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April 7
As i was laying on the couch gazing distractedly at book titles, I thought
how many of them I would like to read again...but how difficult that is
in many ways. They can't be read again in the same way, they can only
be studied (unless my brain has softened irremediably). The seemed like
melons to me, scooping away at the sweet flesh, moving to another spot
and then coming back and digging right down to the rind, and sometimes
all the way through to the outside (where I often hope to get with books
but am always disappointed) -- which is exactly where I started. Except
now I have a stomach ache and a vague sense of unease.
april 8
The slow rust of everyday life seems to be speeding up almost imperceptibly
because of the war. Modernism is ALWAYS about explosions / explosiveness
/catastrophe/disaster, oit's the very nature of western, technological
modernity. And it extends all the way from top to bottom and back up to
the top again, a tightly imbricated system that seems impossible to get
out of. As the economy keeps sliding southward, the everyday pressures
on people to keep up become more and more glaring....but I think that
and then I realize that there are many many folks who seem to be just
cruising along in the fast lane, oblivious of the rest of us down in the
boiler room. In Atlanta there are more and more very large houses being
built, more and more SUVs on the road --- who are these people, where
are they coming from, and more to the point where the hell are they getting
all the money to pay for 300, 000 dollar lofts and 35 k SUVs??!! I'm so
out of it I guess that I'll grant there is a whole other structure of
economics where people have good jobs that they go to everyday and that
they get paid good money for. At this point there is no way I could get
anything other than a menial job, maybe paying slightly above minimal
wage, enough to pay for an apt. (maybe) but that's about it.
The conversation with LE this morning left me feeling terrible...and begins
to clock in with the stuff with LG. It's all i can do to keep my own nose
barely above the waterline, much less anyone else's. I guess I could give
up everything here, go out and work 3 jobs and that would be the end of
it. That's not going to happen though. If 'right livelihood' means anything,
and I'm convinced it does, it doesn't mean reacting like that. I've worked
for years on what I'm doing...to give everything up now would be equivalent
to some sort of suicide. I've got where I am (which is absolutely nowhere)
the hard way...frankly I don't know how to proceed next. There's not much
further down I can go, economically. Everybody else seems to be buying
SUVs, houses....
April 8
I went to see the movie, The Core. It's basically a fifties style
sci-fi flick done up in a little rouge and lipstick, lots of nonsensical
science--reminded me of that Raquel Welch movie where they shrink a team
and put them inside a human body...also a few scenes like those great
ones inside the planet in The Forbidden Planet. And of course what would
a b-science fiction movie be without some scenes in the desert. i always
loved those old jack Arnold b/w flicks from the fifties: the Monolith
Monsters (would love to see that one again, never see it in rental stores)
and of course Creature From the Black Lagoon. The movie had some goofball
stuff about the core of the earth stopping its rotation and hence all
manner of, need I say, apocalyptic things begin to happen ... until the
lone scientist is found in the desert who has a device/machine/vehicle
which will allow them to go to the core and start it moving again. One
could make much of the title, the core, i suppose if one weren't so tired.
After all, a movie this goofy (but great fun I must admit) has to have
SOME metaphysical redeeming features about it since the science itself
is so off. What better thing to go wrong with human life and civilization
than--the very core, of course, the heart, the center, that invisible
but potent force which controls all events up above in a, dare I say it,
uncanny fashion, spukhafte fernwirkungen (spooky action at a distance).
And certainly a small intrepid band has to put things right again. ..when
it comes right down to it, generally the way the West thinks of itself
in relation to history, progress, etc. Anyway, nice enjoyable of escapism
in the spirit (but not tongue in check so) of some of those early b/w
and color flicks. must sleep now.
doing a little installation tomorrow based on a sura from the Koran.
April 10
here is the quote from the Koran I'm using followed by the quote from
M. Blanchot that will be used:
The Tearing
Sura 82
The Qur'an
When the sky is torn
When the stars are scattered
When the seas are poured forth
When the tombs are burst open
Then a soul will know what it has given
And what it has held back
Oh, O, human being
What has deceived you about your generous Lord
Who created you and shaped you and made
You right
In whatever form he willed for you, set you But no, Rather. You deny the
reckoning
That over you they are keeping watch
Ennobled beings, writing down
Knowing what it is you do
The pure of heart will be in bliss
The hard of heart will be in blazing fire the day of reckoning, burning
there --
they will not evade that day
What can tell you of the day of reckoning Again, what can tell you of
the day of reckoning A day no soul has a say for another
and the decision is at that with God
--------
Prophetic speech announces an impossible future, or makes the future it
announces, because it announces it, something impossible, a future one
would not know how to live and that must upset all the sure givens of
existence.
If prophetic speech is mixed, however, with the fracas of history and
the violence of its movement, if it makes the prophet a historical character
charged with a heavy temporal weight, it seems that it's essentially linked
to a momentary interruption of history, to history become an instant of
impossibility of history, a voice where catastrophe hesitates to turn
into salvation, where in the fall already the ascension and return begin.Maurice
Blanchot
--------
I dont know why Ive become so fascinated by prophetic
discourse and the messianic. Some who would know me better than I know
myself (but who could that be?) would say that its the slow slumerous
rising of debris from my rawboned Baptist mississppi background, all those
cover-alled dispensationalists just in from the fields for Wednesday prayer
meeting. Its true that i attended a lot of that coarse grained apocalypticism.
But I would contend that it has always lurked in the crevices of American
society in one way or another, sublimated into various machineries of
joy and optimism. Our age (perhaps more than others, perhaps the same,
perhaps less--the fogginess of vision only reinforces my point) works
to obscure and obstruct any view of the historical placement of where
we are. On teh other hand, let me completely reverse myself and entertain
the possibility that the smoke of battle of history in fact
REVEALS a great deal that would hitherto lie dormant, the introduction
of stresses and fractures and emergencies clarifying a great many things
--but at a great cost. But then isnt that the meaning of the apocalyptic,
the unveiling of truths at great costs? I can think of at least forms
of such an apocalyptic: some sort of final turn into the mechanical and
.... some sort of turn completely away from such. Both equally impossible
eh?
The prophet is always at a remove from the society and culture he/she
is in, no matter how much comfort there seems to be (for some) in the
culture. The prophet is attuned the marginalia, the remaindered, that
which is left behind as it is connected to that-which-has-yet-to-be-achieved.
But of course the horrible yoke for the prophet is no doubt as Blanchot
has it -- the impossibility of it all, but the shear impossibility of
its vision seeming only to quicken its urgency, releasing
the messianic almost as an inevitable outcome of such visions, the passionate
attachment to the impossible.
I think many artists think of themselves as defrocked prophets, prophets
without portfolio. But perhaps its a prophecy in the service of
nihilism and I dont necessarily mean that disparagingly e.g., Benjamins
Destructive Character.
current reading: FUNDAMENTALISM AND THE STRUGGLE FOR THE TEMPLE MOUNT,
still working on the book by Eagleton on Tragedy, and I just picked up
the first voume in a used book store of THE PROPHETS by Heschel (already
had the second volume). The Blanchot quote comes from a new Blanchot collection
I read in the bookstore esp the chapter on prophetic speech.
april 16
a miserable cold, making me depressed..everything seems more blank and
stupid than usual me especially. What's the point.
April 18
trying to finish up my cold. havent been outside much mainly because
of spring rains all week. Its easy to forget about the overwhelming
fecundity of nature when you live in a city, where it is contained by
paving it over, with maybe a corner or a strip of greenery for effect
here and there. But give the organic an inch for any length of time untended
and there will be trouble mounting up exponentially.
I think some folks are under the misapprehension that working with
nature means letting your yard go or not having any interaction
at all with it, just let it happen. Im not a primitivist though.
From the primitivist point of view I suppose any sort of handling or treatment
is wrong. (I differentiate here between shear laziness and taking a principled
pov -- although in reality it may be hard to draw any kind of line between
them).
4/21
I spend a lot of time looking over lists of old book, new books, even
non existent books. I have a particular affinity for book lists of yet-to-be-published
books; theres something delicious about the potential there and
also maybe the fact that nobody else has them yet. Ive alwasy been
disturbed to go into bookstores and see a volume that Ive been interested
in and have considered to be fairly obscure and then to go back in the
next week and its gone! It happened most recently with the book on Gnostic
religion by Hans Jonas and a big thick book on the theology of Paul. Disturbing
and exhilarating at the same time.
Its almost like a disease, this perusal of other thoughts, a thickening
jam, a tightening web of scholars ideas of so and so or this and that.
To what end I cant tell. Its like every sqare inch of the
previous world has to be turned over again and again, the past kept in
an agitation of affect and effect, continually working over it like red
wriggler worms in a pile of mulch, bringing the bottom to the top and
the top to the bottom, unceasing aeration even of that which has just
been aerated.
One certainly gets lost in the undertow sometimes of previous writers
thoughts on previous writers thoughts, on items that have been mulled
over an apparent infinity of times; looking, perhaps, for that one fine
sliver of unpossessed thought or unclaimed (textual) experience that can
be high lighted in a slightly different way. I guess its understandable
why academics do it; they get paid for it. I have yet to figure out why
I do it. Obviously ones identity (er, I mean my identity, me, robert)
is tied into it in some way. And at this late date to let it all slip
away would be like...would be like losing part of my brain, even if it
is only exercised in this very narrow crevasse. But there is also, for
me, the sense of a greater adventure, that of being part of a vast transtemporal
community of minds that have passed and left sometimes enigmatic residues
reflecting where they were, both in a narrow sense and in the much larger
sense of a reflection of their times. There is certainly not the sense
(at least not any more) of trying to figure everything out
as a friend once accused me. After awhile books and ideas
are simply something that one does. If anyone has any hope for, well,
redemption or truth or, at this point, even a job, she would be better
served by having a stiff drink or two and then walking home after the
bar has closed.
4/22
I saw a car commercial the other day on TV that was striking. A man is
walking down the sidewalk and drops something. as he bends down to pick
up his object, he places his hand on the car. All of a sudden he has visions
of the car careening thorough all sorts of activities, swooshing here
and there. He abruptly yanks his hand off the car, with a mystified look
on his face. The only acceptable visions that we are allowed to have together
are those which concern the adventures of the commodity. Movies are only
one step up from such ecstatic visioning of the product. The release of
products accompanying each special effects extravaganza is no doubt calculated
to cause internal replay of the video...the movie continues on in some
fashion even after one leaves the theater. Perhaps it's the same with
all such events except that rather than molding the plasticity of the
material world, we ourselves, our psyches are likewise molded. the line
between plasticities has indeed narrowed considerably. These events project
not only only darkened screens but onto materials and psychologies and
no doubt in circumspect but very real circumlocutions, onto the political
as well.
4/29
I saw another car commercial with an eery theme but for the life of me
I cant remember what it was. There does seem to be trend toward
a certain mysticism of the material, paens to some sort of ultimate control
of the world even extending the car into other dimensions to make that
control and speed happen. To some degree I suppose that has always been
the case. I can remember the old Chevy commercials where there was a close
shot of the car and a woman and then the shot pulls away to reveal that
both are perched on a totally inaccessible mesa in the southwest.
---
Ive started reading a new issue of Boundary 2, a theory journal
with this one devoted to The Arcades Project of Walter Benjamin. The most
striking article for me so far is the first one by Samuel Weber. Ive
always been an admirer of his thinking on Benjamin and this article helps
to confirm that feeling. The title of the article is "Streets, Squares,
Theaters". After starting with a general statement of principal,
that Benjamin was all about the generalized readability of the city (specifically
Paris in the nineteenth century), and the consequences of that (that is,
readability implies also an unreadable condition which always cohabits,
which would mean that the language of the event would not
necessarily make the move from a condition of particularity to a more
generalizable condition.
Weber then goes on to discuss Benjamins use of the term Schwelle,
which apparently is usually translated as threshold but which
is different from limit or border. Weber moves
to the term swelling as a being caught up in a movement, a
tension, a becoming over-extended, such that "a swelling
is thus always more and less that what it appears, a distended res intensa."
(Im reminded also of Agambens recent meditations and lectures
on the concept of threshold.)
Then, moving into a brief discussion of allegory as ALSO the potential
of naming something other than what it seems, at first sight, to represent,
Weber gets to the heart of his argument and what I find most fascinating
about the thesis. The three arenas of streets, squares, and theaters have
an apparent recursive viability to them that acts to haunt the city. Even
when areas are torn down they apparently can resurrect in other areas
of the city, and that besides naming as an aid to the survivibility, there
is also a theatricality somehow involved. "Benjamin....strongly
suggests that the power of the city to resist the passage of time and
space relates as muc to theatricality as to language. And this power in
turn is related tothe particular ability of the stage to survive its own
demise, as it were. Far a stage is a place that can e destroyed, displaces,
dislocated, but it still can reappear elsewhere with what is apparently
an irresistable force." Somehow there are zones that swell with archaic
content, disgorging itself into the city scape, through the use of names
that act as paleonyms apparently, the naming itself bringing forth a certain
non-localized haunting that can manifest as the thing; but also as a theatricality,
as a liminal zone extension that swells into place. (Weber doesnt
go there but one is inevitable led into he erotics of such manifestations...)
The whole thesis reminds me of a piece that Artaud wrote on the ancient
Mexican landscape blossoming into current times, carrying embedded messages
somehow across the gulf of time and into and possessing hapless travelers.
It is also like the Situationists comment that the beach always lays under
the city street.
It is no doubt that something else that is worrisome to some
folks, since there is an unpredictability and potential uncontrollability
to certain events. And also, for many postmoderns perhaps (although Weber
does his best to modify it into the particular) an irresistable placedness
that speaks far too much to the mythological, to a sort of Heideggerean
earthness, that allies several traditions that would seem to be enemies.
(How interesting then a fact that I found out for the first time in one
of these articles --how could that be possible given all the bios read
of WB??!!---that Benjamins first idea for a habilitationscrift topic
was...the same as Heideggers!)
But for me it is that something else (which, granted, doesnt
seem to be of the structure of modernity -- another problem for many and
the point where charges of fascism can start to flow) which
is fascinating.
As chance and synchronicity would have it, the afternoon of the morning
when I read the Weber article, I chanced into a remaindered bookstore
and found a book setting out on a stack dealing with the secret architecture
laying under official Washington, D.C.: zodiacs, masons, the
perennial tradition, etc --- again, an example of that swelling, of time
stepping onto the stage (reminds me also of the work of John Mitchel).
WB represents a very tender....threshold where what has come to be castigated
as the new age and the very latest and highest of contemporary
theory meet, a meeting place also of the Jewish and the German,
the negative with the positive dialectic. And for that matter, the left
hand path and the right hand way.
-----
another synchronistic event: I happened to see the movie Identity
the other day. In one of the key scenes at the beginning of the movie
a road is flooded and cant be passed (in the movie the impassable
flooded road definitely acts as a skandalon ( http://my.execpc.com/~paulnue/year_a/skandalon.htm
) which sets in effect a chain of events leading to discovery as well
as questions and instabilities of various sorts concerning identity. The
synchronistic part is that when I came out of the theater, the temperature
had dropped 20 degrees and it was pouring rain. I got on the expressway
to get into town only to go about a mile and traffic completely blocked
up and a large overhead sign notified traffic that the expressway was
flooded and traffic should get off at the first available exit!
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