism. It has long since
ceased to be merely a question of the sale
of what is living. Under the a priori of
salability, what is living makes itself,
as the living, into a thing, into equipage.
The ego consciously takes the entire human
being into service as its apparatus. In this
reorganization, the ego gives, as a kind
of enterprise director, so much of itself
to the ego as a means of directing the enterprise,
that it becomes wholly abstract, a mere reference-point:
self-preservation loses its self. Personal
characteristics, from genuine friendliness
to hysterical outbreaks of rage, become serviceable,
until they finally slide perfectly into their
situation-specific assignment. With their
mobilization, they transform themselves.
They remain only as light, fixed and empty
shells of impulses, as material transportable
at will, devoid of personal traits. They
are no longer subjects, but the subject directs
itself at them as its internalized object.
In their boundless accessibility toward the
ego, they are simultaneously alienated from
the latter: entirely passive, they no longer
nourish it. That is the social parthogenesis
of schizophrenia. The separation of personal
characteristics as much from the basis of
the drives as from the self, which commands
them where it previously merely held them
together, causes human beings to pay for
their increasing inner organization with
growing disintegration. The division of labor
which is fulfilled in the individual [Individuum],
its radical objectification, ends up as its
diseased splitting. Thus the “psychotic character,”
the anthropological prerequisite for all
totalitarian mass movements. Precisely the
transition from fixed characteristics to
pushbutton modes of behavior – seemingly
enlivening – is the expression of the rising
organic composition of human beings. Quick
reactions, free of any mediation through
constituted being, do not restore spontaneity,
but establish the person as a measuring instrument,
at the disposal of and read by the center.
The more immediate their signal, the deeper
in truth is mediation reflected in them:
in promptly answering, non-resisting reflexes,
the subject is entirely dissolved. So too
with the biological reflexes, models of the
contemporary social ones, which measured
by subjectivity are something objectified,
something foreign: it is not for nothing
they are often called “mechanical.” The closer
organisms come to death, the more they regress
to jerkiness. It follows that the destructive
tendencies of the masses, which explode in
the totalitarian states of both kinds, are
not so much death-wishes as manifestations
of what they have already become. They murder,
so that whatever seems living to them, resembles
them.
148
Knacker’s yard. – The metaphysical categories
are not merely the veiling ideology of the
social system, but simultaneously express
its essence [Wesens], the truth about it,
and in its transformations are precipitated
those of the most central experiences. Thus
death falls into history, and conversely
this latter conversely is understood through
the former. Its dignity resembled that of
the individual [Individuums]. The autonomy
of such, which originated in the economy,
fulfilled itself in the conception of its
absoluteness, as soon as the theological
hope of its immortality, which empirically
relativized it, faded away. This corresponded
to the emphatic picture of death, which entirely
wiped out the individuated [Individuum],
the substrate of all bourgeois conduct and
thinking. Death was the absolute price of
absolute value. Now it falls, along with
the socially dissolved individuated [Individuum].
Where it is clothed with the old dignity,
it chatters away with the lie, which already
stood ready in its concept: to name what
is impenetrable, to predicate what is subjectless,
to prefabricate what falls out. In the administered
consciousness, however, the truth and untruth
of its dignity are done for, not by virtue
of an otherworldly hope, but in view of the
hopeless lack of energy of the secular world.
“Le monde moderne,” noted the radical Catholic
Charles Péguy already in 1907, “a réussi
à avilir ce qu'il y a peut-être de plus difficile
à avilir au monde, parce que c'est quelque
chose qui a en soi, comme dans sa texture,
une sorte particulière de dignité, comme
une incapacité singulière d'être avili: il
avilit la mort. [French: The modern world
has succeeded in debasing something which
perhaps is the most difficult thing to debase
in the world, because it is something which
in itself, as its texture, has a peculiar
sort of dignity, a singular incapacity to
be debased: it debases death.] (Men and Saints,
New York 1944, page 98). If the individuated
[Individuum] which death annihilates is null,
devoid of self-control and of one’s own being,
then the annihilating power also becomes
null, as if in jest at the Heideggerian formula
of the nihilating [nichtenden] nothingness.
The radical replaceability of the individual
practically makes its death – in complete
contempt – to something revocable, as it
was once conceptualized in Christianity with
paradoxical pathos. Death however becomes
totally incorporated as a quantité négligeable
[French: negligible quantity, minute smidgeon].
For every human being, with all their functions,
society stands ready with a waiting replacement,
who regards the former from the very beginning
as the bothersome holder of the job, as a
candidate for death. The experience of death
is accordingly transformed into the exchange
of functionaries, and what does not completely
go from the natural relationship of death
into the social one, is consigned to hygiene.
Because death is no longer perceived as anything
more than as the dropping out of a natural
life-form from the social club of society,
this has finally domesticated it: dying merely
confirms the absolute irrelevance of the
natural life-form in relation to what is
socially absolute. If the culture industry
anywhere testifies to the transformations
in the organic composition of society, then
it is through the scarcely concealed confession
of this state of affairs. Under its lens,
death begins to become comic. The laughter
which greets it in a certain genre of production
is in all likelihood ambiguous. It still
registers the fear of something amorphous
under the net which the society has spun
over the entirety of nature. But the veil
is so vast and tightly-knit, that the memory
of what is not covered seems foolish, sentimental.
Since the decline of the detective novel
in the works of Edgar Wallace, which seemed
to mock their readers through increasingly
less rational constructions, unsolved mysteries
and crass exaggerations, and nevertheless
magnificently anticipated therein the collective
imago of the totalitarian horror, the genre
of the murder-comedy has formed. While it
continues to poke fun at the false shudder,
it demolishes the pictures of death. It represents
the corpse as what it has turned into, as
a stage prop. It still resembles human beings
and is nevertheless only a thing, as in the
film A Slight Case of Murder, where corpses
are incessantly transported to and fro, allegories
of what they already previously were. Comedy
savors the false abolition of death, which
Kafka described long ago in the history of
the Hunter Gracchus with panic: for the same
reason, music is also beginning to be comic.
What the Nazis perpetrated on millions of
human beings, the modeling of the living
on the dead, then the mass production and
cheapening of death, threw its shadow in
advance on those who are spurred to laugh
at corpses. What is decisive is the assimilation
of biological destruction in the conscious
social will. Only a humanity, which is as
indifferent to death as to its members –
one which itself has died – can administratively
inflict death on myriads. Rilke’s prayer
for one’s own death is the pitiful deception
of the fact that human beings still only
croak.
149
Come off it. – The critique of the tendencies
of contemporary society is automatically
countered, before it is fully expressed,
by saying that things have ever been so.
The excitement thereby so promptly abjured,
testifies merely to the lack of insight into
the invariance of history – to an unreason,
which proudly diagnoses everyone as hysterical.
Moreover, the critic’s attacks are said to
be merely hamming it up for the gallery,
a means of claiming special privileges, while
whatever they are nonetheless upset about
is well known and trivial, so that no-one
can be expected to waste their attention
on such. The evidence of the calamity comes
to benefit its apologists: because everyone
knows everything, no-one is supposed to say
anything, and it may then continue unchallenged,
hidden by silence. What is affirmed is what
philosophies of all political stripes have
trumpeted into the heads of human beings:
that whatever has the persistent gravity
of existence on its side, is thereby right.
One need only be dissatisfied to be already
suspected of being a global dreamer [Weltverbesserer].
The consensus employs the trick of ascribing
to opponents a reactionary thesis of decay,
which is untenable – for is not horror in
fact perennial? – by discrediting the concrete
insight into the negative through its alleged
failure of thought, and those who rise up
against the shadow, are maligned as agents
of the shadow. But even if things were ever
so, although nonetheless neither Timur nor
Genghis Khan nor the British colonial administration
of India deliberately burst the lungs of
millions of human beings with poison gas,
then the eternity of horror is revealed by
the fact that each of its new forms outbids
the older ones. What endures is no invariant
quantum of suffering, but of its progress
towards hell: that is the meaning of the
talk about the growth of antagonisms. Any
other kind would be innocuous and would pass
over into mediating phrases, the renunciation
of the qualitative leap. Those who register
the death-camps as a minor accident in the
victory procession of civilization, the martyrdom
of the Jews as world-historically insignificant,
do not merely fall behind the dialectical
insight, but invert the meaning of one’s
own politics: of stopping the extremity.
Quantity recoils into quality, not only in
the development of the productive forces,
but also in the increase of the pressure
of domination. If the Jews are exterminated
as a group, while the society continues to
reproduce the life of workers, then the comment
that these former are bourgeois and their
destiny unimportant to the larger dynamic,
turns into economic spleen, even insofar
as mass murder is in fact explicable by the
decline of the profit-rate. The horror consists
of the fact that it always remains the same
– the continuation of “prehistory” – but
unremittingly realizes itself as something
different, something unforeseen, overwhelming
all expectations, the faithful shadow of
the developing productive forces. The same
duality applies to violence, which the critique
of political economy pointed out in material
production: “There are determinations common
to all stages of production, which are generally
fixed by thought, but the so-called universal
conditions of all production are nothing
but... abstract moments, by which no real
stage of production can be understood.” [Marx,
Grundrisse, page 88] In other words, to abstract
out what is historically unchanged is not
neutral towards the matter [Sache], by virtue
of its scientific objectivity, but serves,
even where it is on target, as a fog in which
what is tangible and assailable disappear.
This latter is precisely what the apologists
do not wish to concede. On the one hand they
are obsessed by the dernière nouveauté [French:
latest novelty] and on the other hand they
deny the infernal machine, which is history.
One cannot bring Auschwitz into analogy with
the destruction of the Greek city-states
in terms of a mere gradual increase of horror,
regarding which one preserves one’s peace
of mind. Certainly, the martyrdom and degradation
suffered by those in the cattle-cars, completely
without precedent, casts a harsh, deathly
light on the most distant past, in whose
obtuse and unplanned violence the scientifically
organized kind was already teleologically
at work. The identity lies in the non-identity,
in what has not yet been, which denounces
what has been. The statement that it’s always
been the same, is untrue in its immediacy,
true only through the dynamic of the totality.
Whoever allows the cognition of the increase
of horror to escape them, does not merely
fall prey to cold-hearted contemplation,
but fails to recognize, along with the specific
difference of what is newest from what has
gone before, simultaneously the true identity
of the whole, of horror without end.
150
Extra edition. – Central passages in Poe
and Baudelaire set up the concept of what
is new. In the former, in the description
of the maelstrom, whose shudder is equated
with “the novel” [in English in original],
which none of the traditional reports is
supposed to adequately give any idea of;
in the latter, in the last lines of the cycle
La Mort [French: death], which chooses the
plunge into the abyss, indifferent as to
whether it is heaven or hell, “au fond de
l'inconnu pour trouver du nouveau” [French:
to the bottom of the unknown to find the
new]. Both times it is an unknown threat,
which the subject entrusts itself to, and
which in a dizzying recoil promises pleasure.
What is new, a blank spot of consciousness,
which one awaits with closed eyes, as it
were, seems to be the formula by which pleasure
can be taken in horror and despair, as stimulus-value.
It causes evil to flower. But its stark outline
is a cryptogram of the most unambiguous reaction.
It circumscribes the precise information,
which is communicated by the subject to a
world become abstract, the industrial epoch.
What is rebelled against in the cult of the
new and thereby in the idea of what is modern,
is the fact that there is no longer anything
new. The unchanging uniformity [Immergleichheit]
of machine-produced goods, the net of socialization,
which in equal measure catches and assimilates
objects and the gaze at those objects, transforms
everything which is encountered into something
which has already been, to the accidental
exemplar of a species, to the model’s doppelganger.
The layer of what has not yet been thought,
what is without intention, in which alone
intention flourishes, seems to be consumed.
The idea of the new dreams of this layer.
Itself unattainable, it puts itself in place
of the fallen god in view of the first consciousness
of the decline of experience. But its concept
remains under the bane [Bann] of its illness,
and its abstraction testifies to this, turning
powerlessly to the concretion which glides
away from it. Much could be learned about
the “Ur-history of what is modern” [concept
from Walter Benjamin] by analyzing the change
in the meaning of the word “sensation” –
the exotic synonym for Baudelaire’s nouveau
[French: new]. The word became universalized
in European education through epistemology.
In Locke, it mean the simple, immediate perception,
the opposite of reflection. It later became
the great unknown and finally, what is exciting
on a mass scale, destructively intoxicating,
the shock as consumer good. To still be able
to perceive anything at all, regardless of
quality, replaces happiness, because omnipotent
quantification has taken away the possibility
of perception itself. Instead of the fulfilled
relation of experience to the thing, something
what emerges is something at once merely
subjective and physically isolated, sensation,
which exhausts itself in the reading of a
manometer. Thus the historic emancipation
of being-in-itself is reconfigured into the
form of the intuition, a process which the
sense-psychology of the 19th century allowed
for, by reducing the substrate of experience
to a mere “basal stimulus,” from whose particular
constituted nature the specific energies
of the senses were supposedly independent.
Baudelaire’s poetry however is filled with
that flash of light, which the closed eye
sees when struck by a blow. As phantasmagoric
as this light, so phantasmagoric is the idea
of the new itself. What flashes, while sedate
perception still only achieves the socially
preformed mold of things, is itself repetition.
The new, sought for its own sake, to a certain
extent reproduced in the laboratory, hardened
to a conceptual schema, turns in the abrupt
appearance [Erscheinen] into the compulsory
return of what is old, not so dissimilar
to the traumatic neuroses. To the dazzled,
the veil of temporal succession tears away
from the archetypes of unchanging uniformity
[Immergleichheit]: that is why the discovery
of the new is satanic, eternal return as
damnation. Poe’s allegory of the novel consists
of the breathlessly circling movement, nonetheless
at a standstill, as it were, of the boat
spinning in the whirlpool. The sensations,
in which masochists abandon themselves to
the new, are as much regressions. This much
is true of psychoanalysis, that the ontology
of Baudelaire’s modernity, like every other
one which followed it, answers to the infantile
partial drive. Its pluralism is the colorful
fata morgana [Latin: mirage], in which what
the monism of bourgeois reason glosses as
allegorical hope, is that reason’s self-destruction.
This promise comprises the idea of what is
modern, and for the sake of its core, for
unchanging uniformity [Immergleichheit],
everything which is modern takes on, once
it is barely aged, the expression of something
archaic. Tristan, which rises in the 19th
century as an obelisk of modernity, is at
the same time the towering monument to the
repetition-compulsion. The new has been ambiguous
since its enthronement. While it links everything
which presses beyond the unity [Einheit]
of the ever more fixed existent, it is at
the same time the absorption by the new,
which, under the pressure of that unity,
decisively promotes the disassembly [Zerfall]
of the subject into convulsive moments in
which the subject deceives itself that it
is still alive, and thereby ultimately promotes
the entire society, which drives out the
new in state-of-the-art style. Baudelaire’s
poem of the female martyr of sex, the murder
victim, allegorically celebrates the sanctity
of pleasure in the terrifyingly emancipating
still-life of crime, but the intoxication
in view of the naked headless body is already
similar to that which drove the prospective
victims of the Hitler regime to buy newspapers,
greedily and powerlessly, in which the measures
were announced portending their doom. Fascism
was the absolute sensation: in a declaration
during the time of the first pogroms, Goebbels
boasted that at least the Nazis weren’t boring.
The abstract terror of news and rumors was
enjoyed in the Third Reich as the only stimulation,
which sufficed to momentarily heat the weakened
sensorium of the masses white-hot. Without
the nearly irresistible violence of the desire
for headlines, which caused the heart to
seize as if thrust back into primeval times,
the unspeakable could not have been borne
by the onlookers, let alone the perpetrators.
In the course of the war, eventually the
most terrifying news was spread among the
Germans and the slow military collapse was
not hushed up. Concepts like sadism and masochism
no longer suffice. In the mass society of
technical dissemination they are mediated
by sensation, by the comet-like, far removed,
to-the-extreme new. It overwhelms the public,
which squirms under the shock and forgets
who the monstrosity is being perpetrated
on, oneself or others. The content of the
shock becomes truly indifferent vis-à-vis
its stimulus value, just as it ideally was
in the invocations of the poets; it is even
possible that the horror savored by Poe and
Baudelaire, once realized by dictators, loses
its sensational quality, burns out. The violent
rescue of qualities in the new was devoid
of qualities. Everything can, as the new,
divested of itself, be enjoyed, just as the
numbed morphine addict finally reaches indiscriminately
for any drug, even atropine. Every judgment
perishes in sensation, along with the distinction
of qualities: that is what actually allows
sensation to become an agent of catastrophic
retrogression. In the terror of regressive
dictators, what is modern, the dialectical
picture of progress, culminates in an explosion.
The new in its collective form, something
already hinted at by the journalistic traits
in Baudelaire as much the noise of drums
in Wagner, is in fact external life, cooked
up as a stimulating and enervating drug:
it is not for nothing that Poe, Baudelaire
and Wagner were addictive personalities.
The new turns into the merely evil first
through totalitarian guidance, wherein that
tension of the individual [Individuums] to
society, which once realized the category
of the new, is canceled out. Today the appeal
to the new – regardless of what kind, provided
only it is archaic enough – has become universal,
the ubiquitous medium of false mimesis. The
decomposition of the subject is completed
by handing itself over to a constantly different,
unchanging uniformity [Immergleichheit].
This sucks everything fixed out of personal
character. What Baudelaire was capable of
achieving by virtue of the picture, devolves
to fascination devoid of will. Breach of
faith and un-identity, the pathic catering
to the situation, are activated by the stimulus
of something new, which as a stimulus is
already no longer stimulating. Perhaps humanity’s
refusal to have children is thereby explained,
because everyone can prophesy the worst:
what is new is the secret figure of everyone
not yet born. Malthus belongs to the Ur-fathers
of the 19th century, and Baudelaire had reason
to exalt what is infertile. Humanity, which
despairs of its reproduction, unconsciously
casts the wish to survive onto the chimera
of never known things, but these latter resemble
death. They point to the downfall of an entire
constitution, which virtually no longer needs
its members.
151
Theses against the occult. – I. The penchant
for the occult is a symptom of the regression
of consciousness. It has lost the energy
to think what is unconditional and to withstand
the conditional. Instead of determining both,
in unity and difference, in the labor of
the concept, it heedlessly mixes them up.
What is unconditional turns into a fact,
what is conditional becomes immediately essential
[wesenhaft]. Monotheism crumbles into a second
mythology. “I believe in astrology, because
I don’t believe in God,” responded an interviewee
in an American social psychological study.
The juridically-minded [rechtsprechenden]
reason, which raised itself to the concept
of a god, seems to be caught up in the latter’s
fall. The Spirit [Geist] dissociates itself
into spirits [Geister: spirits, ghosts] and
thereby forfeits the capacity to recognize,
that the latter no longer exist. The veiled
tendency of calamity of society cons its
victims in the false revelation, in the hallucinatory
phenomenon. They hope, in vain, that its
fragmentary obviousness will enable them
to look at the total doom in the eye and
withstand it. Panic breaks out once again
after millennia of enlightenment on a humanity,
whose domination over nature as domination
over human beings surpasses in horror whatever
human beings had to fear from nature.
II. The second mythology is even more untrue
than the first. The latter was the precipitate
of the state of cognition of its epochs,
each of which showed its consciousness of
the blind natural context to be somewhat
freer than the previous one. The former,
disturbed and entangled, throws away the
cognition it once achieved of itself in the
middle of a society, which eliminates through
the all-embracing exchange relationship even
what is most elementary, which the occultists
claim to control. The gaze of the mariner
at the Dioscuri [twin guardian deities of
sea-voyagers in ancient Greece, rendered
as statues on the ship’s prow], the animism
of trees and streams, in all the delusory
bedazzlement at what is inexplicable, were
appropriate to the historical experiences
of the subject vis-à-vis its action-objects.
As a rationally utilized reaction towards
the rationalized society, however, in which
the booths and consultation rooms of the
spirit-seers of all grades, the reborn animism
denies the alienation to which it testifies
and on which it lives, and surrogates a nonexistent
experience. The occultist draws the most
extreme conclusion from the fetish-character
of the commodity: threateningly objectified
labor springs at them from objects in the
guise of countless demons. What is forgotten
in a world which has turned into products,
its producedness [Produziertsein] by human
beings, is recalled in divided, inverted
form, as something existing in itself which
is added to and equated with the in-themselves
of objects [An sich der Objekte]. Because
these latter have frozen under the light
of reason, losing the appearance [Schein]
of being animated, that which animates them,
its social quality, makes itself something
naturally-supernaturally independent, a thing
among things.
III. The regression to magical thinking under
late capitalism assimilates thought to late-capitalist
forms. The dubious-asocial marginal phenomena
of the system, the ramshackle institutions
which squint through the cracks in its walls,
indeed reveal nothing of what would be outside,
but manifest the energies of disassembly
[Zerfalls] in the interior that much more.
The small-time sages, who terrorize their
clients in front of a crystal ball, are toy
models of the big-time ones, who hold the
destiny of humanity in their hands. The obscurantists
behind “Psychic Research” [in English in
original] are as quarrelsome and conspiratorial
as society itself. The hypnosis exerted by
occult things resembles totalitarian terror:
in contemporary processes, both converge
with each other. The smile of the augury
has overgrown itself into the scornful laughter
of society; it feeds on the immediate material
exploitation of souls. The horoscope corresponds
to the directives of bureaus on nationalities
[Völker: literally peoples or nations, but
meaning a homogenous ethnic group], and number-mysticism
is preparation for administrative statistics
and cartel prices. Integration proves in
the end to be the ideology of the disintegration
into power-groups, which exterminate each
other. Whoever casts their lot with them,
is lost.
IV. The occult is a reflex-movement of the
subjectification of all meaning, the complement
of reification. When the objective reality
seems more deaf to the living than ever before,
they seek to worm out its meaning through
an abracadabra. Meaning is indiscriminately
ascribed to the next worse thing: the rationality
of what is real, which is no longer quite
convincing, is replaced with dancing tables
and rays from heaps of earth. The refuse
of the world of phenomena [Erscheinungswelt]
turns into the mundus intelligibilis [Latin:
world of intelligible realities] of the ailing
consciousness. It comes close to being the
speculative truth, just as Kafka’s Odradek
would almost be an angel, and is nevertheless,
in a positivity which leaves out the medium
of thought, only barbaric error, the subjectivity
which has relinquished [entäusserte] itself
and thereby fails to recognize itself in
the object. The more complete the disdainfulness
of what is passed off as “Spirit” [Geist]
– and in anything more animated the enlightened
subject would of course recognize itself
– the more the meaning sensed there, which
in fact is totally absent, turns into the
unconscious, compulsory project of the historically
– if not necessarily clinically – disintegrating
[zerfallenden] subject. It would like to
make the world similar its own disassembly
[Zerfall]: that is why it deals with stage-props
and malicious wishes. “The third reads out
of my hand / It wants to read my misfortune!”
In the occult, the Spirit [Geist] groans
under its own bane [Bann] like those caught
in a bad dream, whose torment increases with
the feeling, that they are dreaming, without
being able to wake up.
V. The violence of the occult, just like
Fascism, to which it is linked by thought-schemata
of the sort which purvey anti-Semitism, is
not only pathic. It consists rather of the
fact that in the lesser panaceas, cover-pictures,
as it were, the consciousness hungry for
truth thinks it can grasp the dimly present
cognition, which official progress of every
type assiduously withholds. It is that society,
by virtually excluding the possibility of
the spontaneous recoil, gravitates towards
total catastrophe. The real absurdity is
the model for the astrological one, which
puts forward the impenetrable context of
alienated elements – nothing is more foreign
than the stars – as knowledge about the subject.
The threat which is read out of the constellations,
resembles the historical one, which rolls
on in unconsciousness, in what is subjectless.
They can bear the thought that everyone is
a prospective victim of a whole, which is
merely formed from themselves, only by transferring
that whole away from themselves onto something
similar, something external to it. In the
miserable idiocy which they propagate, the
empty horror, they allow themselves to let
out the clumsy misery, the crass fear of
death and nevertheless to continue to repress
it, as they must if they wish to continue
to live. The break in the life-line which
indicates a hidden cancer is a fraud only
in the place where it is asserted, in the
hand of the individual [Individuums]; where
it would not give a diagnosis, in the collective,
it would be correct. Occultists rightly feel
drawn to childishly monstrous natural-scientific
fantasies. The confusion they create between
their emanations and the isotopes of uranium,
is ultimate clarity. The mystic rays are
modest anticipations of the technical ones.
Superstition is cognition, because it sees
all of the ciphers of destruction together,
which are scattered on the social surface;
it is foolish, because in still clings to
illusions, in all of its death-drive: glossing
the answer, from the transfigured form of
society, displaced into the heavens, which
can only be provided by the real transfiguration
of society.
VI. The occult is the metaphysics of knuckleheads.
The subalternity of mediums is no more accidental
than the apocryphal nature and triviality
of what is revealed. Since the early days
of spiritism, the beyond has announced nothing
more portentous than a greeting from a dead
grandmother next to a prediction, that a
journey is in the offing. The excuse that
the spirit-world cannot communicate to feeble
human reason any more than this latter is
able to take in, is just as silly, the auxiliary
hypothesis of the paranoid system: the lumen
naturale [Latin: “natural light,” in the
sense of everyday human reasoning] achieved
greater things than the trip to the grandmother,
and if the spirits do not wish to acknowledge
this, then they are mannerless kobolds, with
whom one had better break off all contact.
The obtusely natural content of the supernatural
message betrays its untruth. While it hunts
outside for what is lost, what it runs into
there is only its own nothingness. In order
not to fall out of the grey prosaicness,
in which they feel right at home as incorrigible
realists, they adjust the meaning, on which
they refresh themselves, into what is meaningless,
before which they flee. The phoney magic
is nothing other than the phoney existence,
which the former illuminates. That is why
it makes itself at home with what is down
to earth. Facts, which differ from what is
the case, only in that they are nothing of
the sort, are worked up into the fourth dimension.
Their qualitas occulta [Latin: hidden quality]
is solely their non-being. They deliver the
world-view of idiocy. Abruptly, drastically,
the astrologists and spiritists issue a response
to every question, which does not even solve
the latter, but cancels any possible solution
through crude suppositions. Their sublime
realm, conceived as analogous to space, no
more needs to be thought than chairs and
flower-vases. It thereby reinforces conformism.
Nothing pleases the existent more, than the
position that existence, as such, is supposed
to be meaning.
VII. The great religions have either, as
in the Jewish one, kept in mind the salvation
of the dead, after the ban on graven images,
with silence, or taught the resurrection
of the flesh. They have their gravity in
the inseparability of what is spiritual [Geistigen]
and what is corporeal. There is no intention,
there is nothing “intellectual” ["geistiges"],
which would not somehow be grounded in corporeal
perception and demand corporeal fulfillment.
To the occultists, who consider themselves
above the thought of resurrection and do
not at all wish for actual salvation, this
is too crude. Their metaphysics, which even
Huxley can no longer distinguish from metaphysics,
rests on the axiom: “The soul swings high
into the air / the body rests on the couch
over there.” The feistier the spirituality,
the more mechanistic: not even Descartes
separated it so cleanly. The division of
labor and reification are driven to the extreme:
body and soul are cut from each other in
a perennial vivisection, as it were. The
soul is supposed to dust itself off, in order
to continue, in lighter regions, its eager
activity right at the point it was interrupted.
In such a declaration of independence, however,
the soul turns into the cheap imitation of
what it was falsely emancipated from. In
place of the reciprocity, which even the
most rigid philosophy upheld, the astral
body sets up shop, the ignominious concession
of the hypostatized Spirit [Geist] to its
opponent. Only in the allegory of the body
is the concept of the pure Spirit [Geists]
is to be grasped at all, and the former simultaneously
sublates the latter. With the reification
of the spirits, the spirits are already negated.
VIII. Occultists fulminate against materialism.
But they want to weigh the astral body. The
objects of their interest are supposed to
simultaneously surpass the possibility of
experience and be experienced. Everything
is supposed to be done strictly scientifically;
the greater the humbug, the more carefully
controlled the test arrangement. The pomposity
of scientific controls is taken ad absurdum
[Latin: to the point of absurdity], where
there is nothing to control for. The same
rationalistic and empiristic apparatus which
put an end to the spirits, is employed to
mandatorily foist them off on those who no
longer trust in their own ratio. As if any
elementary spirit would flee from the trap
of the control over nature, which is posited
by their fleeting essence [Wesen]. But even
this the occultists make use of. Because
the spirits don’t like controls, a door must
be held open to them in the middle of security
precautions, so that they can make their
appearance undisturbed. For the occultists
are practical types. They aren’t driven by
idle curiosity, they seek tips. Things go
in a jiffy from the stars to futures trading
[Termingeschäft: future transactions, futures,
options]. Mostly the information amounts
to ill tidings for some acquaintance, who
was hoping for something.
IX. The cardinal sin of the occult is the
contamination of Spirit [Geist] and existence,
the latter of which turns into an attribute
of the Spirit [Geistes]. This last originated
in existence, as an organ designed to preserve
life. Since existence is reflected in the
Spirit [Geist], this latter turns at the
same time into something else. What exists
negates itself as the memorialization [Eingedenken]
of itself. Such negation is the element of
the Spirit [Geistes]. To ascribe it once
more to positive existence, even if it were
that of a higher social order, would deliver
it to that which it stands against. Later
bourgeois ideology had made it once more
into what it was in pre-animism, something
existing-in-itself according to the measure
of the social division of labor, of the break
between physical and intellectual labor,
and of the planned domination over the former.
In the concept of the Spirit [Geistes] which
exists in itself, the consciousness ontologically
justifies and eternalizes privilege, by making
it independent of the social principle, which
constitutes it. Such ideology explodes into
occultism: the latter is an idealism which
has come into itself, as it were. Precisely
by virtue of the rigid antithesis of being
and Spirit [Geist], this latter turns into
a department of being. If idealism had promoted
the idea solely for the whole, that being
would be Spirit [Geist] and this latter would
exist, then the occult draws the absurd consequence
from this, that existence means determinate
being: “Existence is, according to its becoming,
above all being with something non-being,
so that this non-being is taken up in simple
unity with being. The non-being thus taken
up in being, the fact that the concrete whole
is in the form of being, of immediacy, comprises
the determination as such. “ (Hegel, Science
of Logic I, ed. Glockner, Stutgart 1928,
page 123). The occultists take not-being
as a “simple unity with being” literally,
and their kind of concreity is a fraudulent
abbreviation of the path from the whole to
the determinate, which can claim that the
whole, as something once determined, is thereby
nothing of the sort anymore. They call to
metaphysics, hic Rhodus hic salta [Latin:
here is Rhodes, here is where you jump]:
if the philosophical investment of Spirit
[Geist] with existence can be determined,
then, they feel, any random, scattered existence
must ultimately justify itself as a particular
Spirit [Geist]. Consequently, the doctrine
of the existence of the Spirit [Geist], the
most extreme exaltation of bourgeois consciousness,
would already teleologically bear the belief
in spirits, its utmost denigration. The transition
to existence, always “positive” and justification
for the world, implies at the same time the
thesis of positivity of the Spirit [Geist],
its arrest as a thing [Dingfestmachung],
the transposition of what is absolute into
the phenomenon [Erscheinung]. Whether the
entire tangible world, as “product,” is supposed
to be Spirit [Geist] or any sort of thing
any sort of Spirit [Geist], becomes irrelevant
and the world-spirit turns into the highest
spirit [Geist], to the guardian angel of
what exists, of what is de-spiritualized.
The occultists live on this: their mysticism
is the enfant terrible [French: scandalous
young guard] of the mystical moment in Hegel.
They drive the speculation to defrauding
bankruptcy. By passing off the determinate
being as Spirit [Geist], they subject the
objectified Spirit [Geist] to the test of
existence, and it must turn out negatively.
No Spirit [Geist] is there.
152
Not to be misused. – Dialectics originated
in sophistry, a procedure of discussion designed
to shake dogmatic assertions, and, as public
prosecutors and comics call it, to make the
weaker word into the stronger. It formed
as a consequence of the perennial method
of critique which opposed philosophia perennis
[Latin: age-old philosophy], the asylum of
all thoughts of the oppressed, even what
they themselves could never think. But as
a means of being right, it was from the very
beginning also a means of domination, the
formal technics of apologetics with no concern
for content, serviceable to those who could
pay: the principle, of always and successfully
turning the tables. That is why truth or
untruth does not stand in the method as such,
but in its intention in the historical process.
The split of the Hegelian school into a left
and right wing was grounded in the ambiguity
of the theory no less than in the political
situation of the immediate pre-1848 period.
Dialectics encompasses not just the Marxian
doctrine, that the proletariat becomes, as
the absolute object of history, its first
social subject, capable of realizing the
conscious self-determination of humanity,
but also the joke, which Gustave Doré put
into the mouth of a parliamentary representation
of the ancien régime [French: feudal order]:
that without Louis XVI the revolution would
never have happened, therefore this latter
is to be thanks for human rights. Negative
philosophy, universal dissolution, constantly
dissolves too that which dissolves. But the
new form, in which both what is dissolved
and dissolving claim to be sublated, can
never step forwards purely in antagonistic
society. For as long as domination reproduces
itself, so too will the old quality recrudesce
in the dissolution of what dissolves: in
a radical sense, there is no pure leap. That
would first of all be the emancipatory event,
which actually happens. Because the dialectical
determination of the new quality sees itself
referred back to the violence of the objective
tendency, which hands down the bane [Bann]
of domination, it stands under the almost
unavoidable compulsion, whenever it achieves
the negation through the labor of the negation,
to substitute what is bad about the old for
the non-existent other. The profundity, with
which it plumbs the depths of objectivity,
is bought at the price of participating in
the lie, that objectivity would already be
the truth. By strictly delimiting itself
to extrapolating the non-privileged condition,
from what owes to the process the privilege
of existing, it bows to restoration. This
is registered by private existence. Hegel
objected to the latter for its nullity. Mere
subjectivity, insisting on the purity of
its own principle, would entangle itself
in antinomies. It would go to pieces on its
mischief [Unwesen], hypocrisy and malevolence,
to the extent it does not objectify itself
in society and the state. Ethics [Moral],
autonomy posited on pure self-certainty,
and even the conscience are mere appearance
[Schein]. If “there is nothing ethically
real” (Hegel, Phenomenology of the Spirit,
ed. Lasson, 2nd Printing, Leipzig 1921, page
397), then it logically follows in the Philosophy
of Law that marriage is placed higher than
the conscience, and that this latter is said,
even on its own grounds – which Hegel, along
with Romanticism, designates as irony – to
be “subjective vanity” in a double understanding
of the term. This motif of dialectics, which
operates through all layers of the system,
is simultaneously true and untrue. True,
because it unveils the particular as necessary
appearance [Schein], the false consciousness
of what is split off, of being only itself
and not a moment of the whole; and it causes
this false consciousness to melt away through
the energy of the whole. Untrue, because
the motif of objectification, “disclosure”
[Entäusserung: relinquishment, disclosure,
realization], is degraded into a mere rationalization,
into a pretext for precisely the bourgeois
self-preservation of the subject, as long
as the objectivity, which thought upholds
in opposition to what is badly subjective,
is unfree, regressing behind the critical
labor of the subject. The word disclosure
[Entäusserung], which expects the redemption
of private caprice from the obedience of
the private will, acknowledges, by expressly
holding fast to what is external as what
is institutionally opposed to the subject,
in spite of all protestations of reconciliation,
the enduring irreconcilability of subject
and object, which for its part comprises
the theme of dialectical critique. The act
of self-disclosure [Selbstentäusserung] is
tantamount to renunciation, which Goethe
described as salvational, and thereby justification
for the status quo, then as now. Out of the
insight, for example, into the mutilation
of women through patriarchal society, in
the impossibility of wiping away the anthropological
deformation without its prerequisite, it
is precisely implacable dialecticians, without
illusions, who may deduce the standpoint
of the master-in-the-house, speaking on behalf
of the remaining stock of the patriarchal
relationship. In this they lack neither for
good reasons, such as the impossibility of
relations of a different nature [Wesen] under
contemporary conditions, nor even humanity
towards the oppressed, who have to pay the
bill for false emancipation; but all this.
though true, would turn into ideology in
the hands of masculine interest. Dialecticians
know the unhappiness and the abandonment
of the unmarried spinster, of what is murderous
in separations. By anti-romantically awarding
priority to the objectified marriage over
the ephemeral passion, not sublated into
the common life, they would turn themselves
into the representatives of those who propagate
marriage at the cost of affection, who love
what they are married to, therefore the abstract
property-relationship. The final step of
such wisdom would be, that the person really
doesn’t matter so much, if they would only
adapt to the given constellation and do their
duty. To protect itself from such temptations,
an enlightened dialectics requires the unceasing
suspicion against every apologetic, restorative
element, which nevertheless comprises a part
of what is unnaïve. The threatening relapse
of reflection into what is unreflected is
betrayed by the superiority, which switches
on the dialectical procedure and holds forth,
as if it were itself that immediate knowledge
of the whole, which is excluded precisely
by the principle of dialectics. The standpoint
of the totality is assumed, in order to slap
down every determinate negative judgment
by the opponent with the sign of the cautionary
“that’s not what was meant,” and simultaneously
to violently break off the movement of the
concept, suspending dialectics with reference
to the insurmountable gravity of facts. The
calamity occurs through the thema probandum
[Latin: self-evident supposition] one makes
use of the dialectic instead of losing oneself
in it. Then the sovereignly dialectical thought
would regress back to the pre-dialectical
stage: the sedate exposition, that every
thing has its two sides.
153
At the end. – The only philosophy which would
still be accountable in the face of despair,
would be the attempt to consider all things,
as they would be portrayed from the standpoint
of redemption. Cognition has no other light
than that which shines from redemption out
upon the world; all else exhausts itself
in post-construction and remains a piece
of technics. Perspectives must be produced
which set the world beside itself, alienated
from itself, revealing its cracks and fissures,
as needy and distorted as it will one day
lay there in the messianic light. To win
such perspectives without caprice or violence,
wholly by the feel for objects, this alone
is what thinking is all about. It is the
simplest of all things, because the condition
irrefutably call for such cognitions, indeed
because completed negativity, once it comes
fully into view, shoots [zusammenschiesst]
into the mirror-writing of its opposite.
But it is also that which is totally impossible,
because it presupposes a standpoint at a
remove, were it even the tiniest bit, from
the bane [Bannkreis] of the existent; meanwhile
every possible cognition must not only be
wrested from that which is, in order to be
binding, but for that very reason is stricken
with the same distortedness and neediness
which it intends to escape. The more passionately
thought seals itself off from its conditional
being for the sake of what is unconditional,
the more unconsciously, and thereby catastrophically,
it falls into the world. It must comprehend
even its own impossibility for the sake of
possibility. In relation to the demand thereby
imposed on it, the question concerning the
reality or non-reality of redemption is however
almost inconsequential.
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