A Levinasian poetic?
How might the ideas of the French philosopher Emmanuel Levinas be used practically in the reading of literary texts? He was, of course, an expert reader and interpreter in the Talmudic tradition, and studies such as those of Ira Stone have explored the literary and critical implications of his work in that area. Krzysztof Ziarek has considered Levinas within the broader context of phenomenological hermeneutics, and Jill Robbins has recently argued for the importance of a literary approach for the understanding of Levinas’s work as a whole.1 But there is still little help for those who, impressed by the weight and power of Levinas’s thought, look to apply it practically to the reading of texts. In this paper I shall argue that his central ideas have a direct relevance to reading, and that they make possible the recognition of a deconstructive movement in the text that is more than a textual phenomenon. I shall seek to show, practically as well as theoretically, that he offers a way of recovering the engagement between text and what is not text, and of recognising how the approach of this other leaves its mark on the text, in the form of specific traces that are available to the reader.
This might appear to be an insuperable difficulty, and strictly it is: no system will be able to organise the pervasive fracturing of systems which is the trace of otherness and the point of Levinas’s argument. But the difficulty for a possible Levinasian poetic is no different from that which Levinas himself acknowledges as applying to his philosophy as a whole. Put briefly: his project is to speak of what lies beyond thematisation and conceptualisation through themes and concepts, because they are the only tools we have. His “method” is to use those tools but to expect their breakdown, to encourage his readers to look for those points of breakdown as the points where we meet a true saying.
The same imperfect defence must be used for a Levinasian engagement with the literary text. To set out, as I do here, a Levinasian “strategy” is not to say that there is some derivable, systematic body of Levinasian textual theory that can be applied universally to texts according to some fixed methodology. That would, indeed, be a betrayal of Levinas. It is to say that, within and through the available language of themes and concepts, it is possible to point the reader to the kinds of fracturing and disruption that are the traces of otherness within all structures of comprehension, including literary texts. To call this a “strategy” is to suggest a degree of provisionality in face of the other that cannot be predicted, a way of approaching the text which recognises that neither the approach nor the text can be read simply as system.
The first step must be to identify those features of Levinas’s thought which relate most productively to the area of reading. My discussion therefore starts from his primary philosophical exploration of alterity and of the ethical, and it seeks to relate that exploration to the life of the literary text. It then seeks to identify what it might mean for the text to be the site of an encounter with alterity, and how this might be traceable within the text. In the final section, as a practical demonstration, the results of this discussion are applied to a poem by Wallace Stevens.
My starting-point is Levinas’s two primary texts: Totality and Infinity (1961) and Otherwise than Being (1974).3 The first can be thought of as a narrative of what happens between the self of consciousness and the other. The second inscribes this narrative into an account of language, into an exploration of what happens between saying and the said. But the central structure of his thought remains recognisably the same: it traces the relationship between thematisation and otherness or alterity. In both discussions, what is at issue is the encounter between logos, the totalising thematisation that constructs a world of identifiable and nameable beings and essences, and what exceeds that but is nonetheless encountered, the unthematisable other, or the “otherwise than being.” Thematisation generates a world of concepts and identities, of repeatable categories organised within a linear temporality; it establishes a stable, structured, comprehended area that the self can possess and inhabit. This process takes place within language; and as language, thematisation organises a sharable world of reason and objective knowledge. But though thematisation is required for the creation of a common world, its involvement is with the self, which seeks to know itself in sameness and continuity. As an act of comprehension, of grasping or taking hold, thematisation seeks to assimilate whatever it meets to this same-self, so that the area of selfhood is extended. Thematisation creates a same-world elaborated by a same-self, a world of structures, connectivities and forms that has no place for alterity.
But alterity, the other, cannot finally be evaded. As the human other, it confronts the same-world of selfhood as the face of the one we meet, as the address of the other that calls forth our primary ethical responsibility. With the approach of the other the same-world of thematisation suffers a disruption, because the other is that which cannot be thematised, which cannot be inserted into the world of logos as category and identity or repeated in a temporality of reviewable memories. The other announces itself as a saying which undoes whatever form seeks to enclose it; alterity calls into question all comprehending form, including that of the literary text. At the same time the other as face, as address, calls on us for response; whether in speech or silence, we cannot but respond to that address. The other compels us to answer for ourselves.
Though the other disrupts the forms of thematisation, it does not abolish them; nor, in Levinas’s view, should it do so. He does not depreciate either thematisation, which in language creates our common human world, or the same-world of possessed selfhood, with is the world that we enjoy, that we live from. But he does point to the approach of the other and to the traces that it makes on that same-world; traces which will also be found in language and the literary text.
Language, for Levinas, is the site both of thematisation and its disruption. Though language is the instrument of thematisation, in Totality and Infinity Levinas claims that it begins in alterity. For him the root act of language is not the naming of beings in their identities; rather it is founded in a primary alterity, a first saying, to which language is the response. The grounding act of language is interpellation (TI, p. 69); it is the address of the other which calls out as my response the first word of language: me voici, “here I am.” In that I open myself in responsibility to the need of the other. Only then does language go on to thematisation, to the construction of a common world of shared entities that meets the needs of the other and of myself. Though it thematises the inhabited, human world, language for Levinas begins as a signifying with no theme, as pure response which is also address.
Language and responsibility are born in the same moment of this first approach of alterity. Language is first a saying which answers the saying of the other. But it is also the said, the place of defined entities and essences; it is in language that being as essences and entities comes about. Again it is important to recognise that Levinas is not talking about some decline from the pure moment of alterity; for him language and thematisation are not a veiling of reality, a loss of truer being. For Levinas there is no truer being than that which is thematised in language, because being is exactly what comes about in thematisation. Language constructs for us the world of beings and makes possible all that we do with them, all that we enjoy as we live from them; language makes possible the self’s own world and the commonality of the world in which we meet the need of the other.
This “otherwise” is the other and saying; and language cannot encompass them. Yet language may nevertheless be the site of the approach of saying and of the other. This is because speaking, saying, is what the other is for me; I encounter the other in address, it announces itself, it speaks. Because it presents itself in an act of interpellation and so calls language into being, the other has a relation to language that is prior to that of thematisation (though “prior” historicises that which, outside of thematisation and its linear construction of time, cannot be historicised). It is in this sense, of language’s first intimacy with alterity, that language can the thought of, as Simon Critchley has suggested, as unbound from the area of thematisation that it brings about.4
Temporality and otherness
For Levinas in Totality and Infinity, the characteristic of such temporality is pastness (TI, p. 65). Whatever its grammatical tense, thematisation locates its objects in an area of already-existing definition; the categories that it employs always imply their prior existence. A simple thematising statement, such as “this is a tree,” can only be made if the concept “tree” is already available, or (as Levinas puts it in Otherwise than Being) “already said” (OB, p. 35). But this is also true of any new concept; to conceptualise is always an act of retrojection, of placing within the already said the concept that we create. Through such retrojection, the concept is secured in its self-identity, an identity which can function at any point in the temporal sequence. Pastness, in this sense, is the stability of thematisation and of language.
Levinas points, then, to two temporalities, of thematisation and of the other. But he is not offering us alternatives; we cannot choose between them. For Levinas, consciousness lives in a “diachrony,” a doubleness of temporality, where the two touch. Consciousness deploys the thematisations of the already said and so lives in the memorable pastness of recuperable identities; but it is also aware that it can never be identical with those identities or even with the moment of its own experience, that it cannot hold to the identities of the past and is threatened by the otherness of the future. In its diachrony consciousness is caught in a web of paradox; it seeks to “recuperate the irreversible, coagulate the flow of time into a ‘something,’ thematise, ascribe a meaning;” but it also experiences “the impossibility of the dispersion of time to assemble itself in the present” (OB, pp 37, 38). But consciousness is not the only site of such temporal destabilisation. Diachrony will occur wherever thematisation is touched by saying, by the other; it is therefore to be expected that the thematisation which is art will also bear its trace.
Art and the modality of beings: nominalisation and verbalisation
But though it does not stand outside thematisation, art deals with the thematised in a distinguishable way. In art themes are presented with a special purity and directness; that thematisation which is line, form or verbal image is made to stand forth with unusual clarity, in what Levinas refers to in the following passage as “absolute exposition.” Art exhibits its thematisations with a special nakedness, it invites a directness of gaze that other forms of thematisation do not incur. Further, within the language of thematisation Levinas identifies two aspects: the aspect of nominalisation, which prioritises the noun, and the aspect of verbalisation, which prioritises the verb. Verbalisation conveys beings not as substances but as modalities of being; this is true even of the verb to be within the predicative structure. Predication, for Levinas, is less a statement of identity (“A is B”) than an adverbial structure, telling us how A is (“A is-B”). Art is distinguishable in that, through the pure exposition of theme, it makes this modality, this “how” of being, resound:
It is clear that for Levinas thematisation is no kind of abstraction, nor is art the disclosure of some truer being. Art stays within the area of the thematised, the already said; as Eaglestone puts it, “art makes the said resound but has no access to anything beyond that” (p. 154). Art is not the revealing of transcendence; its power is to display the verbality of the world that we inhabit through theme and concept. His most telling example is a reference to Xenakis’s Nomos Alpha for Unaccompanied Cello:
Music bends the quality of the notes emitted into adverbs. Every quiddity becomes a modality, the strings and woods turn into sonority. What is taking place? Is a soul complaining or exulting in the depth of the sounds ? What misleading anthropomorphism or animism! The cello is a cello in the sonority that vibrates in its strings and its wood, even if it is already reverting into notes, into identities that settle into their natural places in gamuts from the acute to the grave, according to the different pitches. Thus the essence of the cello, a modality of essence, is temporalised in the work. (OB, p. 41)
Again it should be stressed that this is not some romantic revelation of hidden being. For Levinas, “a cello,” “the notes,” have no other being than their thematisations, which occur in language. Their essence is this thematisation: “the entity that appears identical in the light of time is its essence in the already said essence qua essence and entities qua entities, are spoken” (OB, p. 37).
Art’s role, then, is to take the thematised, the already said, and to display it with a resonant purity and directness. At the same time art keeps awake the verbality of the theme, stops it sliding to the opposite pole of nominalised substantivity, thematises it as a “how” rather than as a “what.” Art celebrates our living in and from a world of shared thematisation and enjoyment. This is where art finds itself.
The other in the text: undoing the form
If language and art both inhabit the area of the thematised, what chance is there that the literary text can bear the trace of the other? First it needs to be recognised that an attempt to locate the other within the text is bound to fail; the other will not, for example, turn up in what might seem likely places, in character or dialogue. This is because identification and location are processes that can happen only within thematisation, and the other stands elsewhere. Only the thematised can have recognisable identity and a locatable place; and it is precisely Levinas’s point that neither the other nor saying can be thematised without losing their alterity.
All that can be said, therefore, is that the thematised structure which is the text will be interrupted, called in question, by the proximity of an other that finds no place within it. The “place” of the other, of saying, is this irruption, this dislocation; a diachronising of temporality, a calling to responsibility and response. Nothing new, in a thematised sense, arrives or is added; instead what is already there carries the traces of what it cannot include. Rather like a stellar system approached by a black hole, the text begins to deform in ways that cannot be explained from its own gravitational dynamics. The task for a Levinasian critical practice is to prepare to recognise these deformations so that they can be seen for what they are.
In so far as this process can be conceptualised, form and the undoing of form are the key. The act of comprehension, including the comprehension which is art, proposes form as its instrument; but at the approach of the other, form is, as Levinas puts it in Totality and Infinity, undone (TI, p. 66). He traces a dual process: on the one hand, the enforcement and rigidification of form, and on the other its dislocation. Though form may vary (and he stresses that the search for new form is always part of art), there is always implicit a degree of closure; form seeks to fix and contain its object in an act of structured comprehension. In Otherwise than Being Levinas makes the point in a way that brings it specially close to literature. He argues that even the is of language, the verbal predicate that sustains the modality of thematised entities, always threatens to lose its verbality and to congeal into a rigidity of form:
The verb to be becomes a quasi structure and is thematised and shows itself like an entity. Phenomenality, essence, becomes a phenomenon, is fixed, assembled in a tale, is synchronised, presented, lends itself to a noun, receives a title. An entity or a configuration of entities emerge thematised and are identified in the synchronism of denomination (or in the unity of a tale that cannot be out of phase). They become history, are delivered over to writing, to books, in which the time of the narrative, without being reversed, recommences. They become states of affairs. (OB, p. 42)
But the proximity of the other is the undoing of form. Whatever formal structure is directed toward it, the other it will always elude that structure and call it into question. Form is only “adequate” to the same, never to the other; it can never grasp the other and possess it. To the extent that it appears to do that, it must betray its own object; it makes what is other into what is same, by reducing it to what is already at home within the act of thematisation. In Totality and Infinity Levinas contrasts this reduction with the disruptive power of the other, seen here as the face: “form--incessantly betraying its own manifestation, congealing into a plastic form, for it is adequate to the same--alienates the exteriority of the other. The face is a living presence; it is expression. The life of expression consists in undoing the form in which the existent, exposed as a theme, is thereby dissimulated” (OB, p. 66). Form betrays otherness, but otherness undoes form; not through incoherence and confusion (those are categories of thematisation) but by deconstructing the temporal structure of the formed and the thematised, by moving from the pastness of what is already said to the diachrony of the moment of saying. By this the life of the other is recovered from its dissimulation into theme.
Tracing the other
The primary textual deformation is of the temporal structure. The temporality of the text, as an act of thematisation, is of the kind that thematisation always constructs: a mode of pastness, recuperable in memory, at our disposal. Thus we can always refer to the moment at which Macbeth murders
Since the thematised is the already said, this failure is a failure of thematisation. The object of the text will be incompletely thematised; and this will present itself as an excess of the object in relation to the literary form that seeks to comprehend it. This excess is not an avoidable incompleteness; it is not that the text has failed to include within its formed structure what might have been included, has neglected a remainder. Excess in this sense will be a trace of the not-includable because not-thematisable, a marking of the text by what exceeds it in radical alterity, but not as theme. It will be as though the order of the text were compromised by what, in the terms of the said, is “otherwise than being.”
Finally, it should not be forgotten that for Levinas the ethical is primary: ethics, for him, is first philosophy. This is to say that he understands the grounding moment of language as a moment of the other’s saying; and this saying, this interpellation, is irreducibly ethical. It calls on me to answer for myself, and against that call I have no alibi. Even in refusal I make a response; my saying answers the saying of another. In terms of thematisation, nothing has been said; saying is a laying-bare to what cannot be consigned to the past, a nakedness toward the other in responsibility.
For Levinas, the strongest trace of the approach of the other is this precipitation into responsibility, this being called into question, being forced out of the secure pastness of thematisation into a saying that must answer for itself toward the unpossessable future. The text approached by the other will also suffer this projection into responsibility; instead of disposing of a known world, the text must answer for itself, but to that which cannot be addressed in the language of thematisation. What is at issue here might be described as the stance of the text; instead of being turned toward the same-world of the said, it has to face the unthematisable.
An application: form and deformation
What follows is by way of an experiment. I chose Wallace Stevens’ poem “The House was Quiet and the World was Calm” at random, to test whether this developed Levinasian strategy can be made to work, whether the markers of the undoing of form, diachronic temporalisation, destabilisation of identities, excess, and responsibility, can actually be traced within the text.5 One poem does not make a poetic; but it may be enough to suggest that texts can reflect what Levinas would have understood as the approach of the other.
The house was quiet and the world was calm.
The reader became the book; and summer night
Was like the conscious being of the book.
The house was quiet and the world was calm. (1-4)
Stevens’ insistence here is on the texture of these objects and this experience; not what they are, but how they are for the consciousness that encounters them. In this the poem does what all art seeks to do: whilst remaining within the thematisable, it holds beings, essences and entities from inclining towards substantivity and fixity. Within the said, the primacy of nominalisation is relaxed in favour of the verbal and the adverbial; and this is the achievement of form, which displays, exposes these entities in such a way that their modalities become tangible to the reader.
And the world was calm. The truth in a calm world,
In which there is no other meaning, itself
Is calm, itself is summer and night, itself
Is the reader leaning late and reading there. (13-16)
The later part of the poem comes to feel restive rather than at rest.
The central formal feature of the poem, though, that which is established as its project at the outset, is the declarative statement, predication: “The house was quiet and the world was calm” (1). Through this the poem proposes a world that can be comprehended within predicative structure: a world of identities, “A is B.” This is its initial act of thematisation. Further: the predicative pattern that is set up is one of return. With the repetition of the first line we come to expect the return of predication, its return to itself; formally this is achieved through what seems, at first, to be the promise of a villanelle. We are dealing with a world in which identities are secure enough to be equated in predication, and where they are recoverable in patterns of repetition and return.
Nevertheless in the fourth line the normative formal structure reasserts itself in the repetition of the first line; and the condition of repetition, as Levinas argues, is a recoverable, memorable past. The temporality of thematisation has, apparently, been restored; and the expectation which is set up, of further return through a villanelle-like predictability, offers added reassurance. But this apparent promise is soon disappointed. Instead the poem moves from greater to lesser repeatability. The first repetition, full and immediate, is between the title and the first line: in the printed text, “THE HOUSE WAS QUIET AND THE WORLD WAS CALM/ The house was quiet and the world was calm” (1). Nothing intervenes to disrupt. Only the visual shift from capitalisation hints at the impossibility of full coincidence. Then two lines intervene: repetition is deferred. Then the pattern fragments: line 10 promises a return to lines 1 and 4 but only gives us the first half: “The house was quiet because it had to be.” For the rest we have to wait to line 13, where the second half is displaced to the first half of the line and then inverted in the second half: “And the world was calm. The truth in a calm world ” Finally, in lines 15 and 16, the poem hastily recuperates “calm,” “summer,” “night,” and “reader” from lines 1 and 2, but the measured equations of the opening have collapsed into hurried conjunction with the empty universally equatable non-entity, “itself.”
This may sound like a critical attack on Stevens’ competence as a poet, but of course it is not. What is traced here, I would claim, is a formal deconstruction, an undoing of the form, of the kind that Levinas might expect from the proximity of the other. The occasion of this deformation becomes clearer as the poem moves towards its rhetorical object, which is “truth.” It thematises this object to the extent of giving it a name, of nominalisation; but it can give it no identity, no stability, no recuperability, despite falling back on the best efforts of predication to tell us what truth is:
The truth in a calm world,
In which there is no other meaning, itself
Is calm, itself is summer and night, itself
Is the reader leaning late and reading there. (13-16)
There is something at the end of this poem, towards which it moves rhetorically as though towards a gravitational centre, which it cannot nominalise or thematise, and which destabilises all the other nominalisations and thematisations, even of the most unproblematic kind. Having pursued whatever this is through the familiar thematisations offered (“calm,” “night,” “summer,” “reader”) it threatens to collapse them all. What is at issue here is the failure of predication. The form which the poem offers towards its object fails in the face of that object precisely because it is not an object, an item within thematisation. Form fails and so thematisation fails.
But the poem does not fail. In the very failure of its means, the poem makes present to the reader that which exceeds it, some other that it cannot contain. From thematisation it moves to saying. Another way of expressing this would be to say that by the end of the poem there is a powerful sense that its object exceeds its formal resources. Again, this is in no sense a failure of the poem; indeed, it is the poem’s achievement to bring about this sense of excess. It can only come through the conjunction of theme with the unthematisable and of form with the unformable. The success of the poem is the realisation of these conjunctions.
Temporality
Answerability
Conclusion: alterity and deconstruction
For Levinas, the logos, the logocentric language of thematisation, is deconstructed by alterity, by the other. But we should not take it that he is setting up some sacred or transcendental class of entities that have a higher or truer reality. It is not as though on one side of the line there was the vulnerable and deconstructable, and on the other the invulnerable and deconstructing. Firstly: our textual dealings with the other are thematisations, as in a discussion like the present. These thematisations--of the other, of saying--are as deconstructable as any, as subject to the approach of that to which they speciously appear to refer. Secondly: since construction is the mode of thematisation, the unthematisable “exists” in radical deconstruction. Deconstruction (to use the language of the said) is how it is. It has no privilege of pure, self-identical being (that is the ideal of thematisation). To encounter the other is to encounter the deconstructed.
Something, then, can be said, in the reading of a poem, for each of the traces that in Levinas’s thought announce the approach of the other. One poem does not make a poetic; but this exercise at least suggests that Levinas, even when he is not directly concerned with texts or with literature, does offer a practical basis for approaching the life of the text. If there is, as I have argued, an implicit positing in his work of an alternative deconstruction, not of the text by the text but of the text by the other, then in the traces of the other’s proximity there is a way out of the circle of textuality; not to the thematisation of the unthematisable or the textualisation of the non-textual, but to the text’s response to what is radically not itself.
2 comments:
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