-
To speak of Romantic aesthetics
usually means to invoke an intellectual history, a philosophical
lineage that stretches from, say, Baumgarten or Burke to Kant to
Schiller to Hegel. Of course, it is possible to discuss aesthetics
in terms of cultural history as well, a history of shifting relationships
between artists and audiences, texts and institutions. Discussions
of this sort rarely use the term "aesthetics," however, unless as
a label for the conceptual other to a materialist approach to questions
of art and judgment. In such cases, "aesthetics" is never far
from "ideology."
-
In
this essay, I want to place into dialogue with one another idealism
and materialism, philosophy and culture, by addressing the idea of
"aesthetic culture," which I derive from Kant and Bourdieu. As I
will argue, although Kant and Bourdieu differ in method and purpose,
they share a critical structure, which I describe, employing Kojin
Karatani's neologism, as "transcritique":
Kant
performed a critical oscillation: He continually confronted the dominant
rationalism with empiricism, and the dominant empiricism with rationalism. The
Kantian critique exists within this movement itself. The transcendental
critique is not some kind of stable third position. It cannot
exist without a transversal and transpositional movement. (Karatani
4)
When Kant identifies in
the Critique of Pure Reason the limit of Lockean and Humean
empiricism and Cartesian rationalism (as developed by the Wolff-Leibniz
school), namely the failure of each to theorize a subject representable
to itself, he effectively empties the subject of all positive content,
introducing, as Philippe Lacoue-Labarthe and Jean-Luc Nancy put it,
a "hiatus…at the heart of the subject" (32). The reconstitution
of the subject, which Kant never fully achieves, drives the critical
project, propelling Kant's thought from pure to practical reason,
aesthetic to teleological judgment.
-
"For
Kant," Karatani thus tells us, "empiricism and rationalism were not
simply two scholastic doctrines. Between them he encountered
the paradox between being in the world and being the subject who
constitutes the world. . . . Taken together, empiricism and rationalism
struck Kant [as] a ‘pronounced parallax' (95). I will suggest
that we might begin to understand the relationship between Kant and
Bourdieu by considering how a similar "parallax" underlies Bourdieu's
thought. Further, each thinker's double-turn from dominant
strains of subjectivism and objectivism leads him to insist in his
theory of culture on the necessity of antagonism. For Bourdieu,
this antagonism arises from the claim of each cultural producer (writer,
artist, etc.) and consumer (reader, patron, critic) to "absolute
judgment," or having the final say in matters of taste; for Kant,
cultural antagonism functions as a potential accord, or a "hope of
coming to terms" (Kant 205). Ultimately, I will argue that
these two senses of antagonism mutually reinforce one another, and
that what we call "culture" depends on this relationship for its
continued renewal.
-
If
the Kantian parallax arises out of the paradox of subjectivity—the
subject's at once being in and constituting the world—the Bourdesian
parallax, we might say, arises out of the paradox of agency, where
the agent is caught between forging the societal relations that make
up a cultural totality and being forged as an agent by these
very relations. This paradox is revealed in Bourdieu's double-turn
from what he calls the "substantialist mode of thought" and structuralist
understandings of culture, represented respectively by Kant and Foucault.[1] On
the one hand, Kant's aesthetics, according to Bourdieu, develops
a principle of "pure taste" which systematically ignores the relationship
between social class and aesthetic judgment:
Totally
ahistorical, like all philosophical thought that is worthy of the
name (every philosophia worth its salt is perennis)—perfectly
ethnocentric, since it takes for its sole datum the lived experience
of a homo aestheticus who is none other than the subject
of aesthetic discourse constituted as the universal subject of
aesthetic experience—Kant's analysis of the judgment of taste finds
its real basis in a set of aesthetic principles which are the universalization
of the dispositions associated with a particular social and economic
condition. (Bourdieu, Distinction 493)
Against this universalist
aesthetics, Bourdieu argues that judgment is contextual and contingent
rather than "pure." For Bourdieu, the claims of a work
of art, a cultural producer (writer, painter, etc.), or a critic
exist in relation to all other claims—or "position-takings" (e.g.
poems, novels, essays, paintings, reviews, manifestos)—in the
cultural field. Such claims are derived neither from genius nor from
transcendental a
priori faculties of judgment.[2] Rather,
they are grounded within an objective field of relations, a "space
of possibles," wherein each position-taking "receives its
distinctive value from
its negative relationship with the coexisting position-takings corresponding
to the different positions" (Bourdieu, Field 30). That
is to say, Bourdieu's response to Kant's aesthetics is to emphasize
how the agent's ability to voice cultural claims is defined not by
the conditions of subjectivity but by those claims of other agents
that constitute the cultural field.
-
On
this point, Bourdieu is quite close to Foucault, who similarly emphasizes
the relative position of a "statement" within what he terms
the "field
of strategic possibilities": "Neither the permanence of
opinions through time," Foucault
writes, "nor the dialectic of their conflicts is sufficient
to individualize a set of statements [i.e. a discourse]. To do that,
one must be able to register the distribution of points of choice
and define, behind every option, a field of strategic possibilities" (Foucault
320). As Bourdieu readily admits, Foucault's "field of…possibilities," like
his own "space of possibles," insists that "no cultural
product exists by itself, i.e. outside the relations of interdependence
which link it to other products" (Bourdieu, Field 32-33).
-
And
yet Bourdieu charges Foucault with the same essentialism that he
sees in Kant: "Like so many others, Foucault succumbs to
that form of essentialism . . . that is manifested so clearly in
other domains" (Bourdieu, Field 179). The difference
between Bourdieu's conception of "field" and that of Foucault lies
in Bourdieu's distinction between "position-taking" and "position,"
which he believes is elided in Foucault's thought. For Bourdieu,
a position within the cultural field is a role, (ful)filled by
a person, a text, or some other entity, and each role is invested
with a particular capital. The position-taking, on the other
hand, is a manifestation of position that functions as a defense
of that very position. It can take any number of forms (the
manifesto being, perhaps, the most obvious) and aims at acquiring
cultural capital for the position; the position-taking is what
tries to adjust the balance of power. "Strategies," for Bourdieu,
"depend for their force and form on the position each agent occupies
in . . . power relations" (Bourdieu, Field 30); they
are manifested objectively in the form of a position-taking but
are not reducible to position-takings. In other words, a possibility
is not "strategic" merely because it exists in relation to other
possibilities, but rather because it has, we might say, an agenda,
namely the acquisition of cultural capital. Thus, where Kant essentializes
the subject of aesthetic judgment by extracting it from the social
world, Foucault essentializes discourse, "transfer[ring] into the ‘paradise
of ideas' . . . the relations between the producers and consumers
of cultural works" (Foucault 179) forged in the sociological rather
than discursive realm.
-
To
some degree, Bourdieu seems to exaggerate the subjectivism of Kant
and the objectivism of Foucault. Kant, as I have mentioned
already (and as I develop below) continually rejected what he saw
as the subjectivism of the rationalists; and Foucault, who was
never comfortable with the label "structuralist," was less invested
in the importance of discourse above all than Bourdieu suggests.[3] Yet
it is worth noting Bourdieu's position in relation to each of these "essentialists," whether
or not Kant or Foucault deserves such a characterization. For
what we see when we bracket the truth-value of Bourdieu's claim
is precisely the structure of transcritique, where turning from
one essentialism always risks finding oneself in another. Against
both of these essentialisms, against both Kant and Foucault, Bourdieu
offers a sociology of culture that emphasizes the agent's interested,
strategic position within the field of cultural production and
consumption, the "field of struggle":
When
we speak of a field of position-takings, we are insisting
that what can be constituted as a system for the sake of
analysis is . . . the product and prize of a permanent conflict;
or, to put it another way, that the generative, unifying principle
of this system is the struggle, with all the contradictions it
engenders. (Bourdieu, Field 34)
The totality of the cultural
field—the field of (social) positions plus the field of (discursive)
position-takings—is constituted by a double movement, whereby the
agent is positioned by the system (of positions), which is ordered
by various antagonisms (class, race, political affiliation, etc.),
and thus positions himself or herself within the system (of position-takings)
in such a way as to attain maximum privilege, or "cultural capital";
and the one movement continually necessitates the other. That
is to say, in the effort to introduce agency into Foucault and social
structure into Kant, Bourdieu develops a theory of culture in which
the agent is continually pressed up against the system, the system
continually pressed against the agent. Put differently, the
theory of "permanent conflict" within Bourdieu's conception of the
cultural field is derived from the "permanent conflict" between Kantian
aesthetics and Foucauldian discourse-analysis that structures Bourdieu's
work.
-
What
we see in Bourdieu, then, is a dynamic critique of Kant and Foucault
that gives rise to a theory of cultural contestation, where contestation
suggests not only conflict and contention, but also contest, competition,
and it is with this in mind that I wish to turn to Kant's transcritique. In
the Antinomy of Taste, Kant writes:
1. Thesis.
The judgement of taste is not based on concepts; for, if it were,
it would be open to dispute (decision made by proofs).
2. Antithesis.
The judgment of taste is based on concepts; for otherwise, despite
diversity of judgment, there could be no room even for contention
in the matter (a claim to the necessary agreement of others with
this judgment). (206)
The thesis of the antinomy
suggests that aesthetic judgment is merely a posteriori, derived
from experience, that is to say empirical; the antithesis reads the
same form of judgment as valid a priori, with reference to
determinate concepts that condition our experience. The resolution,
according to Kant, is that aesthetic judgment is indeed based on
concepts, but that these concepts are indeterminate: "All contradiction
disappears," Kant writes, "if I say: the judgment of taste does depend
upon a concept . . . but one from which nothing can be cognized in
respect of the Object, and nothing proved, because it is in itself
indeterminable and useless for knowledge" (207-208).
-
What
is significant about the Antinomy of Taste in the context of the
present discussion is that, in the course of introducing what could
not be theorized from a purely empiricist or purely rationalist perspective
(namely a concept that can prove nothing), Kant raises a subtle but
crucial opposition between "dispute" [Disputieren] and "contention" [Streiten],
the first of which refers to "decisions made by proofs," the second
to "a claim to the necessary agreement of others." Now, it
is commonly understood that Kant, in Hannah Arendt's words, "was
disturbed by the alleged arbitrariness and subjectivity of de
gustibus non disputandum est" (Arendt, Between Past
and Future 222); however, this is not precisely the case. For
Kant distinguishes this commonplace from another, "Every man has
his own taste" [Ein jeder hat seinen eignen Geschmack], which
more closely suggests the "arbitrariness and subjectivity" by which
he is "disturbed."[4] Indeed,
Kant accepts the claim de gustibus non disputandum est [über
den Geschmack läßt sich nicht disputieren], with the
qualification that "there may be contention about taste" [über
den Geschmack läßt sich streiten], and the further
qualification that "there must be a hope of coming to terms" (Kant
205).
-
The
grounds for this hope lie within the a priori faculty or principle
of sensus communis. Unlike the "common sense" or "common understanding" of
such eighteenth-century empiricists as Berkeley and Reid, which refers
to what is commonly held by a community, Kant's sensus communis is
precisely what enables community. It is a "community sense," as
Arendt notes, with which "earthbound creatures, living in communities…[are]
endowed" (Arendt, Lectures 27).
-
It
is on this point that Bourdieu and Kant seem irreconcilably at odds:
whereas Kant conceives of the plurality of subjects on an equal footing,
as it were, Bourdieu emphasizes the unevenness of the terrain and
therefore denies the possibility of coming to terms. In Bourdieu's
field of position-takings, "antagonistic classifications or judgments…are
formulated in the name of a claim to universality—to absolute judgment" (Field 263).
For Bourdieu, "absolute judgement" is the illusio, "the interest,
the investment" (Field 159) that compels each agent to continually
take up a position within the cultural field: to judge absolutely,
without contestation, is not to come to terms with other agents but
to dominate, as the antagonisms forged in the field of positions
(by class struggle, for example) are reproduced in the field of position-takings. As
the illusio, as illusion, absolute judgment is ultimately
unattainable, elusive, and thus struggle is perpetuated: "if there
is a truth," Bourdieu writes, "it is that truth is a stake in the
struggle" (Field 263).
-
But
perhaps it is precisely where Bourdieu and Kant are most markedly
opposed that we might locate a point of contact. What Bourdieu's
cultural sociology and Kant's aesthetics share is a theory
of perpetual antagonism, perpetual contention, which figures as a
structural necessity within the critical system of each, and which
arises out of the merely potential status of objective "absolute
judgement."
-
We
have seen already how the theory of struggle emerges as a structural
necessity out of Bourdieu's transcritique of Kant and Foucault. That
contention is also a necessity within Kant's aesthetics demands,
I suspect, further attention, since, as it has thus far been discussed,
contention [Streiten] has been raised by Kant only as a possibility: "there may be contention
about taste." Yet, just as the periphrastic construction
of de gustibus non disputandum est suggests both in Latin
and Kant's German the idea of necessity (Meredith gives us "there
is no disputing about taste"), so the parallel "läßt
sich" plus the infinitive construction of über den Geschmack
läßt sich streiten might suggest not simply that there
may be contention, but that contention is required—"in matters
of taste there must be contention."[5]
-
Read
in this way, Kant's proposition about contention reflects his continual
critique of the empiricist "standard of taste." Paul Guyer
writes, "In all of the empiricist theories [of taste] . . .
it was held that nature imposed an essential similarity on all members
of the species, by means of an identical ‘sound state' or ‘common
standard' for the sense of beauty, and allowed merely accidental
or apparent divergences from that norm" (Guyer 5). The empiricist
standard of taste, derived from the observation of the contingent
fact of agreement, cannot demonstrate its own a priori necessity,
and any claims to the validity of such a standard are therefore suspect.
When Kant suggests that there must be contention, then, he foregrounds
the falseness of empiricist assumptions about taste: "divergences"
from the common standard are not merely anomalous; they cannot simply
be disregarded. Instead, within the fact of divergence we see
universal assent as a potentiality—as the stake of each singular
judgment—yet as a potentiality only. A determinate concept
to which the judgment of taste might refer continually eludes the
subject; indeed, it eludes the entire field of subjects, the aesthetic
community.
-
Aesthetic
judgment, we might conclude, is for both Kant and Bourdieu teleological
in its structure, "purposive," but the telos, objective
universality, is absent. Bourdieu's illusio is not positively
determined; it is merely an illusion, a placeholder at the very center
of the cultural field. As an illusion, it stands in for any "real"
universality: the subjective claim qua position-taking looks
like absolute judgment even though it is not, just as for Kant the
judgment of taste, "although it is only aesthetic . . . bears this resemblance [Ähnlichkeit]
to the logical judgment, that it may be presupposed to be valid for
all men" (Kant 51; my italics). The resemblance between the
aesthetic judgment and the logical judgment thus opens up a gap that
the subject aims (purposively, that is, formally, if not intentionally)
to bridge. For Bourdieu and Kant, then, the subjective judgment
gives the appearance of absolute, objectively universal judgment,
though only the appearance.
-
This
point of contact between Bourdieu and Kant is really only that—a
point, the beginning and end of any relationship of identity between
the two projects. Nevertheless, we might take the coincidence
of purposive antagonism, antagonism that aims toward an unrealized
aesthetic objectivity, as a point of departure for a transcritical
project situated in the unsteady ground between aesthetics and the
sociology of culture.
-
We
might call this point (of contact between Kant and Bourdieu, of departure
for our own transcritique) "belief" and the structural relationship
between the two systems a "dialectic of belief." By employing
the term "belief" I mean to suggest both the ideological illusion
of aesthetic universalism that Bourdieu describes—the agent believes
in "absolute judgment" although it is not realized—and the "hope
of coming to terms" that Kant identifies as a necessity within the
fact of contention—the subject believes in universality because it might
be realized. By reading the relationship between the two
critical systems in question as a "dialectic," I mean to suggest
that the dual implications of "belief" are continually at odds with
one another, each reinforcing the other. That is, even as material
conditions of struggle (within the field of positions) give rise
to an ideological illusion, whereby agents believe it possible to "win" the
game of culture by means of "absolute judgment," they also create
the possibility of "coming to terms," the "hope" that assent will
be attained within a field of equals, which is also the hope that
material relations will be reorganized in such a way that allows
for equality. The persistent failure of this hope to be fulfilled,
however, continually exacerbates the antagonisms within the field
of position-takings, which suggests that the aesthetic community,
not just for Bourdieu but also for Kant, is fundamentally dynamic.
-
The
relationship between Bourdieu and Kant might thus shed light on Romantic
aesthetics as a "cultural philosophy," both a philosophy of culture
and a culturally rooted philosophy, a philosophy rooted specifically
in the numerous and persistent aesthetic controversies of the Romantic
period. From the "picturesque controversy" in the field of
visual arts to the "Pope controversy," from the "Revolution controversy," waged
in the field of cultural production and consumption, to what Coleridge
referred to as "the whole, long-continued controversy" over the Lyrical
Ballads (Coleridge 7), Romantic audiences and artists alike continually
took sides against one another. As they competed for relative
privilege, for cultural capital, "absolute judgment," they also reinforced
the hope for accord, the potential for universal agreement. That
art continually fails to ameliorate cultural tensions and that dispute
continually fails to eradicate art thus seems to speak to the legacy
of Romanticism not merely as an ideology but as a kind of cultural
dialogue, an always shifting arrangement of those voices of assent
and dissent that surround "art," which is by necessity multiply and
inconsistently defined.
|