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ESSAYS CRITICAL AND CLINICAL

QILLE. DELEUZE

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essays
critical and clinical

Gilles Deleuze

Translated by
Daniel W. Smith and Michael A. Greco

YEIISO

london • New York


Great books are written in a kind of foreign language.
- Proust, Cotttre Sainte-Beuve

The publishers gratefully ac knowledge financial assistance provided by the


French Ministry of Culture for the translation of this book

First published in the UK by Verso 1998


This edition e Verso 1998
Translation e Daniel W. Smith and Michael A. Greco 1998
First published as Critique et Clilliq ll c
o Les Editions de Minuit 1993
All rights rese rved

The mo ral rights of the author and the translalOrs have been asserted.

Verso
UK; 6 Meard Street, London WIV 3HR
USA; 180 Va rick Street, New York NY 100 14-4606

Verso is the imprint of New Left Books



ISBN 1-86091-614-6

British Ubrary Catalogui ng in I>ublieation Data


A ca talogue record for this book is ava ilable from the British Library

Printed and bound in Great Britain by


BiddIes Ltd, Guild fo rd and King's Lynn
Contents

Translators' Preface
Introduction
" A Life of Pure Immanence":
Deleuze's "Critique et Clinique" Project
Daniel W. Smith
Preface to the French Edition \2') Iv
1 Literature and Life ( Z)
2 Louis Wolfson; o r, The Procedure 7
3 Lewis Carroll ~ /" 21
4 T he Greatest Irish Film (Beckett's "Film ") 23
5 On Four Poetic Formulas That Might mmarize the
Kantian Philosophy __ '- '>\
\Jtn,-. 27
6 Nietzsche and Sa int Paul, Lawrence and
John of Patmas 36
7 Re-presemation of Masoch 53
8 Whitman ~ 56
9 What C hildren Say (2.) 61
10 Bartleby; o r, The Formu la / ' 68
11 An Unrecognized Precursor to Heidegger: Alfred Jarry - - 91
12 The Mystery of Ariadl).e accordin&\o Nietzsche ~ 99
13 He sturtered(l) \ I).~ . 'IJ;foil1'V} 107
14 The Shame and the Glory: T. E. Lawrence 115
15 To Have Done wit~ment (2)
16 Plato, the Grttks
126 Translators' Preface
136
17 Spinoza and the Three .. Ethics" "'-----

----
138
18 The Exhausted
152
Notes
175
• Index
207
Although this translation was underraken joi ntly, each of the transla-
lOtS took responsibility for the first and fi nal d rafts of specific essays.

Essays 4, 7, 9, 10, 12, and IS were do ne by Michael A. Greco; the re-


mainder, except the final essay. were done by Daniel W. Smith. The
translation of Essay 18, by Anthony Uhlmann, first appeared in Sub-
Stance 78 (1995), pp. 3-28, and is published here in revised form. The
French version of this essay was originally published as the postface to
Samuel Becken, Quad et autres pieces pOlfr fa television, trans. Edith
Fournier (Paris: Minuit, 1992), and we thank J erome Lindon of &l.i-
/ tions de Minuit for his permission to include it in this collection. We
consulted translations of earlier versions of two essays: "On Four Po-
etic Fonnulas Which Might Summarize the Kantian Philosophy," trans-
lated by Hugh To mlinson and Barbara Habberjam, in Gilles Deleuze,
Kant's Critical Philosophy (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota
Press, 1984), and " He Stuttered," translated by Constantin V. Boundas,
in Gilles Deleuu and the Theater of Philosophy, edited by Constantin
V. Boundas and Dorothea Olkowski (New York: Routledge, 1994).
Throughout the translation, we have tried to err on the side of fidelity
to the French rather than felicity in the English. In conformity with
Deleuze's claim that the third person is the condition fo r literary enun-
ciation, for example, we have consistently translated the French on as
"'one," even in Contexts where this introduces a certain stylistic tension
in the English. As far as possible, we have tried to maintain a termino-
logica l consistency with ea rl ier translations of Deleuze's books. On this
SCore, we would like to ack nowledge our indebtedness to, in particular,
Constantin V. Boundas, Martin Joughin, Brian Massumi, Paul Patton,
and Hugh Tomlinson , whose translations we consu lted. We would like

"
to thank Lisa Fr~m3n and Biodun 19inla at the University of Min-
nesota Press for their support, encouragement, and patience during this
project, as well as Lynn Marasco for her careful reading of the manu-
script. Peter Canning, John Culbert, Gregg Lambert, James Lastra,
TImothy Murphy, and Robert Pippin offered helpful advice on various
aspects of the translation. Martin Joughin suggested the translation of
the title. The translation is dedicated to Eleanor Hendriks, without
Introduction
whose unwavering support it would not have been possible.
"A life of Pure Immanence": Deleuze's
"Critique et Clinique" Project
Daniel W Smith

The critical (in the literary sense) and the clinical


(in the medical sense) may be destined to enter into
a new relationship of mutual learning.'

Although Essays Critical and Clinical is the only book written by


Gilles Deleuze that is devoted primarily to literature,literary references
are present everywhere in his work, running almost parallel to the
philosophical references. In 1967 Deleuze published a study of Sacher-
Masoch in which he first linked together the "critica'" and the "clini-
cal." The 1969 Logic of Sense is in part a reading of Lewis Carroll's
work and includes supplementary material and chapters on Klos-
sowski, Toumier, Zola, Fitzgera ld, Lowry, and Artaud. 2 Literary refer-
ences occupy considerable portions of the two-volume Capitalism and
Schizophrenia, which Deleuze wrote in the 19705 with Felix Guattari.l
He has written books on both Proust (1964) and Kafka {l975, with
Guattaril, as well as two long essays on Carmelo Bene (1979) and
Samuel Beckett ( 1 992).~ His 1977 Dialogues with Claire Pamet in-
cludes an important chapter entitled "On the Superiority of Anglo-
American Literature. " 5 Essays Critical and Clinical comprises eight
newly revised articles that were origina lly published by Deleuze be.
tween 1970 and 1993, along with ten essays that appear here fo r the

.,
INTRODUCTION INTIODUCTION )liil

first time. Once again, names of philosophers (Plato, Spinoz.a, Kant, but that can only be formed phiiosophically.'O Francis Bacon: The
Nierzsche, Heidegger) appear side by side with names of literary fig- Logic of Sensation likewise creates a series of philosophical concepts,
ures (Melville, Whitman, D. H. Lawrence, T. E. Lawrence, Beckett, Ar- each of which relates to a particular aspect of Bacon's paintings, but
taud, Masoch,larry, Carroll). Although he first announced the idea for also finds a place in "a general logic of sensation:'LL Essays Critical
this book during a 1988 imerview, it is clear that Deleuu had con- and Clinical must bt evaluated in the same manner, that is, in terms of
ceived of the "critique et clinique" project early on in his career and the concepts Deleuze extracts from the literary works he examines and
pursued it in various forms throughout his published work.' the links he establishes between philosophy, literature, and the other
What role do these literary analyses play in Deleuze's philosophi- arts. n The book is not a mere collection of articles; though most of the
cal oeuvre? In What Is Philosophy? Deleuze and Guattari define phi- essays are devoted to individual authors, the book develops a series of
losophy as a practice of concepts, an activity that consists in the forma- concepts like so many motifs that appear and reappear in different es-
tion, invention, or creation of concepts, and indeed their work is says, which enter into increasingly complex contrapuntal relationships
marked throughout by an extraordinary conceptual inventiveness. But with each other, and which could likewise bt said to find a place in a
philosophy, Deleuze adds, necessarily enters into variable relations logic of literature-or rather, a logic of "Life." For if the Cinema vol-
with other domains such as science, medicine, and art. Art, for in- umes deal primarily with space and time, and Francis Bacon with the
stance, is an equally creative enterprise of thought, but one whose ob- nature of sensation, Deleuu's writings on literature are primarily
ject is to create sensible aggregates rather than concepts. Great artists linked with the problematic of Life. "You have seen what is essential
and authors, in other words, are also great thinkers, but they think in for me," he once wrote to a commentator, "this 'vitalism' or a concep-
terms of percepts and affects rather than concepts: painters, one might tion of life as a non-organic power"; in a later interview, he added,
say, think in the medium of lines and colors, just as musicians think in "Everything I've written is vitalistic, at least I hope it is. "I)
sounds, filmmakers think in images, writers think in words, and so on. The idea that literature has something to do with life is certainly
Neither activity has any privilege over the other. Creating a concept is not a novel one. In Deleuu's work, however, the notion of Life, as a
neither more difficult nor more abstract than creating new visual, philosophica l concept, has a complex ontological and ethica l status. In
sonorous, or verbal combinations; conversely, it is no easier to read an one of the last essays he published before his suicide in November
image, paiming, or novel than it is to comprehend a concept. Philoso- 1995- a short, dense, abstract, yet strangely moving piece-Deleuze
phy, Deleuze insists, cannot bt undertaken independently of science wrote of a scene from Charles Dickens's Our Mutual Friend. A rogue
and art; it always enters into relations of mutual resonance and ex- despised by everyone is brought in on the verge of death, and the peo-
change with these other domains, though for reasons that are always ple tending to him suddenly manifest a kind of respect and love for the
internal to philosophy itself.' slightest sign of life in the dying man . "No one has the least regard fo r
Deleuze therefore writes on the arts not as a critic but as a philoso- the man, " writes Dickens. "With them all, he has been an object of
pher, and his books and essays on the various arts, and on various avoidance, suspicion, and aversion; but the spark of life within him is
artists and authors, must be read, as he himself insists, as works of curiously sepa rate from himself now, and they have a deep interest in
"philosophy, nmhing but philosophy, in the traditional sense of the it, probably because it is life, and they are living and must die. " I~ As
word. ,,' The cinema, for instance, produces images that move, and the man revives, his saviors become colder, and he recovers all his
that move in time, and it is these two aspects of film that Deleuze sets crudeness and maliciousness. Yet "between his life and his death,"
out to analyze in The Movement-Image and The Time-Image: "What comments Deleuze,
exactly does the cinema show us about space and time that the other
arts don't show?'" Deleuze thus describts his two-volume Cinema as
there is a moment that is no longer a.nything but a life playing with
death. The life of an individual has given way to a.n impersonal and
i
~a book of logic, a logic of the cinema" that sets out "to isolate certain yet singular life that disengages a pure event freed from the accidents
cinematographic concepts," concepu that are specific to the cinema, of the inner and outer life, that is, from the subjectivity and objectivity
INTRODUCTION I N TRODUCTIO N

of what happens. A homo lantum with whom everyone sympathizes,

I
'"Bad'" or sick ly life is an exhausted and degenerating mode of exis-
and who attains a kind of beatitude. This is a haecceiry, which is no tence, one that judges life from the perspective of its sickness, that de-
longer an individuation but a singulariution: a fif~ of pure imma- va luates life in the name of " higher " va lues. The "Good" or healthy
nence, neutral, beyond good and evil.
life, by contrast, is an overflowing and ascending form of existence, 3
In the next paragraph, he notes that this same nonorga nic vi tality is mode of life that is able to transform itself depending on the fo rces it
made manifest in a newborn baby: "Small infants all r~se mble ~ac h encounters, always increasing the power to live, always opening up
oth~ r and hav~ hardly any individuality; but th~y have singu larities-a new possibilities of life. For Deleuze, every literary work implies a way
s m il~, a gestur~, a grimace-which are not subjectin characteristics. of living, a form of life, and must be evaluated not only critically but
Infants are traversed by an immanent life that is pur~ power, and even also clinically. "Style, in a great writer, is always a style of life too, not
a beatitud~ through their sufferings and weak n~ss~s. " 15 For Deleuze, anyth ing at all personal, but inventing a possibility of life, a way of
Life is an impersonal and nonorganic pow~r that goes beyond any existing. "19
lived experience-an ontological concept of Life that draws on sources Put differently, the question that links literature and life, in both its
as diverse as NietzSChe (life as "will to power" ), Bergson (the elan ontological and its ethica l aspectS, is the question of health. This does
not mean that an author nec~ssa rily enjoys robust health; on the con-
vital), and modern evolutionary biology (life as "va riation" and "selec-
trary, artists, like philosophers, often have frail health, a weak consti-
tion "). And if Life has a direct relation to literature, it is because writ-
tution, a fragile personal life (SpinOla'S fra ilty, D. H. Lawrence's he·
ing itself is "a passage of Life that traverses both the livable and the
moptysis, NietzSChe's migra ines, Deleuze's own respiratory ailments).
l ived."I ~
T his frailty, however, does not simply stem from their illnesses or neu-
But the concept of Life also functions as an ethical principle in
roses, says Deleuze, but from having seen or fel t something in life that
Deleuze's thought. Throughout his works, Deleuze has drawn a sharp
is tOO great for them, something un bearable "that has put on them the
distinction between morality and ethics. He uses the term "morality "
quiet mark of death. "20 But this something is also what Niensche
to defin~, in general terms, any set of "constraining" rules, such as a ca lled the "great hea lth," the vitality that supports them th rough the
moral code, that consists in judging actions and intentions by relating illnesses of the lived. This is why, for Deleuze, writing is never a per-
them to transcendent or universal va lues ("this is good, that is evil"). sona l matter. It is never simply a matter of our lived experiences: " You
11 What he calls "ethics" is, on the contrary, a set of "facilitative" (fa cul- don't get very fa r in literature with the system ' I've seen a lot and been
tative ) rul~s that evaluates what we do, say, think, and feel according lots of places ...•21 Novels are not created with our dreams and fantasies,
", to the immanent mode of existence it implies. One says or does this, nor our sufferings and griefs, our opinions and ideas, our memories
Jthinks or feels that: what mode of existence does it imply?" This is the and travels, nor " with the interesting characters we have met or the in-
link that Deleuze sees between Spinoza and Niensche, whom he has teresting character who is inevitably oneself (who isn't interesting?). "22
always identified as his philosophical precursors. Each of them argued, It is true that the writer is " inspired " by the Ii v~d ; but even in writers
in his own manner, that there are things one cannot do or think except like Thomas Wolfe or Henry Miller, who seem to do nothing but re-
on the condition of being weak, base, or enslaved, unless one harbors a COUnt their own lives, "there's an attempt to make life something more I
resentment against life (NietzSChe), unless one remains the slave of pas- than personal, to fret life from what imprisons it.,,2J Nor does Deleuze
sive affections (Spinoza ); and ther~ are other things one cannot do or read works of literature primari ly as texts, or treat writing in terms of
say except on the condition of being strong, noble, or fret, unless one its "textuality," through he by no means ignores the effect literature
affirms life, unless one attains active affections. An immanent ethical has on language. His approach to litera ture must thus be distingu ished
difference (goodlbad ) is in this way substituted for the transcendent from Jacques Derrida's deconstructive approach. "As fo r the method
mora l opposition (GoodIEvil)... Beyond Good and Evil," wrote Nien- of deconstruction of texts," Deleuu once remarked, " I see clea rly what
sche, "at least that does not mean ' Beyond Good and Bad ...• ls The it is. I admire it a lot, but it has noth ing to do with my own method . I
~i INUODUCTION INTRO~UCTION xvii

do not p re~nt myself as a commentator on texts. For me, a text is medicine, a correct etiology depends first of all on a rigorous symp-
merely a small cog in an extra-textual practice. It is not a question of tomatology: "Etiology, which is the scientific or experimental side of
commentaring on the text by a method of dKonsuucrion, or by a medicine, must be subordinated to symptomatology, which is irs liter-
method of textual practice, or by other methods; it is a question of see- ary, artistic aspect. "2'
ing what lise it has in the extra-textual practice that prolongs the The fundamenta l idea behind Deleuze's "critique et clinique" proj-
text. "204 For Deleuze, the question of literature is linked not to the ques- ect is that authors and artists, like doctors and clinicians, can them-
tion of its rextualiry, or even to its historicity, but to its "vitality," that selves be seen as profound symptomatologisrs. Sadism and masochism
is, ils "tenor" of Life. are clearly not diseases on a par with Parkinson's disease or Alz-
heimer's disease. Yet if Krafft-Ebing, in 1869, was able to use Masoch's
How then are we to conceive of this link berween literature and life, name to designate a fundamental perversion (much to Masoch's own
between the critical and the clinical? Deleuze first raised this question consternation), it was not because Masoch "suffered" from it as a pa-
in his 1967 book Coldness and Cruelty in the conrext of a concrete tient, but rather because his literary works isolated a particular way of
problem: Why were the na mes of two literary fi gures, Sade and Masoch, existing and set fort h a novel symptomatology of it, making the con-
used as labels in the nineteenth century to denote two basic "perver- tract its primary sign. Freud made use of Sophocles in much the same
sions" in clinical psychiatry? This encounter between literature and way when he created the concept of the Oed ipus complex. 27 "Authors,
medicine was made possible, Deleuze argues, by the pecu liar nature of if they are great, are more like doctors than patients," writes Deleuze:
the symptomatological method. Medicine is made up of at least three
different activities: symptomatology, or the study o f signs; etiology, or We mean that they att themselves astonishing diagnosticians or
symptomatologists. There is always a great deal of art involved in the
the starch fo r causes; and therapy, or the development and application grouping of symptoms, in the organization of a table [tableau] where
of a treatment. While etiology and therapeutics are integral parts of a particular symptom is dissociated from another, juxtaposed to a
medicine, symptomatology appeals to a kind of limit-point, premedical third, and rorms the new figure of a disorder or illness. Clinicians who
or submedical, that belongs as much to art as to medicine.1S In symp- are able to renew a symptomatological picture produce a work of art;
tomatology, illnesses are sometimes named after typical patients (Lou conversely, artisrs are clinicians, nOI with respect to Iheir own case,
nor even with respect 10 a case in gentral; rather, Ihey are clinicians
Gehrig's disease), but more often it is the dOCtor's name that is given to of civilization.lI
the disease (Parkinson's disease, Roger's disease, Alzheimer's disease,
Creunfeldt-jakob disease). The principles behind this labeling process, It was Nietzsche who first put forward the idea that artists and
Deleuze suggests, deserve careful analysis. The doctor certainly does philosophers are physiologists, .. physicians of culture," fo r w hom phe-
not "invent" the disease, but rather is said to " isolate" it: he or she dis- nomena are signs or symptoms that reflect a certain state of forces. n
tinguishes cases that had hitherto been confused by dissociating symp- Indeed, Deleuze strongly suggests that artists and authors can go fur-
toms that were previously grouped together, and by juxtaposing them ther in symptomatology than doctors and clinicians, precisely "be-
with others that were previously dissociated. In this way, the doctor cause the work of art gives them new means, perhaps also because they
constructS an original cli nica l concept for the disease: the components are less concerned about causes." )O
of the concept are the symptoms, the signs of the illness, and the con- This point of view is very different from many psychoanalytic in-
cept becomes the name of a syndrome, which marks the meeting place terpretations of writers and artists, which tend to see authors, through
of these symptoms, their point of coincidence or convergence. When a their work, as possible or rcal patients, even if they are accorded [he
doctor gives his or her name to an illness, it constitutes an important benefit of "su bl imation." ArtistS are treated as clinical cases, as if they
advance in medicine, insofar as a proper name is linked to a given were ill, however sublimel y, and the critic seeks a sign of neurosis like a
group o f symptoms or signs. Moreover, if diseases are named after secret in their work, its hidden code. The work of art then seems to be
thcic symptoms nuher than after their causes, it is because, even in inscri bed between two poles: a regressive pole. where the work hashes
xviii INTROOUCTION INUOOUCTION xix )

out the unresolved conflicts of childhood, and a progressive pole, by suprasensualldeal, producing a dialectical-imaginative use of language
which the work invents paths leading to a new solution concerning the that operates through qualitative suspense. Finally, Deleu2.C shows how
future of humanity, converting itself into a "cultural object." From these new modes of existence and new uses of language were linked to
both these points of view, there is no need to "a pply" psychoanalysis political acts of resistance: in Sade's case, these acts were linked to the
to the work of art, since the work itself is seen to constitute a successful French revolution, which he thought would remai n sterile unless it
psychoanalysis, either as a resolution or a sublimation. This infantile stopped making laws and set up institutions of perpetual motion (the
or "egoistic" conception of literature, this imposition of the "Oedipal sects of libertines); in Masoch's case, masochistic practices were linked
form" on the work of art, Deleuze suggests, has been an important fac- to the place of minorities in the Austro-Hungarian empire, and to the
tor in the reduction of literature to an object of consumption subject to role of women within these minorities.,ll
the demands of the literary market}1 Deleuze initially saw Coldness and Cmelty as the first installment
Coldness and Cruelty provides one of the clearest examples of what of a series of Iiterary-clinicai studies: "What I would like to study (this
might be termed Deleuze's "symptomatological" approach to literature. book would merely be a first example) is an articulable relationship
At a conceptual level, the book is an incisive critique of the clinical no- between literature and clinical psychiatry. "J4 The idea was not to apply
tion of "sadomasochism," which presumes that sadism and masochism psychiatric concepts to literature, but on the contrary to extract non-
are complementary forces that belong to one and the same pathologi- preexistent clinical concepts from the works themselves. As is often the
cal entity. Psychiatrists were led to posit such a "crude syndrome," fate with such proposals, Deleuze did not exactly rea lize the project in
Deleuze argues, partly because they relied on hasty etiological assump- its envisioned fo rm. Yet when Deleuze asked, ten years later, "Why is
tions (the reversals and transformations of the so-called sexua l in- there not a 'Nietzscheism,' ' Proustism,' 'Kafkaism,' 'Spinozism' along
stinct), and partly because they were "content with a symptomatology the lines of a generalized clinic?" he implied that his monographs on
much less precise and much more confused than that which is fo und in each of these thinkers fe ll, to a greater or lesser degree, within the
Masoch himself. " 32 Because the judgments of clinicians are often prej- scope of the "critique et d inique" project.JS Nietzsche and Philosophy,
udiced, Deleuze adopts a literary approach in Coldness and Cruelty, fo r instance, shows how Nietzsche set out to diagnose a disease (ni-
offering a differentia l diagnosis of sadism and masochism based on the hilism ) by isolating its symptoms (ressentiment, the bad conscience, the
works fro m which their origina l definitions were derived . Three results ascetic ideal), by tracing its etiology to a certain relation of active and
of Deleuze's analysis are important for our purposes. On the clinical reactive fo rces (the genealogical method ), and by setting forth both a
side, Deleuze shows that sadism and masochism are two incommensu- prognosis (nihilism defeated by itself) and a treatment (the revaluation
rable modes of existence whose symptomatologies are completely dif- of va lues). Deleuze thought that the most original contribution of his
ferent. Each chapter of Coldness and Cmelty analyzes a particular as- doctoral thesis, Expressionism in Philosophy: Spinoza. was its analysis
peCt of the sadomasochistic "syndrome" (the nature of the fet ish, the of the composition of finite "modes" in Spinoza, which includes both a
function of fantasy, the forms of desexua lization and resexualizarion, clinica l diagnostic of their passive stare (h uman bondage) and a treat-
the status of the fa ther and mother, the role of the ego and superego, ment fo r their becoming-active (the "ethica l" task).J6 ln the first edition
etc. ) and in each case shows how it ca n be broken down into "symp- of Proust and Signs (1964), Deleuze interprets A la recherche du temps
toms" that are specific to the worlds of sadism and masochism. O n the perdu as a symptomatology of various worlds of signs that mobilize
critical side, he shows that these clinical symptoms are inseparable from the involuntary and the unconscious {the world of love, the social world,
the literary styles and techniques of Sade and Masoch, both of whom, the material world, and the world of art, which comes to transform
he argues, submit language to a "higher function ": in Sade, an Idea of all the others).J7 Even in Kafka: Toward a M;'10r Literature, Deleuze
pu re reason (absolute nega tion ) is projected into the real, producing a and Guartari show how Kafka's work provided a symptomatological
speculative-demonstrative use of language that operates through quan- diagnosis of the "diabolical powers" of the futu re (capitalism, bureau-
titative repetition; in Masoch, by contrast, the real is suspended in a cracy, fasc ism, Stalinism) that were knocking at the door. Cerrai n essays
INTRODUCTION
I NI ~ ODUCTIO N

collected in Essays Critical and Clinical could similarl y be read as entity, or even a localizable '"mode of existence": "schizophrenia is a
literary-clinical studies of specific writers. In all t hese works, what discordant syndrome, always in flight from itself. "40
Fouca ult called the "author function " has all but disappeared; the Anti-Oedipus therefore takes the "critique et clinique" project to a
proper name does not refer to a particular person as an author but to a properly transcendental level. From the clinical viewpoint, one of its
regime of signs or concepts, a determinate multiplicity or assemblage. aims is to descri be schizophrenia in its positivity, no longer as actual·
Deleuze speaks of Nietzsche's philosophy or Proust's novel in much the ized in a mode of life but as the process of life itself. Deleuze and Guat-
same way one speaks of Alzheimer's disease in medicine, the Doppler tari draw a sharp distinction between schizophrenia as a process and
effect or the Kelvin effect in science, the Hamiltonian number or the schizophrenia as a clinical entity (which results from an interruption of
Mandelbrot set in mathematics, that is, as a non ersonal mode of rhe process, as in Ihe case of Nietzsche), although thei r use of t he same
individua tion. If we were to characterize the symptomatological method term to describe both phenomena has led to numerous misunderstand-
-;sed by Deleuze, we could do so in terms of these twO funda mental ings. 41 For what Anti-Oedipus terms "schizophrenia as a process" is
components: the function of the proper name, and the assemblage or nothing other tha n what A Thousarld Plateaus terms "the process of
multiplicity designated by the name. J8 Life" as a nonorganic and impersonal power, "The problem of schizo·
phrenization as a cure consists in this: how can schizophrenia be dis-
With the publication of Anti·Oedipus in 1972, however, the "critique \ engaged as a power of humanity and of Na ture without a schizophrenic
et cl inique" project took a new turn, or at least brought to the fore a thereby being produced ? A problem analogous to t hat of Burroughs
tendency that would become ever more pronounced as Deleuze's own (How to incarnate the power of drugs without being an addict?) or
work progressed. Anti·Oedipus offers a now·famous critique of psycho-- Miller (How to get drun k on pure water?) "U From the critical side,
ana lysis that is prima rily symptomatological: psychoanalysis, Deleuze Deleuze and Guattari once aga in appea l to the work of literary figures,
and Guattari contend, fundamenta lly misunderstands signs and symp· especially a num ber of Anglo-American writers, whose work here as-
toms. Given the book's subtitle, Capitalism arId Schizophrenia, one sumes an importance it did not have in Deleuze's earlier work. "We
have been criticized for overquoting literary authors," they would later
might expect Deleuze and Guattari to provide a symptomatological
comment, "but is it our fau lt that Lawrence, Miller, Kerouac, Bur.
analysis of schizophrenia that would correct the errors and abuses of
roughs, Artaud, and Beckett know more about schizophrenia than psy·
psychoanalysis. But in fact this is not quite the case. Schizophrenia is
chiatrisls and psychoanalysts?"4J If literatu re here takes on a schizo-
an acute phenomenon that poses numerous problems to the cl inical
phren ic vocation, it is because the works of these writers no longer
method: not only is there no agreement as to the etiology of schizo-
simply present the symptomatology of a mode of life, but rat her at·
phrenia, but even its symptomatology remains uncertain. In most psy-
tempt to trace the virtual power of the nonorganic Life itself.
chiatric accounts of schizophrenia (Kraepelin, Bleuler), the diagnostic
How are we to conceive of this "schizophrenic vocation" of litera-
criteria are given in purely negative terms, that is, in terms of the de· ture? In 1970 Deleuze wrote a new essay on PrOUSt entitled "The Lit-
struction rhe disorder engenders in the subject: dissociation, autism, erary Machine," which was added to the second edition of Proust and
detachment from rea lity. Psychoanalysis retains th is negative view- Signs. Whereas the fi rst edition of PrOllst arId Signs considered the
point, insofa r as it relates all the syntheses of the unconscious to the Recherche from the viewpoi nt of its interpretation of signs, "The Liter·
father-mother-child triangle of rhe Oedipus complex (the ego): in neu- ary Machine considers the work from the viewpoint of its creation,
rosis, the ego obeys the requirements of reality and represses the drives its production of signs. 44 For art, Deleuze argues, is essentia lly prod uc-
of the id, whereas in psychosis the ego remains under the sway of the tive: the work of art is a machine fo r prod ucing or generating certain
id, leading to a break wi th reality.J9 T he problem with both psychiatry effects, certain signs, by determinable procedures. Proust suggested
and psychoanalysis is that these negative symptoms are dispersed and that his readers use his book as an optica l instrument, Ma kind of mag.
scattered, and arc difficult to totalize or unify in a coherent clinical nifying glass " that wou ld provide them wilh "the means of reading
INlIlODUCTION INTRODUCTION )(Xiii

within themselves, " in much the same way that Joyce described his and dispersed anarchic multiplicity, without unity or tota lity, whose e1- I
works as machines for producing "epiphanies. ,,~s There is thus a " lit- ements are welded and pasted together by the real distinction or the
erary effect" produced by literature, much as we speak of an optical very absence of a link."49 This is the principle of difference, which con-
effect or an electromagnetic effect; and the " literary machine" is an stitutes the first criterion: fragments or parts whose sole relationship
apparatus capable of creating these effects, producing signs of different is sheer difference, that are related to each other only in that each of
orders, and thus capable of funct ioning effectively. T he question De- them is different. "Dissociation" here ceases to be a negative trait
leuze here poses to the literary work is not "What does it mean?" (inter- of the schizophrenic and becomes a positive and productive principle

I
pretation) but rather " How does it function?" (experimentation). "The of both Life and Literature.
modern work of art has no problem of mean ing, it has only a problem Second, the problem of the work of art is to establ ish a system of
of use. '"'46 But the claim that " meaning is use'"' requires a transcendental communication among these parts or elements that are in themselves
analysis: noncommunicating. The literary work, Deleuze argues, must be seen
as the unity of its parts, even though it does not unify them; the whole
No one has been able to pose the problern of language except to the
extent that linguists and logicians hav(" elirninated rneaning; and the produced by the work is rather a "peripheral" totality that is added
highest power of language was discovered only when the work was alongside its pans as a new singularity fab ricated separately. Proust de-
viewed as a rnachine, producing certain effects, arnenable to a certain scribes the Recherche as a literary apparatus that brings together het-
use ... . The idea that meaning is nothing other than use becornes a erogenous elements and makes them function together; the work thus
principle onl)· if we have at our disposal imm(lnent criteria capable of constitutes a whole, but this whole is itself a part that merely exists
determining legitimate uses, as opposed to illegitirnate uses that would alongside the other parts, which it neither unifies nor totalizes. Yet it
refer use to a supposed rneaning and restore a kind of transcendence.
nonetheless has an effect on these parts, since it is able to create non·
Analysis terrned transcendental is precisely the deterrnination of these
immanent criteria. 41 preexistent relations between elements that in themselves remain dis·
connected, and are left intacr.50 This is rhe empiricist principle that
For Deleuze, these immanent criteria can be summarized in two pervades Deleuze's philosophy, which constitutes the second criterion:
principles. relations are always external to their terms, and the Whole is never a
First, the claim that meaning is use is valid only if one begins with principle but rather an effect that is derived from these external rela-
elements that in themselves, apart from their use, are devoid of any sig- tions, and that constantly varies with them. Russell demonstrated the
nification. Modern literature has tended to pose this question in terms insoluble contradictions set theory fa lls into when it treats the set of all
of the problem of a world in fragmellls. a world deprived of its unity, sets as a Whole. This is not beca use the notion of the Whole is devoid

I
reduced to crumbs and chaos. We live in an age that no longer thinks of sense, but it is not a set and does nOt have parts; it is rather what
in terms of a primordial Unity or Logos that we have lost (Platonism), prevents each set from closing in on itself, forcing it to extend itself
or some future Torality that awa its us as the result of a dialectic or evo- into a larger set, to infinity. The Whole, in other words, is the Open,
lution (Hegelianism), or even a Subjectivity, whether universal or not, because it is its nature to constantly produce or create the new.
that could bestow a cohesion or unity upon the world (Kantianism). It Deleuze thus describes his phi losophy as "a logic of mulriplici-
l is only when objective contents and subjective forms have collapsed ties," but he also insists that "the multiple must be made," that it is
I and given way to a world of fragments, to a chaotic and multiple im- never given in itself. 51 Th is production of the multiple entails two
personal reality, that the work of art assumes its fuJI meaning-"that tasks: obtain pure singularities, and establish relations or syntheses be-
is, exactly all the meanings one wants it to have according to its func- tween them so as to produce a variable Who le that would be the "ef-
tion ing; the essential poim being that it functions, that the machine fect" of the multiplicity and its disconnected parts. These are precisely
works. "~8 The elements or parts of the literary machine, in short, must the two paradoxical features of Life as a nonorganic ;lIld impersona l
be recognized by their mutual independence, pllre singularities, "a pure power: if is a power of abstraction capable of extracting or produci ng
INUODUCllON I N TRODUCT I ON

si ngularities and placing them in continuous va riation, and a power of ph ilosophy that, in the context of his own work, enter into a certain
creation ca pable of inventing ever new relations and conjugations be- resonance or affinity with the work of specific writers and artists. De-
tween these singularities. The fo rmer defines the vitality of life; the lat- !cuze has undertaken a formidable conceptllal crea tion in each of these
ter, its power of innovation. Deleuze is here appea ling, at least in parr, domains, and in what follows I would simply like to show, in a rather
to a model borrowed from biology, which defines Life (in the evolu- summary fa shion, the role each of these themes plays in the comext of
tionary sense) as a process consisting of the molecular production of Deleuze's "critique et dinique" project.
variation and the a posteriori selection of these variants ..51 To be sure,
I. The Destrllcrion of the World (Si ngularities and Events). Ontologi-
Deleuze is aware of the dangers of invoking scientific propositions out-
cally and logically, Deleuze locates the philosophical basis for modern
side of their own domain: it is the danger of an arbitrary metaphor or a
fo rced application. " But perhaps these dangers are averted, " he writes literature in uibniz. u ibniz conceives of the world as a " pure emis-
sion of singularities," and individua ls (monads) are constituted by the
in another context, "if we restrict ourselves to extracting from sci-
entific operators a particular conceptlla/izable character which itself convergence and actualization of a certain number of these singulari-
refers to non-scientific domains, and converges with science without ties, which become its " primary predicates." Here, for instance, are
applying it or making it a metaphor. " H This is the "vitalism" to which fou r singularities of a life: "to be the first man," " to live in a ga rden of
Deleuze lays claim: not a mystical life force, but the abstract power of paradise," "to have a woman emerge from one's rib," "to sin." These
Life as a principle of creation. singularities cannot yet be defined as predicates, but constitute what
From this point of view, the relation between the critical and the Deleuze calls pure "events." Linguistically, mey are like indeterminate
clinical becomes more complex. On the one hand, the term "critical" infinitives that are not yet actualized in determinate modes, tenses, per-
refers not only to criticism in the literary sense, but also to critiqlle in sons, and voices. The great originality of Deleuze's reading of u ibniz,
the Kantian sense of the word. The philosophical question now con- in both The Fold and The Logic of Sense, lies in his insistence on the
I
cerns the determination o f the genetic elements that condition the pro- anteriority of this domain of singularities (the virtual ) in relation to
predicates (the aCfual).H "Being a sinner" is an analytic predicate of a
duction of the literary work . (Deleuze, one should note, describes the
" transcendental field" in a completely different manner than does consti tuted indi vidual or subject, but the infinitive "to sin " is a virtual
Kant. Much like the genetic "code," it constitutes the conditions of singularity-event in the neighborhood of which the monad "Adam"
rea l experience and not merely possible experience; .(lnd it is never will be actualized. Such singularities constitme the genetic elements not
larger than what it conditions, but is itself determined at the same time only of an individual life, but also of the world in which they are actu-
as it determines what it conditions.) On the other hand, the term "clin- alized. For one can add to these four singularities a fifth one: " to resist
ical" does not simply imply a diagnosis of a particular mode of exis- temptation." This si ngularity is not impossible in itself, but it is, as
tence, but concerns the cri teria according to which one assesses the po- l.eibniz put it, incompossible with the world in which Adam sinned.
tentialities of "life" in a given work. It is no longer simply a question There is here a divergence or bifurcation in the series that passes
of ascertaining the symptomatology of particular mode of life, but of through the first three singularities; the vectors that extend from this
attaining the genetic level of the double power of Life as a process. fifth singularity to the three others do not converge, they do not pass
Now in fulfilling these two vita listic powers, modern literature ca n through common va lues, and this bifurcation ma rks a border between
be said to have had five interrelated effects-dftets that, as Deleuze two incompossi ble worlds: Adam the nonsinner belongs to a possible
suggests in his essay on Klossowski, are the inevitable consequences world that is incom possible with our own. For uibniz, the only thing
that fo llow from the death of God: the destrn c(ion of the world, the dis- tha t prevents these incompossible worlds from coexisting is the theo-
solll(ion of the SIIb;ect, the dis-integration of the body, the ~",inoriza ­ logical hypothesis of a God who calculates and chooses among them in
tion" of politics, and the stlltter;'lg " of language.54 Or rather, it would
H a kind of divine game: from this infinity of possible worlds, God selects
be more accurate to say that these are fi ve themes of Dcleuze's own [he " Best," the one richest with reality, which is defined by the set of
)
~i INTROOUCTION INTROOUCTION ~ii
convergent series that constitute it, and the set of monads that express whose conditions Dcleuze outlines in a chapter of The Time-Image en-
it with varying degrees of clarity. Each monad, though it has neither tided "The Powers of the False. "05' Descriptions no longer describe a
door nor window, nonetheless expresses the some world in the infinite preexisting actual reality; rather, as Rob be-Grillet says, they now stand
series of its predicates ("the preestablished harmony "), each of them for their objects, creating and erasing them at the same time. Time
/,
being a different poilu of /Jiew o n the single compossi ble world that ceases to be chronological, and sta rts to pose the simultaneity of in-
God causes them to cnvdop ("perspectivism"). compossible presents or the coexistence of not-necessarily-true pasts.
Literature acceded to its modernity, Deleuze suggests, not only Abstract space becomes discon nected, irs parrs now capable of being
when it turned to language as its condition, but when it freed the vir- linked in an infin ite number of ways through nonlocaliza ble relations ,,
tual from its actualizations and allowed it to assume 3 validity of its (as in the Riemanian or topological spaces o f modern mathematics).
own. Deleuze often cites 35 an example Borges's famo us story "The Concrete space is no longer ei ther stable or unstable but metastable,
Garden of the Forking Paths, " in which a purely virtual world is de-
scribed in the 13byrinthine book of a Chinese philosopher named Ts'ui
Pen: " In a ll fiction, when a man is faced with alternatives, he chooses
patible yet coexistent. Forces lose their centers of movement and fixed
points of rderence and are now merely related to o ther forces. "Per-
I
presenting"a plurality of ways of being in the world " that are incom- L • '·f" H
I ...............
one at the expense of others. In the a lmost unfatho mable Ts'ui Pen, he spectivism" no longer implies a plurality of viewpoints on the same
chooses-simultaneously-all of them .... Fang, let us say, has a se- world or object; each viewpoint now opens o n to another world that
crel. A stranger knocks at the door. Naturally there are various out- itself contains yet others. The " ha rmony" of Leibniz's world ives way
comes. Fang can kill the intruder, the intruder can kill Fang, both can 10 an ema ncipa tion of dissonance and unresolved chords that are not
be saved, both can die, etc. In Ts'ui Pen 's work, all the possible so /,, - broug t ac into a tonalitY2 a "~Iyphony of polyphonies" (Boulez).
tio" s occur, each aile being the point of departure for other bifur- ~ost Importandy, perhaps, the forma l logic of actual predicates is re-
cations. ... You have come to my house, but in one of our possible placed by a properly "transcendental" logic of virtual singularities. It
pasts you are my enemy, in another, my friend ."$6 uibniz ~ad in fact
given a si milar presentation of the universe at the conclusion of the
Theodicy-"an astonishing text," says Deleuze, "that we consider a
Deleuze and Guattari speak of a "rhizome," that is, a multjplicity in
which a singula rity can be connected to any other in an infinite num-
I
is under these virtua l conditions (and only under these conditions) that

source of all modern literature. " 57 In Ts'ui Pen's labyrinth, however, ber of ways. Deleuze distinguishes, in general, between three types of
God is no longer a Being who compares and chooses the richest com- syntheses among singularities: a connective synthesis (if . . . then),
possible world, as in the Theodicy; he has now become a pure Process which bears upon the construction of a single series; a conjunctive syn-
that passes through all these virtual possibilities, fo rming an infinite thesis (and ... and), which is a method of constructing convergent
web of diverging and converging series. Divergences, bifurcations, and serics; and, most importantly, a paradoxical disjunctive synthesis (ei-

~ J,(...
incompossibles now belong to one and the same universe, a chaotic
universe in which divergen t series trace endlessly bifurcating paths: a
$""T~.f...,y~ "chaosmos" and no longer a world.
ther ... or), which affi rms and distributes divergent series and turns
disj unction into a positive and synthetic pri nciple. (One of the essential
questions posed by Logic of Sense concerns the conditions in which
..
,

.. \<::: J
exclusion. )ii! Narration. in short, can describe this virtual domain only I~
,1.,) Hi ndered as he was by theological exigencies, Leibniz could on ly disjunction can be a synthetic principle and not merely a procedure of
.~ ~ .
hint at the principle of the "ideal game" that governs the relat10ns
among si ngula rities considered in themselves. For the inherence of pred· by becoming fu nda mentally falsifyillg: neither true nor fa lse in con-
icates in the expressive monad presupposes the compossibility of the tent-an undecidable alternative-but fa lse in its fo rm , what Nietzsche
expressed world, but both in turn presuppose the distribution of pure called the creative power of the false (the production o f truths that
singula rities that are a-cosmic and preindividual, a nd are linked to- "fa lsify" established truths ).@.>
gether in series accordi ng to rules of convergence a nd divergence. This Many of Deleuze's analyses of literature in Difference a"d Repeti-
iilx-f(l.tion of the virtua l implies a fundamentally new type of narration, tion and Logic of Sense concern the various techniques by which such
xxviii INTRODUCTION INT_ODUCTION

disjunctive syntheses have been put to use in language by various writ- (the monadic subject), beings are now tOrn open and kept open through
ers, The Logic of Seme, for instance, includes an analysis of the vari- the divergent series and incompossible ensembles that continua lly pull
ous types of "portmanteau-words" created by Lewis Carroll, which [hem outside themselves (the nomadic subject). "Instead of a certain
make language ra mify and bifurcate in every direction: the contracting number of predica tes being excluded by a thing by virtue of the iden-
word , which form s a connective synthesis over a single series (" Your tiry of its concept, each 'thing' is open to the infinity of singu larities
Roya l Highness" is contracted into "y'reince"'); the circulatillg word, th rough which it passes, and at the same time it loses its center, that is
which fo rms a conjunctive syntheses between twO heterogenous series to say, its identity as a concept and as a self. "65 An ind ividual is a mul-
(Snark = snake + shark; slithy = slimy + lithe, etc.); and the disi,mctille tipliciry, the actualization o f a set o f virtual singularities tha t function
word, which crea tes an infinite ramification of coexistent series (fru- together. that enter into symbiosis, that attain a certain consistency.
mious = furious + fumi ng, in which the true disjunct ion is between But there is a great difference between the singularities that defin e the
"fuming-furious" and "fu rious-fuming," which in fUrn creates ramifica- virtual plane o f immanence and the individuals that actualize them and
tions in other series),6l Raymond Roussel produced his texts by making transform them into someth ing transcendent. A wound is actualized in
two divergent series resonate. In fA DOl/blure this procedure rests on a state of things or in the lived experience of an individual; but in itself
the double meaning of a homonym (the title can mean either "T he it is a pu re virtual ity on the plane of immanence that sweeps one along
Understudy" or "The Lin ing"): the space opened up at the heart of the in a life. "My wound existed before me," writes j oe Bousquet, a French
word is filled by a Story and by ob jects that themselves take on a poet shot in World War I. "I was born to embody it. "66 The question
double meaning, each participating in fWO stories at the same time. Deleuze poses with regard to the subject is " How can the individual
Impressiom of Africa complicates the procedure, starting witl). a quasi tra nscend its form and its syntactical link with a world in order to at-
homonym, " billard/pilla rd,'" but hiding the second story within the tain the universal communication o f events?"'7 What he calls "schizo-
fi rst.62 Gombrowicz's Cosmos is similarly structured around a series of phrenization'" is a limit-process in which the identity o f the ind ividual
ha nged animals and a series of feminine mouths, which communicate is dissolved and passes entirely into the virtual chaosmos of included
with each other by means of strange interfering objects and esoteric disjunctions. The schizophrenic quickly shifts from one singularity to
words. joyce's Ulysses implicates a story between twO series, Ulysses! another, never explaining events in the same manner, never invoking
Bloom, em ploying a mul titude of procedures that almost constitute an the same genealogy (" I, Antonin Artaud, am my son, my fa ther, my
archaeology of the modes of narration: a prodigious use of esoteric mother, and myself"), never taking on the same identity (Nijinsky: "I
and portmanteau words, a system of correspondences between num- am God . I was not God. I am a clown of God. I am Apis. I am an
bers, a "questionna ire" method of questions/responses, the institution Egyptian . I am a Negro. I am a Chinaman. I am a j apanese ... ). "61 If
of trai ns o f multiple thoughts. Finnegans Wake takes the technique to Deleuze sees a fundamental link between Samuel Beckett's work and
1 its limit, invoking a letter that ma kes all the divergent series constitu- schizoph renia, it is because Beckett likewise situates his characters en-
tive of the "chaosmos" communicate in a transversal dimension.63 ti rely in the domain of the vi rtua l or the possible: rather than trying to
Such a universe goes beyond any lived or livable experience; it exists reali~e a possibiliry, they remain within the domain of the possible and
only in thought and has no other resu lt tha n the work of art. But it attempt to exhaust logically the whole of the possible, passing through
is also, writes Dcleuze, "that by which thought and art are rea l, and all the series and permutations of its incl uded disj unctions (the perme-
disturb the real iry, mora lity, and economy of the world. "64 ation of "sucking stones" in Molloy, the com bina torial of five biscuits
in Murph y, the series of footwear in Watt ). In the process, they exhaust
2. The Dissolution of the Subiect (Affects and Percepts). In such a themselves physiologica lly, losing their names, their memory, and their
chaotic and bifurcating world, the status of the individual changes as purpose in "a fan tastic decomposition of the self. "6'
well: the monadology bttomes a nomadology. Rather than being closed Even without attaining th is limit, however, the self is not defined
upon the compossible and convergent world they express from within by its identiry but by a process of "becoming." Deleuze and Guattari
INUODUCTION INlR OOUC TION

analyze this concept in a long and complex chapter of A Thousand to autonomous and sufficient beings that no longer owe anything to
Piateaus.7o The notion of becoming does not simply refer to the fact those who experience or have experienced them. " 76
that the self does not have a static bei ng and is in constant flux. More What does it mean to speak of a pure affect as an "a utonomous
precisely, it refers to an objective zone of indistinction or indiscernibility bei ng"? In his remarkable cha pters on "the affection-image" in The
that always exists between any two multiplicities, a zone that immedi- Movement-Image, Deieuze takes as one of his exa mples the climactic
ately precedes their respective nalUral differentiation. 71 In a bifurcating scene o f G. B. Pabst's fil m Pandora's Box. Jack the Ripper, looking
world, a multiplicity is defined not by its center but by the limits and dreamily into Lul u's compassionate face in the light of a lamp, sud-
borders where it enters into relations with other multiplicities and denly sees the gleam of a bread kn ife over her shoulder; his face, in
changes nature, transforms itself, follows a line of (ligh t. The self is a close-up, gasps in terror, his pupils grow wider, " the fear becomes a
thresho l d~~ door, a becoming between two multiplicities, as in Rim- pa roxysm"; then his face relaxes again as he accepts his destiny, given
baud's formula "I is another." One ca n enter a zone of becoming with the irresistible call of the weapon and the availabi lity of Lulu as a vic-
anything, provided one discovers the literary or artistic mea ns of doing tim. This scene, Deleuze suggests, can be grasped in two ways. On the
so. Nowhere is this idea of becoming better exempl ified than in Her- one hand, it defi nes an "actual " state of affairs, local ized in a certain
man Melville's Moby- Oick, which Deleuze and Gu atta ri consider to place and time, wi th individualized characters (Lulu, Jack), objects
be "one of the greatest masterpieces of becoming. "12 The relation 6e- with particular uses (the lamp, the knife), and a set of real connections
tween Captain Ahab and the white whale is neither an imitation or between these objects and characters. On the other hand, it can also be
mimesis, no r a lived sympathy, nor even an imaginary identification. said to defi ne a set o f qualities in a pure state, outside their spatio-
Rather, Ahab becomes Moby-Dick, he enters a zone of indiscernibility temporal coordinates, with their own ideal si ngularities and virtual
wherehc can no longer distingu ish himself from M oby-Dick, to the conjunctions: Lulu's compassionate look, the brighmess of the light,
the gleam of the blade, Jack's terror, resignation, and ultimate decisive- \
point where he strikes himself in striking the whale. And JUSt as Ahab
ness." These are what Deleuze call pure "possibles," that is, si ngular
is engaged in a becoming-whale, so the animal simultaneously becomes
qual ities_or powers.
something other: an unbearable whiteness, a shimmering pure white
In Pabst's film, brightness, terror, decisiveness, and compassion are
wall . "To me, the white whale is that wall, shoved near to me. Some-
very different qualities and powers: the fi rst is a qual ity of a sensation;
times 1 th ink there is na ught beyond. But 'tis enough . ,,7.) What is the re-
the second is the quality of a feeling; the third, of an action; and the
ality of this becoming? It is obvious that Ahab does not "really" be-
last, of a state. Bu t these qualities are not themselves either sensations
come a whale, any more tha n Moby-Dick "rea lly" becomes something
feel ings, actions, or states; they express rather the quality of a possi bl;
else. In a lxx:oming, one term does not become another; rather, each
sensation or feeling. Brighmess is not the same as a particular sensa-
term ~~ the other, and the becoming~something betw~n die tion, nor is decisiveness the same as a particular action; they are rather J
two). outside the two. This "something" is what Deleuze ca lls a pure af- II
qualities that will be actua lized under certain conditions in a pa rticular
fect or percept, which is irreducible to the affections or perceptions o f sensation (the knife blade in the light of the lamp) or a particu lar ac-
a subject. " Percepts are nOt perceptions, they are packets of sensations tion (the knife in Jack's hand). T hey correspond to what C. S. Pei rce
and relations that outl ive those who experience them. Affects are not called " Firstness," the category of the Possi ble, which considers qual i-
feel ings, they are becomings that go~ro nd those li ve th rough them ties in themselves as positive possibilities, wi tho ut reference to any-
(they become other). " 7~ In Moby-Dick, both Ahab and the wha le lose thing else, independen tly of thei r actualization in a particular state of
their texture as su bjects in favor of "an infin itely prolife rating patch- affairs. According to Deleuzc, Pei rce seems to have been in flu enced
work" of affects and percepts ,ha t escape their form, like the pure here by Mai ne de Biran, who had al ready spoken of pure affections
whiteness of the wall, or Mthe fu rrows that twist from Ahab's brow to Mu nplac~able because they have no relation to a determinate space:
,hal of the Whale:' 7J " We attain to the percept and the affect only as present In the sole form of a 'there is .. .' because they ha ve no relation
XJ()(i i INTR ODUCTION IN TRODUC TION lOOCiii

to a subject (the pains of a hemiplegic, the floati ng images of falling ~xc1us.ivel~ of S~Ort ~lose-ups. Joan of Arc's tria l is an event actualized
asleep, the visions of madness)." "Secondness," by contrast, is the cate- In a histOrica l situation, with individuated characters and rol U
h b· h es oan,
gory of the Real, in which these qualities have become "forces" that are r . C IS, op, the jud~es), with the affections of these characters (the
related to each other (exertion-resistance, action-reaction, excitation- bishop s anger, Joan s martyrdom ). But the ambition of Dreyer's film is
response, situation-behavior, individual-milieu) and are actualized in to extract the ".Pa ss ~on " from the trial: " All that will be preserved from
determinate space-times, geographicaf or historical milieus, and indio the roles and situations will be what is needed for the affect to be ex-
vidual people.78 tracted .and to carry Out its conj unctions-this 'power' of anger or of
Now, what Deleuze calls an affect is precisely the "complex en- ruse, thiS ~qua.lity' of victim or martyrdom. "82 Bergman perhaps pushed
tity " that, at each insta nt, secures the vi rtual conjunction of a set of r~e affectlon-~mage of the face to its extreme limit: in the superimposi-
such singular qualities or powers (the brightness, the terror, the com- tion ~ f faces. III Persona, the image absorbs two beings and dissolves
passion ). Art does nOt actualize these virtual affects; it gives them "a them III a VOid, having as its sale affect a mute Fear, the fear of the face
body, a life, a universe. " 79 The strength of Deleuze's discussion in The when confronted with its own "effacement." 83
Movement-Image lies in its analysis of the way in which, in the cinema, . "Lite.rature has its own means o f extracting affects ... A great novel-
such qua lities or powers are obtained through the close-up: when we ISt, wnte Deleuze and Guattari, " is above all an artist who invents
see the face of a fleeing coward in dose-up, we see "cowardice " in per-
unk~own or. unrecognized affects and brings them to light as the be-
son, freed from its actualization in a particular person. "The possibil-
com.lOg of hiS characters. "84 It is not that they are proposing an aes-
ity of drawing near to the human fa ce," writes Ingmar Bergman, " is
thetiC Of. pure qualities, fo r af~ects must always be considered from the
the primary originality and distinctive quality of rhe cinema. "80 Ordi-
~tandpoillt of the becomings that seize hold of them. "Pure affects
nari ly, the face of a human subject plays a role that is at once individu-
Impl y an enterprise of desubjectivation. "as The aim of literature, fo r
ating, socializing, and communicative; in the dose-up, however, the
De euze, ~s not t e development of forms or the formation of subjects, '\f'.l
face becomes an autonomous entity that tends to destroy this triple
but the dl.spl~cement or catapulting of becomings into affects and per- .... '"
fun ction: social roles are renounced, communication ceases, individua-
tion is suspended. The o rga nization of the face is undone in favor of its ceP.ts, ~h lch m ~urn ~re combined into " blocks of sensation " through
own material trai ts (" partS which arc hard and tender, shadowy and their Virtual c~nJ unction. In Emily Bronte's Wuthering Heights, for ex-
illuminated, jagged and curved, dull and shiny, smooth and grainy"), a"mple, CatheCl.ne" and ~eathcliff are caught up in a double becoming
which become the building material, the " hyle," of an affect, or even a ( I am Heathclif~ ) that ISdeeper than love and higher than the " lived,"
system of affects. 81 Sometimes a fa ce can be reflective, immutable and a profound passion that traces a zone of indiscernibility between the
without becoming, fixed on a thought or object, expressing a pure tw~ char~cters and creates a block of becoming that passes through an
Quality that marks a minimum of movement for a maximum of unity entire s~ fl es of inten si ~e affects. s6 In Kafka's Metamorphosis, Gregor
(Lulu'S compassion); sometimes, by contrast, a face can be intensive, S~msa IS caught up, like Ahab, in a becoming-a nimal but he finds
fee ling a pure Power that passes through an entire series of qualities, himself OedipaJized by his family and goes to his death ~87 In Ch retien
each of them assuming a momentary independence, but then crossing a de ~royes's novels, one finds catatonic knights seated on their steeds,
threshold that emerges OntO a new qua lity Uack the Ripper's series of leanlllg on their lances, awaiting chivalry and adventure. Like Beckett's
ascending states of terror). Between these two poles, there can be nu- cha~acte~s, "the knight of the novel of cou rtly love spends his time for-
merous intermixings. But this is the way in which the face pa rticipates geumg hiS name, whar he is doing, what people say to him he doesn't
in the nonorganic Life of things, pushing the face ro irs point of nudity kno~ where he is going or to whom he is speaking"-an a~nesiac an
and even inhumanity, as if every face enveloped an unknown and un- ataXIC, a catato~ic, a schizophrenic, a series of pure affects that co~sti-
explored landscape. For Deleuze, the affective fi lm par excellence is tutes ,the becomlllg of (he knight. s8 It is at this level of the affect, as a
Carl Dreyer's The Passiotl of j oan of Arc, which is made up almost genetic element, that life and literature converge on each other: " Life
INTROOUCtlON INU OOUCT'O N

alone creares such zones where livi ng beings whirl around, and only ra achieve an autonomous status? In his chapter "The Perception-
art can reach and penetrate them in its enterprise of co-creation, "19 Image" in The MOl/emellt-lmage, Deleuze shows how Vertov's "kino-
What we have sa id of affects applies equally to percepts. Just as eye" attempted to attai n, through cinematic means, a perception as it
"'..... ~ the affect goes beyond the affections of a cha racter, so the percept goes was "before" humans, the pure vision of a nonhuman eye (the camera)
~ ..R. ..... ~ . beyond the character's perceptions of the landscape. A percept, says that would be in matter itself, making possible the construction of an
tA...M~ ~tt......Deleuze, is "a perception in becoming," a potentialization that raises "any-space-whatever" released from its human coordinates. Similarly,
\t,. .t....¥lU... t' sight to the nth power and breaks with the human perception of deter- in painting, cezanne spoke of the need to always paint at close range,
minate milieus.'" The character's relation to the landscape, writes to no longer see the wheat field, to be too close to it, [0 lose oneself in
Fran~oi s Zourabichvili, " is no longer [hat of an autonomous and pre- the landscape, without landmarks, to t e point were one no longer
existent inner life and an independent external reality supposed to re- sees fo rms or even matters, but on ly forces, densities, intensities: the
flect this life "; rather, the landscape " invol ves one in a becoming where forces of folding in a mountain, the forces of germination in an apple,
[he subject is no longer coextensive with itself. "'91 In Moh y- Dick, Cap- the therma l and magnetic forces of a landscape. This is what cezanne
tain Ahab has perceptions of the sea, but he has them only because he called the world before humanity, "dawn of ourselves," " iridescent
has entered into a relationship with Moby-Dick that makes him be- chaos," "virginity of the world ": a collapse o f visua l coordinates in a
come-whale, and forms a compound of sensations that no longer has universa l varia tion or interaction. Afterward, the ea rth can emerge,
need of either Ahab or the whale: the Ocean as a pure percept, In Seven "stubborn geometry," "the measure of the world," "geological foun-
PifJars of Wisdom , T. E. Lawrence has perceptions of the Arabian dations"-though with the perpetua l risk that the earth in rurn may
desert, but he has entered into a becoming-Arab that populates the hal- once again disappear in a "catastrophe. "t.s Paul Klee descri bed the act
lucinatory haze of the desert with the affects of shame and glory: the of painting in similar terms: "not to rend_,,_ the visible, but to render
, Desert as percept. In Virginia Woo]f"s Mrs. Dal/oway, Mrs. Dalloway I/isih le"-that is, t~ render visible forces that a;-e n~o;:r~v~isiiiiO:,:T.in;'-;r"'=m _
has perceptions of the town , but this is because she has passed into the selves. In music, Messiaen spoke of his sonorous percepts as "melodic
N, town like "a knife through everything," to the poim where she herself landscapes" populated by "rhythmic characters."96 In literature, Woolf's
has become imperceptible; she is no longer a person, but a becoming fo rmula was " to saturate every atom": "to eliminate all waste, dead-
("She would not say of herself, I am this, I am that "): the Town as a ness, superfluity," everythi ng that adheres to ou r lived perceptions; but
percept.tl What the percept makes visible are the invisi ble forces that also to saturate the percept, "ro put everything into it," to include
populate the universe, that affect us and make us become: characters everything. t7 Whatever the technical means involved, such percepts
pass into the landscape and themselves become part of the compound ca n only be constructed in art, since they helong to an eye that we do
of sensations. These percepts are what Woolf called "moments of the " ,ot have. "In each case style is needed- the writer's syntax, [he musi-
world ~ and what Deleuze terms "haecceities," in which the mode of CIan's modes and rhythms, the painter's lines and colors-to raise lived
indi viduation of "a life" does not differ in natu re from that of "a di- perceptions to the percept and lived affections to the affect. " '8
mate, " "a wind," "a fog," or "an hour of a day," They are assemblages Affects and percepts are thus the genetic and immanent elements
of nonsubiectified affects, and percept~ ,t hat e~ter intO virt u~ 1 conjunc- constit!!tive of~f~ "The individuation of a life," writeDeleu;-and
\ tion. "The street enlers mra composltlon With the horse, JUSt as the Guauari, " is not the same as the individuation of the su bject that leads
dying rat enters into composition with the air, and the beast and the it or serves as its ~ u pport."" A " life" is constructed on all immalletlt
full moon enter into composition with each other. " 93 The landscape is plalle of consiste,:cy that knows on ly relations berween affects and
no longer an external reality, but has become the very clement of a percepts, and whose composition, through the creation of blocks of
"passage of Ufe." As Dcleuze and Guattari put it, "We are not ;11 the sensations, takes place in the indefinite and virtual time of the pure
* X world, we lx-come witl} the world. " 9. event (Aeon). A "subject " is constructed on a trallsce"dent plmle of or-
How can such a " mo ment of the world" be made to exist by itself, ganization that already involves the development of forms, organs, and
INTl OOUC TION JOo(Yii
IN T ~ODUCTION

functions , and takes place in a measured and actualized time (Chr~nos). ties running through them .... Experimentation 0 11 ourself is om only
identity. "IOJ
It is true that the opposition between these twO types of planes IS ab-
stract, since one continually and unnoticeably passes from one to ~he 3. The Dis-integration of the Body (Intensities and Becomings). The
other; it is perhaps better to speak of two movements or tenden ~ les, dissolution of the logical identity o f the sul?ject has_as its .;:orrelate the
since there is no subject that is not caught up in a process of becoming, physiCilais-inregration of the organic body. Beneath the organic body, "
and affects and percepts presuppose at least a minimal subject from and astts condition, there lies what Artaud discovered and named: the
which they are extracted, or as an "envelope" that allows them to body without organs, which is a p..w:ely..imensi\le-hody. The body with-
communicate.1OO In A Thousand Plateaus, Goethe and Kleist au: pre- out organs is one o f Deleuze's most notorious concepts; it appears fo r
sented as almost paradigmatic examples of these two tendencies in lit- the first time in The Logic of Sense, is developed conceptually in Anti-
erature. Goethe, like Hegel, insisted that writin~ should aim at the re g-, Oedipus, and is the object of a programmatic .;:hapter of A Thousand
ulated formation of a Subject, or the harmoOious development of a Plateaus entitled " How Do You Make Yourself a Body without Or-
Form; hence his emphasis on themes such as the sentimental education, ga ns?" I04 Deleuzc finds its biological model in~, which is an in-
the inner solidity of the characters, the harmony between forms, the tensive fiel iteral! without 0 gaO!, efiii«l solei b axes an vec-
continuity of thei r development, and so forth. In Kleist, by contrast, tors, gradients and thresholds, displacements and migrations. lOS But
feelings are uprooted from the interiority of the subject and are pro- here agiln,-Oeleuze appeals ~o embryology only in ord~ extract a
jected outward into a milieu of pure exteriority: love and hate.are pure philosophical concept from it: the body without organs is the model of
affects (Gemiit) that pierce the body like weapons; they are Instances Life itself, a p<?werful nonorgamc an intensive vitality that traverses
of the becomings of the characters (Achilles' becoming-woman, Pen- the ~nlsm; by contras • t e orgamsm, ; ith its form s and functions,
thesilea's becoming-dog). There is no subject in Kleist, but only the af- is not ITk;Dut rather that which imprisons life. But fo r Deleuze, the
fects and percepts of a life that combine into " blocks of becoming," body without organs is not something that exists " before" the organ-
blocks that may petrify in a catatonic freeze, and then suddenly accel- ism; it is the intensive reality of the body, a milieu of intensity that is
erate to the extreme velocity of a flight of madness ("Catatonia is: "beneath" or "adjacent to" the organism and contjnually in the pro-
'This affect is tOO strong for me'; and a flash is: 'The power of this af- cess of constructing itself. It is what is "seen," fo r example, in the phe-
fect is sweeping me away"').IOI Proust, who is perhaps the most fre- nomena known as internal or externa l "a utoscopia ": it is no longer
quent point of reference in Deleuzc's works, combines these twO ten- my head, but I feel myself inside a head; or I do not see myself in the
dencies in an almost exemplary manner. In the course of " lost time," mirror, but I feel myself in the organism I see, and so on.
Proust progressively extracts affects and percepts from his characters In Anti-Oedipus, Deleuze and Guattari make use of the concept of
and landscapes, so that the "plane of composition" of the Recherche the body without organs to describe the experien.;:e of schizophrenics,
emerges only gradually, as the work progresses, slowly sweeping every- fo r whom the body without organs is something that is primarily felt
thing along in its path, until it finally appears for itself in "time re- under the integrated o rganization of the organism, as if the organs
ga ined": the forces of pure time [hat have now become perceptible in were experienced as pure intensities .;:apable of being linked together in
themselves.IOl For Deleuze, it is only by passing through the "death of an infinite number of ways. In Na ked Lunch. Burroughs provides a
the subject" that one can ach ieve a true individuality and acquire a vivid literary description of such a vi tal schizoid body:
proper name. " It's a strange business, speaking for yourself, in your No o rgan is constant as regards either function or position ... sex o r-
own name, because it doesn't at all come with seeing yourself as an ego gans sprout everywhere . .. rectums open, defecate, and dose ... the
or a person or a subject. Individuals fi nd a real name fo r themselves cntire o rga nism cha nges colo r and consistcncy in split-second ad just-
only through the harshest exercise in depersonalization, by opening ments.... The human body is scandalously inefficient. Ins tead of a
mo uth and an anus to get Out of order why nOt have one all- purpose
themselves to the multiplicities everywhere within them, to the intensi-
lOUtVii i INUODUCTION INflOOUCTIO N xxxix

hole to cal and eliminate? We could seal up nose and mouth, fill in plex; they are neither familial nor personal but world· historical: it's the
the slOmach, make an air hole direct inlO the lungs where it should Russians that worry the schizo, or the Ch inese; his mouth is dry, some-
have been in the firsl place. 1M one buggered him in the subway, there are spermatozoa swi mming
In Lenz, George Buchner describes the stroll of a schizophrenic whose everywhere; it's Franco's fault, or the Jews' ... The great error of psycho- 1
intensive organs enter into a b«-oming with all the elements of nature, ana lysis was to have largely ignored the social, political, geographical, ~
to the point where the distinction between self and nonseif, man and na- tribal, and, above all, racial content of delirium, or to have reduced it
ture, inside and outside, no longer has any meaning.l07 O. H. Lawrence to the familial or personal. More importantly, for Deleuze, these deliri- f
ous formations constitute " kernels of an," insofar as the artistic pro- N
painted the picrure of a similar body without organs in Fantasia of the
UPlconsciolls, with the sun and the moon as its twO poles, and its vari~
ductions of the "mad" can themselves be seen as the construction of
a body without organs with its own geopolitical and racial coordi-
ous planes, sections, and plexuses. 101 But schizophrenics also experi-
nates. lIO Artaud's "theater of cruelty" ca nnot be separated from his
ence states in which this anorganic func tioning of the organs StOPS
con frontation with the "races," and his confrontation with fo rces and
dead, as the intensities approach the limit where intensity equals zero.
religions of Mexico, all of which populate his body without organs.
It is here that the body without organs becomes a model of Death, co-
Rimbaud's "season in hell " cannot be separated from a becoming-
extensive with Life. Authors of horror stories know this well, when
Mongol or a becoming-Scandinavian, a vast " displacement of races
they appeal to the terror nOt of the orga nic corpse, but of the catatonic
and continen ts," the intensive feeling of being "a beast, a Negro, of an
schizophrenic: the organism remains, with its vacant gaze and rigid
inferior race inferior for all eternity" ("' I am from a distant race: my
postures, but the vital intensity of the body is suspended, frozen ,
ancestors were Scandinavians; they used to pierce their sides and drink
blocked. These twO poles of the body without organs-the vital anor-
thei r own blood.-I will make gashes on my entire body and tattoo it.
ganic functioning of the organs and their frozen catatonic stasis, with I want to be as hideous as a Mongol. ' . . . ) dreamed of crusades, of un-
all the variations of attraction and repulsion that exist between them recorded voyages of discovery, of republics with no history, of hushed-
-translate the entire anguish of the schizophrenic. For schizophrenics up religious wars, revolutions in customs, displacements of races and
experience these naked intensities in a pure and almost unendurable continems").111 Zarathustra's "Grand Politics" cannot be separated
state: beneath the hallucinations of the senses (" I see," " I hear") and from the life of the races that leads Nietz.sche to say, "I' m nOt German,
the deliriums of thought (W ) think "), there is something more pro- I'm Polish. "Ill Delirium d~s not consist in identifying one's ego with
fou nd , a feeling of intensity, that is, a becoming or a transition (" I various historical figures, but of identifying thresholds of intensity that
feel" ). A gradient is crossed, a threshold is surpassed or retreated from, aTe traversed on the body without organs with proper names. Nietz-
a migration is brought about: " I feel that 1 am becoming woman," " I sche, for example, does not suddenly lose his reason and identify him-
feel that I am becoming god," "I feel that) am becoming pure matter." self with Strange personages; rather, his delirium passes through a series
When Judge Schreber, in a famous case analyzed by Freud, says he is of intensive states that receive various proper names, some of which
becoming a woman and can feel breasts on his naked tOrso, he is ex- designate his allies, or manic rises in intensity (Prado, Lesseps, Cham·
pressing a lived emotion that neither resembles nor represents breasts bige, "honest criminels" ), others his enemies, or depressive falls in in-
but rather designates a zone of pu re intensity on his body without tensity (Caiaphus, Will iam, Bismarck, the "antisemites")-a chaos of
organs. 109 pure osci llations invested by "all the names of history" and not, as psy-
Now according to Deleuze and Guattari, what we call a "delir- choana lysis wou ld have it, by "the name of the fathe r." Even when he
ium " is the general matrix by which the intensities and becomings of is motionless, the schizophren ic undertakes vast voyages, but they are
the body without organs directly invest the sociopolitical field. One of voyages in intensit)': he crosses the desert of his body without organs,
the essential theses of Anti-Oedipus is that delirious formations are not and along the way struggles against other races, destroys civi lizations,
Tt'dudble [0 the father-mother-child coordinates of the Oedipus com- becomes a woman, becomes God.
I.... UOOUCT IO N
" INT. ODUC TI ON

Deleuze and Guatfari seem to go ever further. If the body without race, an Aryan" ); and a "schizophrenic " pole, or literature as the mea- !
organs is the model of l ife, and delirium is the process by which its in- sure of health, which always pushes the process furthe r, following the
tensities directly invest history and geogra phy, then every literary line of fl ight, invoki ng an impure and basta rd race that resists every-
work-and not merely the productions of the mad~a n be analyzed thing that crushes and imprisons life (.. ( am a beast, a nigger ... ( am
cl inically as constituti ng a kind of delirium . T he question one must ask of an inferior race for all eternity" ).
is, What are the regions of History and the Universe, what are the na-
tions and races, that are invested by a given work of art? O ne can make 4. The "MinoriUltion" of Politics (Speech Acts and Fabulation). It is
a map of the rhizome it creates, a cartography of its body without or- here that we confront Oeleuze's conception of the political destiny of
gans. In A ThousafJd Plateaus, Deleuze and Guattari propose a brief literature. J ust as writers do not write with their egos, neither do they
cartographic sketch of American literature: in the EaSt, there was a write "on beha lf of" an already existing people or "address" themselves
search fo r an American code and a recoding with Europe (Henry James, to a class or nation. When great artists such as Mallarme, Rimbaud,
Eliot, Pound); in the South, an overcoding of the ruins of the slave sys- Klee, Berg, or the Straubs evoke a people, what they find ra ther is that
tem (Faul kner, Caldwell, O 'Connor); in the North, a capita list decod- "the people are missing. "liS For Deleuze, this implies a new concep-
ing (Dos Passos, Dreiser); but in the West, there was a profound line of tion of the "revolutionary" potential of literature. T he two great mod-
fli ght, with its ever recedi ng limits, its shifting and displaced frontier, ern revolutions, the American and the Soviet. shared a belief in the
its Indians and cultures, its madness (Kerouac, Kesey, the Beats). It is fina lity of universal history in which "the people are already there,"
from this clinica l viewpoint that Deleuze writes of the superiority of even if they exist in an oppressed or subjugated sta te, blind and uncon-
Anglo-American literature.\IJ D. H. Lawrence reproached French liter- scious, awaiting their actualization, their "becoming-conscious." Amer-
ature for being critical of life rather than creatille of life, filled with a ica sought to create a revolution whose strength would lie in a uniller-
mania for judging and being judged. But Anglo-American writers sal immigration, a melting pot in which emigres from all countries
know how to leave, to push the process furthe r, to fo llow a line of would be fu sed in a unanimist community, JUSt as Russia sought to
flight, to enter into a becoming that escapes the ressentiment o f per- make a revolution whose strength would lie in a universal pro /etoTiza-
sons and the domina nce of established orders. Yet Deleuze and Guat- tion, a communist society of comrades without property or family.
tari constantly point to the ambiguity of such lines of flight. For is it Hence the belief that literature, or even the cinema (Eisenstein 's Octo-
not the destiny of literatu re, American and otherwise, to fa il to com - ber, Griffith's Birth of a Na tion), cou ld become an art of the masses, a
plete the process, such that the line of flight becomes blocked or reaches supremely revolutionary or democratic art. But the fai lure of the two
an impasse (Kerouac's sad end, Ciline's fascist ravings), or even tu rns revolutions, heralded by numerous facto rs (the Civi l War and the frag-
into a pure line of demolition (Woolf's suicide, Fitzgerald's crack-up, mentation of the American people; Stalinism and the liquidation of the
Nietzsche's and Holderlin's madness)?114 Kerouac took a revolutionary Soviets. which replaced the unanimity of peoples with the tyrannical
"flight" (On the Road) with the soberest of means, but later immem:d unifY of a party, and the subsequent breakup of the Soviet empire),
himself in a dream of a Great America and went off in sea rch of his would come to compromise this unanimist belief. In the cinema, it was
Breton ancestors of a superior race. Celine, after his great experimenta- the rise of Hitler that sounded the fi nal death knell. Benjamin, and
tions, became the victim of a deli rium that communicated more and then Syberberg, showed how, in Nazism, the cinema, as the art of auto-
more with fascism and the pa ranoia of his father. In Ami-Oedipus, matic movement, did nor coincide wirh the "masses become subjects "
Deleuze and Guan ari suggest that a "universa l clin ica l theory" of liter- bur with the masses subjected and reduced to psychological automa-

~~::::s ~:l::~::;c:;l~ ;ra~i:e:~t~~:u::ea ~~:~~~~na;h~~7~;~n::~


tons: politics as "art, " Hitler as filmma ker (Riefenstahl 's Triumph of
f .. the Will). If art was to find a politica l task, Oeleuze argues, it would
j siries of the body without organs are invested in fa scizing, moralizing, ~ave to be on a new basis, that is, on the basis o f this very fragmenta-
nationalist, and racist tendencies (" I am one of your kind, a superior tion and break up: nor that of addressing an already existing people,
I\li; I NTROOUCTION INTR OOUC TION

but of contri buting to the invention of a people who are missing. Whit- fo r Deleuze and Guattari, these struggles are also the index of another,
man had already noted that, in America, both the people and the coexistent and almost subterranean combat . For the ma jority is in fact
writer confront a double problem: a collection of noncommunicating an abstract standard that constitutes the analytic fact of " Nobody";
fra gments or immigrants, and a tissue of shifting relations between everyone, under some aspect or another, is caught up in a becoming-
them that must constantly be created or acquired . But these conditions minor. Moreover, in a certain manner, one could say that it is the ma:'
were perhaps clearer in the third world, hidden as they were in the jority that implies a state of domination, and not the reverse, since it
West by the mechanisms of power and the systems of majority. For entails a subjection to the model; and that it is the process of becoming-
when a colonizer procla ims, "There has never been a people here," the minoritarian, as a uni versal figure, that constitutes what is called
people necessarily enter into the conditions of a becoming, they must "autonomy."119 A minority by definition has no model; it is itself a be-
invent themselves in new conditions of struggle, and the task of a polit- coming or a process, in constant varia tion, and the power of a minor-
ical literature is to contribute to the invention of this unborn people ity is not measured by its ability to enter and make itself felt within the
who do not yet have a language. 1I6 majority system. Minorities have the potential of promoting composi-
If the people are missi ng, says Deleuze, it is precisely because they tions (connections, convergences, divergences) that do not pass by way ~ .5
exist in the condition of a minority. In Capitalism and Schizophre'lia , of the captialist economy any more than they do the state formationobl
Deleuze and Guattari offer an analysis of the present state of capital- In their "Treatise on Nomadology-The War Machine," one of the most
ism not in terms of its contradictions and classes, but rather in terms of original and important texts in A Thousand PfateallS, Deleuze and
its " lines of flight" and its minorities. 1I7 The concept o f the "minor" Guattari attempt to descri be the organizational conditions of social
developed by Deleuze and Guattari is a complex one, having references fo rmations constructed along a line of flight, which are by nature vari-
that are musical, literary, and linguistic as well as juridical and po- able and nomadic.@This is whattheytermthe"minorization "of pol-
r litical. In the political context, they argue, the difference between a
majority and a minority is nOt a quantitative one. A majority is not de-
itics, insofar as minorities must be thought of as seeds or crystals of
becoming whose value is to trigger uncontrollable movements within

fined by its large numbers, but by an ideal constant or sta ndard mea- the mean or the majority.
sure by which it can be evaluated (fo r instance, white, Western, male, If modern political literature and cinema can playa role in the con-
adult, reasonable, heterosexual, residing in cities, speaking a standard stitution of minorities, it is because they are no longer undertaken on
language .. . ); any determination that deviates from this axiomatic the basis of a "people" who are already there, awaiting their becoming
model, by definition and regardless of number, will be considered mi- conscious and the possibility of revolution. Rather, they are constituted
norita rian. " Man " constitutes a majority, for instance, even though on a set of impossi bilities in which the people are missing, in which the
men are less numerous than women or children; and minorities are only consciousness is the consciousness of violence, fragmentation, the
frequendy larger in number than the majority.1IS For Deleuze and betraya l of every revolution, the shattered state of the emotions and
Guattari, the true theoretical opposition is between those elements that drives: an impasse in every direction. For Deleuze, this is what co nsti ~
eorer into the class axiomatic of capitalism and those that elude or free tutes the new object of a politica l literature or cinema: the imo/erable.
themselves from this axiomatic (as " undecidable propositions" of the that is, a lived actual ity that at the same time testifies to the impossibil-
, axiomatic or nondenumerable multiplicities). It is true that minorities ity of living in such conditions. And minority writers and filmmake rs,
~ are "obje;tively" definable states-definable in terms of language, eth- faced with an illiterate public and rampant decultu ration, confront th;
nicity, or sex, with their own territorialities. It is also true that minori- same set of impasses in thei r work. On the one hand, they cannot sim-
ties must necessarily struggle to become a ma jority-to be recognized, ply appeal to the collective fictions and archaic myths of their people,
to have rights, to achieve an autonomous status, and so on (women's si nce, as in Rocha's fi lm Black God and White Devif. it is often these
struggle for the vote, for abortion, for jobs; the struggle of the third same myths (of prophetism and banditism) {hat ca use the colonized to
world; the st ruggl~ of oppressed minorities in the East and West). But [Urn against themselves-and to intensify-the capi talist violence they
xliv INUODUCTION
INTROOUCIfON xlv
suffer from without (in this case, out of a need fo r idolization). Cultur- minor people who find their expression in and through the singular ity
ally, one could say that minorities are doubly colonized: by the stories, of the writer, who in his very solitude is all the more in a posi tion to ex-
films, television progra ms, and advertisements that are imposed on press potential forces, and to be a true collective agen t, a leaven or cat-
them from without, but also by their own myths that have passed into
3lyst (as Klee says, "We ca n do no more").1lJ Under these conditions
the service of the colonizer from withi n. Yet on the other hand, neither
the speec~ a~t 3ppears as a true genetic eleme"" 3 virruality that is ca~
can writers be content to produce individual utterances as invented
p~ble of Imkmg up, little by little, with other speech acts so 3S to con-
stories or fictions, fo r by appealing to their own privileged experience
stitute th~ free ind irect discourse o f a people or a minority, even if they
("' I in my position as ... "), they break with the condition of the colo-
as yet exlS[ on ly as the potentia l of "diabolical powers to come or
nized and necessa rily pass over to the side of the colonizers-even if
revolutionary fo rces to be constructed."II~
only aesthetically, through artistic influences. As Jean-Louis Comolli
In a diffe rent Context, th is is wha t Bergson termed "fabu lation "
puts it, writers and filmma kers take as thei r object a double impossibil-
ity: "the impossibility of escaping from the group and the impossibility ":hich ~e sa~ as a visionary faculty tha t consists in creating gods a ~d
of being satisfied with it. "Ill glant~, s~ml-r.e~sonal powers or effective presences"; though it is firSt
Between these two impossibi lities, however, Deleuze points to a exerCised I~ religion, D.eleuze suggests that this is a faculty that is freely
narrow pa th, one in which the artist ta kes real (and not fictional) char- developed m art and literature, a mythmaking or fabu lating function
acters and makes use of them as " intercessors," putting them in condi- that bri ngs real panics together to produce collective utterances or
tions in which they are caught in the "flagrant act" of " making up fic- speech acts as the germ of a people to come. "We ought to take upl
tions," of "creating legends" or "story-telling" (Pierre Perrault, Glauber Bergson's notion of fabu l3tion," writes Deleuze, "and give it 3 political
Rocha, Jean Rouch). In the midst of an intolerable and unlivable situa- ~eani ng. "125 Mino~ity writers may fi nd themselves surrounded by the
tion, a becoming passes between the "people" who are missing and the Ideology of 3 colOnizer, the myths of the colonized, the discourse of in-
"I" of the author who is now absent, releasi ng a "pure s~c h act" telltttua ls, and the information of the communications media that
that is neither an impersonal myth nor a persona l fiction, but a collec- threatens to subsume them all; this is the material they have to work
riue utterance-an utrerance that expresses the impossibility of living on. But "fa ~ulation" is ~ fu nction that extracts from them a pure speech C...
under domination, but thereby constitutes an act of resistance, and 3Ct, ~ creative storytellmg that is, as it were, the obverse side of the
functio ns as the prefiguration of the people who are missing. The au- doml.n3.nt myt.hs and fictions, 3n act of resistance whose political im-
thor takes a step towa rd rea l characters, but these characters in turn ~ac.t IS Im~edl.ate ~nd inescapable, 3nd that creates a line of (l ight on
take a step toward the author: a double becoming. Such collective ut- .vhleh a minority discourse and a people ca n be cOllstitued."A mi nor-
terances constitute wha t Pasolini termed free indirect discourse, that is, Ity neve~ exists ready-made, it is only fo rmed on lines of flight, which
a newly created speech act that sets itself up as an autonomous fo rm, a ~re also Its way of advancing or attacking."' 26 This fundamental affin.:J
pure event that effectuates twO acts of subjectivation simultaneously, Ity .between [he work of art and a people who are missing may never be
as if the author could express himself only by becoming another entirely clea r. There.is no work of an that does not appeal to a people
through a rea l character, and the character in turn cou ld act and spuk that does nor yet CXISl. But artists, it is true, can only iftvoke a people;
only if his gestures and words were being reported by a thi rd pa rty.122 although thei r need fo r a people goes to the very heart of what they do
When an author prod uces a statement in this way, it occurs necessari ly ~hey cannor create a people, and an oppressed people ca nnot concer~
as a function of a national, pol itica l, and socia l community---even if Itself wi~h art. Yet when :1 people creates itsel f, Oeleuze suggests,
the objective conditions of this community are not yet given for the throu.gh us own resources and sufferings, it does so in a way that links
moment except in the literary enunciation. In literature, Deleuze fre- up ~Ith something in an, or rather that links up art with wha t it was
quently appeals to the texts of Kafka (i n centra l Europe) and Melville lacking. Fabula tion in this sense is a function common to both the
(in America ) that present literature as the collective utterance of a people and art.
INUODUCTION INTRODUCTION

5. The "Stuttering" of Longllage (Syntax and Style). Finally, for Deleuze, of power, was a vehicu lar language in Europe before becoming a refer-
the process of "becoming-minor" also describes the effect that litera- ential or cultural language, and then a mythic one. When fundamental-
r ture has on language. Proust said that great literature opens up a kind ists prOtest against having the Mass said in a vernacular language, they
of fo reign language within the language in which it is written, as if the are frying to prevent Latin from being robbed of its mythic or religious
writer were writing as a foreigner or minority within his own lan- fu nctions; similarly, classicists bemoan the fact that Latin has been
guage.l27 This foreign language is not another language, even a mar- stripped of its referential or cultural function, si nce the educationa l
ginalized one, but rather the becoming-minor of language itself. Or as forms of power it once exercised ha ve lbeen replaced by other forms.
Deleuze puts it in his essay " He Stuttered," the writer introduces into The present imperialism of American English, as a worldwide linguis-
language a stuttering, which is not simply a stuttering in speech, but a tic power, is due not only to its status as toda y's veh icular language,
stuttering of the language itself.Il8 In this linguistic context, Deleuze but also to the fact that it has managed to infiltrate various cultural,
and GU3ttari argue that the terms major and minor do not qualify two mythic, and even vernacular function s in other languages (hence the
di fferem languages, but rather two different treatments of language, purist's denunciations of "Franglais," English contaminations of the
twO usages or functions of the same language, and link up in a direct contemporary French vernacu lar).
1.. manner with the politica l question of minorities. But these various mechanisms of power, by which one language ac-
Th is is not to deny the reality of the distinction between a major quires an imperia list power over others, are at the sa me time accompa-
language and a minor language, between a language o f power and a nied by a very different tendency. For the more a language acquires the
language of the people. Minorities and immigrants are often bilingual characteristics of a ma jor language, the more it tends to be affected by
or multilingual, living in a "major" language that they often spea k internal variations that transpose it into a "minor" language. English,
poorly, and with which they have difficult political relations; in some because of its very hegemony, is constantly bei ng worked on from
cases, they may no longer even know their own "minor " language or within by the minorities of the world, who nibble away at that hege-
mother tongue. But this distinction requires a genetic account: under mony and create the possi bility of new mythic functions, new cultural
what conditions does a language assume power in a country, or even references, new vernacular languages with their own uses: British En-
on a worldwide scale? Co nve~ly, by what means can one ward off glish is set in variation by Gaelic and Irish English; America n English is
linguistic power? It is not enough to say that victors impose their lan- set in variation by black English and various "ghetro languages," which
guage on the vanquished (though this is usually the case), for the mech- cannot be defined simply as a sum of mistakes or infractions against
anisms of linguistic power are more subtle and diffuse, passing through "standard " English. Minor languages are not simply subla nguages (di-
extensible and reversible functions, which are the object of active polit- alects or idiolects), but express the potential of the major language to
ical struggles and even microstruggles. Henri Gobard, in his book enter into a becoming-minoritarian in all its dimensions and elements.
L'aliblatioll 1i,lgttistiq" e. for which Deleuze wrote a short preface, has Such movements, fO be sure, have their own political ambiguities, since
attempted to go beyond the simple major-minor duality by distinguish- they can mix together revolutionary aspirations with reactiona ry and
ing fou r different types of language: lJemaclI/ar (maternal or territorial even fasc istic tendencies (archaisms, neoterritorialities, regionalisms).
languages of rura l origin), lJehiclllar (languages of commerce and Moreover, from a political viewpoint, "it is difficult to see how the up-
diplomacy, which are primarily urban ), referential (national or cultura l holders of a minor language can operate if nOI by giving it (if onl y by
languages that operate through a recollection or reconstruction of the writing in it) a constancy and homogeneity making it a locally major
past ), and mytl};c (languages that refer to a spiritua l, magical, or reli- language capable of forcing offi cia l recognition (hence the politica l
gious doma inJ.m More precisely, these distinctions refer to different role of writers who assert the rights of a minor language). "130 The ac-
fllnctions Ihar can be assumed (or lost ) by diverse languages in con- quisition of power by a language and the becoming-minor of that lan-
crete situations, or by a single language over the course of time, each guage, in other words, are coexi~ te lH movements that are const::lntly
with its own mechanisms of power. For instance, Larin, as a language passing and converting into each other in both directions. In this man-
..!viii INUOOU C1l0 N INUOOU C TIO N

ner, Deleuze and Guattari, following Gobard, propose a kind of "geo- " minor" does not refer to specific literatures but rathet to the revolu-
linguistics," a " micro-politics" of language (in Foucault's sense), in tionary conditions for every literature, even (and especially) in the
which the internal fun ctions of language are inseparable from inces- midst of a great or established literature: "Only the possibility of set-
sant movements of deterritorialization and reterritoria lization. ting up a minor practice of a major language from within allows one to
What then does it mean to speak of a " minor literatu re"? Many of define popu lar literature, marginal literature, and so on. "113 As De-
the writers that interest Deleuze are indeed those that find themselves leuze and Guattari argue in a chapter of A Thousand Plateaus entitled
in situations o f bi- or multilingualism: Kafka, a Czech Jew writing in .. Postulates o f Linguistics," the essential distinction is between twO dif-
German; Beckett, an Irishman writing in French and English; Luca, a ferent tteatments or uses of language. a major and a minor use. lan-
Romanian writing in French. And it was Kafka who spoke most force- guage is by nature a heterogenous and variable reality, but the vari-
full y of the set of linguistic "impossibilities" that this situation im- ables of language can be treated in two different manners. Either one
posed on him as a writer: the impossibility of not writing, "because na- can carve out a homogeneous or standard system from a language by
tional consciousness, uncerta in or oppressed, necessarily exists by extracting a set of constants from the variables or by determining con-
means of literature"; the impossibility of writing other than in the stant relations between them, thereby relegating pragmatics to external
dominant language of German . because the Prague Jews had forgotten fa ctors (Chomsky); or one can relate the variables of language to in-
or repressed their native Czech vernacular, viewed Yiddish with dis- herent lines of continuous variatio", thereby making pragmatics the
dain or suspicion, and could only dream of Hebrew as the mythic lan- presupposition of all the other dimensions of language (Labov). The
guage of Zionism; the impossibility of writing in German, not only be- performative "I swear!, " for example, is a very different statement de-
cause of its standardized and vehicular status as a "paper language," pending on whether it is said by a son to his father, by a lover to his fi-
but also because the " deterritorialized" elements introduced by Prague ancee, or by a witness to a judge. But this variabi lity can be interpreted
German into Middle-High German of Vienna and Berlin threatened its in twO different ways: either the statement can be said to remain con-
cultural function (" a withered vocabulary, an incorrect use of preposi- stant in principle, its variations being produced by de facto and nonlin-
tions, the abuse of the pronomial, the employment of malleable verbs," guistic circumstances external to the linguistic system; or one could
and so on).131 For Deleuze, however, the situation described by Kafka also say that each effectuation o f the statement is an actualized vari-
is the situation faced by all writers, even those who are not bilingual; able of a virtual line of continuous variation imma1lent to the system, a
creation, he says, necessarily takes place in such choked passages: "We line that remains continuous regardless of the discontin uous leaps
have to see creation as tracing a path between impossibilities .... A made by the statement, and that uproots the statement from its status
creator who isn't grabbed around the throat by a set of impossibilities as a constant and produces its placing-in-variation. The firs t is the
is no creator. A creator's someone who creates their own impossibil- major treatment of language, in which the linguistic system appears in
ities, and thereby creates possibilities .... Without a set of impossi- pri nciple as a system in equilibrium, defined by its syntactical, seman-
bilities, you won't have a line of flight , the exit that is creation, the tic, or phonological constants; the second is the minor treatment, in
power of falsity that is truth. " I l l And Kafka's solution to this problem, which the system itself appea rs in perpetual disequilibrium or bifurca-
his way out of the impasse, also has a validity that extends beyond his tion , defined by pragmatic Jlse of these conStants in relation to a con-
own situation. Rather than writing in Czech, Yiddish, or Hebrew, he tinuous interna l va riation. It may be that the scilmtific study of lan-
chose to write in the German language of Prague, with all its poverty, guage, in order to guarantee the constancy of its object, requires the
and to push it even fu rther in the direction of deterritorializa tion, "to extraction of a systematic structure from language (though A Thou-
the point of sobriety." Rather than writing in a minor language, he sand Plateaus contains an interesting analysis of "minor sciences" that
instead invented a minor lise of the major language. do not operate by means of this type of formalization).1J4 But Deleuze
A minor literature, in other words, is not necessa rily a literature and Guatta ri suggest that this scientific model of language is inextric-
written in a minor or marginalized language; for Deleuze, the term ably linked with its political model, and the mechanisms by which a
INUODucr lON INU ODUCTION I;

language lxcomes a language of power, a dominant or major language, tions in perpetual disequil ibrium. In a sense, this procedure of placing-
homogenized, centralized, and standardized. When schoolteachers teach in-variation is the most natural thing in the world : it is what we call a
their students a rule of grammar, fo r example, they are not simply "style." Style is a set of variations in language, a kind of modulation,
communicating a piece of information to them, but are transmitting an and it is through style that language is pushed toward its own limit,
order or a command, since the ability to fo rmulate grammatically cor- and strains toward something tha t is no longer linguistic, but which
rect sentences ("competence") is a prerequisite for any submission to language alone makes possible (such as the affects and percepts that
social laws. "The scientific enterprise of extracting constants and con- have no existence apart from the words and syntax of the writer).lJ'
stant relations," Deleuze and Guattari write, " is always coupled with "This is what style is," write OeJeuze and Guattari, "the moment when
the politica l enterprise of imposing them on speakers."us This is why language is no longer defined by what it says, but by what causes it to
the problem of beeoming-minor is both a political and an artistic prob- move, to flow.... For literature is like schizophrenia: a process and
lem: "the problem of minorities, the problem of a minor literature, but not a goal ... a pure process that fulfills itself, and that never ceases to
also a problem for all of us: How to tear a minor literature away from reach fulfillment as it proceeds- art as 'experimentation.''' Likewi se ~
its own language, allowing it to challenge the language and making it reading a text is never an act of interpretation, it " is never a scholarly
follow a sober revolutionary path?"1.16 exercise in search of what is signified, still less a highly textual exercise S
For Deleuze, then, the " minor" use o f language involves taking in search of a signifier"; it tOO is an act of experimentation, "a produc-
any linguistic variable-phonological, syntactical or grammatical, tive use of the literary machine ... a schizoid exercise that extracts
semantic-and pl:lcing it in variation, fo llowing the virtual line of con- from the text its revolutionary force. "1..0 -..l
tinuous va riation that subtends the entire language, and that is itself
apertinent, asyntactic or agrammatical, and asemantic. It is through Deleuze's "critique et clinique" project, in the end, can be character-
this minor use of language that literature brings about a decomposi- ized by three fundamental components: ( I) the function of the proper
tion or even destruction of the maternal language, but also the creation name; (2) the nonpersonal "multiplicity" or "assemblage" designated
of a new minor l:lnguage within the writer's own language. Many of by the name; and (3) the active "lines of flight" of which these multi-
the essays collected in Essays Critical and Clinical analyze the specific plicities are constituted. The first two components define what we have
procedures utilized by various authors to make language "stutter" in ca lled the symptomatological method. For OeJeuze, writers are like!
its syntax or grammar: the schizophrenic procedures of Roussel, Bris- clinicians or diagnosticians who isolate a particular "possibility of life,"
set, and Wolfson, which constitute the very process of their psychoses; a certain way of being or mode of existence whose symptomatology is
the poetic procedures of Jarry and Heidegger, who transform and set forth in their work. In these conditions, the proper name refers not
transmute a living language by reactivating a dead language inside it; to the person of the author, but to the constellation of signs and symp-
e. e. cummings's agrammaticalities ("he danced his did "), which stand toms that are grouped together in the work itself. T he literary tech:;
at the limit of a series of ordinary grammatical variables; and the deviant nique and style of the writer (the critical ) is directly linked to the cre-
syntax of Artaud's cris-souffles (" ratara rarara rarara I Atara tatara ation of a differentia l table of vital signs (the clinical), so that one
rana I Ota ra ota ra katara"), which are pure intensities that mark a can spea k of a clin ical "beckettism, " "proustism," or "kafkaism" just
li mit of language. 1J7 (In other contexts, Deleuze ana lyses the phonetic as one speaks of a clinical "sadism" or "masochism." But the sympto-
stuttering of language in the theater, as in Robert Wilson's whispering, matological method is only one aspect of Deleuze's pro ject. The deepe?
without definite pitch, or Carmelo Bene's ascending and descending philosophical question concerns the cond itions that make possible this
variations).1J8 Such writers take the elements of language and submit production of new modes of existence, that is, the ontologica l principle
them to a treatment of continuous variation, out of which they extract of Life as a nonorganic and impersonal power. We have seen the two
new linguistic possibilities; they invent a minor use of language, much aspects of this active power of Life: on the one hand, it is a power
as in music, where the minor mode is derived from dynamic combina- of abstraction capable of producing clements that are in themselves
Iii INnOOUCTION INUODUCTIO N liii

asignif),ing, acosmic, asubjective, anorgan ic, agrammarical, and as)'n- in terms of irs exhaustion or from the viewpoint of the higher values it
tactic (singularities and events, affects and percepts, inte~ and be- erects agai nst Life (the "moral" vision of the world). "Critique et clin-
comings) and placing them in a state of continuous va riation; on the ique," from sta rt to finish, is as much an ethical project as it is an aes-
other hand, it is a power o f invention capable of creating ever new re- thetic one. In this rega rd, perhaps the most important piece included in
lations between these differential or genetic elements (syntheses of sin- Essays Critical and Clinical, in terms of Deleuze's own oeuvre, is the
gularities, blocks of becomings, continuums of intensities). These twO programmatic essa), entitled "To Have Done with Judgment. "143 Forn
ontologica l powers of Life-the production of variation and the se- Deleuze, it is never a question of judging a work of art in terms of tran-
lection and s),nthesis of va riants-are for Deleuze the indispensable scendent or universa cmeria, but of evaluating it clinically in terms of
Lconditions of ever)' creation. its " vitalit),," its "tenor of Life": Does die work ca rry t e process of
Deleuze describes the artistic activity of the writer in the same
terms. "The aim of writing, " he sa),s, " is to carry life to the state of a
, Life to this state of an impersona l power? Or does it interrupt the
process, Stop its movement, and become blocked in the ressentiment of
non-personal power."HI The writer, like each of us, begins with the persons, the rigors of organic organization, the cliches of a standard
multiplicities that have invented him or her as a formed subject, in an language, the dominance of an established order, the world "as it is,"
actualized world, with an organic bod)" in a given political order, hav- the judgment of God? The renu nciation of judgment does not depri v~
ing learned a certain language. But at its highest point, writing, as an one of [he means of distinguishing the "good" and the " bad." On the
activity, fo llows the abstract movement of a line of flight that extracts COntrary, good and bad are both states of the becoming of Life, and can
or produces differential elements from these multiplicities of lived ex- be evaluated b)' criteria that are stricti), immanent to the mode of exis-
perience and makes them function as variables on an immanent "plane tence or work of an itself. I ' " Life does not functi on in Deleuze's philos:'l
of composition." "This is what it's like on the plane of immanence: oph)' as a transcendent principle of judgment but as an immanent
multiplicities fill it, singularities connect with one another, processes or process of production or creation; it is neither an origin nor a goal, nei-
hecomings unfold, intensities rise and fa ll . "142 The task of the writer is ther an arche nor a telos, but a pure process that alwa)'s operates in the
r to establish non preexistent relations between these variables in order middle, au milieu. and proceeds by means of experimentations and un-
to make them function together in a si ngular and nonhomogeneous fo reseen becomings. Judgment operates with preexisti ng criteria tha!J
whole, and thus to panicipate in the construction of '"new possibilities can never apprehend the creation of the new, and what is of value can
, of life": the invention of new compositions in language (style and s)'n-
tax), the formation of new blocks of sensation (a ffects and percepts),
only come into existence by "defying judgment."
It is sometimes sa id that we must learn from life and not bury our-
the production of new modes of existence (intensities and becomings), selves in books, and in a certain sense this is no doubt true. Yet we
the constitution of a people (speech acts and fabu lation), the creation must also say that art and literature have no other object than Life, and
Lof a world (singularities and events). The negative terms we have used that a "passage o f Life can only l>C: seen or elt in a process a cre-
to describe the above rubrics (destruction, dissolution, disintegration, ation, which gives the nonorganic and impersonal power of Life a con-
and so on) are therefore a ni), panial characterizations, since the)' are sistenc), and autonomy of its own, and draws us into its own becom-
merel), the necessary propaedeutic to this positive activity of creation ing. "Art is never an end in itself," write Deleuze and Guatta ri. "It is
and invention. "To be present at the dawn of the world ... " only an instrument fo r tracing lines of lives, that is to sa)" all these rea l
It is this ontological and crea tive power of Life, fina lly, that fu nc- becomings that are not simpl)' produced in 3rt, all these active flights
r tions as the ethical principle of Deleuze's philosoph)'. For what consti- that do not consist in fleein g into art ... but rather sweep it awa)' with
tutes the health or activit), of a mode of existence is precisel), its capac- them toward [he realms of the asignifying, the asubjective."145 This is
ity to Construct such lines o f flight, to affirm the power of life, to the point at which "critique" and "clinique" become one and the~
transform itself depending on the forces it encounters (the o;ethical " vi- thing, when life ceases to be persona l and the work ceases to be merely
sion of the world). A reactive or sickl), mode of existence, by contrast, literary or textual: a life of pure immanence. 14'
cut off from its power of action or transformation, can ani), judge life
Preface to the French Edition

This collection of texts, some of wh ich appear here for the first time,
others of which have already been published elsewhere, is organized
around certain problems. The problem of writing: writers, as Proust
says, invent a new la nguage within language, a fo reign language, as it
were. T hey bring to light new grammatical or syntactic powers. They
force language outside its customary furrows, they make it delirious
Idilirer J. But the problem of writing is also inseparable fro m a problem
of seeing and hearing: in effect, when another language is created
within language, it is language in its entirety that tends toward an
"asynractic," "agrammarical" limit, or that communicates with its own
outside.
The limit is not outside language. it is the outside of language. It is
made up of visions and auditions that are not of language, but which
language alone makes possible. There is also a painting and a music
characteristic of writing, like the effects of colors and sonorities that
rise up above words. It is through words, between words, that one sees
and hears. Beckett spoke of "drilling holes" in language in order [Q see
or hear "what was lurking behi nd ." One must say of every writer: he is
a seer, a hearer, " ill seen ill said," she is a colorist, a musician.
These visions, these auditions are not a private matter but form [he
figures of a history and a geography that are ceaselessly reinvented. It
is deliriu m [hat invents them, as a process driving words from one end
of the universe [Q the other. They are events at the edge of language.
But when delirium falls back into the cli"ical state, words no longer
open O ut OntO anything, we no longer hea r or see anything through
them except a night whose history, colors, and songs have been lost.
Literatu re is a health .
Ivi PUf.-. CE TO THE FR ENCH EDITION

These problems mark out a set of paths. The texts presented here,
and the authors considered, are such paths. Some pieces are short, orh-
ers are longer, but they " II intersect, passing by the same places, coming
together or dividing off, each of them giving a view upon the orhers.
Some of them are impasses closed off by illness. Every work is a voy-
age, a journey, but one that travels along this or that externa l path only 1
by virtue of the internal paths and trajectOries that compose it, that
constitute its Landscape or its concert. literature a nd life

To write is certainly not to impose a form (of expression) on the matter


of lived experience. Literature rather moves in the direction of the i11-
formed or the incomplete, as Gombrowicz said as well as practiced .
Writing is a question of becoming, always incomplete, always in the
midst of being formed, and goes beyond the matter of any liva ble or
lived experience. It is a process, that is, a passage of Life that traverses
both the livable and the lived. Writing is inseparable from becoming: in
writing, one becomes-woman, becomes-animal or vegetable, becomes-
molecule to the point of becoming-imperceptible. These becomings
may be linked to each orher by a particular line, as in Le Clezio's nov-
els; or they may coexist at every level, following the doorways, thresh-
olds, and zones that make up the entire universe, as in Lovecratt's
powerful oeuvre. Becoming does not move in the other direction, and
one does not become Man, insofa r as man presents himself as a domi-
na nt form of expression that claims to impose itself on all matter,
whereas woman, animal, or molecule always has a component of fl ight
that escapes its own fo rma lization. The shame of being a man-is
there any better reason to write? Even when it is a woman who is be-
coming, she has to become-woman, and this becoming has noth ing to
do with a state she could claim as her own. To become is not to attain
a fo rm (identifi cation, imitation, Mimesis) but to find the zone of prox-
imiry, indiscernibility, or indiffere ntiation where one can no longer be
distinguished from a woman, an animal, or a molecule-neither impre-
cise nor general, but unforeseen and non preexistent, singularized out
of a population rather than determ ined in a form . One can institute a
2 lIH .... TU~l ... ND lifE 3

zone of proximity with anything, on the condition that one c reates the simply treat the indefinite as a mask for a personal or a possessive:
literary means for doing so. Andre Dhi)[el, for instance. makes use of "0 child is being beaten" is quickly transformed into " my father beat
the aster: something passes between the sexes, the genera, or the king- me." But literarure takes the opposite path, and exists only when it dis-
doms. 1 Becoming is always "between" or "among": a woman berween coven beneath apparem persons the power of a n impersonal-which
women, or an anim:ai among others. But the power of the indefinite a r- is not a generality but a singularity at the highest point: a man, a
ticle is effected on ly if the term in becoming is stripped of the formal woman, a beast, a sromach, a child ... It is not the first twO penons
characteristics that make it say the (" the animal in front of you ... "). that function as the condition for literary enunciation; literature begins
When le Clezio becomes-Indian, it is always as an incomplete Indian only when a third person is born in us that strips us o f the power to say
who d<H:s not know " how 10 cultivate corn or carve a dugout canoe"; " I" (Blanchot's "neuter").7 Of course, literary characters a re perfectly
rather than acquiring formal characteristics. he enters a zone of prox- individuated, and are neither vague nor general; but all their individua l
imity.l lt is the same, in Kafka , with the swimming champion who does traits elevate them to a vision that carries them off in an indefinite, like
not know how to swim . All writing involves a n athleticism, but far a becoming that is too powerful for them: Ahab and the vision of
from reconciling literature vyith sports or turning writing into an Moby-Dick. The Miser is nOt a type, but on the contrary his individual
O lympic event, this athleticism is exercised in fligh t a nd in the break- traits (to love a young woman, etc.) make him accede to a vision: he
down of the orga nic body-an ath lete in bed, as Michaux put it. O ne sees gold, in such a way that he is sent racing along a witch's line where
becomes animal all the more w hen the animal dies; and contrary to the he gains the power of the indefinite-a miser ... , some gold, more
spi ritual ist prejudice, it is the a nimal who knows how to die, who has a gold ... There is no literature without fabulation, but as Bergson was
sense or premonition of death. Literature begins with a porcupine's able to see, fabulation-the fab ul ating function-does not consist in
death, according to Lawrence, or with the death of a mole, in Kafka: imagining or projecting an ego. Rather, it attains these visions, it raises
"our poor little red feet outstretched for tender sympathy."3 As Morin itself to these becomi ngs and powers.
said, one writes for dying calves. 4 Language must devote itself to We do not write with our neuroses. Neuroses or psychoses are not
reaching these femini ne, a nimal, molecular detours, and every detour passages of life, but states into which we fall when the process is inter·
is a becoming-mortal. There are no straight lines, neither in things nor rupted, blocked, or plugged up. Illness is not a process but a stopping
in language. Syntax is the set of necessary detoun that are created in of the process, as in " the Niensche case." Moreover, the writer as
each case to reveal the life in things. such is nOt a patient but rather a physician, the physician of himself
To write is not to recount one's memories and travels, one's loves and of the world. The world is the set of symptoms whose illness
and griefs, one's dreams and fa masies. It is the same thing to sin merges with man. Literature then appears as an enterprise of health:
through an excess of reality as through an excess of the imagi nation. In not thar the writer would necessari ly be in good hea lth (there wou ld
both cases it is the eterna l daddy-mommy, a n Oedipal structure that is be the same ambiguity here as with athleticism), but he possesses a n
projected onto the real or introjected into the imaginary. In this infan- irresistible and delicate health that stems from what he has seen and
ti le conception of literarure, what we seek at the end of the voyage, or hea rd of things too big for him, tOO strong for him, suffocating things
at the heart of a drea m, is a father. We write for our fath er-mother. whose passage exhausts him, while nonetheless giving him the becom-
Marthe Robert has pushed this infantilization or "psychoana lization" ings that a dominant a nd substantia l health would render impossible.s
of literature to an extreme, leaving the novelist no other choice than The wri ter returns from what he has seen a nd heard with bloodshot
the Basta rd or the Foundling. s Even becoming-anima l is not safe from eyes and pierced eardrums. What hea lth would be sufficient to liber-
an Oedipal reduction of the type "my car, my dog. " As Lawrence says, ate life wherever it is im prisoned by a nd within man, by and within
"If I am a giraffe, and the ordina ry Englishmen who write about me organisms and genera ? It is like Spinoza's delicate health, while it
are nice, well-behaved dogs, there it is, the a nimals a re different .... lasted, bearing witness unti l the end to a new vision whose passage it
The animal I am you instinctivel y disl ike."&As a general rule, fantasi es remained open to.
LlHR"lUH "ND LIfE lITER"lURf "ND lifE 5

'~ Health as literature, a5 writing, consiSts in inventing a people who We can see more clearly thc dfect of literature on language. As
f. are missing. It is the task of the fabu lating functio n to invent a people. Proust says, it optns up a kind of fore ign language within languagc,
We do nOt write with memories, unless it is co make them the origin which is ncither another language nor a rediscovered patois, but a
and collective destination of a people to come still ensconced in its becoming-other of language, a minorization o f this major language, a
betrayals and repudiations. American literature has an exceptional delirium that carries it off, a witch's line that tsCapes the dominant sys-
power to produce writers who can recount thei r own memories, but as tem. Kafka makts the swimming champion say: I sptak the same lan-
those of a uni versal people com posed of immigrants from all countries. guagt as you, and yet I don't understand a single word you'rc saying.
T homas Wolfe "i nscribes all of America in writing insofar as it can be Syntactic creation or sryle-this is the becoming of languagc. Thc crta-
found in the experience of a single man. '" This is not exactly a people tion of words or neologisms is worth nothing apart from the effects of
ca lled upon to dominate the world. It is a minor people, eternally syntax in which thty are developed. So literature already presents twO
minor, taken up in a becoming-revolutionary. Perhaps it ex ists only in aspects: through the creation of syntax, it brings about not only a de-
the atoms of the writer, a bastard people, inferior, dominated, always composition or destruction of the materna l language, but also the in-
in becoming, always incomplete. Bastard no longer designates a fami l- vention of a ntw language within language. "The only way to defend
ial state, but the process or drift of the races. I am a beast, a Negro of language is to attack it . ... Every writer is obliged to create his or hcr
an infe rior race for all eternity. This is the becoming of the writer. own language ... "12 Language seems to be seizcd by a deliri um, which
Kafka (for central Europe) and Melville (for America) present litera- forces it out of its usual fur rows. As for the third aspect, it stems from
ture as the collective enunciation of a minor people, or of all minor tht fact that a fo reign language cannot be hollowed out in one lan-
peoples, who find their expression only in and through the writer. 1o guage without language as a whole in turn being topplcd or pushed
Though it always refers to singular agents [agentsl, literature is a col- to a limit, to an outside or reverse sidc that consists of Visions and
lective assemblage (agencemen t] of enunciation. Literature is delirium, Auditions that no longer belong to any language. These visions are not
but delirium is not a father-mothe r affa ir: there is nO delirium that does fa ntasies, but veritable Ideas that the writer sees and hears in the intt r-
not pass through peoples, races, and tribes, and that does not haunt stices o f language, in its intt rva ls. They art not interruptions of the
universal history. All delirium is world-historical, "a displacement of proctss, but breaks that form part of it, like an eternity that can only
races and conti nents:'11 Literature is delirium, and as such its destiny be revealed in a becomi ng, or a landscape that only apptars in move-
is played out between the two poles of delirium. Delirium is a disease, ment. They art not outside.language, but the outside o f language. The
the disease par excellence, whenever it erects a race it claims is pure writtr as seer and hearer, the aim of literature: it is the passage of life
and dominant. Bur it is the measure of health when it invokes this op- within language that constitutes Ideas.
pressed bastard race that ceaselessly stirs beneath dominations, resist- These three aspects, which are in perpetual movcment, can be seen
ing everyth ing that crushes and imprisons, a race that is o utlined in clearly in Artaud : tht fa ll o f letters in the decomposition of the mater-
relief in literature as process. Here aga in, there is always the risk that a nal language (R, T .. . ); their incorporation into a new syntax or in
diseased state will interru pt the process or becoming; hea lth and ath- ntw names with a syntactic import, creators of a language ("eTReTC");
leticism both confront the same ambiguiry, the conStant risk that a and, fi nally, breath-words, the asyntactical limit toward which all lan-
deli rium of domination will be mixed with a bastard delirium, pushing guage tends. And tvcn in Celine-wt cannot avoid saying it, so acutely
literature towa rd a larval fascis m, the disease against which it fight$- do we feel it: Journey to the End of the Night, or the decomposi tion of
evcn if this means diagnosing the fascism within itself and fighting the materna l language; Death on the i nstal/me", Plan, with its new
against itself. The ultimate aim of literature is to set free, in the delir- syntax as a language within language; and Guignol's Band, with its
ium, this crtation of a htalth or this invention of a peoplt, that is, a susptnded exclamations as the limit of language, as explosive visions
possibi lity of life. To write for this peoplc who are missi ng ... (Mfor" and sonorities. In order to write, it may perhaps bc nccessa ry for the
means less "in the place of" than "for the benefit of"). mattrnal language to be odious, but onl y so that a syntactic creation
6 UTEU,TURE ANO LIfE

can open up a kind of foreign language in it, and language as a whole


can reveal its outside, beyond all synt3,x. We sometimes congratulate
writers, but they know that they are far from having achieved theif
becoming, far from having attained the limit they set fo r themselves,
which ceaselessly slips away from them. To write is also to become
something other than a writer. To those who ask what literature is, Vir- 2
ginia Woolf responds: To whom are you speaking of writing? The
writer does not speak about ii, but is concerned with something else.
If we consider these criteria, we ca n see that, among all those who
louis Wolfson; or, The Procedure
make books with a literary intent, even among the mad, there are very
few who can call themselves writers.

Louis Wolfson, author of the book Le schiz.o et les longues, ca lls him-
self "the student of schizophrenic language," "the mentally ill stu-
dent," "the student of demented idioms," or, in his reformed writing,
"Ie jellne ome sqiz.ofrene."] This sch izophrenic impersonal form has
several meanings, and fo r its author does not simply indicate the
emptiness of his own body. It concerns a combat in which the hero can
apprehend himself only through a kind of anonymity ana logous to
that of the "young soldier." It also concerns a scientific undertaking in
which the student has no identity except as a phonetic or molecular
combination. Finally, for the author, it is less a matter of na rrating
what he is feel ing and thinking than of saying in exact terms what he is
doing. One of the great originalities of this book is that it setS fo n h a
protocol of experimentation or activity. Wolfson's second bOok, Ma
mere musicielme est m orte, will be presented as a double book pre-
cisely because it is interspersed with the protocols of his cancerous
mother'S illness. l
The author is American but the books are written in French, for
reasons that will soon become obvious. For what the student spends
his time doing is translating, and he does so in accorda nce with certain
rules. His proced ure is as (ollows: given a word from the maternal lan-
guage, he looks fo r a fo reign word with a simi lar meaning that has
common sounds or phonemes (preferably in French, German, Russian,
or Hebrew, the four principal languages studied by the author). For ex·
ample, Where? will be translated as Wo? Hier? au? ici?, or bener yet,
as Wober. Tree will produce Tere. which phonetica ll y becomes Dere

7
8 lOUIS WOlfSON ; OR , THE 'I OC fDUU LOUI$ WO l fS O N ; O R, THE 'RO C EDUIf 9
I
and leads to the Russian Derevo. Thus, an ordinary maternal sentence to make it echo three times, to triple its initial sound (shshshorte"ing)
will be analyzed in terms of its phonetic elements and movements so in order to block the first SH with N (the Hebrew cheme,m ), the sec- I
that it can be converted into a sentence, in one or more foreign lan- ond SH with an equiva le:-nt of T (the German Schnldlz ), and the third
guages, which is similar to it in sound and meaning. The operation SH with R (the Russian iir).
must be done as quickly as possible, given the urgency of the situation; Psychosis is inseparable from a variable linguistic procedu re. The
but it also requires a significant amount of time, given the resistances procedure is the very process of the psychosis. The entire procedure of
offered by each word, the inexact meanings that emerge at every stage the student of languages presents striking analogies with the famous
of the conversion, and above all the necessity of drawing up phonetic "procedu re, " itself sch izoph renic, of the poet Raymond Roussel.
rules for each case that are applicable to other transformations (the Roussel worked within his maternal language, French; he too con-
adventures of believe, fo r example, will take up forty pages). h is as if verted an initial sentence into another sentence with sim ilar sounds
there are two circuits of transformation that coexist and interpenetrate and phonemes, but one with a completely different meaning (Ies lettres
each other, the first taking up as little time as possible, the second cov- du blanc sur les bandes du vieux bi/lard and les lettres du blanc sur les
ering as much linguistic space as possible. bandes du vieux pillard). A first direction gave the amplified proce-
Such is the general procedure: the phrase Don't trip over the wire dure, in which words associated in the first series took on another,
becomes Tu 'nicht treb uber eth he Zwirn. The initial sentence is in related meaning in the second (queue de bilfard and robe a traine dll
English, but the final one is a simu lacrum of a sentence that borrows pillard). A second di rection led to the evolved procedure, in which the
from various languages: German, French, Hebrew-a "tour de babi!." original sentence:- was converted into autonomous components (i'ai du
It not only makes use of rules of transformation (from d to t, from p to bon tabae = ;ade tube onde aubade). Another famous case was that of
b. from v to b), but also rules of inversion (si nce the English wire is not Jean-Pierre Brisset. His procedure fixed the meaning of a phonetic or
sufficiently invested by the German Zwirn, the Russian pro/ovka will syllabic element by comparing the words, from one or more languages,
be invoked, which turns wir into riv, or rather rov). that sha red this element; the operation was then amplified and evolved
Now in order to overcome resistances and difficulties of this kind, in order to provide the evolution of the meaning itself, in accordance
the general procedure has to be perfected in two different directions. with various syllabic compositions (hence:- the prisoners were first of all
On the one hand, it moves toward an amplified procedure, grounded drenched in dirty water, dans I'eau sale, they were dans la sale eau pris,
in "the idea of genius to associate words more freely." The conversion thus becoming salauds pris, who were then sold in la salle aux prix ))
of an English word, for example, earfy, can now be sought in French In each of these three cases, a kind of fore ign language is extracted
words and phrases that are associated with "tot" and include the from the maternal language, on the condition that the sounds or
consonants R or L (su R-Le-champ. de bonne heuRe, matinaLement, phonemes always remain similar. In Roussel, however, it is the referent
diLigemment, devoRer L'espace); or tired will be converted at the same of the words that is put in question, and the me:-aning does not remain
time into the French faTigue, exTinue, CouRbaTure, RenDu, the Ger- the same; moreover, the other language is merely homonymous and
man maTT, KapuTT, eRschop(f. eRmiideT, and so on. On the other remains French, though it acts like a foreign language. In Brisset, who
hand, it moves toward an evolved procedure. In this case, it is no putS the signification of propositions in question, other languages are
longer a maner of analyzing or even abstracting certai n phonetic ele- ca lled upon, bur only in order to demonstrate the unity of their mean-
ments from an English word, but of form ing the word in several in- ings as much as the identity of their sou nds (diavolo and die'l-jjieuf, or
dependent modes. Thus, among the terms frequently encountered on di-a vall I'au). As for Wolfson, whose problem is the translation of lan-
food labels, we not only find vegetable oil, which does not pose many guages, the various languages are combined together in a disordered
problems, but also vegetable shortening, which remains irreducible to manne:-r in order to conserve the:- same meanings and the same:- sounds,
the ordinary method: what causes the difficulty is SH, R, T, and N. It bur only by sysre:-matically destroying the maternal language of English
will the:-refore be n('<:essary to render the word monstrous and grotesque, from which they were e:-xrracted. By slighlly modifying rhe meaning of
10 lOUIS WOLfSON ; OR , THE 'IOCfDURE LOUIS WOLfSON; O~, THE 'ROCEOURE 11

these categories, one could say that Roussel constructs a language hom- brain " of the student of languages. The transformations never reach
onymo us with French, Brisser, a synonymous language, and Wolfson. the grandiose level of an event, but remain mired in their accidental cir-
a language paronymous with English. According to one of Wolfson's cumstances and empirical actualizations. The procedure thus remains
intuitions, this is perhaps the secret aim of linguistic5-to kill the mater· a protocol. The linguistic procedure operates in a void, and never links
nal language. The grammarians of the eighteenth century still believed up with a vital process capable of producing a vision. This is why the
in a mother tongue; the linguists of the nineteenth century voiced transformation of believe takes up so many pages, marked by the com-
certain doubts, and changed the rules of both maternity and filiation, ings and goings of those who pronounce the word, and by the inter-
sometimes invoking languages that were linle more than sisters. Per- vals between the different actualized combinations (Pieve-peave, like-
haps an infernal trio was needed to push this initiative ro its limit. In gleichen, leave- Verlaub ... ). Voids subsist and spread everywhere, so
Ro ussd , French is no longer a maternal language, because in its words that the only event that arises, turning its black face toward us, is the
and letters it conceals various exO[icisms that give rise to "impressions end of the world or the atomic explosion of the planet, which the stu-
of Africa" (in keeping with France's colonial mission); in Brisset, there dent fears will be delayed by arms reductions. In Wolfson, the proce-
is no longer a mother lOngue, all languages are sisters, and Latin is not dure is itself its own event, and has no other expression than the condi-
a language (in keeping with a democratic vocation); and in Wolfson, tional, the past conditional, which is needed to establ ish a hypothetical
American English does not even have British English as its mother, place between an externa l circumstance and an improvised actuali -
but becomes an exotic mixture or a " potpourri of various idioms" (in zation: "The alienated linguistic student would take an E from the
keeping with the American dream of bringing together immigrants English tree and would have mentally inserted it between the T and
from around the world ). the R, had he not realized that when a vowel is placed after a T sound,
Wolfson's book, however, is not a literary work, and does not the T becomes D.... During this time, the mother of the alienated stu-
claim to be a poem. What turns Roussel's procedure into a work of art dent followed him around, and occasionally came to his side and ut-
is the fact that the interval between the original sentence and its con- tered something completely useless."4 Wolfso n's style, his propositional
version is filled with marvelously proliferating stories, which make the schema, thus links the schizophrenic impersonal with a verb in the
starting point recede until it is entirely hidden. For example, the event conditional, which expresses the infinite expectation of an event capa-
woven by the hydraulic metier aallbes takes up the metier qui force a ble of filling up the intervals or, on the contrary. of hollowing them out
se lever de grand matin. These are grandiose visions-pu re events that in an immense void that swallows up everything. The demented Stu-
play within language, and su rpass the conditions of their apparition dent of languages would do or would have done ...
and the circumstances of their actua lization, just as a piece of music Wolfson's book, moreover, is not a scientific work, despite the truly
exceeds the ci rcumStances of its performance and the execution given scientific intention of the phonetic transformations it brings about.
to it. The same holds true for Brisset: to extract the unknown face of This is because a scientific method implies the determination or even
the event or, as he says, the other face of language. Moreover, it is the the formation of formally legitimate totalities. Now it is obvious that
intervals between one linguistic combination and the next that gener- the totality of the referent of the student of language is illegitimate; not
ate the great events that fill these intervals, like the binh of a neck, the only because it is constituted by the indefinite set of everything that is
appearance of teeth, the formation of sex organs. Bur there is nothing not English, a veritable "tour de babil," as Wolfson says, but because
simila r in Wolfson: between the word to be converted and the words of the set is not defined by any syntactic rule that would make it corre-
the conversion, and in the conversions themselves, there is nothing but spond to the meanings or sounds, and would order the transforma-
a void. an interv:tl that is lived as pathogenic or pathological. When tions of the set in terms of a staning point that has a syntax and is de-
he translates the :tnicle the into the tWO Hebrew terms eth and he, fined as English. Thus, the schizophrenic lacks a "symbolism" in two
he com ments: the maternal word is "split in twO by the equally split different ways: on the one hand , by the subsistence of pathogen ic inter-
12 lOU IS WOLfSON; OR, TH£ P~OCfDURE LOUIS WOlfSON; O R, THE PROCEOUU 13

vals that nothing can fill; and on the other hand, by the emergence of a noisily into the patient's room, which has neither lock nor key, while
fa lse totality that nothing can define. This is why he lives his own at other times she walks about with light feet, and then silently opens
thought ironically as a double simulacrum of a poetic-artistic system the door and screams out a phrase in English. But the situation is even
and a logical-scientific method. It is this power of the simulacrum or more complex, for the student's entire disjunctive arsenal is also indis-
irony that makes Wolfson's book such an extraordinary book, illumi- pensable in the street and in public places, where he is certain to hear
nated with that peculiar joy and sunlight characteristic of simulations, English being spoken, and indeed may be heckled at any moment.
in which we fee l this very particular resistance germinating in the heart Moreover, in his second book he describes a more perfect apparatus
of the illness. As the student says, "How nice it was to study languages, that can be used while moving about: a stethoscope in his ears, plugged
even in his crazy, if nm imbecilic, manner." For "it is not rare that into a portable tape recorder, whose ea rplugs ca n be removed or in-
things go that way in life: at least a little ironically.
H serted at will, and the sound raised or lowered, while he reads a foreign
In order to kill the maternal language, the combat must be waged newspaper. This use of the stethoscope is especially satisfying to him in
at every moment-and above all, the combat against the mother's the hospitals he goes to, since he thinks medicine is a false science, far
voice, "very high and piercing and perhaps equally triumphant. " He worse than any science he can imagine in language and in life. Ifit is
will be able to transform a part of what he hears only if he has already true that he first used this apparatus in 1976, well before the appear-
avoided and eliminated most of it. As soon as his mother approaches, ance of the Walkman, we can believe him when he says that he is its
he memorizes in his head some sentence from a foreign language; but true inventor. and that for the first time in history a makeshift schizo-
he also has a foreign book in front of him; and again he produces gur- phrenic object lies at the origin of an apparatus that is now spread over
glings in his throat and gratings of his teeth; he has twO fingers ready the entire universe, and that will in turn schizophrenize entire peoples
to plug his ears; or he makes use of a more complex apparatus, a short- and generations.
wave radio with the earplug in one ear, the other ear being plugged The mother tempts and attacks him in yet another way. Whether
with a single finger, leaving the other hand free to hold the book and from good intentions, or to distract him from his studies, or in an
leaf through it. It is a combinatorial, a panoply of all possible disjunc- attempt to surprise him, sometimes she noisily puts away packages of
tions, but one whose particular characteristic is to be inclusive and food in the kitchen, while at other times she comes in and brandishes
ramified to infinity, and not limitative and exclusive. These inclusive them under his nose and then leaves, only to suddenly rerum a short
disjunctions are characteristic of schizophrenia, and complement the time thereafter. Then, during her absence, the student sometimes gives
stylistic schema of the impersonal and the conditional: sometimes the himself over to an alimentary orgy, tearing open the packages, lick-
student will have put a finger in each ear, sometimes a finger in one ear, ing them, absorbing their contents indiscriminately. The danger here is
either the left or the right ear, with the other ear being filled sometimes multiple, because the packages have English labels that he has forbid-
by the earplug, sometimes by another object, with the free hand either den himself to read (except with a quick glance, in order to find easily
holding a book, or making a noise on the table ... It is a litany of dis- converted inscriptions like vegetable oil), or because he cannot know
junctions, in which we recognize Beckett's characters, with Wolfson in advance if they contain a food he likes, or because eating makes him
among them. s Wolfson needs to use all these ripostes, he has to be con- heavy and distracts him from the study of languages, or because the
stantly on the lookout, because his mother, for her part, is also waging morsels of food , even under the ideal conditions of the packages' ster-
a combat with language: either to cure her evil demented son, as he ilization, contain larva. little worms, and eggs that have been made
himself says, or for the joy of "making the eardrum of her dear son vi- even more harmful by air pollution, "trichinas, tapeworms, earth-
brate with her vocal cords," or through aggressiveness and authority, worms, pinworms, ankylosi, flukes , little eels." He feels as much guilt
or fo r some more obscure reason, sometimes she shuffles about in the after eating as he does after hearing his mother speak English. To ward
next room, making her American radio reverberate, and then enters off this new form of danger, he takes great pains to "memorize" a for-
" LOUIS WOLfSON ; OR, THE PROCEDURE

eign phrase he had already learned; bener yet, he fixes in his mind, he
tOUIS W OLfSO N ; O R, THE PROCEDURE 15

a conti nuous fashion, the logic, the proofs for the truth of the periodic
invests with all his strength, 3; certain number of calories. or the chemi- table of the elements?"
cal formulas that correspond to the desired food, intellectualized and Here then is the great equation o f fact, as Roussel wou ld have said:
purified-for example. the "'ong chains of unsaturated carbon atoms"
maternal words food, life
of vegetable oil. He combines the force of the chemical structures with • • knowledge
foreign languages molecular structures
that of the foreign words, either by making a repetition of words cor-
respond to an absorption of calories ("he would repeat the same four If we consider the numerators, we see that what they have in com-
or five words twenty or thirty times, while he avidly ingesti a sum of mon is that they are all "panial objects." But this notion remains all
calories equal in hundreds [0 the second pair of numbers or equal in the more obscure in that it does not refer to a lost totaliry. What ap-
thousands to the fi rst pai r of numbers"), or by identifying the phonetic pears as a partial object, in fact, is something that is menacing, explo-
elements of the foreign words with the chemical formulas of trans- sive, bursting, toxic, or poisonous. O r what contains such an object.
formation (for exampl~, th ~ pairs of vowels-phonemes in German, a nd Or else the pieces into wh ich it ~xplodes. In short, the partial object
more gen~rally the elements of language that are changed automati- is in a box, and bursts into pieces when we open the box, but what
ca lly "like an unstable chemica l compound or a radioactive element is called " pa rtial " is as much the box as its contents, although there
with an extremely short half-life" ). are differences between them, namely, their voids and intervals. Thus,
There is therefore a profound equ ivalence, on the one hand, be- foods are enclosed in boxes, but they nonetheless contain larvae and
tween the intolerable maternal words and the poisonous or spoiled worms, especially when Wolfson tea rs open the boxes with his bare
foods, and on the other hand, between the foreign words of transfor- teeth. The maternal l angu ag~ is a box containing words that are al-
mation and the formulas or unstable atomic linkages. The most gen- ways cutting; but letters (especially consonants) are consta ntly fa lling
eral p robl~m, as the fou ndation of these equivalences, is revealed at the from these words, and must be avoided or warded off as so many
end of the book: Life and Knowledge. Foods and mat~rnal words are thorns or splinters that a re particularly harmfu l or harsh. And is nor
life, foreign languages and atomic formulas are knowledge. How can the body itself a box conta in ing organs as so many parts? But are not
one justify life, which is suffering and crying? H ow can one justify life, these parts menaced by various microbes, viruses, and especially can-
an "evil and sick matter" that feeds off his own sufferi ngs and cries? cers, which make them explode, leaping from one part to another so as
The only justification of life is knowledge, which to him is th~ only to tear apart the entire organism? The organism is as maternal as food
thing Beautiful and Tru~. Against the maternal language, which is the or words: it even seems tha t the pen is is a feminine organ par excel·
cry of 1if~, he has to unite ev~ry foreign language in a total and con- lence, as in the case of dimorphism, where a collection of rudimentary
tinuous idiom, as the knowledge of language or philology. Against the male organs appear as organic appendices of the female body (" the
lived body, its larvae and eggs, which constitute the suffer ings of l if~, female genital organ, rather than the vagina, seems to him to be a
he has to unite every atomic combination in a total fo rmu la a nd a peri- greasy rubber tube ready to be inserted by the hand of a woman into
odic table, as the knowledge of the body or molecular biology. Only an the last section of the intesti ne, of his intestine," which is why nurses
" intellectual exploit" is Beautifu l and True, and alone is able to justify seem to him to be professiona l sodomists par excellence). The beauti -
life. But how can knowledge have this justifying continuity and tocal- ful mother, now one·eyed and cancerous, ca n thus be sa id to be a col·
ity, since it is made up of every foreign language and every unstable lection of pa rtial objects, which a re explosive boxes of different types
fo rmula, in which an interval always subsists that menaces the Beauti- and levels. Within each type, and at every level, these partial ob jects
fu l, and from which only a grotesque totality emerges that overturns continually break apart in the void, and open up interva ls between the
the True? Is it ever possible " to represent in a continuous fashion the letters of a word, the orga ns of a body, or mouthfuls of food (the spac-
relative posi tions of diverse atoms of a fairly complicated biochemica l ing that govern s them. as in Wolfson's meal). This is the cl inical picture
compound ... and to demonstrate at once, instantaneously, yet also in of the schizophrenic student: aphasic, hypochondriac. a norexic.
16 lOUIS W O HSON ; OR, THE ' ROCfOURf lOUIS WOlfSON; ai, THE HOCEOUU 17

Tht: numerators of the great equation therefore give us a first de· facto rs that guide him in his ~tting, as a minimum and a maximum:
rivative equation: the smallest num~r of previous "trials" by the horse, but also the uni-
versal ca lendar of historical birthdays that can be linked to the name of
an unjust,
maternal words organism the horse, the owner, the jockey, and so on (hence the "Jewish horses"
~ ~ sick, and
hurtful letters harmful larvae cancerous organs and the great Jewish festiva ls).
painful life
The denominators of the great equation would thus give us a sec-
How can we draw up the other equation, that of the denomina- ond derivative equation:
tors? This is not unrelated to Artaud, and to Anaud's combat. In Ar-
taud, the peyote rite also confronts letters and organs, but it makes Knowledge,
them move in the other direction, toward inarticulate breaths, toward foreign words chains of atoms reconstitution
periodic table • of a pure body
~

tower of Babel (all languages)


a nondecomposable body without organs. What it extracts from the
and its breaths
maternal language are breath-words that belong to no language, and
from the organism, a body without organs that has no generation. To If the partial objects of life referred to the mother, why not refer
the dirty writing, the disgusting organisms, the organ-letters, the mi- the transformations and totalizations of knowledge to the father? Es-
crobes and parasites, there stands opposed the fluid breath or the pure pecially since the fa ther is double, and is presented on two circuits: the
body-but this opposition must ~ a transition that reStores to us this first circuit, lasting a short period of time, for the stepfather-chef who
murdered body, these stifled breaths.' But Wolfson is not at the same is always changing jobs like a " radioactive element with a half-life of
"level," because the letters still ~Iong to the maternal words, and the 4S days"; and the second circuit, having a great amplitude, for the no-
breaths still have to ~ discovered in foreign words, so that he remains madic father whom the young man encounters at a distance in public
mired in the condition of resemblance ~tween sound and meaning. places. Must not Wolfson's double "failure"-the persistence of patho-
He lacks a creative syntax. Nonetheless, the combat has the same na- genic intervals and the constitution of illegitimate totalities-~ related
ture, [he same sufferings, and should also make us pass from wound- to this Medusa-mother with a thousand penises, and to the scission
ing letters to animated breaths, from sick organs to the cosmic body of the fathe r F Psychoanalysis contains but a single error: it reduces
without organs. To maternal words and ha rsh letters, Wolfson opposes all the adventures of psychosis to a single refrain, the eternal daddy-
the action that comes from the words of one or more languages, which mommy, which is sometimes played by psychological characters, and
must fuse together, enter a new phonetic writing, form a liquid totality sometimes raised to the level of symbolic functions. But the schizo-
or alliterative continuity. To poisonous foods, Wolfson opposes the phrenic does not live in familial categories, he wanders among world-
continuity of a chain of atoms and the totality of a periodic table, wide and cosmic categories-this is why he is always studying some-
which must ~ absor~d rather than divided into parts, reconstituting thing. He is continually rewriting De natura rerum. He evolves in
a pure body rather than sustaining a sick one. It will ~ noted that the [~ings and in words. What he terms "mother " is an organization of
conquest of this new dimension, which turns away from the infinite words (hat has been put in his ears and mouth, an organization of
process of explosions and intervals, proceeds for its part with two cir- things that has been put in his body. It is not my language that is ma-
cuits, one fast, the other slow. We have seen this with words, since on ternal, it is my mother who is a language; it is not my organism that
the one hand the maternal words must ~ converted as quickly as pos- comes from the mother, it is my mother who is 3 collection of organs,
sible, and continuously, but on the other hand the foreign words can the collection of my own organs. What one ca lls Mother is Life. And
only extend their domain and form a whole thanks to multilingual dic- what one ca lls Father is foreignness letrangetel, all these words I do
tionaries that no longer pass through the maternal language. Likewise, not know, and (hat cut through my own; all these atoms that con-
the speed of a chemica l transformation's ha lf-life, and the amplitude of stantly enter and leave my body. It is nOt the father that speaks foreign
a periodic table of tho: elements. Even horse races inspire in him twO languages and is familiar with atoms; it is the fo reign languages and
18 lOUIS WOLfSON; OR, THE PROCEDURE
LOUIS WOLfSON; OR, THf '.OCfOUU 19

atomic combinations that are my father. The father is the crowd of my For "'God is the bomb, that is, quite obviously the set of nuclea r
atoms and the set of my glossolalias-in short, Knowledge. bombs necessary to steri lize our extremely cancerous planet by radio-
And the struggle between knowledge and life is the bomba rdment activity ... , Etohi", hon petsita. literally, God he bombs ... ~
of the body by atoms, and cancer is the riposte of the body. How Unless there is "possibly" yet another way, indicated in the fiery
can knowledge hea l life, and in some way justify it? All the world's pages of an "'additional chapter" in the first book. Wolfson ~ms lO
doctors-those "green basta rds" who come in pairs like fathers-will follow in the footsteps of Artaud, who had gone beyond the quesnon
never be able to cure the cancerous mother by bombarding her with of fath er-mother, and then that of the bomb and the tumor, and
atoms. Bur it is nor a question of the father or the mother. The young wanted to have done with the un iverse of "'judgment," to discover a
man could accept his mother and father as they are, "modify at least new continent. On the one hand, knowledge is not opposed to life, be-
some of his pejorative conclusions with regard to his parents," and cause even when it takes as its object the dullest chemical formula of
even return to Ihe maternal language at the end of his lingu istic studies. inanimate matter, the alOms of this form ula are still those that enter
This is how he concluded his first book-with a certain hope. The into the composition of life, and what is life if nOt their adventure?
question, however, lies elsewhere, since it concerns the body in which And on the other hand, life is not opposed to knowledge, for even the
he lives, with all the metastases that constitute the earth, and the knowl- greatest pain offers a strange knowledge to those who experience it,
edge in which he evolves, with all the languages that never Stop speak- and what is knowledge if nor the adventure of the painful life in the
ing, all the atoms that never Stop bombarding. It is here, in the world, brains of great men (which moreover look like pleated irrigators)? We
in the rcal , that the pathogenic intervals arc opened up, and the ille- impose little pains upon ourselves to persuade ourselves that life is tol-
gitimate totalities are made and unmade. It is here that the problem of erable, and even justifiable. But one day, the student of languages, fa-
existence is posed, the problem of his own existence. What makes the miliar with masochistic behaviors (cigarette burns, voluntary asphyx-
student sick is the world, nOt his father-mothe r. What makes him sick ias), encounters the "revela tion," and encounters it precisely on the
is the real, not symbols. The on ly "justification" of life would be for all occasion of a very moderate pain he inflicts on himself: that life is ab-
the atoms [Q bombard the cancer-Earth once and for all , and return it solutely unjustifiable, and all the more so in that it does nOt have to be
to the great void: the resolution of all equations, the atomic explosion. justified ... The student glimpses "the truth of truths," without being
More and more, the student will combine his readings on cancer, from able to penetrate it fu rther. What comes to light is an event: life and
which he learns how the disease progresses, with his monitoring of knowledge are no longer opposed, they are no longer even distinguish-
shortwave radio, which announces the possibility of a radioactive able from each other, once the former abandons irs born organisms
Apocalypse that would put an end to all cancer: "especially si nce one and the latter irs acquired knowledges, and both of them engender new
could easily claim that planet Earth as a whole has contracted the most and extraord inary figures that are revelations of Being-perhaps those
horrible cancer possible, a portion of its own substance having run c;f Roussel or Brisset, and even of Artaud, the great story of humanity's
amok and starred multiplying and metastasizing itself, and whose ef- "i nnate" breath and body.
fect is the wrenching phenomena of the here-below, a fabric woven The procedure, the linguistic procedure, is necessary for all this.
ineluctably from an infinity of lies, in justices, sufferings ... , an evil All words recount a story of love, a star)' of life and knowledge, but
that at present is nonetheless treatable and curable by extremely strong this story is neither designated nor signi fied by words. nor translated
and persistent doses of artificia l radioactivity ... ! " from one word into another. Rather, the story concerns what is "im-
So that the primary great principal equation would now show possible" in language, and thus what belongs to language alone: its
what it hides: olltside. It is made possible only by means of a procedure. which testi-
fies to madness. Moreover, psychosis is inseparable from a linguistic
OlCIaSI3Se:S of cance r c:lncer-F.artn life procedure, which must not be confused with any of the known cate-
atomic :. pocalyp~ bomb-God knowledge: gories of psychoanalysis, si nce it has another destination.!I The proce-
20 lOUIS WOlfSON ; O~, THE ~~OCEDUIE

dure pushes language to its limit, yet fo r all that it does not cross this
limit. It lays waste to designations, significations, and translations-
but it does so in o rder that language might finall y confront, on the
other side of its limit, the figures of an unknown life and an esoteric
knowledge. The procedure is merely the condition, however indispens-
able it may be. He who knows how to cross the limit accedes to new 3
figures. Perhaps Wolfson remains on the edge, an almost reasonable
prisoner of madness, without being able to extract from his procedure
the figures he sca rcely offers us a glimpse of. For the problem is not to
Lewis Carroll
go beyond the bounds of reason, it is to cross the bounds of unreason
as a victor: then one ca n speak o f "good mental health," even if every-
thing ends badl y. But the new figures of life and knowledge still remain
prisoners in Wolfson's psychotic procedure. His procedure, in a certain
manner, remains unproductive. And yet it is one of the greatest experi·
ments ever made in this area. This is why Wolfson keeps saying "para- In Lewis Carroll, everything begins with a horrible combat, the combat
doxically " that it is sometimes more difficult to remain slumped in of depths: things explode or make us explode, boxes are too small for
one's chair, immobilized, than it is to get up and and move farther their contents, food s are toxic and poisonous, entrails are stretched,
on ... monsters grab at us. A little brother uses his little brother as bait.
Bodies intermingle with one another, everything is mixed up in a kind
of cannibalism that joins together food and excrement. Even words are
eaten. This is the domain of the action and passion of bodies: things
and words are scattered in every direction, or on the contrary are
welded together into nondecomposa ble blocks. Everything in depth is
horrible, everything is nonsense. Alice in Wonderland was originally to
have bttn entitled Alice's Adventures Underground.
But why didn't Carroll keep this title ? Because Alice progressively
conquers surfaces. She rises or returns to the su rface. She creates sur-
faces. Movements of penetration and burying give way to light lateral
. movements of sliding; the animals of the depths become figures on cards
without thickness. All the more reason for Through the Looking-Glass
to invest the surface of a mirror, to institute a game of chess. Pure
events escape from states of affairs. We no longer penerrate in depth,
but through an act of sliding pass through the looki ng-glass, turning
everything the other way round like a left-hander. The stock market of
Fortunatus described by Carroll is a Mobius strip on which a single
line traverses the two sides. Mathematics is good because it brings new
surfaces into existence, and brings peace to a world whose mixtures
in depth would be terrible: Carroll the mathematician, or Carroll the
photographer. But the world of depths sti ll rumbles under the surface,

21
22 lEWIS C ,olU OLl

and thr~at~ ns to br~ak through it. Ev~n unfolded and laid out flat, the
mon st~rs Still haunt us.
Ca rroWs third gr~a t novel, Sylvie and Bruno, brings about y~t a
further advanc~ . The pr~vious d~p t h itself seems to be flatt~ned out, and
becom~s a surfac~ alongsid~ th~ other s u rfac~. The two surfaces thus
coexist, and two contiguous sto ri~s are written on [hem, [he one ma jor 4
and the other minor; the one in a major key, the other in a minor key.
Nor one Story within another, but on~ next to the other. Sylvie and
Bruno is no doubt the first book that tells two stories at the same time, The Greatest Irish Film (Beckett's " Film")
not one inside the other, but fWO contiguous stories, with passages that
constantly shift from one to the other, sometimes owing to a fragment
of a sentence that is common to both stories, sometimes by means of
the couplers of an admirable song that distributes the events proper to
each story, JUSt as much as the couplets are determined by the events:
the Mad Gardener's song. Carroll asks, Is it the song that determines the The Problem
events, or the events, the song? With Sylvie and Bruno, Ca rroll makes
a scroll book in the manner of Japanese scroll paintings. (Eisenstein If it is true, as the Irish Bishop Berkeley said, that to be is to be per-
thought of scroll painting as the true precursor of cinematographic ceived (esse est pereipiJ, is it possible to escape perception? How does
montage and descri bed it in this way: "The scroll's ribbon rolls up by one become imperceptible?1
formi ng a rectangle! It is no longer the medium that rolls up on itself;
it is what is represented on it that rolls up at its surface. ") The two si- The History of the Problem
multaneous Stories of Sylvie and Bruno form the final term of Carroll's
trilogy, a masterpiece equal to the others. We might imagine that the whole Story is that of Berkeley, who had
It is not that surface has less nonsense than does depth. But it is enough o f being perceived (and of perceiving). The role, which could
not the same nonsense. Su rface nonsense is like the " Radiance" of pure on ly have been played by Buster Keaton, would be that of Bishop
events, entities that never fini sh either happening o r withdrawing. Pure Berkeley. Or rather, it is the transi tion fro m one Irishman to another,
events without mixtu re shine above the mixed bodies, above their em- from Berkeley who perceived and was perceived, to Beckett who had
broiled actions and passions. They let an incorporeal rise to the surface ~x hausted "all the joys of pereipere and perdpi." 2 We must therefore
like a mist over the earth, a pure "expressed " from the depths: not the propose a cutting of the film (or a distinction of cases) that differs
sword, but the fla sh of th~ sword, a fl ash without a sword like the -slightly from the one proposed by Beckett himself.
smile wi thout a cat. Carroll's uniqueness is to have allowed nothing to
pass through sense, but to have played our everything in non s~ nse,
The Condition of the Problem
si n c~ th e d i v~rsity of nonsenses is enough to give an account of the en-
tire un iverse, its terrors as well as its glories: the depth, the su rface, and There must be something unbea ra ble in the fact o f being perceived.
the vol ume or rolled surface. Is it the fa ct of bei ng perceived by a third parry? No, si nce possible
perceiving thi rd pa rties recoil once they rea lize they are being per-
ceived, not si mpl y by each other, but each one by himself. Thus there
is someth ing intrinsica lly terrifyi ng in the fact of being perceived, but
what?

2J
24 THf GREATEST IR ISH fiLM THE GUAffST IRISH filM 25

The Givens of the Problem their perceiving me, all perception as such being the perception of per-
ception. The solution to this second case consists in expelling the ani-
As long as perception (the camera ) is behind the cha racter, it is not ma ls, veiling the mirror, covering the furniture, pulling down the litho-
da ngerous because it remains unconscious. It seizes the cha racter on ly graph, and tearing up the ph otos~ the extinction of double perception .
when it approaches him at an oblique angle and makes him conscious On the Street, a bit earlier, the character still had a space-time at his
of being perceived. We will say, by con vention, that the character be- disposal, and even fragments of a past (the photos he was carrying). In
comes conscious of being perceived, that it "enters into percipi," when the room, he still had sufficient strength at his disposal to form images
the camera exceeds an angle of fo rry-five degrees behind the charac- that would reStore his perception. But now he has nothing but the
ter's back. from onc side o r the other. present, in the form of a hermetica lly sealed room in which all ideas
of space and time. all divine, human, or animal images, all images of
The First Case: The Wall and the Staircase, Action things, have disappeared. All that remains is the Rocking Cha ir in the
center of the room, because, more than any bed, it is the sole piece of
The character can limit the danger by walking quickly along a wall; in furniture that exists before or after man, that which suspends us in the
this way, he leaves only onc side unprotected. To make a character middle of nothingness (to-and-fro).
walk a long a wall is the first cinematographic act (a ll the great film-
makers have attempted it). Of course, the action is more complex
when it becomes vertical and even spiral-like, as in a staircase, since
The Third Cose: The Rocking Choir, Affection
the unprorected side ahernares relative to the angle of view. In any The character was able to sit in the rocking chair and doze off only to
case, whenever the forry- fI ve-degree angle is surpassed, the character the degree that the perceptions were extinguished. But perception still
comes to a hair, stops the action, flattens himself against the wall, and lies in wait behind the rocking chair, where it has both sides at its dis-
hides the exposed side of his face with his hand, or with a handkerchief posal simultaneously. And it seems to have lost the goodwill it mani-
or cabbage leaf that could be drawn from his hat. Such is the first case, fested earlier, when it hurried to close off the angle it had inadven endy
the perception o f action, wh ich can be neutra lized by stopping the surpassed, protecting the character from potential third panies. Now it
action. surpasses the angle deliberately, trying to surprise the dozing character.
The character defend s himself and cu rls up, ever more feebly. The cam-
era perception takes advantage of this; it surpasses the angle defini-
The Second Cose: The Room, Perception
tively, turns around, faces the s l e~ping character, and draws near to
This is [he second ci nematographic act: the interior, wha t rakes place him . It then revea ls what it is: the perception of affection, that is, the
between the walls. Previously, the character was nor considered to be yerception of the self by itself, or pure Affect. It is the reflexive double
perceiving: it was the camera that furnished him with a "blind " per- of the convu lsive man in the rocking chair. It is the one-eyed person
ception, sufficient to his action. But now the camera perceives the who looks at the one-eyed character. It was waiting for the right mo-
character in the room, and the character perceives the room: all per- ment. This, then, is what was so terrifying: that perception was the
ception becomes double. Previously, human third parties could poten- perception o f the self by itself, "i nsuppressi ble " in this sense. This is
tia ll y perceive the cha racter, but they were neutra lized by the camera. the third cinematographic act, the close-up, the affect or the perception
Now, the character perceives fo r himself, his perceptions become of affection, the perception of oneself. It too will be extingu ished, but
things that in turn perceive him : nOI onl y an imals, mirrors, a litho- at the same time as the movement of the rocking chair stopS and the
graph of the good Lord, photos, bUI e\'en utensils (as Eisenstein said character dies. Is this not precisely what is needed, to cease to be in
after Dickens: the kenle is looking al me ... J. In th is rega rd, things are order to become imperceptible, according to Ihe conditions sel forth by
more dan~crous than humans beings: I do not perceive them wilhout Bishop Berkeley?
26 THE GIf"TEST IRISH filM

The General Solution


Beckett's film traversed the three great elementary images of the cin-
ema, those of action, perception, and affection. But nothing is ever fin -
ished in Beckett, noth ing ever dies. When the rock ing chair is immobi-
lized, what is set in motion is the Platonic idea of the Rocking Chair,
the rocking cha ir of the spirit. When the character dies, as Murphy 5
said it is because he has already begu n to move in spirit. He is like a
cork floating on a tempesfU Ous ocea n: he no longer moves, but is in an On Four Poetic Formulas That Might
element that moves. Even the present has disa ppeared in its turn , in a
void that no longer involves obscurity, in a becoming that no longer Summarize the Kantian Philosophy
includes any conceivable change. The room has lost its partitions, and
releases an atom into the luminous void, an impersonal yet singular
atom that no longer has a Self by which it might distinguish itself from
or merge with others. Becoming imperceptible is Life, "without cessa-
tion or cond ition" ... attaining to a cosmic and spiritual lapping.
"The time is out of joint."
-Shakespeare 1

Time is out of joint, time is unhinged.2 The hinges are the axis on
which the door turns. The hinge, Cardo, indicates the subordination of
time to precise cardina l points, through which the periodic movements
it measures pass. As long as time rema ins on its hinges, it is subordi-
nated to extensive~ovement; it is the measure of movement, its inter-
~l or number. This characteristic of ancient philosophy has ohen been
emphasized: the subordination of lime to the circular movement of the
world as the turning Door, a revolving door, a labyrinth opening onto
its eternal origin. It will entai l an entire hiera'fchlzation of movements
according to t heir proximity to the Eternal, according to their neces-
sity, their perfection, their uniformity, thdr rotation, their compos-
ite spirals, their pa rticular axes and doors, and the num bers of Time
that correspond to them. Time no doubt tends to free itself when the
movement it measures itself becomes increasingly aberrant or deril/ed
[deril/el, marked by materia l, meteorological. and terrestrial contin-
gencies; but (his is a downward tendency that still depends on the ad-
ventures of movement. J Time thus remai ns subord inate to wha t, in
movement, is both origi nary and derived.
Time out of joint, the door off its hi nges, signifies the fi rst great
Kantian reversa l: movement is now subordinated to time. Time is no

27
28 ON fOUl fOU.lUlAS ON fOUR f ORMUl ... S 29

longer related to the movement it measures, but rather movement to Consequently, JUSt as time can no longer be defined by succession,
the time that cond itions it. Moreover, movement is no longer the deter- space can no longer be defined by coex istence or simultaneity. Each of
mination of objects, but the description of a space, a space we must set them, space and time, will have to find completely new determinations.
aside in order to discover time as the condition of action. Time thus be- Everything that moves and changes is in time, but time iuelf does not
comes unilinear and rectilinea r, no longer in the sense that it would change or move, any more than it is eternal. It is the fo rm of everything
measu re a derived movement, but in and through itself, insofar as it that changes and moves, but it is an immutable form that does nm
imposes the succession of its determination on every possible move- change-not an eterna l form, but precisely the fo rm of what is not
ment. T his is a recti fication of time. Time ceases to be curved b a God eternal, the immutable form of change and movement. Such an au-
who makes it depend on movemenC1ITe~ ca rdinal and be- tonomous ~ttms to point to a pro ound mystery: it requ;;;Sa
comes ~a l, the order of an empry time. In time, there is no longer new definition of time (and space).
anything either originary or devived that depends on movement. The
labyri nth takes on a new look-neither a circle nor a spiral, but a "I is an other. ..
th read, a pure straight line, all the more mysterious in that it is simple, -Rimbaud'
inexorable, terrible-"the labyrinth made of a single straight line which
is ind ivisible, incessant." 4 Holdertin portrayed Oedi us as having al- The ancients also conceived of time in another way, as a mode of
ready entered into this strict march of the slow death, following an thought or an intensive movement of the soul, a kind of spiritual or
order of time that had ceased to " rhyme. " j Niensche, in a similar monastic time. ge~ brought about its secularization or laiciza-
Sffise, conSl ered it to the most mmc of the Grttk tragedies. Yet tion with the cogito: the I think is an act of instantaneous determina-
Oedipus is still urged on by his wandering as a derived movement. It tion, which implies an undetermined existence (I am) and determines
is tl!!nJ~, rather, who completes the emancipation ime. He truly this existence as that of a thinking substance (I am a thing that thinks ).
brings about the reversal because IS own movement results from ~ut how can the determination apply to the undetermined if we cannot
nothing other than the succession of the determination.iH'3.mlet is the ~Lund er what fo rm it is "determinable"? This Kantian objection
first hero who truly needed time in order to act, whereala:rlier heroes could lead to no other result than the following: our undetermined
were subject to time as the consequence of an origina l movement existence is determinable only in time, under the fo rm of time. Hence
(Aeschylus) or an aberrant action (Sophocieill The Critique of Pure the " I think" affects time, and only determines the existence o f a "self"
ReaS011 is the book of Hamlet, the pri nce of the north. Kant's historical (ma ll that changes in time and presents a certain degr~ of conscious-
situation allowed him to grasp the implications of this reversal. Time is ness at every moment. Time as the for m of determinability therefore
no longet the cosmic time of an original celestial movement, nor is it does not depend upon the intensive movement of the soul; on the con-
the rura l time of derived meteorologica l movements. It has become the trary, the intensive production of a degree of consciousness at every
time o f the city and nothing other, the pure order of time. "moment depends on time. Kant brings about a second ema ncipation 0
It is nm succession that defines time, but time that defines the parts time, and completes its lalcization.
of movement as successive inasmuch as they are determined within it. The Self is in time and is constantly changing: it is a passive, or
I
If time itself were succession, it wou ld have to succeed in another time, rather receptive, "self" that experiences changes in time. The J is an act
to infinity. Things succeed each other in diverse times, but they are also (I think ) that actively determines my existence (I am), but can only de-
simultaneous in the same ti me, and they subsist in an indeterminate termine it in time, as the existence of a passive, receptive, and changing
time [,m temps quelconqllej. It is no longer a question of defining time self, which only represents to itself the activity of its own thought. ~
by succession, nor space by simultaneity, nor perma nence by eter- I and the Self are thus separated by the line of time, which relates the
nity. Permanence, succession, and simultaneity are modes or relations to t'ach other onl y under the condition of a fundam ental difference
of tim"e {dllration. jeries, setL They are the fragm.:~rs [ecl~sl of time. M y existence can never be determined as that of an active and sponta-
30 O N fOUR fOR ..... Ul ... S ON fOU~ f O~ M Ul"S 31

neous being, but as a passive "self" that represents to itself the "1"- If the I determines our existence as a passive self changing in time,
that is, the spontaneity of the determination-as an Other that affects time is the fo rmal relation through which the mind affects itself, or the
it ("the paradox of inner sense"J. Oedipus, according to Nietzsche, is way we are internally affected by ourselve Time can thus be defined
defined by a purdy passive attitude, but one that is related ro an activ- as the Affect of the self b itself, or at least as the formal possibility of
ity that continues after his death.' For all the morc reason, Hamlet dis- being affected by oneself. t is in this sense that time as an immutable
plays his eminently Kantian character whenever he appears as a pas- form , which can no longer be defined by simple succession, appears
sive existence, who,like an actor or sleeper, receives the activity of his as the form of interiority (inner sense), whereas space, wh ich can no
own thought as an Other, which is nonetheless capable of giving him a longer be defi ned by coexistence o r simultaneity, appears for its part
dangerous power that defi es pure reason. In Beckett, it is Murphy's as the fo rm of exteriority, the fo rmal possibility of being affected by
"metabuiia." s H a m ~ is not a man of skepticism or doubt, but the something else as an exterior object. " Form of interiority " does not
man of the Critiqu e~ am separated from myself by the form of time simply mea n that time is interior to the mind, because space is no less
and yet I am one, because the I necessarily affects this form by bringing so. Nor does "form of exteriority" mean that space presupposes
about its synthesis-not only of successive parts to each other, but "something else," since it is space, on the contra.t)', that makes possible
at every moment-3 nd because the Self is necessarily affected by the I every representation of objects as other or exterior. But this amoun~s
as the content of this form. The form of the determinable makes the to saying that exteriority entails as much immanence (because space
determined Self represent the determination to itself as an Other. In r~ mains int~ rior to my mind ) as interiority ~ntails transcend~nce (be-
short, the madness o f the subject corresponds to the time out of joint. cause in relation to tim~ my mind is represented as other than myselO.
There is, as it were, a double derivation of the I and the Self in time, It is not time that is interior to us, or at least it is not specifically inte-
and it is this derivation that links or stitches them together. Such is the rior to us; it is we who are interior t~e .. and for this reason time al-
thread of time. ways separates us from w at etermines us by affecting it. Int~riority
In a certain sense, Kant goes further than Rimbaud. For Rimbaud's constantly hollows us out, splits us in two, doubles us, ~v~n though
great formula takes on its full force only by appealing to recollections our unity subsists. But because time has no end, this doubling nev~ r
from school. Rimbaud gives his formula an Aristotelian interpretation: reaches its limit: time is constituted by a vertigo or oscillation, just as
"So much the worse for the wood that finds itself a violin! ... If the unlimited space is consti tuted by a sliding or fl oating.
copper wakes up a bugle, that is not its fault ... " This is like a concept-
object relation in which the concept is an active form, and the object a " It is a" extremely painful thing to be rlIled by laws
merely potential matter. It is a mold, a process of molding. For Kant, by that one does "ot know! ... For the essence of
contrast, the I is no longer a concept but the representation that accom- sllch laws in this way necessitates the secret of their
panies every concept; and the Self is not an object, but that to which all content. " -Kafka'
objects are related as to the continuous variation of its own successive
states, and to the infinite modulation of its degrees at each instant. The Which amounts to saying the Law, since one can hardly distinguish be-
concept-object relation subsists in Kant, but it is doubled by the I-Self tween laws one does not know. The conscience of antiquity speaks of
relation, which constitutes a modulation, and no longer a mold. In this laws beca use, under cerrai n cond itions, they give us knowledge of the
sense, the compartmentalized distinction between forms as concepts Good or the BeSt : laws express the Good from which they are derived.
(violin-bugle) and matters as objects (wood-copper) gives way to the Laws are a ~second resort," a rep r~t~tive of the Good in a world
continu ity of a one-way linear development that requires the establish- eserted by the gods@hen the true Politics is abse;;'- it k a;e;-behii',d
ment of new formal relations (time) and the disposi tion of a ':lew type general dI rectives that men need to know in ordeUQ M=!..fQu,e7tTi]
of matter (phenomenon). It is as if, in Kant, one could already hear From the point of view of knowledge, la ws are like the imitation of the
Beethoven, and soon Wa~n er's continuous variation. Good in a given case.
32 ON fOUR fOR ..... UL ... S ON FOUR FO~MUl"'S 33

In th(' Critique of Practical Reason, by contrast, Kant rt:verses the from the viewpoint of a progress that continues to infi nity in its ever
relationship between the law and the Good, and thereby raises the law increasi ng con formity with the law (sanctifica tion as the conscious-
to the level of a pure and empty uniqueness. The good is w.hat the La~J ness of perseverance in moral progress). This path, which exceeds the
says it is-it is the good that depends on the law, and not vice versa. As limits of our life and requires the soul's immortality, follows the straight
first principle, the law has neither interioriry nor coment, since any l i n~ of time, inexorab l ~ and incessant, upon wh ich w~ r~main in con-
content would refer it back to a Good of which it would be the imita- stant contact with the law. But this indefinite prolongation, rath'e r than
tion. It is a pure form that has no object, whether sensible or intelligi- leading us to a pa radise above, already installs us in a hell here below.
ble. It does not tell us what we mUSt do, but what subjective ru le we Rather than announcing immortality, it distills a "slow dea th," and
must obey no matter what our action. Any action whose maxim can be continuously defers the illdgmellt of the law~hen time is out of joint,
thought without contradiction as universal, and whose motive has no we have to renounce the a n ci~ nt cycle of fau lts and expiations in order
object other than this maxim, will be moral (iying, fo r exa m p l~, cannot to follow the infinite route of the slow death, the deferred judgment, or
be thought as u niv~rsal, sinc~ it at l~ast i m p l i~s peopl~ who be li ~v~ it the infin ite deb!Jr.me leaves us no other juridical options than those
and who, in beli~ving it, ar~ not lying)Gn~ law is thus d~fin~d as th~ of Kafka in The TrIa l: either an "apparent acquittal" or an "unlimited
p ur~ form of u n iv~ rsali ty. II does not t~lI us what aim th~ will must postponement. "
pursu~ to be good, but what fo rm it must ta k~ to be moran It does not
t~1I us what w~ must do, it simply t~lIs us "You mus[!," leaving us to "To attain the ,mknown by disorgatrizi" g all the
deduc~ from it th~ good, that is, the aims of this pu r~ imperativ~. Th ~ senses. , . a long, boundless, alld systematized dis-

~
w is not known because th~ r~ is nothing in it to know: it is the obj~ct o rga nization o f all [he senses. " - Rimbaud l l
.f a purely practical determination, and not a theoretical or specula-
tlV~ on~. O r rather, an unregu lated ex~ rcise of all the facu lties, T his would be
Th~ law is indistinguishable from its se nt~ nc~, and th~ s~ nt~ nce is the fo urth form ula of a profoundly romantic Kant in the Critique of
i ndisti n gui s h abl~ from its im pl~ m e ntat ion or ex~c uti on. If the law is jlldgm ent. This is because, in the first two Critiques, the various sub-
pri mary, it no l ong~ r has any way of distinguishing between the "accu- jective fac ul ti~s entered into relationships wi th each other, but these re-
sation," t h~ "d~fense," and the "verdict. "10 Th~ law coincides with its lationships were rigorously r~gu l ated, since there was always a domi -
imprint on our heart and in ou r f1~s h . But it does not thereb ~ven give nant or determining funda m~ nta l faculty that imposed its rule upon
us a final knowl~dge of our faults, f~r ; hat its needle writes on ~s the others. T here were numerous facu lties: outer sense, inn ~ r sense, the
js Ad throllg/~ d;tty 1and nOt mer:ely in con formity with duty) ... imagination, the understanding, reason, ~ach of wh ich was well de-
It writ~s nothing ~ I se. Fr~ud showed that, if duty in this sense pre- fined. But in the Critique of Pilre Reason. it was the undef1itanding
s uppos~s a r~nunciati~n of i nt~ rests and inclinations, the law will ~xert that dominated, beca use it determi ned inner sense through the inter-
itself all the more strongly and rigorously t he deeper our ren unciation. mediary of a synthesis of the imagina tion, and even rcason s ubmitt~d
T hus, th~ more w~ observ~ th~ law with ~xactitude, t h~ more s~v~ r~ it to th~ role the understanding assigned to it. In the Critiqlle of Practical
beco m~s. Even t h~ most holy a r~ not spa r~d .1l It nelleracqllits us, nei- Reaso" , the fun damenta l fac ulty was reason, because reason consti-
th~ r of our virtues nor of our vic~s or our faults: at ~v~ ry moment th er~ tutes the pure form of the universa lity of law, the other fac uhies fol-
is on ly an a pparent acquitta l, and the moral conscience, fa r fro m ap- lowing as they might {the understa nding a pplied the law, the imagina·
peasing itself, is intensifi ~d by all our renunciations and pricks us ~v~ n tion receiv~d [he sentence, inner sense ~xpe ri enced (h~ consequences
more strongly. This is not Hamiet, but Brutus. How could the law re- or the sanction). But now we see Kant, at an age when great authors
veal its secret without making the renunciation on which it feeds im- rarely have anything new to say, confronting a problem that wi ll lead
possible? An acquitta l can on ly be hoped for, "which makes up fo r the him into an extraordinary undertaki ng: if the facu lties can thus enter
impotence of speculative reason, " no longer at a given moment, but into va riable relationships in which each fa culty is in turn regu lated by
ON 'OUR fORMULAS ON f O U. fORM UL AS 35

one of the others, it must follow that, taken together, they are capable whose episodes will be the two forms of the Sublime, and then Genius.
of free and unregulated relationships in which each faculty goes to its There is a tempest in the chasm opened up inside the subject. In the
own limit, and yet in this way shows the possibility of its entering into firs t (WO Critiques, the dominant or fundame ntal facu lty was able to
an indeterminate [que/conque J harmony with the others. This will be make the other faculties enter into the closesr possible harmonics with
[he Critique of Judgment as the fo undation of romanticism. itself.{[ut now, in an exercise of limits, the various facu lties mutually
This is no longer the aesthetic of the Critique of Pure Reason, which produce the most remote ha~s in each other, so that they fo rm
considered the sensi ble as a quality that could be related to an object in essentially dissonant accords. The emancipation of dissona nce, the dis-
space and time; nor is it a logic of the sensible, nor even a new logos cordant accord, is the great discovery of the Critique of Judgment, the
that would be time. It is an aesthetic of the Beautiful and the Sublime, final Kantian reversill'The separation that joins was the first of Kant's
in which the sensible takes on an autonomous va lue fo r itself and is themes in the Critique of Pure Reason. But in the end, he discovers the
deployed in a pathos beyond all logic, and which will grasp time as it discord that produces an accord. An unregulated exercise of all the fac-
bursts forth [dans son iaiJIissem entJ, at the very origin of its thread and ulties, which was to define future philosophy, JUSt as for Rimbaud the
its vertigo. This is no longer the Affect of the Critique of Pllre Reason, disorder of all the senses would define the poetry of the future. A new
which linked the Self to the I in a relationship that was still regulated music as discord, and as discordant accord, the source of time.
by the order of time; it is a Pathos that lets them evolve freely in order T his is why we have proposed fou r formu las, which are obviously
to fo rm st range com binations as sources of time, "arbitrary forms of arbitrary in relation to Kant, but not arbi trary in relation to what Kant
~ssi bl e intuitions." It is no longer the determination of an I, which has left us fo r the present and the future . De Qu incey's admirable text
must be joined to the determinability of the Self in order to constitute The Last Days of Immanllef Kant said everything, but only the reverse
knowledge; it is now the undetermined unity of all the facu lties (the side of things that will find their full development in the four poetic
Soul ), which makes us enter the unknown. formulas of Kantianism. This is the Shakespearea n aspect o f Kant, who
What is in question in the Critiqlle of Judgment is how certain begins as Hamlet and winds up as Lear, whose daughters would be the
phenomena, which will define the Beautiful, give to the inner sense of post-Kantians.
time an autonomous supplementary dimension; to the imagination, a
power [pouvoirJ of free reflection; and to the understanding, an infi-
nite conceptual ca pacity [puissanceJ. The various facu lties enter into a
spontaneous accord that is no longer determined by anyone of them,
which is all the more profound in that it no longer has any rule, and
which demonstrates a spontaneous accord of the Self and the I under
the conditions of a beautifu l Nature. The Subl ime goes even further in
this di rection: it brings the va rious facu lties into play in such a manner
that they struggle aga inst each other like wrestlers, with one fa cu lty
pushing another to its maximum or limit, to which the second faculty
reacts by pushing the firs t toward an inspiration it would nOt have had
on its own. One fa culty pushes another to a limit, but they each make
the one go beyond the limits of the other. The faculties enter into rela-
tionship at their deepest level, where they are mOSt foreign to ea.;h
other. They interact at the point where the distance between them ;s at
its greatest. There is a terrible snuggle between the imagination and
reason, but also between the understanding and inner sense, a battle
NIETZSCHE A N D S.... NT , ... Ut 37

ing read or reread the text of the Apocalypse, We can immediately


sense the topicality of both the Apocalypse and Lawrence's denuncia-
tion of it, This topica lity does not consiSt in historical correspondences
of the type "Nero = Hitler = Antichrist," nor in the suprahistorical sen-
timent of the end of the world, nor in the atomic, economic, ecologic,
6 and science fiction pan ic of the millena rians. If we are steeped in the
Apocalypse, it is rather because it inspires ways o f living, surviving,
N ietzsche and Saint Paul, Lawrence and judging in each o f us. It is a book fo r all those who think of them-
selves as survivors. It is the book of Zombies.
and John of Patmos Lawrence is closely related to Nietzsche. We can assume that
Lawrence would not have written his text without Nietzsche's Ami-
c.hrist. Nietzsche himself was not the first. Nor even Spinoza. A certain
number of "visionaries" have opposed Christ as an amorous person to
Christianity as a mortuary enterprise. Not that they have an overly
accommodating attitude toward Christ, but they do feel the need to
avoid confusing him with Christianity. In Nietzsche, there is the great
It's not the same, it can't be the same . . ,I D. H . Lawrence intervenes in
opposition between Christ and Saint Paul : Christ, the softest, most
the scholarly debates of those who ask if the same John wrOte both the amorous of the decadents, a kind of Buddha who frees us from the
gospel and the Apoca lypse.2 l awrence intervenes with very passionate domination of priests and the ideas of fau lt, punishment, reward, judg-
arguments, which have all the more force in that they imply a method ment, death, and what fo llows death-this bearer of glad tidings is
of evaluation, a typology: the same type of man CQuid not have written doubled by the black Saint Paul, who keeps Christ on the cross, cease-
the gospel and the Apocalypse. It man ers linle that each of the two lessly lead ing him back to it, making him rise from the dead, displacing
teXIS is complex or composite, a nd includes so many different things. the center of gravity toward eternal life, and inventing a new type of
The question does not concern two individuals or twO authors, but priest even more terrible than its predecessors. " Paul's invention, his
two types of man, two regions of the soul, twO completely different means to priestly tyranny, to herd formation: the belief in immortal-
ensembles. The gospel is aris[(x ratic, individual, soft, amorous, deca- ity-that is, the doctrine of·jlfdgment.· .. j Lawrence takes up the oppo-
dem, always rather cultivated. The Apoca lypse is collective, popular. sition once again, but this time he opposes Christ to the red John of
uncultivated, hateful, and savage. Each of these words would have to Parmos, the author of the Apocalypse. This was Lawrence's mortal
be explained in order to avoid misunderStandings. But al ready the book, since it only slightly preceded his red hemoptysica l death, just
evangelist and the apocalypst cannot be the same. John of Patmos does as the Antichrist preceded Nietzsche's collapse. Befo re dyi ng, one last
not even assume the mask of the evangelist, nor that of Christ; he in- "joyful message," one last glad tid ing, It is not that Lawrence simply
vents another mask, he fab ricates another mask that unmasks Ch rist imitates Nietzsche. Rather, he picks up an arrow, Nietzsche's arrow,
or, if you prefer, that is superimposed on Christ's mask. John of Patmos and shoots it elsewhere, aims it in a different direction, on another
dea ls with cosmic terror and death, whereas the gospel and Christ comet, to another audience: "Nature propels the philosopher into man-
dea lt with human and spiritua l love. Christ invented a religion of love kind like an arrow; it takes no aim, but hopes the arrow will stick
(a practice, a way of living and not a belief), whereas the Apocalypse somewhere."4 Lawrence takes up Nietzsche's initiative by taking John
brings a religion of Power IPouvoirj-a belief, a terrible manner of of Patmos as his target, and no longer Saint Paul. Many things change
jlldging. Instead of the gift of Ch rist, an infinite debL or are supplemented from one initiative to anmher, and even what they
It goes without say i n~ thai Lawrence's text is best read after hav- have in common gai ns in strength and novelty.

36
38 NIETZSCHE "'1'10 SAIN1 PAUl I'<IIETZSCI1E AND S""N1 PAUl 39

~'
Christ's enterprise is individual. In itsdf, the individual is not nec- type of man, and a type of thinker that still exists today, enjoying a
essarily opposed to the collectivity; individual and collective stand op- ncw reign: the carnivorous lamb, the lamb that bites and then cries,
posed in each of us like two different parts of the soul. Now Christ " Help! What did I ever do to you? It was for your own good and our
rarely addressed himself to what is collective in us. His problem common cause. " What a curious figure, the modern thinker. The~
was rather to undo the collective syst(~m of the Old Testament priest-
hood, of the Je ..... ish priesthood and its power, but only to liberate the
individual soul from Ihis morass. As fo r Caesa r, he would give him
his due. ThaI is why he is aristocratic. He thought a culture of the in-
I lambs in lion's skin, with oversized teeth, no longer need eithcr the
pricsts' habit or, as Lawrence said, the Salvation Army: they have con-
quered many other means of expression, many other popular fo rccs.
What the collective soul wants is Power lPOIl/loirl. Lawrcnce does
dividual soul would be enough to chasc off the monsters buried in the not say simple things, and it would be wrong here to think we have
col1e<tivC' soul. A political errOT. He left us to manage with the collte-
understood him immediately. The collective sou l does nOt sim I want
rive soul, with Caesa r, outside us and inside us. On this score, he con-
stantly deceived his apostles and disciples. We might even imagine to seize power or to re lace the des~t. On theo ne and, it wantS to
that he did so on purpose. destroy wer, it hates weT and steen th fpllissaflceJ, john of Patmos
He did not want to be a master or to help his disciples (only to hares Caesar or the Roman Empire with all his carr. On the or er
love them, he said, but what did that hide?). Iiiilcf,liowever, it also ;ants to penetrate into every_P..Qre of wer, to
He did not really mix with them, or even really work or act with
swarm in its centers, to multi I . them t~~e universe. h~
them. He was Illone all the time. He puzzled them utterly, and in
some part of them, he Jet them down. He refused to be their physical a cosmopOfuan wee not in fu ll view like the Empire, but rathe7Tn
power-lord. The power-homage in a man like Judas found itself be- _every nook and cranny, in every dark corner, in every 0 of the collec-
trayed. So it betrayed back again.' 1 five soul. 8 Finally and above all, it wants an ultimate power that makes
;W appeal to the gods, but is itself the power of a God without appeal
The apostles and disciples made Christ pay for it: denial, betraya l, fa l-
sification, the shameless doc[Oring of the Good News. Lawrence says who judges all other powers. Christianity does not form a pact with
that the principal character of Christianity is judas.' And then john of the Roman Empire, but transmutes it. With the Apocalypse, Ch ristian-
Patmns, and then Saint Paul. Each of them took advantage of the pro- ity invents a completely flew image of power: the system of Judgment.
test of the collective soul, the pan neglected by Christ. The Apocalypse The paimer Gustave Courbet (there arc numerous resemblances be-
takes advantage of the claims of the "poor" or the "weak," for they tween Lawrence and Courbet) spoke of people who woke up at night
are not who we think they are; they are not the humble or the unfonu- cryi ng, " I wam [0 judge! I have ro judge!" The will to destroy, [he will
nate, but tho~ extremely fearsome men who have nothing but a col- to infiltrate e\'ery corn ~_ the will to forever have the last word-a
lective soul. Among Lawrence's most beautiful passages are those on t riple will that is unified and obstinate: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit~
the Lamb. John of Patmos foretells the lion of Judah, but instead a lamb Power singularly changes its nature, its extension, its dlstfl utlon,itS
appea rs, a horned lamb who roars like a lion and has become panicu- intcnsity, its means, and its end. A counterpower, which is both a power
larly cunning, and who is made all the more cruel and terrifying by of nooks and crannies and a power of the laSt men. Power no longer
being presented as a sacrificial victim and no longer as a sacrificer or exists except as the long politics of vengeance, the long enterprise of
an executioner. But the lamb is a more dreadful executioner tha n the the collective soul 's narcissism. The revenge and self-glori fi ca tion of
others. "j ohn insists on a lamb 'as it were slain': but we never see it the weak, says Lawrcnce-Nierz~he,_ Even the Greck asphodel Will-be-
slai n, we only see it slayi ng mankind by the million. Even when it come thc Christian narcissus. 9 And what details are provided in the list
comes on in a victorious bloody shin at the end, the blood is not its of vengeances and glories ... Thc weak can be reproached for only one
orVII blood ... '" In truth, it is Christianity that becomes the Antichrist; thing, and that is for nor being hard enough. for not being puffed up
it betra ys Christ, it fO rces a collective soul on him be in is back, and enough with their own glory and certainty.
in rcturn it gives the collective sou l a superficial indi vidual figure, the Now for this enterprise of the collective suul, a new race of priests,
little lamb. Christianity, and above all john of Palmos, founded a new a new type, would have to be invented. even if this meant turning
40 NIETZSCHE AND SAINT ~AUl NlfTlSCHE AND SAINT 'AUl 41

aga inst the Jewish priest. The latter had n Ot yet 3nained universa lity or the last judgment-this is what fill s up and occupies the wait. A kind
fi nality, he was still too local, he was still waiting for something. The of Folies-Sergere with a celestial city a nd a n infernal lake of sulfur. All
Christian priest would have to take on t from the Jewish priest, even if the details of the suffe rings, the scourges and plagues reserved for the
both would have to turn against Christ. Christ will be made to submit enemies in the lake, the glory of the elect in the city, the nttd of the lat-
to the worst of prostheses: he will be turned into the hero of the collec- ter to measure their seU-glory through the suffering of others-all this
tive soul, he will be made [0 give the collective soul something he never will be programmed down to the minute in the long revenge of the
wanted to give. Or rather, Christia nity will give him what he always weak. It is the spirit of revenge tha t introduces the program into the
hated, a collective Ego, a collective soul. T he Apoca lypse is a mon- wait ("revenge is a dish that ... ").B Those who wait must be given
strous ego grafted onto Christ. John of Patmos's effortS are all di rected something to do. The wait has to be organized from sta rt to finish: the
toward this aim: "Always the titles of power, and never the titles of marryredsouls have to-wait until there is a sufficient numbe-r ofR;"ar-
love. Always Christ the omnipotent conqueror fla shing his grea t sword tyrs for the show to begin.H And then there is the short wait of half an
and destroying, destroyi ng vast masses of men, till blood runs up to the hour before the opening of the seventh seal, the long wait lasting a mil-
horses' bridles. Never Christ the Savior: never. In the Apocalypse, the lennium ... Above all, the End must be programmed . "The needed to J--
Son of Man comes to bring a new and terrible power on to the earth, know the en as well as the ginning, never - fore. had men wanted_
power greater than that of any Pompey or Alexander or Cyrus. Power, to know the end of cr~ation .. ~ . Fla mboya nt hate and a simple
terrific, smiting power.... So that we are left puzzled."10 For this, lust ... for the end of the world. "15 There is an element here that does
Christ w ill be forced to rise from the dead, he will be given in jections. not appear as such in the Old Testament but only in the collective
He who did not judge, who did not want to judge, will be made into a n Christian soul, which opposes the apocalyptic vision to the prophetic
essential cog in the system of Judgment. For the vengeance o f the weak,
word, the apocalyptic program to the prophetic pro ject. For if the
or the new power, achieves its utmost precision when judgment-the
prophet waits, already fill ed with ressentiment, he nonetheless does
abominable faculty-becomes the master faculty of the soul. (On the
so in time, in life-he is waiting for an advent. And he waits for this
minor question of 3 Christian philosophy: yes, there is a Christian phi-
advent as something new and unforeseen. something of which he can
losophy, not so much as a function of belief, but as soon 3 S judgment
mer~ sense the resence or gestation in God's Ian. Whereas Chris-
is considered to be an autonomous faculty, a nd for this reason nttds
tianity can no longer wait or anyt ing ut a return, and the return of
both the system a nd the guaranttt of God.) The Apocalypse won: we
something programmed down to the smallest detail. If Christ is dead,
have never left the system of judgment. "Then I saw thrones, and seated
upon them were those to whom judgment was committed. "II then the center of gravity is effectively displaced-it is no longer in life
In this rega rd, the working method of the Apocalypse is fascinat- but has passed beyond life into an afterlife. Postponed destiny changes
ing. The Jews had invented something very important in the order of meaning with Christianity, since it is no longer simply deferred but
time, which was postponed destiny. H aving failed in their imperial a m- " postferred," placed after death, after the death of Christ a nd the death
bition, the chosen people had been put on hold, they were left waiting, I'
of runand every person. One is now fa ced with the task of fillin u
V they had become " ~op l e of poy tponed destinJ." 12 T his situation a monstro~n~. .4!~~'n.out~ be~een Death and the End between
Death and Etern ity. It can only be filled with visions: "I looked, a nd
remains essent ial th roughout all of Jewish prophetism, and al ready ex-
plai ns the presence of certain apoca lyptic elements in the prophets. But
what is new in the Apoca lypse is that this waiting now becomes the ob·
I behold ... ," "a nd I saw ... " Apoca lyptic visionre places the pro-
phetic word, programming replaces project and action, an entire thea-
ject of a n unprecedented and maniaca l programming. The Apoca lypse ter of phantasms supplants both the action of the prophets and the
is undoubtedly the fi rst great program book, a grea t spectacle. The passion of Christ. Phantasms, phantasms, the expression of the instinct
small and large death , the seven seals, the seven trumpets, the seven fo r vengeance, the weapon of the weak's vengeance. The Apocalypse
vials, the first resu rrC'Ction, the millennium, the second resu rrection, breaks not only with prophetism, but above all with the elegant imma-
NIHZSCHE "ND SAINT P"Ul NIHZS CHE "NO SAI NT PAUL 43

nence of Christ, for whom eternity was first experienced in life and But it is John of Patmos, the author of the Apocalypse, the book of Vi-
could only be experienced in life ("to feel oneself in heaven"). sions, who most needs to reactivate the pagan source, and who is in the
And yet it is not difficuh to demonstrate the Jewish sources of the best situation to do so. John knew very little about Jesus and the evan-
Apocalypse at every point: not only in the posrponed destiny, but in gelists, and what he knew he knew poorly; but "i t seems to me he knew ~ V-
the entire system of reward-punishment, sin-redemption, the need fo r a good deal about the pagan value of symbols, as contrasted with the
the enemy to suffe r a long time, in his spirit as much as in his flesh-in Jewish or Christian va lues. "20
short , the birth o f morality, and allegory as the expression of morality, Here we see wrence, with all his horror o f the Apocalypse,
as the means of moralization ... But what is even more interesting in through this horror, experiencing an obscure sympathy, even a kind of
' the Apocalypse is the presence and reactivation of a diverted pagan admiration, for this book, precisely because it is sedimemed and strati-
/ l source. That the Apocalypse is a composite book is not extraordinary; fied. Nietzsche also experienced this peculiar fa scination for what he
i would rather have been surprising in this period if a book were fo und horrible and disgusting: " How interesting it is," he said. law-
not composite wrence, owever, distinguishes between twO kinds of rence no doubt has a certain sympathy for John of Patmos, he find s
com osite books, or rat er two les: in extension, when the book in- him interesting, perhaps the most interesting of men, he sees an ex-
cludes severa l other ~ks, b different auth~t.fr~m different places, cessiveness and presumptuousness in him that are not without their
traditions, an so on; or in depth, when it straddles several strata, tra- charm_ This is because the "'weak, " these men o f ressentiment who are
verses tnem, mixes them up if need be, making one su bstratum show waiting to wreak their vengeance, enjoy a hardness that they use to
ilirough the surface of the most recent stratum, a probe book ( ivre- their own advantage, to their own glory, but that comes to them from
sondageJ and no longer a syncretic book. A pagan, a Jewis h,and a elsewhere. Their profound lack of culture, and the exclusivity of a
Christian stra tum: these are what mark the great parts o f the Apoca- book that for them assumes the figure of THE book-mE BOOK, the
lypse, even if a pagan sediment slides into a fa ult line in the Christian Bible and especially the Apocalypse-allows them to remain open to
stratum, fill ing up a Christian void (Lawrence analyzes the example of the thrust of a very old stratum, a secret sediment tharothers no longer
the famous chapter 12 of the Apocalypse, in which the pagan myth of care to know about. aint PaulJor example, is still an aristocrat: not"'
a divine birth, with the astral Mother and the great red dragon, fi lls the an aristocrat Ii e Jesus, but a ifferent type of aristocrat who is tOO cul-
emptiness of Chrin's birth)." Such a reactivation of paganism is not tivated not to be able to recognize, and thus to efface or repress, the
freq uent in the Bible. One can assume that the prophets, the evange- sediments that would betray his program. What censorious treatmem
lists, and Saint Paul himself were well aware of the heavenly bodies, Saint Paul is able [Q apply to the pagan stratum, and what selection to
the stars, and the pagan cults; but they chose to suppress them to the the Jewish stratum ! He needs a Jewish stratum that has been revised
ma ximum, to cover up this Stratum. There is but one case in which the and corrected, converted, but he needs the pagan source to be and to

~I
Jews had an absolute need to return to this stratum, na mely, when it remain buried-and he has enough culture to do so himself. )o n of
was a matter of seeing, when ther needed to see) whe'l....Vision lliu~ Patmos; however, is a man of the a Ie. He is a kind of uneducated t---
ac ertain autonomy in relation to the Word. "The Jews of the post- Welsh miner. Lawrence opens his commentary on the Apocalypse with 1\
David period had no eyes 0 thfifOW'nroseewith. T hey peered inward a portrait of these Engl ish miners, whom he knows well and marvels
at their Jehovah ti ll they were blind: then they looked at the world with at: hard, very hard, endowed with "a rough and rather wi ld, some-
the eyes of their neighbors. When the prophets had to see visions, they wha t 'specia l' se n ~e of power, n rel igious men pa r excellence, brandish-
had to see Assyrian or Chaldean visions. They borrowed other sods to ing the Apocalypse with vengea nce and self-glorification, organizing
see thei r own invisible God by."'l The mei1O£'7 e new Word have need da rk Tuesday-evening meetings in thei r primitive Methodist chapels. 11
of the old paga n e'n. Th is was already true of the apocalyptic elements Thei r natural leader is neither the apostle John nor Saint Paul but John
that appear in the prophets: Ezekiel needed Anaximander's perforated of Patmos. They are the collective and popu lar soul of Christianity,
wheels {.. it is a great rel ief to fi nd Anaxima nder's wheels in Ezekiel "). " whereas Sa int Pau l (and also Lenin, Lawrence adds) was still an aristo-
NIETZSCHE AND SAINt 'AUl N IETZS CH E AND SAINT 'AUl A5

crat who went to the people. Miners know all about strata. They have fu rnishes it with a world a cosmos. It therefore ca lls up the pagan cos-
no need to be well read, for the pagan depth rum bles deep within mos only in order to fi nish it off, to bring about its hallucinatory de-
them. They are open to a pagan stratum, they set it loose, they make it struction. Lawrence defines the cosmos in aver sim Ie manner: it is ( (
come to them, saying only: it's coa l, it's Christ. They bring about the the locus 0 great IIIla symbols and lilling connections. the more-t an-
most fea rsome diversion of a stratum so that it can be used by the personam e. or cosmic connectJ.ons, the Jews will substi rute thntlirnCe'"
Christian, mechanica l, and technica l world. T he Apocalypse is a great v--- - orGod wii1l the chosen people; for the supra-or infra- personal life,
machinery, an already industrialized organization, a Metropolis. By
drawing on his own lived experience, Lawrence thinks of John of Pat- I
mas as an English miner, and the Apocalypse as a series of engravings
the Christians will substitute the small, persona l link of the soul with
Christ; for symbols, the Jews and the Christians will substitute alle-
gory. And this pagan world, which, despite everything, remained alive
Ill---
hung in the miner's house-the mirror of a popular, hard, pitiless, and and continued to live deep in us with all its strength, is fl attered, in-
pious face. It is the same cause as Saint Paul's, the same enterprise, but voked, and made to reappear by the Apoca lypse-but only to make
it is by no means the same type of man, of the same process, or the sure that it is definitively murdered, not even out of di rect hatred, but
same fu nction. Saint Paul is the ultimate manager, while John of Patmos because it is needed as a means. The cosmos had already been sub-
is a laborer, the terrible laborer of the last hour. The director of the en- jected to many blows, but it is with the Apocalypse that it dies.
terprise must prohi bit, censure, and select, whereas the laborer must When the pagans spoke about the world, what interested them
hammer, extend, compress, and forge a material ... This is why, in the was always its beginnings, and its leaps from one cycle to another; but
Nietzsche-Lawrence alliance, it would be wrong to think that the dif- now there is nothing but an End lying at the limit of a long fl at line.
fe rence between their targets-Saint Paul fo r one, John of Patmos fo r Necrophiliacs, we are no longer interested in anything but this end,
the other-is merely anecdotal or secondary. It marks a radical differ- since it is definitive. When the pagans, the pre-Socratics, spoke of de-
ence between the two books. Lawrence knows Nietzsche's arrow well, struction, they always saw it as an injustice that resulted from the ex-
but in turn he shoots it in a completely different direction, even if they cess of one element over another, and the unjust one was above all else
both wind up in the same hell, dementia and hemoptysis, with Sa int the destroyer. But now, it is destruction that is called just, it is the will
Paul and John of Pafmos occupying all of heaven. to destroy that is called Justice and Holiness. This is the innovation of
But Lawrence soon recovers all his distrust and horror for John of the Apocalypse. It does not criticize the Romans for being destroyers,
Patmos. For this reactivation of the pagan world, sometimes moving nor does it want to, fo r this is a good thing; Rome-Babylon is criticized
and even gra ndiose in the first part of the Apocalypse-what is it used for being an insurgent, a rebel, for sheltering rebels, great or small, rich
for, what is it made to serve in the second part? It would be wrong to or poor. To destroy, to destroy an anonymous and interchangeable
say that John hates paganism. "He accepts it almost as naturally as his enemy, an unspecified enemy, has become the most essential act of the
own HeErew culture, and fa r more naturally than the new Christia n new justice. The unspecified enemy is designated as anyone who does
spirit, which is alien [Q him. "22 His enemy is not the agans but the not confo rm to God's order. It is curious to note how, in the Apoca-
Roman Empire. Now the pagans arenot the-Romans, but rat er t e lypse, everyone will have to be marked, wi ll bear a mark on forehead
"Etruscans; tlley are not even t e ree s, but the Aegean peoples, or hand, the mark of the Beast or of Christ; and the Lamb will mark
the Aegean civilization:-Bur to ensure the fa ll of the Roma n Empire in a 144,000 persons, and the Beast ... Whenever a radiant ciry is pro-
~ision, t ne entireCoSrTios must be gathered together, convoked, brought grammed, we can be assured that it is a way to destroy the world, to
back to life-and then it must all be destroyed, so that the Roman Em- render it "un inhabitable," and to begin the hunt fo r the unspecified
pire will itself be brought down and buried under its debris. Such is the enemy.B There are not many resemblances, perhaps, between Hitler
strange diversion, the strange expedient through which one avoids at- and the Antichrist, but there is a great resemblance between the New
tacking the enemy directly: to establish its ultimate power and itS celes- Jerusalem and the future that we are now being promised, not only
rial city, the Apocal ypse needs to destroy the world, and only paganism in science fiction, but in the military-industrial plans of an absolute
46 N IETZS CHf AND SAINT ~AUl NIETZSCHE ... NO U.INT ' ''Ul 47

worldwide State. The Apocalypse is not 3 concentration camp (Anti· peraments, astral natures, and the parts of the sou l as riders-it is nec-
christ); it is the great military, police, and civil secu rity of the new State essary to examine not t he horse as seen, but rather the lived symbiosis
(the Heavenly Jerusalem). T he modernity of the Apocalypse lies not in of the man-horse. White, for example, is also blood, which acts as a
its predicted catastrophes, but in its programmed self-glo rification, the pure w hite light, whereas red is merely the clothing of blood furnished
institution of glory in the New Jerusalem, the demented installation of by the bile. A vast interlinking of lines, planes, and reiationsP But
an ultimate judiciary and moral power. The New Jerusalem, with its with Christianity, the horse is nothing but a beast of bu rden to which
wa ll and its great StreeT of glass, is an architectural terror: "And the one says "Come!" and what it bears are abstractions.
city had no need of the sun, neither of the moon, [Q shine in it .... And
nothing unclean shall enter it ... but on ly those who 3fC written in the 3. The transformation of colors and of the dragon. Lawrence develops
Lamb's book of life. "14 Involuntarily, the Apocalypse at least persuades a very beautiful becoming of colors. For the oldest dragon is red,
us that what is most terrifyi ng is not the Antichrist, but this new city gol~e n -red, extending through the cosmos in a spiral or coiled around

descended from heaven, the holy city "prepared like a bride adorned man's vertebra l column. But when the moment of his ambiguity arri\'es
for her husband. " lJ All relatively healthy readers of the Apocalypse (Is he good? Is h~ bad?), he still remains red for man, whereas the good
will feel they are already in the lake of sulfur. cosmic dragon becomes a translucent green in the midst of the stars,
Among Lawrence's most beautiful pages are thus those concerning like a spring breeze. Red has become dangerous fo r man (Lawrence, let
1\/ this reactivation of the pagan world, but under such conditions that us nOt fo rget, is writing in the midst of his fits of spitting blood). But
fina lly the dragon tUfllS white, a white without color, the dirty white of
the vital symbols are in complete decline, and all their living connec-
tions are severed. "The greatest literary fa lsification," said Nietzsche. our logos, a kind of large gray worm. When does gold change into cur-
Lawrence is at his best when he analyzes the precise themes of this rency? Precisely when it ceases to be the reddish gold of the first dragon,
decadence and falsification in the Apocalypse (we limit ourselves to in- when the dragon takes on the papier-m:iche color of pal~ Europe.U
dicating certain points): 4. The transformation of woman. Th~ Apocalypse again renders a
I. The transformation of hell. With the pagans, hell is not separated fugitive homage to the great cosmic Mother, enveloped in the sun, with
off, but depends on the transformation of elements in a cycle: when the the moon under her feet. But s h~ is planted there, severed f.rom any
fire becomes too strong for the soft waters, it burns them, and the connection. And her child is taken away from her, "caught up unto
water produces salt like the child of injustice who corrupts it and makes God"; she is sent out into the desen, which she will never teave. n She
it bitter. Hell is the bad aspect of the subterranean water. If the unjust only returns in the inverted fo rm of the whore of Babylon: still splen-
are gathered there, it is beca use hell is itself the effect of an elementary did, seated on the red dragon, promising destruction. This seems to be
injustice, an avatar of elements. But the idea that hell is itself separate, the woman's only choice: either TO be the dragon's whore, or to make
that it exists for itself, that it is one of twO expressions of the fina l herself prey to "all the grey little snakes of modern shame and pain"
justice-these are ideas that would have to wait for Christianity. "The (today's women, as Lawrence says, are told to Mmake somethi ng worth
old Jewish hells of Sheal and Gehenna were fairly mild, uncomfort- while" of their lives, to make the beSt of the worSt, without ever think-
able, abysmal places like Hades, and when a New Jerusalem was cre- ing that this is even worse; this is why women assume a strangely
ated from heaven, they disappeared" in principle in favor of a "bril- policelike role, the modern " police-woman "}.30 But it was the Apoca-
liant sulfureous torture-lake" where sou ls burn fo rever and ever.26 lypse that had already transformed the angelic powerS into odd police
Even the sea will be poured into the pond of sulfur for good measure. agents.
That way there will no longer be any connections at all.
5. The transformatiorl of the twins. The pagan world was nOt only
2. The transformation of the riders. To try to rediscover what a truly made up of living conjunctions; it also included borders, thresholds
pagan horse is-what conn~ction s it establish~s between colors, tem- and doors, disjunctions, so that something passes between twO things,
"
NIETZSCHE AND SA,INT ~AUl N IETZSC H~ " NO SAINT 'AUl 49

or a substance passes from one state to another, or alternates with midst of things, between things. It has only a milieu, milieus that are
another while avoiding dangerous mixes. The twins have precisely this ever more profound. The symbol is a maelstrom, it makes us whirl
role as disjunctors: masters of wind and rain, because they open the about until it produces that intense state out of which the solution, the
doors of heaven; sons of thunder. because they part the clouds; guard- decision, emerges. The symbol is a process of action and decision; in
ians of sexuality, because they maintain the opening in which birth this sense, it is linked to the oracle that furnished it with these whirling
insinuates itself, and make blood and water alternate, while outlining images. For this is how we make a true decision: we turn into our-
the mortal point in which everything would be mixed without mea- selves, upon ourselves, ever more rapidly, " until a center is formed and
sure. The twins are thus the masters of flows, their passage, their alter- we know what to do." Just the opposite occurs in ailegorical thought,
nation, and theif disjunction.11 This is ":'hy the Apocalypse needs to which is no longer an active thought but a thought that ceaselessly
have them killed and rise to heaven-not for the pagan world to reach postpones or defers. It replaced the force [IJUissancel of decision with
its periodic excess [demesure). but for its measun: to come from else- the power [poulloirl of judgment. Furthermore, it wants a fina l point
where, like a death sentence. as the last judgment. And it places these provisional points between
each sentence, between each segment, as so many stages in a path pre-
6. The transformation of symbols into metaphors and allegories. The paring for the second coming. No doubt it is the sense of sight, books,
symbol is a concrete cosmic force Ipuissance]. Popular consciousness, and reading that have given us this taste for points, segmentary lines,
even in the Apocalypse, retains a cenain sense of the symbol while beginnings, ends, and stages. The eye is the sense organ that separates
adoring brute Power [poulIoir]. And yet what differences there are be- us: allegory is visual, whereas the symbol evokes and unites all the
tween a cosmic force and the idea of an ultimate power ... One by other senses. When the book was still scrolled, if perhaps retained its
one, lawrence sketches out cenain characteristic features of the sym- power as a symbol. But how, precisely, can we explain the strange fact
bol. It is a dynamic process that enlarges, deepens, and expands sen- that the book of the seven seals is supposed to be a scroll , and yet that
sible consciousness; it is an ever increasing becoming-conscious, as the seals are broken successively, in stages-apart from the fact that
opposed to the closing of the moral consciousness upon a fixed alle- the Apocalypse needs to put points everywhere, to install segments
gorical idea. It is a method of the Affect, intensive, a cumulative inten- everywhere? The symbol is made up of physical connections and dis-
sity, which merely marks the threshold of a sensation, the awakening junctions, and even when we find ourselves before a disjunction, some-
of a state of consciousness: the symbol means nothing, and has neither thing nonetheless happens in the interval, a substance or flow. For the
to be explained nor interpreted, as opposed to the intellectual con- symbol is the thought of flows, in contrast fa the intellectual and linear
sciousness of allegory. It is a rotatille thought. in which a group of im- process of allegorica l thought. "The modern mind apprehends pans,
ages turn ever more quickly around a mysterious point, as opposed to bribes, and pieces, and putS a point after each sentence, whereas the
the linear allegorical chain. Consider the Sphinx's riddle: "What is it sensible consciousness apprehends the whole as a flow or flux." The
that goes first on four legs, then on twO, and then on three?" It would Apoca lypse reveals its own aim: to disconnect us from the world and
be rather foolish to see this as three linked parts whose final response from ourseives..H
would be Man. It comes to life, on the contrary, only if one feels the Exeunt the pagan world. The Apocalypse made it rise again for
three groups of images in the process of whirling around the most mys- one last time in order to destroy it forever. We must therefore return to
terious point of man: images of the animal-child; then those of the the other axis: no longer the opposition berween the Apoca lypse and
creature on two paws, a monkey, bird, or frog; and then those of the pagan world, but the completely different opposition between the
the unknown beast on three paws, from beyond the seas and deserts. Apocalypse and Christ as a person. Christ had invented a religion of
This is precisely what the rotative symbol is. It has neither beginning love, that is, an aristoctatic culture of the individual part of the soul;
nor end, it does not lead us anywhere, and above all it has no final the Apocalypse inventS a religion of Power, that is, a terrible popular
point, nor even stages. It is always in the middle [all mifiell] , in the cult of the collective part of the soul. The Apocalypse turns Christ into
50 NIETUCHE "NO 5"11.0 'AU l NIETZSCHE AND SAINT ~AUl 51

a collective ego, it gives him a collective soul-and then everything the miner, who lays claim to the collective soul and wants to take
changes. The vital ity of love is transmuted into an enterprise of re- e\'erything; and Saint Paul, who closes the link, a kind of aristocrat
venge, and the evangdical Christ is transmuted into the apocalyptic going to the people, a kind of Lenin who will organize the collective
Christ (the man with the sword between his teeth ). Hence the impor- soul, who will make it "an oligarchy of martyrs"-he gives Christ the
tance of Lawrence's admonition: the John who wrote the gospel is not aims, and the Apocalypse the means. Was not all this essential to the
the same John who wrote the Apocalypse. And yet perhaps they are formation of the system of judgment? Individual suicide and mass sui·
more united thon if they were the same. And the two Christs are m Ofe cide, with self-glorification on all sides. Death, death, this is the only
united than if they were the same, "'twO sides of the same medal. .. n judgment.
To explain this complementarity, is it enough to say that Christ Save the individual soul, then, as well as the collective soul, but
had "personally" neglected the collective soul, thereby h~av ing it a how? Nietzsche ended the Amicbrist with his famous Law against
wide-open field? Or is there indeed a more profound, a more abom- Christianity. Lawrence ends his commentary on the Apocalypse with a
inable reason? Lawrence here throws himself into a complex affair: it kind of manifesto-what he elsewhere calls a "litany of exhortations":JS
seems to him that the reason for the deviation, for the disfiguration, Stop loving. Oppose to the judgment of love "a decision that love can
was not simple negligence, but instead has to be sought in Christ's never vanquish. " Arrive at the point where you can no longer give any
love, in the manner in which he loved. For this is what was al ready more than you can take, where you know you will no longer "give"
horrible-the manner in which Christ loved. This is what would per- anything, the point of Aaron or The Man Who Died, for the problem
mit a religion of Power to be substituted for the religion of love. In has passed elsewhere: to construct banks between which a flow can
Christ's love, there was a kind of abstract identification, or worse, run, break apart or come together.]' Do not love anymore, do not give
an ardor to give without taking anything. Christ did not want to mu t of yourself, do not take: in this way you will save the individual part of
his disciples' expectations, and yet he did not want to keep anything, yourself. For love is not the individual part, it is not the individual
not even the inviolable part of himself. There was something suicidal soul, it is rather what makes the individual soul an Ego (MOIl. Now an
about him. Shortly before his text on the Apocalypse, Lawrence wrote ego is something to be given or taken, which wants to love or be loved,
a novel entitled The Man Who Died: he imagines Christ resuscitated it is an allegory, an image, a Subject, it is not a true relation. The ego
("they took me down roo soon"), but also nauseated, telling himself is not a relation but a reflection, it is the small glimmer that makes a
"never again." Found by Mary Magdalene, who wants to give up every- subject, the glimmer of triumph in an eye ("the dirty little secret," as
thing fo r him, he perceives a small glimmer of triumph in the woman's Lawrence sometimes said). A worshipper of the sun, Lawrence none-
eye, an accent of triumph in her voice-and he recognizes himself in theless said that the sun's glimmer on rhe grass is nor enough to make a
it. Now this is the same glimmer, the same accent, of those who take relation. He derived an entire conception of painring and music from
without giving. There is the same fatality in Christ's ardor and in this. What is individual is the relation, it is the soul and not the ego.
Christian cupidity, in the religion of love and in the religion of power: The ego has a tendency to identify itself with the world, but it is al-
" I gave more than I took, and that also is woe and vanity.... It only ready dead, whereas the soul extends the thread of its living "sympa-
mea ns another death .... Now he knew ... that the body rises again thies" and "a ntipathies. "37 Stop thinking of yourself as an ego in order
to give and to take, to take and to give, ungreedily." Throughout his to live as a flow, a set of flow s in relation with other flow s, outside of
work, Lawrence tended toward this task: (Q track down and diagnose oneself and within oneself. Even sca rcity is a flow, even drying up, even
the sma ll and ev il glimmer wherever it may be fo und, whether in those death can become one. Sexllal and symbolic: in effecr they amount to
who tak e without giving or in those who give without taking-John of the same thing, and have never meant anything else-the life of forces
Patmos and Christ ..l4 Between Christ, Saint Paul, and John of Patmos, or fiows. J8 There is a tendency in the ego to annihilate itself, which
the chain closes in on itself: Christ the aristocrat, the artist of the indi- finds a certain propensity in Christ and irs full rea lization in Buddhism:
vidual soul. who wants to give this soul; John of Patmos, the worker, hence Lawrence's (and Nien.sche's) distrust of rhe East. The soul as the

,I
52 NIEtZSCHE AND SAINT 'AUl

life of flows is the will to live, struggle and combat. It is not only the
disjunction, but also the conjunction of flows that is struggle and com-
bat, like wrestlers engaging each other. Every accord is dissonant. War
is just the opposite. War is the general annihilation that requires the
participation of the ego, but combat rejects war, it is the conquest of
the soul. The soul refuses those who want war, because they confuse it 7
with struggle, but also those who renounce struggle, because they con-
fuse it with war: militant Christianity and pacifist Christ. The inalien- Re-presentation of Masoch
able part of the soul appears when one has ceased to be an ego; it is this
eminently flowing, vibrating, struggling part that has to be conquered.
The collective problem, then, is to institute, find, or recover a maxi-
mum of connections. For connections (and disjunctions) are nothing
other than the physics of relations, the cosmos. Even disjunction is
physical,like twO banks that permit the passage of flows, or their alter-
nation. But we, we live at the very most in a "logic" of relations Masoch is neither a pretext for psychiatry or psychoanalysis, nor even
(Lawrence and Russell a id not like each other at all ). We turn disjunc- a particularly striking fig ure of masochism. ] This is because his work
keeps all extrinsic interpretation at a distance. More a physician than
tion into an "either/or." We tum connection into a relation of cause
a patient, the writer makes a diagnosis, but what he diagnoses is the
and effect or a prinCiple of consequence. We abstract a reflection from
world; he follows the illness step by step, but it is the generic illness of
the physical world of flows, a bloodless double made up of subjects,
man; he assesses the chances of health, but it is the possible birth of a
objects, predicates, and logical relations. In this way we extract the
new man: "the legacy of Cain," "the Sign of Cain" as the total work. If
system of judgment. It is not a question of opposing society and na-
the characters, situations, and objects of masochism receive this name,
ture • the artificial and the natural. Anifices maner little. But whenever
it is because they assume, in Masoch's novels, an unknown, immeasur-
a physical relation is translated into logical relations, a symbol into im-
able dimension that surpasses the unconscious no less than individual
ages, flows into segments, exchanged, cut up into subjects and objects, consciousne5SeS. In his novels, the hero is swollen with powers that ex-
each for the other, we have to say that the world is dead, and that the ceed his soul as much as his milieu. What we must consider in Masoch,
collective soul is in turn enclosed in an ego, whether that of the people therefore, are his contributions to the art of the novel.
or a despot. These are the "false connections" that Lawrence opposed In the first place, Masoch displaces the question of suffering. The
to Physis. According to Lawrence's critique, money, like love, must be sufferings that the masochistic hero has inflicted on himself, though
reproached not for being a flow, but for being a fa lse connection that acute, depend upon a contract. It is this contract of submission, made
mints subjects and objects: when gold is turned into loose change .. )' with the woman, that constitutes the essential element of masochism.
There is no return to nature, but only a political problem of the collec- But the manner in which the contract is rooted in masochism remains
tive soul, the connections of which a society is capable, the flows it a mystery. It seems to have something to do with breaking the link
supports, invents, leaves alone, or does away with. Pure and simple between desire and pleasure: pleasure interrupts desire, so thar the
sexuality, yes, if what one means by that is the individual and social constitution of desire as a process must ward off pleasure, repress it to
physics of relations as opposed to asexual logic. like other people of infinity. The woman-torturer sends a delayed wave of pain over the
genius, lawrence died while carefully refolding his bandages, carefully masochist, who makes use of it, obviously not as a source of pleasure,
arranging them (he presumed that Christ had done the same), and by bur as a flow to be followed in the constititution of an uninterrupted
rurning around this idea, in this idea ... process of desire. What becomes essential is waiting or suspense as a

53
54 RE-'RESENTATIQN Of MA,SOCH 55

plenitude, as a physical and spiritual intensity. The rituals of suspen- extremely lIaried milieus and moments, with which it links up in its
sion become the novelistic figures par excellence, with regard to both own manner. Masoch's work , which is inseparable from a litera tu r~ of
the woman-torturer who suspends her gesture, :md the hero-victim min o riti~s, haunts the glacial zones of the Universe and the femi nine
whose suspended body awaits the whip. Masoch is the writer who zones o f History. A great wave, the wave of Cain the wand~ r~r, whose
makes suspense, in its pure and almost unbearable state, the motivat- desriny is fo rever suspended, mixes times and places, The hand of a
ing force of the novel. In Masoch, the complementarity between the severe woman cuts across the wave and offers itself to the wanderer.
contract and infinite suspense plays a role ana logous to that between For Masoch, the no v~ 1 is Cainian, JUSt as it was Ishmaelite fo r Thomas
the tribunal and its "unlimited postponement" in Kalka : a postponed Hardy ( th~ s t~ppe and the heather). It is the broken line of Ca in .
destiny, a juridicism, an extreme juridicism, a Justice that should by no The literature of a minority is not defined by a l oca ll anguag~ that t--
means be confused with the law. wou ld be its defining feature , but by a t.reatment to which it subjects
In the second place, there is the ro[e of the a nimal, as much for the the major language. Th~ problem is analogous in both Kafka and
woman in furs as fo r th ~ victim (a riding or draft animal, a horse or an Masoch,2 Masoch's language is a very pure German, but a German
ox). Th~ r~lati o nsh ip betw~~n man and animal is without doubt som~' that is nonetheless affected, as Wanda says, by a certain trembling.
thing that has been constantly misunderstood by psychoanalysis, be· This trembling need not be actualized at the l ev~ 1 of the characters, and
caus~ psychoana lysis is unabl~ to s~~ in it anything bu t all· roo·human one must even avoid miming it; it is enough to ceaselessly indicate it,
Oedipal figures. The so<all~d masochist postcards, w h~ r~ old m ~n beg since it is no longer m er~ l y a trait of speech but a superior characteris·
Iik ~ dogs before a severe mistress, t~nd to I ~ad us astray as w~lI . tic of th ~ language, which depends on the legends, situarions, and con-
Masochistic characters do not imi tat~ the animals; they enter zones of tents on which it feeds. A trembling that is no longer psychological but
in d~t~rmination or proximity in which woman and anima l, animal and lingu istic. To make the language itself stutter in this manner, at the
man, have become indiscernible. Th~ novd in its ~nti r~ty has becom~ deepest I ~nl of sty l~. is a cr~ative process that runs through all great
a training novd (roman d~ dressagel , the last avatar o f th~ bildungs- works. It is as if the language were becoming animal. Pascal Quignard
roman (roman de fonnationl. It is a cyd ~ of forces. Masoc.h's hero trains has shown how Masoch makes language "stammer": "stammering" is
the woman who has to train him. In s t~ad of th~ man t ransmitting his a putting into suspense, whereas "stuttering" is a repetition, a prolifer-
aqui r~d forc~s to the innate forces of the animal, th ~ woman transmits ation, a bifurcation, a deviation.) But this is not the essential differe nce.
aquired anima l forc~s to the innat~ forces of the man, Here again, the There are many diverse indications and procedures that the writer can
world of suspense is trav~rsed by wav~s. apply to language in order to create a style. And whenever a language
D~ l i rious fo rmations ar~, as it w~r~, th~ k~rnd s of art. But a deliri- is submitted to such creative treatments, it is language in its entirety
ous fo rmation is neither fam ilial nor privat~, it is world-historical: " I that is pus h~d to its limit, (Q music or silence. T his is what Quignard
am a beast, a Negro ... ," following Rimbaud's formula. The impor- shows: Masoch makes language stammer, and in this way he pushes
tant thing, th~n, is to d et~ rmin~ which regions o f History and the Uni- la nguage to its point of suspension , a song, a cry or silence-a song
v~rse are invested by a given formation. On~ could draw up a map for of the woods, a cry o f the village, the s i le nc~ of the steppe. The sus-
~ac h cas~: th~ Christian martyrs, for example, in whom R~nan saw the pension of bodies and the stammering of language constitute the body-
birth of a n~ w aes th~tic . On~ could even imagi n~ that it is the Virgin language, or the oeuvre, of Masoch.
who putS Christ on the cross to g iv~ birth to the new man , and that it is
the Christian woman who drives men to sacrifice th~mse l ves. But also
courtly love, with its o rdea ls and procedur~s. Or again, the agricul-
tural communes of the steppe, religious sects, the minorities of the
Austro-Hungaria n Empir~, th~ role of women in these communes and
minorities, and in panslavism. Ellery delirious formation appropriates
W H ITMAN 57

by the menace of secession, that is to say, by war. The experience of the


American writer is inseparable from the American experience, even
when the writer does not speak of America.
This is what gives the fragmenta ry work the immediate value of a
coll&tive statement. Kafk a said that in a minor literature, that is, in
8 the literature of a minority, there is no private history that is not imme-
diately public, political, and popular: all literature becomes an "affa ir
Whitman of the people," and not of exceptional individuals.5 Is not American lit-
erature the minor literature par excellence, insofar as America claims
to federate the most diverse minorities, "a Nation swarming with na-
tions"? America brings together extracts, it presents samples from all
ages, all lands, and all nations. 6 The simplest love Story brings into
pla y states, peoples, and tribes; the most personal autobiography is
necessarily collective, as can still be seen in Wolfe or Miller. It is a
With much confide nce and tranquility, Whitman states that writing is popular literature created by the people, by the "average bulk, " like
fragmentary, and that the American writer has to devote himself [ 0 the creation of America, and not by "great individuals. ,,' And from
writing in fragments. This is precisely what disturbs us-assigning this this point of view, the Self [Moil of the Anglo-Saxons, always splin-
task to America, as if Europe had not progressed along this same path. tered, fragm entary, and relative, is opposed to the substantial, total,
But perhaps we should recall the difference Holderlin discovered be· and solipsistic I Uel of the Europeans.
tween the Greeks and the Europeans: what is natal or innate in the first The world as a collection of heterogenous parts: an infinite patch-
must be acquired or conquered by the second. and vice-versa. 1 In a dif· work, or an endless wall of dry stones (a cemented wall, or the pi&es
ferent manner, this is how things stand with the Europeans and the of a puzzle, would r&onstitute a totality). The world as a sampling:
Americans. Europeans have an innate sense of organic tOtality, or com- the samples ("specimens") are singularities, remarkable and nontotal-
position, but they have to acquire the sense of the fragment, and can izable parts extracted from a series of ordinary parts. Samples of days,
do so only through a tragic reflection or an experience of disaster. specimen days, says Whitman. Specimens of cases, specimens of scenes
Americans, on the contrary, have a natural sense for the fragment, and or views (scenes, shows, or sights). Sometimes the specimens are cases,
what they have (0 conquer is the fee l for the totality, for beautiful com- in which coexistent parts are separated by intervals of space (the
position. The fragment already exists in a nonteflective manner, pre- wounded in the hospitals), and sometimes they are specimens of views,
ceding any effort: we make plans, but when the time comes to act, in which the successive phases of a movement are separated by inter-
we "tumble the thing together, lening hurry and crudeness tell the vals of time (the moments of an uncertain battle ). In both instances,
story better tha n fi ne work. "2 What is characteristic of America is the law is that of fragmentation. The fragments are grains, "granula-
therefore not the fragmentary, but the spontaneity of the fragmentary: tions." Sel& ting singular cases and minor scenes is more important
"Spontaneous, fragmentary," says Whitman ) In America, literature is than any consideration of the whole. It is in the fragments that the hid-
naturally convulsive: "they are but parts of the actua l distraction, den background a ppears, be it celestial or demonic. The fragment is
heat, smoke, and excitement of those times." But "convu lsiveness," as "a reflection afar off" of a bloody or peaceful reality.S But the frag-
Whitman makes clear, characterizes the epoch and the country as ments-the remarkable parts, cases, or views-must still be extracted
much as the writing. 4 If the fragment is innately American, it is because by means of a specia l act, an act that consists, precisely, in writing.
America itself is made up of fede rated States and various immigrant For Whitman, fragmentary writing is not defined by the a phorism or
peoples (minoriticsl--everywhere a collection of fragments, haunted through sepa ration, but by a pa rticular type of sentence that mod u-

56
,. WHITMAN WHITMAN
'9
lares the interva l. It is as if the syntax that composes the sentence, interlocutors: the masses, the reader, States, the Ocean ... 13 The object
which makes it a totality capable of referring back to itself, tends to of American literature is to establish relations between the most diverse
disappear by setting free an infinite asyntact;c; sentence, which pro- aspects of the United States' geography-the Mississippi, the Rockies,
longs itself or sproutS dashes in order to create spatiotemporal inter- the Prairies-as well as its history, struggles, loves, and evolution. l~
vals. Sometimes it appears 35 an occasional enumerative sentence, an Relations in ever greater numbers and of increasingly subtle quality:
enumeration of cases 3S in a cata log (the wounded in the hospital, the this is, as it were, the motor that drives both Nature and History. War
trees in a certain locale), sometimes it is a processionary sentence, like is just the opposite: its acts of destruction affect every relation, and
a protocol of phases or moments (a battle, convoys of canIe, successive have as their consequence the Hospital, the generalized hospital, that
swa rms of bumblebees), It is an almost mad sentence, with its changes is, the place where brothers are strangers to each other, and where the
in direction, its bifurcations, its ruptures and leaps, its prolongations, dying parts, fragments of mutilated men, coexist absolutely solitary
its sproutings, its parentheses. Mdville notes that "no American writer and without relat ion.1S
should write like an Englishman.'" They have to dismantle the English The relations between colors are made up of contrasts and com·
language and send it racing along a line of flight, thereby rendering the plementarities, never given but always new, and Whitman no doubt
language convulsive. fab ricated one of the most coloristic of literatures that could ever have
T he law of the fragment is as valid for Nature as it is for History, existed. The relations between sounds or bird songs, which Whitman
for the Earth as for War, for good as for evil. For War and Nature describes in marvelous ways, are made up of counterpoints and re·
indeed share a common cause: Nature moves forward in procession, sponses, constantly renewed and invented. Nature is not a form, but
by sections, like the corps of an army.IOA "procession " of crows or rather the process of establishing relations. It invents a polyphony: it is
bumblebees. But if it is true that the fragment is given everywhere, in not a totality but an assembly, a "conclave," a "plenary session. " Na-
the most spontaneous manner., we have seen that the whole, or an ana· ture is inseparable from processes of companionship and conviviality,
logue of the whole, nonetheless has to be conquered and even in· which are not preexistent givens but are elaborated between hereroge·
vented. Yet Whitman sometimes places the Idea of the Whole before· nous living beings in such a way that they create a tissue of shift ing re·
hand, invoking a cosmos that beckons us to a kind o f fusion ; in a lations, in which the melody of one part intervenes as a motif in the
panicularly "convulsive" meditation, he calls himself a " Hegelian," he melody of another (the bee and the fl ower). Relations are not internal
asserts that only America "realizes" Hegel, and posits the primary rights to a Whole; rather, the Whole is derived from the external relations of
of an organic totality. II He is then expressing himself like a European, a given moment, and varies with them. Relations of counterpoint must
who finds in pantheism a reason to inflate his own ego. But when be invented everywhere, and are the very condition of evolution.
Whitman speaks in his own manner and his own style, it turns out that It is the same with the relationship between man and Nature.
a kind of whole must be constructed, a whole that is all the more para- Whitman enters into a gymnastic relationship with young oak trees, a
doxical in that it only comes after the fragm ents and leaves them in· kind of hand· to-hand combat. He neither grounds himself in them
tact, making no attempt to totalize them. 1l nor merges with them; rather, he makes something pass between the
This complex idea depends on a principle dear to English philoso· human body and the tree, in both directions, the body receiving "some
phy, to which the Americans would give a new meaning and new de· of its elastic fibre and clear sap," but the tree fo r its part receiving a
velopments: relations are extemal to their terms. Relations will conse· little consciousness (.. may·be we interchange")." It is the same, finall y,
quently be posited as something thar can and must be instituted or in the relationships between man and man. Here again, man must
invented. Parts are fragments thar cannot be totalized, but we ca n at invent his relation with the other. "Camaraderie" is the great word
least invent nonpreexisting rela tions between them, which testify to a Whitman uses to designate the highest human relation, not by vi rtue of
progress in History as much as to an evolution in Nature. Whitman's the totality of a situa tion but as a fu nction of particular traits, emo-
poetry offers as many meanings as there are relations with its various tional circumstances, and the ;' interiority" of the relevant fragme nts
60 WHITMAN

(in the hospital, for example, a relation of camaraderie must be estab-


lished with each isolated dying man lY In this way is woven a web of
variable relations, which are not merged into a whole, bur prod uce the
only whole that man is capable of conquering in a given situation. Ca-
maraderie is the variability that implies an encounter with the Outside,
a march of souls in the open air, on the "Open Road." It is in America 9
that the relation of camaraderie is supposed w achieve its maximum
extension and density, leading to virile and popular loves, all the while
acquiring a political and national character-nOt a totalism or a totali-
What Children Say
tarianism but, as Whitman says, a "Union ism. "]S Democracy and Art
themselves form a whole only in their relationship with Nature (the
open air, light, colors, sounds, the night ... ); lacking these, art col-
lapses into morbidity, and democracy, inw deception. ]9
The society of comrades is the revolutionary American dream-a
dream to which Whitman made a powerful contribution, and which Children never stop talking about what they are doing or trying to do:
was disappointed and betrayed long before the dream of the Soviet exploring milieus, by means of dynamic trajectories,] and drawing up
society. But it is also the reality of American literature, under these maps of them. T he maps of these trajectories are essential to psychic
two aspects: spontaneity or the innate feeling for the fragmentary, and activity. Little Hans wants to leave his famil y's apartment to spend
the reflection on living relations that must constantly be acquired and the night at the little girl's downstairs and return in the morning-the
created. Spontaneous fragments constitute the element through which, apartment building as milieu. Or again: he wantS to leave the building
or in the intervals of which, we attain the great and carefully c'3"sld- and go to the restau rant to meet with the little rich girl, passing by
ered visions and sounds of both Nature and History. / the horses at the wa rehouse-the street as milieu. Even Freud deems the
intervention of a map to be necessary.2
As usual, however, Freud refers everything back to the fa ther-
mother: oddly enough, he sees the demand to explore the building as a
desire to sleep with the mother. tit is as if parents had primary places or
fu nctions that exist independently of mi lieus. But a milieu is made up
of qualities, substances, powers, and events: the street, fo r example,
with its materials (paving swnes), its noises (the cries of merchants), its
anima ls (harnessed horses) or its dramas (a horse slips, a horse falls
down, a horse is beaten ... ). The trajectory merges not only with the
subjectivity of those who travel through a milieu, but also with the
subjectivity of the milieu itself, insofar as it is reflected in those who
travel through it. The map expresses the identity of the journey and
what one journeys through. It merges with its object, when the object
itself is movement. Nothing is more instructive than the paths of autis-
tic children, such as those whose maps Deligny has revealed and super-
imposed, with their customary lines, wandering lines, loops, correc-
tions, and turnings back-all thei r singularities. l Parents are themselves

61
62 WHA.T CHilDREN SAY WHAT C H ILDR EN SAY 63

a milieu that children travel through: they pass through its qualities be verified in the real. This is why the imaginary and the real must be,
and powers and make 3 map of them. They take on a personal and rather, like two juxta posable or superimposable parts of a single trajec-
parental form only as the rep re~matives of one milieu within another. tory, twO faces that ceaselessly interchange with one another, a mobile
But it is wrong to think that children 3re limited before all d~ to their mi rror. Thus the Australian Aborigines link nomadic itineraries to
parents, and onl y had access to milieus afterward, by extention or de- dream voyages, which together compose "an interstitching of routes,"
rivation. The father and mother 3re not the coordinates of everything .. in an immense cut-out [decoupe) of space and time that must be read
that is invested by the unconscious. There is never a moment when like a map. " 7 At the limit, the imaginary is a virtual image that is inter-
children 3re not already plunged into an actual milieu in which they fused with the real object, and vice versa, thereby constituting a crystal
are moving about, and in which the parents as persons simply play the of the unconscious. It is not enough for the real object or the real land-
roles of openers or closers of doors, guardians of thresholds, connec- scape to evoke similar or related images; it must disengage its oum vir-
tors or disconnectOrs of zones. The parentS always occupy a position tual image at the same time that the latter, as an imaginary landscape,
in a world that is not derived from them. Even with an infant, the par- makes its entry into the real, following a circuit where each of the two
ents are defined in relation to a continent-bed, as agents along the terms pursues the other, is interchanged with the other. "Vision" is the
child's route. Lewin's hodological spaces, with their routes, their de- product of this doubling or splitting in two (doublement ou dedouble-
tours, their barriers, their agents, form a dynamic cartography.~ ment], this coalescence. It is in such crystals of the unconscious that the
Little Richard was studied by Melanie Klein during the war. He trajectories of the libido are made visible.
lived and thought the world in the form of maps. He colored them in, A cartographic conception is very distinct from the archaeological
inverted them, superimposed them, populated them with their leaders: conception of psychoanalysis, The latter establishes a profound link
England and Churchill, Germany and Hitler. It is the libido's business between the unconscious and memory: it is a memorial, commemora-
to haunt history and geography, to organize formation s of worlds and tive, or monumental conception that pertains to persons or objects, the
constellations of universes, to make continents drift and to populate milieus being nothing more than terrains capable of conserving, identi-
them with races, tribes, and nations. What beloved being does not fyi ng, or authenticating them. From such a point of view, the super-
envelope landscapes, continents, and populations that are more or less position of layers is necessarily traversed by a shaft that goes from tOp
known, more or less imaginary? But Melanie Klein-who nonetheless to bottom, and it is alwa)'s a question of penetration . Maps, on the
went a long way in determining the milieus of the unconscious, from contrary, are superimposed in such a way that each map finds itself
the point of view of substances or qualities as much as events-seems modified in the following map, rather than finding its origin in the pre-
to misunderstand the cartographic activity of Little Richard. She can ceding one: from one map to the next, it is not a matter of searching
only see it as an afterward, a simple extension of parental personages, fo r an origin, but of evaluating displacements. Every map is a redistri-
the good fathe r, the bad mother ... Children resist psychoanalytic bution of impasses and breakthroughs, of thresholds and enclosures,
forcingl and intoxication more than do adults: Hans and Richard in- which necessarily go from bottom to top. There is not only a reversa l
ject all of their humor into the analysis. But they cannot resist for very of directions, but also a difference in nature; the unconscious no longer
long. They have to put away their maps, underneath which there is no deals with persons and objects, but with trajectories and becomings; it
longer anything but yellowed photos of the father-mother. " Mrs. K. in- is no longer an unconscious of commemoration but one of mobiliza-
terpreted, interpreted, INTERP RETED ..• " (; tion, an unconscious whose objects take flight rather than remaining
The libido does nOt undergo metamorphoses, but foll ows world- buried in the ground. In th is regard, Felix Guattari has defined a schizo-
historical trajectories. From this point of view, it does not seem that the analysis that opposes itself to psychoana lysis. "Lapses, parapraxes and
real and the imaginary form a pertinent distinction. A real voyage, by symptOms are like birds that strike their beaks against the window. It is
itself, lacks the force necessary to be reflected in the imagination; the not a question of interpreting them. It is a question instead of identify-
imaginary voyage, by itself, does not have the force, as Proust says, to ing their trajectory to see if they ca n serve as indicators of new uni-
WHAT CHHDUN SAY WHAT CHHDIEN SAY

verses of reference capable of acquiring a consistency sufficient for ents are opposed. It is the same with little Arpad and his becoming-
turning a situation upside down ... • The pharaoh's tomb, with its inert cock : in each case, psychoanalysis misconstrues the relationship of the
central chamber at the base of the pyramid, gives way to more dynamic unconscious with forces. II The image is not only a trajectory, but also
models: from the drifting of continents to the migration of peoples, a becoming. Becoming is what subtends the trajectory, just as intensivt:
these are all means through which the unconscious maps the universe. forces subtend motor forces. Hans's becoming-horst: reft:rs to a trajec-
The Indian model replaces the Egyptian: the Indians pass into the tory, from the apartment houSt: to the warehouSt:. The passage along-
thickness of the rocks themselves, where aesthetic form is no longer sidt: tht: warehouse, or evt:n the visit to the henhouse, may be custom-
identified with the commemoration of a departure or an arrival, but ary trajectories, but they are not innocent promenades. We see dearly
with the creation of paths without memory, all the memory of the why the real and the imaginary were led to exceed themselvt:s, or t:ven
world remaining in the material. ~ to interchange with each other: a becoming is not imaginary, any more
Maps should not be understood only in extension, in relation to a than a voyage is real. It is becoming that turns the most negligible of
space constituted by trajectories. There are also maps of intensity, of trajectories, or even a fixed immobility, into a voyage; and it is the tra-
density, that are concerned with what fills space, what subtends the jectory that turns the imaginary into a becoming. Each of tht: two types
trajectory. Little Hans defines a horse by making out a list of its affects, of maps, those of trajectories and those of affects, refers to the otht:r.
both active and passive: having a big widdler, hauling heavy loads, What concerns the libido, what the libido invests, presents itself
having blinkers, biting, falling down, being whipped, making a row with an indefinite article, or rather is presented by tht: indefinite arti-
with its feet. It is this distribution of affects (with the widdler playing de: an animal as the qualification of a becoming or the specificalion of
the role of a transformer or convener) that constitutes a map of inten- a trajectory (0 horse, a chicken); a body or an organ as the power to af-
sity. It is always an affective constellation. Here again, it would be abu- fect and to be affected (0 stomach, some eyes ... ); and even the charac-
sive to see this as a simple derivation from the father-mother, as does ters that obstruct a pathway and inhibit affects, or on the contrary that
Freud-as if the "vision" of the Street, so frequent at the time (a horse further them (0 father, some people ... ). Children express themselves
falls down, is whipped, struggles) were incapable of affecting the libido in this mannt:r-a father, a body, a horse. These indefinites often seem
directly, and had to recall a lovemaking scene between the parents ... to result from a lack of determination due to the defenses of conscious-
Identifying the horse with the father borders on the grotesque and en- ness. For psychoanalysis, it is always a question of my father, me, my
tails a misunderstanding of all the unconscious ~~.i.. with animal body. It has a mania for the possessive and the personal, and intt:rpre·
forces. And juSt as the map of movements or'~~as not a de- tation consists in recovering persons and possessions. "A child is being
rivation from or an extension of the father-mother, the map of forces beatt:n" must signify .. t am being beaten by m y father," even if this
or intensities is not a derivation from the body, an extension of a prior transformation remains abstract; and "a horse falls down and kicks
image, or a supplement or afterword. Pollack and Sivadon have made about with its legs" means that my father makes love with my mother.
a profound analysis of the cartographic activity of the unconscious; Yet the indt:finite lacks nothing; above all, it does not lack determina-
perhaps their sole ambiguity lies in seeing it as a continuation of the tion. It is the determination of a becoming, its cha racteristic power,
image of the body.IOOn the contrary, it is the map of intensity that dis- the powt:r of an impersonal that is not a generality but a singularity at
tributes the affects, and it is their links and va lences that constitute the its highest point. For exa mple, I do not play the horse, any more than
image of the body in each case-an image that can always be modified I imitate this or that horse, but I become a horse, by reaching a zone
or transformed depending on the affective constellations that deter- of proxim ity where I ca n no longer be distinguisht:d from what I am
mine it. becoming.
A list or constellation of affects, an intensive map, is a becoming: Art also attains this celestial state that no longer rt:tains anything
Little Hans does nor form an unconscious representation of the father of the personal or rational. In its own way, art says what children say.
with the horse, but is drawn into a becoming-horse to which his par- It is made up of trajectories and becomings, and it too makes maps,
66 WHAT CHilDREN SAY WHAT CHlLDREN SAY 67

both extensive and imensive. There is always a trajectory in the work trajectories, but this position depends primarily on paths internal to
of 3rt, and Stevenson, fo r example, shows [he decisive importance of a the work itself; the external path is a creation that does not exist before
colored map in his conception of Treasure Island,l2 This is not to say the work, and depends on its internal relations. O ne circles around a
that a milieu necessarily determines the existence of characters, but sculpture, and the viewing axes that belong to it make us grasp the
rather that the latter 3fe defined by the trajectories they make in realiry body, sometimes along its entire length, sometimes in an astonishing
or in spirit, without which they would nor become. A colored map can foreshortening, sometimes in twO or more diverging directions: its po-
be present in painting insofar as a painting is less a window on the sition in the surrounding space is strictly dependent on these internal
world, Ii l'itafienne, than an arrangement [agencemen t J on a surface,l} trajectories. It is as if the real path were intertwined with virtual paths
In Vermeer, fo r example, the most intimate, most immobile becomings that give it new courses or trajectories. A map of virtualities, drawn up
(the girl seduced by the soldier, the woman who receives a letter, the by art, is superimposed ontO the rea l map, whose distances [parcoursl
painter in the process of painting .. ,J nonetheless refer to the vast dis- it transforms. Such internal paths or courses are implied not only in
tances [parcoursJ displayed on a map. I studied maps, sa id Fromentin sculpture, but in any work of art, including music: in each case, the
" not in geography but in painting."14 And just as trajectories are no choice of a particular path ca n determine 3 variable position of the
more rea l than becomings are imaginary, there is something unique in work in space. Every work is made up of a plurality of trajectories that
their joining together that belongs only to art. Art is defined, then, as coexist and are readable on ly on a map, and that change direction de-
an impersonal process in which the work is composed somewhat like a pending on the trajectories that are retained. 1' These internalized tra-
cairn, with stones carried in by different voyagers and beings in be- jectories are inseparable from becomings. Trajectories and becomings:
coming (rather than ghosts) (devenants plutot que revenants] that may art makes each of them present in the other, it renders their murual
or may not depend on a single author. presence perceptible. Thus defined, it invokes Dionysus as the god of
Only a conception such as this can tear art away from the personal places of passage and things of fo rgetting.
process of memory and the collective ideal of commemoration. To an
archaeology-art, which penetrates the millennia in order to reach the
immemorial, is opposed a cartography-art built on "things of forget-
ting and places of passage. " The same thing happens when sculpture
ceases to be monumental in order to become hodological: it is not
enough to say that it is a landscape and that it lays out a place or terri-
tory. What it lays out are paths-it is itself a voyage. A sculpture fol -
lows the paths that give it an outside; it works only with nonclosed
curves that divide up and traverse the organ ic body and has no other
memory than that of the material (hence its procedure o f direct CUt-
ting and its frequent utilization of wood). Carmen Perrin clears out
erratic blocks from the greenery that integrates them into the under-
growth and delivers them to the memory of the glacier that carried
them there, not in order to assign an origin to them but to make their
displacement something visible.1J One might object that a walking
[ou r, as an art of paths, is no more satisfactory than the museum as a
monumental or commemorative art. But there is something that disti n-
guishes ca rtography-art from a walking tour in an essentia l way: it is
characteristic of this new sculpture to assume a position on external
of jf se mit a damer (" he began to dance "). Nicolas Ruwet explains
that this presupposes a series of ordinary grammatical variables, which
wou ld have an agramma tical formula as their limit: he danced his did
would be a limit of the normal expressions he did his donee, he danced
his dan ce. he donced whot he did . .. I This would no longer be a port-
10 manteau word, like those found in Lewis Carroll, but a "portmanteau-
cons[fuction," a breath-constfuction, a limit or tensor. Perhaps it would
be better to take an example from the French, in a practical situation:
Bartleby; or, The Form ula someone who wants to hang something on a wall a nd holds a certain
number of nails in his hand exclaims, J'EN AI UN DE PAS ASSEZ ("I have
one not enough "). This is an agrammatica l formula that stands as the
limit of a series of correct expressions: J'en oj de trap, Je n'en oj pos
asset, II m 'en monque un ... (" I have tOO many," "I don't have
enough," "I am one short" ... ). Would not Bartleby's formula be of
"Bartleby" is nei ther a metaphor for the writer nor the symbol of any- this rype, at once a stereorypy of Ba n leby's and a highly poetic expres-
thing whatsoever. It is a violently comical text, and the comical is al- sion of Melville's, the limit of a series such as '" would prefer this. I
ways literal. It is like the novellas of Kleist, Dostoyevsky, Kafka. or would prefer not to do that. That is not what I would prefer ... "? De-
Beckett, with which it fo rms a subterra nean and prestigious lineage. It spite its quite normal construction, it has a n anomalous ring to it.
means only what it says, literally. And what it says a nd repeats is I I WOULD PREFER NOT TO. The fo rmula has several variants. Some-
would prefer not to. This is the formula of its glory, which every loving ti mes it abandons the conditional and becomes more curt: I PREFER
reader repeats in tum. A gaunt a nd pallid man has uttered the formula NOT TO. Sometimes, as in its final occurrences, it seems to lose its mys-
that drives everyone crazy. But in what does the literality of the for- tery by being completed by an infinitive, and coupled with to: " I prefer
mula consist ? to give no answer," .. , would prefer not to be a little reasonable," "I
We immediately notice a certain mannerism, a certain solemnity: would prefer not to ta ke a clerkship," " I would prefer to be doing
prefer is rarely employed in this sense, and neither Bartleby's boss, the something else" ... But even in these cases we sense the muted pres-
attorney. nor his clerks normally use it (" q u ~r word, l never use it my- ence of the strange form that continues to haunt Bartleby's language.
seW' ). The usual formula would instead be I hod rather not. But the He himself adds, "but I am not a particular case," " there is nothing
strangeness of the form ula goes beyond the word itself. Certainly it particular about me," I am not porticulor, in order to indicate that
is grammatically correct, syntactically correct, but its abrupt termina- whatever else might be suggested to him would be yet a nother particu-
tion, NOT TO, which leaves what it rejects undetermined, confers upon lariry fa lling under the ban of the great indeterminate formula, I PR E-
it the character o f a radical, a kind of limit-function. Its repetition and FER NOT TO, wh ich subsists once and for all and in all cases.
its insistence render it all the more unusual, entirely so. Murmured in a The formula occurs in ten principal circumstances, and in each
soft, flat , and patient voice, it attains to the irremissi ble, by for ming an case it may appear several times, whether it is repeated verbatim or
inarticu late block, a single breath. In all these respects, it has the same with minor variations. Bartleby is a copyist in the attorney's office; he
force, the same role as an agrammaticol formula. copies ceaselessly, "silently, palely, mechanically." The first instance
linguists have rigorously a nalyzed what is called "agrammatica liry." takes place when the attorney tells him to proofread and collate the
A number of very intense examples can be found in the work of the two d erks' copies: I WOU LD PREFER NOT TO. T he second, when the at-
American poet e. e. cu mmings-for instance, "he da nced his did," as torney tells Ba rtleby to come and reread his own copies. The third,
if one said in French if da!lsa son mit (" he danced his began" ) instead when the anorney invites Bartleby to reread with him personally, tete a

6'
70 aARTLEBY; OR, THe f ORMULA 71

tete. The fourth, when the anorney wants [0 send him on an errand. be relieved if Bartleby did not want to, but Barrleby does not refuse, he
The fifth, when he asks him to go into the next room. T he sixth, when simply rejects a nonpreferred (the proofreading, the errands ... ). And
the attorney enters his study onc Sunday afternoon and discovers that he does not accept either, he does not affirm a preference that would
Bartleby has been sleeping there. The seventh, when the attorney satis- consist in continuing to copy, he simply posits its impossibility. In
fies himself by asking questions. The eighth, when Bartleby has stopped shorr, the formula rhat successively refuses every other act has already
copying, has renounced all copying, and the attorney asks him fO engulfed the act of copying, which it no longer even needs to refuse.
leave. The ninth, when the attorney makes a second attempt to get rid The formula is devastating because it eliminates the preferable just as
of him. The tenth, when Bartleby is forced out of the office, sits on the mercilessly as any nonpreferred. It nOt only abolishes the term it refers
ba nister of the landing while the panic-stricken attorney proposes other, to, and that it re jects, but also abolishes the other term it seemed to
unexpected occupations lO him (3 clerkship in a dry goods store, bar- preserve, and that becomes impossible. In fact, it renders them indis-
tender, bill collector, traveling companion to a young gentleman ... ). tinct: it hollows out an ever expanding zone of indiscernibility or in-
The formula bourgeons and proliferates. At each occurrence, there is a determination between some nonpreferred activities and a preferable
stupor surrounding Bartleby, as if one had heard the Unspeakable or activity. All particularity, all reference is abolished. The formula anni-
the Unstoppable. And there is Bartleby's silence, as if he had said every- hilates "copying," the only reference in relation to which something
thing and exhausted language at the same time. With each instance, might or might not be preferred. I would prefer nothing rather than
one has the impression that the madness is growing: not Bartleby's something: not a will to nothingness, but the growth of a nothingness
madness in "pa rticular," but the madness around him, notably that of of the will. Bardeby has won the right to survive, that is, to remain im-
the attorney, w ho launches into strange propositions and even stranger mobile and upright before a blind wall. Pure patient passivity, as Blan-
behaviors. chat would say. Being as being, and nothing more. He is urged to say
Without a doubt, the formula is ravaging, devastating, and leaves yes or no. But if he said no (to collating, running errands ... ), or if he
nothing standing in its wake. Its contagious character is immediately said yes (to copying), he would quickly be defeated and judged useless,
evidenr: Bartleby "ties the tongues" of others. The queer words, I and would nOt survive. He can survive only by whirling in a suspense
would prefer, steal their way into the language of the derks and of the that keeps everyone at a distance. His means of survival is to prefer not
attorney himself ("So you have got the word, too"). But this contami- to collate, but thereby also not to prefer copying. He had to refuse the
nation is not the essential point; the essential point is its effect on former in order to render the latter impossible. The formu la has two
Bartleby: from the moment he says I WOULD PREFER NOT TO (collate), phases and continually recharges itself by passing again and again
he is no longer able to copy either. And yet he will never say that he through the same states. This is why the attorney has the vertiginous
prefers not to (copy): he has simply passed beyond this stage. And impression, each time, that everything is starting oV-e r again from zero.
doubtless he does nOt realize this immediately, since he continues copy- The formula at first seems like the bad translation of a foreign Ian·
ing until after the sixth instance. But when he does notice it, it seems guage. Bur once we understand it better, once we hear it more clearly,
obvious, like the delayed reaction that was already implied in the first its splendor refutes this hypothesis. Perhaps it is the formu la that carves
statement of the formula: "Do you not see the reason for yourself?" he out a kind of foreign language within language. It has been suggested
says to the attorney. The effect of the formu la-block is nor only to im- that e. e. cummings's agrammaticalities can be considered as having is-
pugn what Bartleby prefers not to do, but also to render what he was sued from a dialect differing from Standard English, and whose rules of
doing impossible, what he was su pposed to prefer to continue doing. creation can be abstracted. The same goes for Bartleby: the rule would
It has been noted that the fo rmula, I prefer nOt [0, is neither an af- lie in this logic of negative preference, a negativism beyond all negation.
fi rmation nor a negation. Barrleby "does not refuse, but neither does But if it is true that the masterpieces of literature always form a kind of
he accept, he advances and then withdraws into th is advance, barely foreign language within the language in which they are written, what
exposing himself in a nimble retreat from speech. "z The anorney would wi nd of madness, what psychotic breath thereby passes into language
72 ..... TlUy; OR, THE FOUIiUl A IAUtEn; OR, THE FORMULA 73

as a whol~? Psychosis characteristically brings into playa procedure which, except for Billy Budd. he will never emerge.· Bartleby himself
that treats an ordinary language, a standard language, in a manner that had no other escape than to remain silent and withdraw behind his
makes it "render" an original and unknown language, which would partition every time he uttered the formu la, all the way up until his
perhaps be a projection of God's language, and would carry off lan- fina l silence in prison. After the formula there is nothing left to say: it
guage as a whole. Procedures of this type appear in France in Roussel funct ions as a procedure, overcoming its appearance of particularity.
and Beisset, and in America in Wolfson. Is this not the schizophrenic The attorney himself concocts a theory explaining how Bartleby's
vocation of American literature: to make the English language, by formula ravages language as a whole. All language. he suggests, has
means of driftings, deviations, de-taxes or sur-taX\!$ (as opposed to the references or assumptions. These are not exactly what language desig-
standard syntax), slip in this manner? To introduce a bit of psychosis nates, but what permit it to designate. A word always presupposes
into English neurosis? To invent a new universality? If need be, other other words that can replace it, complete it, or form alternatives with
languages will be summoned into English in order to make it echo this it: it is on this condition that language is distributed in such a way as to
divine language of Storm and thunder. Melville invents a foreign lan- designate things, states of things and actions, according to a set of ob-
guage that runs beneath English and carries it off: it is the OUTlANDISH jective, explicit conventions. But perhaps there are also other implicit
or Deterritorialized, the language of the Whale. Whence the interest of and subjective conventions, other types of reference or presupposition.
studies of Moby-Dick that are based on Numbers and Letters, and their In speaking, I do not simply indicate things and actions; I also commit
cryptic meaning, to set free at least a skeleton of the inhuman or super- acts that assure a relation with the interlocutor, in keeping with our
human originary language. J It is as if three operations were linked to- respective situations: I command, I interrogate, I promise, I ask, I emit
gether: a certain treatment of la nguage; the result of this treatment, "speech acts." Speech acts are self-referential (I command by saying
which tends to constitute an original language within language; and " I order you ... "), while constative propositions refer to other things
the effect, which is to sweep up language in its entirety, sending it into and other words. It is this double system of references that Bartleby
flight, pushing it to its very limit in order to discover its Outside, si- ravages.
lence or music. A great book is always the inverse of another book that The formula I PREFER NOT TO excludes all alternatives, and de-
could only be written in the soul, with silence and blood. This is the vours what it claims to conserve no less than it distances itself from
case not only with Moby-Dick but also with Pierre. in which Isabelle everything else. It implies that Bartleby StOp copying, that is, that he
affects language with an incomprehensible murmur, a kind of basso stop reproducing words; it hollows out a zone of indetermination that
continuo that carries the whole of language on the chords and tones of renders words indistinguishable, that creates a vacuum within lan-
its guitar. And it is also the a ngelic or adamic Billy Budd, who suffers guage [/angageJ. But it also stymies the speech acts that a boss uses to
from a stuttering that denatures language but also gives rise to the mu- command, that a kind friend uses to ask questions or a man of faith to
sical and celestial Beyond of language as a whole. It is like the "persis- make promises. If Banleby had refused, he could still be seen as a rebel
tent horrible twittering squeak" that muddles the resonance of words, Or insurrectionary, and as such would still have a social role. Bur the
while the sister is getting the violin ready to respond to Gregor. formula stymies all speech acts, and at the same time, it makes Bartleby
Bartleby also has an angelic and Adamic nature, but his case seems a pure outsider lexcluJ to whom no social position can be attributed.
different because he has no general Procedure, such as slUttering, with This is what the attorney glimpses with dread: all his hopes of bringing
which to t.reat language. He makes do with a seemingly normal, brief Bardeby back to reason are dashed because they rest on a logic of pre-
Formula, at beSt a localized tick that crops up in certain circumstances. sllppositions according to which an employer "expects" to be obeyed,
And yet the result and the effect are the same: to carve out a kind of or a kind friend listened to, whereas Bartleby has invented a new logic,
fore ign language within language, (0 make the whole confront silence, a logic of preference. which is enough to undermine the presupposi-
make it topple into si lence. Bartleby a nnounces the long si lence, bro- tions of language as a whole. As Mathieu Lindon shows, the fo rmula
ken only by the music of poems, into which Mdville will enter and from "disconnects" words and things, words and actions, but also speech
74 U,lTlUV; OR, THE fOR/,WL ... U,RTLEIV; OR, THE fORMUl .... 75

acts and words-it 5t:V(! ( S language from all reference, in accordance Schreber unleashed his own delirium only after receiving a promotion,
with Bartleby's absolute vocation, to be a man witho,a references, as if th is gave him the audacity to take the risk. But what is the attor-
someone who appears suddenly and then disappears, withom rder· ney going to risk? He already has two scriveners who, much like
coee to himself or anything else. s This is why, despite its conventional Kafka's assistants, are inverted doubles of each other, the one normal
appearance, the formu la fu nctions 35 a veritable agrammaticality. in the morning and drunk in the afternoon, the m her in a perpetual
Bartleby is the Bachelor, about whom Kafka said, " He has only as state of indigestion in the morning but almost normal in the afternoon.
much ground as his twO feet take up, only as much o f a hold as his fWO Since he needs an extra scrivener, he hires Banleby after a brief conver-
hands encompass"-someone who falls asleep in the winter snow to sation without any references because his pallid aspect seemed to indi-
freeze to death like a child, someone who does nothing but take walks, cate a constancy that could compensate for the irregularities of the two
yet who could take them anywhere, without moving. 6 Bartleby is the others. But on the firs t day he places Bartleby in a strange arrange-
man without rderences, without possessions, without properties, with- ment: Bartleby is to sit in the attorney's own office, next to some fol d-
out qualities, without particularities: he is too smooth for anyone to be ing doors separating it fro m the clerk's office, between a window that
able to hang any particularity on him. Without past or futu re, he is faces the side of a neighboring building and a high screen, green as a
instantaneous. I PREFER NOT TO is Bartleby's chemical or alchemical prairie, as if it were important that Bartleby be able to hear, but wim-
for mula, but one can read inversely I AM NOT PARTI CULAR as its indis- out being seen. Whether this was a sudden inspi ration on the attor-
pensable complement. The entire nineteenth century will go through ney's part or an agreement reached during the short conversation, we
this search for the man without a name, regicide and parricide, the will never know. But the fact is that, caught in this arrangement, the in-
modern-day Ulysses (" I am No O ne"): the crushed and mechanized visible Bartleby does an extraordi nary amount of " mechanical" work.
man of [he great metropolises, but from which one expects, perhaps, Bur when the attorney tries to make him leave his retreat, Bartleby
the emergence of the Man of the Future or New World Man. And, in emits his form ula, and at this fi rst occurrence, as with those that fol-
an identical messianism, we glimpse him, sometimes as a Proletarian, low, the attorney finds himself disarmed, bewildered, stunned, thunder-
sometimes as an American. Musil's novel will also follow this quest, struck, without response or reply, Bartleby stOps copying altogether
and will invent the new logic of which The Man without Qualities is and remains on the premises, a fixture. We know to w hat extremes the
both the thinker and the product. 7 And mough the derivation of Musil attorney is fo rced to go in order to rid himself of Bartleby: he returns
from Melville ~ms certain to us, it should be sought not in " Bartleby," home, decides to relocate his office, then takes off for several days and
but rather in Pierre; or, the Ambiguities. The incesruous couple Ulrich- hides out, avoiding the new tenant's complaints. What a strange flight,
Agathe is like the rerum of the Pierre-Isabelle couple; in both cases, the with the wandering attorney living in his rockaway .. , From the initia1
silent sister, unknown or forgonen, is not a substitute fo r the motqer, arrangement to this irrepressible, Cain -like flight, everything is bizarre,
but on the contrary the abolition of sexual difference as particular- and the attorney behaves like a madman. Murder fa ntasies and decla-
ity, in favor of an androgynous relationship in which both Pierre and rations of Jove for Bartleby alternate in his soul. What happened? Is it
Ulrich are or become woman. In Bardeby's case, might not his relation a case of sha red madness, here aga in, another relationsh ip berween
with the attorney be equally mysterious, and in turn mark the possibi l- doubles, a nearly acknowledged homosexual relation ("yes, Bartleby ...
ity of a becoming, of a new man? Will Bartleby be able to conquer the I never feel so private as when 1 know you are here, , , I penetrate to
place where he takes his walks? the predestinated pu rpose of my life ... ")?8
Perhaps Bartleby is a madman, a lunatic or a psychotic ("an innate One might imagine that hiring Bartleb), was a kind of pact, as if
and incurable disorder " of the soul). But how can we know, if we do the attorney, followi ng his promotion, had decided to make this per-
not take into account the anomalies of the attorney, who conti nues son, without ob jective references, a man of confidence (un homme de
to behave in the most bizarre ways? T he attorney had JUSt received contfanceJ who would owe everything to him . He wants (0 make him
an important professional promotion. One will recall that President his man. The pact consists of the following: Bartleby will sit nea r his
76 BA~TlEBY ; ai, THE FORMULA 77
master and copy, listening [Q him but without being seen, lih a night Iroman de formationl, or one could JUSt as easily say the reference
bird who can nOt stand to be looked at. So there is no doubt that once novel lroman de referencel. provides numerous exa mples.
the attorney wantS to draw (without even doing it on purpose) Certainly, many of Melville's novels begin with images or por-
Bartleby from behind his screen to correct the copies with the others, traits, and seem to tell the story of an upbringing under a paternal
he breaks the pact. This is why Bartleby, once he "prefers not to" cor+ function: Redbltrn. for inStance. Pierre; or, The Ambiguities begins
reet, is already unable to copy. Bartleby will expose himself to view with an image of the father, with a statue and a painting. Even Moby-
even more than he is asked to, planted in the middle of the office, but Dick begi ns by amassi ng information at the begi nning in order to give
he will no longer do any copying. The attorney has an obscure feeli ng the whale a form and sketch out its image, right down to the dark
about it, since he assumes that if Bartleby refuses to copy, it is because painting hanging in the inn. "Ban leby" is no exception to the rule. The
his vision is impaired. And in effect, exposed to view, Bartleby for his twO clerks are like paper images, symmetrical opposites, and the attor-
part no longer sees, no longer looks. He has acquired what was, in a ney fills the paternal functio n so well that one can hardly believe the
certain fash ion, already innate in him: the legendary infirmity, one- story is taking place in New York. Everything starts off as in an Eng-
eyed and one-a rmed, which makes him an autochthon, someone who lish novel, in Dickens's London. But in each case, something strange
is born to and stays in a particular place, while the attorney necessarily happens, something that blurs the image, marks it with an essential un-
fills the fu nction of the traitor condemned to flight. Whenever the at- certainty, keeps the form from "taking," but also undoes the subject,
torney invokes philanthropy, charity, or friendship, his protestations sets it adrift and abolishes any paternal function. It is only here that
are shot through with an obscure guilt. In fact, it is the attorney who things begin to get interesting, The statue of the father gives way to his
broke the arrangement he himself had organized, and from the debris much more ambiguous portrait, and then to yet another portrait that
Bartleby pulls a trait of expression, I PREFER NOT TO, which will prolif- could be of anybody or nobody. All referents are lost, and the forma-
erate around him and contaminate the others, sending the attorney tion [{ormationl of man gives way to a new, unknown element. to the
fleeing. But it will also send language itself into flight, it will open up a mystery of a formless, nonhuman life, a Squid. Everything began Ii
zone of indetermination or indiscernibility in which neither words nor I'angiaise but continues Ii l'ameriwine, following an irresistible line of
characters can be distinguished-the fleeing attorney and the immo- fligh t, Ahab can say with good reason that he is fleeing from every-
bile, petrified Banleby. The attorney startS to vagabond while Bartleby where. The paternal function is dropped in favor of even more obscure
and ambiguous forces, The-subjcct loses its texture in favor of an infi -
rema ins tranquil, but it is precisely because he remains tranquil and
nitely proliferating patchwork : the America n patchwork becomes the
immobile that Bartleby is treated like a vagabond.
I~w of Melville's oeuvre, devoid of a center, of an upside down or right
Is there a relation of identification between the attorne)' and
s.'de up. It is as if the traits of expression escaped form, like the abstract
Banleby? But what is this relation? In what direction does it move?
IlRes of an unknown writing, or the furrows that twist from Ahab's
Most often, an identification seems to bri ng into play three elements,
b~ow to that of the Whale, or the " horrible contortions" of the flap-
which are able to interchange or permutate: a form , image, or repre-
pl~g l~nyards that pass through the fixed rigging and ca n easily drag a
sentation, a portra it. a model; a subject (or at lean a virtual subject ); sa ilor IOta the sea, a subject into death.' In Pierre; or, The Ambiguities,
and the subject's efforts to assume a fo rm, to a ppropriate the image, to the. disquieting smi le of the un known young man in the paiming,
adapt itself to this image and the image to itself. It is a complex opera- which so resembles the fa ther's, fun ctions as a trait of expression that
tion that passes through all of the adventures of resemblance, and that ~manc i pates itsel f, and is JUSt as capable of undoing resemblance as it
always risks fall ing into neurosis or turning into narcissism. A "mimetic IS of making the subject vacillate. I PREFER NOT TO is also a trait of
rivalry," as it is sometimes called. It mobi lizes a paternal function in ex~re~s i on that comaminates everything, escaping linguistic form and
general: an image of the fath er par excellence, and the subject is a son, St.nPPlOg the father of his exemplary speech, just as it strips the son of
even if the determinations arc interchangea ble. The bildungsroman hiS ability to reproduce or copy.
7' I..,RTLUY; OR, TH E f OR MUl ....
.... UtEn ; Ok, THE fO.MUl ... 79

It is still a process of identification, but rather than following the "ictims, the Swift and the Slow, the Thundering and the Petrifi ed, the
adventures of the neurotic, it has now become psychotic. A little bit of Unpunishable (beyond all punishment) and the Irresponsible (beyond
schizophrenia escapes the neurosis of the O ld World. We can bring to- all responsibility). What is Ahab doing when he lets loose his harpoons
gerher (hrtt distinctive characteristics. In the fi rst place, the formless of fire and madness? He is breaking a pact. He is betraying the Whal-
traiLoLcxpression i~sedJOJh~image..ot.-to..the ex ressed a rm. In ers' Law, which says that any healthy whale encountered must be
the st<:ond place. thefl~ is no looger a subj~t that tries to conform to hunted, without chOOSing one over another. But Ahab, thrown into his
the image, and either succeeds or fails. Rather, ~on e of in~isti ncti on. indiscern ible becoming, makes a choice-he pursues his identification
of indiscernibility, or of ambiguity seems to be establish d berween with Moby-Dick, putting his crew in mortal danger. This is the mon-
two, terms as if they had reached t e....po·nt immediately prKeeCling strous preference that Lieutenant Sta rbuck bitterly objects to, to the
th!ir respective differentiatIOn: .EQt a similitude but a 5 ip ;I e an ex- point where he even dreams of killing the treacherous captain. Choos-
treme proximity, an absolutec ontiguit . n t...a..-natura I iation, but an ing is the Promethean sin par excellence. 1o This was the case with
unnatura alliiilce. l t is a " h r rean, ~"a rctic" zone. It i no longer Kleist's Penthesilea, an Ahab-woman who, like her indiscernible dou-
a quesuon ofNfLmesis, but of becoming. Ahab does not ~te the ble Achilles, had chosen her enemy, in defiance of the law of the Ama-
wha e, e comes oby-Dick, e enters into the zone of proximity zons fo rbidding the preference of one enemy over another. The priest-
[.tone de lIoisinagej where he calL-Oo lo'!..ger be distinguished from ess and the Amazons consider this a betraya l that madness sanctions in
o y-Dick, and strikes himself in striking the whale. Moby-Dick is a cannibal identification. In his last novel, Billy Budd, Melville himself
the "wa ,shove<l near"w ith which he merges. Redburn renounces the brings another monomaniacal demon into the picture with Claggart:
image of the fathe r in favor of the ambiguous traits of the mysterious the master-at-arms. We should have no illusions about Claggart's sub-
brother. Pierre does nor imitate his father, but reaches the zone of prox- ordinate function: his is no more a case of psychological wickedness
imity where he can no longer be distinguished from his half sister, than Captain Ahab's. It is a case of metaphysical perversion that con-
Isabelle, and becomes woman. While neurosis flounders in the nets of sists in choosing one's prey, preferring a chosen victim with a kind of
maternal incest in order to identify more closely with the father, psy- love rather than observing the maritime law that req uires him to apply
chosis liberates incest with the sister as a becoming, a free identifica- the same discipline to everyone. This is what the narrator suggests
tion of man and woman: in the same way Kleist emits atypical, almost when he recalls an ancient and mysterious theory, an expose of which
animal traits of expression-srunerings, grindings, grimaces--that feed is found in Sade: secondary, sensible Nature is governed by the law (or
his passionate conversation with his sister. This is because, in the third laws), while innately depralled beings participate in a terrible supersen-
place, ~is pursues its dream of establishing a function of univer- sible Primary Nature, original and oceanic, which, knowing no Law,
-
sal fraternity that no longer passes through the father, but is built on
-. ~ .
th ~ruins 01 the paternal fun ctio&,a function that presu ~ses the dIS-
. pursues its own irrational aim through them. Nothingness, Nothing-
ness. 1I Ahab will break through the wall, even if there is nothing be-
sbl u~n of all images of the father, following anautonomous- I.ill.£..Ilf- hind it, and will make nothingness the object of his will: "To me, the
a lliance or roximi that maknJhe wom31'J: a , isteb a~~ther white whale is that wall, shoved nea r to me. Sometimes I think there's
man, a brothe like the terr~!s:~~" ~nitin !!.hm~d naught beyond . But 'tis enough. "12 Melville says that only the eye of a
Quee ueg as a married couple. These are the three cha racteristics of Prophet, and not a psychologist, is capable of discerning or diagnosing
the American Dream, which togethe r make up the new identification, such obscu re beings as these creatures of the abyss, without being able
the New World: the Trait, the Zone, and the Function. (0 prevent [heir mad enterprise, the " mystery of iniquity" .

We are in the process of melding together characters as different as We are now in a position to classify Melville's great characters. At
Ahab and Bartleby. Yet does not everything instead set them in opposi- one pole, there are those 11,10nomaniacs or demons who, driven by the
tion to each other? Melvi llian psychiatry constantly in vokes twO poles: will to nothingness, make a monStrous choice: Ahab, Claggart, Babo ...
monomania<.$ and hypochondriacs, demons and angels, tOrturers and But a( the other pole are those angels or saintly hypochondriacs, ai-
80 .... uLEn; OR, TH E f OR MU LA
'A.HEIY ; OR, THE FORMUlA 81

most stupid, creatures of innocence and purity, stricken with a consti- innocent, toward whom they feel a genuine love, but also with the
tutive weakness but also with a strange ~auty. Petrified by nature, demon, since they break their pact wi th the innocent they love, each in
they prder ... no will at all, a nothingness of the will rather than a will his own manner. They betray, then, but in a different way than does
to nothingness (hypochondriaca' "negarivism" ). They can only survive Ahab or Clagga rt : the la tter broke the law, whereas Vere or the attor-
by be<:oming stone, by denying the will and sanctify ing themselves in ney, in the name of the law, break an implicit and almost unavowable
this sus~n s i o n .U Such are Cereno, Billy Budd, and above all Bartleby. agreement (even Ishmael seems to turn away from his savage brother
And although the two ry~s are opposed in enry way-the former in- Queeq ueg). T hey continue to cherish the innocent they have con-
nate traitors a nd the latter betrayed in their very essence; the former demned: Captain Vere will die muttering the name of Billy Budd, and
monstrous fath ers who devour their children, the latter abandoned the final words of the attorney's na rrative wi ll be, .. Ah, Bartleby! Ah,
sons without fa thers-they haunt ont and the same world, forming al- humanity'" which ~ oes not indicate a connection, but rather a n alter-
ternations within it, just as Melville's writing, like Kleist's, alternates native in which he has had to choose the all-too-human law over
between sta tionary, fixed processes and mad-paced procedures: style, Ba rtleby. Torn between the twO Natures, with all their contradictions,
with its succession of catatonias a nd accelerations ... This is because these chatacters are extremely important, but do not have the stature
both poles, both types of characters, Ahab and Bartleby, belong to this of the two others. Rather, they are Witnesses, narrators, interpreters.
Primary N ature, they inhabit it, they constitute it. Everything sets them There is a problem that escapes this third type of cha racter, a very im-
in opposition, and yet they are perhaps the same creature-primary, portant problem that is settled between the other two.
original, stubborn, seized from both sides, marked merely with a The Confidm ce-Man (much as one says the Medicine-Man ) is
"plus" or a "minus" sign: Ahab and Bartleby. Or in Kleist, the terrible sprinkled with Melville's reflections on the novel. The first of these
Penthesilea and the sweet little Catherine, the fi rst beyond conscience, reflections consists in claiming the rights of a superior irrationalism
the second before conscience: she who chooses and she who does not !chapter 14). Why should the novelist believe he is obligated to explain
choose, she who howls like a she-wolf and she who would prefer-not- the behavior of his characters, a nd to supply them with reasons,
to speak.14 whereas life for its part never explains anything and leaves in its crea-
There exists, finally, a third type of character in Melville, the one tures so many indeterminate, obscure, indiscernible zones that defy
on the side of the Law, the guardian of the divine and human laws of any attempt at clarification? It is life that justifies; it has no n ~d of
secondary nature: the prophet. Captain Delano lacks the prophet's eye, being justified. The English novel, and even more so the French novel,
but Ishmael in Moby-Dic.k, Captain Vere in Billy Budd. and the attor- feels the n ~d to rationalize, even if only in the fin al pages, a nd psy-
ney in Hartleb), all have this power to "See" : they a re capable of grasp- chology is no doubt the last fo rm of rationalism: the Western reader
ing and understanding, as much as is possible, the beings of Primary awa its the final word. In this regard, psychoana lysis has revived the
Nature, the great monomaniacal demons or the saintly innocents, and claims of reason. But even if it has hardly spared the great novelistic
sometimes both. Yet they themselves are not lacking in ambigu ity, each works, no great novelist contemporaneous with psychoanalysis has
in his own way. Though they are able to see into the Primary Nature taken much interest in it. The founding act of the American novel, like
that so fascinates them, they are nonetheless representatives of sec- that of the Russian novel, wa s to take the novel far fro m the order of
ondary nature and its laws. They bear the paternal image-they seem reasons, and to give birth to cha racters who exist in nothingness, sur-
like good fathers , benevolent fathe rs (or at least protective big broth- vive onl y in the void, defy logic and psychology and keep their mystery
ers, as Ishmael is toward Queequeg). But they cannot ward off the until the end. Even thei r soul , says Melvi lle, is "an immense and terri-
demons, because the latter are tOO quick for the law, tOO surprising. fying void," and Ahab's body is an "empty shell. " If they have a for-
Nor can they save the innocent, the irresponsible: they immolate them mula, it is certainly not explanatory. I PREFER NOT TO remains just as
in the name of the Law, they make the sacrifice of Abraham. Behind much a caba listic formula as that of the Underground Man, who can
their paternal mask, they have a kind of double identification: with the not keep two and fWO from making fo ur, but who will nor RES IGN him-
82 .... tH En ; OR, THE FORMULA 83

self to it either (he prefers that tlllO and two not make four). What no nrationallogic. Figures of life and knowledge, they know something
counts fo r a great novelist-Melville. Dosloyevsky, Kafka, or Musil- inexpressible, live something unfathomable. They have nothing gen-
is that things remain enigmatic yet no narbitrary: in shott, a new logic, eral about them, and are not particular-they escape knowledge, defy
definitely a logic, but one that grasps the innermost depths of life a nd psychology. Even the words they uner surpass the general laws of lan-
death without leading us back to reason. The novelist has the eye of a guage (presuppositio ns) as well as the simple panicularities of speech,
prophet, not the gaze of a psychologist. For Melville, the thrtt great since they are like the vestiges or projections of a unique, original lan-
categories of characters belong to this new logic, just as much as this guage (IangueJ, and bring all of language [tangageJ to the limit of si-
logic belongs to them. Once it has reached that sought-after Zone, the lence and music. There is nothing particular o r general about Bartleby:
hyperborean zone, far from the temperate regions, the novel, like life, he is an Original.
needs no justification,l5 And in truth, there is no such thing as reason; Originals are beings of Primary Nature, but they are inseparable
it exists only in bits and pieces. In Billy Budd, Melville defines mo no- from the world or from secondary nature, where they exen their effect:
maniacs as (he Masters of reason, which is why they are so difficult to they reveal its emptiness, [he imperfection of its laws, the mediocriry of
su rprise; but this is because theirs is a delirium of action, because they particular creatures ... the world as masquerade (this is what Musil,
make use of reason, make it serve their own sovereign ends, which for his part, will call "parallel action"). The role of prophets, who are
in truth are highly unreasonable. Hypochond riacs are the Outcasts of not originals, is to be the only ones who can recognize the wake that
reason, without o ur being able to know if they have excluded them- originals leave in the world, and the unspeakable confusion and trou-
selves from it in order to obtain something reason can not give them- ble they cause in it. The original, says Melville, is nOt subject to the in-
the indiscernible, the unnameable with which they will be able to fluence of his milieu; on the contrary, he throws a livid white light on
merge. In the end, even prophets are o nly the Castaways of reason: if his surroundings, much like the light that "accompanies the beginning
Vere, Ishmael, or the attorney clings so tightly to the debris of reason, of things in Genesis." Originals are sometimes the immobile source of
whose integrity they try so hard to restore, it is because they have seen this light-like the foretopman high up on the mast, Billy Budd the
so much, and because what they have seen has marked them foreve r. bound, hanged man who "ascends" with the glimmering of the dawn,
But a second remark by Melville (chapter 44) introduces an essen- or Banleby standing in the attorney's office-and sometimes its daz-
tia l distinction between the characters in a novel. Melville says that we zling passage, a movement too rapid for the ordinary eye to follow, the
mUSt above all avoid confusing true Originals with characters that are lighming of Ahab or Claggan. These are the two great original Figures
simply remarkable or singular, particular. This is because the particu- that one finds throughout Melville, the panoramic shot and the track-
lars, who tend to be quite populous in a novel, have cha racteristics that ing shot, stationary process and infinite speed. And even tho ugh these
determine their form, properties that make up their image; they are are the two elements of music, though StOps give rhythm to movement
in fluenced by their milieu and by each other, so that their actions and and lightning springs from immobility, is it not this contradiction that
reactions are governed by general laws, though in each case they retain separates the originals, their two types? What does Jean-Luc Godard
a particular va lue. Simi larly, the sentences they utter are their own, mean when, in the name of cinema, he asserts that between a tracking
but they are nonetheless governed by the general laws of language. By shot and a panoramic shot there lies a " moral problem"? Perhaps it is
contrast, we do nO( even know if an origina l exists in a n absolute this difference that explains why a great novel cannot, it seems, include
sense, apart from the primordial God, and it is already something more than a si ngle original. Mediocre novels have never been able to
extraordi nary when we encou nter o ne. Melville admits that it is diffi- create the slightest o rigi nal c haracter. But how could even the greatest
cult to imagine how a novel might include several of them. Each origi- novel create more than one at a time? Ahab or Bartleby ... It is like the
nal is a powerful, solitary Figure that exceeds any expl icable form: it great Figures of the painter Francis Bacon, who admits that he has not
projects flamboyant traits of expression that mark the stubbornness of yet found a way of bringing together two figures in a single painting.1 6
.1 thought without image, a question without response, an extreme and And yet Melville will find a way. If he finally broke his silence in the
84 .",uun; OR, tH£ fO'MULA '~ITHIY ; 01 , THE fOIMUL~ .5

end to write Billy Budd. it is because this last novel, under the pene- the way to rhe homosexual relation between brothers, a nd passing
trating eye of Captain Vere, brings together twO originals, the demon ic through the incestuous relation between brother and sister. This is the
and the petrified. The problem was not to link them together through most mysterious relation, the one in which Pierre and Isabelle ate swept
a plot-an easy and inconsequential thing to do, since it would be up, the one that draws Heathcliff and C3[herine along in Wuthering
enough fo r one to be the victim of the other-but to make them, wor,k Heights, each one becoming Ahab a nd Moby-Dick by turns: "What-
together in the picture (if Benito Gerena was already a n attempt In thiS ever our souls are m:1de of, his and mine are the same.... My love for
direction, it was a flawed one, under the myopic and blurred gaze of Heathcliff resembles the eternal rocks beneath-a source of little visi-
Delano), ble delight, but necessary.... I am Heathcliff-he's always always in
What then is the biggest problem haunting Melville's oeuvre? To my mind-not as a pleasure, any more than I am always a pleasure to
recover the already-sensed identity? No doubt, it lies in reconciling the myself-but as my own being ... ".1
two originals but thereby also in reconciling the original with sec- How can this community be realiztd ? H ow can the biggest prob-
ondary humanity, the inhuman with the human. Now what Captain lem be resolved? But is it not al ready resolved, by itself, precisely be-
Vere a nd the attorney demonstrate is that there are no good fathers. cause it is not a personal problem, but a historical, geographic, or po-
There are only monstrous, devouring fathers, and petrified, fath erless litical one? It is not a n individual or pa rticular aff!!!, but a collectiv.t
sons. If humanity can be saved, and the originals reconciled, it will one, the affair of a pe:o Ie or rathe[ of I 0 les. It is not a n Oedipal
only be through the dissolution or decomposition of the paternal func- phantasm but a political program. Melville's bachelor a rt e y, Ike
tion. So it is a great moment w hen Ahab, invoking Saint Elmo's fi re, K:1fka's, must "find the place where he can take his w Iks" Amer-
discovers that the father is himself a lost son, an orphan, whereas the i ca. l~The Americ_an is one who is freed from the EnglisJu>aternal func-
son is the son of nothing, or of everyone, a brotherY As Joyce w ill say, tion the son of a crumbJtd father, the son 0 aTl nations. ven before
paternity does not exist, it is an emptiness, a nothingness--or ra ther, a th~ ence, Americans were thinking about the combination
zone of uncertainty haunted by brothers, by the brother and sister. T he of Sta res, the Sta te-form most compa tible with their vocation. But their
mask of the charitable fat her must fall in order for Primary Nature to vocation was not to reconstitute a n "old State secret," a nation, a fam -
be appeased, and for Ahab and Claggart to recognize Bartleby and ily, a heritage, or a father. It was above all to constitute a universe, a
Billy Budd, releasing through the violence of the former and the stu~ r society of brothers, a fede ration of men a nd goods, a community of
of rhe laner the fruit with which they were laden: the fraternal relation anarchist individuals, inspired by Jefferson, by Thoreau, by Melville.
pure and simple. Melville w ill never cease to elaborate on the radical Such is the declaration in Mohy-Dick (chapter 26 ): if man is the
opposition between fraternity and Christian "charity" or paternal brother of his fellow man, if he is worthy of truSt or "confidence," it
"philanthropy." ..Io liberate man from the father functiQl!..JQ..~h is nor beca use he belongs to a nation or because he is a proprietor or
JSl..!h.e new ma n or the man without pa rtic.'!.larities,~e o.rigi- shareholder, but only insofar as he is Man, when he has lost those
nal and humanity by constirutin a socie ofbrom rs as a new umver- characteristics that constitute his "violence," his " idiocy," his "vii·
sali . n t i t h e r s , alliance re~ filiation and the lainy," when he has no consciousness of himself apart from the proprio
~~[ replaces consanguinity. Man is indeed the b~~ ~rothe~_of eties of a "democratic dignity" that considers all particularities as so
l;ais ellowJTIa..!!.z$Dd .lY...om~n, hisbIOO<fSister: accc~elv.lle, man y ignomi nious stains that arouse anguish or pity. America is the
this is the community of ce il/ates;arawmg ItS mem rs into a n unlim- potential of the man without particula rities, the Original Man. Al-
ited becoming. A brother, a sister, all the more true for no longer being ready in Redburn :
"his" or " hers," since all"property," aU " proprietorship, " has disap-
You ,an nOI spill a drop of American blood without spilling the
peared. A burning passion deeper than love, since it no longer has blood of the whole world. Be he Englishman, Frenchman, German,
either substance or qualities, but [faces a zone of indiscernibi lity in Dane, or ScOl; the European who scoffs at an American, calls his own
which it passes through all intensities in every direction, extendi ng all brother Raca. and stands in danger of the judgment. We are not a
86 .... uun; OR, THf fORMULA 'ARHEn; 01, THE fORMUlA 87

narrow tribe of men, with a bigoted Hebrew nationality-whose invented patchwork, JUSt as the Swiss are said to have invented the
blood has been debased in the attempt to enoble it, by maintaining an cuckoo clock. But to reach this point, it was also necessary for the
exclusive succession among ourselves . ... We are not a nation, so knowing subject, the sole proprietor, to give way to a community of
h as a world- for unless we may claim all the~ld {QUWT-si re, explorers, the brothers of the archipelago, who replace knowledge
like arc: without famer..ol mot her. '-' ' We are the
~U-time,-a.od with all nations w.5 divide our inhe~e .. ,10
with belief, or rather with "confidence"-not belief in another world,
but confidence in this one, and in man as much as in God (" , am going
The picture of the nineteenth-century proletarian looks like this; ro attempt the ascent of Ofo with hope, not with faith . ... 'will follow
the advent of the comm unist man or the society of comrades, the my own path ... ").
future Soviet, being without property, family, or nation, has no other Pragmatism is this double principle of archipelago and hope.ll
determination than that of being man, Homo tantum. But this is also And what must the community of men consist of in order fo r truth to
the picture of the American. executed by other means, and the traits of be possible? Truth and trust. II Like Melville before iL..wsmatism will
the former often intermingle with or ace superimposed over those of the ~ht ceaselessl OR two fronts: a ainst the articularities that it man
latter. America sought to create a revolution whose strength would lie apinst man andnQui R irremedi@le mis.rruSti..hut alsQ agai.o.rube
in a universal immigration, emigres of the world, just as Bolshevik ~niversal or hole he fu sion of soukin the name of g~.ve or
Russia would seek to make a revolution whose strength would lie in a c~ a rity. Yet, what remains of souls once they are no longer attached
universal proletarization, " Proletarians of the world " . . . the twO (Q particularities, what keeps them from melting into a whole? What

forms of the class struggle. So that the messianism of the nineteenth rema!Os is precise y t elC "origina icy," t at is, a SOUR that each one
century has twO heads and is expressed no less in American pragma- produces, like a ritornel a at the limit of langua e!.. but that it produces
tism than in the ultimately Russian form of socialism. only when it takes to the 0 n road or to the o~n sea) with iti-body,
Pragmatism is misunderstood when it is seen as a summary philo- ~en it leads its life without seekin salvation wien it embarks upon
sophical theory fabricated by Americans. On the other hand, ,:"e und~r­ it;; incarnate voyage, without any particular aim. and then enc ters
stand the novelty of America n thought when we see pragmatism as a~ other a a ers, whom it recognizes by their sound. This is how
attempt to transform the world, to think a new world or new rna" lawrence described the new meSSlamsm, or t e demo£Wic..comribu-
insofar as they create themsellJes. Western philosophy was the skull, 0; rion 0 merica n literature: against the European morality of salvation..
the paternal Spirit that realized itself in the world as totality, and in a and cha rity, a morality of life in which the soul is fulfill ed onl y by tak-
knowing subject as proprietor. Is it against Western philosophy that ing to the road, with no other aim, open to all contacts, never trying
Melville directs his insult, " metaphysical villain"? A contemporary of to save other sou ls, turni ng awa y from those that produce an overly
American transcendentalism (Emerson, Thoreau), Melville is already authoritarian or groaning sound, forming even fleeting and unresolved
sketch ing out the traits of the pragmatism that will be its continuation. chords and accords with its equals, with freedom as its sole accom-
It is first of all the affirmation of a world in process, an archipelago. plishment, always ready to free itself so as to complete itself.H Ac-
Not even a puzzle, whose pieces when fitted together would constitute cording to Melville or lawrence, brotherhood is a matter for original
a whole, but rather a wa ll of loose, uncemented stones, where every souls: perhaps it begi ns only with the death of the father or God, but it
element has a value in itself but also in relation to others: isolated and does nor derive fro m this death, it is a whole other matter-"all the
floating relations, islands and straits, immobile points and sinuous subtle sympa thizings of the inca lculable soul, from the bitterest hate to
lines-for Truth always has " jagged edges. " Not a skull but the verte- passionate love. n
bral column, a spinal cord; not a uniform piece of clothing but a Har- This requ ires a new perspective, 3n archipelago-perspectivism that
lequin's coat, even white on white, an infinite patchwork with multiple conjugates the panoramic shot and the tracking shot, as in The Encan-
joinings, like the jacket of Redburn, White Jacket or the Great Cos- radas. It requ ires an acute perception, both visua l and auditory, as
mopolitan: the American invention par excellence. fo r the Americans Bellito Cerello shows, and must replace the concept with the "percept,"
88 I ARllEIY ; O R, THE f O RM UL... ,,,ULEIY; O R, THE fORMULA 89

that is, with a perception in becoming. II requires a new community, American prison. The city-ship reconstitutes the most opp ress i v~ law,
whose members are capable oftrUSt or "confidence," that is, of a belid and brotherhood ~x i sts among the topmen only when they remain im-
in themselves, in the world, and in becoming. Bartleb), the bachelor mobile, high up on the masu (White Jacket ). The great community o f
must embark upon his voyage and find his sister, with whom he will c~liba tes is nothing more than a company of bons vivants, which cer-
consume the ginger nut, the new host. Bartleby lives cloistered in the tainly does not kup the rich bachelor from exploit ing the poor and pal-
office and never goes out, but when the attorney suggests new occupa- lid worhrs, by reconstituting the twO unreconciled figures of the mon-
tions to him , he is not joki ng when he responds, "There is tOO much suous father and t h ~ orphaned daughters (The Paradise of Bache/ors
confinement ... " And if he is prevented from making his voyage, then and the Tartarus of Maids ). The American con fidence-man appears
the only place left for him is prison, where he dies of "civil disobedi- everywh ~r~ in Melville's work. What ma lignant power has turned the
ence, " as Thoreau says, "the only place where a free man can stay with trust into a company as cruel as the abomi nabl~ " un iversal nation"
honor. ~ 2~ Wi lliam and Henry James are indeed broth~rs, and Daisy foun ded by the Dog-Man in The Enc:antadas? The Confidence-Man ,
Miller, the new American maiden, asks fo r nothing more tha n a littl~ in which Melville's critique of charity and philanthropy culminates,
confid~nce, 3nd allows herself to die because even this meager requ ~st brings into playa series of devious characters who seem to emanate
remains unfu lfilled. And what was Bartleby asking for if not a little from a "great Cosmopolitan " in patchwork clothing, and who ask for
confidence from the 3rtorney, who instead r~s pond s to him with char- no more than ... a little human confidence, in order to pull off a multi-
ity and philanthropy-all th~ masks of the paternal fu nction? The ple and rebounding confidence game.
attorney's onl y ~xc us~ is that he draws back from th~ becoming into Are th ~se fa lse brothers sent by a diabolical fath ~r to restore his
which Bartleby, through his lonely existence, threat~ns to drag him: power over overly credulous Americans? But th~ novel is so complex
rumors ar~ already spreading ... The hero of pragmatism is not th~ that one could just as easily say the opposit~: this long proc~ssion
succ~ss fu l busi nessman, it is Bard~by, and it is Daisy Miller, it is Pierre [theoriel of con m ~n would be a comic v~rsio n of authentic brothers,
and Isabelle, the brother and sister. such as overly suspicious Americans su them, or rather have already
Th~ dangers of a "soci~ty without fathers" h av~ oft~n been poi nt~d becom~ incapable of suing them. This cohort of characters, including
out, but th~ only r~a l danger is the return of the fa[h~r.lS In this respect, the mysterious child at the end, is perhaps th~ soc i ~ty of Philanthro-
it is difficult to sepa rat~ the failur~ of the two r~volution s, th~ Am~rican pists who dissimulate their demon ic project, but perhaps it is also the
and th~ Soviet, th~ pragmatic and the dialectical. Universal emigration community of brothers that th~ Misanthropes are no l ong~ r able to
was no mor~ successful than universal proletarization. The Civil War recognize in passing. For ev~n in the midst of its fail ure, the American
al r~ad y sounded the knell, as would th~ liquidation of the Sovi~ ts later Revolution continues to send out its fragments, always making some-
on. The birth o f a nation, the restoration of the nation-state-and the thing take flight on the ho rizon, even sending itself to the moon, al-
monstrous fath ers come galloping back in, while Ih~ sons without fa - ways trying to break through the wall, to take up the experim~nt once
thers start dying off again. Paper images-th is is [he fal~ of the Ameri- again, to find a brotherhood in enter ri s· in this becom-
ca n as well as the Proleta rian. But just as many Bolsheviks could hear ing, a music in its stuttering language, a pure sound and unknown
the di3bolical powers knocking at the door in 19 17, the pragmatistS, C~tselfW¥K-;r;:a w ukLsaL about "smal~a-
like Melville before rhem, could see the masquerade that the society of lions" is what e virr;had al;:;ad said a bout the reat AmeTlc
brothcrs would lead to. Long before Lawrence, Melvillc and Thoreau nation: Lt must become a patchwork of all smal nations. What atka
wcre diagnosing thc America n evil , the new cemcnt that wou ld re- ~Lnor iteratures is what e VL e ~d
bu ild the wa ll: pa ternal authority and filthy charity. Bartleby therefore a bout ~ite ratu re of his time: because there are ~ ewau-
lcts himself die in prison. In the beginn ing, it was Benjamin Franklin, thors in Amerjg. an beca use I t.P:C_Q Ie are so indifferent, the writer is
the hypocri tical lightning-rod Merchant, who instituted the magnetic
----- --
not in a position to succeed as a recogll i z~d master.
-- n in his fa ilure,
90 'AUtEn; O~, THe f OR MUl",

t e writer remains all the mm the bearer of a collective enunciatio


which no on~ arms part of literary historx and reserves the rights
~ f a people to corne, or of a huma_n becoming~26 A sc Izophrenic voca-
tion: even-in..his catatonic or anorexic state.~r is not the patient,
but the doctor of a sick America , the Medicine-Man, the new Christ or

-
the brother to us all. 11
An Unrecognized Precursor
to Heidegger: Alfred Jarry

Pataphysics (epi meta ta phusika ) has as its exact and explicit object
the great Turning, the overcoming of metaphysics. the rising up be-
yond or before. "the science of that which is superinduced upon meta-
physics, whether in itself or outside of itself, extending as fa r beyond
metaphysics as the latter extends beyond physics. ,,\ We can thus con-
, . sider Heidegger's work as a development of pataphysics in conformity
with the principles of Sophrotates the Armenian, and of his first disci-
ple, Alfred Jarry. The great resemblances, memorial or historical, con-
cern the Being of phenomena. planetary technology. and the treatment
of langllage.

I. In the first place, pataphysics as the overcoming of metaphysics is


insepa rable from a phenomenology, that is, from a new sense and a
!lew comprehension of phenomena. There is a striking resemblance be-
tween the rwo authors. T he phenomenon can no longer be defined as
an appearance, nor can it be defined as an apparition, as in Husserl's
phenomenology. The apparition refers to a consciousness to which it
appears, and can still exist in a form different from the one it makes
appea r. The phenomenon, on the cont rary, is that which shows itself in
itseJf.2 A watch appears round whenever one reads the time (utensil-
ity); or again, independently of its uti lity, and by virtue of the demands
of consciousness alone (everyday banality), the fa cade of a house ap-
pears sq uare, in accordance with the consta nts of reduction. But the

91
9' "N UNRECOGNIZED PRECURSOR TO HEIDEGGER A N UNReCOGNIZED PUCURSOR TO HEIDEGGER 9,
phenomenon is the watch as an infinite series of ellipses, or the facade of machines in all its sinister frenzy. Anarchy is the bomb, or the com-
as an infinite series of trapezoids: a world made up of remarkable sin- prehension of technology. Jarry puts forward a curious conception of
gu larities, or a world that shows itself (whereas apparitions a re only anarchism: "Ana rchy Is," but it makes Being lower itself to the being
singularities reduced to the ordinary, appearing ordina rily to conscious- of science and technology (Ubu himself will become an ana rchist in
ness)} The phenomenon, on this account, does not refer to a con- order to better ensure that he is obeyed).' More generally, Ja rry's entire
sciousness, but to a Being, the Being of the phenomenon that consists oeuvre ceaselessly invokes science a nd technology; it is populated with
precisely in its self-showing [se-montrerJ. The Being of the phenome- machines and places itself under the sign o f the Bicycle. The bicycle is
non is the "epiphenomenon," non useful and unconscious, the object nOt a simple machine, but tbe simple model of a Machine appropriate
of pataph ysics. The epiphenomenon is the Being of the phenomenon, to the times? And it is the Bicycle tbat transforms the Passion, as the
whereas the phenomenon is only a being, or life. It is not Being, but the Christian metaphysics of the death of God, into an eminently technical
phenomenon that is perception-it perceives or is perceived- whereas relay race. s The Bicycle, with its chain and its gears, is the essence of
Being is thinking.~ No doubt Being, or the epiphenomenon, is nothing technology; it envelops and develops, it brings about the great Turning
other than the phenomenon, but it differs from it absolmely: it is the of the earth. The bicycle is the frame, like H eidegger's " fourfold."
self-showing of the phenomenon. If the problem is a complex one, however, it is because technology
Metaphysics is an error that consists in treating the epiphenome- and technologized science, for both Jarry and Heidegger, do not simply
non as another phenomenon, another being, another life. In nuth, entail the withdrawal or forgetting of Being. Being also shows itself in
rather than considering Being as a superior being that would ground technology by the very fact that it withdraws from it, insofar as it with-
the constancy of other perceived beings, we must think of it as a n draws. But this can only be comprehended pataphysically (ontologi-
Emptiness or a Non-Being, through the transparency of which sinj::u!ar ca lly), and not metaphysically. This is why Ubu invents pataphysics at
variations come into play, "an iridescent mental ka leidoscope (that) the same time as he promotes planetary technology: he comprehends
thinks itself."5 Beings could even seem to be a degeneration of Being, the essence of technology-the comprehension Heidegger imprudently
and life, a degeneration of thought; or, even more, one could say that credited to national socialism. What Heidegger find s in Nazism (a
beings cross out Being, they put it to death and destroy it, or that life populist tendency), Jarry finds in anarchism (a right-wing tendency). In
ki lls thought-so that we are not yet thinking. "To remain at peace both authors, technology seems to be the site of a combat in which
with my consciousness wh ile glori fying thought, I want Being to dis- Being is sometimes lost in forgetting or in withdrawal, while at other
appear, to resolve itself into its opposite. n This disappearance or dis- times, on the contrary, it shows itself or unveils itself in it. It is not
sipation, however, does nOt come from the outside. If Being is the self- enough to oppose Being to its forgetting or withdrawa l, since what
showing of beings, it does not show itself, but ceaselessly withdraws; it defines the loss of Being is ratber the forgetti ng of forgetting, the
is itself in withdrawal or retreating. Better yet: withdrawing or turning withdrawal of the withdrawal, whereas withdrawal and forgetting are
away is the only manner by which it shows itself as Being, since it is the manner by which Being shows itself, or is able to show itself. The
on ly the self-showing of the phenomenon or beings. essence of technology is not technology, and " must harbour in itself
the growth of the saving power."9 Thus, it is the culmination of meta-
II . Because it confuses Being with beings, meta physics in its entirety physics in technology that makes possible the overcoming of meta-
stands in the withdrawal of Being, o r forgetfulness. Technology as the physics, that is, pataphysics. Hence the importance of the theory of
effective mastery of Being is the heir to metaphysics: it completes meta- science and the experimentations with machines as integral parts of
physics, it rea lizes it. Action and life " have killed thought, therefore pataphysics: planetary technology is not simply the loss of Being, but
let us Live, and in so doing we wi ll become Masters. " In this sense, it the possibi lity of its salvation.
is Ubu who represents the fat bei ng, the outcome of metaphysics as Being shows itself twice: once in relation to melaphysics, in an im.
planetary technology and a completely mechanized science, the science memorial past, one that retrea ts before every historical past-the al-
9A AN UNRECOGNIZED PRECURSOR TO HEIDEGGU AN UNRECOGNIHO PRfCUR$oa TO HflOEGGEl 95

ways Already-thought of the Greeks; and <I second time in relation to future. Presence is the Being of the present, but also the Being of
technology, in an unassignable {utllre. a pure imminence or the pos- the past and the future. Ethernity does not designate the eternal, but
sibility of a thought always srill-lo-come. 1o This is what appears in the donation or excretion of time, the temporalization of time that oc-
Heidegger wi th the notion of Ereignis. which is like the eventua lity of curs simu ltaneously in these three dimensions (Zeit-Raum). Moreover,
an Event, a Possibility of Being, a Possest, a Still-ro-come that goes ~­ the machine starts by transforming succession into simultaneity, before
yond the pre~nce of the present no less than the immemorial of mem- leading to the final transformation "in reverse," when the Being of
ory. And in his last writings, Heidegger no longer even speaks of meta- time in its entirety is converted into Being-Power, into the possibility of
physics or the overcoming of metaphysics, since Being in turn must be Being as Futu re. Jarry is perhaps recalling his Professor Bergson when
overcome in favor of a Being-Power that is no longer linked ro technol- he ta kes up the theme of Duration [Duree]. which he first defines as an
ogy.1I Jarry will likewise stop speaking of paraphysics once he discov- immobility in temporal succession (conservation of the past), and then
ers the Possible beyond Being, in The Supermale, as the novel of the fu- as an explora tion of the future, or an opening toward what is to come.
ture; and in his fina l work, The Sword Knot (La Dragonne], he will "Duration is the transformation of a succession into a reversion-in
show how the Possible surpasses both the present and the paSt to pro- ) other words: the be<:oming of a memory." This is a profound reconcilia·
duce a new dawn. 12 Now for Jarry, this opening of the possible also tion of the Machine with Duration. l4 And this reversion also implies a
needs a technologized science: this can already be seen from the limited reversal in the relationship between man and machine. Not only are
viewpoint of pataphysics itself. And if Heidegger defined technol.ogy the indices of virtual speed reversed to infinity, but the bicycle be<:omes
by the rising of a "standing-reserve" [fonds] that effaces the object more rapid than the train, as in the great race in The Supermafe; but
in favor of a possibility of Being-the airplane in every one of its con- the relationship between man and machine gives way to a relationship
stituent parts as the possibility of flying-Jarry fo r his part considers between the machine a nd the Being of man (Dasein or Supermale),
science and technology as the rising of an "ether," or the unveiling of inasmuch as the Being of man is more powerful than the machine, and
courses that correspond to the molecular potentialities or virtualities of succeeds in "stoking" it. The Supermale is the Being of man that is no
all the parts of an obieet: the bicycle, or more precisely the bicycle's longer aware of the distinction between man and woman: woman as a
frame, is an excellent atomic model, inasmuch as it is made up of whole enters into the machine, is absor bed by the machine, and man
" rigid, articulated rods and wheels driven by a rapid rotative move- alone be<:omes the celibate capacity, or the Being·Power, the emblem of
mem."\,) The "physick stick" [baton aphysiqlle] is the technical being scissiparity, "far removed from earthly sexes" and "the firstborn of the
par excellence, which describes the set of its virtual lines: circular, recti- future. "IS
linear, crossed. It is in this sense that pataphysics already ema ils a great
theory of machines, and already goes beyond the virtualities of beings II I. Being shows itself, but only inasmuch as it never ceases to with-
toward the possibility of Being (Ubu sends his technical inventions to draw (the past); the More and Less than Being occurs, but only by
an office whose boss is Mr. Possible), following a tendency that will ceaselessly receding, by possibilizing itself (the futu re).l' In other words,
culminate in The Supermale. Being does not merely show itself in beings, but in something that
Planetary technology is thus the site of possible reversals, conver- shows its inevitable withdrawal; and the more and less than Being, in
sions, or turnings. In effect, science treats time as an independent vari- something that shows its inexhaustible possibility. This something, or
able; this is why machines are essemia ll y machines for explori ng time, the Thing. is the Sign. For if it is true that science or technology already
the "tempomotive" rather than the "locomotive." From a techno- contain a possibility for salvation, they remain incapable of deploying
logical standpoint, it is science that first makes a pataphysical reversal it, and must give way to the Beautiful and Art, which sometimes ex·
of time possible: the succession of three stases-past, present, and tend technology by crowning it, as with the Greeks, a nd sometimes
future-gives way to the co-presence or simultaneity of the three ex- transmute or convert it. According to Heidegger, the technical being
stases, the Being of the past, the Being of the present, the Being of the (the machine) was already more than an object, since it made the ground
96 AN UN!HCOGNllED '.feU.SOl to HEIOfGGEl AN UNIECOGNIZEO PUCUUO. TO HflOfGGfR 97

appear; but the poetic being (the Thing, the Sign) went even funher, to German and Greek (or to High German ): he put an ancient Greek or
because it brought into being a world that was groundless. 17 In this an old German to work within contemporary German, but precisely in
transition from science to an, in this reversion of science into art, order to obtain a new German ... The old language affects the present \
Heidegger perhaps rediscovers a problem familiar to the late nine- language, which under this condition produces a language still to
teenth century. one that would be encountered in a different manner by come: the three exStases. Ancient Greek is caught up in agglutinations
Renan (a nother Breton precursor to Heidegger), by neoimpressionism, of the rype "Iego- I speak" and "Iego- I harvest, I gather," in such a way
and by larry himself. Jarry would follow a similar path when he de- that the German "sagen-to speak" recreates '"sagen-to show by gather-
veloped his strange thesis on anarchy: by making-disappear, anarchy ing." Or again, in the most famous example, the agglutination "'/ethe-
could only operate technically, with machines, whereas Jarry prders fo rgetfulness" and "aletheia-the true" will activate in German the ob-
the aesthetic stage of crime, and ranks Quincy above Vaillant. IS More sessive couplet "veiling-unveiling." Or aga in "chrao-cheir, n which is
generally, according to Jarry, the technical machine makes vinuallines almost Breton. Or again the old Saxon "wllon" (to live somewhere), in
emerge, which bring together the atomic components of beings, whereas its agglutination with "freien" (to save, to preserve), will disengage
the poetic sign deploys all the possibilities or capabilities of Being that, "bauen" (to live in peace) from the current meaning of "bauen ." larry
when brought together in their original unity, constitute "the thing." seems to have proceeded in the same manner. But l arry, though he
We know that Heidegger will identify this grandiose nature of the sign often invoked Greek, as shown by Pataph ysics, instead introduced
with the Quadriparti, the mirror-play of the world, the ringing of the Latin, or old French, or an ancestral dialect, or perhaps Breton into the
ring, the "Fourfold " (das Ceviertj.1' But Jarry had already deployed French language, in order to bring to light a French of the future that
the great heraldic Act of the four heralds, with the coat of arms as the found in a symbolism close to that of MaliarmlE and Villiers something
mirror, and the organization of the world, Perhinderion, as the Cross analogous to what Heidegger found in Holderlin. l l And injected into
of Christ, or the Frame of the original Bicycle, which ensures the tran- the French, "si vis pacem" will give "civil," and "industria, " "' 1,2,3":
sition from technology to the Poeticl°-which is what Heidegger failed only two languages against the Tower of Babel, one of wh ich works or
to recognize in the play of the world and its four paths. This was also plays within the other to produce the language of the future, Poetry
the case with the "physick-stick": from the machine or engine, it be- par excellence, which shines forth panicularly in the description of Dr.
comes the thing that bears the anistic sign, when it forms a cross with FaustroU's islands, with its music-words and sonorous harmonies.2J
itself "in each quarter of everyone of its revolutions." We have heard the news that not one of Heidegger's etymologies is
larry's thought is above all a theory of the Sign: the sign neither correa, not even LethlE or Aletheia.l~ But is this a well-posed problem?
designates nor signifies, but shows ... It is the same as the thing, but is Has not every scientific criterion of erymology been repudiated in ad-
not identical to it; it shows the thing. The question is knowing how vance, in favor of a pure and simple Poetry ? It is sometimes said that
and why the sign thus understood is necessarily linguistic, or rather these are nothing more than word plays. But is it not contradictory to
under what conditions it becomes language. 21 The first condition is expect some sort of linguistic correctness from a project that expl ici dy
that we must form a poetic conception of language, and not a technical sets out to go beyond scientific and technical being toward poetic
or scientific one. Science presupposes the idea of diversiry, a tower of being? Strictly speaking, it is not a question of etymology, bur of bring-
Babel of languages, in which order would have to be introduced by ing about agglutinations in the other-language (/'autre-Iangllel so as to
grasping their virtual relations. But we, on the contrary, will consider emerge in the-language [la-langue]. Undertakings like those of Heideg-
on ly two languages in principle, as if they were the only languages in ger or larry should not be compared with linguistics, but rather with
the world, a living language and a dead language, [he latter being put the analogous undertakings of Roussel, Brisset, or Wolfson. The differ-
to work in the forme r-agglutinations in the second inspiring new ence consistS in [his; Wolfson maintains the Tower of Babel, and makes
emergences or reemergences in the first. The dead language !ittms to use of every language minus one to constitute the language of the fu-
create anagrams in the living language. Heidegger kept rather strictly ture in wh ich this one mUSt disappear; Roussel on the contrary makes
98 .... N UNUCOGNIZfD PRECURSOR ro HEIDEGGER

use of only one language, but he carves out from it, as the equivalent of
another language, homophonous series, which say something else en-
tirely with similar sounds; and Brisset makes use of one language in
order to pull out syllabic or phonic elements that may be present in
other languages, but that say the same thing, and that in turn form the
secret language of the Origin or the Furure. Jarry and Heidegger have 12
yet another procedure: they work in principle with twO languages, ac-
tivating a dead language within a living language, in such a way that
the living language is transformed and transmuted. If we use the term
The Mystery of Ariadne according
element to designate an abstraction capable of taking on variable val- to Nietzsche
ues, we could say that a linguistic element A affects element 8 in such a
way as to turn it into element C. The affect (A) produces in the current
language (8 ) a kind of foot stomping, a sta mmeri ng, an obsessional
tom-tom, like a repetition that never ceases to create something new
(C). Under the impulse of the affect, our language is set whirling, and
in whirling it forms a language of the fu ture, as if it were a fo reign lan-
guage, an eternal reiteration, but one that leaps and jumps. We stomp Dionysus sings:
within the turning question, but this turning is the bud of the new "Be wise, Ariadne! ...
language. "'/$ it fro m the Greek or from the Negro, Father Ubu?"lS You have little ears, you have ears like mine:
From one element to the other, between the old language and the pre- Put a clever word inTO them!
sent language being affected, between the current language and the Must we not first hate each other if we are to love each other? ...
new one being formed, there are intervals and empty spaces, but they I am your labyrinth ."l
are fi lled with immense visions, insane scenes and landscapes: the un-
veiling of Heidegger's world, the procession of Dr. Faustroll's islands, Just as other women are between two men, Ariadne is between
or the sequence of " Ymagier'sn engravings. Theseus and Dionysus. l She passes from Theseus to Dionysus. She
Such is the response: language does not have signs at its disposal, began by hating Dionysus the Bull. But abandoned by Theseus, whom
but acquires them by creating them, when a language 1 acts within a she had nonetheless guided through the labyrinth, she is carried off by
language1 so as to produce in it a language J an unheard of and almost Dionysus, and discovers another labyrinth. "Who besides me knows
fore ign language. The first injects, the second stammers, the third sud- what Ariadne is ?"J Is this to say: Wagner-Theseus, Cosima-Ariadne,
denly starts with a fit. Then language has become Sign or poetry, and Nietzsche-Dionysus? The question "who?" does nOt refer to persons,
one can no longer distinguish between language. speech, or word. And but to forces and wills.4
a language is never made to produce a new language within itself with- Theseus appears to be the model fo r a text in the second part of
out language as whole in turn being taken to a limit. The limit of lan- Zarathlfstra, "On Those Who Are Sublime." It concerns the hero, cun-
guage is the Thing in its muteness-vision. The thing is the limit of ning and skillful at solving riddles, passing through the labyrinth and
la nguage, as the sign is the language of the thing. When a language subduing the bull. Th is subl ime man prefigures the theory of the higher
is hollowed out by its turning within language, it finally completes man in the fourth part: he is called "the ascetic of the spirit," a name
its mission: the Sign shows the Thing, and effectuates the nth power that will later be applied to one of the fragments on the higher man
of language, for ("T he Magician"). The characteristics of the su blime man match up
~whe rc word breaks off no thing may be. "26 with the attri butes of the higher man in general: his serious spirit, his

99
100 THE MY$1flY Of AR'''DNE ACCORDING TO NIETZSCHE THE MYSTEn Of ARIADNE ACCORDING TO NIETZS CHE 101

h~av in ess, his taste fo r bearing burdens, his contempt for the earth, his negation with reaction, of negative will with reactive fo rce, of nihilism
inability to laugh and play, his enterprise of revenge. with bad conscience and ressentiment. The products of nihilism are
We know that Niensche's theory of the higher man is a critique made to be borne, and it is reactive fo rces that bear them. Whence the
that sets out to expose the deepest and most dangerous mystification illusion of a false affirmation. The higher man claims knowledge as his
of humanism. The higher man claims [Q carry humanity to perfection, authority: he claims to explore the labyrinth or the fo rest of knowl-
to completion. He claims to recuperate all the properties of man, to edge. But knowledge is only a disguise fo r morality; the thread in the
overcome alienation, to real ize the total man, to put man in the place labyrinth is the moral thread. Morality, in tum, is a labyrinth, a disguise
of God, to turn man into a power of affirmation that affirms itself. fo r the ascetic and religious ideal. From the ascetic ideal to the moral
But in truth, man, even the higher man, does not know what it means ideal, from the moral ideal to the ideal of knowledge, it is the same en-
to affirm. He merely presents a caricature of affirmation, a ridiculous terprise that is being pursued, that of killing the bull, that is, of denying
travesty. He believes that to affirm mea ns to bear, to assume, to endure life, crushing it beneath a weight, reducing it to its reactive fo rces. The
an ordea l, ro take on a burden. He measures positivity in terms of the su blime man no longer even needs a God to harness man . In the end,
weight he bears and confuses affirmation with the exertion of his tense man replaces God with humanism; the ascetic ideal with the moral
muscles.s Everything heavy is real, everything that bea rs is affirmative ideal and the ideal of knowledge. Man burdens himself, he puts on his
and active! Moreoever, instead of the bull, the higher man's animals own harness-all in the name of heroic values, in the name of man's
are the ass and the camel, beasts of the desert who inhabit the desolate va lues.
face of the earth and who know how to bear burdens. Theseus, the There are a number of higher men: the soothsayer, the two kings,
sublime or higher man, subdues the bull, but he is far inferior to it, the man with leeches, the magician, the last pope, the ugliest man, the
having merely the same neck: " He should act like a bull, and his happi- voluntary beggar. and the shadow. They fo rm a procession Ilbeoriel. a
ness should smell of the eanh, and not of contempt for the eanh. I series, a fa randole. This is because they are distinguished by the place
would like to see him as a white bull, walking before the plowshare, they occupy along the thread, by the fo rm of their ideal, by the specific
snoning and bellowing; and his bellowing should be in praise of every- weight of their reaction and the tonality of their negativity. But they all
thing eanhly.... To stand with relaxed muscles and unharnessed will : amount to the same thing: they are powers of the false, a parade of
that is most difficult fo r all of you who are sublime."6 The sublime or forgers, as if the fa lse necessarily referred to the false. Even the truthful
higher man subdues monSters, poses riddles, but knows nothing of the man is a fo rger because he concea ls his motives for willing the truth,
riddle and the monster that he himself is. He does not know that to af- his somber passion fo r condemning life. Perhaps only Melville is com-
fi rm is not to bear, carry, or harness oneself to that which exists, but on parable to NietzSChe for having created a prodigious chain of forgers,
the contrary to unburden, unharness, and set free that which lives. It is higher men emanating from the "great Cosmopolitan," each of whom
not to burden life with the weight of higher or even heroic values, but guarantees or even exposes the swindle of the other, but always in a
to create new va lues that would be those of life, values that make life way that reinforces the power of the (alse.' Is not the false already in
light or affirmative. " He must still discard his heroic will; he shall be the model, in the truthful man, as much as in the simulations?
elevated, not merely sublime."7 T heseus does not understand that the As long as Ariadne loves Theseus, she participates in this life-
bu ll (or the rhinoceros) possesses the only true superiority: a light, denying enterprise. Under his fal se appearances of affirmation, The-
prod igious beast deep in the hean of the labyrinth, but who also feels seus-the model-is the power to deny, the Spirit of negation, the
at ease in high places, a beast who unharnesses and affirms life. confidence-man. Ariadne is the Anima , the Soul, but the reactive soul
According to Niet"Lsche, the will to power has twO tonal ities: affir- or the force of ressentiment. Her splendid song remains a complaint,
mation and negation; and forces have two qua lities: action and reac- and in Zarathllstra, where it first appea rs, it is put into the mouth of
tion. What the higher man presents as affi rmation is no doubt the most the Magician, the forger par excellence, an abject old man who dons
profound being of man, but it is only the extreme combin~ ti o n of the mask of a little girl. Ariadne is the sister, but the sister who fee ls
102 THE MYSTERY OF .... RIADNE ACCORDING TO NIHlSCHE THE MYSTfRY Of ARIAONE ACCOROING TO NIETZSCHE 103

ressentiment against her brother the bull. A pathetic appea l runs countered, but Theseus was not a true Greek. He was, rather, a kind of
through all of Nietzsche's work: Beware of sisters. It is Ariadne who German ava1lt fa fettre. 12 Ariadne understands her deception at a mo-
holds the thread to the labyrinth, the thread of morality. Ariadne is ment when it no longer concerns her: Dionysus, who is a true Greek, is
the Spider, the tarantula. Here again Niensche cries out: "Hang your- approaching; the Soul becomes active, and at the same time, the Spirit
self with this thread!"~ Ariadne will have to fulfill this prophecy (in reveals the true nature of affirmation . Ariadne's song then rakes on its
certain traditions, Ariadne, abandoned by Theseus, does indeed hang full meaning: the transmutation of Ariadne at the approach of Diony-
herself). 10 sus, Ariadne being the Anima that now corresponds to the Spirit that
Bur what does this mean: Ariadne abandoned by Theseus? It means says yes. Dionysus adds a fina l couplet to Ariadne's song, which be-
that the combination of the negative will with the force of reaction, of comes a dithyramb. In keeping with Nietzsche's general method, the
the spirit of reaction with the reactive soul, is not nihilism's last word. meaning and nature of the song change depending on who sings it-
The moment arrives when the will to negation breaks its alliance with the magician behind Ariadne's mask, Ariadne herself in Dionysus's ear.
the forces of reaction, abandons them and even turns against them. Why does Dionysus need Ariadne, or to be loved? He sings a song
Ariadne hangs herself, Ariadne wants to perish. Now this fundamental of solitude, he seeks a fiancee.1J For if Dionysus is the god of affirma-
moment ("midnight") heralds a double transmutation, as if completed tion, there must be a second affirmation in order for affirmation itself
nihilism gave way to its opposite: reactive forces, themselves denied, to be affirmed. Affirmation must divide in two so that it can redouble
become active; negation is conven ed and becomes the thunderclap of a [II (aut qU'elie se dedouble pour pouvoir redoubler). Nietzsche clearly
pure affirmation, the polemical and ludic mode of a will that affirms distinguishes the two affirmations when he says "Eternal affirmation
and enters into the service of an excess of life. Nihilism "defeated by of being, eternally 1 am your affirmation. "14 Dionysus is the affirma-
itself." Our aim is not to analyze this transmutation of nihilism, this tion of Being, but Ariadne is the affirmation of affirmation, the second
double conversion, but simply to see how the myth of Ariadne expresses affirmation or the becoming-active. From this point of view, all the
it. Abandoned by Theseus, Ariadne senses the approach of Dionysus. symbols of Ariadne change meaning when they are related to Dionysus
Dionysus the Bull is pure and multiple affirmation, the true affirma- rather than being deformed by Theseus. Not only does Ariadne's song
tion, the affirmative will; he bears nothing, unburdens himself com- cease to be the expression of ressentiment in order to become an active
pletely, makes everything that lives lighter. He is able to do what the search, an already affirmative question ("Who are you? ... Me-you
higher man cannot: to laugh, play, and dance, in other words, to af- want me? me-all of me? .. .")IS but the labyrimh is no longer the
firm. He is the Light One who does not recognize himself in man, espe- labyrinth of knowledge and morality, the labyrimh is no longer the
cially nOt in the higher man or sublime hero, but only in the overman, path pursued by the one who, holding a thread, is going to kill the bull.
in the overhero, in someth ing other than man. It was necessary that The labyrinth has become the white bull himself, Dionysus the Bull:
Ariadne be abandoned by Theseus: "For this is the soul's secret: only " I am your labyrinth." More precisely, the labyrimh is now the ear of
when the hero has abandoned her is she approached in a dream by the Dionysus, the labyrinthine ear. Ariadne must have ears like those of
overhero. "\l Under the caress of Dionysus, the soul becomes active. Dionysus in order to hear the Dionysian affirmation, but she must also
She was so heavy with Theseus but becomes lighter with Dionysus, un- respond to the affirmation in the ear of Dionysus himself. Dionysus
burdened, delicate, elevated to the sky. She learns that what she for- says to Ariadne: "You have little ears, you have ears like mine, put a
merly thought to be an activity was only an enterprise of revenge, mis- clever word into thcm!n- yes . Dionysus also has occasion to say to
trust, and surveillance (the thread), [he reaction of the bad conscience Ariadne, in jest: " I find a ki nd of humor in your ea rs ... why are they
and ressentiment; and more profoundly, what she believed to be an not longer? " In this way, Dionysus reminds her of her errors when she
affirmation was only a travesty, a manifestation o f heaviness, a way of loved Theseus: she believed that to affirm meant to bea r a weight, to
believing oneself strong because one bears and assumes. Ariadne real- do as the ass does. But in truth, with Dionysus, Ariadne has acquired
izes how she had been deceived: she thought it was a Greek ~he had en- small ea rs; the round ear, propitious to the eternal return.
lOA THE MYStERY Of ARIADNE ACCORDING TO N IETZSCHE THE MYSTERY Of ARIADNE ACCORDING TO NIETlSCHE 105

The labyrinth is no longer architectural; it has become sonorous fo rger of paintings: what he copies from the original painting is an at-
and musical. It was Schopenhauer who defined a rch itecrure in terms of tributable form that is just as false as the copies; what escapes him is
two forces, that of bearing and that of being borne. support and load, the metamorphosis or transformation of the o riginal, the impossi bility
even if the two tend to merge together. But music appears to be the op- of anributing any particular form lO it, in short, creation. This is why
posite of this, when Nietzsche separates himself more and more from the higher men are merely the lowest degrees of the will to power:
the old fo rger, Wagner the magician: music is Lightness [la Legere ). " May men higher than you stride over you! You signify steps. "2] With
pure weightiessness,l' Does not the enti re triangular story of Ariadne them the will to power represents only a will to deceive, a will to take,
bear witness to an anti-Wagnerian lightness, closer to Offenbach a nd a will to dominate, a sickly, exhausted life that brandishes prostheses.
Strauss than to Wagner? To make the roofs da nce, to balance the Their very ro les are prostheses they use to prop themselves up. Only
beams-this is what is essential to Dionysus the musician.!' Doubtless Dionysus, the creative artist, attains the power of metamorphosis that
there is a lso an Apollonian, even Theseusian side to music, but it is makes him become, attesting to a surging forth of life. He carries the
a music that is distributed according lO terrilOries, milieus, activities, power of the false to a degree that is no longer effected in a form, but
ethoses: a work song, a marching song, a dance song, a song for re- in a transformation- Wthe gift-giving virtue," or the creation of pos-
pose, a d rinking song, a lullaby ... almost little " hurdy-gurdy songs," sibilities of life: transmutatio n. The will to power is like energy: an
each with its own panicular weight. ls In order fo r music to free itself, energy capable of transformin g itself i!'; called no ble. Those that merely
it will have to pass over to the other side-there where the territories know how to disguise or travesty themselves, that is, to take o n and
tremble, where the structures collapse, where the ethoses get mixed up, maintain a form that is always the same, are vile o r base.
where a powerful song of the earth is unleashed, the great ritornello To pass from Theseus to Dio nysus is, for Ariadne, a clinical matter,
that transmutes a ll the airs it carries away and makes return. 19 Diony- a question of health and healing. And for Dionysus as well. Dionysus
sus knows no other architecture than that of routes and trajectories. needs Ariadne. Dionysus is pure affirmation; Ariadne is the Anima, af-
Was this not already the distinctive feature of the lied: to ser out from fi rmation divided in fWO, the "yes" that responds to "yes." But, di-
the territory at the call or wind of the earth? Each of the higher men vided in fWO (didoublee], affirmation returns to Dionysus as the affir·
leaves his domain and makes his way lOward Zarathustra's cave. But mation that redoubles (redouble] . It is in this sense that the eternal
o nly the dithyramb spreads itself out over the earth and embraces it in return is the product of the union of Dionysus and Ariadne. As long
its entirety. Dionysus has no territory because he is everywhere o n the as Dionysus is a lone, he still fea rs the tho ught of the Eternal Return,
earth.20 The sonorous labyrinth is the song of the ea rth, the Ritornello, because he is afraid that it brings back reactive fo rces, the enterprise
the eternal return in person. of denying life, the little man (whether higher or sublime). But when
Bur why o ppose the fWO sides as the true and the false? Is it nO[ the Dionysian affirmation finds its full development in Ariadne, Dionysus
same power of the fa lse o n both sides, and is not Dionysus a great in turn learns something new: that the thought of the Eternal Return is
forge r, the greatest " in truth," the Cosmopolitan? Is not art the highest consoling, and at the same time, that the Eternal Return itself is selec-
power of the false? 8efWeen the high a nd the low, fro m one side to the tive. The Eternal Return does not occur without a transmutation. The
other, there is a considerable difference, a distance that must be af- Eternal Return, as the being of becoming, is the product of a double a f-
firmed. The spider is always respinning its web and the scorpion never fi rmation that only makes what affirms itself return, and o nly makes
StOpS stinging; each higher man is fixated on his own feat, which he what is active become. Neither reactive forces nor the will to deny will
rehearses like a circus act (and this is precisely how the fourth pan of retu rn : they 3re elimina ted by the transmutation, by the Eternal Return
Zarathustra is o rganized, much like Raymond Roussel 's gala of Incom- as se lection. Ariadne has forgotten Theseus; he is no longer even a bad
parables, or a puppet show, or an operetta). This is because each of memory. Theseus will never come back. The Eternal Return is active
these mimes has a n invariable model, a fixed form, that can always be and affirmative: it is the union of Dionysus and Ariadne. For this rea-
ca lled true, though It is JUSt as "false" as its reproductions. It!S like the son, Nietzsche com pares it nor on ly to the ci rcula r ear, but also to the
106 THE MYSTERV Of .... I .... ONE .... CCOROI NG TO NIHZSCHE

wedding ring: the labyrinth is the ring, the ear, the Eternal Return itself
that expresses what is active or affirmative. The labyrinth is no longer
the path on which one gets lost, but the path that returns. The laby-
rinth is no longer that of knowledge or morality, but the labyrinth of
life and of Being as filling being. A5. for the product of Dionysus and
Ariadne's union, it is the overman or the overhero, the opposite of the 13
higher man. The overman is the living being of caves and summits, the
on ly child conceived through the ear, the son of Ariadne and the Bull. He Stuttered

It is sometimes said that bad novelists feel the need to vary their dia-
logic markers ifndicatifsl by substituting for " he said " expressions
like " he murmured," "he stammered," "he sobbed," "he giggled," "he
cried," "he stuttered," all of which indicate different voice intonations.
And in fact, with regard to these intonations, the writer seems to have
only twO possibilities: either to do it (as did Balzac, when he made
Father Grandet stutter in his dealings with business matters, or when
he made Nucingen speak in a contorted patois; in each case we can
clearly sense Balzac's pleasure). Or else to sa)' it without doing it, to be
content with a simple indication that the reader is allowed to fill in:
thus, Masoch's heroes are constantly murmuring, and their voice must
be a barely audible murmur; Melville's Isabelle has a voice that must
nor rise above a murmur, and the angelic Billy Budd cannot stir with-
our our having to reconstitute his "stutter or even worse";' Kafka 's
Gregor squeaks more than he spea ks, but this is according to the testi-
mony of others.
However, there seems to be a third possibility: when sa),ing is
doing.2 This is what happens when the stuttering no longer affects
preexisting words, but itselL inrroduces the_words it affects; these
words no longer exist independently of the stutter, which 7eieCts and
links them together through itself. It is no longer the character who
stutters in speech; it is the writer who becomes a stutterer in language.
He makes the language as such stutter: an affective and intensive lan-
guage, and no longer an affectation of the one who speaks. A poetic
operation such as this seems to be very distant from the previous

107
108 HE STUTTUED HE STUTTERED 109

cases; but it is perhaps I ~ss distant from the second case than we might rion to other constants, but as a series of differential positions or
think. For when an author is contenr with an external marker that points of view on a specifiable dynamism: the indefinite article a covers
leaves the (ann of expression intact (" he stuttered ... "), its efficacy the entire zone of variation included in a movement of particulariza-
will bt poorly understood unless there is a corees odin arm 0 tion, and the definite article the covers the entire zone generated by the
content-an atmospheric quality, a milieu that acts as the conductor movement of generalization.4 It is a stuttering, with every position of a
of words-that brio 5 t ether with ' itself the uive the murmur or the constituting a zone of vibration. Language trembles from head V.
the stuner, the tremolo, or the vibr,!!o, and makes the indicaJe~ ~. This is the principle of a poetic comprehension of language
reverberate through the words. This, at least, is what happens in gn~at itself: it is as if the language were stretched along an abstract and infi-
writers like Melville, in whom the hum of the forests and caves, the nitely varied line. Even with respect to pure science, the question must
V silence of the house, and the presence of the guitar are evidence of be posed thus: ~we make progress if we do nourutr into regio1!J>
Isabelle's murmurings, and her soft, "foreign intonations"; or Kafka, far {rom equilibrittm? Physics attests to this. Keynes made advances in
who confi rms Gregor's squeaking through the trembling of hiS feet ~mCal economy because he related it to the situation of a "boom."
and the osci llations of his body; or even Masoch, who doubles the and no longer one of equilibrium. This is the only way to introduce
stammering of his characters with the heavy suspense of the boudoir, desire into the co.uesp.oruling..iield. Must language then be put into a
the hum of the village, or the vibrations of the steppe . .!he affects of state of boom, dose to a crash? Dante is admired for having " listened
lan&!!8e here become the ob'ect of an indirect effectuation, an yet to stammerers" and studied "speech impediments," not only to derive
they remain close to those that are made direc!.!X w en ten: are no speech effects from them, but in order to undertake a vast phonetic,
charactersOthe -~ 0 ds hemselves. "What was it my amily lexical, and even syntactic creation}
wished to say? I do not know. It had been stuttering since birth, and T his is not a situation of bilingualism or multilingualism. We can ':(-
yet it had something to say. This congenital stuttering weighs heavily easily conceive of two languages mixing with each other, with inces-
on me and many of my contemporaries. We were not taught to spea k sant transitions from one to the other; yet each of them nonetheless
but to stammer-and only by listening to the swelling noise of the remains a homogenous system in equilibrium, and their mixing takes
century and being bleached by the foam on the crest of its wave did place in speech. But this is not how great authors proceed, even though
we acqu ire a language. "3 " Kafka is a Czech writing in German, and Beckett an Irishman (often)
Is it possible to make language stutter without confusing it with writing in French, and so on. They do not mix two languages together,
s~h? Everything depends on the way we consider language. If we not even a minor language and a major language, though many of
extract it like a homogeneous system in equilibrium, or close to equi· them are linked to minorities as a sign of their vocation. What they do.
librium, defined by constant terms and relations, it is obvious that the rather, is invent a minor use of the major language within which [hy
disequilibriums and variations can only affect speech (nonpertinent ex ress themselves entirely; they minorize this language, much as in
variations of the intonation type). Bur if the system appe:ars in.,.eerpe.,!:. music, where the minor mode refers to ynamic combinations in per-
ual dise uilihrium or bifurcation, if each of its ter~n turn passes tual dise ui librium. They are great writers by virtue of this minori-
thro~~tinuous vari~tion t ~n tne languag~ itself ~ill z~ey make the anguage take fl ight, they send it racing along a
begin to vibrate and ~ULWJ~..!!:!g-confused With speech, witch's line, ceaselessly placing it in a state of dise uil ibrium, making it
whic never assumes more than one va riable position among others, bifurcate and vary in each of its terms, following an incessant modula-
or moves in more than one direction. If language merges with speech, tion. This exceeds the possibilities of spee<:h and atta ins the power of
it is on ly with a very particular kind of spee<:h, a ~tic speech that ac- the language, or even of language in its entirety. This means that a
w 'zes hese ower f bifu rcation and variation, of heter enesis and great writer is always like a foreigner in the langua~c in which he ex-

=
modulation hat are proper to language. The linguist Gu illaume, for
examp e, considers each term 0 f a anguage
- . re Ia-
not as a constant, III
presses himself: even if this is his n ative tongue. At the limit, he draws
his strength from a mlite and unknown minority that belongL9nl to
110 HE STUTHRfD HE STUTTfUD III

Jllin...He is a foreigner in his own language: he does not mix anmher ing one by the other or excluding one from the other, laying a u[ and
language with his own language, he carves our a nonpreexisttnt for- passing through the entire set o f possibi lities. Hence, in Watt, the ways
eign language within his own language. He makes the language itself in which Knott putS on his shoes, moves about his room , or changes
scream, stutter, stammer, or murmur.;.. What better compliment could his furniture. It is true that, in Beckett, these affirmative disjunctions
one receive than that of the critic who said of SCllen Pillars of Wisdom: usually concern the bearing or gait of the characters: an ineffable man-
this is not English. Lawrence made English stumble in order to extract ner of walking, while rolling and pitching. But this is how the transfer
from it we mysic and visions of AraQia. And what language did Kleist from the fo rm of expression to a form of content is brought aboUl. But
awaken deep within Germa n by mea ns of grimaces, slips of the tongue, we could equally well bring about the reverse transition by supposing
scfttChings, inarticulate sounds, extended liaisons, and brutal accelera- that the characters speak like they walk or stumble, for speaking is no
tions and decelerations, at the risk of horrifying Goethe, the greatest less a movement than walking: the former goes beyond speech toward
representative of the major language, and in order to attain these truly language, just as the latter goes beyond the organism toward a body
strange ends: petrified visions and a vertiginous music.' without organs. A confirmation of this can be found in one of Beckett's
Language is subject to a double process, that of choices to be made poems that deals specifically with the connections of language and
and that of seq uences to be established: disjunction or the selection of makes sruttering the poetic or linguistic power par excellence. I Beckett's
similars, connection or the consecution of combinables. As long as lan- procedure, which is different from Luca's, is as follows: he places him-
guage is considered as a system in equilibrium, the disjunctions are self in the middle of the sentence and makes the sentence grow out
necessarily exclusive (we do not say " passion," "ration," " nation" at from the middle, adding particle upon particle (que de ce, ce ceci-ci,
the same time, but must choose between them), and the connections, loin iii iii-bas a peine quoi .. . ) so as to pilot the block of a single expir-
progressive (we do not combine a word with its own elements, in a ing breath (I/Ou lais croire entrel/Oir quoi ... ). ..creative sturtering)s
kind of stoJ>'"start or forward-backward jerk). But fa r from equilib- what makes language grow from the middle. like Krass; it is what
rium, the disjunctions become included or inclusille, and the connec- makes Ian ua e a rhizo e instead of a tret what utS I iJU.ge in per-
tions, reflexille, following a rolling gait that concerns the process of ~Q!!equilibrium ; LUSeen, III Said (content and expression), Being
language and no longer the now of speech. Every word is divided, but well spoken has never been either the distinctive feature or the concern
into itself (pas-rats, passions·rations); and every word is combined, but of great writers.
with itself (pas-passe-passion ). It is as if the entire language started to There are many ways to grow from the middle, or to stutter. Peguy
roll from right to left, and to pitch backward and forward: the two does not work with asignifying particles, but rather with highly sig-
stutterings. If Gherasim Luca's speech is eminently poetic, it is because nificative terms: substantives, each of which defines a zone of varia-
he makes stuttering an affect of language and not an affectation of tion until it reaches the neighborhood of another substantive, which
speech. The entire language spins and varies in order to disengage a determines another zone (Mater purissima, catissima, in lJio/ata, Virgo
fi nal block of sound, a single breath at the limit of the cry, JE T'AIME po tens, clemens, fidelis). Peguy's repetitions give words a vertical thick-
I'ASSIONNtMENT (" I love you passionately"). ness and make them perpetually recommence the "unrecommence-
able." In Peguy, stuttering embraces the language so well that it leaves
Passionnc nez passionnem je the words intact, complete, and normal, but it uses them as if they
je r'ai je t'aime je were themselves the disjoi nted and decomposed members of a super-
je je jet je r'ai jetez
je I'aime passionnem t'aime.' human stuttering. Peguy is like a thwarted stutterer. In Roussel, there is
yet another procedure, fo r the stuttering no longer affects particles or
Luca the Romanian, Becket! the Irishman. Beckert took this art of complete terms, but proposi tions, perpetually inserted into the middle
inclusive disjunctions to its highest point, an art that no longer selects of the sentence, each within the preceding sentence, following a prolif-
but affirms the diSJointed terms through their distance, with.out limit- erating system of parentheses-to the point where there are five paren.
112 HE STUTTEREO ME STUTHlEO 113

theses inside each other, so that "with each additional increase this of music. but a musjc of words.., a painting with wort!!. a silence in
internal developmem could not fai l to overwhelm the language it en- words. as if the words could now discharge their cOntent: a r~ndiose
riched. The invention of each verse was the destruction of the whole vision or a sublime sound. What is specific to the drawings andpa~t­
and stipulated irs reconstitution.'" ings a great writers (Hugo, Michaux ... ) is nOt that these works are
This is therefo re a ramified variation of language. Each variable literary, for they are not literary at all; they attain pure visions, but
state is like a point o n a ridge line, which then bifurcates and is contin- visions that are still related to language in that they constitute an ulti-
ued along other lines. It is a syntactic line, syntax being constituted by mate aim, an outside, an inverse, an underside, an inkstain or unread-
the curves, rings, bends, a nd deviations of this dynamic line as it passes able handwriting. Words aint and sin but a ni at the limit of the
through the points, from the double viewpoint of disjunctions and path they trace throu&!!..!.heir divisions and combinations. Words cre- . +
conm:ctions. It is no Ion er the formal or su r(idal s "tax that gov- ate si ence. The siste~'s violin takes up Gregor's- squeaking, and the
erns the equi libriums of language, but a syntax in the process 0 guitar reflects Isabelle's murmur; the melody of a singing bird about to
conlina creation-of s ntax that~rth to a fo reign langua e die drowns out the stuttering of Billy Budd, the swett "barbarian."
within language, a grammar of disequilibrium. But in this sense it is When a Ian ua e is so strained that it starts to stutter: or to murmur or
insepa ra e rom an en , it tends towar a imlt that is itself no longer staq1mer . , , then ia'1J!lIJ1U jn its entir.e reaches the limit that marks
cither syntactic or grammatical, even when it sti ll seems to be so for- its out and makes it confront silence. When a language is strained lit
mally: hence Luca's formula, " je t'aime passionnement," which ex- in this way, language in its entirety is submitted to a pressure that \1
plodes like a scream at the end of long stuttering series (or the .. , prefer makes it fall silent. Style-the foreign language within language-is
not to" in Bart/ehy, which has even absorbed all the prior variations; made up of these nvo operations; or should we instead speak with
or e. e. cummings's "he danced his did, " which is extracted from varia- Proust of a nonstyle, that is, of "the elements of a style to come which
tions that are assumed to be merely virtual). Such expressions are taken do not yet exist"? Style is the economy of language. 1o To make one's
as inarticulate words, blocks of a single breath. This final limit eventu- language stutter, face to face, or face to back, and at the same time to
ally abandons any grammatical appearance in order to appear in its raw push language as a whole to its limit, to its outside to its silence-this
state in Artaud's breath-words: Artaud's deviant syntax, to the extent would be like the boom and the eras .
that it sets out to strain the French language, reaches the destination of Everyone can talk about his memories, invent stories, state opin-
its own tension in these breaths or pure intensities that mark a limit ions in his language; sometimes he even acquires a beautiful style,
of language. Or again, sometimes this takes place in different books. [n which gives him adequate means and makes him an appreciated writer.
<:eline, Journey to the End of the Night places the native language in Bur when it is a matter of digging under the stories, cracking open the
disequi libri um, Death on the Installment Plan develops the new syntax opinions, and reaching regions without memories, when the self must
in affective variations, while Guignol's Band achieves the ultimate aim: be destroyed, it is certainly not enough to be a "great" writer, and the
exclamatory sentences and suspensions that do away with all syntax. means must remain forever inadequate. Style becomes nons Ie and
in favor o f a pure dance of words. The two aspects are nonetheless cor- one's language lets an unknown foreign language escape from it, so that
relative: the tcnsor and the limit, the tension in language and the limit onecan reach the limits of language itself and become something othc;.r
of language. than a writer, conquering fragment ed visions that pass through the
The two aspects are effected in an infinity of tonalities, but always words of a poet, t~e "olors of a painter, or the sounds of a musician.
together: a limit of language that subtends the entire language, and a "The only thing the reader will see marching P~St him are inadequate
line of va riation or subtended modulation that brings language to this means: fragments, allusions, strivings, investigations. Do not try [Q find
limit. And JUSt as the new language is not externa l to the initial Ian · a well-polished sentence or a perfectly coherent image in it, what is
guage, the asyntactic limit is not external to language as a whole: it is printed on the pages is an embarrassed word, a stuttering ... "11 Biely's
the oUls ic:k ~guags: . but is not outside it. It is a e.ainting or a piece stuttering work, KOlik Lelaiell. is flung into a becoming-child that is
114 Hf STUTTeRED

not a "self" but the cosmos, rhe explosion of the world: a childhood
that is not my own, rhat is not a memory bur a block, an anonymous
and infinite fragment, a becoming that is always contemporary.12 Biely,
Mandelsram, Khlebnikov: a Russian trinity thrice the stutterer and
thrice crucified.
14
The Shame and the Glory:
T. E. lawrence

The desert and its perception, or the perception of the Arabs in the
desert, seem to pass through Goethean moments. In the beginning,
there is light, but it is not yer perceived. It is instead a pure trans-
parency, invisible, colorless, unformed, untouchable. It is the Idea, the
God of the Arabs. But the Idea, or the abstract, has no transcendence.
T he Idea is extended throughout space, it is like the Open: "beyond
there lay nothing but clear air. "l Light is the opening that creates
space. Ideas are forces that are exerted on space following certain di-
rections of movement: entities or hypostases, not transcendences. The
revah , the rebellion, is light because it is space (it is a question of ex-
tending it in space, of opening up as much space as possible) and it is
an Idea (what is essential is predication). The men of the rebellion are
the prophet and the knight-errant, Feisa l and Auda, he who preaches
the Idea and he who crosses space. l The "Movement": this is what the
revolt is called.
What comes to occupy this space is haze, solar haze. The rebellion
itself is a gas, a vapor. Haze is the· first state of nascent perception; it
creates mirages in which things rise and fall , as if under the action of a
piston, and men levitate, as if hung from a rope. To see through a haze
is to have blurred vision-the rough outlines of a hallucinatory percep-
tion, a cosmic gray,3 Does the gray then divide in two, producing black
when the shadow spreads or the light disa ppea rs, hut also white when
the luminosity itself becomes opaque? Goethe defined white as the

115
116 THE SHAME AND THE CLon : T. E. LAWRENCE THE SHAME AND THE GLORY: T. f. LAWUNCf 117

" fonuit ously opaqu~ flash of pure transparency"; white is the ever- shadowy tableau JUSt emerged from the deep. "9 But is it enough to
renewed accident of the desert, and the Arab world is painted in black invoke the objectivity of a milieu that distorts things, and that makes
and white. 4 But these are still only the conditions of perception, which perception flicke r or scintillate? Are there not rather sub;ective condi-
will be fully actualized when colors appear, that is, when white darkens tions that certainly require a favorable and objective milieu, are de-
into yellow and black lightens into blue: sand and sky, whose intensifi- '"piOyed in it, can coincide with it, but nonetheless retain an irresisribk:
cation produces a blinding crimson in which the world bums, and eye- and irreducible difference from it? It is by virtue of a subjective disposi-
sight is replaced by suffering. Si hI and suffer!" two entities . . . : "in tion that Proust finds his percepts in a current of air passing under a
the night, wak ing up, there had been no sight, o nly pain in his eyes:'$ door, and is left cold by the beauties others bring to his attention. 1Q In
From gray to red, there is the appearing and disappearing of the world Melville, there is a private ocean of which the sailors are unaware,
in the desert, all the adventures of the visible and its perception. The even if they have a fo reboding of it; it is there that Moby-Dick swims,
Idea in space is vision, which passes from a pure and invisible trans- and it is he who is cast into the ocean from the outside, but in order
parency to the crimson fire in which all sight burns. to transmute its perception and to "abstract" a Vision from it. In
"The union of dar k cliffs, pink floors, and pale green shrubbery Lawrence, there is a private desert that drives him to the Arabian
was beautiful to eyes sated with months of sunlight and sooty shadow. deserts, among the Arabs, and that coincides on many points with
When evening came, the declining sun crimsoned one side of the va lley their own perceptions and conceptions, but that retains an unmaster-
with its glow, leaving the other in purple gloom. '" lawrence is one of able difference that inserts them into a completely different and secret
the greatest pontayers of landscapes in literature. Rumm the sublime, Figure. Lawrence speaks Arabic. he dresses and lives like an Arab, even
the absolute vision, the landscape of the mind.' And color is mgve- un er torture he cries out in Arabic, but he does nOt imitate the Arabs,
ment, no less than the line; it is deviation...dj~~e n t. sliding,..QbJiq- he never renounces his difference, which he already experiences as a
ul..~olor and fine are born together and meldlnto...each..otbcr, Sand- betrayal. l1 Beneath his young groom 's suit, "suspect immaculate silk,"
stone or basah landscapes are made up of colors and lines, but they are he ceaselessly betrays his Bride. And Lawrence's difference does not
always in movement, the broad strokes being colored in coats, and the simply stem from the fact that he is English, in the service of England;
colors being drawn in broad strokes. Forms of thorns and blisters fo l- fo r he betrays England as much as Arabia, in a nightmare-dream
low upon each other, while at the same time colors are given names, where everything is betrayed at once. But neither is it his personal dif·
from pure transparency to hopeless gray. Faces correspond to the land- ference, since Lawrence's undertaking is a cold and concerted destruc-
scapes, they appear and disappear in these brief pictu res, which makes tion of the ego, ca rried to its limit. Every mine he plants also explodes
lawrence one of the great portraitists: "Though usually merry, he had within himself, he is himself the bomb he detonates. It is an infinitely
a quick vein of suffering in him ... "; " his streaming hair and the ruined secret subjectille disposition. which must not be confused with a na-
face of a tired tragedian ... r>; "his mind,like a pastoral landscape, had tional ~r personal character, and which leads him far from his own
four corners to itS view: cared-for, friendly, limited, displayed ... "j country, under the ruins of his devastated ego.
"upon his coarse eyelashes the eyelids sagged down in tired folds, No problem is more important than the nature of this disposition
through which, from the overhead sun, a red light gliuered into his that carries Lawrence along, freeing him from the "chains of being."
eye-sockets and made them look like fiery pits in which the man was Even a psychoana lyst would hesitate to say that this subjective disposi-
slowly burning.'" tion is homosexuality, or more precisely, the hidden love that lawrence,
The finest writers have singular conditions of perception that allow in his splendid dedicatory poem, makes the motivating force of his
them to draw on or shape aesthetic percepts like veritable visions, even action-though homosexua lity is no doubt included in the disposition.
if they return from them with red eyes. Melville's perceptions are im- Nor should we assume that it is a disposition to betray-though be-
pregnated from within by the ocean, so much so that the ship ~ms trayal perhaps follows from it. It would rather be a question of a pro-
unreal compa red with the empty sea and is imposed on sight like "a fou nd desire, a tendency to project- into things, into reality, ioro the
\
118 THE SHAME "ND THE GlORY: T. E. lAWRENCE Tlif SIiAME ANO Tlif GLORY: T. E. LAW REN CE 11 9

future , and even into the sky-an image of himself and others so in- shows how his writing project is linked to the Arab movement: lacking
tense that it has a life of its own; an image that is always stitched to- a literary technique, he needs the mechanism of revolt and preaching
gether, patched up, continually growing along the way, to the point to become a writer. U
where it becomes fabulou s, II It is a machine for manufacturing giants, The images Lawrence projects into the rea l are not inflated images
what Bergson called a fabulatory fu nction. that would sin by a false extension, but are va lid solely through the
Lawrence says that he sees through a haze, that he cannot immedi- pure intensity, whether dramatic or comic, that the writer is able to give
ately perceive either forms or colors, that he can only recogQize things the event. And the image he offers of himself is not a deceptive image,
through direct co nta~ that he is hardly a man of action, that he is in- because it has no need to correspond to a preexisting rea lity. As Genet
t;;-wed in Ideas rather than ends and theif means; that he has hardly says of this type of projection, behind the image there is nothing, an
any imagination and does not like dreams ... And in these negative "absence of being," an emptiness that bears witness to a dissolved ego.
characterizations, there are already numerous motifs that link him There is nothing beh ind the images, even the bloody and harrowing
with the Arabs. But what inspires him, what carries him along, is to be ones, except the mind that regards them with a strange coldness.16
a "diurnal dreamer," to be a truly dangerous man, one who defines There are thus two books in SelJe1t Pillars of Wisdom, two books that
himself neither in relation to the real or action, nor in relation to the are intertwined with each other: the first concerns the images projected
imaginary or dreams, but solely in relation to the force through which
he projects images into the real, images he was able to draw from him-
self and his Arab frie nds.13 Did these images correspond to what they
really were? Those who criticize Lawrence for ascribing himself an
importance he never had are simply revealing their personal peniness,
into the real, leading a life of their own; the second concerns the mind
that contemplates them, given over to its own abstractions.
But the mind that contemplates is not itself empty, and the abstrac-
ti2.!!.~~hJ: eyes of the mi nd. Tlte mind's serenity is beSet by thou hts
that claw awa at it. The mind is a Beast wit mu riple eyes! always
I
their aptitude for denigration as much as their inaptitude in compre- ready to leap on the anima l bodies it perceives. Lawrence insists on
hending a text. For Lawrence does not hide the fa ct that he gives him- ~ is passion fo r a straction, whk e shares with the Arabs: both
self a very local role, caught up in a fragile network; he underscores the Lawrence and the Arabs will gladly interrupt an action in order to fol-
insignificance of many of his undertakings, as when he plants mines Iowan Idea they come across. I am the manservant of the abstractY
that do not go off and cannot remember where he planted them. As for Abstract ideas are not dead things, they are entities that inspire power- \
his final success, in which he takes a certain pride without sustaining ful spatial dynamisms; in the desert they are intimately linked up with
any illusions about it, it lies in his having led the Arab partisans to the projected images-things, bodies, or beings. This is why Seven
Damascus before the arrival of the Allied troops-under conditions Pillars is the object of a double reading, a double theatricality. Such is
somewhat analogous to those that would be reproduced at the end of Lawrence's special disposition-a gift for making entities live passion-
the Second World War, when resistance fighters seized the official ately in the desert, alongside people and things, in the jerking rh ythm
buildings of a liberated city, and even had time to neuualize the repre- of a ca mel 's gait. Perhaps this gift con fers something unique on
sentatives of a compromise at the last minute. L4 In short, it is not some Lawrence's language, somethin that sounds like a foreign language,
SOrt of contemptible individua l mythomania that compels Lawrence to less Ara ic t an a p antom German that is inscribed in IS stye, en-
project grand iose images on his path, beyond his often modest under- dowing the English language with new powers (an English that does
takings. The projection machine is inseparable from the movement of not flow, sa id Forster, but is granular, uneven, constantly changing
the Revolt itself: it is subjective, but it refers to the subjectivity of die regime, full of abstractions, stationary processes, and frozen visions).{!...
revolutionary group. And Lawrence's writing, his style, makes use of In any case, the Arabs were enchanted by Lawrence's capacity fo r ab-
this machine in its own way, or rather acts as its relay: the subjective straction . One feverish evening, his fe brile mind inspired in him a half-
disposition, that is to say, the force through which the images are pro- deli rious discourse denouncing Om'liporence and In finity, imploring
jected, is inseparably politica l, erotic, and artistic. Lawrence himself these entities to hit us even ha rder in order to forrify us with the
\
120 THE SHAME AND THE GLORY: T. E. LAWRENCE THE SHAME AND THE GLORY: T. E. LAWRENCE 121

weapons of their own ruin, and exa lting the importance of being them, and make giants of them. "Our confidence game glorified them.
beaten: Nondoing is our only victory, and Failure our sovereign free- The more we condemned and distrusted ourselves, the more we were
dom . "To the dear-sighted, failure was the only goal .. ,"19 What is able to be proud of them, our creatures. OUf will blew them before us
most curious is that his listeners were so filled with enthusiasm that like straw, and they were nOt straw, but the bravest, simplest, most gay
they decided ro join the Revoir on the SpOt. of men." For Lawrence, the first great theoretician of guerrilla warfare,
One moves from images to entities. In the final analysis, then, this the dominating opposition is between the raid and the battle, between
is Lawrence's subjective disposition: a world of entities that passes partisans and armies. The problem of guerrilla warfare merges with
through the desert, that doubles the images, intermingling with them that of the desert: it is the problem of individuality or subjectivity, even
and giving them a visionary dimension. Lawrence says that he knows if it is a group subjectivity, in which the fate of freedom is at stake,
these entities intimately, but their character escapes him. Character whereas the problem of wars and armies is the organ ization of an
must not be confused with an ego. At the most profound level of sub- anonymous mass sub jected to objective rules, which set out to turn the
jectivity, there is nOl an ego but rather a singular composition, an idio- men into "types. "23 The shame of battles, which soil the desert-the
syncrasy, a secret cipher marking the unique chance that these entities only battle Lawrence fights against the Turks, out of weariness, turns
had been retained and willed, that this combination had been thrown into an ignoble and useless slaughter. The shame of armies, whose
and not another. It is this combination that is named Lawrence. A dice members are worse than convicts, and merely attract whores.24 It is
throw, a Will that throws the dice. Character is the Beast: mind, will, true that groups of partisans sometimes have to form an army, or at
desire, a desert-desire that brings together heterogenous entities. 2o The least be integrated into an army, if they want to achieve a decisive vic-
problem then becomes: What are these subjective entities, and how are tOry; but at that point they cease to exist as free men and rebels. For al-
they combined? Lawrence devotes the grandiose chapter 103 to this most half of Seven Pillars, we are made to witness the long obliteration
problem. Of all the entities, none appears with greater insistence than of the partisan period-the camels are replaced by automatic machine
Shame and Glory, Shame and Pride. Perhaps it is their relationship that guns and Rolls-Royces, and the guerrilla chiefs by experts and politi-
permits him to decipher the secret of character. Never before has cians. Even comfort and success create shame. Shame has many con-
shame been sung like this, in so proud and haughty a manner. tradictory motifs. At the end, as he steps aside, filled with his own soli·
V Every entity is multiple, and at the same time is linked with various tude, with two mad laughs, Lawrence can say with Kafka: " It was as if
other entities. Shame IS first of all the sha me of betraying the Arabs, the shame of it must outlive him. "25 Shame enlarges the man.
since Lawrence never stops guaranteeing English promises that he There are many shames in one, but there are also other sha mes.
knows perfectly well will not be kept. Though he is honest, Lawrence How is it possible to command without shame? To command is to steal
still feels the shame of preaching national freedom to men of another sou ls in order to deliver them over to suffering. A leader cannot be
nation: an unlivable situation. Lawrence constantly lives like a confi- legitimized by the crowd that believes in him-"fervent hopes united in
dence man: " I must take up again my mantle of fraud. "21 But he al- myopic multitudes"-if he does not take on the suffering and sacrifice
ready experiences a kind of compensatory fidelity by betraying his himself. But shame survives even in this redemptive sacrifice, for one
own race and his government a little, since he is training partisans ca- has now taken the place of others. The redeemer takes delight in his
pable, he hopes, of forcing the English to keep their word (hence the own sacri fi ce, but "he wounds his brothers' virility": he has not suffi -
importance of entering Damascus). Mingled with shame, his pride lies ciently immolated his own ego, which preventS others from themselves
in seeing the Arabs so noble, so beautiful, so charming (even when they taking on the role of the redeemer. This is why "the virile disciples are
in turn betray a little), so opposed in every respect to the English sol- ashamed": it is as if Christ had deprived the thieves of the glory that
diers.21 For in keeping with the demands of guerrilla warfare, he is could have been theirs. The shame of the redeemer because he "cast
training warriors and not soldiers. As the Arabs join the Revolt, they down the bought."26 These are the sort of clawed thoughts that tear
are molded more and more on the projected images that individualize away at Lawrence's brain and make Seven Pillars an almost mad book.
122 THE SHAME ANO THE GLORY: T. E. LAWRENCE TME SM AME ... NO TME GLORY: T. E. L",WH N CE 123

Must we then choose servitude? But what could be more shameful shame is something more than distrust: Lawrence insists on his differ-
than to be subject to one's inferiors? The shame is doubled when man ence from the Arabs. He has shame because he thinks the mind,
has to depend on anima ls, not only in his biological functions, bur for though distinct, is inseparable from the body; rhe two are irremed iably
his most human projects. Lawrence mounts his horse only when ab- linked. 33 In this sense, the body is nOt even a means or a vehicle for the
solutely necessary. and he prefers to walk in bare feet on sharp coral, mind, but rather a ~molecular sluds.e" that adheres to all the mind's
not only to harden himself but also because he is ashamed to depend actions. When we act, the body lets itself be forgotten . But when it is
on a form of existence whose very resemblance to us is enough to reduced to a state of sludge, on the contrary, one has the strange feel-
remind us of what we are in the eyes of God P Despite the admiring ing that it finally makes itself visible and attains its ultimate aim."" The
or comic portrait he gives of several camels, his haued erupts when Mint opens with this shame of the body and its marks of infamy. In
the fever abandons him to their stench and abjection.18 And in armies, two famous episodes, Lawrence reaches the limit of horror: in his own
there are servitudes that make us depend on men who are no less infe- body, tortured and raped by the soldiers of the bey; and in the bodies
rior to us than the beasts. A forced and shameful servitude-such is the of the agonized Turks, who limply raise their hands to show they are
problem of armies. And if it is true that Seven Pillars poses the ques- still alive.35 The idea that horror nonetheless has an aim stems from the
tion, How can one live and survive in the desert as a free subjectivity? fact that molecular sludge is the body's final state, which the mind con-
Lawrence's other book, The Mint, asks, "Can I again become a man templates with a certain attraction, finding in it the security of a final
like others by binding myself to my equals?" How can one live and level that it cannot pass beyond.3' The mind depends on the body;
survive in an army as an anonymous "type," objectively determined shame would be nothing without this dependency, this attraction for
down to the smallest detail ?l' Lawrence's two books can perhaps be the abject, this voyeurism of the bodr. Which means that the mind is
read as an exploration of two ways, like Parmenides' poem. When ashamed of the body in a very special manner; in fact, it is ashamed for
Lawrence plunges into anonymity and is engaged as a simple soldier, the body. It is as if it were saying to the body: You make me ashamed,
he passes from one way to the other. The Mint is in this sense the song . You ought to be ashamed ... "A bodily weakness which made my ani-
of shame, just as Seven Pillars is the song of glory. But just as glory mal self crawl away and hide until the shame was passed. "17
is already filled with shame, perhaps shame has a glorious outcome. Being ashamed for the body impl ies a very particular conception
Glory is so compromised by shame that servitude becomes glorious- of the body. According to this conception, the body has autonomous
but only on the condition that it is taken on volumarily. There is al- external reactions. The body is an anima l. What the body does it does
ways glory to extract from shame, a "glorification of humanity's cross." alone. Lawrence makes Spinoza's formula his own: we do nO[ know
It is a volumary servitude that Lawrence demands of himself, a kind of what a body can do! In the midst of his tortures, an erectjon; even in
arrogant masochistic contract that he calls on with all his goodwill: the state of sludge, there are convulsions that jolt the body, like the
a subjection, and not an enslavement. 3o It is volumary servitude that reflexes that still animate a dead frog. And there are the gestures of the
defines a subject-group in the desert-for example, Lawrence's own dying, that attempt at raising their hands that makes all the agonizing
bodyguard. 3 1 But it is also what transmutes the abject dependence on Turks ;ipple together, as if they had practiced the same theatrical ges-
the army into a splendid and free servitude: hence the lesson of The ture, provoking Lawrence's mad laughter. For all the more reason, in
Mint, in which Lawrence goes from the shame of the Prison to the its normal state, the body never ceases to act and react before the mind
glory of the officers' school. Lawrence's two ways, his twO very differ- moves it. One might perhaps recall William lames's theory of the emo-
ent questions, meet up in voluntary servitude. tions, which has often been sub ject to absurd reiutarions.l8 James sug-
The third aspect of shame, without a doubt the most essential one, geStS; paradoxical order: ( I ) I perceive a lion, (2) my body trembles,
is the shame of the body. Lawrence admi res the Arabs because they dis- (3) I am afraid; (1 ) the perception of a situation, (2) rhe modification
trust the body; "in successive waves they had been dashing themselves of the body, a reenforcement or a wea kening, (3 ) the emotion of con-
against the coasts of the flesh" throughout their entire history.n Bm sciousness or the mind. James is perhaps wrong to confuse this order
124 THE SHAME AND tHE GLon: I. E. LAWRENCE THE SHAME AND THE GlO ~Y : T. f . l AWI(NCE 125

with a causality, and to believe that the emotion of the mind is merely the Arabs, for the Arabs, before the Arabs. Yet Lawrence bears the
the result or effect of corporeal modifications. But the order is correct: shame within himself, for all time, from birth, as a profou nd compo-
I am in an exhausting situation; my body "crouches down a nd nent of his Character. And it is through this profound shame that the
crawls"; my mind is ashamed. The mind begins by coldly and curi- Arabs set about playing the glorious role of an expiation, a voluntary
ously regarding what the body does, it is fi rst of all a witness; then it is purification; Lawrence himself helps them transform their paltry
affected, it bKomes an impassioned witness, tha t is, it experiences for undertakings into a war of resistance and liberation, even if the latter
itself affects that afe not simply effects of the body, but veritable criti· must fail through betrayal (the fa ilure in turn doubles the splendor or
cal entities that hover over the body and judge it.J9 purity). The English, the Turks, the whole world distrusts them; but it
Spiritual entities or a bstract ideas are not what we think they are: is as if the Arabs, insolent and cheerfu l, leap beyond shame and cap-
they a re emotions or affects. They are innumerable, and do nor simply ture the reflection of Vision and Beauty. They bring a stra nge freedom
consist of shame, though shame is one of the principal entities. There into the world, where glory and shame enter into an almost spiritual
are cases where the mind is ashamed of the body, but also cases where combat. This is where Jean Genet has many points in common with
the body makes it laugh, or ind~d charms it, as with the young and Lawrence: the impossibility of identifying with the Arab (Palestinian)
handsome Arabs ("the love-locks plaited tightly over each temple in cause; the shame o f not being able to do so; the deeper shame that
long horns, made them look like Russian dancers").40 It is always the comes from elsewhere, cosubstantial with being; and the revelation of
mind that is ashamed, cracks, or extracts pleasure or glory, while the an insolent beauty that shows, as Genet says, at what poi nt " the com-
body "continues to toil away obstinately." Affective critical entities do ing out of shame was easy," as least for a moment ...~2
not cancel each other out, but can coexist and intermingle, composing
the character of the mind, constituting not an ego but a center of grav-
ity that is displaced from one entity to the next, following the secret
threads of this marionette theater. Perhaps this is what glory is: a hid-
den will that makes entities communicate, and extracts them at the
favorable moment.
Entities rise up and act on the mind when it contemplates the
body. These are acts of subjectivity. They are not only the eyes of the
mind, but its Powers a nd its Words. What we hear in Lawrence's style
is the shock of entities. But because their only object is the body, they
provoke, at the limit of language, the a ppa rition of great visual and
sonorous images-images that hollow out these bod ies, whether ani-
mate or inanimate, in order to humiliate and magnify them at the same
time, as in the opening of Sellen Pillars: "At night we were stained by
dew, a nd shamed into pettiness by the inn umerable si lences of stars. "~l
It is as if the entities populate a private desert that is applied to the ex-
ternal desert, and projects fabulous images onto it through the bodies
of men, beasts, and rocks. Entities and Images, Abstractions and Vi-
sions combine to make of Lawrence another William Blake. Lawrence
does not lie, and even in pleasure he experiences all kinds of shame in
relation to the Arabs: the shame of disguising himself, of sharing their
misery, of commanding them. of deceiving them ... He is ashamed of
TO HAVE DONE WITH JUDGMENT 127

to be infinite. O r as Lawrence says, Christianity did not renounce


power. but rather invented a new form of power as the Power to judge:
the destiny of man is "postponed " at the same time that judgment
I ~Cl.'1
\'
becomes a fina l authority.· The doctrine of judgment appears in the
Apocalypse or the Last Judgment, JUSt as it appears in the theater of
15 America. Kafka, for his part, locates the infinite debt in an "apparent
aquinal,"a nd the deferred destiny in an "unlimited postponement, "
both of which keep the judges beyond our ~rience and our compre-
To Have Done with Judgment hension.1 Artaud will never cease to pit the operation of having done

1
with the j~dgment of God against the infinite. For all fou r, the logic of
judgment merges with the psychology of the priest, as the inventor
of the most somber organization: I want to judge, I have to judge ... It
is not as if the judgment itself were postponed, put off until tomorrow,
pushed back to infi nity; on the contrary, it is the act of postponing, of
Fro m Greek tragedy to modern philosophy, an entire d octrine of judg- carrying to infinity, that makes judgment possible. The condition of
ment has been elaborated and developed. What is tragic is less the ac· judgment lies in a supposed relation between existence and the infinite
tion than the judgment, and what Greek tragedy instituted at the out- in the order of time. The power to judge and to be judged is given to
set was a tribunal. Kant did not invent a true critique of judgment; on whomever stands in this relation. Even the judgment of knowledg~
the contrary, what the book of this title established was a fantastic envelops an infinity of space, time, and experience that determines the
subjective tribunal. Breaking with the Judeo-Christian tradition, it was existence of phenomena in space and time ("every time that ... "J. But
Spinoza. who carried out the critique, and he had four great d isciples to the judgment of knowledge in this sense implies a prior moral and theo-
ta ke it up again and push it further: Nietzsche, D. H. Lawrence. Kafka, logical fo rm, according to which a relation was established between
Artaud. These four had personally, singularly suffered fro m judgment. existence and [he infinite fo llowing an order of time: the existing being
They experienced that infinite point at which accusation, deliberation, as having a debt to God.
and verdict converge. Nietzsche moved like a condemned man from But what then can be distinguished from judgment? Would it be
room to room, against which he set a grandiose defiance; Lawrence enough to invoke a "prejudicative" that would be both its ground and
li ved under the accusations of immoralism and pornography that were its horizon? And wou ld this be the same thing as an anti judicative,
brought against the least of his watercolors; Kafka showed himself to understood as Antichrist-less a ground than a collapse, a landsl ide, a
be "diabolical in all innocence" in order to escape from the "tribunal loss of horizons? ~isti ng beings confront each other, and obtain re-
in the hotel" where his infinite engagements were being judged. 1 And dress by means of jnjte relations thar merely constitute the course of
who suffered more from judgment in its harshest form, the terror of til1!.e. Nietzsche's greatness lies in having shown, without any hesita-
psychiatric expertise, than Artaud-Van Gogh? ......- rion, that the creditor-debtor relation was primary in reiatio'l to all ex-
It was Nietzsche who was able lay ba re the condition of judgment: change.' One begins by promising, and becomes indebted not to a god
r" the consciousness of bei ng in debt to the deity,'" the adventu re of debt but to a partner, depending on the forces that pass between the parties,
as it becomes infinite and thus unpayable. 2 Man does nOt appeal to which provoke a change o f state and create something new in them: an
judgment, he judges and is judgable only to the extent that his exis- affect. Everything takes place between parties, and the ordeal is not a
tence is sub ject to an infinite debt : the infinity of the debt and the im- judgment of God, si nce there is neither god nor judgment.? Where
mortality of existence each depend on the other, and together consti- Mauss and then Levi-Strauss still hesitated, Nietzsche did not hesi tate;
\-tute "the doctrine of judgment." J The debtor must survive if his debt is there exists a justice that is opposed to all judgment. according to which

"6
'26 TO HAve OONE WITH JUDGMENT TO HAVE DONE WITH JUDGMENT "9
bodies are marked by each other, and the debt is inscribed directly on What form does my lot condemn me to ? But also, Does my lot carre:'
the body following the finite blocks that circulate in a territory. The
law [Ie droit) does not have the immobility of eternal things, but is
spond to the form I aspire to? This is the essential effect of judgment:
existence is cut into lots, the affects are distributed into lots, and then
v
ceaselessly displaced among families that either have to draw blood or related to hi her forms (thiSTs a constant theme in 60tli Nietzsche and
pay with it. Such are the terrible signs that lacerate bodies and stain Lawrence: the denunciation of this claim to "jud e" Ii e in e name 0
them, the incisions and pigments that reveal in the flesh of each person higher values). Men judge insofar as they va lue their own lots, and are
what they owe and are owed: an entire system of cruelty, whose echo judged insofar as a fo rm either confirms or dismisses their claim . Thel.!
can be heard in the philosophy of Anaximander and the tragedy of judge and are judged at the same time, and take equal delight in judg-
Aeschylus.' In the doctrine of judgment, by contrast, OUf debts are in- ing and being judged. Judgment burst in on the world in the form of
scribed in an autonomous book without our even realizing it, so that the false ;udgment leading to delirium and madness, when man is mis-
we are no longer able to payoff an account that has become infinite. taken abOut his lot, and in the form the ;udgment of God, when the
We are dispossessed, expelled from our territory, inasmuch as the book form imposes another lot. A;ax would be a g examp e. e oc-
has already collected the dead signs of a Proprietorship that claims to trme a ju gment, in its infancy, has as much need of the false judg-
be eternal. The bookish doctrine of judgment is moderate only in ap- ment of man as it does of the formal judgment of God. A final bifurca-
pearence, because it in fact condemns us to an endless servitude and tion takes place with Christianity: there are no longer any lots, for it is
annuls any liberatory process. Anaud will give sublime developments our judgments that make up our only lot; and there is no longer any
to the system of cruelty, a writing of blood and life that is opposed to form, for it is the judgment of God that constitutes the infinite form.
the writing of the book, just as justice is opposed to judgment, provok- At the limit, dividing oneself into JOts and punishing oneself become
ing a veritable inversion of the sign. 9 Is this not also the case with the characteristics of the new judgment or modern tragedy. Nothing is
Kafka, when to the great book of The Trial he opposes the machine of left but judgment, and every judgment bears on another judgment. Per-
"The Penal Colony"-a writing in bodies that testifies both to an an- haps Oedipus prefigures this new state in the Greek world. And what
cient order and to a justice in which obligation, accusation, defense, is modern about a theme like Don Juan is less the comic action than
and verdict all merge together? The system of cruelty expresses the fi- this new form of judgment. This second movement of the doctrine of
nite relations of the existing body with the forces that affect it, whereas judgment, in very general terms, can be expressed in the following
the doctrine of infinite debt determines the relationships of the immor- manner: we are no longer debtors of the gods through forms or ends,
tal soul with judgments. The system of cruelty is everywhere opposed but have become in our entire being the infinite debtors of a single
to the doctrine of judgment. God. The doctrine of judgment has reversed and replaced the system of
Judgment did not appear on a soil that, even had it been quite dif- affects. These cha racteristics are found even in the judgment of knowl-
ferent, would have favored its blossoming. Ruptures and bifurcations edge or experience.
were necessary. The debt had to be owed to the gods; it had to be re- The world of judgment establishes itself as in a dream. It is [he
lated, no longer to the forces of which we were the guardians, but to df(~am that makes the lots turn (Ezekiel's wheel ) and makes the forms
the gods who were supposed to have given us these forces. Many cir- pass in procession . In the dream, judgments are hurled into the void,
cuitous paths had to be taken, for at the outset the gods were passive without encountering the resistance of a milieu that would subject them
witnesses or plaintive litigants who could not judge (as in Aeschylus's to the exigencies of knowledge or experience; this is why the question
Eumenides ). It was only gradually that the gods and men mgether of judgment is first of all knowing whether one is dreaming or not.
raised themselves to the activity of judging-for bener or for worse, as Moreover, Apollo is both the god of judgment and the god of dreams:
can be seen in Sophocles' plays. At bottom, a doctrine of judgment pre- it is Apollo who judges, who imposes limits and emprisons us in an or-\
sumes thar the gods give fats to men, and that men, depending on their ganic form, it is the dream that emprisons life within these forms in
lots, are fit for some particular form, for some particular organic end. whose name life is judged. The dream erects walls, it feeds on death
130 TO HAVE DONE WITH JUDGMENT TO HAVE CONE WITH JUDGMENT

and cr~a(es shadows, shadows of all things and of the world, shadows judgment all the more inasmuch as it is not an "organism, " and is de- ~ .
of ourselves. But o nce we leave the sho res of judgment, we also repudi- prived of this organization o f the organs through which one judges and /. e ·
ate the dream in favor of an "intoxication," like a high tide sweeping is judged. Where we once had a vital and living body, God has made us ' (.. ~)
over us. 10 What we seek in states of intoxicarion---drinks, drugs, ec- .IOtO an orgaOlsm,
. woman has lurned us ·Into an organism. . Artau d pre- \rdAA...,.',
stasies-is an antidote to both the dream and judgment. Whenever we sents this "body without organs" that God has stolen from us in order t
turn away from judgment toward justice, we enter into a dreamless to palm off an organized body without which his judgment could not ( h e_
I sleep. What the fo ur authors denounce in the dream is a state that is
still too immobile, and t OO directed, t OO governed. Groups that are
i be exercised. IS The body without organs is an affective, intensive, an- ,..l. ... .i,.. ~L
I a..;;hist body that consists solely of poles, zones, thresholds, and gradi-
7.
deeply interested in dreams, like psychoanalysts or surrealists, are also Vents. It is traversed by a powerful, nonorgan ic vitality. Lawrence paints
J quick to fo rm tribuna ls that judge and punish in reality: a disgusting
mania, frequent in dreamers. In his reservations concerning surrealism,
the picture of such a body, with the sun and moon as its poles, with
its planes, its sections, and its plexuses. 1' Moreover, when Lawrence
Artaud insists that it is not thought that collides with the kernel of a assigns his characters a double determination, it would seem that the
.,/ dream, but rather dreams that bounce off a kernel of thought that es- first is a personal, organic feeling, but the second is a powerful, inor- I'J t!.,.
~ them. 11 The peyote rites, according to Artaud, and the songs of ganic affect that comes to ass on this ; ital body: "The more exquisite J
the Mexican forest, according to Lawrence, are not dreams, but states t e music, the more perfectly he produced it, in sheer bliss; and at the ~'''''''
of intoxication or sleep. This dreamless sleep is not a state in which we same time, the more intense was the maddened exasperation within
fall asleep, but one that tra ve~ the night and inhabits it with a fright- him."1 7 Lawrence ceaselessly describes bodies that are organically de-
ening clarity. It is not daylight, but Lightning: "In the dream of the fective or unattractive-like the fat retired toreador or the skinny, oily
night I see gray dogs, creeping forward to devour the dream. " 12 This Mexican general-but that are nonetheless traversed by this intense vi- /
dreamless sleep, in which one does not fall asleep, is Insomnia, for only tality that defies organs and undoes their organization. ThIs nonorg~'l l/, .
insomnia is appropriate to the night, and can fill and populate it.ll The vitali IS the relation of the bod to the imperc9tible forces and w eo hi ~
dream is rediscovered, no longer as a dream of sleep or a daydream, ers that seize hold of it, or that it seizes hold of, lust as the moon take ~,, "~"":..'::
but as an insomniac dream. The new dream has become the guardian hol(fQf a woman's body. In Artaud, the anarchist Helioga balus wil If'~H v",
of insomnia. As in Kafka, it is no longer a dream one has while sleep- constantly bear witness to this confrontat10n between forces and pow- '} ......
ing, but a dream one has alongside insomnia: " I'll send Ito the country) en as so many becomlngs: becoming-mineral, becoming-vegetable, $<,.....-,,"'. .
my clothed body.... For I myself am meanwhile lying in my bed, becoming-animal. l!e way to esc.!lPC: j~dgme ~ g> make yourself, 1/
/ smoothly covered over with the yellow-brown blanket .. . "\4 The in- _bod without organs to find our body without orga'!.5' This had a ll t(... ..,t((,.
somniac can remain motionless, whereas the dream has taken the real ready been Nietzsche's project: to define the body in its becoming, i ~ ....
movement upon itself. This dreamless sleep in which one nonetheless its intensity, as the wer to affect or to be affected, that is, as Will to 1
does not fall asleep, this insomnia that nonetheless sweeps the dream Power. And if Kafka, at first sight, does not see-;-to take part in this
along as far as the insomnia extends-such is the state of Dionysian in- current, his work nonetheless makes two worlds or twO bodies coexist,
toxication. its way of escaping judgmr nt. each of which reacts upon and enters into the other: a body of judg-
- The physical system of cruelty is also opposed to the theological ment, with its organization, its segments (contiguity of offices), its dif-
doctrine of judgment from a third aspect, at the level of the body. This fe rentiations (bailiffs, lawyers, judges ... ), its hierarchies (classes of
is because judgment implies a veritable organization of the bodies judges, of bureaucrats); but also a body of justice in which the seg-
through which it acts: organs are both judges and judged, and the ments are dissolved, the differentiations lost, and the hierarchies thrown ....../r
judgment of God is nothing other than the power to organize to infin- into confus ion, a body that retains nothing but intensities that make
ity. Whence the relationship between judgment and the sense organs. up ~ncertain zones that traverse these zones at full speed and confront
The body of the physical system is completely different; it escapes the powers in them ... on this anarchic body restored to itself ("Justice I
TO HAVE DONE WITH JUDGMENT TO HAVE DONE WITH JUDGMENT 133

wants nothing from you, it receives you when you come and dismisses mies, but this is the most mediocre aspect of their combat, fit for a
you when you go ... ").18 domestic scene. More profoundly, man and woman are two flows that
A fourth characteristic of the system of cruelty follows from this: must struggle, that can either seize hold of each other alternately, or

I
combat, combat everywhere; it is combat that replaces judgment. And separate while devoting themselves to chastity, which is itself a force, a
no doubt the combat appears as a combat against judgment, against its flow.21 Lawrence meets up with Nietzsche intensely---everything good
~ J'O authorities and its personae. But more profoundly, it is_the combat,ant V is the result of a combat-and their common master is the thinker of
~ .. rlI.... himself wJto is the combat: the combat is betweenhis own parts, be- combat, Heraclitus.l l Neither Artaud nor Lawrence nor Nietzsche has
tween the forces that either sub~t~ or ~bjugated, and between anything to do with the Orient and its ideal of noncombat; their high-
the powers that express these(relations f force. Thus, all of Kafka 's est places are Greece, Etruria, and Mexico, places where things come
works could be entitled "Description of a Combat": the combat against and become in the course of the comba t that composes their forces.
the castle, against judgment, against his father, against his fiancees. All But whenever someone wants to make us renounce combat, what he is
gestures are defenses or even attacks, evasions, ripostes, anticipations offering us is a "nothingness of the will," a deification of the dream, a
of a blow one does not always see coming, or of an enemy one is not cult of death, even in its mildest form-that of the Buddha or Christ as
always able to identify: hence the importance of the body's postures. a person (independently of what Saint Paul makes of him).
But these external combats, these combats-against, find their justifica- But neither is combat a " will to nothingness." Combat is not war.
tion in the combats-between that determine the composition of forces War is only a combat-aga inst, a will to destruction, a judgment of God
in the combatant. The combat against the Other must be distin uished that turns destruction into something "just." The judgment of God is
from the combat tween nese. e combat-against tries to destroy on the side of war, and not combat. Even when it takes hold of other
.u"C""';4 or repel a force (to struggle against "the diabolical powers of the fu- forces, the force of war be ins by mutilatin these forces, reducing , H
" rt.IAJ..:"~...( ture "), but the combat-between, by contrast, tries to take hold of a them to their oweS[ state. In war, t e will to power merely means that N.~ h ~r
I ,.~, force inorder to make it one's own. The combat-between is the process the will wants strength [puissance] as a maximum of power [pou voir] ( .. r't.N\· )
~ 31.~ .. \t through which a force enriches itself by seizing hold of other forces or domination. For Nietzsche and Lawrence, war is the lowest d~ee
and joining itself to them in a new ensemble: a becoming. Kafka 's love of the will to we its sickness. Artaud begins by evoking the relation}
letters can be seen as a combat against the fiancee, whose disquieting of war between America and the USSR; Lawrence describes the imperi-
carnivorous forces they seek to repel. But they are also a combat alism of death, from the ancient Romans to the modern ascists.

~~T~ht'~Y~d~O~S~O~i~n~O~' d~,'~~rO~S~h~o~"~rn~o~'~ c;1~"~'ltY~rh~ 'r~~~~~~~~~~:


between the fiance's forces and the animal forces he joins with so as
to better flee the force he fears falling prey to, or the vampiric forces he I.,
will use to suck the woman's blood before she devours him. All these
t associations of forces constitute so many becomings-a becoming- i i obstinate, in-
animal, a becoming-vampire, perhaps even a becoming-woman-that domitable will to live that differs from all organic life. With a young
1 ca n only be obta ined through combat. 19 child, one already has an organic, personal relationship, but not with a
In Artaud, the combat is against God, the thief or the forger, but baby, who concentrates in its sma llness the same energy that shatters
this undertaking is possible only because the combatant at the same paving stones {Lawrence's baby torroise).24 With a baby, one has noth-
time wages the combat of the principles or powers that are actualized ing but an affective, athletic, impersonal, vital relationship. The will to
in the stone, the animal, or the woman, so that it is only by becoming power certainly appears in an infinitely more exact manner in a baby
(by becoming-stone, becoming-animal, or becoming-woman ) that the than in a f!1an of war. For the baby is combat, and the small is an ir-
combatant can lash out "aga inst" his enemy, in league with all the reducible locus of forces, the most revea ling test of forces. All four
I allies this other combat has given to him .10 A similar theme appea.rs authors are caught up in processes of "miniaturization" or "minoriza-
constantly in Lawrence. Men and women often treat each other as ene- tion": NietzSChe, who thinks the game or the chi ld-player; Lawrence or
134 TO HAVf DONE WITH JUDG M ENT TO HAVE DONE WITH JUDGMENT "5
"the little Pan"; Artaud Ie mama, " 3 child's ego, a little child con- nor even sense the creation of a mode of existence ? Such a mode is cre-
sciousness"; Kafka, "the great shameful man who makes himsdf very ;ued vitally, through combat, in the insomnia ofsiee p, and not without
small. " ll a certai n cruelty tOward itself: nothing of all this is the resu lt of judg-
A power is an idiosyncrasy of fo rces, such that the dominant force ment. Judgment prevents the erner ence of an new mode of existence.
is transformed by passing into the dominated forces, and the domi- For the latter creates itself through its own forces , that is, through the
~~ ... .,... nated by passing into the dominant-a center of metamorphosis. This forces it is able co harness, and is valid in and of itself inasmuch as it
"( ,..u.,. ~ , .. I is what Lawrence calls a symbol: an intensive compound that vibrates brings the new combination into existence. Herein, perhaps, lies the
~~ and expands, that has no meaning, but makes us whirl about unli! secret: to bring into exjm;m; and not to .ud e. If it is so disgusting to
II rd".~ ,.,\1..1 we harness the maximum of possible forces in every direction, each judge,it is nOt because everything is of equal value, but on the contrary
................ {).., I ..... of which receives a new meaning by entering into relation with the beca use what has value can be made orAi!tinguished anI b~ fying
others. A decision is not a judgment, nor is it the organic consequence judgment. What expert judgment, in art, could ever bear on the work
of a judgment: it s rin vit'!.!lr.. from a whirlwind of forces t~ lead~ to come? It is not a question of judging other existing beings, but of
us into combat. It resolves the combat without s u~~ress ing or ending sensing whether they agr« or disagree with us, that is, whether they
It.'""It is the lightning fla sh appropriate to the night of the symbol. The bring forces to us, or whet er t ey return us to the miseries of ;"ar, to
fo ur authors of whom we are speaking could be called symbolists. the poverty of the dream, to the rigors of organization. As Spino1.3 had
Zarathustra, the book of symbols, the combative book par excellence. sa id, it is a problem of love and hate and not judgment; "my soul and
In Niensche's aphorisms and Kafka 's parables, there appears an analo- body are one.... What my sou l loves, I love. What my soul hates, I

l gous tendency to multiply and enrich fo rces, to attract a maximum of


forces, each of which reacts upon the others. Between the theater and
the plague, Arraud creates a symbol in which each of these twO forces
hate .... All the subtle sympathizings of the incalculable soul, from the
bitterest hate to passionate love. "26 This is not subjectivism, since to
pose the problem in terms of force, and not in other terms, already sur-
intensifies and energizes the other. Let us take the horse, the apocalyp- passes all subjectivity.
tic beast, as an example: the horse that laughs, in Lawrence; the horse
that sticks his head through the window and looks at you, in Kafka;
the horse "that is the sun," in Artaud; or even the ass that says Yea-
I Yuh , in Nietzsche-these are all fi gures that constitute so many sym-

bols through the building-up of forces, through the constitution of


compounds of power.
Combat is nOt a judgment of God, but the way to have done with
God and with 'ud ment. No one eve ops through judgment, but
through a combat that implies no judgment. Existence and judgment
seem to be opposed on five points: cmelty versus infinite torture, sleep
or intoxication versus the dream, vitality versus organiUltion, the will
to power versus a will to dominate, combat versus war. What dis-
turbed us was that in renouncing judgment we had the impression of
depriving ourselves of any means of distinguishing between existing
beings, between modes of existence, as if everything were now of equal
va lue. But is it not rather judgment that presupposes preexisting crite-

I ria (higher va lues), criteria that preexist for all time (to the infin ity of
time), so that i!..e!!. neither apprehend what is new in an exist.i..ng being,
'loUO, THE CREEKS 137

nonetheless remains indexed to them. As Vernant has shown, the


Greek philosopher invokes an order that is immanent to the cosmos.
He presents himself as a friend of wisdom (and not as a wise man, as in
the East). He sets out to " rectify" or secure the opinion of men. These
cha racteristics survive in Western societies, even if they have taken on a
16 new meaning, which explains the permanence of philosophy in the
economy of our democratic world: the field of immanence of "capiral ";
Plato, the Greeks the society of brothers or comrades, to which every revolution appeals
(and the free competition among brothers); a nd the reign of opinion .
• But what Plato criticizes in the Athenian democracy is the fact that
a~ne can lay claim to anything; whence his enterprise of restoring
criteria of selection among rivals. It will be necessary for him to erect a
new type of transcendence, one that differs from imperial or mythical
transcendence (although Plato makes use of myth by giving it a special
Platonism appears as a selective doctrine, as a selection among claim- function). He ":ill .have to invent. a transctnd~n'c [ba ~d ..J(.'1~,
ants or rivals. l Every thing or every being lays claim to certain quali- and situated wlthm the field of 1m en f. This IS the meaOlng
ties. It is a question of judging the well-foundedness or legitimacy of of the [hear 0 Ideas. And modem philosoe.hy will continue to follow
these claims. The Idea is sited by Plato as that which possesses a Plato in this regar ,encountering u{3 dence at the hean of im-
quali.oWir~ (necessarily and universally); it then allOWs us to manence as such. The poisoned gift of Platonism is to have introduced
.('t ~1·) determine, after ,(nain test~_which thin s ssess that uali ~­ transcen eoce into philosophy to have 'ven transcendence a lausible
,. hand, thirdhand, and so forth, depending on the nature of their ac- philosophical meaning (the triumph of the judgment of God). This en-
ticipation. Such is the doctrine of judgment. The legitimate claimant terprise runs up against numerous paradoxes and aporias, which con-
is t e participant, the one who possesses the quality secondhand and cern, precisely, the status of the doxa (Theataetus ), the nature of friend-
whose claim is thereby va lidated by the Idea. Platonism is the philo- ship and love (Symposium), and the irreducibility of an immanence of
sophical Odyssey, which will be continued in Neoplatonism. It con- the earth (Timaeus ).
fronts sophism as its enemy, but also as its limit and its double: because Every reaction as!;inst Platonism is a restoration of immanence in
he lays claim to anything and everything, there is the great risk that the its full extension and in its purity, which forbids th---ereturn orany tran:-
sophist will scramble the selection and pervert the judgment. ~ce. The question is wether such a reaction abandons tht: pro-
This problem finds its source in the City. Because they refuse any iect of a selection among rivals, or on tht: contrary, as Spinoza and
imperial or ba rbarian transcendence. the Greek societies or cities form ietzsche bel ieved, draws up completely different methods of selec-
r ",(opt fields of immanence (even in the case of the tyrannies). These fields are ti~lD. Such methods would no longer concern claims as acts of tran-
lJ (filled and populated by societies of friend s, that is, by free rivals whose scendence, but the manner in which an existing being is filled with
I'J ' ci;' claims in each case enter into a competitive ag6n, and are exercised immanence (the Eternal Return as thr: capacity of something or some-
(C' in diverse domains: love, athletics. politics, the magistratures. In such a one to rerurn eternally). S_election no longer concerns the claim, but
{" regime, opinion obviously assumes a decisive importance. This is pa r- power: unlike the claim, power is modest. In truth, only the philoso-
ticularly clear in the case o f Athens and its democracy: autoGhtonie. phies of pure immanence escape Platonism-from the StOics [0 Spinoza
philia. doxa are its three fundamenta l traits, and constitute the con- or Nietzsche.
ditions under which philosophy was born and developed. In spirit,
philosophy can cnticize these traits, surpass and correct them, but it

130
SPI N OlA A N O THE TH~U -ETHICS - 139

velops" [he nature of the affecting body. We have knowledge of our af-
fectio ns through the ideas we have, sensations or perceptions, sensa-
tions of heat and color, the perception of form and distance (the sun is
above us, it is a golden disk, it is two hundred feet away ... J. We will

,,
call them, for convenience, scalar signs, since they express our state at
17 a moment in time and are thus distinguished from another type of sign.
( This is because our present state is always a slice of our duration, and
I",
Spinoza and the Three "Ethics" as such determines an increase or decrease, an expansion or restriction
,1- of our existence in duration in relation to the preceding state, however
close it may be. It is not that we compare the two states in a refl ective
operation; rather, each state of affection determines a passage to a
"more" or a " less": the heat of the sun fills me or, on the contrary, its
burning repulses me. Affection is therefore not only the instantane-
ous effect of a body upon my own, but also has an effect on my own
"I'm not some sort of Spinotll to jump arollnd doing duration-a pleasure or pain, a joy or sadness. These are passages, be-
entrcchats." -Chekhov, "The Wedding"l comings, rises and falls, continuous variations of power [puissance )
that pass from one state to another. We will call them affects, strictly
On a fi rst reading, the Ethics can appear to be a long, continuous speaking, and no longer affections. They are signs of increase and de-
movement that goes in an almost straight line, with an incomparable crease, signs that are vectorial (of the joy-sadness type) and no longer
power and serenity, passing again and again through definitions, axi- scalar like the affections, sensations or perceptions.
oms, postulates, propositions, demonstrations, corollaries, a nd scholia. In fact, there are an even greater number of types of signs. There
carrying everything along in its grandiose course. It is like a river that are four principal types of sca lar signs. T he first, which are sensory
sometimes broadens and sometimes branches into a thousand streams; or perceptive physical effects that merely envelop the nature of their
sometimes speeding up and sometimes slowing down, but always main- cause, are essentia lly indicative, and indicate our own nature rather
ta ining its radical unity. And Spinoza's Latin, which appears so schol- than some other thing. In a second case, our nature, being fin ite, sim-
arly, seems to constitute the ageless sh ip that fo llows the eternal river. ply retains some selected characteristic from what affects it (man as a
But as emotions invade the reader, or after a second reading, these two vertical anima l, or a reasonable animal, or an animal that laughs).
impressions prove to be erroneous. This book, one of the greatest in These are abstractive signs. In the third case, the sign always being an
the world, is not what it seems at fi rst glance: it is not homogenous, effect, we take the effect for an end, or the idea of the effect for the
rectilinear, continuous, serene, navigable, a pure language without style. cause (since the sun heats, we believe that it was made " in order to"
The Ethics sets forth three elements, which are not only contents ~arm us; since the fruit tastes bitter, Adam believes that it "should
bur forms of expression: Signs or affects; Notions or conceptS; Essences not" be eaten ). These are moral effects or imperative signs: Do not ea t
or percepts. They correspond to the three kinds of knowledge, which this fr uit! Get our in the sun! The last of the sca lar signs, fina lly, are
are also modes of existence and expression. imagi nary effecrs: our sensations and perceptions make us conceive of
A sign, according to Spinoza, can have several meanings, but it is SuprasensibJe beings who wou ld be their fina l cause, and conversely
always an effect. An effect is first of all the trace of onc body upon we imagine these beings in the inordi nately enlarged image of what
another, the State of a body insofar as it suffers the action of another affects us (God as an infinite sun, or as a Prince or Legislator). These
body. It is an affectio-for example, the effect of the sun on our body, are lJerm efteltric or i1lterpretive signs. T he prophets, who were the great
which " indicates" the nature of the affected body and merely "en- specialists in signs, combined abstractive, imperative, and interpretive

138
140 S'INOlA AND THE THRH 'ETHICS" 14 1

signs in marvelous ways. In this regard, a famous chapter of the Trac- servitude fo r one part is power fo r another, and a rise can be followed
tatus TlJeologico-Poliricus joins together the power of the comic with by a fa ll and conversely.
the depth of its analysis. T here are thus fou r scalar signs of affection, Signs do not halle ob;ects as their direct referents. They are states
which CQuid be called sensible indices, logical icons, moral symbols, of bodies (affections) and varia tions of power (affects), each of which
and metaphysical idols. refers ro the other. Signs refer to signs. T hey have as their referents con-
In addition, there are two kinds of vectorial signs of affect, de- fused mixtures of bodies and obscure variations of power, and fo llow
~nding on whether the vector is one of increase or decrease, growth an order that is established by Chance or by the fortuitou s encounter
or decline, joy or sadness. These two sons of signs cou ld be called between bod ies. Signs are effects: the effect of one body upon another
augmentative powers and diminutive servitudes. We CQuid also add to in space, or affection; the effect of an affection on a duration, or affect.
these a third SOrt: ambiguous or nUCfuati ng signs, when an affection Like the Stoics, Spinoza breaks causality imo two distinct chains:
increases or diminishes our power at the same time, or affects us with effects between themselves, on the condition that one in rurn grasp
joy and sad ness at the same time. There are thus six signs, or seven, causes between themselves. Effects refer to effects just as signs refer to
which ceaselessly enter into various combinations with each other. In signs: consequences separated from their premises. We must also under-
particular, the scalars are necessa rily combined with the vectorials. stand "effect" optically and not merely causa lly. Effects or signs are
Affects always presuppose the affections from wh ich they are derived, shadows that play on the surface of bodies, always between twO bod-
although they can not be reduced to them. ies. The shadow is always on the edge. It is always a body that casts a
The com mon characteristics o f all these signs are associability, shadow on another body. We have knowledge of bodies only through
the shadows they cast upon us, and it is through our own shadow that
variability, and equivocity or analogy. The affections vary according to
we know ourselves, ourselves and our bodies. Signs are effects of fight
the cha ins of association between bodies (the sun hardens clay and
in a space filled with things colliding with each other at random. If
softens wax, the horse is not the sa me for the warrior and for the peas-
Spinoza differs essentially from Leibniz, it is because the latter, under a
ant). The moral effects themselves vary according ro peoples; and the
baroque inspiration , saw the Dark ("fuscum subnigrum ") as a matrix
prophets each had personal signs that appealed to their imaginations.
or premise, from which chiaroscuro, colors, and even light emerge. In
As for interpretations, they are fundamentally equivocal depending on Spinoza, on the contrary, everything is light, and the Dark is onl y a
the va riable association that is made between something given and shadow, a simple effect of light, a limit of light on the bodies that re-
something that is not given. It is an equivocal or analogical language flect it (affection ) or absorb it (a frect ). SpinOla is closer to Byzantium
that ascribes to God an infinite intellect and will, in an enlarged image than to the baroque. In place of a light that emerges by degrees from
of our own intellect and our own will-an equivocity similar to the the shadow through the accumulation of red, we instead have a light
one found between the dog as a barking animal and the Dog as a celes- that creates degrees of blue shadow. Chiaroscuro is itself an effect
tial constellation. If signs like words are conventional, it is precisely be- of the brightening or darkening of the shadow: it is the variations of
cause they act on natural signs and simply classify their variability and JX?wer or vectorial signs that constitute degrees of chiaroscuro, the aug-
equivocity: conventional signs are Abstractions that fix a relative con- mentation of power being a brightening, and the diminution of power,
stant for variable chains of association. The conventional-natu ral dis- a darkening.
tinction is therefore not determinative for signs, any more than is the
distinction between the social State and the state of nature; even vecto- If we consider the second aspect of the Ethics, we see a determining op-
ri31 signs ca n depend on conventions, as rewa rds (augmentation ) and PO~ition to signs emerge: common notiOllS are cOllcepts of ob;ects, and
punishments (diminution). Vectorial signs in general, that is, affects, objects are causes. Light is no longer refl ected or absorbed by bodies
enter into va riable associations as much as do affections: what is growth ~h~t produce shadows, it makes bodies transpa rent by revealing their
for one part of the body can be a diminution fo r another part, what is IIltl mate "structure" (fabrica). This is the second aspect of light; and
14' $~INOZ. AND THE HUH -ETHICS· 143

the intellect is the true apprehension of the structures of the body, each case, this order is the profile or projection that in each case en·
whereas the imagination merely grasped the shadow of one body upon velops the face of Natu re in its entirety, or the relation of all relations. 2
another. Here again it is a question of optics, but it is now an optica l Modes, as projections of light, are also colors, coloring COllses.
geometry. In effect, the structure is geometrical and consists of solid Colors enter into relations o f complementarity and contrast, which
lines, but they are constantly being formed and deformed, acting as means that each of them, at the limit, reconstitutes the whole, and that
cause. What constitu tes the Structure is a composite relation of move- they all merge together in whiteness (infinite mode) followi ng an order
ment and rest, of speed and slowness, which is established between of composition, or stand out from it in the order of decomposition.
the infinitely small parts of a transparent body. Since the parts always What Goethe said about whiteness must be said of every color: it is the
come in larger or smaller infi nities, there is in each body an infinity o f opacity characteristic of pure tra nsparency.J The solid and rectilinear
relations that are composed and decomposed, in such a way that the structure is necessarily colored in, because it is the opacity that is re-
body in turn enters into a more vast body under a new composite rela- vealed when light renders the body transparent. In this way, a differ-
tion or, on the contrary, makes smaller bodies come out from under ence in kind is established between color and shadow, between the col-
thei r composite relations. Modes are geometric but fluid structures oring couse and the effect of shadow: the first adequately "completes"
that are transformed and deformed in the light at va riable speeds. the light, while the second abolishes it in the inadequate. Vermeer is
Structure is rhythm, that is, the linking of figures that compose and de- said to have replaced chiaroscuro by the complementarity and contrast
of colors. It is not that the shadow disappears, but it subsists as an ef-
compose their relations. It ca uses disagreements between bodies when
fect that can be isolated from its cause, a separated consequence, an
the relations decompose, and agreementS when the relations compose
extrinsic sign distinct from colors and their relations. 4 In Vermeer, one
a new body. But the structure moves in both directions simu ltaneously.
sees the shadow detach itself and move forward so as to fram e or bor-
Chyle and lymph are two bodies determined by twO relations that con-
der the luminous background from which it originates ("The Maid-
stitute blood under a composite relation, although a poison may de-
servant Pouring Milk," "The Young Lady with a Pearl Necklace," "The
compose the blood. If I learn to swim or dance, my movements and
Love Letter" ). T his is the way Vermeer set himself in opposition to the
pauses, my sp«ds and slownesses, must take on a rhythm common to tradition of chiaroscuro; and in all these respects Spinoza remains in·
that of the sea or my partner, maintaining a more or less durable ad- finite ly closer to Vermeer than to Rembrandt.
justment. The structure always has several bodies in common, and refers The distinction between signs and concepts thus seems irreducible
to a concept of the object, that is, to a common notion. The struclllre and insurmountable, much as in Aeschylus: "He is going to express
or object is formed by at least two bodies, each of which in turn is himself, no longer in a mute language, nor through the smoke of a fi re
formed by two or more bodies, to infinity, while in the other direction burning on a peak, but in clear terms ... " $ Signs or affects are inade-
they are united into ever larger and more composite bodies, until one qJ:late ideas and passions; common notions or concepts are adequate
reaches the unique object of Nature in its entirety, an infinitely trans- ideas from which true actions ensue. If one refers to the cleavage in
formable and deformable structure, universal rhythm, Facies tOli/l$ ~ausali ty, signs refer to signs as effects refer to effects, following an
Naturae, infinite mode. Common notions are universa ls, out they are associative chain that depends on the order of the simple chance
"'more or less" so depending on whether they fo rm the concept of at encounter between physica l bodies. But insofar as concepts refer to
least twO bodies, or that of all possible bodies (to be in space, to be in concepts, or causes to causes, they fo llow what must be called an allto-
movement and at rest ... ). matic chain, determi ned by the necessary order of relations or propor-
Understood in this way, modes are projections. Or rather, the tions, and by the determi nate succession of their transformations and
variations of an object are projections that envelop a relation of move- deformations. Contrary to our initia l thesis, it therefore seems that
ment and rest as their invariant (involution). And since each relation signs or affects are not and cannot be a positive element in the Ethics,
involves all the uthers to infinity, following an order that varies with and even less a form of expression. The kind of knowledge they consti-
145

lute is .ha rdly a knowledge, but rather an experience in which one ran- both prepared for and accompa nied by these processes that continue
domly encounters confused ideas of bodily mixtures, brute imperatives to operate in the shadows. Values of chiaroscuro are reintroduced in
to avoid this mixture and seek another, and more or less delirious in- Spinoza, because joy as a passion is a sign of brightening that leads us
terpretations of these situations. Rather than a form of expression, this to the light of the notions. And the Ethics cannot dispense with this

, is a material and affective language, onc that resembles cries rather


than the discourse of the concept. It s«ms, then, that if signs-affects
passional form of expression that operates through signs, for it alone is
capable of bringing about the indispensable selection without which
( intervene in the Ethics, it is o nly to be severely criticized, denounced, we would remain condemned to the first kind.
h.
and SC nt back to their night, out of which light reappears or in which it This selection is extremely hard, extremely difficult. The joys and
,I. perishes. sadnesses, increases and decreases, brightenings and darkenings are
This cannot, however, be the casco Book II of the Ethics explains often ambiguous, partial, changing, intermixed with each other. And
the common notions by beginning with "the most universal" notions above all, there exist people who can o nly establish their Power (Pou-
(those that agree with all bodies), It presumes that concepts are already lIoir1 o n sadness and affliction, on the diminution of the power of
given; hence the impression that they owe nothing to signs. But when others, on the darkening of the world. They act as if sadness were a
one asks how we manage to form a concept, or how we rise from ef- promise of joy, and already a joy in itself. They institute a cult of sad-
fects to causes, it is d ear that at least certain signs must serve as a ness, of servitude or impotence, of death. They never cease to emit and
springboard for us, and that certain affects must give us the necessary impose signs of sadness, which they present as ideals and joys to the
vitality (Book V). From a random encounter of bodies, we can select souls they have made iii. Hence the infernal couple, the Despot and
the idea of those bodies that agree with our own and give us joy, that the Priest, terrible "judges" of life. The selection of signs or affects as
is, that increase ou r power. And it is only when our power has suffi- the primacy condition for the birth of the concept does not merely
ciently increased, to a point that undoubtedly varies with each case, imply the personal effort eacb person must make o n his or her own be·
that we come into possession of this power and become capable of half (Reason), but a passional struggle, an inexpiable affective combat
forming a concept, beginning with tbe least universal concept (the in which one risks death, in which signs confront signs and affects
agrttment of our body with o ne o ther), even if we subsequently attain clash with affects in order that a little joy might be saved that could
ever la rger concepts following the order of the composition of rela- make us leave the shadow and change kind. The cries of the language
tions. There is thus a selection of the passional affects, and of the ideas of signs are the mark of this battle of the passions, of joys and sad-
on which they depend, which must liberate joys, vectorial signs of the nesses, of increases and decreases of power.
augmentation of power, and ward off sadnesses, signs of diminution , The Ethics, or at least most of the Ethics, is written in common
This selection of the affects is the very condition for leaving the first no tions, beginning with the most general notions and ceaselessly devel·
kind of knowledge, and for attaining the concept thro ugh the acquisi- o ping their consequences. It presupposes that the common notions are
tion of a sufficient power. The signs of augmentation remain passions ~Iready acquired or given. The Ethics is the discourse of the concept. It
and the ideas that they presuppose remain inadequate; yet they are the IS. a discursive and deductive system, which is why it can appear to be a
precursors of the notions, the dark precursors.' Furthermore, even long, tranquil, and powerful river. The definitions, axioms, postulates,
when we have attained common notions, as well as the actions that Propositions, demonstrations, and corollaries form a grandiose course.
follow fro m them as active affects of a new type, the inadequate ideas ~nd when one of these elementS deals with inadequate ideas or pas-
and passional affects (i.e., signs) will not disappear entirely, nor even Sions, it does so in o rder to denounce their insufficiency, to repress
the inevitable sadnesses. They will subsist, they will double the no- them as far as possible like so many sediments on the riverbanks. But
tions, but will lose their exclusive or tyrannical character to the profit there is another element that only ostensibly has the same nature as
of notions and actions. There is thus something in signs that at the ~he preceding elements. These are the "scholia," which a re nonetheless
same time prepares for and doubles the concepts. The rays of light are Inserted into the demonstrative chain, even though the reader quickly
146 S'INOZA AND THE THREE "ETHICS"

realizes that they have a completely different tone. They have another Robert Sasso accepts the principle of a difference in kind between
style, almost another language. They operate in the shadows, trying to the chain of scholia and the demonstrative linkages. But he notes that
distinguish between what prevents us from reaching common notions there is no reason to consider the demonstrative linkage itself as a ho-
and what, on the contrary, allows us to do so, what diminishes and mogenous flow, continuous and rectilinear, whose progress would be
what augments our power, the sad signs of our servitude and the joy· shelrered from turbulences and accidents. This is not only because the
ous signs of our liberations. They denounce the personae that lie be- schol ia, by interrupting the course of the demonstrations, happen to
hind our diminutions of power, those that have an interest in maintain- break its flow at va rious points. It is the concept in itself, says Sasso,
" ing and propagating sadness, the despot and the priest. They herald that passes through extremely variable moments: definitions, axioms,
the sign or condition of the new man, one who has sufficiently aug- postulates, demonstrations that are sometimes slower, sometimes more
mented his power in order to form concepts and convert his affects rapid. 7 And certain ly Sasso is correct. One can discern stations, amlS,
into actions. elbows, loops, speedings up and slowings down, and so on. The pref-
The scholia are ostensive and polemical. If it is true that the scholia aces and appendices, which mark the beginning and end of the great
most often refer to other scholia, we can see that in themselves they Parts, are like the stations along the river where the ship takes on new
constitute a specific chain, distinct from that of [he demonstrative and passengers and drops off old ones; they often mark the juncture be·
discursive elements. Conversely, the demonstrations do not refer to the tween the demonstrations and the sch':)lia. Arms appear when a single
scholia, but to other demonstrations, definitions, axioms, and poStu- proposition can be demonstrated in several ways. And elbows appear
lates. If the scholia are inserted into the demonstrative chain, it is when the flow changes direction: a single substance is posited for all
therefore less because they form a part of it than because they intersect the attributes by means of an elbow, whereas upstream each attribute
and reinters«t with it, by virtue of their own nature. It is like a broken could have one and only one substance. In the same way, an elbow
chain, discontinuous, subterranean, volcanic, which at irregular inter- introduces the physics of bodies. The corollaries, for their part, con-
vals comes to interrupt the chain of demonstrative elements, the great sritute derivations that loop back onto the demonstrated proposition .
and continuous fluvial chain. Each scholium is like a lighthouse that Finally, the series of demonstrations attests to relative speeds and slow-
exchanges its signals with the others, at a distance and across the flow nesses, depending on whether the river widens or na rrows its course-
of the demonstrations. It is like a language of fire that is distinguish- for example, Spinoza will always maintain that one cannot begin with
able from the language of the waters. It no doubt appears to be the God, with the idea of God, but that one must reach it as quickly as
same Latin, but one could almost believe that the Latin of the scholia is possible. One could identify many other demonstrative figures. Yct
translated from the Hebrew. On their own, the scholia form a book..of whatever their variety, there is a single ri ver that persists throughout all
Anger and Laughter, as if it were Spinoza's anti-Bible. It is the book of its states, and forms the Ethics of the concept or the second kind of
Signs, which never ceases to accompany the more visible Ethics, the knowledge. This is why we believe that the difference between the
book of the Concept, and which only emerges for its own sake at ex- sc.holia and the other elements is more important, because in the final
plosive points. Nonetheless, it is a perfectly positive element .and an analysis it is what accounts for the differences between the demonstra-
autonomous form of expression in the composition of the double tive elements. The river wou ld nor have so many adventures without
Ethics. The two books, the two Ethics coexist, the one developing the the subterranea n action of the scholia. It is they that give shape to the
free notions conquered in the light of transparencies, while the other, demonstrations, and ensure the turnings. The entire Ethics of the con-
at the deepest level of the obscure mixture of bodies, carries on the c.e~t, in all its variety, has need of an Ethics of signs in all their speci-
combat between servitudes and liberations. At least twO Ethics, which ftclty. The variety in the course of the demonstrations does not corre-
have one and the same meaning but nor the same language, like twO spond term by term to the jolts and pressures of the schoJia, and yet it
versions o f the language of God. presupposes and envelops them.
'48 149

But perhaps there is yet a third Ethics, represented by Book V, incar- But absolute speed is the manner in which a n essence surveys [survo feJ
nated in Book V, or a least in the greater part of Book V. Unlike the its affects and affections in eternity (speed of power).
other twO, which coexist throughout the entire course, it occupies a For Book Valone to constitute a third Ethics. it is not enough for
precise place, the final one. Nonetheless it was there from the Slan as it to have a specific object; it would also have to adopt a method dis-
the focus, [he foca l point that was already at work before it appeared. tinct from the two others. But this does not Sttm to be the case, since it
Book V must be ~ n as being coextensive with all the others; we have contains only demonstrative elements and scholia. Yet the reader has
the impression of reaching it at the end, but it was there all the time, the impression that the geometric method here assumes a strange a nd
for all time. This is the third dement of Spinoza 's logic: no longer signs wild demeanor, which could almost make one believe that Book V
"
or affects, nor concepts, but Essences or Singularities, Percepts. It is the was only a provisiona l version, a rough sketch: the propositions a nd
third state o f light: no longer signs of shadow, nor of light as color, but demonstrations are traversed by such violent hiatuses, and include so
light in itself and for itself. The common notions (concepts) are re- many ellipses and contractions, that the syllogisms seem to be replaced
vea led by the light that traverses bodies and makes them transparent; by simple "enthymemes. "1\ And the more one reads Book V, the more
they therefore refer to geometrica l Structures or figures (fabrica), which one real izes that these features are neither imperfections in the elabora-
are all the more full of life in that they are transformable and deform- tion of the method nor shortcuts, but are perfectly adapted to essences
able in a projective space, subordinated to the exigencies of a projec- insofa r as they surpass any order of discursivity or deduction. They are
tive geometry like that of Desargues. But essences have a completely not simple operations of fact, but an entire procedure in principle. This
different nature: pure figures of light produced by a substantial Lumi- is because, at the level of concepts, the geometric method is a method
of exposition that requires completeness and saturation: this is why the
nosity (and no longer geometrical figures revealed by light).! It has
common notions are expounded for themselves, starting with the most
often been noted that Platonic and even Cartesian ideas remained
universal, as in a n axiomatic, without one having to wonder how in
"tactilo-optical": it fell to Plotinus in relation to Plato, and Spino2a in
fact we attain even a single common notion. But the geometric method
relation to Descartes, to attain a purely optical world. The common
of Book V is a method of invention that will proceed by intervals and
notions, insofar as they concern relations of projection, are already op-
leaps, hiatuses and contractions, somewhat like a dog searching rather
tical figures (although they still retain a minimum of tactile references).
than a reasonable man explaining. Perhaps it surpasses all demonstra-
But essences are pure figures of light: they are in themselves "contem- tion inasmuch as it operates in the "undecidable. "
plations," that is to say, they contemplate as much as they are contem- When mathematicians are not given over to the constit ution of
plated, in a unity of God, the subject o r the object (percepts ). The com- an axiomatic, their style of invention assumes strange powers, and the
mon notions refer to relations of movement and rest that constitute deductive links are broken by large discontinuities, or on the contrary
relative speeds; essences on the COntrary are absolute speeds that do are violently contracted. No one denies the genius of Desargues, bur
not compose space by projection, but occupy it all at once, in a single mathematicians like Huygens or Descartes had difficulty understand-
stroke.' One of the most considerable of Jules Lagneau's contributions ing him. His demonstration that every plane is the " polar" of a point,
is to have shown the importance of speeds in thought, as Spin02a con- and every point the "pole" of a plane, is so rapid that one has to fill in
ceives of it, although Lagneau reduces absolute speed to a relative everything it skips over. No one has described this jolting, jumping, and
speed. 1o These are nonetheless the two characteristics of essences: ab- COlliding thought-which grasps singu lar essences in mathematics-
solute and 110 fOllger re/atille speed, figures of light alld 110 IOl/ger geo- bener than Evariste Galois, who himself met w ith a great deal of in-
metric figures revealed by light. Relative speed is the speed of the affec· comprehension fro m his peers: analysts "do nor deduce, they combine,
tions and the affects: the speed of a n action of one body upon a nother they Compose; when they arrive at the truth, it is by crashing in from
in space, the speed of the passage from one state to another in dura - all sides that they happen to Stumble on it."1l Once again, these fea-
tion . What the notions grasp a re the relations berween relative speeds. tures do not appea r as simple imperfections in the exposition, so that it
150 SPINOlA AND THE 'HUE "£THICS" 151

can be don~ "more quickly," but as powers of a new order of thought absolute speed. Finally, to limit ourselves to a few examples, demon-
that conquers an absolute speed. It seems to us that Book V bears wit· stration 30 traces, but along a dotted line, a kind of sublime triangle
ness to this type of thought, which is irreducible to the ont developed whose summits are the figures of light (Self, World, and God ), and
by the common notions in the cour~ of the first four books. If, as whose sides, as distances, are traversed by an absolute speed that is in
Blanchot says, books have as their correlate "the absence of the book" turn revealed to be the greatest. The peculiar characteristics of Book V,
(or a more secret book made of fles h and blood), Book V would be this the way it surpasses the method of the preceding books, always come
( absence or this secret in which signs and concepts vanish, and things down to this: the absolute speed of figu res of light.
" begin to write by themselns and for themselves, crossing the intervals The Ethics of the definitions, axioms and postulates, demonstra-
of space. tions and corollaries is a river-book that develops its course. But the
Consider proposition 10: "As long as we are not torn by affects Ethics of the scholia is a subterranean book o f fire. The Ethics of Book
contrary to our nature, we have the power of ordering and connecting V is an aerial book of light, which proceeds by flashes. A logic of the
the affections of the body according to the order of the intdlect. " I ) sign, a logic of the concept, a logic of essence: Shadow, Color, Light.
There is an immense rift or interval that appears here between the sub- Each of the th ree Etllies coexists with the others and is taken up in the
ordinate and the principal. For affects contrary to ou r nature above all others, despite their differences in kind . it is one and the same world.
prevent us from forming common notions, since they depend upon Each of them sends out bridges in order to cross the emptiness that
bodies that do not agree with our own; on the contrary, whenever a separates them.
body agrees with our own and increases our power (joy), a common
notion of the two bodies can be formed , from which an order and an
active linking of the affections will ensue. In this voluntarily opened
rift, the ideas of the agreement between bodies and of the restricted
common notion have only an implicit presence, and they both appear
only if one reconstitutes a missing chain: a double interval. If this re-
constitution is not made, if this white space is not fil led in, not only
will the demonstration be inconclusive, but we will always remain
undecided about the fundamental question: How do we come to fo rm
any common notion at all? And why is it a question of the least uni-
versal of notions (common to our body and one other)? The function
of the interval or hiatus is to bring together to the maximum degree
terms that are distant as such, and thereby to assure a speed of ab-
solute survey. Speeds can be absolute and yet have a greater or lesser
magnitude. The magnitude of an absolute speed is measured in precise
terms by the distance it covers at one stroke, that is, by the number of
intermediaries it envelops, surveys, or implies (here, at least two). There
are always leaps, lacunae, and cuts as positive cha racteristics of the
third kind.
Another example can be found in propositions 14 and 22, where
one passes, this time by contraction, from the idea of God as the most
universal common notion [Q the idea of God as the mOSt si ngular
essence. It is as if one jumped from a relative speed (the greatest) to an
THE EXH .... USTED 153

stares the possible, but only by readying it for a realization. And I can
nO doubt make use of the day to stay at home, or I can stay at home
because of some other possibility ("it'S night "). But the realization of
the possible always proceeds through exclusion, because it presup-
poses preferences and goals that vary, always replacing the preceeding
18 ones. In the end, it is these variations, these substitutions, all these
( exclusive disjunctions (daytime/nighttime, going out/staying in ... )
The Exhausted that are tiring.
Exhaustion is something entirely different: one combines the set of
variables of a situation, on the condition that one renounce any order
of preference, any organization in relation to a goal, any signification.
The goal is no longer to go out or stay in, and one no longer makes use
of the days and nights. One no longer realizes, even though one accom-
plishes something. Shoes, one stays in; slippers, one goes out. Yet one
Being exhausted is much morc than being tired, I " It's not juSt tired- does not fall into the undifferentiated, or into the famous unity of con-
ness, I'm nOf juSt tired, in spite of the climb. "2 The tired person no tradictories, nor is one passive: one remains active, but for nothing.
longer has any (subjective) possibility at his disposal; he therefore can- One was tired of something, but one is exhausted by nothing. The dis-
not realize the slightest (objective) possibility. But the latter remains, junctions subsist, and the distinction between terms may become ever
because one can never rea lize the whole of the possible; in fact, one more crude, but the disjointed terms are affirmed in their nondecom-
even creates the possible to the extent that onc realizes it. The tired posable distance, since they are used for nothing except to create fur-
person has merely exhausted the realization, whereas the exhausted ther permutations. It is enough to say about an event that it is possible,
person exhausts the whole of the possible. The tired person can no since it does not occur without merging with nothing, and abolishing
longer realizt, but the exhausted person can no longer possibilize. the real to which it lays claim. There is no existence other than the pos-
"That the impossible should be asked of me, good, what else could be sible. It is night, it is not night, it is raining, it is not raining.1 "Yes, I
asked of me." j There is no longer any possible: a relentless Spinozism. was my father and I was my son. to. The disjuction has become inclu-
Does he exhaust the possible because he is himself exhausted, or is he sive: everything divides, but into itself; and God, who is the sum total
exhausted because he has exhausted the possible? He exhausts himself of the possible, merges with Nothing, of which each thing is a modifi·
in exhausting the possible, and vice-versa. He exhausts that which, in cation. "Simple games that time plays with space, now with these toys,
the possible,;s not realized. He has had done with the possible, beyond and now with those.'" Beckett's characters play with the possible with-
all tired ness, "for to end yet again... • OU t real izing it; they are too involved in a possibility that is ever more
God is the originary, or the sum total of all possibility. The possi- restricted in its kind to care about what is still happening. The permu-
ble is realized only in the derivative, in tiredness, whereas one is ex- tation of "sucking stones" in Molloy is one of the most famo us texts.
hausted before birth, before realizing oneself, or rea lizing anyth ing In Murphy, the hero devotes himself to the combina torial of fi ve small
whatsoever (" I gave up before binh" ).l When one realizes some of the biSCUits, but on the condition of havi ng vanquished all order of prefer-
possible, one does so according to cen ain goals, plans, and preferences: ence, and of having thereby conquered the hundred and twenty modes
I put on shoes to go out, and slippers when I stay in. When I speak, of total permutability: "Overcome by these perspectives Murphy fell
for example, when I say "it's daytime," the interlocutor answers, " it's fo rward on his face in the grass, beside those biscuits of which it could
possible ... " because he is wa iting to know what purpose I want the be said as truly as of the sta rs, that one differed from another, but of
day to serve: I'm goi ng to go out because it's daytime ... ' Language wh ich he could not parrake in their fullne ss until he had learnt not

152
ISA THE UHAUSHD THE EXHAUSTED 155

to prefer any ont to any other. "lo I would prefer not to. fo llowing errors included, and how the self decomposes, stench and agony in-
Sanleby's Beckettian formula . Beckett's enrire oeuvre is pervaded by cluded, in the manner of Mafone Dies, A double innocence, for as the
exhaustive series, that is, exhausting series--most norably WaN, with its exhausted person says, " the art of combining is not my fault, It's a
series of footwear (sock-stocking; booHhoe-slipper) or furn iture (tall- curse from above. For the rest I would suggest not guilty."14
boy--<l ressing table-night stool-wash stand; on its feet-on its More than an art, this is a science that demands long study. The
head-on its fac~n its back-on its side; bed-door-window-fire: fif- combiner is seated at his school desk: "In a learned school / TIll the
(
, teen thousand arra ngementsl. 1I Watt is the great seria l novd, in which wreck of body I Slow decay of blood I Testy delirium I Or dull decrepi-
,, Mr. Knott, whose only need is to be without need, does not earmark tude ... "1$ Not that the decrepitude or the wreck interrupts one's stud·
any combination for a particular use that would exclude the others, ies; on the contrary, they complete them, as much as they condition
and whose circumstances would still be yet to come. and accompany them: the exhausted person remains seated at his
The combinatorial is the an or science of exhausting the possible school desk, " bowed head resting on hands," hands sitting on the table
through inclusive disjunctions. But only an exhausted person can ex- and head sitting on the hands, the head level with the table. 16 This
haust the possible, because he has renounced all need, preference, goa l, is the posture of the exhausted person, which Nach t und Triiume will
or signification. Only the exhausted person is sufficiently disinterested, take up again and duplicate, Beckett's damned together present the
sufficiently scrupulous. Indeed, he is obliged to replace his plans with most astonishing gallery of postures, gaits, and positions since Dante.
tables and programs that are devoid of all meaning, For him, what Macmann had no doubt rema rked that he fe lt "happier sitting than
matters is the order in which he does what he has to do, and in what standing and lying down than sitting. " 17 But this was a formula more
combinations he does two things at the same time-when it is still nec- suited to tiredness than to exhaustion. Lying down is never the end or
essary to do so, for nothing. Ikckett's great contribution to logic is to the last word; it is the penultimate word. For if one is sufficiently
have shown that exhaustion (exhaustivity) does not occur without a rested, there is the risk that one will, if not get up, at least roll over or
certain physiological exhaustion, somewhat as Nietzsche showed that crawl. To be kept from crawling, one must be put in a ditch or stuck in
the scientific ideal is not attained without a kind of vital drgeneration- a jar where, no longer able to stir one's limbs, on~ will nonetheless stir
for example, in the Man with leeches, "the conscientious in spirit" some memories. But exhaustion does not allow one to lie down; when
who wanted to know everything about the leech's brain,12 The combi- night falls, one remains seated at the table, empty head in captive hands,
natorial exhausts its object, but only because its subject is himself ex- "head sunk on crippled hands," "one night as h~ sat at his table head
hausted. The exhaustive and the exhausted. Must one be exhausted to on hands. , . Lift his past head a moment to see his past hands ... ,"
give oneself over to the combinatorial, or is it the combinatorial that "skull alone in a dark place pent bowed on a board ... ," " hands and
exhausts us, that leads us to exhaustion--or even the twO together, the head a little heap. "I' This is the most horrible position in which to
combinatorial and the exhaustion? Here again, inclusive disjunctions. aw.a it death: seated, without the strength eith~ r to get up or to lie
And perhaps it is like the front and back side of a single thing: a keen down, watching for the signal that will make us stand up one last time
sense or science of the possible, joined, or rather disjoined, with a fan- and then lie down fo rever, Once seated, one can not recover, one can no
tastic decomposition of the self. What Blanchot says about Musil is longer stir even a single memory. The rocking chair is still imperfect in
equally true of Beckett: the greatest exactitude and the most extreme this regard: it must come to a stop. 19 We should perhaps distinguish
dissolution; the indefinite exchange of mathematica l formulations and between Beckett's " lyi ng down" work and his "seated " work, which
the pursuit of the formless or the unformulated. U These are the twO alone is final. This is because there is a difference in nature between
meanings of exhaustion, and both are necessary in order to abolish the "seated " exhaustion and the tired ness that " lies down " "crawls" or
" ' ,
real. Many authors are too polite, and are content to announce the gets stuck." Tiredness affects action in all its states, whereas exhaus-
tota l work and the death of the self, But this remains an absrraction as tion only concerns an amnesiac witness. The seated person is the wit-
long as one does not show " how it is": how one makes an "i nventory," ness around which the other revolves while developing all the degrees
IS. THE EKHAUSTED THE EXHAUSTED 157

of tiredness. He is there befoce birth, and before the other begins. "Was off. This second, very complex, moment is not unrelated to the firs t: it
there a time when I tOO revolved thus? No, I have always been sitting is always an Other who speaks, since the words have not waited for
here, at this selfsame spot ... "20 But why is the seated person on the me, and there is no language orher than the foreign; it is always an
lookout for words, for voices, for sounds? Other, the "owner" of the objects he possesses by speaking. It is still a
Language names the possible. How could o ne combine what has question of the possible, but in a new fas hion: the Others are possible
no name, the object = x? Molloy finds himself before a sma ll, strange worlds, on which the voices confer a reality that is always variable,
thing, made up of "two crosses joined, at their point of intersection, by depending on the force they have, and revocable, depending on the
a bar," equally stable and indiscernible on its four bases,II Future ar- silences they create. Sometimes they are strong, sometimes they are
chaeologists, if they find one in our ruins, will, as is their wont, proba- weak, until a moment arrives when they fa ll silent (a silence of tired·
bly interpret it as a religious object used in prayers or sacrifices. How ness). Sometimes they separate and even oppose each other, sometimes
could it enter into a combinatorial if one does not have its name, they merge together. The Others-that is, the possible worlds, with
"knife holder"? Nonetheless, if the ambition of the combinatorial is to their ob jects, with their voices that bestow on them the only reality
exhaust the possible with words, it must constitute a metalanguage, a to which they can lay claim--constirute "StOries." The Others have
very special language in which the reladons between objects are identi- no other reality than the one given to them in their possible world by
cal to the relations between words; and consequently, words must no their voices.24 Such are Murphy, Watt, Mercier, and all the others-
longer give a realization to the possible, but must themselves give the "Mahood and Co. "1.5 Mahood and Company: How can one have done
possible a reality that is proper to it, a reality that is, precisely, ex- with them, with both their voices and their stories? To exhaust the pos-
haustible: " Minimally less. No more. Well on the way to inexistence. sible in this new sense, the problem of exhaustive series must be con-
As to zero the infinite. "22 Let us call this atomic, disjunctive, cut and fronted anew, even if it means falling into an "aporia. "26 One would
chopped language in Beckett language I, a language in which enumera- have to succeed in speaking of them-but how can one speak of them
tion replaces propositions and combinatorial reladons replace syntac- without introducing oneself into the series, without "prolonging" their
tic relations: a language of names. But if one thereby hopes to exhaust voices, without passing through each of them, without being in rurn
the possible with words, one must also hope to exhaust the words Murphy, Molloy, Malone, Watt. and so on, and coming back once
themselves; whence the need for another metalanguage, a language II, aga in to the inexhaustible Mahood? Or else one would have to suc-
which is no longer a language of names but of voices, a language that ceed in arriving at the self, not as a term in the series, but as its limit:
no longer operates with combinable atoms but with blendable flows. me, the exhausted one, the unnamable, me, sitting alone in the dark,
Voices are waves or flows that direct and distribute the linguistic cor- haVing become Worm, "the anti-Mahood," deprived of any voice, so
puscles. When one exhausts the possible with words, one cuts and chops that I could spea k of myself only through the voice of Mahood, and
the atoms, and when one exhausts the words themselves. one drys up couJd only be Worm by becoming Mahood yet againP The aporia lies
the flows. It is this problem, to have done now with words, that domi- in the inexhaustible series of all these exhausted beings. "How many of
nates Beckett's work from The Unnamable onward: a true silence, nOt us are there altogether, finally? And who is holding forth at the mo-
a simple tiredness with talking, because "it is all very well to keep ment? And to whom? And about what?"n How can one imagine a
silence, but one has also to consider the kind of silence one keeps. "lJ Whole that holds everything together (un tOll t qui fasse compagnie!?
What will be the last word, and how can it be recognized? How can one make :I whole out of the series? By going up the series,
To exhaust the possible, the possibilia (objects or "things") must hy going down it, by mutipJyin8 it by two if one speaks to the other, or
be related to the words that designate them through inclusive disjunc- by three if one speaks to the other of yet another?2~ The aporia will be
tions within a combinatorial. To exhaust words, they mUSt be related to Solved if one considers that the limit of the series does not lie at the
Others who pronounce them-<>r rather, who emir them, se-crere them- infinity of the terms but can be anywhere in the flow: between two
following flows that sometimes intermingle and sometimes separate terms, between two voices or the variations of :I si ngle voice-a point
158 !HE EXHAUSTED THf EXHAUSHO 15.

that is already reached well before one knows that the series is ex- Beethoven. The image is a little ritornello, whether visual or aural,
hausted, a nd well before one lea rns that there is no lo nger any possibil- once the time has come: "the exquisite hour .. ... ,U In Watt, the three
ity or any Story, and that there has not been o ne for a long time.1O Long frogs intermingle their songs, each with its own cadence, Krak, Krek,
since exhausted, without our knowing it, without his knowing it. The and Krik. 37 Image-ritornellos run throughout Beckett's books. In First
inexhaustible Mahood and Worm the exhausted, the Other and my- Lalle, "he" watches a patch of starry sky as it comes and goes, and
self, 3rc [he same character, the sa me dead foreign language. "she" si ngs in a low voice. The image is not ddined by the sublimity of
There is therefore a ianglloge W. which no longer relates la nguage its content but by its form, that is, by its " internal tension," or by the
to enumerable or combinable ob jects, nor to transmitting voices, but force it mobilizes to create a void or to bore holes, to loosen the grip of
to immanent limits that 3rc ceaselessly displaced-hiatuses, holes, or words, [Q dry up the oozing of voices, so as to free itself from memory
tears that we would never notice, or would attribute to mere tiredness, and reason: a small, alogica1, amnesiac, and almost aphasic image,
if they did not sudden ly widen in such a way as to receive something sometimes standing in the void, sometimes shivering in the open. J8 The
from the outside or from elsewhere. " Blanks fo r when words gone. image is not an object but a "process." We do not know the power of
When nohow on. Then all seen as only then. Undimmed. All undimmed such images, so simple do they appear from the point of view of the
that words dim. All so seen unsaid. "31 This something seen or heard object. This is language III, which is no longer a language of names or
is called Image. a visual or aural Image, provided it is freed from the voices but a language of images, resounding and coloring images. What
chai ns in which it was bound by the other twO languages. It is no is tedious about the language of words is the way in which it is bur-
longer a question of imagining a "whole" of the series with language I dened with calcu lations, memories, and stories: it cannot avoid them.
(a combinatorial imagination "sullied by reason"), or of inventing sto- Nevertheless, the pure image must be inserted into language, into the
ries or making inventories of memories with language II (imagination names and voices. Sometimes this will occur in silence, by means of an
sullied by memory), although the cruelty of voices never stops pierc- ordinary silence, when the voices seem to have died out. But sometimes
ing us with unbearable memories, absurd stories, or undesirable com- it will happen at the signal of an inductive term, in the current of the
pany.31 It is extremely d ifficult to tear all these adhesions away from voice, Ping: " Ping image only just almost never one second light rime
the image so as to reach the point of " Imagination Dead Imagine. "J3 It blue and white in the wind ... Jt Sometimes this is a very distinctive f1at-
is extremely difficult to make a pure and unsu llied image, one that is toned voice, as if it were predetermined or preexisting. that of an
nothing but an image, by reaching the point where it emerges in all its Announcer or Opener who descri bes all the elements of the image to
si ngularity, retaining nothing of the personal or the rational, and by come, but which srililacks form.40 Sometimes, fina lly, the voice man-
ascending to the indefinite as if into a celestia l state. A woman, a hand, ages to overcome its repugnances, its loyalties, its ill will, and, carried
a mouth, some eyes ... some blue and some white ... a little green along by the music, it becomes speech, capable in turn of making a ver-
with white and red patches, a small field with crocuses and sheep: ~alimage, as in a lied, or of itself making the music and color of an
" little scenes yes in the light yes but not onen no as if a light went on Image, as in a poem.41 Language 111, then, can bring together words
yes as if yes ... he calls that the life above yes ... they are not memo- and voices in images, but in accordance with a special combination:
ries no. "j4 language I was that of the novels, and culminates in Watt; language II
To make an image from time to time ("it's done I've done the marks out its multiple paths throughout the novels (The Unnamable),
imagc"): Can an, painting, and music have any other goa l, even if suffuses the works for theater, and blares forth in the radio pieces. But
the contents of the image are quite meagre, quite mediocre?'s In one of langllage Ill, born in the novel (How It Is), passing through the theater
Lichtenstein's porcelain scu lptures, sixty centimeters high, there sta nds (Happy Days, Act wiehOld Words. Catastrophe ), finds the secret of its
a brown-trunked n ec, topped with a ball of green, and fla nked by a lit- assemblage in television: a prerecorded voice for an image that in each
tle cloud on the left and a patch of sky on the right, at different heights: case is in the process of taking form. There is 3 specificity to the works
what force! One asks nothing more, neither of Bram van Velde nor of for television.41
160 THE UHAUSTfD THE EX H AUSTED 161

This outside of language is not only the image, but also the ..... asti· detOnation, combustion, and dissipation of their condensed energy.
tude" of space. Language III does not operate only with images but Like ultimate particles, they never last very long, and Ping activates an
also with spaces. And juSt as the image must attain the indefinite, while "image only JUSt almost never one second:'4! When the protagonist
rema ining completely determined. so space must always be an any- says, "Enough, enough ... images, "49 it is not only because he is dis-
space-whatever, disused, unmodified, even though it is enti rely deter- gusted by them, but also because their existence is purely ephemeral.
mined geometrically (a square with these sides and diagonals, a circle "No more blue the blue is done. "SO We wi ll not invent an entity that
with these zones, a cylinder "fifty metres round and sixteen high n ).43 would be Art, ca pable of making the image endure: the image lasts
The any-space-whatever is populated and well-trodden, it is even that only as long as the fu rtive moment of our pleasure, our gaze (" I stood
which we ourselves populate and traverse, but it is opposed to all our for three minutes before Professor Pater's smile, to look at it. ")51 T here
pseudoqualified extensions, and is defined as "neither here nor there is a time for images, a right moment when they can appear or insinuate
where all the footsteps ever fell can never fare nearer to anywhere nor themselves, breaking the combination of words and the flow of voices.
from anywhere furth er away. "44 Just as the image appeari as a visual There is a time fo r images, as when Winnie feels that she can sing
or aural ritornello to the one who makes it, space appears as a motor L'he,lre exquise, but it is a moment very near the end, an hour close to
ritornello--postu res, positions, and ga its-to the one who travels the last. The rocking chair is a motor ritornello that tends toward its
through it. All these images compose and decompose themselves. 45 own end, pushing all the possible toward it, going "faster and faster,"
The "Pings," which activate the images, are mixed together with the "shorter and shorter, " until, quite suddenly, it a bruptly StOpS.S2 The
"Hups," which activate strange movements within the spatial direc- energy of the image is dissipative. The image quickly ends and dissi-
tions:" A manner of walking is no less a ritornello than a song or a pates because it is itself the means of having ~on e with itself. It cap-
tiny colored vision: for example, the gait of Watt, who moves east !:iy tures all the possible in order to make it explode. When one says, "I've
turning his bust toward the nonh and throwing the right leg toward done the image," it is because this rime it is finished, there is no more
the south, then the bust toward the south and the left leg toward the possibility. The only uncertainty that makes us continue is that even
nonhY We can see that this gait is exhaustive, since it invests all the painters, even musicians, are never sure they have succeeded in making
cardinal points at the same time, the fourth obviously being the direc- the image. What great painter has not said to himself, on his deathbed,
tion from which he comes, without ever moving away from it. It is a that he had fa iled to make a single image, even a small or simple one?
matter of covering every possible direction, while nonetheless moving It is, rather, the end, the end of all possibility, that teaches us that we
in a straight line. There is an equality between the straight line and the have made it, that we have JUSt made the image. And it is the same
plane, and between the plane and the volume: the consideration of with space: if the image, by its very nature, has a very short duration,
space gives a new meaning and a new object to exhaustion--exhaust- then space perhaps has a very restricted place, as restricted as the one
ing the potentialities of an any-space-whatever. t~at 'cramps Winnie, when she says, "Ia terre est juste" ["the earth is
Space has potentialities inasmuch as it makes the realization of ~lght"J and Godard, "j uste une image" ["j USt an image" J.H No sooner
events possible; it therefore precedes realization, and potentiality itself IS the space made than it contracts into a "pinho le," just as the image
belongs to the possible. But was this not equally the case for the image, contr.acts into a microfraction of time: a singular darkness, "again that
which had already put forth a specific means for exhausting the possi- certatn dark that alone certain ashes ca n,'"' "ping silence ping over. "S4
ble? T his time, it would seem that an image, inasmuch as it stands in There are thus four ways of exhausting the possible:
the void outside space, and also apart from words, stories, and memo-
ries, accumulates a fan tastic potential energy, which it detonates by -forming exhaustive series of things,
dissipating itself. What counts in the image is not its meager content, -<l rying up the fl ow of voices,
but the energy-mad and ready to explode-that it has harnessed, --extenuating the potentia li[ies of space,
which is why images never last very long. The images merge with the -dissipating the power of the image.
162 TH E EXHAUSTED THE EXHAU STED 163

T he exhausted is the exha ustive, the dried up, the extenuated, and ~ Four possible solos all ginn. Six possible duos all given (two twice).
the dissipated. The last two ways are united in language lII, the lan- Four possible trios all given twice";S6 four times a quartet. The order,
guage of images and spaces. It maimains a relationship with language the cou rse, and the set render the movement all the more inexorable
in its entirety, but rises up or stretches out in its holes, its gaps, or its inasmuch as it has no object, like a conveyor belt that makes moving
silences. Sometimes it operates in silence, sometimes it presents itself objects appea r and disa ppear.
through the use of a recorded voice; moreover, it forces speech to be- Beckett's text is perfectly d ear: it is a question of exhausting space.
come image, movement, song, poem. No doubt this language is born There is no doubr thar the characters will become tired, and will drag
h.
t in the novels and the novellas, and passes through the theater, but it is thei r feet more and more. Yet tiredness primarily concerns a minor as-
in television that it accomplishes its own mission, distinct from the first pect of the enterprise: the number of rimes one possible combination is
,
,~
two. Quad will be Space with silence and eventually music. Ghost Trio realized (for example, two of the duos are realized twice, the fou r trios
will be Space with a presenting voice and music .... But the clouds . .. twice, the quarret fo ur times). The protagonists become tired depend-
will be Image with voice and poetry. Nacht ulld Triium e will be Image ing on the number of realizations. But the possible is accomplished, in-
with silence, song, and music. dependently of this number, by the exhausted characters who exhaust
it. The problem is: in relation to what is exhaustion (which must not be
Q uad, without words, without voice, is a quadrilateral, a squa re. confused with tiredness) going to be defined? The characters realize
Nonetheless, it is perfectly determined, possessing certain dimensions; and tire at the fo ur corners of the square, and along the sides and diag-
but it has no other determinations than its formal singularities, four onals. But they accomplish and exhaust at the center of the square,
equidistant vertices and a center, and no other contents or occupants where the diagonals cross. This is where the potentiality of the square
than the fou r identical characters who ceaselessly traverse it. It is a seems to lie. Potentiality is a double possible. It is the possibility that
dosed, globally defined , any-space-whatever. Even the characters- an event, in itself possible, might be realized in the space under consid-
short and thin, asexual, wrapped in their cowls-have no other singu- eration: the possibi lity that something is realizing itself, and the possi-
larities than the fact that each of them departs from a vertex as from a bility that some place is realizing it. The potentiality of the square is
cardinal point, "any-characters-whatever" who traverse the square, the possibi lity that the four moving bodies that inhabit it will collide-
each followi ng a given course and direction. They can always be modi- two, three, or all four of them-depending on the order and the course
fied with a light, a color, a percussion, or a particular sound of foot- of the seriesF The center is precisely that place where they can run
steps, which would allow us to distinguish between them. But this is into each other; and their encounter, their coll ision is not one event
merely a means of recognizing them; in themselves, they are only deter- among others, but the only possibility of an event-that is, the poten-
mined spatially; in themselves, they are modified by nothing other than tiality of the corresponding space. To exhaust space is to extenuate its
their order and position. They are unmodified protagonists in an un- pqtentiality by mak ing any encounter impossible. Conseq uently, the
modifia ble space. Q uad is a ritornello that is essentially. motor, whose solution to the problem lies in this slight dislocation at the center, rhis
music is the shuffli ng of slippers-like the sound of rats. The form of SWay of the hips, th is deflection, this hiatus, this punctuation, this syn-
the ritornello is the series, which in this case is no longer concerned cope, this quick sidestep or little jump that foresees the encounter and
with objects to be combined, but only with journeys having no ob- a\'errs it. The repetition takes nothing away from the decisive and ab-
ject.5s The series has an order, according to which the series increases solute character of such a gesture. The bodies avoid each other respec-
and decreases, increases and decreases again, depending on the appear- tively, but they avoid the center absolutely. T hey sidestep each other at
ance and disappearance of the protagonists at the four corners of the ~he center in order to avoid each other. but each of them also sidesteps
square: it is a ca non. It has a continuous course, depending on the suc- In solo in order to avoid the center. What is depotenrialized is the space,
cession of the segments that are traversed: one side, the diagonal, an- a krrack ... just wide enough for one. O n it no two ever meet. " 58
olher side, and so on. It has a set, which Beckett describes as follows: Quad is close to a ballet. The general similarities between Beckett's
164 THE EXHAUSTED THE EXHAUSTED 165

work and modern ballet are numerous; the abandon ment of the privi- the ca mera shows them in close-up--homogenous, gray, rectangular
leging o f vertical statu re; the agglutination of bodies as a means of re- partS homologous with a single space distinguished solely by nuances
maining upright; the substitution o f an any-space-whatever for quali- of gray: in the order of succession, a sample of the (loor, a sample of
fied and extended spaces; the replacement of all story and narration by the wall, a door without a knob, an opaque window, a pallet seen from
a "genus" as a logic of poStures and positions; the quest for a mini- above. These objects in space are strictly identical to the parts of space.
malisrn; the introduction of walking and its va ri OllS accidents into It is therefore an any-space-whatever, in the previously defined sense:
" dance; the conquest of gestural dissonances. It is not surprising that it is completely determined, but it is determined locally-and not glob-
( Becken asks that the walkers of Quad h3ve "some ballet training." ally, as in QlIad-by a succession of even gra y bands. It is an any-
Not only does the walking require it, but so does the hiatus, the punc- space-whatever in fragmentation, in close-ups, whose filmic vocation
tuation, and the dissonance. was indicated by Robert Bresson: fragmentatio n " is indispensable if
It is also dose to a musical work. A work by Beethoven, "Ghost one does not want to fall into repr~ntation .... Isolate the parts.
Trio," appears in another of Beckert's pieces for television, and gives it Make them independent as a way of giving them a new dependence."60
its title. The second movement of the trio, which Beckert utilizes, pre- Disconnect them to allow for a new connection. Fragmentation is the
sents us with the composition, decomposition, and recomposition of a first step in a depote~alization of space, through loca l paths.
theme with twO motifs, with twO ritornellos. It is like the increase and To be sure, a glol)al space had been given at the outset, in a long
decrease of a more or less dense compound along melodic and har- shol. Bur even here, it is not-as in Quad. where the camera is fixed and
monic lines, its sonorous surface traversed by a continual movement, elevated, exterior to the space of a dosed shot, necessarily operating in
obsessive and obsessional. But there is something else as well: a kind of a continuous manner. To be sure, a global space can be exhausted by
central erosion that fi rst arises as a threat among the bass parts and is the simple power of a fixed camera, immobile and continuous, operat-
expressed in the trill or wavering of the piano, as if one key were about ing with a zoom. One famous example is Michael Snow's Wavelength:
to be abandoned for another, or for nothing, hollowing out the sur- a forty-five-minute zoom explores a recta ngular any-space-whatever,
face, plunging into a ghostly dimension where dissonances would ap- and rejects the events it encounters as it moves forward by endowing
pear only to punctuate the silence. And this is precisely what Becken them with little more than a ghostly existence (through negative super-
emphasizes whenever he speaks of Beethoven: a hitherto unknown art imposition, fo r example) until it reaches the far wall, on which is hung
of dissonances, a wavering, a hiatus, "a punctuation of dehiscence," a an image of the empty sea, into which the enti re space is swallowed up.
stress given by what opens, slips away, and disappears, a gap that I~ i~, as has been said, "the story of the diminishing area of pure poten-
punctuates nothing other than the silence of a final end ing)9 But if the tiality. "61 Bur apart from the fact that Beckett does not like special ef-
trio effectively displays these [fairs, why was it not used to accompany ~ects, the conditions of the problem, from the point of view of a loca l-
Quad, to which it is so well suited? Why is it used to punctuate an- Ized .reconstruction, require that the ca mera be both mobile (with
other piece? Perhaps because there is no need for Quad to illustrate a tracking shotS) and discontinuous (with jump cutS): everything is writ-
piece of music that will take on a role elsewhere by developing its ten down and quantified. This is because the space of Trio is on ly de-
ghostly dimension in a different manner. termined on three sides, east, north, and west, the soulh being consti-
tUted by the camera as a mobi le partition. T his is not the dosed space
Ghost Trio is made up of both voice and music. It is still concerned of ,?uad, with a single central potentiality, but a space with th ree po_
with space, with exhausting its potentialities, but it does so in a com- :entlalities: the door to the east, the window ro the north, and the pa l-
pletely different manner than does Quad. One might at first thi nk it is et}O the wen. And since these are the parts of space, the camera
an extended space qualified by the elements that occupy it: the (loor, movements and curs constirute the passage from one to the other, as
the walls, the door, the window, the paller. But these elements are de- Well as their succession, their substitution, all these gray bands that
fun ctiona lized, and the voice names each of them successively while compose the space in accordance with the demands of the local treat.
166 THE UHAUST(D THf EXHAUSTED 167

memo But moreover (and this is the most profound aspect of Trio ), aU to introduce the works fot television, rather than being fully a part of
these parts plunge into the void, each in its own way, each revealing them. In Trio. the whispering voice has become neutral, blank, without
the emptiness into which they are plunging: the door opening onto intentions, without resonance, and the space has become an any-space-
a dark corridor, the window looking out ontO a rainy night, the flat whatever, without depth and with no underside, having no other ob-
pallet that reveals its own emptiness. So that the passage and the suc- jectS tha n its own parts. This is the final step of depotentialization-a
cession from one part to another only serves to co,mect or link to- double step, si nce the voice dries up the possible at the same time as
gether unfathomable lIoids. Such is the new conne<:tion, specifica lly the space extenuates its potentialitjes. Everything indicates that the
t ghostlike. or the second step of depotentialization. It ~orrespo~ds to woman who speaks from the outSide and the woman who could sud-
Beethoven's music when the latter succeeds in punctuaung the Silence, denly appear in this space are one and the same. Between the twO,
and when a "path of sound" no longer cooneen anything but " unfath- however, between the off-screen voice and the pure field of space, there
omable abysses of silence."62 This is particularly the case in Beethoven's is a scission, a line of separation, as in Greek theater, Japanese No, or
"Trio," in which the wavering, the tremolo, already indicates holes the cinema of the Straubs and Marguerite Duras.'5 It is as if a radio
of silence across which the sonorous connection passes, at the price of piece and a silent film were being played simultaneously: a new form
dissonances. of the inclusive disjunction. Or rather, it is like a split frame, on one
The situation is as fo llows: the voice of a woman, prerecorded, side of which are inscribed the silences of the voice, and on the other,
predetermined, prophetic, whose source is off-screen, announces in a the voids of space (jump curs). It is OntO this ghostly frame that the
whisper that the protagonist "will think he hears her. "61 Seated on a music is hutled, connecting the voids and the silences, following a
stool near the door and clutching a small cassette player, the protago- ridge line like a limit to infinity.
nist gets up, setS the cassette player down, and like a ghostly night There are numerous trios: voice, space, and music; woman, man,
watchman or sentinel moves toward the door, then the window, then and child; the three principal positions of the camera; the door to the
the pallet. There are startings-over, returns to the seated position, and east, the window to the north, and the paller to the west, three poten-
the cassette player em its music only when the protagonist is seated, tialities of space ... The voice says: "He will now think he hears
leaning over the machine. This general situation is not unlike the o~e her. "64i But we should not think he is afraid and fee ls threatened; this
in Eh Joe. which was Beckert's fi rst piece for television. 64 But the dif- was true in Eh Joe, but not here. He no longer wantS or is waiting for
fe rences between it and Trio are even greater. In Eh Joe. the fema le the woman; on the contrary. He is merely waiting for the end, the lat-
voice did not present the objects, and the objects were not identified est end. The whole of Trio is organized in order to put an end to it, and
with [he flat and equiva lent parts of the space. In addition to the door the end so ea rnestly desired is at hand: the music (absent from Eh Joe),
and the window there was a cupboard that introduced an interior the music of Beethoven, is inseparable from a conversion to silence,
depth to the roo~, and the bed had a space beneath it, rather than sim- from a rendency to abolish itself in the voids that it connects. In truth,
ply being a pallet laid on the floor. The protagonist was tracked, and the protagonist has extenuated all the potentialities of the space, inas-
the function of the voice was not to name or to announce, but to re- much as he has treated the three sources as simple, identical, and blind
mind, to threaten, to persecute. This was still language II. The voice part~, floating in the void: he has made the arrival of the woman im-
had intentions and intonations, it evoked persona l recollections that ':;~5Ible. Even the pallet is so flat that it bears witness to its emptiness.
were unbearable to the protagonist, and sunk into this di mension of . y does the protagonist nevertheless start over again, long after the
memory without being able to rise to the ghostly dimension .of an .in- ~olce has fallen si lent? Why does he again go to the door, to the win-
definite impersonal. It is only in Ghost Trio that this latter d lm enslo~ ~)Y. to the head of the pallet? We have seen why: it is because the end
is attained: a woman, a man, and a child, without any personal coordi- WIll have been. long before he could know it: "everything will continue
nates. From Eh Joe to Trio. a kind of vocal and spatial purification 'hUto~atically. until (he order arrives. to stop everything."67 And when
t elmlc mute messenger su dd en Jy appears, . It .15 not to announce that
takes place, which gives the first piece a preparatory value that serves
168 THE EJ(HAUSTfD THE EXHAUSTED 169

the woman will not be coming, as if this were a piece of bad news, but fades, or disperses like a cloud or a puff of smoke. The visual image is
to bring the long-awaiu=d order to stop everything, everything being carried along by the music, the sonorous imagt: that rushes toward
well and truly finished. At least the prOtagonist has a means of sensing its own abolition. Both of them rush toward the end, all possibility
that the end is at hand. Language III involves not only space but also exhausted.
the image. There is a mirror in Ghost Trio [hat plays an important
• role, and must be distinguished from the door-window-pallet series The Trio leads us from space to the thresholds of the image. But ...
because it is not visible from the "camera position general view," and but the clouds . .. enters into the "sanctum." The sanctum is the place
"{ it does not figure in the presentations given at the beginning; moreover, where the protagonist will make the image. Or rather. in a return to the
it will be paired with the cassette player ("small gray rectangle, same post-Cartesian theories of Murphy, there a re now twO worlds, the
dimensions as cassette") and not with the three objects.'8 Further- physical and the mental, the corporeal and the spiritual, the real and
more, the only time the prophetic voice is taken by surprise, caught off the possible_ 71 The physical world seems to be made up of a qualified,
guard-"Ah!"-is when the protagonist leans over the mirror for the extended space: to the left, there is a door that opens onto some "back
first time, before we are able to see it. When at laSt we see the mirror. roads," and through which the protagonist leaves and returns; to the
in an extreme close-up, what suddenly appears in it is the Image, that right, a closet in which he changes his clothes; and up above, the sanc-
is, the face of the abominable protagonist. The image will leave its-sup- tum into which he disappears. But all this only exists in the voice,
port and become a floating close-up, while the final, amplified bars of which is that of the protagonist himself. What we see, by contrast, is
the second movement of the "Trio" are being played. The face starts only an any-space-whatever, determined as a circle surrounded by
to smile, the astonishingly treacherous and cunning smile of someone black, which becomes darker as ooe moves toward the periphery and
who has reached the goal of his " testy delirium": he has made the brighter as one moves toward the center. The door. the closet, and the
image.69 sanctum a re merely directions in the circle: west, east, north; and far to
Trio goes from the space to the image. The any-space-whatever al- the south, outside the circle, lies the immobile camera. When the pro-
ready belongs to the category of possibility, because its potentialities tagonist moves in one direction, he simply disappears into the shadow;
make possible the realization of an event that is itself possible. But the when he is in the sanctum, he only appears in close-up, from behind,
image is more profound because it frees itself from its object in order "sitting on invisible stool bowed over invisible table. »n The sanctum,
to become a process itself, that is, an event as a "possible" that no th~n, only has a mental existence; it is a "mental chamber," as Murphy
longer even needs to be realized in a body or an object, somewhat like saId, and corresponds to the law of inversion as formulated by Mur-
the smile without a cat in Lewis Carroll. This is why Beckett takes such phy: "But motion in this world (of the mind) depended on rest in the
care in making the image. Already in £h Joe, the smil ing face appeared ,;"orld lof the body]."7j The image is precisely this: not a representa-
in an image, but without our being able to see the mouth, the pure pos- ~Ion.of an object but a movement in the world of the mind. The image
sibility of the smile being in the eyes and in the twO upward-rising ~s the spiritual life, the "life above" of How It Is. One can exhaust the
commisures, the rest not being included in the shot. A horrible smile Jays, the movements, and the acrobatics of the life of the mind only if
without a mouth. In ... but the douds . .. , the fema le face " has almost h' bod
the . Yremains . .Immo b·1I e, cur I_~
cu up, seared, somber. itself exhausted:
no head, a face without head suspended in the void"; and in Nacht und thiS IS what Murphy called "collusion,"'4 the perfect accord between
Triiume, the dreamed face seems as if it were wrested from the cloth t, e needs of the body and the needs of the mind, the double exhaus-
which mops away its sweat, like a face of Christ, and is floating in
space.70 But if it is true that the any-space-whatever cannot be sepa-
rated from an inhabitant who extenuates some of its potentialities, the
ar
tIon. The subject of ... but the clouds . .. is this spiritual need, this life
ve . What matters is no longer the any-space-whatever but the men-
ta Image to which it leads.
image, with even greater reason, remains insepa rable from the move- ?f course, it is nOt easy to make an image. It is not enough simply
to th mk o f somer h 109
· or someone. The vOice , says: "When I thought of
ment through which it dissipates itself: the head bows, turns away,
170 THE EXHAUSTEO THE EXHAUSTED 171

her ... No ... No, that is not right ... " What is required is an obscure the mind that does not set out to recount a Story but to ercct an image:
spiritual tension, a second or third intensio, as the authors of the Mid- the words provide a decor for a network o f circuits in an a ny-space-
dle Ages put it, a silent evocation that is also an invocation and even a whatever; these finely detailed ci rcuits are measured and recapitulated
convocation, and a revocation, since it raises the thing or the person to in space and time in relation to what must remai n indefinite in the
the state of a n indefinite: a woman ... " I call to the eye of the mind," spiritual image; the characters are like "supermarionettes"; the cam-
, exclaims Willie. 75 N ine hundred and ninety-eight times out of a thou- era, as a cha racter, has an autonomous, furti ve, or dazzling movement
sand, one fails and nothing appears. And when one succeeds, the sUD- that is antagonistic to the movement of the o ther characters; artificial
lime image invades the screen, a female face with no outline; some- techniques (slow motion, superimposition) are rejected as being un-
, times it disappears immediately, "in the same breath,"" sometimes it suit~d to the mov~m~ n ts of th~ mind ... 12 According to Beckett, only
(~ lingers before disappearing, sometimes it murmurs some: words from television is able to satisfy th ~se demands.
Yeats's pcxm . In any case, the image answers to the demands of III seen
III said, III seen III heard, which reigns in the kingdom of the mind. And Making the image is still the operation of Nadlt lind Trallme. In this
as a spiritua l movement, it cannot be separated from the process of case, however, the protagonist has no voice with which to speak and
its own disappearance, its dissipation, whether premature or not. The does no t hear any voices; he is unable to move about, seated, empty
image is a pant, a breath, but it is an expiring breath, on its w<l:Y to ex- h~ad in crippled hands, "clenched staring eyes. "8J This is a new purifi-
tinction. The image is that which extinguishes itself, consumes itself: a cation, "Nohow less. Nohow worse. Nohow nought. Nohow on." 84 It
fall. It is a pure intensity, which is defined as such by its height, that is, is night, and he is about to dream. Are w~ supposed to think he is
by its level above zero, which it describes o nly by falling .n What is re- falling asleep? We would do better to believ~ Blanchot when he says
tained from Yeats's poem is the visual image of douds moving through that sleep betrays th~ night because it introduc~s an int~ rruption be-
the sky and dispersing on the horizon, and the sonorous image of the tween two days, permitting the following day to succeed the preced-
bird's cry fading into the night. It is in this sense that the image concen- ing one. Sl We are oft~n content to distinguish between daydreams or
trates within itself a potential energy, which it carries along in its waking dreams and the dreams of sle~p. But these ar~ questions of
process of self-dissipation. It announces that the end of the possible is tiredn~ss and repose. We thereby miss the third state, which is perhaps
at hand for the pro tagonist of ... but the clouds . .. , JUSt as it was for the most important o ne: insomnia, which alone is appropriate to night,
Winnie, who felt a "zephyr." a "breath, "78 right before the eternal and the dream of insomnia, which is a matter of exhaustion. The ex-
darkness, the dead end of the black night. There is no lo nger an image, hausted person is the wide-eyed person. We dreamed ;" sle~p, but
any more than there is a space: beyond the possible there is only dark- we dream alongside insomnia. The twO exhaustions, the logical a nd
ness, as in Murphy's third and fina l state, where the protagonist no the psychological, "the head and the lungs," as Kafka said, meet up
longer moves in spirit but has become an indiscernible atom, abulic, behind our backs. Kafka and Beckett hardl y resemble each other, but
"in the dark ... of ... absolute freedom."" This is the final word, what th~y do have in commo n is the insomniac dream." In the dream
"nohow." 10 of insomnia, it is a question not of realizing the impossible but of ex-
It is the entire last stanza of Yeats's poem that ties in with ... but hausting the possible, eirher by giving it a maximal extension that al-
the clouds . .. : it takes two exhaustions to produce the end that carries lows it to be trcated like a real waking day, in the manner of Kafka, o r
off the Seared person. But Beckett's encounter with Years goes well cl.se by red ucing it to a minimum that subjects it to the nothingness of a
beyond this piece; it ;s nm that Beckett takes up Yeats's project of in- n~ght without sleep, as in Beckett. The dream is the guardian of insom-
troducingJapanese No as the fulfillment of the theater. But the conver- n~a that keeps it from fa ll ing aslcep. Insomnia is the crouching beaSt
gences between Beckett and No, even if involuntary, perhaps presup- t~at Stretches out as long as the da ys and cu rls up as tightly as the
pose the theatre of Yeats, and appear for their part in the works for nIght. The terrifying posture of insomnia.
television.11 This ;s what has been called a "visual poem, n a theater of The insomniac of Nocht .",d Tramne is preparing himself for what
172 THE EKHAUSHD THE EXHAUSTED 173

he has to do. He is seated, his hands stated on the table. his head or van Velde; or on the surface of sound, as in Beethoven or Schubert,
seated o n his hands: a simple movement of the hands, which could be so as to allow fo r the emergence of the void or the visible in itself, the
placed o n the head or simply separated from each o ther, is a possibility silence or the audible in itself; but "is there any reason why that terri-
that can only appear in a dream, like a flying footstool ... But this ble materiality of the word surface should not be capable of being dis-
dream has to be made. The dream of the exhausted, insomniac, o r abu- solved ... ?"S7 It is not on ly that words lie; they are so burdened with
lic person is not like the dream of sleep. which is fashioned all alone calculations and significations, with intentions and personal memories,
in the depths of the body and of desire; it is a dream of the mind that with old habits that cement them together, that one can scarcely bore
has [0 be made, fabricated . What is "dreamed," the image, will be [he intO the surface before it closes up again. It sticks together. It imprisons
same character in the same seated position, but inverted,left profile in- and suffocates us. Music succeeds in transforming the death of this
stead of right profile, above the dreamer. But in order for the dreamed young girl into a young girl dies; it brings about this extreme determi-
hands [0 be rdeased into an image, other hands, those of a woman, nation of the indefinite like a pure intensity that pierces the surface, as
will have to flutte r about and raise his head, make him drink abun- in the "Concerto in Memory of an Angel." But words are unable to do
dantly from a chalice, and wipe his brow with a cloth-all in such a this, given the adhesions that keep them bound to the general or the
way that, with his head now raised, the dreamed character can extend particular. They lack that "punctuation of dehiscence, " that "discon-
his hands toward one of these other hands that condense and dispense nection " that comes from a groundswell peculiar to art. It is television
the energy in the image. This image seems to attain a heartrending that, in part, allows Beckett to overcome the inferiority of words:
intensity until the head again sinks down onto three hands, the fo urth either by dispensing with spoken words, as in Q uad and Nach t und
resting gendy on (OP of the head. And when the image is dissipated, we Triiume; or by using them to enumerate, to expound, or to create a
might imagine we heard a voice: the possible is accomplished, " it is decor, which loosens them and allows things and movements to be in-
done I've made the image." But there is no voice that spuks, any mort troduced between them (Ghost Trio, ... but the clouds . . •); or by
than in Quad. There is only the male voice, which hums and sings emphasizing certain words according to an interval or a bar, the rest
the last bars of the humble ritornello carried along by the music of passing by in a barely audible murmur, as at the end of Eh Joe; or by
Schubert, "Soft dreams come again ... ," once before the appearance including some of the words in the melody, which gives them [he ac-
of the image, and once after its disappearance. T he sonorous image, centuation they lack, as in Nacht und Triiume. In television, however,
the music, takes over from the visual image, and opens onto the void there is always something other than words, music or vision, that
or the silence of the fina l end. In this case, it is Schubert, so admired by makes them loosen their grip, separates the~ or even opens them up
Becken, who brings about a hiatus or a leap, a kind of uncoupling co~p letely. Is there then no salvation for words, like a new style in
whose mode is very different from Beethoven's. T he monodic, melodic whIch words would at last open up by themselves, where language
voice leaps outside the harmonic support, here reduced to a minimum, Would become poetry, in such a way as to actually produce the visions
in order to undertake an exploration of the pure intensities that are and sounds that remained imperceptible behind the old language (" the
experienced in the way the sound fades. A vector of abolition straddled old style" )?U Visions o r sounds: how can they be distinguished? So
by music. pure and so simple, so strong, they are said to be ill seen ill jaid when-
everword s pIerce
· th emseivesd an turn agamst. themselves so as to re-
veal .thei r own OurSI'de. A mUSIC. proper to a poetry read aloud without
In his works for television, Beckett exhausts space twice over, and the
mUSIC '.From t he be· .
gmnmg, Bec kert employed a style that would at the
image twice over. Beckett became less and less tolerant of words. And
he knew from the outset the reason he became increasingly intolerant ~ me tIme proceed through a perforation and a proliferation of tissue
of them: the exceptional difficulty of "boring holes" in the surface of ha breaking down and multiplication of tissue")." It is worked out
language so that "what lurks behind it " might at last appear. This can t rough the novels and rhearer pieces, shows itself in How It Is and
eJ(plod ~ ,
be done on the surface of a painted canvas, as in Rembrandt, Cezanne, es m the splendor of his final texts. Sometimes shorr segments
174 THE fl(H"'USHO

art= ct=asdt=ssly addt=d to tht= intt=rior of tht= phrase in an aut=mpt to


brt=ak open tht= su rface of words completdy, as in the ~m What Is
the Word:
folly seeing all this-
this-
what is tht= word- Notes
this this-
"
I this this ht=rt=-
all this this hert=-
• folly givt=n all this-
seeing-
folly seeing all this this hert=-
for to- Introduction. "A life of Pure Immanence":
what is the word- Deleuze's ~ Cr itique et Clin ique ~ Project
,,<- 1. Gi lles lklel.lze, "Coldness and Cruelty, ~ in MaJochiJm, trans. Jean M,Neil
glimpst=- (New York: Zone, 1989), p. 14. This C"Ssay is an expansion of ideas fim develoJ'C'd in
seem to glimpse- "De Sa,her·Masoch au masochi5me,~ in IIrgume"u 5, no. 2 1 Uanuary- April 1961 1,
nt=ed to seem to glimpse- 40--46. See also Ihe short but important interview with Madeleine Chapsal, KMystique
folly for to nt=ed to seem to glimpse- ft masochisme," in La quinUlinc littbai,e 25 (April I-IS, 1961): 12-13.
what- 2. Gilles Delcuze, Thc Logic of ~e, td. Constantin V. Boundas, trans. Mark
............................. ........................................... ......" Lester with Charles Stivale (New York, Columbia Univcnity Press, 1990).
3. Gilles Deleuze and Fili:c Guamri, CApitali,m and ScbizophrcnW. vol. 1, Anti-
And sometimt=s tht= phrast= is riddled with dots o r dashes (traits) in Oedipus, trans. Robert Hurley, Mark Seem, and Helen R.Une (Minneapolis: Univenity
ordt=r to ct=aselt=ssly reduce tht= surfact= of words, as in tht= pi«e Worst- of Minnesola PtcS$, 1983); vol. 2, II Tbou$ilnd Plareau" trans. Brian Massumi (Min-
rxapolis: Univenity of Minnesota Press, 1981).
word Ho: 4. Gilles Deleuu, PrOUJt and SigflS, trans. Richa rd Howard (New York, Georsc
Braziller, 19n ); GilIC"S Ddeuu and Felix Guattari. Kil{ilJ: Toward a Minor UtD"oltllU,
uss bt=st. No. Naught beSt. Best worse. No. Not best worse. Naught
uans. Dana Polan (Minneapolis: Univenity of MinnC"SOta Press, 1986); ~The Exhausted-
not bt=st worst=. U5S best worse. No. kast. kast beSt worst=· uast (on Samuel B«kett), ehapler 18 in Ihis volume; "One Manifesto Le$s" (on Carmelo
nevt=r to be naught. Never to naught be brought. Nt=ver by naught be Bene), lrans. Alan OrenSlein, in The OellNu RClJdD", td. Constan tin V. Boundas (New
nulled. Unnullable least. Say that bt=st worst. With it=astening wordS YOlk: Columbia Universily Press, 1993), pp. 204-22.
say least beSt worst. S. Gilles Deleuu and Clai re Parne!, Ow/ogutJ, trans. Hugh Tomlinson and Bat-
............................................................................................. Blanks bara Habberjam (New York: Columbia University Press, 1987), pp. 36-16.
for when words gone 91 6. Gilles Deleuu, ~On Philosop hy," in Ncgotiatio" ,: 1972-1990, lrans. Martin
JO~ghin (New York: Columbia Univct$ity Press, 1995), p. 142, "rve dreamed aoout
bnnging togelher a series of studies under Ihe general title Cr'tiqu~ ~t dinique." For
olher explici t references 10 the proje<:t, see Masochism, p. I S; Logic ofS~"sc, pp. 83, 92,
121-28, 237_38; and Dialogu~J, pp. 120, 141 .
7. S« Gilles Deleuzc, preface to the English edition, Oiff~rc"u tlnd R~Pdition,
Ir ins. Paul Panon (Ne w York: Colu mbia Univetsiry Pren, 1994), p. :cv: KA philosophi·
~I 'oncepI ,an never be confu~ with a so:iemifie fun"ion or an artislic ,0nSlru"ion,
~I finds itself in 4finjry wilh Ihese in Ihis o r Ihal domain of so:ience or style of arl. M

I l.cl.I.1.e and Guallari analyze Ihe precise relations between philosophy, arl, .science, and
~IC '" What IJ Phil~ophyllrans. Hugh Tomlinson and Graham Rurchell (New York:
d' Iumbia University Press, 1994). On philosophy'$ need for such "inlcrceS50rs" or me-
'alon., see Nt"gotiatjonJ, pp. 123-26.
8. Gilles Dcleule, ~8 ans apm: Ennelien 1980" (in terview wilh Catherine C~-

175
176 NOTES TO INTRODUCTION 1'1 0 1( $ TO I NU ODUCTIO N 177

ment ), in L'llrc 49 (rev. ed., 1980), special issue on Ddcuze, p. 99. Dclcuu's response to 23. Negotiations, p. 143, and What Is PhilOJOphy f p. 17 1.
a qU~lion concerning the - genrc· of JI. ThouSilnd PiarclllU is equally applicable to all 24. Ddeuu was responding 10 a question posed fO him du ring lhe u-nsy col.
his boolu. I u.um on Nietuche in 1972; sec Nittuche auiourd'hui (Paris: Union Generale
9. NtgOlUJlions, p. S8. d'ioirions, 10118, 1973 ), vol. 1, ['ltensitieJ, pp. 186-87. Moreover, Deleuu and GUai.
10. Gilles Ddcuu, The Mo~c,, '·fmDgt, trans. Hligh Tomlinson and Barba~ rari have distanced them~lvn from ctrtain Heidegge-rian p roblema rics thai IXrrida has
Habbcrjam (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1986). p. IX; Negotiations, p. 47. laken up: "The dea th of meta physics o r t he overcoming of phitosophy has never been
11 . Gilles Delcult, Fra"cis Bileo/I: w giq ..c de la sC"J<itio" . 2 vols. (Paris: Edi tion. a prohlem for us" (What IJ Philruoph.,r p . 9). Dele-uu none-t ht less ci tn Derrid a on
de la Difference, 198 1), vol. I, p. 7. numerouS occasions, and the many lines of convergence beTWeen Iheir respeaive works
h 12. Dclcu~e hn csulblished numerous such links in his workr-bctwccn, for in· remain to be uplored .
stance, Chckhov'l short Stories and FO\lCauh's " Infamous Men - (Ncgotiationi, pp. 108,
,j
ISO ); between Shakesptau's Hllmld and K.nfs Critiq~ of Pu, t RCllso" ("On Four For-
mulas Thai Might Summarize the Kantian Philosophy," chaplcr S in Ihis volume); be·
25. Sec: -Myslique et masochislllC', ~ p. 13: - I would never have- permitted myself
10 write- on psychoanalYlis and psydai.3fl'Y We're I nOl: dealing wit h a proble-m of symp--
l(II1\arology. Sym ptomalology is silualC'd almost outside- of medicillC', a t a neutral point,
I~ TWeen Alfred J arry ~nd M a rtin He-idqge-r (- An Unl"C'COglliud Precursor to Heidcs8e-r: a zero poim, where anistl and philosophers and doctors and patie-nts can encounter
Alfred J arry, ~ chapt er II in this volume); and in the cine ma, between Kierkepard and
nch other."
Dreye r, and between Pasa l and Bresson (The MolJCftent·lmDge, pp. 11 ~ 1 6 ). O ne
26. MlI$ocbism, p. 1l3. The- history of medicine-, DeleuZC' suggests. can the-relore-
mighl nOle thai Stan ley Cavell presents his own inlernl in Ihe- cine-rna in simdar le-rIN:
be ~rded unde-r at least two aspectS. The first is the- hiltory of distaUJ, which may
_I discuss the- blanket in II Happtl'led O ne N ight in te-rms of the censoring of hunan
diuppear, rC("ede. re-appear, or a lle r the-ir form de-pending on nume-rOUJ e-xlernal facton
knowle-dge- and aspiralion in t he philosophy of Kant; and [ see the sp«u latio n of
(Ihe appearance o f ne-w microbes or vi ruses, altered t«hnological and t hera peutic
Hcidqger exemplified or elltplai ne-d in the- coun tenance of BUSier Ke-alon. ~ See "l"hC"
lC("hniques, and cha ngi ng socia l cond itions). Bu t intertwined wilh Ih is is the hiltory of
Thought of Movies, ~ in Themes out of School: Efftets and CAuses (Chicago: University
symptomatology, which is a kind of "symax" of medici ne- thai solllC'times follows a nd
of Chicago PlCQ, 198" ), pp. 6-7.
sometimC'S prC("edes changes in t he-rapy or the- naTUre- of di~ases: symptoms are- isolated,
13. Gilln DelwZC', "l..ettrC'.prefaa," in Mireille Buydens, Stlhara; L'esthitique tU
namtd, a nd regrouped in ~arious manne-rs. While- external factors can make new symp--
Gilles Delewu (Paris: Vrin, 1990), p. 5; and NegotiatioM, p. 1"3. The term nC»lOTganN:
tomarologies possible-, they ca n neve-r dcte-rmine thC"m as SIKh. Sec:, lot inslallCC, Deleuu's
life is derived from Wilhelm Worringer, Form i" Gothic (London: Pumam, 1927),
rommcnts on post-World War II devdopmcnlS in symptomlliolasy in Negotiations,
pp. 41 ...... 2; Worringer used it to dacribe the vilality of Ihe- abslract line' in Gothic a rt (see
pp. 132-33.
Dele-IUC and Guattari, A T/toMw"d P~tuu.s, pp. 496-98).
27. Stt Logic of Sense, p. 237: -From lhe perspocrive of Freud 'I Srnius, il is nOl: the
14. Charles Dickens, 0 .. , MUhuJl FriDSd, book 3, chapter 3, in The Oxford 1I/Ju.
complex wh ich provides us with information about Dtdipul and Hamlet, bUI rathe-r
trated Dickens (London: Oxford University Press, 1952 ), p . .... 3.
IS. Gilles Deleuu, "L'immanrnce: Une- vic ... ," Philosophie .. 7 (Septem ber I , Oedipus and HamIel who provide us wilh information about the- compkx."
1995 ): S. "With a young chi ld, one al ready hIS an organic, personal relationsh ip, but 28. Logic ofSense, p. 237, translation mooifie-d. Sec: a lso Mluochism, p. 14: -Sym p--
lomatology is always a question of art. ~
nOt wil h 11 baby, which concentrates in it5 small ness the same energy thai shatters pavi",
stones. Wi th a baby, one has nolh ing bu t a n affective, at hlel ic, impersona l, vi la l relarion. 29. See, in p~rTic ula r, Frie-drich Nie-rzsche-, ~The Phi losophe-r a5 Cul tura l Physician"
It is ceTtaill that the will to po"," flppefl' s jll fl" ill filliltly more UflCt mall"tr i" a bflby (1873), in Philosophy and Tn4 th, cd. Daniel Breuale (Atlantic H ighlands, N. J.: H uman.
than i" a ma" of war" (-To Have Done with Judgme-n t, ~ chaple-r IS in Ihis voh.rne, e-m· ities Press, 1979), pp. 67-76, though [he ide-3 of the- phi losophe-r as a phySician o f culture
phasis added ). OCCUrs throughout NiC"rzsche'$ wriTings. For Deleule's analysis of the symptomatologia l
16. "literaTUre- and LifC"," cha pte-r 1 in this volulllC'. method in Nie-wche-, see Nietuche and Phi/osoplry, pp. x, 3, 75, 79, 157.
17. Gilles Dekuu, Nietuche and PhifoJoplry, Irans. H ugh Tomlinson (New York: 30. " Mystique t1 masochisme, ~ p. 13.
Columbia University Press, 1981 ), p. 1: " We always haY<' the- belieb, feelings., and 3 1. On all Ihe-sc poinTS, sec Ihe- important passage in A"ti·OtdipflJ, pp. 132-36,
thoughu we deserve-, give-n our way of being or our Ityk of life-. ~ On thC" distincti~ be· I'Sprcially on the- SIaTUS o f psychosis in lite-tarure (Anaud). For Fre\ld, the libido docs
TWn'n ethics a nd mor~lity, sec Negotiations, pp. 100, 114-15, as wc-II as -On {he- Dlffe-r· I\()I[ invl'St the socia l field as such excepf on the condilion that il be " dnexuali:ted~ a nd

ence betwn'n the EthiC$ and a M orality," in SpinotJl: Practical Philosophy, trans. Robert ~$u blim~ II"d~ ; an y scxual libid inal investmenl having a social dimension the rdorc seems
Hurley (San Francisco: City Lights, 1988 ), pp. 17-29. Regles fac .. /tatillts is a te-rm to him to bear wifne-ss to a pathogenic state, eithu a -fixation " in narciss ism or a -re.
Deleuu adopts from Ihe sociolinguist Wi lliam Labov to duignatr " functions of inre-rna l grl'Ssjon~ 1<) pr~·Ocdipal statC'S. For IXIe-uu:'s reflcctions o n The- presenl state- o f ~th ~
varia tion and no longer con~tanls. " Sec: G illes IXleuu, Fouca ..lt, Irans. Sean Hand .~aee o f literature- an d the- fragile condiTions for the- li rerary production, see Nego tifl .
(Min neapol is: University of Minnesota Press, 1988), pp. 146--47, note 18. . tIO" s, pp. 22-23, 128-3 1. On the df«t o f marketing on both liler3 fure and philosophy,
18. Friedrich Nictuche-, On tht Genealogy o f Mo rals, cs.aay I, S 17, in Basic Wnt· l<c ? ele-uu's crilique- of the "new ph ilosophers," " A propos des nouve-aux philosophes
illgJ of Nittucht, trans. Walte-r Kau fmann (New York: Modem Library, 19681, p. " 91. "" d un proble-me plus general, ~ Minu;t 4, supplemen t Uune 5, 1971): n.p.
19. Ntgotiatio"s, p. 100. • 32. "De Sacher·M asoch au ma sochi smc," p. 40. For a n ana lysil of the role- of Ihe
20. What Is PhifOJophyf p. 172. ~ SClfual mSlinet-whose va rious transformations and inversions were used 10 accoum
2 1. Negotiations, p. U4. Or lhe, "perversions"-in nine-tetnth-«nlury psychiatry, see Arnold 1. Davidson, MOOS.
22. WhlJt II PhifOfophyr p. 170. IRg Up the Corpses: Discases o f Sexua lity and the Emergence of the Psychiatric Sryle of
178 Non s TO INTRO DU CTIO N NOTES TO INUODUCTlOJ>l 179

RC';J.500ing. - in Mea""" Imd Method: Essays in Honor of Hilary Pulrlllm, ed. George t~in of Win genstcin's followers, of a form of Mcommon smse~ in the g\lise of a "gram·
Boolos (Ca mbridge: Cambridge University Prcss, 1~90), pp. 29S-325. mar" that would be properly "philO5Op hicaI Mand a "form of lik" that would be g~neri·
JJ. Deltuu summarizes fht resu lts of his clinical analystS in deyen propositions in call~' human.
the laSI pa ragraph of the book (Masochism, p. 134 ). For the analystS of the litera ry tech- 47. Anti·Oedipus, p. 109.
niques, sec chapler 2, "The Role of Dncriprions, - pp. 25-3.5. For Ihe relation to mino ri· 48. ProuSI Ilnd Sigm , p. 138. Sec also p. 128. where I)cleule ci te! Mako lm Lowry's
ties, s« Masochism, pp. 9-10, 93; Negorioltions, p. 142. description of the " mean ing" of his novel: " Ir can be- rrgarded as a kind of sym phony, or
34. ~ Mysriquc CI masochisme," pp. 12-13. Asked why he had treated onl y S.de in another way as a kind of o pcra-or even a horse opera. It is hot music, a poem, a
and I\lasoch from Ihis poinl of view, Deleuze replied, - There atc Olhen_ in fact, but their song, a tragedy, a com«iy, a farce, and so forth . It is superficial, c nt~na ining and boring,
work has nOI yet been re<:ogniud under the aspect of a ctu rivc sym pl omliiology, as wu aC(ording to taste. It is a prophtc)', a political warn ing, a cryptogram, a preposterous
the t<lsc with Masoch at the 51an. Theu is a prodigious table Itablta.IIX} of symptoms movie, and a writing on th~ wa ll. II un tvm be rcg3rded Il$ II sort of nIIlchl/"l~: il wor.s
corresponding to Ihe work of Samu~1 kktn: nol Ihal it is si mply a qUr$lion of id~ntify. too. belinIC me, liS I hllile fo und mit. ~ &Iuud UtfO"$ of Militolm Lowry, ~. Harv~y
ing an illness. but Ihe world as symptom, and the anist as symplomatologisl~ (p. 13). lireil and Margeric Sonner Lowry ( Philad~lphia and New York: Lippincon , 1965 ),
35. Dialogues, p. 120. p. 66, emphasis add~.
36. Gilles Od~uze, Exprusionism in Phjfruopby: Spino~, n ans. Marrin Joughin 49. Anti·Oedipus. p. J24. 5« also "Balance-Sheet Program for Ocsiring Ma-
(N~w York: z.c.,oc, 1990 ). 5« Dckuze's comm~nts in his Ictl~r to Ih~ transla tor, p. 11. chinr$, ~ in Felix Guamri. ChIlOSOPhy, ~. Sylvere Lot:ring~r (New York: ScmiOlenlel,
37. Negotiations, p. 142: MThe Recn"the is a geneul sem iology, a symplomatol. 19905 ), p. 1405: "How ~an clements be bound togerh~r by the absence of any link? In a
ogy of different worlds .~ cen ain sense, it can be- said that Canr$ianism, in Spi noUi and lcibnil, has nOt ceased to
38. See Ikleuze'$ discussion of the thru componenls of th e "critique Cf\clinique~ reply ro [his question. It is Ihe thcory of the real di stinction, inso fa r as it implies a spe-
project in Dill/ogues. pp. 120-23; I discuss various aspects of the third componenl (lil\ell cific logic. II is because they arc really distinct, and compl~tel y independent of each
of flight ) in the latter seclions of this r$say. other. that ultimale e l~menu or simple forms belong 10 the same being or to the sa me
39. Anti·Oedipus, p. 122. S\lbstance. ~
40. Gilles Deleuzc, "Schiwphlinie el posi tivite du desir, " in EncydopUu, Univer- SO. Proust IJnd Signs, pp. 93-1057. Thomas Wolfe, in his euay "The Story of a
SlIlis (Path: Liilion, Encydopldie Universalis France, 1972 ), vol. 14, p. 7305. Novel," in The Autobiogrllplry of lin Amnitan Artist, ~. I..c$l i~ Field (C:.a mbridge,
'I I . The definition of schilophr~nia as a process has a complex history. When Emile Mus.: Harvard University Ptcu, 1983), describes his oompo$itional technique in similar
Kraepelin tri«i 10 ground his concept of dementitJ prlluox (" prcmal\lfC: 5Cnility-J, he de- terms: "It was as if I had d iscovered a whol~ new universe of chemical clements and had
fined it ocither by caUSC:$ nor by symptoms but by a process, by an evolution and a ler' begun to sec ce nain relations between some of them but had by no means begun to
minal Slate; but he conceiv~ of Ihis tCTminal Slale:as a complete and 100ai disinlcgrarioo, orpniu and a rrllnge the wholf: series in such a way that they would crystallize into a
which jusrifi~ the confinement of the patient in an asy lum while awaiting hh deam. harmonious and coherent union. From this time on, I think my dfon might be described
Dcleuzc and Guana ri's nOlion is closer 10 th at of Karl Jaspers and R. O. Lai ng, who for- as the dfon to rompler~ that organ iu tion. ~
mubl.l~ a rich notion of process as a rupture, an irruption, an opening (pock) thai 05 1. NegotitJtiofIJ, p. '47; A ThouSlInd PlilUIlUS, p. 6.
breaks th~ continuity of a personality, carrying il off in a ki nd of voyage through an in- 52. Sec Ernst Ma yr, " An Analysis of Ih~ Concept of Na tural Selection, ~ in ToWtJrd
tense and terrifying "more than reality," following lints o f flight that ~ngulf both nature II New Philruoplry of Biology: Obuf1Illtiom of lin Evolutionist (Cambridge, Mass.: Hat ·

and hislory, both the orga nism and the mind. 5« Anti.Oedip us, pp. 24-205. • ".ard UniverSity Press, 1988). p. 98: "Selection would nOl be possible wit hout the con'
42. Gi lles Dcl~uzt and Fel ix Gua lta ri, "La synthesc disjoncrive," L'Il'c 43, spec..1 l,"uOUS restora tion of variabili ty. ~
issue on Pierre Klossowski (Aix-cn· Pro'·encc: Duponchen~, 1970), p. 56, emphasis added. . 053. Gilles Dcleuu, The Time-InIIlge, trans. Hugh Tomlinson and Robert Galera
43. A ThoMSlInd PiartllUS, p. 'I; NtgotitJtions, p. 2J. 5« also "SchizophrEnic CI ( ~1mneapolis: University of Minnesota Ptc5$, 1989). p. 129,tr.lnslation modified, empha·
positivite du dCsi r.~ p. 7305: "~us resign ours-e:lves 10 the idea that ccnai~ a~iSl$ oc ilS added. On the philosophica l use of scientific functions, sec NetJOtillNol'IS, pp. 123-26.
writers have had mon revelations concerning schiwphrenia than the Pliyc h, all"lSl$ and 05 4. Sec " Klossowski, or Bodir$.Language, ~ in The Logic of Smu, esp. pp. 292-94,
psychoanalysts. ~ . . wher~ Dcl~\lze contrasts ~the o rder o f God ~ wilh "the ordu of the Anti·ChriSt."
44. This text is inc luded in th~ English tnnslation under the 1II1~ ~ "nulogos; or, dlC 0505. The Fold. chapter S. and Logit of Sense, pp. 110-11. For the distinction be·
Lircrary M achin~, ~ in ProuSlllnd Sigm, pp. 93-1.57. !Wee,n the "iflUal and the actual, Dcle\lle relies on the model proposed in Albert laut·
'IS. Proust lind Signs, pp. 128, 154; for th e compa rison with j oyce's epiphanieS, ~n s theory of different ial equations in Le problime du lemps (Pari.: Hermann, 1946 ),
sec p. 138. p. 42. Lautman argues that a si ngulari ty can be grasped in twO wayt. The conditions of
46. Prous t Imd Signs. p. 129. The norion that ~meaning i. use~ comes from a probl~ 3re determined by the nomadic distribut ion of singular points in a virtual
Wingenstein, though to my k n owl~dge IXleule mak r$ on ly .twO rcfe.rencr$ t? ~in.gcn· ;pa~~. in which each si ngularity is inseparable from a wne of objective indeterminati on
stein in his work. In the first, he writr$ approvingly Ihat MW,ltgensteln and hiS diSCIples t;~e':ry poi~ts). The JOIUlio~ appea.r~ onl~ w.'th the int~gral cu rves and the form they
:lt~ right 10 d~fine l1lC:aning by \lse~ (Logi' of Sense, p. 146): in the second, he writes that th .the. neighborhood o f ImgulaTltlts wllh,n the field o f VCCtors, which constitutes
"\X'hitehcad "stands provisionall y as the Ian great Anglo--AnlCrican philosopher. JUSt be· t ~/kgm",ng of the actualiution o f th~ singularities (a singula rity is analytically ex-
fore Wittgen~tcin's disciples sptead Ih~ir mist~. their $\lff,dency. and their terror ~ (The • I c.d o"cr a series of ordinary points un til il reaches the neigh borhood of ano ther sin·
fuld: l..ejbnl~ lind the BllroqUe, trans. Tom Conley [Minneapoli S: University o f Minne- Xu aTlty. eft. ).
SOIa Press, 199JI, p. 76 ). His disapproval perhaps sIems from the rrintroducrion. by cct· 056. JOTg~ Luis Borges, ~The Garden of Forking Paths. Min Flct/One$ (New York:
180 NOTES TO INUOOU"ION NOTE S TO INUOOUCTION '81
Grove, 1962), p. 98, ~mphasi5 . dckd. For Dclcuzt'. various referencn to this "ory, 5te
The Fold, p. 62; Logic of&nse. p. 114; The Time- Image, p. 131; Dif(ernlulll'ld R~tj..
pp. I~.n... On '.he ~Ie of i::clu~ed dilju~i~nJ in ~h.e 5Ch.ilOphrrnic p~~ .sec- La
synthCSC d,sloncr,ve, p. 59: Schu:ophremzatlon: a d,sluncnon Ihat re mains dISJunctive,
rion, p. 73; FONcau/t, p. 145 n. 1. and which nonethdess affirms the disjoint terms. affirms them through all thei r distance,
57. The Time-Image, p. 303. For ~ibni~'$ narrative, s« Thcodicy. S§ 4 14-17. without limiting one by the other or exduding one from the other. M

58. S« The Timt-/mllgt, - The Powers of the False, Mpp. 126-55. The following 69.lkleuze, MThe ExhaListed,~ chapter 18 in this volume: -Becken', great contri.
th emes arc summaries of this chapter, $Orne of which are devcloped in morc dctail in The bution to logic is to have shown that exhaustion (exhaustivity) does not occur without a
Fold, where Dtlcuu makes usc of Ltibniz's work 10 develop. concept of the -baroque," certain physiological exhaustion .... Perha ps it is like the front and back side of a single
59. Stt The Logic ofSmu, p. 174: -The whole question, and rightly so, is to know thing: a keen 5I'nse or science of the possi ble joined, or rather diljoined, with a fantastic
uockr what conditions di sjunction is a vcrir;J.ble synthesis, instud of being a procedure decomposition of the ·self...• Dclcuu him5l'if, however. draWl a sharp distincrion be-
I
of .n.J)'$is which il sa tisfied with the exclusion of predic.lts from a thing by virtuf; of tw<'Cn IIII.' vi nual and the po5sible; sec Differenu and Repuitio". pp. 211-14.
, the identity of its concept (the negative, limitative, ~ exclusive use of disjunction ). The
all$wer is given insofar 15 the divU&rn<:e or the ckctntering determine'li by the disjunc·
70. Ikleuu and GLianari, " 1730: Bccoming-lntel1$C, Becoming. Animal, Becoming.
Impct«ptible ... ," in JI, Thousand PfattaNS. pp. 232-309.
tion brcome objects of affirmation as such ... an inclUJiWl diJjllnctio" that carries out 71. What Is Philosophy? p. 173. Dcleuu's monographs in the history of philo5o-
the synthesis itself by drifting from one term to anot her and following the distance M' phy all inhabit sLICh a zone of indiscemibility. whi<:h a«OtInts for the sense that they arc
[Wttn terms . ~ For the concept of the rhizome, tee Mlntroduction: Rhizome, M in JI, M
fully MDe1euzian despite the variety of figures he considers.
$Il"d pu,tealls. pp. 3-25, esp. p. 7. 72. JI, ThON$IlNd PfattaUJ, p. 243.
60. NegotiatioNs, p. 126. See also The Time·lmage, p. 133: ~Narration is con· 73. Herman Melville, Molry·Dick. chapter 36, "The Quaner·Deck, ft as cited in JI,
stant ly being modified in each of its episodes, not according to subjective variations, but ThousaNd Pfateaus. p. 245.
as a consequell(:e of di sconnectcd spaces and dc-chronologiud moments. ft 74. Negotiations. p. 137, translation modified.
61. For Dcleuze's analysis of the thrtt types of ponmanteau words in Lewis Car· 75. Ddeuu, • Banleby; Of, the FormLlla," clla pter 10 in this volume.
roll's work, tee MOf Esoteric Words, ft in The Logic of ~se, pp. <42-47. Dcleuu dIes 76. What Is Philosophy? p. 168.
Carroll's explanation of the disjLlnctive ponnunteau word: MIf your thoughts incline 77. The Movemmt. lmage. p. 102. We might note here a Ihift that seems to take
ever so link fOwards 'fuming,' you will say 'fuming·furious·; if they tum, evtn by a hairs place in Dcltuu's terminology. In Spinoz.a, an "affection" (affectiol indicates the state of
breadth, tOw;!lrds 'furiOtlI-,' yOLI will say ·furious·fuming·; but if you have the rarest of a body insofar as it is affected by another body, while an "affca" (af{utNs ) marks the
gihs, a JXrfectly Nlanad mind, yOti will say 'fru mioLls'~ (p. <46). p.l5sage from one stile to anodlCr al an increase o r ckcrea5l' in the body's power as a
62. See Michel FOlKaLllt, Death and the Labyrinth: The W~ld of Raymond ROfIS- function of its affections. This terminology, whi<:h Dcleuu analyza in detail in &pres.
sel (Garden City, N.Y.: DoLlblcday, 1986). especia lly chapter 2. For Dcleuu's analyses, sioniJm in Philosophy: SpirtOUI. is retained throughout JI, ThON$Ilnd PfattaUJ. In The
see Dif{trertu and Rtpt,itioN, pp. 22, 121 , and Logic of~. pp. 39, 85. ROLl$sel's Ian· Movnnmt.lmage and What b Philosophy? however. Ocleuu replaces these tenru with
guage rests not simply on the combinatorial possibilities of la nguage--che fact that Ian· perception and affectiON rcsp«tivel y. reserving the wo rd affect for the pure qualities or
guage has fewer terms of designation than thinp to designa te, but nonetheless can u' powen that are extracted from affections and achieve an autonomous 51at\15.
tract an immense wealth from this poveny-but more precisely on the possibility of 78. The Movement.lmage. p. 98; Ihis text: contains Deleuu's analysis of MFint.
ft ft
$aying twO things with the same word, inscribing a muimum of difference within the IlCSS and ·Sccondness in Pei rce and makH the com parison wilh Si ran.
reJXtition of the samc word . ~ 79. What Is Philosophy' p. 177.
63. On Gombrowicz, see Difftrmceand Rtpttition, p.I23, and Logic of Sense. p.39; 80. Cited in The MOllemmt.lmage. p. 99.
on Joyce, see Difftrmuand RepetitioN. pp. 121-23, and LogicofSmu, pp. 260-61, 26<4. 8!. The Movement.lmage. p. 103.
6<4. Logic of~, p. 60, translation modifttd. 82. The Movemtrtt. fmage . p. 106.
65. Logic of Sense, p. 174, translation modif~. 83. The Movemerot./WI<Ige. pp . 99.101.
66. Joe Bousquet, Ln eap;talts (Paris: I.e Celclc du Livre, 1955), p. 103, as d ted in 84. What Is Philosophy? p. 174.
Logic of 5enu. p. 148. It is in the context: of his discuuion of BousqutT that Dcleuu de- 85. JI, ThON$Ilnd PfateIJNS. p. 270.
fines ethics in tetms of the rdation of the individual to the singularities it embodies: an 86. Em ily Srontc. Wuthering Heights {New York: Notton, 19!101. chapter 9,
active life is one thaI is able to affirm the singularities that constitute it, to become wor· PP·62-64.
thy of the events Ihat happen to it ("Everything was in order wilh lhe events of my life D 87. Gilles Dcleuu and Fflix Guallari, Ka(}.a: Toward a Minor Uttratll", trans.
before I made them mine, ~ writes Bousquet. MTo live them is to find myself tempted to ana Polan (Minn eapolis: University of Minnesota PreS5, 1986), p. 39.
buome their equDr); a reactive life, by conlra St,;s driven by • resseNtiment of the evenl. SS. A Thollsand P!ateaIlS. p. 174.
grasping whatever hapJXns 10 it as unjust and unwarranted. MEither ethics makes no 89. What Is Philosophy? p. 173.
sen51' anll, Mwrites De1euu, Mor this is what it muns and has nothing dse to say: not to 90. MBartleby; or, The Formula, Mchapter 10 in this volume.
be unwonhy of what hapJXos to us M(p. 14!J). . b 9 1. Ftan~ois Zourabichvili, MSix NotH on the Percept (On the Relation between
67. LogicofSeme. p. 178. ~ e Cnrical and the Clinica!), ~ in Deleu~e: JI, Critkal Rtadtr, edt Pau l Pallon (Ca m.
68. Antonin Anaud, - Here Liu. M in Selected WritiNgs, cd. SLisan Sontag, tranl. ndge , M ass.: Slackwell, 19961. p. 190. Zourabichvili's anicle provides a profound
Helen Weaver (New York: Farrar Straus &: Giroux. 19n1, p. 540; and Vaslav Nijiosty, analYSIS of the clinical stalUl of the percept in Dl'1euu's work.
Diary (New York. Simon &: Schuster, I !JJ6), pp. 20. 156, al cited in Jl,roti·QedipUJ, 92. Virginia Woolf, Mrs. DalloUJay (New York: Harcourt Brace &: World. 19251.
182 NOTf S TO INTRODUCTION N OTES TO INTlOOUCTlON '83
p. 11; see A ThoMm"d rliif~~"J, p. 263. For Ddeuze', anaty5is of the role of affects and upon Ihem in order 10 projecc iUl magic lancern upon chem w (cited ;n PrOIl$t and Sig"s,
percepts in &wn Pillars of Wisdom, see "The Shame and Ihe Glory: T. E. Lawre~, ~ p. 142).
chapler 14 in this volume. 103. NegotiatiONS, p. 6; Dialoglle$, p. II, emphasis added.
93. A Thousand Plaltt;lw" p. 262. I ()4. A ThOIlSllnd Pillteaus, chapcer 6, pp. 1<49-66.
94. WlllIl Is PhilO$oph'jf p. 169. lOS. On Dcleuzc's usc o f embryology and the model of che egg, 5« Differem:~ a"d
95. 5« Joachim Gasquet, ChRnnt: A Memoir Wiln ConI/CUlliom, Irans. Chri"o- Rfpetilio". pp. 214-1 7, 249-52.
phtr Pemberton (London: Thames and Hudron, 1991), p. 160, translation mod ified: 106. William Burroughs, Naked LIl"ch (New York : Grove, 1966 ), pp. 8, 131, as
~man absent from but mtirdy wilhin the landscape,- Ciunne', phrase captures exactl y ciled in A ThOlmmd Pla/Calls, pp. 153, ISO.
, the paradox of Ihe percept. 107. George Bik hne r, Le"z. in Complete Pillys aNd Prose, crans. Ca rl Richard
96. Claude Samuel, Conversations with Olivin Messiaen. Irans. Filix Apraha m_ Mueller (New York: H ill IS< Wang, 1963), p. 141 , as ciled in A"ti.Oedipus, p. 2: " He
ian (London: Stainer and Bdl, 19761. pp. 61-63. thoughl that ic musc be a feeling of endless bliss to be in contact with the profou nd life of
97. Vi rginia Woolf, The Diary of Virginia Woolf, ed. Anne Olivkr Bell {London: every fonn, to have a soul for rocks, mcu ls, waler, and plants, to take into himself, as in
• Hogarth, 19801. vol. 3, p . 209, lIS ti lt(! in A Tbsalld PliiftauS, p. 280, and What Is a dream, every element of nature, like flowers that brealhe wil h the waxing and waning
Philosophy' p. 112. of the moon."
98. What Is Philowplry' p. 170. One might nOle chac ic is in precisely chis COIlten 108. O. H. lawrence, FatllllSia of the UNconuiOIiS (New York: Viking, 1960).
Ihat Deleuzc considers che effects of drup and akohol on lilerary creation: though d rop 109. Sft Anti.Oedipus. pp. 18-19.
ca n indeed open th~ "doors of percepcion, ~ drug-induced wor ks rarely if ever attain me 110. Sft Anti.Oediplls, pp. 8-4-89.
l~vel of the percept; the effects of such perceptive experimenca lions, Deleuu: argues, III. Arthur Rimbaud, A SeaSON in Hell. in Rimballd: Complete Works, Selected
musc be brought about "by quite diffe rent means"-chac is, in an . For Deleuzc's discus- Letters. trans. Wallace Fowlie (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1966), pp. In,
sions of drup, see A ThouSllnd P/ateaus, pp. 282-86, which is an elabo£ltion of an elr- 179, 189, 193.
li~r anicle, "Deux questions" (Two questions), which appea red in Ruhoches, 39 bit 112. Sft Pierre Klouowski, "The Euphoria at Turin," in Nietzsche and The Vicious
(December 1979), pp. 23 1- 34. The first question concems the ·specific causa lity" 01 Circle, crans. Daniel W. Sm;th (Chicago: University of Chicago PrC$s, 1997). Klossowski
drugs, which Dekuu locates in a "line of Oight" that invC$U the system of perception di- cites one of Niewche', fina l fragments, in wruch the twO poles of delirium arc mixed: " I
rectly: drup "SlOp the wOl"ld~ and rele~ pure aud itory and optical pcrcep!$; they create touch here the question of race. I a m a Polish gweleman, pure blood, in whom mx a
microintervals and molecu lar holC$ in matter, fonns, coloL'1i, fOunds.; and they makt lines ~rop of impure blood is mixed, not the sligh tesc. If I seck my mosl profound oppo-
of speed p;iSS through these intervals (see The Movnne"t-Tmage, p. SS ). 1M second stte ...-1 always find m y mother and my sister: co 5« mYl'Clf allied with such German
question, however, concerns the inevitable "curning poinc": in themselves, drugs are .m- ~ff-raff w~s a blasphemy againsc my d ivini ty. The anceslry on the side of my mOlher and
SISter 10 thIS very da y (-) was a monscrosity."
abie co d raw the plane necessary for the action of th is " ]ine of flight," and inscead rcsuk
in "erroneous perceptions " (Anaud ), "bad feelinp" (Michaux ), dependency, addiction. 113. Dialogues, pp. 36-5 I. The Anglo-American wrilers th ac appear most fre-
quently in ~Ieuzc's writings include Samuel Becken , William Burroughs, Lewis Carroll,
and so on. Burroughs thus formulates Ihe aesthetic problem posed by drup in the fol-
Charles D'ckens, F. Scott Fingerald, Allen Ginsberg. Thomas Hardy, Henry Ja mes,
lowing manner: How ca n one incarnate che power of drup wit hout becoming an addicd
James Joyce, Jack Kerou ac, D. H. Law rence, T. E. Lawrence, H . P. lovecra ft, Makolm
" Imagine tha t e,·erything chac can be attained by chemical means is accessible b.t.OIlier
lowt}·, Herman Melville, Henry Miller, R. L Stevenson, Virginia Woolf.
p;ith s" (Logic of Soue, p. 161 ).
114. On Ihe geograph y of American literature, 5« A ThOUSllnd Plateaus, pp. 19,
99. II ThOMSllNd Plateaw. p. 261.
:20 n. 18; on the process of demol ition, sec Anti·Oedipus, pp. 133, 277-7g, and Diu-
100. Sft Dckuu and Guattari's commen ts in A Thou$lInd Platealls: "Js it nOl nec- ogues. pp. 38-39, 14()-..41.
essary to reta in a minimum of sm,ca, a minimum o f forms or functions, a minimal sub- F ~ 115. Sft, for exa mple, P~ul Kl«, On M odtTtl Art, ,rans. Paul Findla y (london:
iect from which 10 extract materials, affects, and assemblagC$ ~· (p. 270). · You don't a r, 1966), p. 55; "We have found pam, buc not the whole. We still lack the ulcimate
ruch the plane of consistency by wildly destranfring.... Scaying stracificd--organizcd. pov.·er, for Ihe people are not wich us. BUI we seek a people."
signified, subjected-is not che worst Ihal can happen; che worst that can happen is if 116. On alll hcsc poi ntS, sec the short section in The Time- Image (pp. 2IS- H I thai
you throw the straca in lO demented or suicida l collapse, which brings chem Inck down a~al)'Zcs the conditions of a modern political cinema. In a parallel section of che book
on us heavier Iha n ever. This is how ic should be done; Lodge yourself on a stratum, ex- t ~would deserve a separale di scussion (pp. 262-70 ), Deleuze analyzC$ the condilion s
perimenl with Ihe o pportunities it offeL'1i, find an advanl~geoul place on ic, find potenna l un r which the cinema is capable of figh'ing an in cernal bailIe agai nsc informatics and
movements of delerritorializalion, possible lines of flighc. cxpc:rience them, produce flow COmmunica tion (a CTC3t io n beyond informa tion
M
W
).

conjunctions here a nd there, try out con tinuums of inlensities Kgment by segment, have 117. Sl:e Negotiat;ons. pp. 17 1-72. Fo r ~leuze and GU311ari 's critique of the con.
a small plOt of new land at alltimC$" (pp. 160-6 1). cept of cl ass, 5« IInt;·Otdip lis. pp. 252-62.
10 1. A Thollund Platea lls, p. 356. For the comparilOn betWeen Goethe and Kleist, • ,118. In II Thouund P/a/COlIiS. pp. 469-70, Dcleuzc and Gua lla ri provide a SCt thco-
_ pp. 26g--69. CtlCaL _ ,nte rp re "allon 0 f I h e malo. rI m'' nor d"Istmct,on.
. Whal defi nes a minori!)· is nOl its
102. What Is PhIlosophy? pp. I g8-89. Thi s is how Dcleuu defines ProUSt's pro- nUm""rbul
Is J ra , her re' allons .,nterna '10h I e nu mber: a majority is constltuled by a set that
ject: 10 render visi ble the 'nvisible force of lime. "Time, ~ writes Proust, · which is usu- enll'tlh",.ble. whereas a minority is defined as a .,o"de"Il'tlnable set, no mailer how
a lly nOI visible, ,n o rder 10 become so seeks bodies and, whe rever it finds chern, seizes many cleme mJi .II hIS. Th e cap ita ,. . . mampula
'SI aXlomanc . tC$ only denumerable setS.
I 184 NOTES TO INUODUC.TION NOTES TO CHAnER 1 185

whc-rea5 minorities constitute fuuy, nondenumen.bk:. and nonuiomiublC' scu, which 139. NtgotilllKmS, pp. 140-41. Wilh rrgard 10 Ih is · outside M of language in phi.
implies ~ OIkulus of probinmltic;s rathtr than an axiomatic. IosOphy, Dcleuu Wriltl Ihat "style in philo$Ophy lends toward Ihcse th ree polcs: con.
119. Set ~ ThOOlwnd P/arC'aU5, pp. 29 1, 106. ceptS, OI new ways of rhinking; perteJ)Q, or new waYI of seeing and hearing; and affccu,
120. - 1227: Trealise on Nomadology-The War Machine,· in A ThouSIIrrd or new ways of feeling" (pp. 164-65, tranSlalion modified).
Pk3uaus, pp. 351....0423, which could be read lIS an attempt 10 set fonh rM type of poliri · 140. "nti·Oedipus, pp. 133,370-71, 106. For fhis use of the lerm upcrime"'a'
cal formation thaI would corrnpond with the Mactive· mode of cxislmcC' outlined in NOlI, ~ John Cage,Silence (Middletown, Conn.: Wesleyan Uni~rsity Pre5$, 1961 ), p. 13:
Nicnsche', Ge"cllwp of Mor"ls. -The word experi",ental is apt, providing it il underslood nO( as descriPTive of an act 10
121. The TIme-lrnagt. p. 219. be later judged in ICtmS of SlICCnS and failu re, bul si mpl y as of an act Ihe outcome of
h 122. Pier Pliolo Pasolio; doelops Ihis norion of flft indirtct discount in L'txpiriDtu whIch is unknown."
hhitique (Paris: ParOl, 1976 ). pp. ]~S {in Httu.rurel, and pp. I J9-SS (i n cintma). for 141. Dialogues, p. 50 .

• ~leuu', anal~ see The Movem"'t·lrna~, pp. 72-76.


123. Set Htrman Melville's essay on American litcraNtC, WHawthorne and his
142, N t gotilltioru, pp. 146-47. Sa: al$O A ThOtl$tlnd PlattaUJ, p. 100: "Onl y con·
rinuo us nfiarion brings forth this vin ual line, this cominuum of life, 'Ihe essential ele.
MosSC'$, W in The- Portable Melville, W. Jay Leyda (New York : Vi king, 1952), pp. 411-14; ment o f the real benea th the everyday. 'M
and frant Kafka's dia ry emry (December 25, 191 1) on "the literature of sma ll peoples, ~ 143. ~To Have Done with J udgmem," chapter 15 in Ihis volume. On me dislinc.
in The Diarie$ of Fran~ Ka{1ta: 1910-1913, ed, M:uc Brod, trans. JotCph Kresh (New rion between Mtransctndent judgmcm" and -immanent eval ua rion," sec The Trme'/mIlgc,
York: Schocken, 1948). pp. 191- 98. p. 141 ; "It is nOI a matter of judging life in Ihe name of a highe r authority which would
124. Ka{1ta, Toward a Minor Literature, p. 18. be the good, the lruei il is a mafler, o n rhe contrary, of evaluating every being, every
125. Negotiatio ns, p. 174 . Berg$On develops the notion of fabulation in chapter 2 of action and passion, even every va lue, in relat ion ro Ihe Life which Ihey involve. Affect as
Two So .. rcts of Morality Ilnd Religion. lran s. T. Ashl ey Audra and Cloudesley Breleton immanent evalunion, instead of judgment as transcendenT value."
with W. Horsfall Carter (New York: Henry Holt. 1935 ). 144. On the nOlion of immanen r criteria, $CC KIl{1ta, pp. 87-88, and A Thou$tlnd
126. Dialogues, p. 43. For the concepl of "minority," !i« A Tho ..wnd PlattaJU, PliluiJus, pp. 70, 2S 1: .. Although Ihere is no preformed logical o rder 10 becomings and
pp. 105-6, 469-7 1. On the conditions for a political cinema in relation !O minorities, mul tiplicities, Ihere arc crileria, and The important Ihing is thai they nOf be u$Cd afrer The
and BergK!n'$ notion of "fa bularion," !i« The Ti",e·I",llge, pp. 2 15-24. fact, that rhey be applied in Ihe course of events. M
127. Marcel Prousr, By W,,>, of Soinu· BeulJe, tra ns. Sylvia Towruend Warner (lon- 145. A ThouStlnd Plattaus, p. 187, Iranlla lion modified.
don: Olano & Wind us, 1958 ), pp. 194-95: "Great literature is written in I $Ort of foreip 146. Dialogues, p. 141.
lang~. To each sentence we attach I meaning, or I I any rale a memal image, which
is onen a miSIr.ansladon. But in yeal lilera rure all our miS!ranslations rcsuh in bea uty.·
1. Lileroture and life
128. " He SlutterM," chapler 13 in Ihis volume.
129. Dcleult'. "Avenir de linguisriq~.~ preface 10 Henri Gobard, L'al~riOJf . I. Sce Andri DhOreI, Terres de ",boroi. e (Pari,: Dclarge, 1978), on a becoming-
fjnpistiq ..e (Paris: Fla mmnion, 1976), pp. 9-14. Sa: alK! Ka{1ta: Toward a Minor Lif· UfCr In La chronique fllbul_ (Paris; M ercu re de France, 1960 ), p. 225.
eriltu .e, p. 23-27: "The sjMliotemporal carcgories of Ihcse languagtl differ . harply: 2. J.·M. G. le Cluio, Hai (Pans: Aammarion, 1971), p. 5. ln his first novel, Tht
~rnacu l ar language is "here," vehicula r language is "everywhere," fdermtialla nguap I"'~gation, trans. Daphne Woodward (New York: Atheneum, 1964), le actio pre-
is "ovu rhere: mythic languagt: is "bcyond~ (p. 23 ). '-. sen ts I~ a n almost exemplary fashion I characler laken up in a becoming,woman, then a
130. A 1"hou$tlnd Plateaus, p. 102. bccOfTl1ng.rat , Ihen a becoming. imperceptible in which he effaCti himself.
131. On all rhese points. !i« Ka{1ta: TOWtI.d II Mino r Lileralun, pp. 15-16,23. . 3. [Frant Ka fka, as eiled by Elias Canetd, Ka{1ta's Other TriIIl: The Letters to Fe.
Pierre Perrault encounlered a similar siruation in Quebec: fhe impossibility of nOl: speak· bu, rrans. Chrislopher Middleton (New York: Schocken. 1974). p. 9O.-Tr.ans.[
ing, the impossibility of 5peaking ol her than in Engl ish, the impossibi lity of spea ki ng in . 4. Karl Philipp Mo rin ( 1756-93 ), " Anton Reiser, " in Jean.ChriSlophe Bailly, La
English. Ihe imp05sibility of scnling in fnlnce in order 10 speak French (sec Tht Trrne- ligendc disptrsh: Arrthologie du romantis",c Illltmand (Paris; Union Qnerale d'&lidons,
10-18, 1976 ), p. 38.
ImIlgt, p. 2 17J.
132. Ntgotillti01l5. p. 133. I . 5. Manhe Robert, O rigins o f the N o vel. frans. Sacha Rabinovitch (Bloomington:
133. Ka{1ta; Toward Il Mino . Literaturt, p. 18. nd'a na University PreS5, 1980).
134. See A ThouStlnd Pill/t aus, pp. 36 1- 74 . of D 6. D. H. Law rence, I~ncr ra John Middlelon Murry, M ay 20,1929, in The Lellers
135 . A Thou$tlnd Plateaus, p. 101; d. p. 76: "A rule of gra mmar is a power marker v " H. lAlurence, cd . Keith Saga r and Ja mes T. Bolton (Cambridge: Cambridge Uni·

before it is a syntaclical marker." erslty Press, 1993 1, vol. 7,Ieu er 5095, p. 29 4.


136. KIl{It.a: Toward Il Mi"or Liuratu.e. p. 19. Car 7. Mauriee Blanchot, The Wo •• of Fi, e. tfans. Charlotte Mand ell (Stanford,
137. In addition 10 the essays collected in EsStlys Critical Ilnd CliniCflI,!i« Dcleuz.c's S If.: Stanford Univer5iTY Press, 1995 ), pp. 21-22, and The Infinite ConvtrStltion, rrans.
essa y ~Of the Schi~ophrenic and the lillIe Girl, in Logic o f Stnse, pp. 82- 93 , which
M t:.un Hanson (Minneapolis: Unive rsity of M innesota Press, 1993), pp. 384-85: MSomc.
compares Ihe procedures of u moll and Ana ud (especially p. 83, where Dcleutc nO(CI Ing happens to [the characlers) that they can on ly reca pfure by relinquishing their
that Ihe compa ri50n muST lake place al bOlh a "clinical" and a ~ criTica l" level ). ~wt'r to say ' 1.' " Uterarutf here set'ms 10 rdu le the linguistk conception, which finds in
] 38. SCI' Gilles Dcleuzc, "One ManifesTO Uss," in 1"ht Delt .. tt Reader, cd. Con· ~ ,fters,,,,nd nota bl y in the rwo firsl per$Ons, the very condition o f enuncia lion.
SlanlLn V. I!.ounda~ ~ New York: Columbia Univcr$ity Press, 1994 1. 8. O n hlerature as an affair of hulth, but fo r thOll' who do nO( ha ve it or ha ve
r
1B6 NOTES TO cH .... nER 2
NOTES TO CH .... PTERS " -5 187
only a fragi le health, 5« Henri Michaux, po$tface to -Mes propnetts, - in U ""it rtmll,
(Paris: Gallimard, 1972), p. 193. And Lc Clczio, Hil i; p. 7: "One day, we will perhaps
4. The Greatest Irish Film (Beckett'S "Film")
know ,hal there wasn't any an but only medicine. ft I. r~his eSiay was o riginally published in Revue d'esthltique, 1986, pp. 38 1-82,
9. Andre &y, prdacc 10 Thomas Wolfe, Dc UJ morr II .. mllti" (Paris: Slott, under ,he !IIle "L.t plus grand film irlandais (en hommage i Samuel Becktlt) ~· it appears
1987), p. 12. here in re\'ised (orm.-Trans., '
10. Stt Kafka's reOtctions on so-<alled minor ]i,craturts in his diary cnlry for . 2. [Beckett's o~gin~1 English phrasi~g is ~ all contentedly in percipere and percipi, ~
December 25, 1911 , in The Diaries of nant Kilf/t.a: J910-1913, ed. Max Brod, trans. ",hlCh we have mod,fied 10 accordance wl lh the French translaTion; see Samuel Beckett,

JOK'ph Kresh (New York: Schockcn, 1948), pp. 191-98, and Melville's reflections on The Complctt D,anwtic Works (London: Faber, 1986), p. 324.-Trans.!
American lilc rawre in his " HawthorllC' and H is M~,- in The Port"blc Melville, ed.

, J ay Leyda (New York: Viking, 1952), pp. 411 _ 14.


11. [Arlh ur Rimbaud, A ~,"on in Hell, in Ri",fxI"d, Complt tc Worh, &Itctcd
5. On Four Poetic Formulos Thot Might Summorize
the Kontion Philosophy
Letttr,. trans. Wallace Fowlit (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 19(6), p. 1'3-
Tra ns·1 I . Sh.akes~are, Ha.m/et, Act I , Scene 5. Shenovoften used Shak~~are'l form ula
12. Mar«-l Proust, Ccrrtspo"dmu QIIU Madamt St.aus, ltlftr 47 IU36: Paris: as the tragic dtvlCe ~f hiS own thought; sec "The Ethical Problem in j ulius Caewr, ~
Uvre de Poc he, 1'74), pp. 11 0-15 (~t here are nocertain tics, nOi even grammatical ones~). trans. S. Konovalov, In The New A.dtlphi, June 1928, p. 348, and "Cclui qui bjifie ct
delrui~.des mondes (Tols~o,)," I.ranl. Sylvie Luneau, in L'homme pris Q" pi~ge (Pouehl!:ine,
Tolstor, Tchllt.hov) (Pans: Union Qnerale d'£ditions, 1966), p. 29. IDeleuze follows
2. louis Wolfson; or, The Procedure ~n~~oY'1 F~nch. [ran~larion of this phrase ;II Ie temps cst hoTI de HI gotlds, literally,
I.lThis euay wu fi rsl published as the preface to Louis Wolfson, U schito et kJ lime IS off ltl hIOges ; sec HQmlet, trans. Yvel Bonnefoy (Paris, Gallimard, Folio,
/,J"gues (Paris: GaUimard, 1'70), pp. 5-23, under Ihc title ~Schizologie~; it appears here 1992).- Trans.J
in revised form .-Trans.j 2. IThis essay was first published 1$ the preface to Kant's Critical Philosophy' The
2. Loui$ Wolfson, LA schizo et les /anguel; MQ mne mUI;c;mne est m o.te (Paris: ~tri"~ of the ~acuftiel, trans. Hugh Tomlinson and Barbara Habberja m IMinnea~is:
Nava rin,I'84). Umverslf)' of Mmnesota Press, 1984), pp. vii-xiii. 11K: French text subsequentl y ap-
3. See not only Michel Foucaul!"s DCQth Qnd the lAbyrinth: The Wo,ld of Ray- pe~red as .~Sur quatre formules qui pourraiem r.!sumer la philosop hie k antienne, ~ in
mond Rcnmtl, trans. C. Ru as (New York: Doubleday, 1'86), but also his preface to Ph.losoph .e 9 (1986): 29-34. The prescnl essay il a revised and expanded version of thil
the new edition of 8ris$tl, in OilS et l erits 1954-1988 (Paris: Gallimard, 1994), vol. 2, urlier [e.t.-Trans.j
pp. 13-24, where he compares the thl"« procedu rcs of Roussel, 8 ri5Set, and Wolfson in 3. Eric Alliez, in Capital Times: Tales from the Conquest of Time, trans. George
terms of the di stribution of thrcc organs: the mouth, tlu- e)'e, and the ear. van. den Abbcele ( ~ innupolis: Universif)' of MinneSOTa Press, 1'96), has ana lyud, in
4. Alain Ref has provided an analysis of the condi tiorua l, both in itself and as it is ancIent. thought, Ihls tendency loward tM: enuncipation of time: when movement ccases
used by Wolfson, in his anicle "L.uchirolexe, ~ in Critiqw, September 1970, pp. 681-82. lO .be Circular: for instance, in The "chremarism~ and time., a monetary movemen t in
5. Fran~ois Martel has made a detailed study of IIu- disjunctions in Beckett's AnstOlJe.
Watt, in ~Jeux formels dans Watl,~ in Poitique 10 (1972). See also "Assez,~ in nltl- . 4.Jorge L.uis Borges, ~Dea th and the Compass, " Irans. Anthony Kerrigan, in
mortcs (Paris: Minuit, 1'67), and Beckett's English ve rsion, "Enough,~ in ~'s K"ife F,u io"es (New York: Knopf, J 993), p. 113, transluion modifttd.
(london: Ylder, 1967). A large ~rt of Beckett's work can be understood in teUlU of 5. Friedrich Holderlin, ~ Remarks on 'Oedi pu$;~ in Essays and Letters (»I The-
the great formula of MQlone Dies (New York: Grove, 1966), p. 4: "Everything divides ory. cd. and trans. Thomas Phou (Albany: Stare University of New York Press, 1988),
inlO itself. ~ ~. 101-8. See also ~ean 8c:~ufrct'~ commentary, " Holdertin et Sophocles, ~ in Holderlin,
6. In Anaud, the famous breath-words are opposed to the materna l language marq~e$ su~ Otdlpc (pailS: Umon Qnc rale d'£di tions, 10/18, 1965), which analysel
and to broken letters; and the body without o rgans is opposed to the organism, [0 Of- rhe relanon wit h Kant.
gans and larvae. But the brea th -words arc supported by a poetic syntax, and the body Row 6. [Arthu r Rimbor.ud, Complete Works, trans. Paul Schmidt (New York: Harper 6c.
without organs by a vital cosmology that exceeds the Jimi" of Wolfson's equation on M , 1975), leiter TO Georges b amba rd, May 13, 1871, p. 101; letter TO Paul Demeny,
all sides. ' ay 15, ] 87 ], p. ]03, translation modified._Trans.J
7. See Piera Y storiadis-Aulagnier's psychl),ln~lytic interpretaTion of Wolfson in 7 N' .
H . letuche, The Birth of T,llgedy. trans. Waher Kaufmann (New York: Random
~L.t sense perdu, ~ in Topique 7- 8. The conclusion of the stud y S«1T1S to open up a larger OUIt, 1967), S9, pp. 67-72.
perspective. . 8. Samuc:l Beckett. Murphy (Paris: Bordas, 1948) chapter 6 p. 85. I ~ MctabuJia ~
8. On the ~ impoS$ible~ in language, and th e me~n$ [0 render it possible, see Jea n- I~ a neolo, ' , . ,. b .. "
15m com= y Bechlf 10 hIS French translation of Murphy, m~tQ combined
Claude Milner, For the Low of lAngJUJge, Irans. Ann Banfield (New York : St: Manin'., .... '1 h Ilbul", b " k f b'"
En ' an a norma ac 0 a I If)' to act or to make decisions. In the original
1'90), ~pccially his considerations or maternal languages arid the dlverslry. of !an. 19~'~h vc",ion (1 938), the tenn wil/-/eslneS5 was used; see Murphy (London: Picado r,
guages. It is true that [he author appea ls 10 Ihe Lacanian concept of f:,11l"g .. ~, which hnks 3). p. 66._Trans.1
t oge,h~r languag~ and desi re, but this concepT does nOI seem any more reducible to Nah 9. /Franl Ka fka, ~The Problem of Our Laws,~ in The Complete Stories, cd.
psychoan alysis than it is to linguiStics. urn Gla tur (Ne", York , Schocken, 1983), p. 437, translaTio n modificd._ Trans. /
lB. NOTES TO ( "AHn 6 NOTE S TO C HA~Tn 6 189

10. Frant Kafka, Ad von .les," in The Compltft Stories, fiI. Nahum N. Glaaer
M /1.1 bollom, he had no usc a t all for Ihe life of the Red,e.cmer-ne need.cd the death on the
{New York: Schockrn, 19711. pp. -i-49-SI. crOSS and something more. W

11. Sigmund Freud, CiviliUltiort lind Its DisconUrtU, in The SlIlnda,d Edition of ] 7. Apocalypst, (haptcr I S, p. 119 [74 ].
the Camp/tie Ply,holog;t/J I Wo.h, [rans. James Sinchey, vol. 21 (London: Hogarth, 18. Apocalypst, chapler 6, p. 82 [30).
1961 ), pp. 125-26. 19. [ApOUllypu, chapter 6, p. 83 (31).-Trans. )
12. [Arthu r Rimbaud, Complete Work's, letter 10 Georges lumbard, Ma y I], 187 1, 20. Apocalyp,t, chapter 6, p. 84 [32].
p. 101; and lener {O Pa ullkmcny, May I S, 187 1, p. IOl.-Tranl.1 21. Apocalypse, chapter 2, p. 6617].
22. IApoulypse, chapter 6, p. 86 [34-351.- Trani. ]
23. Certain thinkers hne today ~inted a properl y wa poca lyptic:w p icture, in which
6. Nietzsche and Soint Paul, lowrence and John of Patmo5 three characteri srics ca n be identified: (I I the germs of an abwlute worldwide State;
, I. (This euay wu o riginally publishtd as the preface to D. H. Lawrence, Apou.
typu (Paris: Iblland. 1978), pp. 7-37. where ill aUlhOf$hip is a$Cribed 10 " Fanny and
(21 the destruction of Ihe - habita ble- ..... orld in favo r of a sterile and lethal environment
or milieu; (31 the hunt for the - unspecified- enemy. Sec Pa ul Virilio, L'imkuriti du tn-n'
(u Gilles Ikleuu. "-Tnns.[ t OITt {paris: Stock, 1986).
2. f or d~c IUT of and com~nlarics on the Apexalypse. see Charles BriitsCh, 1.4 24. Revelation 21 :23, 27.
dOr1i de l'A~Iypu (Geneva : Labor e'I Fides., 1967), On the question of the author or 25. {Reveluion 2 1:2.- Trans.]
authol"S, see pp. 397-405; the scholarly reasons 10 assimilate the twO authors seem very 26. Apocalypu. chapter 13, p. 11 2 [66J.
weak. li n the notes that follow, the page numbel"S refer to the definitive text established 27. Apocalypu, chapter 10, p. 102 [5 41. The horse as a vibra nt fort:e a nd lived
in the Cambridge edition of the works of D. H. Lawrence, Apocalypst and the Writmg, symbol appears in Lawrence'. story -The Woman Who Rode Away, - in The Woman
on Rtl'dation, ed. Mara Kalnins (Cambridge: Ca mbridge University Press, 1980); the Who R.ode Away lI"d Othn- Stories (London: Martin Seeker, 1928), pp. 57- 102.
numbers in brackels refer 10 the pagination of Ihe more readily available Viking edition 28. Apocaiypu, chapter 16, pp. 123-29/78-86).
of the Cambridge lelft, which docs not include Ihe critical appa ratus (D. H. La.wren<:c, 29. IRevelation 12:S.-Trans.)
Apocalypse 119311, ed. Mara Kalnins [New York: Vikinl, 1912)). Citations of the Book 30. Apocalypse, chapters IS and 16, pp. 11 9 [7-4] and 126 {821-
of Revelation are from the Revised Standard Version.-Trans .1 31. Apoulypst, ehaptet 14, pp. 116--1 7170-71J.
3. [Friedrich Nietuche, The Antichrist, in The Portable Nictuche, traM. Walter 32. These different aspectS of symbolic thought are anal}'led by Lawrmce through-
Ka ufmann (New York: Viking, 195-4), 5-42, p. 618.-Trans. 1 OUt his commentary on the: Apocalypse. For a more general expotition concerning the
4. Friedrich NictUChe, · Schopenhauer as Educator, · in UntitMiy Mtditatiotu, plancs, centers, or foci, the poilU of the soul, see FantlUitJ of the Unconscious (192 1; New
trans. R. J . Ho llingdale (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1983), 57, p. 1 n. York: Viking, 19601.
5. Apocalypst, chapler 3, p. 69[141· 33. Apocalypu, chapter 22, p. 144 [104).
6. D. H. Lawrenct", Aaron~ Rod, ed. Mara Ka lnins (Ca mbridge: Cambridge Uni- 3-4. D. H. Lawren<:e, The Man Who Died (London: Martin Scl;ker, 193 11, pp. 23,
versity Press, 1988 ), pp. n -78: MDon't you see that ii's tht" Judas principle you really 4 1 (emphas is added ), 5 1: Ihe great scene of Christ with Mary M agdalene ("A nd in
worship. Judas is the rea l hero. But for Judas the wholt" show .w~uld .have been his heart he knew he would never go 10 li ve in her hou$C. For the flicker of triumph
manque . ... When people say Christ they mean j udas. Tht"y find hIm lUSCIOUS o n the had gleamed in her eyes; the greed of giving... . A revu lsion from a ll the life he had
palate. And j t"sus fostem! him . ~ known came over him again- tpp. 47-481). There is an analogous Kene in Aaron~ R.od,
7. Apoulypst , cha pter 9, p. 100 [52]. chaptet 11, in wh ich Aaron returns to his wife, on ly to flee aga in, horrified by the glim-
8. Nietzsche, The Antichrist, S17, p. 585: God is Mat home a nywhere, this great mer in her eyes.
cosmopoliran .... Nevertheless, he remained a Jew, he remained the god of nooks, the 35. D. H. Lawren<:e, Fanlasitl of th4! Unconscious (1921 ; New York: Viking, 1960),
god of alltht" dark corners and pl<1cC$ . . . . H is world -wide: kingdom is, as ever, a n under· Pp. 176-78.
world kingdom , a hO!l pita l, a ,0utnTaill kingdom. ~ 36. On the necessity o f being alone, and of attainin8 the refusal 10 giVC"---ll conSla nt
9 . D. H . Lawten«, Etnl$un PlDets (New York: Viking, 19331, p. 22. theme In Lawren<:c--stt Aaron', Rod, pp. 189-201 (-His intrinsic and centra] isobtion
10. Apoc.aiypu, chapter 6, p. 81 128-29 ]. Was the very center of his being, if he broke Ihis centra l solitude, everything would be
p-. [Revd<1tion 20:4 .- Trans. ] b:Okt"n. To cede il the greateSI temptation, and it was the fina l sacrilege. "), and p. 128
V 12. Apocalypst, chapter 6 , p. 80 (27 ]. ( let there be d ea n and pure d ivision first, perfect sin8lencss. That is the only way to
13. [I>eleule is referring to the expression La VCtrgt allce eft Un plDt qui se mange final, liVIng unison: through ,heer, finished singlenes.s. ~).
froid-Mrevenge is a dish be~1 caten cold. ~-Trans. ] V. 37. D. H. Lawrence, St ..dits in Classic Americlln Lilt rature (1923; New York:
14. Revelation 6 :1()"'11 : · 0 Sovereign Lord, hol y and true, how long before thou .klng, ]961 ), pp. 173-77.
wilt judge and avenge ou r b lood on those who dwell on the eanh ? Then they were . . . 38. On this concept ion o f flows and Ihe Klfuality that follows from it, Ke one of
fOld to rCSt a little longer, until the number o f their brethren should be complete, who ~wrence's la sl tell"ll , ·We Need One Another - (1930 ), in Phcwnix: The Posthumous
were to be killed as Ihey themselvcs had been. ~ 4pers o{ D. H. La wrence (London: Heinemann, 1936 ), pp. 188- 95.
IS. A{KXal'jpu, cha pter 6, p. 80 [27-28J. 39. Apocaiypu, chapter 23, p. 149 111 ()... ll ). ]t i$ Ih is thought of false and ttue
\6. Ninuc~, Thf! Antichrist, S42, p. 61 7: MPau l ~; mpl y u a Mposed the center of ~nttt lons that animatC$ Lawrence's politica] t hought , no rabl y in Phcwnix: Tht Post-
gravity o f tha t whole tx istence a{tn- this Clf;sten(c--in the lif! o f the 'resurro:ctcd' jcsus. ""'Olq Papn-s o{ D. H. Lawrm et, cd. Edward D. M cDona ld (London: HeinelNnn ,
190 NOTE S TO C H.UTUS 7-8 NOTES TO CHMTU 9 191

1961), and PhOD/a II: U"coIlected, U.." ..bltshtd, lind Other P,ou, ed. Warren Roberts 14. Whitman,Spec;mtl'l Days, ~Mi"issippi Valley Litera[urc,~ pp. 5n·78.
and Ha rry T. Moore (london: Heinemann, 1968). IS. Whilman, Specimen Days, ~The Real Wat Will Never Gel in Ihe Books,~
1"1". 482-84 .
7. Re-presentolion of Mosoch 16. Whitman, Specimen Days, "The Oaks and 1," pp. 515-16.
17. Whitman, Specimen Days, "The Real War Will Never Get in the Books,~
1. [This e5Uf was originally published in the French new paper UiHration on
PI". 482-84. On ~amaraderie, sec Whilman, Lealles of Grass, ~Ca lamus."
May 18, 1989. The lide refers to Deleuze's book Prbentation de Sacher-Masoch (Paris:
18. Whitman, Sptci"'en Days, ~The Dr:ath of President Lincoln," p. 467.
Minuit, 1961), the lhc,sc,s of whkh arc re-presented here.-Trans.1
19. Whitman, Specimen Days, "Nature and Democracy, ~ pp. 639-40.
2. In his biography of hchcf'-Masoch, Bernard Michel shows that the very name
of Ihe hero of ~The Metamorphosis, ~ Gregor Sam~, is quire plausibly an hommagc to
M:noch: Grtgor is the p$eudonym that the hero of Vcnl<,l in FJlfJ rake$ on, and Samu 9. Whol Children Soy
semIS to be a diminutive or partial anagram of Sachcr-M;tSOCh. NO!: only arc masochist J.ITra;ets. Throughout this essay, traitt has been IralUia!ed as ~Irajectory~ or
themes nUlMfOUS in Kafka. but the problem of minorities in the Austro- Hungarian -pathway~; trajectoire has been [ranslaled uniformly as -Irajectory~; and parrours has
Empire animal" both oeuvres. Nonetheless, [here a[e imponanl d ifferm<:es belW«n the bern !rano;lated variously 15 ~ rOUle, ~ "journey,- or ~disrance~ (as in ~dislance covered~),
juridicism of Ihe lribunal in ~fkl and the juridici~ of the conlract in Masoch. See depcnding on Ihe conleXI. Pllrcouri, has been rendered IS ~tO lTavcllhrough. ~-Trans.1
Bernard Michel, S#din-Mt'stXh, 1836-1895 (Paris: uffonl, 1989), p. 303. 2. Sigmund Freud, "Analysis of a Phobia in I Five· Yeal'-Old Boy· (1909), in The
3. Pascal Quignard, L'itre du b<Jlbutitmtl1t, elSai sur S·M (Paris: Mercute de St<Jndard Edition of the Complete Psydlologieal Woris, trans. james Sirachey, vol. 10
France, 1969), pp. 2 1-22,147-64. (London: Hoga rth, 1953).
3. Femand Deligny, ~Voix el voir," in Ciihicrs de l"immNllble J (Fontenay-sous.
8. Whitman Bois: Recherches, 1975).
I. Friedrich Holderlin, ~ Remarks on 'Oedipus;~ in EssaySlmd Letters on Theory,
4. Pierre Kaufmann, KNrt Lewin: Une thiorit du champ dllns Itt u;ienus de
ed. and IralU. Thomas pfau (Alblny: State University of N~ York Pms. 1988), pp. I'homme (Paris: Vrin, 1968), 170-73: Ihe nOlion of path.
101-8, andjea.n Buufm', commmlaries in RtmIlrques sur Ordjpe (Paris: Union G6lerak 5. [In English in Ihc original.-TralU.J
d'£ditions, 10-18, 1965 ). 6. Melanie Klein, Nll"atilJt of a Child Analysis (New York: Fftt Press, 1984 ).
2. Walt Whirman, Spedmtl'l Days, in The Portable Wt'lt Wh;tm,,,.,, ed. Mark Vln 7. See Barbara Glownewski, Du rive D Ia Wi the: Itl Aborigines {Paris: PUF,
1992}, ~hapter I.
Doren (New York: Viking, 1973), ~ A HIPPY Hour's Command, ~ pp. 387-88.
3. Whi[man, Specimen Days, "A Happy Hour's Command, ~ pp. 387-88. . 8. Ftlix Guamri, Les annhs d'hilln (Paris: Barraull, 1986). And CartogTllphia
uh~o-<Jna/ytiques (Paris: Gal ilee, 1989).
4. Whillnan, Specimen Days, ~Convulsiveness, ~ p. 480.
S. Franz. Kafka, Diaries 1910-1913, ed. Max Brod, 11110$. joseph Kresh (New 9. £lie Faure, Hislory of Art, vol. 2, Meditvfll Art, Irans. Walter Pach (New York:
York: xhocken, 1948), entry for December 2S, 1911 , pp. 191-98. Harper .& Brothers, 1922), pp. 12_14: ~Thtrt at the shorc of the sea, al Ihe base of.
6. This is a ~onsta n t Iheme of ua~s of Gran, in Walt Whitman: Cam pier. m~nta'n, they encounlered a grU t wa ll of granite. Then they all entcred the granite....
Pmtry llnd &Itcted Prose llnd Letl~s, ed. Emory Halloway (London: Nonesuch, 1964). ~h,nd them they Icfl the empt ied gra nile, ils galleries hollowed OUI in every direction,
S« also Herma n Melville, Redburn: His Maidtl'l Voyage (EvanSlOn and Chicago: Nonh· lIS sculptured, chiseled wa lls, ils nalural or artifICial pillars. ~
wesrern Univrrsily Pms and Newberry Library, 1969), chapter 33, p. 169. 10. j ean·Claude Po lack and Danielle Sivadon, L'int;me utopie /paris: PUF, 199 1)
7. Whitman, Specimen Days, "An Interviewer's ilem, ~ pp. S78-7~. (t~ aUlhors opPQK !he "geographical~ melhod [0 a ~geological" method like thai of
8. Whitman, Specimen Duys, "A Night Banle, over a Week Sina:, ~ pp. 422-24, Glscla Pankow, p. 28 ).
and ~The Real War Will Never Grr in Ihe Books, - pp. 482-8 4. II. Sec S<inoor Ferenai, ~ A lJnle Chanlicleer, ~ ill Sa in Psychounarysis. trans.
9. Herman Melville, "Hawthorne Ind His Mosset, ~ in HtmUln Me/llille, cd. Etnesl Jones (N~ York: Basic Books, 1950), pp. 240-42.
R. W. B. Uavis ( N~ York: Dr:1I, 1962), p. 48. In Ihe $ame way, Whitmln invokes the 12. Robert Louis S[eVell5On, ~My Fi TSI Book, Trtllsure tsu,nd'~ in Treasure Isu,nd
ntaSSi!}, of an American literature ~without a Iracc or laste of Europe"s soi l, remi· (London: Oxford University PTess, 1955).
niscence, technical lener or spi rit" (Spuimtl'l Dtrys, ~Thc Pra iries and Great PlaiN in leh ' IJ. Svetlana AIpt'TS, The Art of Describing: Dut,h Art in the Seventeenth Century
POClry, ~ p. S73). reago: Univu5ity of Chicago Press, 1983), p. 122.
10. Whitman, Specimen DllyS, " Bumble·Bets,· PI". 488-9 1. PI " 14. Eug~ne Fromelllin, Un i ti dans Ie Sahllrll, in Oeullres (Paris: Gallimard
II . Whitman, Specimen Days, ~Carlyle from Amen.:.n Points of View," pp. 602-1 I. e'ade, 1984 1, p. 18. '
12. D. H. Lawrcnec, in Studies in Cianic Amerium Utuature (New York, Vi king, I~. On an art of paths Ihat opposcs itself to the monumellial or tomme morative,

(V VOI(" " sUisse: ". 'tmera'Te
.•• • (ana 1yltS by Carmen Perrin). S« alro Bcrtholin
1964 ), violenlly criddles Whilman for his pantheism and his "on~ept;on of an Ego- g('nWOls
Whole; but he »lules him as thc grulesl poel because, morc profoundl y, Whitman sings ..... ~S~'Vlere ), wi[h the leXI by Pat rick Lt Nou~ne, ~Chose d'oubli et lieux de passag•. "
of ~sym palhieJ,~ Ihat is. of relationi Ihal are conSlructed eXlernally, ~on [he Open '"e een
prl . le r 0 IVus/v...lere. or Ih at 0 Ie reStel. arc Ihe $iles of this nou ~lIt "ulp,ure. whose
Road~ (pp. 174-7S ). IIClpl" refer to the grul con~ep[ions of Henry Moore .
13. See Paul Ja mali, W"II Whit>mJn: Une bude, un choix de poimes (Paris: Sq.htrs. 16. Cf. Ihe mulliplid!}' of cours<:s in Roulez, Ind Ihe comlXlrison wilh "'he Str~I'
1950 ), p. n: Ihc poem u polyphony. map of a 1 0WIl ~ (p. 82), ill works like Tht Third Pillno Sonatll, Eclat. or Do,""in('s, in
192 NOTES TO CHMTER 10
NOlES TO CHAPTER 10 193
Pierre Bo u/e'l; ConvnSlltions with uks/j" Ddiegt (London: Eulcnburg, 1976), ChaJMeT ton. 1982). Catherine Hei lbronn had her own formula, dose to that of ~nleby's: _I
12 (-the cou r~ of 11 work ought to be multiple,8 p. 8 1). don't know " or simply MOon't know."
15. The comparison between Musil and Melville would pertain to the following
10. Borrieby; or, The Formula four points: the critique of reason (- Principle of insufficient reason- I, Ihe denunciation
I. Nicolas Ruwet, -Pafllllili$1Tle$ et deviations en pohie; in Lmg..c, disco ..", of ps)'Chology (M the great hole we call the soul- ), the new logic ("the other state- I, and
weiifl, ed. Julia Kristeva and Nicholas Ruwt t (Paris: Seuil, 1975 ), pp. 334-4<4 (on the h),pc:rborcan Zone (Ihe -Possible" ).
M portmantcau<onstructions ~).
16. Su Francis B.acon and Davjd SylvC$ter, The Bnltalit» of Fact: lnttmlicws
2. Philippe Jaworski, MtillifIt, Ie dNert t l I'tmpirc (Paris: Prmn de ]'Ecole NOt"· u,lIb f,tlnciJ Bacon (New York: Thames and Hudson, 1975), p. 22. And Melville said:
male, 1986), p. 19. - For the same reason tluot theft is but one planet to one orbit, so can there be but one
3.5« Viola Sachs, La contrt·Bibk dt Melville (Paris: Mouton, 1975 ). su.<;h original character to OIW: work or invention. Two would conflict to chaos." Her-
• 4. On Banlcby and Melville's silence:. sec Armand Farnlchi, La pliTt dN ,ilc'fal
(Pari,: Sarraull, 1984). pp. 40-45.
man Melville, Tbe Confidenu- Man, ed. Stephen Matterson (London: Penguin Classics,
1990), p. 282.
(v
S. Mathieu Lindon , MBartlcby,- DdlD 6 (Ma y 1978): 22. 17. Sec R. Durand, p. 153. M ayoux writes: ~On the personal plane, the question of
6. Kafka's grUI texi almost reads like anolher version of "Bartltby,- Sec Franz the falher is momentaril y postponed, if nOI $titled .... But it is not only a question of the
Kafka, The DiluitJ of Franz Ka{b: 1910-1913, cd. Max Brod, trans. JO$Cph Kre$h father. We are a ll orphans. Now is the age of fra!emity." Jean-jacques Mayoux, Melville,
(New York: Schochn, 19-48 ), p. 26. ltans. John Ashbery (New York: Grove, 1960), p. 109, translation modified.
7. Blam;:hOt demonstrate$ thai Musil's character is nOI only without qualitie$, but 18. Emily Bronte, Wlithering Heighu (London: Penguin. 1985), p. 122.
"without particularilie$," since he has no moft substance than he dQe$ qualities. See lA 19. Kafka, Diaries 19 J O--19JJ, p. 28.
livre t3 ~nir /paris: Gallima rdIFolio, 1963), pp. 202-3. This theme of the man without 20. Herman Melville, Redburn: HiJ Maiden Voyage (Evanston and Chicago: North-
particularities, Ihe rnodern.day Ulysses, arises tarly in the nineteenth century, and in "''CStern University Press and Newberry Library, 1969), p. 169.
France appears in the rather strange book of &.lla nclle, a friend of Chattaubriand; JoeC 21. Jaworski has analyzed this world-as-archi pelago or Ihis patchwork cxperimcOl.
Pierre Simon &lIanche, uwis de fNllinginisu sociale, notably ~La ville des cxpiation.~ These themes are to be found throughout Pragmatism, and notably among William
(1827 ), in Oelivrtl completcs (Geneva: Sialkinc Reprinf$, 1967). James's most beautifu l pages: the world as "shot point blank with a pistol ." This is in-
8. Herman Melville, "&rtleby the Scrivcner," in Billy Budd, S#ilor and Otb,., separable from the search for a new human community. In Pierre; or, The Ambiguities,
Storics, ed. Harold Beaver (London: Ptoguin Classics, 1967), p. 89. Plotinus Plinlimmon'$ mys!erioul !Tact already 5ctms like the manifestation of an ab-
9. R!gi s Durllnd, in his Melville, signes CI mttapbores (Paris: L'Age d' Homme, solute pragmatism. On the history of pragmatism in general, philosophical and political,
1980), pp. 103-7, lias pointed our the role played by looK lina aboard a whaler, u ~ Ge.rard Ocledallc, La philosophic amm,aine (Paris: L'Age d'Homme, 1983): Royce
opposed to the formalitcd riggings. Both Durand's and j a worski's books are amotlltM II particularly imponant, with hil ·absolute pragmatism" and his ~grcat community of

tnO$t profound anal)'1CS of Melville to have appeami recently. Interpretation" tha t unitC$ ind ividuals. There a re many Melvillian echQe$ in Royce',
10. George DumUil, preface to Georges Charachidze, P,omltblc ow Ie GaoUeaN: work. His strange trio of the Aventurer, the Beneficiary, and the Insurer seems in ccrtllin
Usai de mylhologie conu/UtWc (Pa ris: Flammarion 1986): ~11'Ic Greek myth of Pr0me- -15 10 derive from Melville', trio of the M onoma niac, the Hypochondriac, and the
theus has remained, through the ages, an object of reflection and referenee. The god who Prophet, or CVto to refer to characters in Tbe Confiden,e-Man, who would already pre-
docs not take part in his brothers' dynastic struggle agailUt their COU$in Zeus, but who, figure the trio '$ comic version.
on personal grounds, defies and rid icules this same Zeus ... this anarchiJl, affecu and 22. [In English in the original.- Trans.)
stirs up dark and sensitive zones in us." \ 23. D. H. Lawrence, "Whitman," in Sllidies in Classic Am,.,ican Literallire (New
11 . On this concept ion of the two Natures in Sade (the thcory of the pope in lhe York: Viking, 1953). This book also includes two fam~1 studie$ on Melville. Lawrence
New Jlistin~), JoeC Pierre Klossowski, Sade My Neighbor, trans. Alphonso Lingis critici'lC$ both Melville and Whi(man for having succumbed 10 the very things they de-
(Eva nston, 111.: Northwestern University Press, 199 1), pp. 99 ft. nO\lnccd; nonetheless, he "'ys, it was American literature (hat, thanks 10 them, marked
12. Hetman M elyille. Moby-Didl; or, tbe Wh:lle, chapter 36 (New York: Penguin 01.11 th~ palh.
Classics, 1992), p. 178. 2-4. [See Henry David Thoreau, Walden and Civil Disobedience cd Owen Thomas
13. See Sc hopenhauer's conception of sainthood as the :lCt by which Ihe Will denits (~ew York: Norton, 1966), p. 233, ~Under a government which im~ri~n$ lIny unjustly,
itsclf in Ihe suppression of all particularity. Pierre Leyris, in hil s«ond preface to the I e true place for a JUSt man is also a prison. "-Tran s. I
French lranslation of Billy Blidd (Paris: Gallirnard, 1980), recalls Melvillc 's profound in- Soc 25. Set: Aluander Mitscherlich's Society wirhOlit the FIlthcr; A Contribution to
lerCSt in Schopc:nhaucr. Nietl5Che saw Parsifal as a type of Sc hopenhauerian saml, a kind 'al Psychology, tra ns. Eric Mu sbacher (New York: j . Aronson, 19741, which is wri t.
of Banleby. BUI after NieltSChe, man still preferred being a demon 10 being a lainl: -man ~n from a psychoanalytic point of view Ihat remai ns indifferent to (he mo\tem~nts of
would rather will nOlbingnesslllan not will. ~ Friedrich Nienschc, On rhe Cenea!olr1 of 'SIOry and invokes the bo:,nefits of tile plI lemal English Constitution.
MoralJ, trans. Walter Kaufmann and R. j. Hollingdale (New York, Random Hou5C, 1'h 26. See Melville's t~"t on Am~rican literature, ~Hawthome and His MosS<"s, _ in
1967 ), th ird essay, S 28, p. 163. bt, e Portable Me/vilie, ed. jay Leyda (New York: Viking, 19521, pp. 41 1-1 4, which should
1-4. Set: Heinrich Kleisl's leller 10 H. j. von Collin, D«ernber 1808, in An Abyss F cOmpared with Kafka's leXI on "the litera ture of small pwplC$," in The Diaries of
Deep Enough: The Leiters of Heinrich Von K/ciJt, ed. Philip B. Miller (New Yo rk: Dut- ra,,~ Kaf/t.a; 1910-1913, enrry for December 25, )9 11 , pp. 210 ff.
NOffS TO CHMtEl 11
NOTES TO CH At'H 12 195
194

17. On the: Il'3nlilionl from technique 10 an. art ~ing rrlaled 10 the csscncc: of
11 . An Unrecognized Precursor 10 Heidegger: Alfred Jorry technique while functioning differen tl y, scc: ·The QUe$lion Concerning Te<:hnology,"
I. Alfred Jarry, up/oilS and Opi"ions of Dodor Fa ..$troll, Pataplrysida", in 51· pp.34-35.
ltcud Works of ~Ifred larry, ed. Roger Shmuck and Simon Wal$on Taylor (New York: 18. See Visio"s PrtUllt Ilrod Future and t.tre et vivrt: Jarry's inle:rest in anarchy is
Grove, 1965), p. 192. . ' reinforced by his relalions wilh Laurent Tailhade and Fenion; but he criliciU$ anarch y
2. Martin HeidC88cr. Being lind Time, lrans. John Macqua rne and Edward RobLn- for su bstituling ~lCience: for an," and for entrusting ~Ihe Beautiful ~Sl ure" 10 the mao
son (New York: Harper ~ Row, 1962), S7, p. 60 ("Onl y 115 phenomenology is ontology chine (sec Oeuvres complt tes, voL I, esp. p. 3381. Cou ld one a lso say Iha[ Hcidegger
possible." although Hddegge r USC'S the Gr«ks as his authority morc than Husserl). 5(CS a [ransilion loward art in Ihe nalional socialist machine~
3. Ja rry, FawstTO/l, p. 192. . . 19. Manin Hcideggcr, ~Thc Thing,· in Portry, ulroguage, Thought, trans. Alben
4. AlfT«! Jarry, E.trt tl !livre (Bting find Livi"g ). in Otuvres compldes (Pans: Ga~­ Hofstadler (New Yorle: Harptr & Row, 15171 ), pp. 1751-81.
limard, Plei",dc edition, 1972), vol. 1. p. 3-42: "Being. dublKd to death by Berkeley. 20. In Ihe: thUler of Char-Anteduut, Ihe misc..cn·scene of the world is assured by
cudgcllitre, difublt d.. bat de Bvktu,.1 .. . " . .. .. Ihe COOl[S of arms, a nd Ihe de<:or by the shields: the theme of Ihe Quadriparti is clearly
S. Jarry, F/lJlJtroll and E.trt d vivrt, in Otuvres compltttJ, vol. I, p. J4J ( uvtng e"idenl (OeuvrtJ comp/ittJ, vol. I, pp. 286-88 ). In all Jarry'. worle, th.c fourfold Cross
is the carnival of Being ... "1. . ~ . appears as the grut sign. The va lue of Ihe Bilee COI1lC5 from Jarty's invocalion of an
6. On ana rchy according 10 Jarry, 5« nOt only t.trt tt IIIl'1't, but above all ViSIOOS original bicycle, strucle wilh forgetting. whose: frame is a cross, " twO lUbes soldcrc:d 10-
Prrsc:nl and Future " in Seltcttd Works, pp. 109-13. gether al right anglcs· (" The Passion Considered as an Uphill Bicycle Race,- in Selected
7. The appt~lto Kitnce (ph ysics and mathemat1C$J apptars above all in FaustroU Wor.l:s, p. 122).
and in The Suptmtll/e, Irans. Barbal'3 Wright (London: Jonalhan Capt, 1!J68J; the theory 21. Michel Arrive in panicular has insisted on the theory o f Ihe sign in Jarry; 5« hili
of machine$ is specifically developed in a text supplementary 10 Filustroll, ~ How to Con· introduetion in Oeuvres completes. vol. I, pp. ix-xxvi.
Siruct a Time Machine," in Selected Woris, pp. 114-21 . . 22. Sec Henri Behar, Les cultures de }Iltry (Paris: PUF, I5IS8 ), especially chapter 1
8. Alfred Jarry, "The Passion Considered as an Uphill Bicyde Race," 00 Selected on "Ccltic cultu re. ~ Ubu providcs only a limited idu of Jarry's sly Ie: a style: with a sum!)"
Worb, pp. 122-24. . ~ . . IUOUS flavor, SIKh none hear$, al [he beginnin8 of Cisar-A"techrist. in the Ihrtt Chris!S
!J, Manin Heidcgger, "nit: Question Concernoog Te<:hnology, In The QunbOfl and the four Golden birds.
Co"ummg Ted",ology, trans. William Lovitt (New Yorle: Harper &. Row, I 51n), p. 28. 23. See Ihe anicle conlained in u, cha"delle tlffte (The grc:c:n candle), "Ccux pour
10 Marl~ Zal'3der has shown Ihis double turning in Heidcgger, one toward the qui il n'y CUI poinl de &bcl~ ("Tbosc for whom thc:re wn no Babt;l whatsor'Ve:r), in
rear, Ih~ other tOWard Ihe front, panicularly well, in HtidrUtr et les paroles de f'ori~ OcuvrtS camp/ites, voL 2, pp. 441- 43. Jarry is reviewing a boole by Victor Fourrue,
(Pari5: Vrin, 1m) , pp, 260-73. , from which he: exll'3cts this principle: ·the same sound or the: umc: syllable always has
I I . Manin Hcidcgger, ~ Time and Being," in On Time Il"d 8emS, tran~. J~an Starn· tile same meaning in all languages. " BUI Jarry, for his pan, docs nOI exactly adopt this
baugh (New Yorle: Harptr &. Row, 15172): "wilhout regard 10 metaphyslQ, or even principle; inslead, lilee Heidcgger, he: worles with twO languages, one dead and The Other
"Ihe inlenlion 10 overcome metaphysiC$" (p. 24 ). __ . living, ~ language of Being and a language of being.5, which are not reall y dislinct, bUI
12. See He nri Bo rdillon, preface 10 Oeuvres romp/tits (Paris: Gallimard, Plelade, none[hc:less arc eminently different from each other.
15172), vol. 2, pp. xix-xx: Jarry "almost never utiliU$ the wo rd pata~hysics betw~ 24. Sec the analy$CS of Henri Meschonnic, Lt langllge Heidegger (Paris: PUF, 151510).
1900 and his duth," except in Ihe texts relaled to Ubu. In t.trt et Vlvrt, Jarry sa l~ 25. Jarry, Aimanach il/wstTe du Pert Ubu (J1IuSlraled Almanac of Falher Ubu, 1901 J,
~Being is the sub-supreme of the Idea, for il is less comprehensible than Ihe PosII' in OCUl'l'ts compl~tts, vol. I , p. 604.
ble.,.," OeuvrtS complhes, vol. I, p. 3.42.. . " . II 26. Heidcgge:r frc:qucntly ciles this phl'3sc from a poem by Stephan George in his
Il. Sec Ihe definilion of palaphyslCS ,n Faust.o", p. 1513: KtenCe symboJICa., cssay "Words,- in On the Way to Languagt, t1"1lns. Peter D. Hem (New Yorle: Harper &.
attribules the proptnies of objects, described b., Iheir vinuality, 10 lheir lineamcnu." On Row, 151711.
the frame, 5« " How 10 Conslruct a Time Machine," in Se/uted Wo.b. pp. 118-151.
14. Jarry, " How 10 Construct a Time Machine," in Se/ecltd Wo •• s, pp..114-21, 12. The Mystery of Ariadne according to Nietzsche
which SCl:S forth Ihe who le of Jarty's Ihtoty of lime, is an obscu re and very ~autlfullexl,
I. (Friedrich Nicnsche, Dithyrambs of Dionysus, trans. R. J. Hollingdale: (Red ·
which mU5t ~ related to Bergson as much ~s 10 Heidcu:er. . . r. ding Ridge, Conn.: Blacle Swan, 1984l. p. 551, translation modified.- Tl'3 os.)
15. SoC!' Ihe descriplion of Jarry's mach ines, and Ihelr sexual conlCnl, 10 Ml(hel ~ 's
2. [The original version of this essay was puhl ished in Etudes N;et-uchi",ne$
rougcs's us maari"es ciUblltaires (Paris: Arcancs, 15154). ~ also J~cqu~ lkrnda
{1963). pp. 12-15, under Ihe litle ~MySlhe d'Ar;ane." A revised version, from wh ich
commentary, in which he suggests Ihal Dase;n, according ~o Helde~er, Implies a sex~al:
Ihe presenl essay was adapted, appeared in M<lgllti"t litterll;rr 2518 (Apri l I5I5I2J:
ity, but one thaI is irreducible to the duality [hal appurs ~n Ihe a nlm~l or human beIng: 21-24-Trans.)
~Gcschlechl : Sexual Difference, Ontological Difference, Restarch,.. Pheroome"olog1
3. Frie:drich Nietzsche, E(er Hom o, trans. Waher Kaufmann (New York: Random
IJ (l5I8J): 65-83. . . House, 151651), ~Why I Wrile Such Good Books, ~ "ThU$ Spolee Zara lhuma. ~ S 8, p. 308.
16. According 10 Heidcgger, Ihe wilhdl'3wal concerns not onl.,. ~lOg, but 10 a~ol~,!
4. [In Nietu(he Ilrod Ph"cnophy. Irans. Hugh To mlinron (New Yorle: Columbia
scnse Etcigrois iuelf: ~&eigni5 is withdrawal nOl only as a mode of g'VIOg, bUI as ~lgn~1
University Press, 15183). Dcleuu IUggeslS [hal rhe: French lerm qui be rendered in English
(. Time and Being, ~ p. 22. Il'3nslalion modifledl. On Ihe: More: and Ihe: Less. Ihe Less·ln·
as "which one" in order 10 avoid any " personali$l~ referencel (5tt p. xi and p. 207, nOle
More" and "Morc.in-Less.· scc: Cisa.·Antechrist, in Oeuvres comp/hrs, vol. I. p. 290.
196 NOTES TO (HoUff_ 13
NOTES 10 CHA HfR 14 197

3). We have chosen to rendcr qui lIS ·who· in this insTance 110 as to «1'10 the question ill genera l, Ihat ha~ dynamisms as "lOnes of variation, but also each ~rb, and each par-
-Who besides me . .. ~ "-T(aru.l riculJr s ubslanti~.
S. Friedrich Nictuche. Thin Spoit uralhustr.:l, Irans. Walter Kaufmann, in Th, S. Osip Mandelstam, EIItutim Jll r Dante (Gt-neva: Dosana, 1989), p. 8.
Po~bk Nittucbt (New York: Viking, 1954), third p,a", -On the Spirit of Gravity,- 6. Pierre Bla nchaud i$ one of The r.lre translators of Klei'lt who hll5 been able to
pp. 303-7. And Bc),c,"d Good amJ Evil, trans. Waller Kaufmann (New York: Random ra lK this question of uylc; 5ft' Heinrich von Kleis!. u dllel (Puis: Press·Pocket , 1985l.
House, 1966), S 213, p. 139: ·'Thinking' and taking a matter 'seriously,' consider· Th is problem ca n be extended to every transla tion of a grat writer: it is obvious !hat
ing il ',",yc'-for them ailihis belong5 together: dl:ll is the only way thty have 'cxJIC- translation is a betrayal if it takes as iu modclthe norms of equilibrium of the s!andard
ritnccd' il.· b nguagc into which it is lranslated.
6. Nietuche, uwnustTIJ, second pan, -On Those Who Au Sublime," pp. 229-30. 7. Th~ rema rks refer to Gherasim b.ca's famous poem ·Passion~ment, ~ in u
7. Ibid., p. 230. ch."" de la Ulrpe (Paris: J. Corti, 1986).
8. Herman Melvi lle, The eonfidv<cc·Man, ed. Su~phrn Maflerson (I.ondon: Pen· 8. s..muel Beckett, " Comment dire, Min Pobnes (Paris: Minuil, 19781; translated. by
guin Classics, 1990). Btckttl as ~Wha t Is the Word," in AJ the Story WIIS Told (london: a.ldcr, 1990l, p. 132.
9. friedrich Nitwcht, Somt/irht Werh. Kriti$Che Stlldit/'IDusglJbe. ed. Giorgio 9. On this procedure used in Impressions of AfriUl, 5« M ic~1 f ouca ult, DeD/h
Comand Manino MOllTinari (Berlin: Walter de Gruyter, 19801, vol. 13, 23[3], p. 602. lind the Lalryri"th: The World of RD)'mond Ro omel {New York: Dou bleday, 19861,
10. Henri Jeanmaire, Dio1l)'sos, histoire du clllte de Bacchus (Paris: Payot, 19701, pp. 129-30.
1'.223. 10. On Ihe ploblem of stylc, its relation with language and its twO aspectS. sec Gior-
11. Nien.sche, Zarathu5tra, second part, MO n Those Who Are Sublime, ~ p. 231, gio Passerone, La ligna asua/tll' Pr(lgmati,o dello stilt (Milan: Angelo Guerinl, 1991 ).
translation modified. II. Andrei Bicly, Camels d'om loqHt (Geneva: l 'Agc d' Homme, 1991), p. 50. And
12. Nietuche, fragment of a preface for Human, All Too Hllman. See also Ari - Andrei Biely, Kot;A: u /aitv, trans. A.-M. Tatsis-Bonon (from the RU$$ia nl (Geneva:
ad ne's intervention in Kritiche Studienausgabe, vol. II , p. 579, B7[4], J une-July 1885. I:Age d'Homme, 1973). For both Ih~ books, sec the commen taries of Georges Nivat,
13. Niensche, ZarathllstrD, second part, "The Night Song, ~ Pl" 217-19. especially on language a nd Ihe procedure of "variation on a se mantic root"; d . KotiA:
14. N ieasche, Dithyrambs of Dionysus, MFame and Eternity,~ p. 67, IrlIlIlslation Ltt(l;CV, p. 284.
mod ified. 12. lyotard ca lls "childhood" this movement that sweeps away language and
15. Nirn.sche, Dithyrambs of Dionysut;-.:: Ariadne's Complaim,· p. 57, trant lation trun an al ways-repressed limi! o f language: ~ I n fatia, what docs not speak to itself. A
modified. childhood is nOI a period of life and docs nOi pau on. II haunts discourse.... Wh<i! does
!IOI allow i!self to be written, in wriling, perhaps ca lls forth a reader who no longer
16 . Friedrich Nieasche, The Case of WDgrrn; trans. Walter Kaufmann {New York:
Vintag~, 1967}. knoW$ how to read, or mx yet ... " See Jean -fran~ois l yota rd, Ltcturts d'enfD1Ia (Paris:
17. Sec Ma rcel Detienne, Dionysus at Large, trans. Arthur Goldhammer (a. m' Galile.c, 199 I l,p. 9.
bridge, Mus.: Harvard University Press, 1989), PI" 51-52.
18. Conctrning die eternal rnurn, Zannhustra asks h is own animals: MHa ve you 14. The Shame and the Glory; T. E. Lowrence
already made I hurdy-gurdy song of Ihis?~ Nieasc~, ZarDthUJua, third p,art, "11Ic 1. T. E.l.awrenct, ~ Pillars of Wisdom: A Trill",ph (Garden City, N.Y.: Dou·
ConvlleKem,· p. 330. bleday, Doran 1935). book IV, chapter 54, p. 308. On The God o f Ihe Arabs, Colorless,
19. See the different stanzas of "The Seven Seals~ in Niensche, Zora/hllstr., UnfOrmed, Untouchable, embracing everything. sec IntrodllcnOfl, chapter 3.
pp. 340-43. 2. Book III, chapter 38, pp. 22 1-22.
20. On the question of "unctuary, - tha i is, of God's territory, sec Jeanmai re, 3. On !he hau o r "mirage,- sec book I, chapter 8, p. 65. A beautiful descrip-
Dionysos, p. 193 (" One encounters him everywhere, yel he is nowhere al home . . . . He rion can be found in book IX, cha plcr 104. On the revolt as gas or vapor, sec book III,
insinuates himiClf more than he imposes himscW I. chapter 33.
21. Niernche, Za r(l/hustra, fourth part, "The Welcome, ~ p. 395. 4. Stt Introduction, chapler 2.
5. Book V. chap!er 62, p. 350.
6. Book IV, chapter 40, p. 236.
13 . He Stuttered 7. Book V, cha pl ers 62 and 67.
1. [Herman Melville, MBilly Budd, Sailor," in Billy Budd, SDi/o r and O ther S/ories,
8. Book IV, chapter 39, p. 230; book IV, cha pler 4 1, p. 238; book V, chapter 57,
cd. Harold Beaver (l ondon: Penguin Classics, 19671, PI'. 317-409.-Trans.) p. 323; book I X,chapl~r 99, p. 546.
2. [Quand dire, C'C5I f(lire. This is an allusion 10 Ihe title of the French Iranslalion 9. Herman Melville, ~ Benito u,reno,~ in Bill)' B..dd, SDilorlmd Othn Sto ries , ed.
of J. l. Austin's Ho w to Do Things with Words (New York: Oxford Univeni lY Press, Harold Beaver (l ondon: Penguin C lassics, 1967), PI'. 221-22.
1962l: Qlla"d dire , 'tst faire , Irans. Oswald Ducwt (Paris: Hermann, 1972._Tra ns.] "t 10. ~1arccl . ProuSl, Remembrana of ThingJ P(lJr. Irans. C. ScOIl Moncrieff and
3. Osip Mandelstam, Tht Noise of Time: Th~ Prost! of O sip Mandell/am, Irans. crcncc Kllmartm {New York: Random House, 1981 I, vol. 2, Citics of the Plai", part
Cla rence Brown (San Francisco: North Point, 1986l, pp. 109-10, transladon modified. two, chapler 2, p. 976.
4. See Gus!avc Guillaume, Foundarions for II Scienc~ of UlIIgHOlgt, Irans. W. Hirtle II . On Ihe two possible behaviors of the English in relation to Ihe Arabs, sec book V,
and J. Hewson (Philadelphia: Benjamins, 1984 l. 11 is not only anicln in genera l, or verbs t hapler 61, pp. 346-47; and ["trad ..ction, chapter I.
198 NOTES TO CHAHn I A NOHS TO CHMTEI 15 199

12. NOI~ how Jun Q,nl"l describes this tendency in Prisoner of Low, tr.tns.. Sat- whICh was basic in the Arab $elf-surrender, helped rm not at all. I achieved surrender (as
bar:! (Hanover, N.H ., and London: We5leyan University Press, University Pres$ o f
Por.t)' f~r .1.5 I did achieve it) by the very opposit~ road ... ~
New England. 1992), pp. 26 1-63. There arc numerous rC'Semblarw;n between Genet and 34. Book VI I, chapler 83, p. 468.
lawrence. and il is still a subjective d isposition , hal Generlays claim to when he finds 35. Book VI, chapter 80; book X, chapter 12 1.
himself in the desert among the Palestinians, ready for another Revolt. See Felix Gu.at_ 36. Book IX, chapter 103, p. 564: " I liked Ihe things underneath me and took my
tari's commen tary. "Gentt rttro uvi," in CArtographies ubi%oanalytiqwt s (Paris: Ga lild, pleasures and adven tures downw ard. Therc seemed a ceMaint)' in degradation, a fi nal
19B9}, pp. 272-7S. safcty. Man could ri5C to any height. but there was a n animal leyel heneath which he
13. Introduction; "diurnal dreamers. dangerous men ... " On the subjective char- could nOI fall.
M

acters of his prrccption, Stt book I, chapter IS; book II , chapler 2 1; book IV, chapter -is. 37. Book 111, chapter 33, p. 188.
14. Sec book X, chapters 119, 120. 121 (the deposition of the p$eudogovcm menl 38. See William James. Princ:ipks of Psycbology (London: Macmillan. 189O).
of Ihe nephew of Abd-col-Kader ). 39. There are thus at least three -pans, ~ as Lawrence says in part VI, chapter 81.
15. Book IX, chapter 99, p. S49: MAt laST accidtm. with pj:rvened humor, in cauina p. 452: the one that goa on riding with the body or flesh; another -hovering to the right
me as a man of action had giytn me a place in Ihe Arab Reyolr, a therm rudy and epic henl dowo curiously~; and Ma third garrulous one talked and wondered, critical of the
10 a direct eye and hand. thus offering me an outlet in liler"ure ... M body) self·inflicted labor. M
16. Book VI, chapters 80 and 81. And IntroductiOl'l, 1. 40. Book VI, chapler 78, p. 431.
17. Book IX, chapter 99. 4 1. introduction. chapter I, p. 29.
......... 18. Sec E. M . Forster, len er to T. E. La wrence, mid- February 1924, in u ttn J to 42. See Alain Milianti. "u fils de la hon te: Su r I'engagement politique de Genel M
T. E.LAwrence (London: Jonat han Cape, 1962). Forster notes that moyemtnl has never (The son of shame: On Genet's political tngagcment), in ReliNe d'itudes paltstiniennes
II bun rendered wil h so lill ie mobi lity, through a sUCCHsion of immobile points.
19. Book VI, chapter 7, p. 4 12.
42 (1992): in th is lelfl, everything said of Genet can he applied equa ll y to Lawrence.

20. Book IX, chapter 103, p. 563: MI was Yery con§cious of the bundled powers and 15. To Have Done with Judgment
enritie!; within me; ir wu thei r charactet which'bid. MAnd also on the spiriN al beut, will I. Sec Elias Canelli, Ka{1ta'$ O tbn Trial: Tbe ut/tn to Felin, lrans. Christopher
or desire. Orson Welles insisted on the panicular USC' of the word chta .taan in English; Middleton (New York: Schoo::ken. 1974), p. 6S, transla tion modified.
sec Andti Sarin, Orson Welles (Paris: Cerf, 1972), pp. 178-80: in the Nietzschcan sense, 2. Friedrich Niensche, On the CtnLDfogy of MorDls, trans. Waher Kaufmann and
a will to power rhat unites diyenc foren. R. J Hol1insdalc (New York: R;indom House, 1967), essay 2, S 20, p. 90.
21 . Book VII, chapter 91, p. 503 (and passim). 3. Friedrich Niensche. Tbe Antichrist, trans. Wallet Kaufmann. in The Ponabk
22. Book IX, chapler 99. (A nd sec book V. chapter 57, where Aouda has aU me Nietzsche (New York: Viki ns Ptnguin, 1982), S 42, p. 6 1S.
more charm when he s«retly negotiates with the Turks Mthrough compassion"). \./ 4. D. H. Law renc~, ApOCil/ypse, ed. Mara Kalnins (New York: Viking, 1982J,
23. Book V. chapler 59. And book X, chapter 118, p. 638: Mthe essence of thE 'Alapter 6, p. 27.
desert was the lonely moving indiyidual. M 5. Fran~ Kafka. The Trita/, trans. Willa and Edwin Mui r (New York: xhoo::kcn,
24. Book X, chapter 11 8. 1956), Titorelli's elfpla nations.
25. [This is the concludin8 line of Fran z Kafka. The Trita/, Irans. Willa and Edwin 6. Friedrich Nieruche, Cenetalogy of Morals, essay 2. This elfuemc!y importa nt
Muir (New York: Knopf, 19481, p. 288.-Trans.) texi can be eYa luated only in relation to later ethnographic telf tS, nOlably those on the
26. Book IX, chapler 100, p. 551. potl;uch. Despite a limitation in material, it constiwtes a prodigiOUS advance.
27. Book 111, chapler 32. 7. See Louis Gernet, Anth,opologit de III Grin antiqNe (Pa ris: Maspero, 1976 ),
28. Book 111, chapter 32. 1'1'.215-17,241-42 (the ~th Monly functions betwccn si ngle p,artics. . . . It would
29. fT. E. Lawrence, The Mint: N otes Made i" tbe R. A. F. D~ bt~m Aupsl lit anachronistic to "'y Ihat it takes the place of judgment: given iu original nalUfC, it
and December 1922. tand <It Cadet College in J926 by J52087 /tIC Ross. Regrouped ClCdudcs the notion of judgment), and 269-70.
and copied in J92 7 and 1928 tat Aircr<lft D~ot. Karacbj (Ga rden City, N.Y.: Doran, 8. ~ Ismael Kad:lte, uc:byle oul'i ttfMl pndtJn' (Paris: Fayard, 1984), chaptcr 4.
1936).-Trans .) 9. Antonin AMaud, To Ha~'t Done witb the Judgmmt ofCed ( 1947 ), in A"tonin
30. Sec book IX, chapler 103. Lawrence complains that he has not found a master ~rlaNd: Sel~c'ed W,iti"gs. ed. Susan Sontag, trans. Helen Weaver (New York: Farrar,
ca pable of su bjccting him. even Allenby. a.:
Ir aus G,rOUlf, 1976), MThe Abolition of the Cross, p. 559. For a comparison of the
W

31. Book VII , chapter 83, p. 466: MThese lads took pleasure in subordination; in SYste m of cruehy in Artaud and Nieruche, sec Camille Dumou lie, Nietzsche CI Arlaud
degrading the body: so as to throw into greater re lief Iheir freedom in eq ual iry o f (Pans: PUF. 1992).
mind.... They had a gladness of abascment, a freedom of consen! to yield to their mu- RIO. Friedrich Nielucht. The Birth of Tragedy. tran s. Waller Kaufmann (New York:
ter Ihe lasl sc",ice and degree of their flesh and blood, because their spirits we re eq ual to andom House, 1967).55 I a nd 2, pp. JJ-41.
his and Ihe contract yolunlary. ~ Forced servitude is. on the conn ary, a degradation of II. Set- Antonin Attaud, Oeuvru compf~te$ (Paris: Gallimard, 19781. \'01. 3 . MA
the spirit. P~opos du cintma, pp. 61-8 7 {cntique of the dream from the yitwpoinl of cinema and
W

32. tntrod"cr,OI'I. chapt~r 3, p. 43. I e fun~tioning of thought I. IAn extracl from th is Icxl ;$ included In Seluled Writings.
33. BooI< Vll . chapIn 83, p. 468, MThe conc::cption of antithcric;ll mind and malter, lIP. 18 1..82._Trans.1
200 NOlES TO (HAHn 16
NOTES TO CHMTU 17 201
12. D. H . Lawrence, The Plum ed Serpent (London: c..m bridge University Preu,
1987), chapter 22.
17. Spinozo and the Three " Ethics"
13. II is Blanchot who sU8&CSts thai sleep is nO( appropriate 10 the nighl, but o nl), 1. [Anron Chekhov. "The Wedding," in Compkle Plays. crans. Juliul West (lon-
insom nia; see Maurice Blanchot, The Sp.1ce of Lifer", turt, trans. Ann Smock (Lincoln: don: Duckworth , 19 15), p. 61, translation modifi<,d.-Trans.)
Univcuity of Nebraska Press, 1982), pp. 266-67. Rene Char is not bdng contradictory 1: Yvon ne Toros, in ~pinoZD fit I'ispau proicctif( rhesis, Universiry of Paris-VIII.
w~n he in\'okes the rights of sleep bryond the drum, since he is concerned with a Hate $r,.(Xnls). makes use of vanous argumentS to show Iha t rhe geoml:try that inspires Spin.
of sleep in which one is no r asleep, ilnd that produces a lightn ing flash; see Pa ul Vtyne, oz;J IS not that of Descartes or even Hobbes. but I proittrivc opt~1 geometry doser ro

- Ren e Char (I ['upericncc de ('cxrase,· in Nou~lIc UIINC (rl2nfOisc (November 1985). th~t of Des.argues. These arguments seem decisive, and email, as we shall $('C. I new
14. Franz Kafka, "Wedding Preparations in the Country,~ in Frlltlz KII{k.a: The com preh~nsion of Spinozism. In an ea rl ier work. £Space fit transfortnatio,,: SpinotA
Complete Storiel, N . Nahum N. GlalUr (New York: Schockcn, 1971 ), pp. 55-56. See (Paris:' ), Toros compa.red Spinoza with Vermeer. and sketched OUt a projcctive lheory of
also The DUiricl of Front Ka{lt.a: / 910-1913, ed. Mu Srod (New York: Schocken color In acco rdance WIth the Treatise on the Rambow.
Books, 1948), entry for J uly 21 , 1913. p. 29 1: 81 ca nnot sleep. Only dreams, no sleep." 3. Joha nn Wolfgang von Goethe, Goethel Color Theory, rd. Rupprecht Manhaci,
15. Antonin Anaud, To Ha~ DOM with the Judgment of God. in Mkcltd Writ· tnns. Herb Aach (New York: Van Norstrand Reinhold, 1971), S494. And on the ten-
ings, pp. SSS-71. dency of each color 10 reconstitUTe the whole, $('C SS g03-1S.
16. D. H . la wrence, Flmtasia of tht Unconscious (New York: Viking, 1960). .4. Sec ':iuse ppc Ungarttri, Vmnctr. irani. Phillipc JlcrotIct (Paris, Echoppe, 1990)
17. D. H . lawrence, Aaron'$ Rod {Cambri,e: Cambridge University Preu, unpaglnated, color lhat he sees as a colo r in itself, as light, and in wh ich he also sees-
1988}. p. 13. and iwlates when he sees it---thc 5hadow ... ~ Sec a lso Gilles AiJlaud's theater piece Ver-
18. Kafka, Tht TrUll. p. 222, translation modifird. mur and SpinotA (pari., Bourgois, 1987).
19. Sec Kafka'li a ll usions in LtUttS to Miltna, rd. Willi Haas, trans. Tania and S. Aeschylus, "gllmemnon, 11. 49S- S00.
Jamft Stem {New York, Schocken, 19S3}. pp. 218-19. 6. [Lts sombres prlcurstJlrs. The French phrase signes pricurseurs ("precursory
20. On the combat of priociple$, the Will, the masculine and the feminine, _ signs") usually refflt5to t~ ominous meteorologica l signs that portend a coming Siotm.
Artaud, A Voyage to the umd of tht TllTah"rn/lra (1936), 8The PeyOle Dance," in ~~uu devclop5 The non on of "the dark prccul'5Or" as a philO$Ophkal conccpc in
MlecUd Writings, pp. 382-91; and Heliogabalus; or, The Anarchi$t Croumed. "The Wu Dlfftttnct and Rtpttition, trans. Paul Patton (New York: Col um bia Uni versity Press.
of Principles," "Anarchy," in Oeuvres compliltl, vol. 7, pp. 11-137 (the combat "of 1M 1994), pp. 119 ff.-Trans.1
ON! that dividn while remaining ON!. Of the man who becomes woman and rema ins 7. Sec Robert Sasso, "Discoutl III non-discours de l'Elhique," in Rel-oue de S"fl'-
man in perpetuity"). [A tra nslation of the 5e(:ond half of " Anarchy" is included in these 89 Uanuary 1978}.
Mluted Writings, pp. 317-34.-Trans.) 8. Science ~onfronts rhis pro blem of geomfll:rK:al figures and figures of lighT. {Thus
21 . D. H. Lawrence, p<luim and, nOlably, "We Need Each Other," in Phorrrix: 1M Be:1'g5O~ can say, 10 c~pter 5 of Duration and SimuitaMiry ftranli. Leon Jacobson (Indi-
Posthumo"s Papers of D. H. Lawrenct, rd. Edward D. McDona ld (New York: Viking, anapol~: ~bbs-McmlJ, 1965II. that the lhenry o f Rclariviry reverses the traditional
1968), pp. 188-95. subordmallon of figures of lighT to $Olid, geomfll:rical figures.l In a rt, the painter Delau-
22. Sec Anaud, Lt Muique et la dviliultion, in ,""""ts romp/ttes, vol. 8 (Pari5: nay opposes figures of lighT to the geometrical fisures of cubism as well as abstract art.
Gallimard, 1978 ): the invocation of Heraclitus, and the a llusion to Lawrence. 9. Yvonne TotO$., in chapter 6 of Spi,.otA et I'hpau pro;cai(, ma r\q; in prcci$oC
23. Sec Artaud, the beginnin g of To Have Done with the Judgment of God; and ferms two aspects o r two priociples of Desargucs's geometry, the first homology con-
lawrence, lhe btginning of Etn.<Scan Plaus (New York: Viking, 1933). :rns proposit.ions; .the secon~ , which will be namrd ~dua liry. ~ conce~s the corr~pon ­
24. D. H. Law rence, Complete Poems, ed. Vivian de Sola Pinto and Warren nee. of The Ime wllh the POlDt, and of the point with the plane. This is a new under-
Robe rts (New York: Heinemann, 1964), vol. 1. pp. 352-54: the very beautiful poem st;r,ndlDg of parallelism, since it is csTa blished between a point in thought {lhc idea of
"Ba by Tortoise. 8 God} and an infi nite d~vclopment Idiroultmentl in extension.
2S. Franz Kafka, cited by Canrtti in Ka~a'$ O thtt Trilll, p. 94: "Two possibilities: 10. Jules Lagneau, CilebrflS lefons et (ragmenu. 2d ed., revillCd and expanded
making oncs.rlf infinitely small or beill8 50. The second is perfcction. that is to 5ay, in ~~:'S: P~F. 196.4) pp. 67-:68 (the "ra pidiry of thought," ro which one finds an cquiva-
aaiviry, the first is beginni ng. thaI is to s.ay, aai on .~ II was Dickens who turnrd minia· only ID .muslC, and whIch restS Icss on the ab50lute tha n on the relative).
turiz.arion inlO a literary procedure (the cripp lrd Iinl~ gi rl }; Kafka rakes up the proce- II. Atlstotle, Prio r ""alyties, II, 27: rhe enthymeme is a syllogism of which one or
Ihcothup remIse " IS assume, d h'dd
I en, suppressed, o r elidrd. Lribniz takes up the ques.
d uct, both in The TrUll where the twO dccectives are beaten in the doscclike small chil- ,n
dren, and in 11>11 ustle where the adults bathe in rhlllub and splash rhe children. """h New UflryJ, I, chapter 1, §4 and § 19, and shows thaI the hiatus is made nOl only
IDfCCl(~ "
"".Iuon, b Ut m
' our t houg h t 'IIlIClf, and that "the strength of the conclusion con-
26. D. H. La wrence, Studies in Classic American Literature (New York: Viki ng,
5151 \ III part in wh at one suppresses."
1953), pp. 189-90.
19 12. Sec the t/!Xt$ by Galois in Andre Dalmas, E.~'Ilrisfe Galois (Paris, Fasquelle,
[ S6). p. 121, as well 1$ p. 112 (" one must constantly ind iale the progress of the caku-
16. Plato, the Greeks (!"on~ and foresee the resu lts without ever being able to carry them OUI ... -I and p. 132
1. [This essay was firsl published in Nos Grees ef leur moderniti. rd. Ba rbara • In these TWO memoi rs, and especially in the second, one often finds the formula, I don'f
Canian (Paris: Scull. 1992), pp. 249-S0. under the title ~ Remarqucs~: ir appears here in "OW • . . " ). There thus uisf$ a style. even in mathematics, thaI would be defined by
revillCd {orm.-Trans.] modes of hia tus, ehsion, and COntraction in though t as SL>Ch. In this regard, SO~ invaJu-
202 NOTES TO CHAPTER 18 NOTES TO CHAPTU ' 8 203

able commenlS can be found in Gilles-Gaston Granger, £.sui d'une philo50phie du styk. 19. (Sec Samuel Ikckett. Rodaby, in Compltte Dramatic Wo.h, pp. 431-42.-
2d ed. (Pans: Od;le Jacob, 1988), th ough th e author ha s II completely different concep- Tran§.]
tion of style in mathematics (pp. 20--21 J, 20. Beckelt, Tht U"namable, p. 269.
13. Spinol..a, E.thics, in The Collccted Works of Spi'lo:tJl. ed. and Irans. Edwin Cur- 2] . Beckelt, Molloy, p. 59.
ley (Princeton, N.J.: Princeton Univcl1iiry Press, 1985), p. 60 1. 22. Ikcken, III Sem, 11/ Said, in Nohow On, p. 93.
23. Ba:ke:n, Tht Unnamablt , p. 28. Cf. Edilh Fourn ier, in Samutl BecJwt, Revue
d'esfliitiqlle (paris: Privat, 19861, p. 24: "Beckett breaks Ihe: net:e:ssary bone, neither the
18. The Exhausted ~n tence: nor the word, but their incoming tide; his greatness lil"$ in having known how
1.1This e5Slly was originally publ ished as II posdace to Samuel Beckett, QW#d n to dry it up. H
autre! pieces pour ID li it"ision, Irans. Edith Fournier (Pari,: Minuit;-1992), The tr.a!1$la. 24. It is here Ihat the great Hlheory~ of Tht Unnamablt seems to become circular.
rioo, by Anthony Uh lmann, first appurcd in Sub-stance 78 (1995), pp. 3-28, and 1$ here Whc:n(:c: the idea Ihatthe voicl"$ of the protagonists perhaps refer 10 ~maste rs H who are
published in revised form.-Trans.] different from Ihe protagonistS themsdves.
2. Samuel B«kctt, Texts for No/hing, in Collecltd Shorter Prrut 1945-1980 25. (Ba:ken, Tht UnJldmable, p. 82.-Trans.]
(umdon: Calder, 19841, p. 72. 26. (See B«ken, Tht Unnamable, p. 3: " Whal am I to do, what shall ' do, whal
J. Samuel Beckett, The Unnamable (New York: Grove, 1958 ), p. 70. should I do, in my situation, how procud? By aporia pu re and simple? Or by affirma·
4 . [Samuel Ikckett, For to f.tId Yet Ag.:l;n, in Collected Shorter Prose: 1945-1980, tions and negations im'alidatcd as uttered, or sooner or laler?~-Trans.[
pp.179-182.-Trans.1 27. Beckell, The Unnamable, p. 84.
5. Samuel &ckelt, I Gave Up Befort Birth, in Collected Shorter Prose: 1945- 1980. 28. [Beckett, The Unnamable, p. 114.-Trans.]
pp.197-98. 29. Samud Beekell, How If Is (New York: Grove, 1964), pp. 12S--29, and Com-
6.5« Brice Parain, Sur fa dialectique (Paris: Gallimard, 1953): language ~dOCl pa"y. in Nobow On, pp. 5- 52.
not say what is, it says what might be .... You say there is thunde~ a~d" in the .oou~a:' 30. Ba:kett, The Unnamablt, p. 115.
someone answers you: 'i t's possible, that might be .. . ' When I say that It IS daytime, It .. 3 1. Beckelt, Worstward Ho, p. 124. And already in a leiter of 1937, wrilten in Ger-
not at all because it is daytime . .. Ibut] because I have an intention to realize, one which man (in Disitcta: Misallantou$ Writings and a Dramatic fragm t nt, ed. Ruby Cohen
is particular to me, and which makes use of the da y only as an occasion, a prete"t, o r aD (London: Calder. 1984], p. 172), Beckett had written: " As we: cannot eliminate language
argument~ (pp. 61, 130). all at once, we should at least leave nOlhing undone that might contribute 10 ils falling
7. [See Samuel Beckett, Molloy (New York: Grove, 1955), pp. 125,241.-Trans.) into disrepu te. To bore: one hole aher anOther in ii, until what lurks behind it-be il
8. Beckett, Te"U for Nothing, in Colhcted Shorter Prose, p. 74. something or nOlhing-begi ns 10 seep Ihrough.~ (Worstward Ho, on Ihe oontrary.
9. Samuel Beckelt, W.:Itt (London: Picador, 1988), p. 7 1. would say: ~No ooze then. -)
10. Samuel Beckett, Murphy (London: PiC1ldo~ 1973), p. 57. . 32. Often the image does nOl fully succeed in disengaging itself from a memory-
11 . Becketl, W.:Irt, pp. 200-20 1, 204-6. Fran~ois Martel has made a very ngoroull image, notably in Camptlny. And some:times Ihe voice: is animated by a perverse desire 10
study of Ihe combi natorial science, of the series and disjunclions in Watt: MJeux fonnelt impose a particular ly cruel memory: for efample, in the television piece Eh JOt.
dans Wan. H Pobique 10 (1972). See Samuel Beckell, M.:Ilone Dits (New York: GtOYf, 33. (Sec lmagi"ation Dtad Tmagi"t and All Strange Aw<l)', bolh in Collected
1956), p. 4 : HEverything divides into iuelf. ~ . .. Shorttr Prost.-Trans.]
12. [Friedrich Niet2SChe, Thus Spoke ZarathustT.:I, founh pan, sealon 4, ~ 34. B«kelt. How It ls, p. 97 /and concerning a little: blue and a liltle white, and the
Luch. H in The Porttlblt Nittzsche, cd. and tran s. Walt er Kaufmann (New York: Vilun&o ~lifc: above, H pp. 70, 72, 75).
195 4), p. 362.-Trans.] 35. ISamuel B«ke:tt, Tht Image, in As the Story Was Told. p. 40 (and How It Is,
tJ. Maurice Blanchot, Le livrt Ii vtnir (Paris: Gallimard, 1959), p. 211. The .exac- p. 27: "3 rin e image fine [me:an in movc:men t and colour~ ).-Trans.]
erbation of the meaning of the possible is a conSlant theme in Musil's The M.:In un th(1lll 36. (Sec Samuel Becken, Happy D<l)'s/Oh les btaux iours (London: Faber, ]978),
esp. pp. 52-53 and 82-83. In Happy D<l)'s, Winnie possesses a sma ll music box that
Qualities.
14. Beckelt, Enough, in Collecttd ShorttT Prost, p. 140. .. "plays the Waltz Duct 'I love you so' from The: Merry Widow· (pp. 52-53); in Db les
15. 5« YealS's poem ~The Tower, ~ wh ich inspired Ba:kett's piet:e for televISIon, . .. ~e~ux iou rs, the lyrics of '" l.ove You So" arc replaced by those of the french song
bllt tht douds . . . , in Selecud Poems and Two Pltlys of William B.dln Yeats, ed. M. 1- L hc:ure exquisc:, ~ "The Exquisile HourH (pp. 82-83 1. This is the song Winnie refers to
thro ughout th e play, carefully awaiting the: right lime 10 sing iI, which she does at Ihe:
Rosenthal (New York: Collier, 1966 ), pp. 101-2. " .
16. (Samuel B<eckett, Nacht .md Triiumt, in Compleu Dram.:lt" Wo rks (London. Very cnd._Trans.[
37. [&Ckelt, Wtltt, pp. 135-37.-Trans. ]
Faber, 19861. p. 465.-Trans.]
17. (Beckett, Malo"e Dies, p. 70.-Trans.] . 38 . Samuel Ba:ke:tf, HLc: monde et Ie pan talon. H in Disiecta. p. 118 (and on the twO
18. Samuel Ikckett, ~Womward Ho," in Nohow On (London: Calder, 1989). tyPl'~ of image: in Bram and Geer van Velde. the: congealed and the shuddering imagel.
p ] 03. Sti" i"8S Still, in As the Story Was Told (l.ondon: Calder, 1990), pp. 11 3, 11 8" "[ 39. B«:kett. Pi"g, in Collected Shorter I'rost, p. 150. Ping activa tes a murmur o r a
f~r to' E"d Yef Again, in Collected Sho.tt r Prose. p. 179; A.far a Bird. in Collectt .. enee. usually accompanied by an image.
40. Cf. the voice: in the television piet:e Ghost Trio. in Compl~te D.tlmati, Work s.
Shorte. Prose, p. 195.
20' NOTES TO CHMHR lB 20S

pp. -405-14. In Cat/J~ITOph~, pp. 455-61, the voice of ,h.. Mistan! and that of th .. Dirtt- emphasize the nOlation in tremolo for the piano, which is followed by a finale Mthat
rot respond 10 one another so;lS to describe the image 10 be made and to make il. so;lrs smight towards the wrong key and stays lhere ... " (Anlhony Bunon).
41 . In Wo,dI and MUsit (pi«.. for radio, in Co",pkte Drllnwri, Wo,.s) we Wllnes. 60. Roben Bresson, Notn on Cintn'Ultography, trans. Jonathan Griifen (Ntw
the ill will of Words. too atlac~ to the rehashing of pU$C)nal memory, who rdu5CS to York: Uriun, 19n), p. 46, translation modified.
follow Music. 61. On Snow's film, ~ P. Adami Sitney, "Structural Film, ~ in Visionary Fi/tn: The
42. The works for television consist of Ghost Trio, 1975, ... but ,h, cfo><ds. " , .... merican .want· Garde (Ntw York: Oxford University Press., 1979), p. 37S. Befort
1976, Nacbt wl'ldT,iiumc, 1982, Qwad, 1982, a5wen as Eh ,(No IUS, whkh arc all con. Sno"'", Beckett had umkrtaken an analogous opera lion, but in purely radiophonic condi-
rained in eompute Dra>mlti, Wor,b. '«'e will see below why Eh J~ is C()IUidcrai Kpa. tions: Ember$. The protagonist, who we hear walking on pebbles dose to the sea, evolces
,,,.. Iy from the OiIh"rs. JOIInd·memories Ihat respond to his call. But soon they SlOp responding, the potentiality
4J.[Sec The l...o$l On~. in CoIluted Shortn Prose, p. In.-Trans.] of the sonorous space being exhausted, and lhe sound of the sea enguln everything.
44.lkdcelt, For to End Yd "'gD;", in Coilutcd Shorttr Prou, p. 181. 62. Sec Djliecfa,letter 10 Axd Krun, p. 172. On punctUation, the musical connec-
45. Alrudy with animals. rilomellos arc made up not only of cries and chanh., tion of silence-s, and the conversion of music into silence, ~ Andn! Remold, pp. 26, 28.
but also of colors. postures, and moycm.. ms. as can be seen in the marking of lerritoriel 63. (Beckett, GhOJt Trio, p. 41 0.-Trans.]
and m:uing displays. This is also nue of human rilomellOli. F~lix Guattari has Sludied 64. (Beckett, Eh Joe, in Compltte D,anuJtk Wor.i:I.-Tran,.
Ihe role of Ihe rilornello in the work of Proust, in Ml.e$ ritoumelles du tempt; perdu," in 6S. The visual voice-imagt scission can ha ve 0pJlO$ile consequences: in Beckett,
L'inconlcient machin;que (Paris: Encres, 1979 ), for example, the tom bination of Yin- there is a dtpotenrialization of s~ce, while in Ihe StrauQs or Marguerite Duras, on tht
tcuil', little phrase with colours, postures, and movements. contra?" there is a potentialization of matter. A voice i, raillCd to speak of what ha s ha p-
46. (In the original Freneh version of Bing, Beckett makes use of the word, bin, pened 10 the em pty 'pact, wh ich is curren tly being shown. Voi(C$ arc raised to spea k of
and hop, both of which are rendered as piNg in his English translalion. Sincc De1elltC an a ncient ball that took pla te in thc same hall as the si lent ball being put on today. The
htre maintains thc French distinction, I have translated hop as hup. Tht French term voicc is raised to evoke what is buried in Ihe eanh as. still -active potential.
is an intcrjection used to get someone to leap into action, as in MAlin, ho pt " or " Hop 66. (Bec kel!, Ghost Trio, p. 410.-Trans. J
67. Beckett, Tht Un'lJlmable. p. 11 5.
lalM_Trans.]
68. Beckett, Ghost Trio, p. 41 3.
47. Beckett, Wall. p. 28.
48. (Beckttt, Ping. in Collected ShOrUT PrOUt 1S0.-Trans.] 69. "Testy delirium~ appears in Yeall, poem ~The Tower," as cited in ... but the
douds ...
49. Beckett, Noullfliits tt w:tt$ pou, rim (Paris: Minuit. 1991), p . 109 (Beckett ..
English rendition of Ihis phrase reads, "enough, ~ugh ... visions, Min The End, in Col- 70. Jim Lewis, Beckett's cameraman for the pieces for television produced in
Stuttgan, speaks of the technical problems corresponding to these thrc-c cases in
lected Shorter Prout p. 68. -Trans.]; How It h . p. 106.
"8cdett et la camera, ~ in RCVJIt d'esthtthique, pp. 371 if. Notably foe Eh J oe, Beckett
50. Beckel!, How It h, p. 106; d. pp. 103-6.
wanted the COtntrs of the lip$ to enter into the imagt a quatter of a centimaer. and not
51. Beckett, " La peinture des van Velde ou Ie Monde el Ie Pantalon," in Dujta..
half a centimeter.
p. 123. 71. This is from tht great sixth ehapter of Murphy, "Amor intellectualis quo
52. Becken, Murphy, pp. 141-42. [The Frmch tcrm u, ber~ means IxMh " rock· Murphy se ip$um ama t, " p. 63.
ing chair" and "lullaby," and can also refer to thc female protasonist rocking hcrself ill
thc chair. -Trans.]
n. (Beckett, ... but theelOl/ds ... , p. 417.-Tr.nl.J
73. (Beckett, Murphy, p. 64.-Tran•. J
53. [Beckett, Happy DaysJOh le$ beaux jours, pp. 4G---41; Ihe origina l English vet- 74 . (Beckett, Murphy, p. 6S.-Tran •. ]
sion rtads. "tht eanh is very light today." Tht s«ond referena: is to Jean-Luc Godlltd" 7S. Beckett, Happy DayJlOh les beaux iours, pp. 74--75. This is a ph rase borrowed
famous formula, "pas une imagt jllSte, JUSle une image" (M not a correct imagc, jllSl an from Yeats's play At the Haw.i:'I Wtll. Similar phrases can be found in Klossowski: "in-
imagc" ).-Trans.\ stead of naming the spirit to Robcne, Ihe rtverse took place ... Suddenly Robene be-
54. Beckett, For to End Yet Again, p. 182; and Ping, p. 151. ~ the object of a pure spirit ... " Pierre Klonowski, Robctc ce loir, trans. Auntyn
55. In novel s like Watt. the series might already put movemenll into play, but .1· amh.ouse (New VOI"k: Grove, 19691, p. 24, translation modified. Kl05S0wski, for his
way s in rdation to objects or behaviors. part. hnlr.$ together invocation and revocation, in relation to voices and breaths.
56. [Beckttt, Q uad. in Camp/tte D,arMti, Worh, pp. 451-52.-Trans.] 76. (Be.: kell, ... but ' he cloudl ... , p. 420. -Trans.]
57. Molloy and The Unnamable both include, in their first pages, meditations on . . 77. The problem of th e dissipation of the image, or the Figure, appears in very
the encounter of IWO bodies. 51ITular ttrms in .·rancis 8acon'$ painlings.
58. Becken, Cloud Spa£e, in Collected Shorter PrOUt pp. 199-200. 78. (Be.:kell. Happy Days, pp. 78-79.-Trans.]
59. See Dream of Fair to Middling Womm (1932; New York: Arc.de, 1993), and 79. Beckett, Murphy, p. 66.
the lelfcr of 1937 {o Axel Kaun. Becket! em phasius, in Beethoven; ~a puncluation of de- 80. (Sec Beekett. Womward Ho.-Trans. 1
hiscence, f1otlemenIS, the cohe rence gone 10 piece-s ... " (Duiecta, p. 491. And rt Bernold . h 81. Sec J acqulline Genet, ~ Yea lS It Ie N6"; Ihe draws thl connections with Beckett
hu commen ted on these texIS by Beckw on Beethoven in a very beautiful article, "Cupio In ~ r book William Butler YealJ (Pa ris: L'Herne. 198 1}, pp. 336-S3. On the possible
dissolvi, note sur Beckel! musicien," in Dfirai/ 314 (Roya umonl: Ald ier de: la Fondalion rf l~"onships ~lWeen Becken and J apanl$C No, ~ Takahashi Vasunari, ~Qu'est·cc qui
Royaumonl, 199 \). Musicologi5ls analy:r.ing the s«ond movement of Beethoven'. trio :lrnve? Some Structural Compa risons of Beckell's Pla y. and No" in Samuel Bee.i:ett, HM-
206 NOlES TO CHAHU 18

manistic Pnsputiws, ed. M. &;a, S. E. Gontarski, and P. A~t kr (Columbus: Ohio Suitt
University Prus, 1~8JI, pp. ~9-106); and Kishi Tasuo, ~Dcs voix de nulle pan: ung.agc
et csp,acc dans Ie thatre de Becken et Ie No," in (Ahiers RmDud·Btl""ult (Paris: Nu-
muo 102. 1 ~81). pp. 85-92.
82. 11 is in H/m that the C;l.mt:r;I. :acquires the ma.ximum of antagoniJric movement;
bu t cinema hu yuter need of ~ l1'ickery- Than d<:le$ television (d. The technica l problem
of FIlm. in Camp/de D,tlmatic Works, p. JJ I), and control o f the image here is much
more difficult. Index
83. [Becken. \'('orstWtl,d Ho, p. 103.-Tr.ms.)
84. Becken, Worstwllrd Ho. p. 128.
SS. Maurice RlanehOl, The Space of U ttITilture, !Tans. Ann Smock (Uncoln: Uni-
versi ty of Nebraska Press, 1982), p. 266: " night, rhe csscnce of night, docs not let us
sleep."
86. Stt Ffllnt Kafka, "Wedding Prepantions in the Country,- trans. Ern st Kaiser and
Eithne Wilkins. in Wedding P,eparlltions i" the Country lind Other Storks (H armondt-
wonh: Penguin, 1 ~7g 1, p. 10. MI don't cvcn need to go to the country myself, it isn 't nec· Abraham, 80 America, xlii, 4 , 10,56-57,74 ,85,90,
essa ry. I' ll send my clothed body. . . . For I myself am mcanwh ile lying in my bed, absU'action (s), 140; abstract line in 133
smooth ly covered o ver with the yellow-brown blanket, cxposed to the breeze that iI Melville, 77; as enl ities in T. E. ana{( hy, 85, 93; in Jarl)', 96
wafted th rough that seldom·a ired room. " Sa also Bernard GrOC'lhuyse n, ~ A propos de Lawreru::e, II ' Anaximander, 42, 128
Kafka," in Obliques 3 (Paris, n.d. ), specia l issue on Ka fka, pp. I , 88: " They rem.ined action( s), 11 8; in Becken 's ~Fil m, ~ 25- 26; an imaUI): us, 100, 134; bull, 99-100;
awake during their sleep; they had kept their eyes open whi le they slept ... . II is I world in Carroll, 21; and force, 100-101 ; ca lvcs,2; camel, 100, 122; Cat, 2; dog,
without sleep. The world of the wlking sleeper. Everyth ing, with a frightening cllriry, parallel, 83; in Spinou, 144 2, 140; gira ffc, 2; horse, 54, 122, 134;
isdear." Adam, xxv. 13' T. E. lawrcru::e's shame 10ward, 122;
87. Cf. the rwo tcxU reprinted in Dis;eaa, p. 172. Aeschylus, 128, 143 leech, 154; mole, 2; ox, 54; porcupine.
88. [Cf. Happy Days. where this phrase rtcUt$ throughout the tcxt.-Trans.) aesthetics: of the beautiful and sublime. 2; scorpion, 104; spider, 102, 104;
89. [In English in the original.-Trans. ) 34; as logic of the sensible, 34; new, 54 tarantull, 102; tortoise, 133. See also
90. Becken, Whtllls Ihe Word, in As Ihe Slory W,:IS Told (london: Calder, 1'90). affect(s} , xii,lii, 97-98, 124, 127, 138, becoming
p. 132. 140, 143, 148; Ind becoming, xxxiii; AmichriSl,37-J8.45,127
9 1. Becken, Worstword Ho, in NobowOn, pp. 118, 124. in cinema, xxxi-xxxiii; as crirical enli- anY·Ip,ace-wharever. 160, 164-65,
tics, 124; Dcleuze's terminology COIl- 168-69; in Becken, 162. See tl/so space
cerning, 181 n. 77; distributed in lots, aphotiun, 57; in Nieruche, 134
129; VS. feeling, 13 1; as genetic ele. Apocalypse, D. H. lawrence's critique of,
mem, xxxiii; of language, 108; and 36-52
ligh,. I'll; in literature, xxxiii-xxxv; Apollo. 129
of unle Hans's hOT$e, 64; I I non - aporia. 137, 157
organic, 13 1; pu re. 25; in Spinou, archaeology, and art, 66
IJ9-4 1; and symbolism, 48; systcm archipelago, 86-87; and perspeaivism, 87
of, 129; as variaTions of power, I'll architectu re: of New jerusalem, 46;
affectionis}, 13 1; vs. aflta, xxx, 138-39; Schopenhaueron, 104
in Rccken's ~ Film ; 25-26; self- Ariadne, myth of in Niensche, 99-106
affection. 30-31; signs of. 140; in Aristode, 30, 20 1 n. II
Spino1.3, 138-40; as Slarcs of bodies, armies, 58; in T. E. Lawrence, 121-22
141 art, xii, xxii, xxxiv, xli.liii, 60, 95.161;
affirmation, 70; in Niett.schc, 100-105 and affccts, xxxii; a nd f3bulaTion. xlv;
agrammaricali lY, 68-69; as a limit of goal of. 158; as impersonal process.,
la nguagc, Iv 66; and judgment, 135; nature of,
allegol)', 51; as a deferring 1houghT. 49; 65-67; and politics. xIi-xiv; as pro-
as exprcssion of morality, 42; V5. ductive, xxi; and science, 96
~Ymbol, 45. Sec also symbolism Anaud, Antonin, xi. xxi, xxix, xxxvii, I,
:l.lliaru::e: vs. filiation, 78. 84; with God, S. IS, 19, 126 . 128, 133, 134. 186 n.
45 6 ; a nd body withoul organs, xxxviii,

207
208 INDEX INDEX 209

131; and comba t, 132; com pared with being, 71; chains of, 117; of man, 95; Buddha, 133; and Buddhism. 5 1; as deca- com bat, 52; combat-against vs. combat-
Wolfson, 16; and surrealism, 130; and Non-Being, 92 dent. 37 between, 132; and vitality, 133; vs.
theater of cruelty, xxxix belief, 36, 40; in this world, 87-88 Bu rroughs. William, xxi, xxxllii-xxxviii war, 132-34
as~mblagc, xxxiv, Ii Bene, Carmdo, xi, I B)'ron, Lord: Do"Jua", 129 combinatorial, 154, 156
asymaclic limit, lv, 5j asyntactic stnlcncc, Benjamin, Walter, xli ByzanTium, 141 comic, 129, 140
Berg, Alban, xli
"
athleticism, 2-3, 136
auditions, as the OUlsidc of language, lv, S.
Bergman, Ingmar. xxxii-xxxiii
Bergson, Henri: and illl,. villl/, xiII; and
cabba lah, 81
Caesar, 38-39
community, 85; of brothers, 87, 89; of
celibates. 84, 89: in Melville, 88
Comolli, Jean-Louis, xliII
Sec a/50 sonorities, as a limit of lan- fubulalion, X/II, 95, 118 Cain, 53, 55, 75 composition, XXXII, xliii, 56
guage; vision(s} Berkeley, George, 23, 25 Cald w~lI, Erskine, x/ comrades, society of, 137
author funnion, xx best, principle of, XII, 3 1 capitalism, xlii; and immancl\(e, 137 concept('),xi;"'xiii, 87, 138, 143, 148;
authority, paternal, 88 betrayal: in T. E. Lawrence, 11 7; in Carroll, Lewis, xi-xii. xxlliii, 21-22, 69, concept-object rela lion, 30; in Spin-
axiomatic, xliii, 149 Melville, 81 168 oza,144
Bible, 42, 43; Old Testament, 38, 41 Ca rtesianism, 148; posT-Canesianism, 169 concert, /Ili
Babylon, 45; whore of, 47 Biely, Andrei, 11 3-14, 197 n. 11 canography, xl, 62, 66; vs. archaeology, 63 confidence, 87-88; confidence-man, 89,
bachelor: figure of, 85, 88-89; Banleby bifurcation, XXII-xxiii, xxx, 55, 108, ca usa lity, 124; broken into two chains, 101; in Melville, 75, 85
as, 74; in Kafka, 74 128-29 141, 143: final causes, 139 conjunction(s), xXllii, 52: living, 47. Sec
&'con, Fra ncis. 83 biology, xiII, 14 Cave ll, Stanl~y, 176 n. 12 also connccrion (s}; disjunction (s}
ballet, 163-64 Blake, William, 124 a line, Louis Ferdinand, xl,S, 11 2 connection (!), xliii, 112, 166; vs. con-
Saluc, Honore de, t07 Blanchot, Maurice, 3, 71, 154, 171, 185 azanne. Paul, 172; and percepTS, XXXII junction, xxxi; cosmos as locus of, 45;
baroquc, 141 n. 7, 200 n. 13; absence of the book, chaosmos, xxiii, xxlliii-xxix progressive vs. ~gressive, 11 0. Sec
bastard, 4; as image of the writer, 2. Su 149 charactet (s},liTerary, 3, 81, 124-25; in 1l/$O conj unction (!}; dujunction (s}
Dlso race block(s}, in Carroll, 21; of becoming, Beckett, 111; defined by trajectories, conscience: of a ntiquity, 31; mora l, 32
beautiful, 14,95,125; Kanr'$lhwry of, xxxiii, xxxiii, Iii; of chil dhood, 113; 131;doubledet~rminarionof, 131 ; consciousness, 91-92,123
34 finite, 128; formu la-block, 70; inartic- in D. H. Law~ncc, 131; ~origi n als~ in contemplation, 119, 124; in Spinoza, 148
Becken, Samuel, xi, xxi, x/viii, lv, 2)-26, ulate, 68; of sensations, xxxiii, XXXll Melville, 82-83; as perfectly individu- contract, in masochism, 53-54
68, 109, 110, 152-74; and schizo- body, bodies, 14,64,87,130-32,1 43; ated, 3: as singu lar composition, 120 contradictories, unity of, 153
phrenia, xxix; and Wolfwn, 12 and affects, 139--40; anarchic, 131; charity, 88-89; Chrisrian, 84 convention, 73, 140
becoming, xxix-xxx, ",,)Civ, xxxvi, and debt, 128; duintegration of, Chekhov, Amon, 138 cosmos, 52; destroy~d in the Apocalypse,
xxxviii, Iii, 1-3, 63, 65, 67, 105, 13 1, xxxvi-xli; as clement of depth, 21; in chiaroscuro, 141 , 143, 145 44-45; and immanence, 137; in Whit-
133, 139; beli~f in, 88; as a consrd - T. E. Lawrence, 123: lived, 14; mark- chi ldren, 61-67 man, 58
lation of affects, 64; and forces, 132; ingof, 128; and mi nd, 123-24; as Chomsky, Noam, xlix Courbet, Gustave, 39
vs. mimesis, 78; syntax as, 112; of rh~ organism, xxxllii, 2, 66; and shadows., Chretien de Troyes, xxxiii cou rtly love, xxxiii, 54
writ~r. 4, 6 141; shame o f, 122-23; in Spinou, Christianity, 129; founded new type of creation, 67, 104; life as principle of,
becoming, types of: active, 103, 105; 14 1--42; suspension of in Masoch, 55 thinker, 38-39; opposed to ChriST, 37: xxiII
animal, xxxiii, 1-2, 13 1-32; Arab, body without orga ns, xxXIlii-XXXlliii, and postponed destiny, 41: as religion critical, xi, xxiv, Ii
xxxiII; aster, 2; ch ild, 113; cock, 64; 13 1-32; in Artaud, 15, 131: in D. H. of POWU, 36, 43, 127 ~critique et clinique. ~ xix, xxi, XXiII-XXII,
conscious, xli; dog, XXXIIi; god, Lawrcnce,13 1 Churchill, Winston, 62 Ii-lii;
xxxlliii-xxxix; horse, 64-65: human, book(s}: and judgment, 128; twO kinds of cinema, xii, 23-26, 83; as an of the cruelty, 135; system of, 128, 130; theater
90; imperceptible, XXXiII, 1,23, 26: composite book, 42; vs. scroll, 49 mas~s, xli; panoramic shot vs. track- of, xxxix; vs. IOnu re, 134
Indian, 2; matter, xxxlliii; mineral, Borges, Jorge Luis, xxvi ing shot, 83, 87 crystals, of the unconscious, 63
131: minor, xliii-xlix; molecu le, 1-2; Boulez, Pierre, xxllii civil disobedi~nce, 88 cuc koo dock, 87
Mongol, xxxix; monal, 2: a new man , Bousquet, J~, xxix, 180 n. 66 Civil War, xli. 88 cummings, e. e., I, 68, 71, 11 2
74; oth~r, 5: revolutionary, 4: Scan- breath-words, 5, 15, I 12 clinical, .~i, xix, XXiII, Ii, 105; and litera-
dinavian, xxxix; stone, 80, 132: un- Bresson, Robert, 165 ture, xl Dante Ali8hieri, 109, I SS
limited, 84: vampire, 132; vegetable, Brisset,lean-Pi~rre, 1, 9_10,19,97_98 d~·u p, xxxi, 25 IX Quincey, Thomas, 35
I, 131; whale, xxx, XXXiII, 78: woman, Bronte, Emily, xx"xiii; Wulhcri"g Heights, colonization, xlii, xliII dearh, 37, 41, 129; culr of, 133; and
XXXIIi-xxxix, 1-2, 78, 132 85 cnlor, III, 11 3, 118, [41, ISO; coloring judgment, 5 1
Beethoven, Ludwig van, 30,158,167, brother, 78: &rtleby as, 90; brotherhood, causes. 143; genetic co nception of, debt: creditor-debtor relation, 127; VI.
172; "Concerto in Memory of an 87,89; society of, 84, 137 115-16: in Goethe, 115-16: in Whit- exchange, 127; finite, 128; infinite, 33,
Angel, ~ 173; "Ghost Trio, 164
ft Buchner, George, xxxviii man, 59 36, 126, 127
210 INDU INDEX 211

decision, 5 1: 'IS. judgmenl, 133; and sym- differ~nce, xxiii, 11 7, 123; in Kant, 29; elemi ty, 41-42, 128: -~thernity, _ 95 forger(s): Dionysus 1$, 104; higher men
bolism,49 sexual,74 ethics, xiv, Iii, 176 n. 17 as, 101; Wagn~r as, 104
deconSlruClion. xv-xvi differ~ntiation, xxx, 78, 13 1; and the ctiology, xiii-xliii forgelling. 66; of forgClling, 93; as with·
ddinile artkle, as !Ollf' of vatUllion, 109. undifferentiated. 133 ~tymology, in Hcidegger, 97 drawal of Being, 92
Su a/sa indefinite ,uncle Dionysus, 67. 102-5, IJO: and Apollo, 104 Europe, ,,/, 4, 56, 57, 85, 87 formlsl, xxxvi, 77, 118; of cOntenl, 108,
Deleuu, GitlC1, XII. Diff~c"cc ,md Repe- disasl~r, experi~nce of, 56 ("valu ation, xiII; method of, 36 111;ofeltprcssion, I, 108, 111;vs.
tition, xxvii; E.ssl!ys C,iticlll lind Clini- discontinuity,I49 ("velll(sl, xiii, XXXII, X/ill, II, 19,22,94, figure, 82; fixed, 104; and formlcss or
cal, xi, ;eiii, xix, I; E:cprtSJion;sm in discourse, free indirect, X/iV-X/1I 153, 160; al aspects of milie us, 6 1-62; unformulaled, 15<4: God 1$ infinitc,
Philruoplry: SpiXOUl, xi.%; The Fold: disjunction{s), 52, 112; charaaeristic of in Carroll, 21; tommunication be· 129; higher, 129; and idcntiflCation,
uib"iz lind the Baroque, xxv; Francis Khirophrcnia, 12; ~xclusive vs. inclu- lw«n, xxix; and language, 10; as a 75; and judgment, 128: vs.transfor-
813(0'" Logic of Smsatio" , Xlii; The sive, 11 0; inclusive, xxix, 13, 11 0, -possible,- 168 mation, 105
Logic of !k'UII, xi, xxv, xxvii-xxlliii, 153-54: in language, 110: as syo- exhustion, 153, 170; and in$Omnia, 17 1; formula: -he danced his did, " 68-69;
xxxvii; The MOllllmenf· /mage, xii, xxi, th~tic, XXvii, 180 n. 59; twins as dis- logical and psychological, 154, 17 1; " I would prcf~r not 10, " 68, 112, 154:
xxxii, xxxiv, Nietuchc and PhiloJO> junctors, 47; in Woloon, 12. Su a/so vs.tired n~ss, 152, ISS, 161 as opposed 10 a procedure, 72. See
plry. xix; ProUJt and Sign" xix, xxi; connection(s), conjunCtion(s) experimen[;lIioo, xxxvii, 7; vs. interprela· 11110 procedure
The Timc-lmage, xii, xxvii displacemenl, xxxvii, 63, 66, 116, 128 tion, xxii, Ii FOTSter, E. M., on T. E. Lawrmce, 119
Delcuu, Gilles, and Ftii" Guamri, n; dissonance, 35; in Beethovm, 164; in expression, form o f, 108, 143, 144: vs. Foucault, Michel, xx, xlviii
,4ntj·Otaipus, xi, xxi, xxxvii, xl; D. H. Lawrence, 52 Ira ilS of ~xprnsion, n-78 foundling, 1$ image of lhe wrilCr, 2
Ka{lt.a: To_,a a Minor Li'",otIlTt, dithyramb,IOl Ezekitl's wh«l, 42,129 fragmenl (s), fragmentalion, xxii, "Ii-xlii,
xix; Ao Thousand Plateaus, xi, xxi, div~rgence, XXV-XXIIi 113, 165; extracted Ihrough wrilin8,
XX:r, xxxvi-xxxvii, xliii, xl, xlix; What Dos Passos, John, x/ fabula tion , "III, Iii, 118; as inv~nling a 57; naruralto Amerians, 56, spon-
Is Phiknophyt, xii Dosloyevsky, Feodor, 68, 82 people, 4; as visionary, 3 taneity of, 56, 58
Dclcuu:, Gilles. and O.irc Parnel, Dill- dream(,), 118, 115; in Ik<;km, 172; deifi- face, and affectivity, xxxii France, IS; and colonialism, 10
tapa,xi cation of, 133; and insomnia. 129-30; faculties: disjunctive Iheory o~, 33-35; Franklin, Benjamin, 88
Deligny, Fernand, 61 vs. $Ieep o r intoxicalion, 134 judgment as faculty, 40 frat~rnily, in M~lviIJ~, 78, 84
delirium, 144; and a rt, """lIii~x:uix, 54; DreifCr, Theodore, xl fal§e, powcr of thc, xXllii, 101, 104-5 freedom, 87, 170
as clinicalltal~, /11, in languagc, /11, 5; Dreyer, Carl, xxxii fan lasy, 5; as material for wriling, 2-3 Freud, Sigmund, xvii, xxxviii, 32, 6 1,
as proce$s, /11; two poles of, xl-x/i, 4; drugs, xxi, 182 n. 98 fasc:ism, Xlll,i, 4, 133 I n nn. 27, 31
as '4~rld-hi5torical, 54 Duras, Margu~ril~, 167 falhcr, 18,75,78,80,86,88; death of, friendship, 117
dtmOCracy, 60; and American lit~rarure, duration, 95,141; in Kanl, 28; in Spinou., 87; as foreignne", 17; as image, 78; as Fromentin, Eugene, 66
fUlur~, 95; as unassignable, 94. ~e a/so
87; Ihrtt Iraits of, 1J6-37
d~monstration: ma t h~matical, 149; in '" monstrous, 84, 89; in Wolfson, 17
father-mother, 4, 6 1, 64; in Anaud, 19.
Su IIIso Oedipus complex; pal~rnal
lime
SpinOla, 146-47 car, 105; of Dionysus, 99, 103
Derrida, Jacque$, XII, 177 n_ 24 earth, 18, 58, 100 function Galois, Evarisl~. 149
De.urgues, Gera rd. 148-49 effect(,), 138-39; imaginary, 139; undtr- Faulkner, William, x/ game, 1J3; ideal,:Uui
Descartts, Rcnt. 148-49 stood optically and no\: C3ill$llly, 141 figur~(sl, 142; in ~con, 83; geometric, ~ne$i" Book of, 83
desert, 47, 122, 124; and gu~rril1a war- ego, 3, 5 1; vs. character, 120, 124; destruc· 148; of light, 148; originals as, 82; in Genet, J~a n, 119, 125
fare, 121; in T. E. Lawrenc~, 115; as lion of, 117; dissolved, 119. Su also self Wolfson, 20 genctic elcment, XXiV-XXII, x/vi, Ii
percept, XXXiII, 11 7 E8YPt,64 Fingerald, E Scali, xi, x/ genius, in Kanl , 35
desire. 109; and pleasure, 53; as process, Eisenstein, Sergei, xli, 22, 24 fiighl.l, 63, 75, 89; in language, 109; line geography, xl, III, 62
53 £J im, T. 5., xl n
o f, xxx, "/-X/', x/iii, xlt" fi-lii, I, geomelry: optical, 142; projective, 148
de$tiny, po$tponed, 41-42; and doctrine Emerson, IUtph Waldo, 86 fIow(s) , 49, 51, 156-57: men and women Germany. 62, 85
of judgment, 127; in Judaism, 40; emmions, throry of in William James., 123 as, 133: mon~y as, 52; of pain, 53; giants, 11 8, 121
transformed in Christianity, 41 England, 62, 85, 11 7 twins 1$ ml$teTS of, 48 glory, 122, 124; 1$ affecl, xxxiII; in T. E.
destruction: and C hristianity, 45; as JUSt, cnlity, enlities, 119: as affects, 124; in force(s) , 54, 64, 11 8, 127-28, 133, 135; Lawrence, 120; makes enlili~s com·
133 T. E. Lawrence, li S, 11 9-20 action and reaction, 100-101; animal, municalc, 124
det~rminarion, 29; and det~rminability, ~nuncial ion, lil~rary, 90; condilions of, 3 132; thaSlily as. 133; combination Gobard, H~nri, x/vi, x/viii
29: of th~ ind~(jnit~, 65: praCtical, 32 ~nvelopmml, 138-19, 142 of. 135; composition of, 132; im- God, 47, 82, 122; death of, XXiII, 87,
DhOtd. Andli, 2 a.sc:nces, 138; in Spinoza, 148 perccptible, 131: in Melvill~, n, in 93; idea of, 150; judgm~nt of, 130;
dial«tics, 88 Clernal return, 103: as method of $elec- N lel"lSCh~, 99; r~aaivc. 105; vampiric, and man. 10 1: and possible worlds,
!)ickens, C harles, "i;i, 24, 77 tion, 105, 137 IJ2 XXII; in Spi nOla, 140, 148, I SO; sum
212 INDU INDEX 213

101:;1;1 of all possibility, 1S2-53; in illness, xl, lvi, 3-4, 53: in Wolfson, 12 Jarry, Alfrt<!, xii, I; compared with Hci- Kant, Inmanuel, xii, xxiv, 27-35, 126
Wolfson, 19 imageil j, 65, 119--20, 139,161 , 11;9,172; degger, 91-98 Kantia nism, xxii; four form ulas o f,
Godard,Jean.luc,83 in Becken, 158, 168; contcmplated by Jefferson, Thomas, 85 27-35; post- Kantia nism, 35
gods: and debt. 128; as pusivc witntsSeS, Ihe mind , 119; as dipipalive, 161, Jerusalem, New, 4 1, 45-46 Keaton, Buster, 23
128 170; and identifiC1ltion, 75: in lemal JesuS Christ, 38, 40, 5 I , 12 1, 133, 168; Kerouac, jack, xxi, xl
Goethe, Johann Wolfgang von, xxxvi, tension of, 159; in T. E. Lawrt'nce, as aristocra t, 43; Sardeby as, 90: Keynes, John M aynard, 109
110, 11 5-16 118; as outside of language, 159; pa' Christia nity't ooraya l of, 37; as deca - Khlebnikov, 11 4
Gombrowic:t, Witold , ;It%viii, I tcrnal, 80: potential energy of, 16~1. dent, 36-37; immanence of, 41-42; vs. Klce, Paul, xxxv, xli, xlv
Greek(5), 44, 94-95, 102-3, 133; cities, 170; sonorous and vi sual, 124 infinitt debt, 36; inventor of a religion Klein, Melanie, 62
136; in Holckr!in, 56 imagination, 2-3, 33,1 18; and signs, of love, 36; manner of loving, SO-5 1 Kleist, Hci nrich von, xxxvi, 68, 79; a ni -
Griffith, O. W., xli 142; and wriling. 2 John the Apostle, 36, 43 mal traiu of txpression in, 78: style of
GUlietari, ftlix, 63, Set tJlso Dclcuu, imitation, I , 11 7 John of PatmO$, 36, 38--39, 43 writing. 80: use of language, 100
Gilles, and Felix Guauari immanence, xxii, mi, 31; and anri- joy and sadness, in Spinou, 139, 140, Klossowski, Pierre. xi, xxiv
Guillaume, Gumlvc. 108 Pbtonism, 137; o f Christ, 41-42; 14+45 knowled8e, 83; disguise for mora lity,
and life, xiv; YS. IralUCUldtnce, Joyce, james, xxviii, 84; and epiphanies, l Ot; thrce kind. of in Spinoll-, 138,
haeccdty, xxxiII XXXII-XXXvi xxii 144; in Wolfson, 14, 18
hallucinations, 115 immigralion, 10; in Arner""" 56; univCf- Judaism: and thc priesthood, 39--40; and Krae pe:lin, Emilt, xx
Hami el, 32, JS; a5 Kamian, 28; as man sal, xli, 88 prophetism, 40-41 Kra fft .Ebing, Richard, xvii
of the Critique, )O immobililY, 83, 130 Judas, 38
Hardy, Thomas. S5 immorta lity, 33, 37; and the afterlift', 41 Judm-ChriSlian tradition, 126 Labov, William, xlix, 176 n. 17
harmony' in Kant, 34; in Lcibnit, xxv;i im persona l form, 3, 26, 65; as schi~o- judgment, Iii-liii, 36-37, 85, 145; and labyrinth, 99, 100-10 1: archittctura l vs.
health, XII, xli, Iii, 53, 105; and lilcranare, phrenic,7, II ; in Wolfson, 12 Apollo, 129; in art, H5; lind Artaud, musical, 104; of Being, 105; Dionysus
lv, J-4 impossiblt, impossibilil}', xliv, 186 n. 8; 19; becomes an autonomout faculty in lIS, 103: thrt'ad of, 102. oftirne, 27-28
Hegel. G. W. F., 58; Hegelianism. xxii as condition of litCfllture, dviii; in Chrisrianity, 40; condition. of, 126-27; Lagneau, j ules, 148
Hcidegger, Marun. ;cjj, I; compared with language, 19; as objtcl of poIirital vs. cruelty, HO; v•. decision, 49, H3; landscape, lvi, 66; a, a passage of Life,
Jarry, 91-98; compared with Roussel, literaturc, xliii doctrine of, 126, 136; fa lse, 129; of xxxiv
Brind, Walkon. 97-98; lind etymol- illttSt, 85; maternal, 78 God, 127, 129--30; impl i~ lou, fomu, language, xxiii, xlii, 2, 17, 82, 83, 89,
ogy, 97; and Nuism, 93; and Technol- incompossibilil}', xxv and ends, 128-29; and infinite dtbt, 145,173; affectivt, 144; agglutina-
ogy,95-96 incorporcab, 22 126; invention of Saint Paul, 37; YS. tions in, 96-97; becoming of, 5; tquiv-
HeracliTUS, 133 indefinitt article, 1-3,84, 1S8, 162, 165, justice, 127, HO; and Kantian law, 33; ocaJ o r ana logieal, 140: and events,
heterogenesis, 108 169; in psychoana lysis, 65; as tone o f of knowledge, 127; last judgment, 4 9; 10; four functions of, xlvi; of God,
history, "I, lv, 54, 58, 62; universa l, 4 variation, 109 ... ,. Iove and hate , 135; rmans of escap- 146; intensi... t, 107: intcrstiees o f, 5;
Hitltf, Adolf, xli, 37, 45, 62 India, 64 ing, 13 I ; mootrn form of, 129; and in Jarry li nd Heideggcr, 95-98; in T. E.
Holderlin, Fr it<!rich, xl, 28, 56, 97 individuation, xx, 121; of a life, xxxv; modes o f txisttnct, 135; and mora lity, Lawrtnct, 11 9: limit of, lv, 5, 55, 87,
homosexuali l}', 85; in Sanltby, 75; in mode of, xxxiv; set of actualited sin- xi,,; opposed by Jesus, 40; plalOnie 98,112, 124: literaturc as a foreign
T. E. Lawrtoct, 11 7 gularities, xxix form of, 136; renunciation of, 134; language wit hin language, xli", Iv, 5--6,
hOrTor storits, :lCxxviii infants: affective rdationsh ip with, 133; system of, 39--40; and tranKendence, 9-10,71-72, 109-- 10, 113, 119, 184
Hugo, VICtor, 113 and militUJi, 62: and vita lism, xiv 137: and war, 133 n. 127: matcmal, 12, 14-tS; of a mi-
H usstr1, Edmund, 91 infinity, 130, 134, 142, 167; and finitc Justice, 45, 54; VI. judgment, 127, 130; in noril}', 55: names the possiblt, tS6;
Huygens. Ch ristia n, 149 rtlations, 127 Kafka, 131 nth power of, 98. o riginary, 72; out-
hYpIXhondria, IS; hypIXhondri acs a5 insomnia, 130, 135; and drums, 129-30; side of, I", 3, 112, 159; p,atois, 5; pa-
outCaStS of reason, 7s-fJO, 82 and cxhaustion, 17 1; and Kafka, 130. Ka fka, Franz, xix, xliv. xl~-iij, 4 , 3 1,55, etic V5. scicntific conceptio n of, 96,
Sa also sltt p 68,82, 107-9, 121 ,126,134 , 17 1; 107; ramified variation o f, 112; states
" 1 think ,ft 29-30 intensil}', xxxvi, Iii, 53, 64, 84, 1t9, 13 1; and Ma pparent aquittal,M 32-33, 127; tht possible, 152-53: in Sade and
idea(s}, 118; adtquate vs, inadequate, 143, intensio, 170 : voyages in, xxxix and insomnia, 130: and jud8mem , Masoch, xviii-xix, 55: in Spinou's
145; as forces, 11 5; in T. E. Lawrcn<:t, ;me:rval(s}, 14, 150: pathogenic, 11-12, 131; love letters, 132; and Masoch, ElhilJ, 138, 146: and slultering,
11 5; as passagt of life, 5: platonic, 25, 17- 18; in Whitman', sentellttS, 58 190 n. 2; on minor literature, 4, 57; xlvf-lj; tensor and limit, 69, 112: twO
136-37: as ... isions, 5 and pa rables, 134 ; on Msmall nations, M treatrmnrs of (major V5. minor),
identiflCalion, 1; of Ahab and Moby - james, Hen ry, xl, 88 89; and swimming champion, 2, 5; xlvi-li,5, 108
Dick, 79; doublt., 80; prOC('$1 of, 78: James, William, 88, 193 n . 21: theory of and Mun limited postponermnt," languages: Armrica n English, xillii, 10:
thr",eltrnentsof, 75 emotions, 123 33,54 Arabic, 11 7, 119; black English, xlv;;;
21. INDEX INDEX 215

Breton, 97; British English, x/vii, 10; lim itls), 69, 157; of language,S, 55, 87, Wolfson, 19. &r Illso Sacher-Ma5OCh, mlilliplicity, xxiii, xXllii, xxx, XXXIIi, Ii; as
Cuch. xlviii; English, 8, II, 13,58, 98, 11 2, 124: limit-function, 68; in Leopold von nondenumerable, xlii
71, 11 0, 119; French, 7-9, 10,68,97, theory o f faculties, 3S mathematics, 21, ).49, 154 music. 1i,lv, 51, 55, 67, 72, 83. 89, li D,
109, 112; Gaelic. x/vii; Gf,rman, xlviii, Lindon, Mathieu, 73 Mauss, Marcfl, 127 113.13I, I 73;counterpoi nt ,59;goal
7-9, 14,55, 97, 109, 119; Gr«k. 97; linguistics, xlvi; Chomsky "S. Labov, xlix; Mayr, Emst, 119 n. 52 of, 158; as territorial, 104
Hebrew, xlviii, 7-8,97, 1-46; Irish in Wolfson, 10 meaning, u usc, xxii Musil, Robert, 82, 154, 192 n. 7; The
English. x lvii; Latin, xlvi-x/vii, 10,97, lit£ratur£, xii~xill: Am£rican, xl, 4, 56, M£khiSC<!cc,86 Miln without Qualitits, 14; and par_ M

1311, 146; Old Saxon, 97; Russian, 57,59,60; Anglo-American, xl; as col· Melvil1£, Herma n, xii. xliv, 4, 58, 101, a ile! action, _ 83
7-9; Yiddi,h, xlvii lcctive asssemblage o f enunciation, 4; 108; o n American literature, 89-90; myth: u fabulating function. xiII: in
uutman, Alben. 179 n. S5 as -convulsive. M 56: lIS .;klirillm, 4; &rtleby, 68-90, 112; and forgers, Plalonism, 131
law{$J; and categorical imperative, 32; European, 4, 56; and fabulation, xiII; 10 1; Moiry-Dk', xxx, XXXiII, 12, n,
convergence of accusation, delibera- French, ;J;/; as health, III; effect on lan- 80,85; and Musil, 74 name!s}: name of the falher VI. names of
tion, verdict, 32, 126; and debt, 128; Sllase, 5; and life, 1-6; minor, 57: psy- memory, 2, 66, Ill, 113; inadequate for hi slory, ;J;;J;xix; proper, xx, xxix, Ii
Kantian, J 1-33; in Mtlvilic, 80; as choanalytic inte,pretatiolU of, 2; and li~rature, 4; and unconscious, 63 na rra tion, xXII~xxvii
pure form, 32; rdalion 10 the Good, schiwphrroia, xxi: three aspectS of,S Messiaen, Olivier, XXXII narion(. li,m), 88-89
31-32; of secondary nature, 80, 83; Little Hans, 61, 64-65 mcuianism, 14. 86, 87 nature, 58: in Kanl, 34; primary "S. $«-
universality of, JJ Little Richard, 62 melamorphosis, 105, 133 ondary, 19-80, 84
Lawrence, D. H., xii, n', xxi, xl, 2, logk, 8 1; and Beckett, 154: formal ...,. metaphysics: death o f, 177 n. 24; over- Nazism, xli; and Hcidcgger, 93
36-52,88, 126, 129, 133, 134; and transcendental, xxvii; nonrationaltype coming of, 9 1-9 2 negation. 70-1 1, 102: and will to power,
Amuican literature, 87; an d Chris- of, 82; a nd Russell, 52; in Spinou, method, geometric, 149 100-101
tia nity, 127: and cornbu, 132-33, ' 48 Michawc, Henri, 2, 113 neoimpressionism, 96
Fantasia of fbr U"oonsOouJ. xxxviii; lo~. 36, 5 1; in G.tt«, 136; in Plato. middle, liii, 48-49, III Neoplatonism, 136
- Litany of Exhortlltiom, • 5 1i The JJ7: in Spinou, JJ5 mi lieus, 61, 83, 11 7; in deliriums, 54-55; neurosis, 3, 75; in Melville, 18
Man Who Dka, SO-51; rt'lation to Lovccraft, H. P., 1 pa rrots as, 62 new, production of, 134-35
Nien.J(:he,31 Lowry, Malcolm, xi, 179 n. 48 Miller, Henry, XII. xxi, 57 NielUChe, Friedrich, xii, xj~xv, Xliii.
Lawrence, T. E., xii. 11 5-25 LUell, Gherasim, xlviii. 111-12 mi mesis, 1, 75; VI. becoming, 78 xix-xx. xxxix, xl, 3, 39, 43, 5 1. 126,
l.e Clnio, J. M. G., 1-2 Lucretills, 17 min imalism, 164 129,133;Anrichrisl,31,51;and
Leibniz, Gottfried WilMlm. xxl'-xxvii. Lyotard, Jean·Fran<;ois. 197 n. 12 minor: COIlttPf of, xlii; ilInguage, xlvii. I; aphorism$, 134; ascetic idea l, 101; bad
141; and monads, XXII; and poin t of u lingllistic category, xlvi; literaturt', conscience, 10 1-2: Beyond Good and
"jew, ;J;xvi: preestablished harmony, machilH'(s), 93, 95: literary, xxi; xlvii~xlix, 4; peoplt, 4 Evil, xiv; and cond ition of judgment,
xxvi, Throdiey, xxvi madness, xX;J;IIi, xxxix, xl. 6, 19-20,1 1, minority, xiII, 54-56, 109, 1S3 n. 11 8; 126; and credilor-debtor rt'lalion, 127;
Lenin, Vl ad imir I. 43, 51 74,79, 121; in Bartleby, 10, 75; and and majority,xlii a nd immanence, 131; and judgment ,
Uvi-Strauss. Claude, 127 Nien.J(:he, xxxix; and time, 30 minoriution, 133; of la nguage, S, 109; in 131: and O. H.Lawrt'nce, 37; and
libido. 62. 63; and indefini te aniele, 65 Maine de Biran. xxxi music,109 ITI.1n wilh leeches, 1S4; -The Magi-
u.:htenstein. Roy, 1S8 Mallarme, Srephane. xli, 97 Mobius strip, 2 1 cian, _ 99, 101 , 104; and myth of
life, xiII, xli. Iii, 2. 82-83. 87, 100; -a man: as concept, xlii: as democratic, S5: models): of existence. xiv. :>Wiii. xx, Ii. 36, AriadlH', 99-106; and nihilism, 101-2;
life, _ ;J;;II, ;J;;J;;J;;II: as be!;om ing-imper- as dominant form of expression, I ; 135, U8; of expression, U8: healthy on Oedipus, 28, 30: -overman, - 105;
ceptible, 26; body with organs as a of the fu ture, 74; higher, 99-100, vs. sickly,Ii~liii; jnfini~, ).42-43; of ressentimenl,xl.liii. 41. 43, 10 1-3:
model of, ;uxlI;i. xl; denial of, 105; 102,104, l OS; new, 14, 84, 146; with- life, xxi, xxiII: in Spinou, 142 Thus Spob Zarathultra, 99, 101,
emprisoned in dreams, 129; £temal, out particulari ties, 84-85; in tM pillct model, 104; and identification, 15; The- 104,134: and transmutation. 102,
37: exhausted and sickly, lOS: form- of God, 101; without rt'ferences, scusas, 10 1 l OS; -Who?- as form of question,
less and nonhuman, 77; and IduJ, 5; 13-14;,ublime, 99-10 1, lOS: and modu lation. 57-58,108-9; vs. molding, 99, 103
judged by high£r forms, 129: justifica- woman, 95 JO night, 130; and slup. 111
tion o f, 18, 8 1; and literature, 1-6; Mandelsfam, Osip, 108, 11 3-14 monoma niacs, in Melville, 18-80 Nij insky, Vaslav, xxix
as nonorganic power, xiii. xxi. xxiii, map!s}, 62-63; exten,ive VI. intensive, mo rality, 83, 101 ; birtb of, 42; Eu ropean, nomads, 63: nomadology, xxviii. xliii
xxxllii, xli: passage of, liii, 3: will to 64-66; and milieus. 6 1: of virtllaJities.. 87; moral ideal, 101 nonsense, in Carroll, 21-22
live, 52: in Wolfson, 14-20 61 Moritz, Karl Ph ilipp, 2 nQlhins{nnsl, 81, 1S3: in Beckm. 164.
light, ISO; as colo r, "'8; and dark , 141: Mary (mQlhu of Jesus). 54 mQlhu. 18.74,86; astral, 42: cosmic, 4 7; Seealwwill
in itsclf. 148; in T. E_ Lawrell«. 115: Mary Magdalene. SO in Wolfson, 17 notion ll). 1S3:common. 138. 141-43,
as pure transparency, 115-16; as ma5OChism, xvi-Xliii. Ii. 53; and the movement, g3: in Becken. 163; and rest. 14 g-49; formation of, 1.50: Spinou's
shadow. 148: m Spinou. 141 co ntr~ CI. 53-54; ~nd pain, 53; a nd 148; and time , 27-29 Elhit:J wrinen in, 145
216 INDU INDU 217

novel: American. 8 1; bildungsroman p:l.lhology, pathologies: amnesia, xxxiii. poetry, 97, 170, 173; in Melville, 72; in prol~lariat,xli, 74, 86, 88
( rOmDn d~ (ormation), 54, 76-n; 159; anoruia, 15,90; aphasia. IS, Whitman, 58-59 property, 84; propooorship, 84-85, 128
Engl ish. 81: Frcl\Ch, 8 1; reference
novo:! (roman de reftTenu). 77; Rus-
159; ala xii, xxxiii; autoscopia, xxxvi;,
calalonia, x}txiii, }tx}tvi. xxxviii, 88,
90; paranoia, xl; and 'IX'oUson. 10. Su
politics, in an tiquity, 3 1: in Gre«~, 136;
and literature, xllfi-li; minoriution of,
xli-xlv; Nietuchc'l ~grand poIirics. ~
,....,
prophet(I),42, 139-<40; in Melville,

sian, 81: [nining novel ( roma"~ prophcrism. Jewish, 40-41; vs. apocalyp-
drnUlge), H tJlso schiwphrmia xxxix ric,41
number: cardina l YS. ordinal, 28; as mea- palhs, 66; inl~mal, lvi; as virtualitin_ polyphony, xxvii, 59 ProuSI, Marcel, xi, xix, xx, xxxiii, x/vi,S;
sure of movemc1lt. 27 66--67, ~I! tJlso lra jeaories pornography, 126 A lD ruhntht d .. temps pnd.., xix,
Paul, Saini, 38, 133; as aristocral. 43; ponmanTl'aU words, xxviii, 69 "xi, xxiii; and lhe " literary machine,-
o bject'- 141: !»offial, 14 o pposed 10 Jesus ChriSI, 37; opposed ponrait: and i<ientifiClltion, 75; rol~ of in xxi-xxii; and · plane of composition, ~
ocun: in Melville. 116-17; u percept, 10 paganism. 42-43 Melvill~'s writings, n }txxvi, and voyages, 62-63; on wril'
XXX;II Ptgu)" Charles, 111 possessivc article, 3; in psychoanalYlis, 65 ing, Iv
O'Connor, Flannery, ,,/ Peirce, C, S.• }t}txi possi ble, possibi li!}', 94, 156, 161, 168; psychiatry, Sl, 126; and litl'rature, xix
Oedipus complex, xvii, xx, xxxiii, people, 85, }tlv; invention o f, 4; as milS< subjectivl' vs. objective, 152: waY' of psychoanalY'is, 53, 11 7,130; archaeo-
xxxviii-ICX";", 2. 54, 8S. Su also ing, xli-xlii, xlv. ~t allO minori!}' I'xhausting, 168 logical conception of the unconscious
father-mother; paternal function percepl (s), }tii, xxxiv-}tx}tv, Iii. 138, 148; Pound, Ezra, xl in, 63-64; on art, xvii-xviii; mis-
Oedipus. 129; in Holderlin, 28 dl'finl'd, xxxiv; as percePlion in be- power (pouvoir): in the Apocalypse, 48: conslrues Ihe nature of forces, 65;
Offenbach,JacquC$.I04 coming, xxxiv, 87-88; V5. pel'Cl'plionl, Chrislianity as a religion of, 39, 43, misunderltands human-anima l r~la ­
opinion, 11 ), 137; and Platonism, 136 xxx; in Proust, 117; as vii ions, 116, 127; and figu~ of Ih~ despot, 145; lionshipi, 54: misunderstands Si8nS
organ(s): in Artalld, IS;eye, 49; intestine, ~t also percl'ption judgment as a new image of, 39; and symploms, xx; primary error of,
14; and judgmcm, 130; penis, 14, 17; perception, 92, 123; in Btck~tI's ~ Fitm,~ linguistic mechanism. o f, :xlvii; in 17; and piychOlic procedures, 19; n
5en~, 130; vagina, 14; in Wolfson, 14 24-25; conditions of, 116; in T. E. Spinou,145 rationalillic,8 1
organism, J, 19. 131;io Wolfson, 17 Lawrl'1lce, 11 5; in Melville, 87-tl8, powed.) (pUWalfU), 3, 124, 140; 10 psychology, 81, 83
organiu fion. 135; of the body, 130-3 I; 11 6-17; as a problem, 23-26; of self affect and be affected, 13 1; al aspcm psychosis, 3, 17,20,71-72,74,78; in-
vs. vilality, 134 by ilself, 25; in SpinOla, 139; sub- of milieus, 6 1; and the body, 131; VI. separable from a linguistic proced ure,
Oricnl: and ideal of noncombat. 133; and icctivc conditions of. 117. ~I! /Jiso d ai m, 136-37; of the mind, 124; vari- 9, 19; in Melville, 78
wise man, tl 7 IlC'rccpt(s) aTion50f, 14 1
originals, in Mdvill~, 82-83 IlC'rformativc, xlix pragmatism, 86-88 qualities, 84; as aspects of milieus, 61-fi2
Olh~r(s), 132, 158; ~I isanOlhcr,- 29-30; P~rrault, Pierre, xliv Prague, xlviii Quignard, Pascal, 55
as possible worlds, 157 Pl'mn, Carmen, 66 precursors, dark, 144
O\Inide, of languag~,lv, 5-6,19,72, penona l article, 3; in psychoanalY'is, 65, predication, xxu, 52, 115 race, xxxix; pure VI. buta rd, xli, 4
112-13, 159 ~"/Jlsa indefinite article prcferl'nCC, 7 1; Afuob's, 79; logic of, 73 l'1IIionalilm, psychology as, 8 1
perspectivism, x}tvi, xxvii p.-cscllCC,95 reaction, 102; and fol'Cl', 100-10 1
Pabsl, G. 8., xxx; peyote rite, 130; in Amud, 15 pre-Socrariu, 45 real, 153; and imaginary, 62-fi3
pacifism, 52 pha nrasms, 41 presuppositions, 83; logic of, 73 rl'a liurion, proo:euof, 152-53, 160
painling, It·, 112-13; goal of, 158; in phl'nomenology, 91-92; in Kant, 30; phe- pri~t{hood), Chrislian, 39-<40; Jewish, rea50n, 81-tl2, 145; as dominanl facul!}"
D. H. Lawrenc~, 5 I nomenon VII. apparition, 9 1 38-40; in Nietuche, 37; psycholOSY J3
Palestinians. 125 philanthropy, 88-89; pal~mal. 84 of, 127; in Spinou, 145 rdl'rence, 7 1, 73, 77; referent,I41
parabl~, in Kafk a, 134 philosophy: Christian, 40; condilions of, prison, 89 reneaion, 52; tragic, 56
Parmenides, 122 136; definition of, xii; and democracy, procedure, 80; amplified, 8-9: in BriISl"!, relatio n(s}: of counterpoint, 59; eXlernal
parlicula rily, 74, 82. 87: in BaTtl~by, 69 136-37; English, 58; modem, 126; 9; as event, 11; ~volved, 8-9; and liter- 10 their lerms, xxiii, 58; finitl',
Pasolini, Pier Paolo, xliv OVl'rcoming of. 171 n. 24 ~turl', 72; pushcslanguagl' 10 its timit, 127-28; livi ng, 60; logic of, 52,
passion(I). 21, 14.3--45; deeper Ihan love, phOiography, 2 1 20: in Roussel. 9; ill three ollC' ralions, 58-59; of movemenl and teSt, 142;
84 physicia n(s): Wolfson's miSlrusl of, 18; 72; in Wolfson, 19-20. S"~Qlso for- mUSt be invented , xlii; nonpreeXiStenl,
passivily: and Blanchol, 7 1; in Kam, 30 writer as, 3 . 53, 90 mula /ii; in SpinOla, 142; and the wholl',
paSI, 95; bislo rical, 93: immemorial, 63, physiCS, ;lnd disequilihrium, 109 process,xxlti. xliii, II , 159, 168; as delir- 58-fi0
66,93-94 pl ane: of composition, }t}t}tvi; consistency ium, Iv; interruptions of, 3, 5: libera· religion . x/v. 36.49-5 1: reli8ious idl'al,
pDtaphysics. 93, 97 vs. organiution, XXXII-XXXvi lory, 128; lifl' n, 3; world ai, 86 10 1
palchwork, 57, 86-87, 89; in Mdvill~, 77 Plalo, xii. 136-37, 148 procesSl'S, stalionary, 11 9 Rl'mbrandt van Rij n. 143, 172
pal~rnal function, 75, 77-78, 88: Engliih, pleasure, vs. desire, 53 programmi ng, in the Apoca lypse, 40-41 Renan, Joseph Ernest. 54, 96
85; nonuiSlem pJ u·rniIY. 84 PIOI inus, 148 projeaion, 11 9: in T. E. Lawrence, 11 7 repetition. 55, 68,163; in Peguy, III
218 INDEX IN OEX 219

~mblance. 122; mechanism of, 1$; scimee, xii, 7, II , 155; and an, 96; 1IOfI. 75, 84 mathematia, 20 1 n. 12; and nonsty le,
similitude, 78 mechanized , 92; minor, xlix: and phi. IIOng!s), Iv. 104; leider, 104 11 3: in SIde and M asoch, :cviii; in
resisulntt, actli of, JtVr, xlv Iosophy, n;v; pure, 109; scicn« fic- 5OtlOritin, as a limi t of la nguage, lv, 5. Spinou's Ethics, 149-50; in Wolfson.
Rcvelation, Book of. Sa Apocalypse rion, 37; scientifIC idea l, 1S4; 5>,-1entifw: Set also a uditions, ali the outside of II ; as varia tion, Ii
revenge, 4 1, 43; in the Apocalypse, 39; IllC(hod, II language; vision(s) . ubittt, ;r;;r;ni, 5 1; dissolu tion o f.
entcrprise of, 102; of the wuk, 40 sculprure, 66-67; hoclologka l, 66 IIOphism, 136 nviii-;r;;r;:evii; n. life. :e:e:e .....:e;r;;r;vi:
!'evolu tion, 137; American, xli, 60, 86, selection, IllC(hocl of: in Platonism, Sophocles, ;r;vii, 128 IOS$ of in Melville. n; as prop rietor,
88-89; Russian, xli, 86, 88 136-J7; in Spinoza, 144 Sopbrotates the Armenian , 9 1 86-87; wbject·g.roup in T. E.
reward and punishment, 37, 140; system self, X:U, 26, 157; death of, 154; decom· soul, 103; collective vs. individua l, 38, Lawrence, 122; subjective disposition,
of, 42 posirion of, nix, 154-55: destruction 49-5 I ; in Kant, 34 11 7; subjectivism, 135; virnaal, 75
rhitOffic. xxvii: VI. trtt, III of necessary for writing, 113; Kantian sound!s).6O, 11 3, 1S6. 173 subjectivity, 121 , 135; free, 122
rh ythm, 83, 11 9; un ivcrh l, 142 theory of, 29-3 1; vs. the " I, ~ 57 Soviet Union, ;r;1i, 86, 133; liquidation of sublime, Kant's theory of, 34-35
RicfcnSlahl , uni, xli sensation: compound o f, xxxiv; in Spin. t he Soviets, 88 su bstance, 84 ; as aspects o f milieus,
Riemann , Georg. xxvii oitll,139 'p~ce: in Beckett, 160, 168; and co- 6 1-62
Rimlnud , Arthur, xxx, xxxix, xli, 29-30, series, 157, 162-63; exhausti ng, 154; in exislence, 28; depotential iution of, su bstantives, in PEguy, 111
JJ, 35, S4 Kant , 28; in Leibniz, ;r;xlli 165,167; disconnected, :exvii; as form surrealism. 130
ritorncll0, 87, 159, 160, 164; motor, 161, servitude, 140-41; endless, 128; volun· of e:elerio rity, 3 I ; hodologic~ l , 62; in· suspense: in Bartldry, 7 1; in M asoch,
162;usongof thctl nh, l04 la ry, 122 finity of, 127; in Kan t, 28-29; in T. E. Sl-S'
Robbe·Grillet, Alain, xxvii sel theory, xxiii Lawrence, 11 5; potentia lities of, 160. Syberberg, Hans Jurgen , :eli
Roehm, Glauber, xliii-xliv sexualiry, I n n. 32: as physics of rela- 163, 168; projective, 148; and time, symbolism , II , 48-49, 134; in the Apoc·
roddng t hai r, in Beckett, 25-26, 161 tions, 52; sexual difference, 74; and 28. Set also any.space.whatever a lypse, 46-52; Ariadne's, 103; in
Roman empire, 39, 44-45,133 sy mbol ism, 5 1; twins as gua rdians speech, 107, 109 D. H . Lawrence, 133; in psycho-
romanticism, 34 of, 4 8 speech aClS, :eliI.', Iii. 73 analysis, 17
Rouch, Jean, xliv shadow(,), 130, 143, ISO: in SpinOla, 141 speed: absol ute vs. rela tive, 148.....50; symptomato log)', :ev;"'xvii, .r.ri, Ii,
Ro ussel, Ra ymond, I, 9-10, 19, 97- 98, Shakespeare, William, 27, 35 virna ... l,95 I nnn.2 5,26
180 n. 62; ~Gala of Incompa rabln. ~ shame, 124-25, I ll; as affect, ;r;;r;;r;iv; of Sphinx. riddle o f, 48 symlMo ms, Ii, 3. See also sign!s)
104; and Itu nering, 111 being a man, 1; of the body, 122.....23; Spinoza. ;r;ii. ;r;v, :ea. 3, 37, 126, 135; and syntax, ;r;",i;r;, ;r;;r;;r;v, ;r;lvi, iii', 6, I I. 58,
rupture, 128 in T. E. Lawrmer, 120 tM body, 123; and Byunti um. 141 : 11 2; as bccoming of language, 5;
Ru ssell, B¢nrand, xxiii, 52 sign('), ni, ;r;;r; . . .x;r;i, Ii, 98, 141 , 143, 1.... , and ethics,.riv; and tM E.lhics, 1]8.-5 1; deviant, 11 2; lacking in Wolfson, IS;
RuWtt. Nicolas.. 69 148; and Ihe body, 128; as effect, 138; and inunanmer, 137; SpinOl.ism in as set of detours in la nguage, 2
in Heidegger, 95 ..... 96; in Jarry, 95; nec- Beckett, 152 synthesis, t hree typeS, ;r;;r;vii
Sacher· Masoch, Leopold von, ;r;i, ;r;1Ii, essary for the formation of conccpu, stammering, 98, 108. Set also stuttering
;r;viii-;r;ix, 53.... 55, 107-8; and Kafka, 144: types of in SpinOitll, 139-40 Stale form, 85; New Jerusakm as model tC'C:hnology, 44, 95; pla nc:tary. 92..... 95
19On.2 si lence, 55, 72,113, 156, 166; a5lhe of, 46 te rritory, 128; deterritorialiution, :elvin
Sade, Marquis de, xiii, ;r;lIiii-xbc, 79 audible in itself, 173: in Bartltby, 70; Slate of nature, vs. social Stale, 140 theater: G reek, 167; J apanese No, 167,
u d ilm, Ii: sadomasoc hism, niii c;reated by words, 113; of language, 162 Stevenson, Roben Loui s, 66 170
Sa lvation Army, 39 simubcrum, 12 Stoics, 14 1; and immanence, 137 Theseus, 99, 100-103, 105
Sasso, Robe-n, 147 singula rit ies, ;r;iv, :e:eii, :e:eiv-:e;r;v, Iii, 3, stories: in Beckett, 1S7; simultaneously thing: as limit of la nguage, 98; in Heideg·
sch i~ophrenia , 7, 13, IS, x;r;-ni, niii, 26,61,65, 158, 162: distribution o f, n3rrated, 22 ger a nd Jarry, 96-98
;r;x;r;iii, xxxllii-;r;xx,';ii, ;r;/i, Ii, 178 n. ;r;;r;vi; n . generaliry, 65; ord inary VI. storytelling, xliv-;r;lv. See also fabulalion Thoreau, Henry Da.,id, 85-86, 88
41 ; and di ssociation, ;r;;r;, niii: and in- remarka ble, 9 1; as specimens, 57; in Si raub, Jea n-M a ric and Daniele, :eU, 167 threshold{5), ;r;;r;;r;, xxxvii, 1, 47, 13 I
cl usive di sjunctions, 12; irreducible to Spi noza, 148 Stra uss, Richard , 104 time: Aeon vs. Chronos, ;r;:e;r; .....",,:evi;
familial categories, 17; a nd literature, sisler(s), 74, 78, 88; Ariadne U , 101: stull er ing, x/vi, 72, 89, 109, 11 3; d is· cou rse of vs. o rder o f, 127; in Critique
90: in Mel vi ll e, 78: as positi ve process, blood, 84: Nim sche and, 102 tinguished from stamme ring, 55; in ofJudgmem. 34-35; as form o f deter-
x;r;i: process of schiwph reniution, sleep, 130; and night, 17 1. Set also Kleist, 78; in language rat her than minabili ty, 29; as fo rm of interiority,
nix; in WolfllOn, 10..... 11 insomnia ~pc«h , I 07: in Masoch, 55; in PEguy, 3 1; as immuta ble fo rm, 28, 3 1: infinity
scholia, role in Spinou's e ,hit:$, 145-47, small, 133 I] I ; IWO types of, 110 o f, 127. 134; as intensive movement of
149 Snow, Michael, 165 Style, xuv, xlvi, 55, 138; in Beckett, 173; Ihe 1101,11, 28: in Kant, 27- 29; as mea·
Schopenhauer, Anhur. 104, 192 n. 13 socialism, 86 as becoming of language, 5; as foreign sure of move ment, 27; monastic, 28;
Schrebe r, Daniel, ;r;;r;;r;lIiii, 74-75 society: of brotilcrs, 85; of comrades, 60; language in language, I I l; in T. E. nonchronologica l, :e:evii; ~ou t of joint .~
Sc huben , Fra nl., 172 ..... 73 without blhers. 88 Lawrence, 11 8, 124; of life , ",v: in 27 .....29; in Proust, :e:exlli: and si mul·
220 INDEX
{NOEll 221
flintily, 28-29, 9<4; lIS sUCU$Sion, 124; as limit o r outside of langua8e, writing, XiII, Iii, 1-2; as athleticism, 2; as tombies,37
28-29; rhrt'e tltSIlIstI of, 9<4, 97 5, 98, 124 (Ke tllso a uditions, as becoming, 6; as diagnostic, 53;.11 frag· zone: of continuous va riation, 108, III ;
tiredness, and . !«p, 171. ~e ~lso the outside of language; sonorities, mentary, 56; in T. E. Lawrence, 119; V5. formal characteristics, 1-2; of in·
exhaustion as a limit of language); in MelYille, problem of, III discrmibility, xxx, xxxiii-xxx;v, 1-2,
T0f'Q5, Yvonne, 201 nn. 2, 9 117; in Roussel, 10; in Whitman, 54,65,71,75,78,8 1-82,84, 108,
Il)t:;I lif}', uiji, 86; iIlqitimarc, 17; linguis· 60 Yeat5, William Butler, 170 131; and trcail and function, 78; of
tic,II-12; 105t. '4;organk,S6.Su vitalism, yitality, xiii, xiII-xvi. xxiv, U I, yibration, 109
also whole U3; Ys. - orpniurion, - U4 Zionism, xlviii Zourabichvili. Fn.nc;ois, xxxiv, 181
Toumif,t, Michel, xi Yoices, in Beckett, 156, 16 1 Zola, Emilt,:ri n .9 1
lower of Babel, 11 ,96-97 yoid{s), 10- 11 , 14,26,81 ; in Beckett.
Ingtdy: Greck, 28,126; modem, 129; 166; as the yisible in itself, 173
ShakeJPfarcan,28 voyage, lvi, 2, 87-88
n ail: of exprtSlion, 77; VI. image or
form, 78 Wagner. Richard , 3D, 99
ITlIjeaories, 61; in an, 66; as up«t5 of Wa lkman, Wolfson's -inyenrion~ of, 13
milieus, 63; external YS. internal, wall, image of, 89; 100$C YI. cemented,
66-67; internal, lvi. &, II/SO paths 57, 86; M oby-Diek as white wall,
Irans«ndcrn:e, 3 1, 11 S; imperia l or bar- xx!f,79
In.rian, 136; a nd judgment, 137; in war, 52, 57-58, 125, US; cold war, U3;
Platonism, 137 8uerrilla warfare, 121; and judgment
Innsccndcnlalism, 86 of God, 133
trust, 87-88 weak, the, 43; as a type, 38-39
tN lh, '4, 87, 1().4; will to, 10 1 weight, 10 1; weighdessncss, 104
type(.) , 121-22; method of typology, 36 Whitman, Walt, !fij, xlii, 56-60
whole, idea of, 58, 87; derived from
unronsciouJ, 62-63 nonpl'ffllistcnt nlarions, xxii, 59; and
undecidability, xlii, 149 $eries, 157.~ealsotot1lity
uniRrulity, 84, 87; law as pure form of, will: in Nica.sche, 99; nothingnesa of
J2 will, 79-80, 133; will to dominate,
105; will to nothingness, 7 1, 133
valllchJ. 101, 131-3S; hightr, XI',/iii, 100, will to power, xiII. 131; as mcrgy, 105;
129, 134 higher men as fornu of, 104; manifest
Van Gosh, Vincent, 126 in infantll ratilcr than men of war, 1l3;
Van Vcldc, Bram, 158, 173 in Nica.sche, 100-101; YS. will to
variarion(s),6O, 108; continuous, xxiv, dominate, lJ.4
xliii, xliJr, I, Iii, 30; grammltlcal, 69; Wil$On, Roben, I
and modulation, 112; and sigru, 140; Wiugenstein, Ludwig, 178 n. 46
singular, 92 Wolfe, Thomas, xv, 4, 57,179 n. SO
ver bs: conditional, 11-12; infinitive, xxv, Wolfson, Louis, I, 7-20, 97-98

"
Vermeer. Jan, 66, 143
Vernant, Jean·Pierre, 137
women, !f/iii; in Masoch, 53-54; and
men, 95, 132-33; and minorities, 154;
and organism. 13 1; as "police agtnts,~
VertoY, Oliga, XJOt/i 4 7; as symbol, 47
Virilio, Paul, 189 n. 23 Woolf, Virginia, XXXiII, xl, 6; a nd "mo-
virtual, xxi. !f!flli, xxxv, xl/l, 63; and ac- ments of the world, " xxxiII; and
tua l, XXII; lines and relations., 96 percepts, XXXII
yision (s).lv, 3, II ; apocalyptic, 41-42; word , 124; lasl, 156; prophetic, 41 ; a nd
in Beckett, 173; as crystal5, 63; vision, 42
{rcagmentcd, 113; {rOlen, 11 9; a5 an "''Ords,lv.llJ, ].40, 155, 161, 173
Idu, 116; in T. E. Lawrence, 110, world, destruction of, xxv-xxviii

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