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I had wild Jack for a lover;
Though
like a road
That men pass over
My body makes no moan
But sings on:
All things remain in God |
W.
B. Yeats, "Crazy Jane on God"
A
fourth modern phenomenon announces itself in the fact that human
action is understood and practiced as culture. Culture then becomes
the realization of the highest values through the care and cultivation
of man's highest goods. It belongs to the essence of culture, as
such care, that it, in turn, takes itself into care and then becomes
the politics of culture.
Martin Heidegger, "The Age of the World
Picture" "What
about the materiality of the body, Judy."
Judith Butler, Bodies
that Matter
There
is no "the" body;
there is no "the" sense of touch; there is no "the" res extensa.
Jean-Luc
Nancy, Corpus
-
I begin by asking how one should read Yeats's lines in my first
epigraph. Are they blatantly sexist, or are they an example of work
by a male writer able to sympathize with, and represent from within,
the immemorial bodily experience of women? Is such a transfer from
a virile to a feminine point of view, or point of contact, even possible?
Women's bodies have always been roads "that men pass over" on the
way to somewhere else. Why does Crazy Jane's body nevertheless "sing
on," rather than "making any moan," whether in anguished pain or
in sexual ecstasy? Why is what her body sings the words, "All
things remain in God"? What does Crazy Jane's ideology of the
female body have to do with religion, with the Christian religion?
I mean more specifically the Christian doctrine of the incarnation
(Hoc est enim corpus meum), along with the Christian doctrine
which holds that although sublunary things pass, like men passing
over Crazy Jane's body, or like progress down a road, all those temporally
moving things do not vanish. As Yeats says in ""Nineteen Hundred
and Nineteen": "Man is in love and loves what vanishes, / What
more is there to say?" (Yeats 208). All things, nevertheless, without
exception, have "in God" a static permanence. They remain. All things
remain in God.
-
Do Yeats's lines have a performative dimension? Are they
a way of doing something with words, or are they just an imagined
dramatic performance? What context, biographical, cultural,
intertextual, or whatever, should govern my reading of what Crazy
Jane says? When I read these lines do I join a community of
other readers, past and present, which has read the lines in a way
similar to my own reading, or is my reading necessarily solitary
and idiosyncratic, sui generis? Which would be better, to
be a singular reader or a member of a community of readers? To ask,
as I just have asked, "Exactly what are body, context, performativity,
and community?" is a properly philosophical question; at any rate,
Western philosophers over the years have asked questions about these
topics. These topics are also features of cultural studies, whether
as questions or as taken-for-granted methodological presuppositions.
-
My title is a little misleading. It suggests that philosophy and
cultural studies do, perhaps inevitably, meet at some crossroads
or other, perhaps where the three roads meet in Sophocles's Oedipus
the King. My hypothesis, however, is the reverse. As this brief
paper will sketch out, my claim is that these days philosophy and
cultural studies often, though of course not always, fail to connect.
It is as though the scene of patricide, Oedipus's angry slaying of
the stranger who is really his father, had never occurred. It never
happened because Oedipus was too early or too late, counter-temporally,
out of sync, in a contretemps, to reach the crossroads just when
Laius did. The Oedipal slaying of philosophy by cultural studies
has rarely taken place. This is because cultural studies has often,
more or less deliberately, forgotten all about Western philosophy.
Dead white males wrote almost all of Western philosophy, in any case.
That forgetting, that non-event or non-encounter between philosophy
and cultural studies, it might be argued, is a more effective parricide
than the one Oedipus performed. This is because the practitioners
of cultural studies can always say, "Plato or Aristotle; Descartes,
Kant, or Hegel; Wittgenstein, Husserl, or Heidegger; Austin or Merleau-Ponty
are not relevant to what I am trying to do. In any case, I am too
busy mastering film noir, or popular music, or fashion magazines,
or whatever, to have time for philosophy." One result of this
implicit claim is that those working in cultural studies may sometimes
be mystified, unknowingly, by unexamined philosophemes that go back
to Aristotle and that have persisted in our culture down to Husserl,
Heidegger, Levinas, Lacan, Deleuze and Guattari, and beyond. They
are prisoners of just what they want to escape. Such ideological
mystifications are not innocent. They can cause great harm and suffering.
One example is an almost irresistible "intuitionism" that
views the body as something taken for granted, something there
to touch, something
outside language, in no way a philosophical problem. This intuitionism
may be the assumed ground of Western philosophy and of current cultural
studies too. Everybody knows, and has always known, what is meant
by the materiality of the body.
-
The possibility, of course, is that workers in cultural studies
would gain much for their own enterprise from reading philosophy,
just as philosophers who do not pay attention to cultural studies
may miss some properly philosophical insights in the work cultural
studies scholars do. Philosophers, for example, still tend a little
too much (to speak ironically) to couch their enunciations as universal
truths valid anywhere in the world at any time. They tend to forget
history and cultural differences even when they are making pronouncements
about history or culture. It is true, moreover, that most Western
philosophy from Plato on down to Levinas has been written not just
by men, but from what Derrida, speaking of Levinas, calls "a resolutely
virile point of view . . . or point of contact . .
. . Indeed, the touching touch of the caress is touching (without
touching) on the untouchable as inviolable, and the one stroking
is always masculine and the stroked one (the untouchable) feminine" (Derrida, On
Touching 80). Can the caress be talked about from the point of
view, or point of contact, of the feminine, the queer, or the lesbian?
Judith Butler certainly tried to do something like that in Bodies
that Matter. The cataclysmic blow that cultural studies in its
feminist branch has directed at the Western tradition of virile philosophy
has perhaps not touched many philosophers yet. It has been like a
roundhouse punch that does not land. Male philosophers, Levinas for
example, still go on imperturbably talking about the way "the feminine
is the Other refractory to society" (Levinas, Totality and Infinity 265),
and, implicitly, about Jehovah as an old man with a long gray beard.
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Let me briefly indicate four interconnected realms where this missed
encounter between philosophy and cultural studies happens as the
failure of a happening. Each would require a long development to
elucidate what is at stake in each failure to meet at the crossroads.
From the perspective of philosophy, the failure is manifested in
the way philosophy tends to go on making pronouncements about "universal
Man." From the perspective of cultural studies, the missed encounter
manifests itself as a reluctance, much of the time, to see that such
concepts as community, context, performativity, and body are problems
with a long philosophical history, not taken-for-granted answers
or presuppositions on the solid basis of which empirical studies
of culture, what Heidegger calls "taking care" of culture, can take
place. The prevalent ideology of cultural studies tends to be a constructivist
one. It sees culture, through iterative reinforcement, creating out
of some passive residue or ground, such as the materiality of the
body, the structures of power that determine our lives. That means
things could be different. For example, the hegemony of heterosexualism
could be undone. At the same time, somewhat paradoxically, this ideology
presumes that as our culture is so will we be. Circumambient culture
has more or less irresistible power to make me what I am.
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That we more or less know already what a normative community is
tends to be assumed in such discussions of community as Benedict
Anderson's Imagined Communities and Raymond Williams's The Country and
the City. A long philosophical tradition, however, going back
to Aristotle's Politics, Plato's Republic, and down
to recent work by Bataille, Blanchot, Agamben, Lingis, and Nancy
(see Works Cited), views or feels the question of community as a
big problem, a problem demanding virtually interminable reflection.
Nancy alone has written three difficult books trying to work out
what he thinks about community. This contemporary philosophical
tradition is rarely mentioned or seriously confronted by practitioners
of cultural studies.
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Much cultural studies tends to assume that context is determining,
even though cultural artifacts are sometimes granted power to generate,
or even to put in question, context. As my cultural context is, so
will I, and all my works, be. The power of the New Historicism was,
on the basis of this assumption, to describe dazzlingly some more
or less obscure feature of popular culture, often British Renaissance
culture, and then to assert that this feature explained some piece
of high culture, for example Shakespeare's King Lear. Philosophy,
on the contrary, tends to think of the transfer from circumambient
cultural context to cultural artifact as a big mystery. That transfer
is something extremely difficult to demonstrate persuasively and
empirically. A notorious example is Derrida's "Signature Event Context," in
which Derrida argues, against Austin and Searle, that the "context" of
a performative utterance can never be "saturated (saturé)" (Derrida, Limited
Inc. 20). As a result, the "felicity" of a performative speech
act, such as the minister's "I pronounce you man and wife," can never
be firmly known, predicted, or confirmed.
-
Much confusion in cultural studies has been caused, in my view,
by an incautious conflation of "performative" in the sense
of a speech act and "performative" in the sense of "performativity." This
confusion can be seen or felt in the widely practiced discipline
of "performance
studies," or in Butler's widely influential claim that an individual's "sex" is
a result of iterated "performances" of culturally determined,
power-imposed ideas about masculinity or femininity. It is important
not to confuse kinds. We must, as Wikipedia puts it, "disambiguate." I
contend that "performativity" in the sense of the way a
dance, a musical composition, or a part in a play is performed has
practically nothing to do with "performativity" in the
sense of the way a given enunciation can function as a performative
speech act. "He gave a
spectacular performance of Hamlet" does not exemplify, nor does
it refer to, the same use of language as does saying, "He gave
his solemn promise that he would be here at ten," even though
both are forms of enunciation, of speaking out, even of doing something
with words.[1] Though
Austin's deplorable misogyny is evident everywhere in How To Do
Things With Words, people in performance studies need to grit
their teeth, return to the source, and see what Austin actually said
about, for example, performances on the stage. He saw such performances
as devoid of performative force (Austin 22). This is a huge subject.
Amazon.com gives 456 results under "Performativity and Performance." The
introduction by Andrew Parker and Eve Sedgwick to the English Institute
volume on Performativity and Performance begins by distinguishing
sharply between performativity as applied to speech acts and performativity
in the theater: "For while philosophy and theater now share 'performative'
as a common lexical item, the term has hardly come to mean 'the same
thing' for each" (Parker and Sedgwick 3). By the end of the
essay, however, after a subtle and penetrating discussion of how
one can go beyond Austin in the direction of queer theory, Parker
and Sedgwick give their blessing to the appropriation of the term "performative" for
theatrical and other performance studies: "Arguably," they
say, "it's
the aptitude of the explicit performative for mobilizing such transformative
effects on interlocutory space [they've just been discussing Charlotte's
great speech to the Prince early in Henry James's The Golden Bowl]
that makes it almost irresistible—in the face of a lot of discouragement
from Austin himself—to associate it with theatrical performance" (Parker
and Sedgwick 11). I suggest that one ought to resist. It is important
to resist.
-
The materiality of the body, finally, tends to be taken for granted
by those in cultural studies, as for example in that citation I began
with from Butler's Bodies that Matter. She is citing a common
protest from women in her audiences when she gave lectures on the
body. Everybody, these women assumed, knows what is meant by the
materiality of the body. It is just my too too solid flesh right
here. Appealing to it deictically, or with a touch of the forefinger
or the foot, as when Samuel Johnson kicked the stone to disprove
Berkeley's idealism, is taken as an irrefutable refutation of any
claim that it is "all language," as so-called deconstruction
is, falsely, assumed to say. Almost innumerable books and essays
in recent decades have contained the word "body" in their
titles. Amazon.com gives 428,366 results. That boggles or googles
the mind. The methodological references in such works are more likely
to be medical or psychoanalytical, specifically Lacanian, than properly
philosophical. Some such works display the word "body" on
their title pages like a flag of allegiance, a talisman, or a shibboleth: "I
am not a deconstructionist. Heaven forfend." Others stage an
encounter, or at least a touch, a tangent, sometimes a "touch
without touching," a glancing blow, between philosophy
and cultural studies, for example a response by Gayatri Spivak to
a preliminary version of Nancy's Corpus in a collection edited
by Juliet MacCannell and Laura Zakarin called Thinking Bodies.[2]
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One of the earliest of such books was Jean H. Hagstrum's The
Romantic Body: Love and Sexuality in Keats, Wordsworth, and Blake.
Since this essay appears in the Romantic Circles Praxis
Series, it is appropriate to say a word or two about Hagstrum's
fine book. Discussing the major romantic poets by way of love,
sexuality, and the body was relatively unusual in 1985, so it took
some courage then to focus on these topics. Moreover, Hagstrum's
pioneering, learned, and intellectually generous book initiated
the tradition I am identifying of more or less taking the body
for granted. The Romantic Body is hardly a "feminist" book.
It is written, for the most part, from a resolutely and unashamedly
virile perspective, though with some proto-feminist due respect
for women's sexual experience, as in the discussion of Blake's
Oothoon. Yet The Romantic Body helped establish the
program for all those subsequent books about the body, including
many central texts in feminism or in queer studies.
-
Hagstrum begins by firmly distinguishing his stance from that of
Paul de Man. He cites a remark Patricia Spacks had made about Hagstrum's
own previous book on seventeenth- and eighteenth-century love, Sex
and Sensibility, a book preliminary to The Romantic
Body: "'If you want to talk about men [sic!],' Paul de Man remarked
at the English Institute, 'you're in the wrong field. We talk about
letters.' Hagstrum talks about men and women and their representations" (Hagstrum
viii). Hagstrum goes on firmly to confirm that allegiance: "I am
confident that the frequent glances I make in the ensuing pages to
authors' lives predispose us to respond to zones of verbal energy
and do not finally divert attention from the proper locus of critical
attention, the work itself. That work I find to be best when its
mythic beings and events convey real experience within fictional,
rhetorical, and verbal structures" (Hagstrum ix-x). You can see that
the backlash against "deconstruction" was already in full
swing in 1985, just two years after
de Man's death. Hagstrum returns, somewhat defiantly, pace de
Man, to a straightforwardly mimetic and referential concept of literature,
to the notion that good literature "conveys real experience," that
words have "energy," and to the notion that literature is based on
the "real experience" of the author. That means biographical data
may always be relevant. The real experience registered by Wordsworth,
Keats, and Blake and discussed by Hagstrum is not so much of the
body as such—primarily the female body from a male perspective—as
of what is named in the subtitle: "love and sexuality in Keats, Wordsworth,
and Blake," that is, the female body as an object of male sexual
desire, though occasionally the male body as an object of female
desire. Hagstrum also reproduces and discusses some Romantic
graphic works of nude and clothed females, by Henry Fuseli, James
Barry, William Etty, and of course Blake. He specifies, for example,
whether the pudenda are exposed or veiled in each of his examples. The
Romantic Body is primarily a thematic and paraphrastic book about
sex in work by three poets. It is primarily about the heterosexual
sex act, or the desire for it, although due attention is given to
sex's idealizing, transcendentalizing, or politicizing by the poets
in question. Hagstrum asserts in one place, for example, that for
Blake "what poisoned sexuality was not the body itself, desire per
se" (Hagstrum 121), as though the body and sexual desire were
the same thing. He asserts in another place, wrongly if Derrida is
right, that to "give primacy and beauty to the sense of touch," as
Blake does, is an alteration of "traditional psychology" (Hagstrum
115; Derrida's On Touching—Jean-Luc Nancy is devoted to showing
that touch is primary, from Aristotle to Nancy). A brief coda by
Hagstrum, "Philosophical Epilogue: Nature and Imagination," does
indeed discuss some philosophers: Diderot, Archibald Alison, Thomas
Holcroft, Kant, Hegel, Schiller, and Schopenhauer, though primarily
to find the last four "deficient" (Hagstrum149) and male chauvinist.
They are deficient because they pay scant attention to sexuality
in the way it was celebrated by Keats, Wordsworth, and Blake, that
is, as a give and take between the sexes that involves both Eros
and Agape. The close attention to what major philosophers actually
say about the body never occurs in Hagstrum's book in anything like
the way it occurs in Derrida's close readings of philosophers in On
Touching. The body never becomes a challenging philosophical
or theoretical problem in Hagstrum's book, in spite of his careful
attention to Blake's sexual theories. By saying that Hagstrum tends
to take the body for granted, I mean that like most, but not all
of the authors of the recent books about the body I have listed in
my bibliography, he does not draw himself up, as Nancy and Derrida
do, and ask, "Just what is 'the body'? How can I ever be sure that
I know it, or make contact with it, or touch it? What do the major
Western philosophers have to say about the body and about touch?"
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For the philosophical tradition, on the contrary, the body, from
Aristotle all the way through Merleau-Ponty to the present, is an
enigmatic problem, not a solution, perhaps not even a problem amenable
to rational elucidation. Embodiment, incarnation, or incorporation,
is, moreover, not detachable, in our Western culture, from its theological
roots. Hoc est enim corpus meum, "This is truly my body," said
Jesus, in the Latin Vulgate version, when he broke bread at the Last
Supper.[3]
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Some idea of the issues involved can be obtained from Jean-Luc Nancy's Corpus and
Derrida's aforementioned On Touching—Jean-Luc Nancy, although
these two books are by no means singing exactly the same tune about
the problem of the body.[4] Derrida's
book reads notions of touch in texts from Aristotle's De Anima down
through Kant, Maine de Biran, Ravaisson, and Hegel to Bergson, Merleau-Ponty,
Deleuze and Guattari, Levinas, and Nancy himself. "For that
which touches on it [touch] or that about which one speaks in speaking
of touch is also the intangible," says Derrida. "To
touch with tact is to touch without touching that which does not
let itself be touched: to embrace eyes, in a word (or in several
words, and the word ["embrace," embrasser in
French, which means "kiss"] always brings to your ear the
modest reserve of a kiss on the mouth). To touch as tact is, thanks
to you, because of you [i.e., Nancy], to break with immediacy, with
the immediate given wrongly associated with touch and on which all
bets are always placed, as on self-presence, by transcendental idealism
(Kantian or Husserlian intuitionism) or by ontology, the thinking
of the presence of being or of being-there as such in its
Being [the reference is to Heidegger], the thinking of the body proper
or of flesh [as in all those present-day feminist appeals to the
'materiality of the body,' as well as in discussions in the male
philosophical tradition, recapitulated by Derrida, of the 'body proper'
or of flesh (Leib)]" (Derrida, On
Touching 292-293). "The" "central thesis" of On
Touching,
if I may put it that way, which Derrida explicitly forbids me to
do, is the untouchability of the heart of touch, the possibility/impossibility
both of touching itself, either of touching oneself or of touching
another presumed body or embodied person, and, as a result, the impossibility
of talking or writing directly and unequivocally about touch or about
the body. You cannot touch touch. An interval, interruption, or spacing,
that cannot itself be touched, any more than can the object of touch,
or the limit of touch, always intervenes between my finger and what
I reach out to touch, as in the old telephone ad, "Reach out
and touch someone." "What is a contact," Derrida asks, "if
it always intervenes
between two x's? [intervient toujours entre deux x]" (Derrida, On
Touching 2, trans. modified). In another place Derrida makes
clear that he thinks our ordinary assumptions about the body are
culturally specific, but have been around a long time, though they
are extremely problematic: "And so it is our very old habit
in this or that historical culture, 'at home' [chez nous]
in the West, to make use of these terms (the 'logic' and 'arithmetic'
of the five senses, and so forth) so as to adjust them more or less
well [tant
bien que mal] (and often not very well at all, as we are experiencing
it here, and that is all of philosophy) to suit some pretended [alléguées]
ontophenomenological evidence in 'our body.' Empirical ontophenomenology
+ historical legacy + language of a culture: perhaps this makes a
common habit, a way of being social, a praxis, a pragmatics, a consciousness,
and so forth" (Derrida, On Touching 106-7,
trans. modified).
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I do not say that it is necessary to agree with Derrida or with
Nancy. Far from it. I am arguing, rather, that those in cultural
studies would do well to take into account the challenge Nancy and
Derrida, in different ways, pose to the "intuitionist" tradition.
This tradition, from Aristotle to the present day, tends to take
for granted "the materiality of the body."
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I conclude that both cultural studies and philosophy would be doing
their different tasks better if more meetings, however Oedipal or
Judith-like (I mean like Judith in the Biblical story of Judith and
Holofernes[5]), had occurred or were to
occur, at that crossroads or at that mountain pass.
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