Eileen A. Joy, Assoc. Professor

Dept. of English Language and Literature

Southern Illinois University Edwardsville

ejoy@siue.edu

Animal, Vegetable, Mineral: Ethics and Objects in the Early Modern and Medieval Periods

11-12 March 2011

Medieval and Early Modern Studies Institute, George Washington University

You Are Here: A Manifesto

[audiofile available HERE]

The poet produces the beautiful by fixing his attention on something real. It is the same with an act of love. . . . The authentic and pure values—truth, beauty and goodness—in the activity of a human being are the result of one and the same act, a certain application of the full attention to the object.—Simone Weil, Gravity and Grace

I. Ideation Without Bodies/The Drowned World

The strangest thing is that I am not at all inclined to call myself insane, I clearly see that I am not: all these changes concern objects. At least, that is what I’d like to be sure of.—from the notebooks of Antoine Roquentin[1]

In J.G. Ballard’s short story, “The Overloaded Man,” the main character, Faulkner, is “slowly going insane.”[2] In a nutshell, he’s become dissatisfied with life in general, and having quit his job, he waits impatiently for his wife to leave every morning so that he can engage in his daily secret ritual. Living in a development called “the Bin”—a “sprawl of interlocking frosted glass, white rectangles and curves, at first glance abstract and exciting . . . but to the people within formless and visually exhausting”[3]—Faulkner is eager to de-materialize his surroundings. Sitting on his veranda each day, he engages in a process of intense visualization, turning the entire field of recognizable “objects” in his view into “disembodied” forms, leading to a randomized, geometric “cubist landscape.”[4] Following some of the thing-logics laid out by Bill Brown in his 2001 essay, “Thing Theory,” Faulkner reduces the world to thing-ness, where “things” denote both the “amorphousness out of which objects are materialized by the (ap)perceving subject” (things as the “anterior physicality of the physical world”) and also the ways in which the world always exceeds our ability to apprehend it (things as “sensuous” and “metaphysical” presences that exceed their “materialization as objects or their mere utilization in objects”).[5]

Similar to the bricolage technique of the Surrealists, Faulkner operates a variety of “cut-out switches” that sever objects from their always already “tenuous” hold on reality and thereby crafts what he believes is an “escape route” from a world he finds tedious and “intolerable.” But Faulkner also believes, perhaps perversely, that “it was pleasant to see the world afresh again, to wallow in an endless panorama of brilliantly colored images. What did it matter if there was form but no content?”[6] Nevertheless, as the verbs of Ballard’s story suggest—deleting, blotting, switching off, repressing, vanishing, obliterating, eliminating, erasing, stripping, reducing, demolishing—what Faulkner is really doing is deleting the world and all “traces of meaning” from that world, until even the cubist shapes he has reduced it to also begin to “lose their meaning, the abstract masses of color dissolving, drawing Faulkner after them into a world of pure psychic sensation, where blocks of ideation hung like magnetic fields in a cloud chamber . . . .” Eventually, he also discovers that, in addition to his surroundings, his own body, which “seemed an extension of his mind,” has vanished as well. That is, until his wife shows up and starts screaming at him and he decides to “dismantle” her as well, “erasing all his memories” of her “motion and energy,” and turning her into “a bundle of obtrusive angles.” And yet, what he precisely cannot erase is the motion of her body fastening onto his, at which point he decides to “smooth and restrain her, molding her angular form into a softer and rounder one.”[7] In other words, he strangles her to death.

As it turns out, even when you visually “dismantle” and erase the world and all of its “objects,” including persons, they still retain their insistent object-ness and demand your attention. Bodies continue to press in, even your own. And what Faulkner ultimately seeks is “pure ideation, the undisturbed sensation of psychic being untransmuted by any physical medium. Only thus could he escape the nausea of the external world.” And so, seeking “an absolute continuum of existence uncontaminated by material excrescences,”[8] he drowns himself in a shallow pond at the far end of his garden while looking up at the “blue disk” of the sky, which he believes is somehow the only space freed of materiality. The sky is teeming with materiality, of course. The world remains, and Faulkner himself, even as a dead body, is still enmeshed with that world, and with his own body (he is his body), which cannot really be obliterated—at least, not by Faulkner thinking it away. Another way of putting this might be to say, even when you are dead, you are still here.

In another story by Ballard, “The Concentration City,” Franz M., a physics student who lives at 3599719 West 783rd Street, is obsessed with trying to leave the City, which is comprised of seemingly endless buildings and streets and is “as old as time and continuous with it.”[9] Although even just one sector of the City is “one hundred thousand cubic miles,” Franz M. is convinced that somewhere beyond an outer boundary there is endless “free space” and he attempts to traverse the entire length of the City in one direction on a high-speed train in order to find a limitless Outside that he believes must exist. But through some trick of time-space curvature that is built into the train tracks he only ends up back where he started, with no time having elapsed, even though he was gone for three weeks. Although Franz M. continues to doggedly insist, even while being carted off to the psychiatrists, that the City must have “bounds,” the City itself fills up all of time and space and cannot be traversed, or even imagined, as some sort of totality that could be crossed beyond. For the reader, as for Franz M., this is supposed to feel like a nightmare.

II. You Are Here/This Must Be the Place

I guess that this must be the place, / I can't tell one from another. / Did I find you, or you find me? / There was a time before we were born, / If someone asks, this is where I'll be, where I'll be.—The Talking Heads, “This Must be the Place”

In her book Vibrant Matter, Jane Bennett mentions Hent de Vries’s idea of the “absolute” as an “‘intangible and imponderable’ recalcitrance” that points to “a some-thing that is not an object of knowledge, that is detached or radically free from representation, and thus no-thing at all. Nothing but the force or the effectivity of the detachment, that is.”[10] Important to note here is that while this “absolute” may be radically detached from our world and systems of knowledge, it has also somehow come “loose” from that very same world and systems of knowledge, and therefore, it is both gone, yet also still here. In some systems this “absolute” could be God, but more importantly, for De Vries, it marks a place, or a Thing, which has “loosen[ed] its ties to existing contexts.” Similar to the “thing-power” that Bennett wants to articulate in her book, De Vries’s notion of the absolute “seeks to acknowledge that which refuses to dissolve completely into the milieu of human knowledge,” but whereas De Vries conceives of this absolute as an epistemological limit on human knowing that also hovers, recalcitrantly, “between immanence and transcendence,” Bennett wants to return matter (“things”) to a more “earthy, not-quite human capaciousness” in which things would be “absolved” of their “long history of attachment to automatism or mechanism.”[11]

Thinking of Ballard’s two stories again, we might say that they both take up different forms of De Vries’s version of the completely detached and non-earthy absolute (both characters are trying to literally loosen themselves from their respective worlds), and both stories also illustrate the anxiety and despair brought on by a desire to either inhabit the absolute position (which, ultimately, is never “human,” or let’s say, liveable) or to somehow cross beyond it, to believe that there must be an Outside (an exterior) that would unfold or unfurl somehow from a more locally-positioned world contained by our mapping devices, which is to say, our minds, as well as our satellites. Without this Outside, we feel trapped, hemmed “in”—although strictly speaking, if there is no Outside, there is also no Inside. There is only here, and to quote the Talking Heads, “this must be the place.” With Timothy Morton (and I guess, also, with the Buddhists and physicists), I believe that absolutely everything in the universe is connected to everything else and “there is no definite ‘within’ or ‘outside’ of beings”—for example, every time you breathe in oxygen you are inhaling “a by-product of the first Archæn beings (from 2.5 billion years ago back to an undefined limit after the origin of Earth 4.5 billion years ago)” and the “hills are teeming with the skeletal silence of dead life forms”—but as Morton also reminds us, we can’t really “get along without these concepts [of inside and outside] either.”[12]

Nevertheless, if we’re going to formulate any sort of ethics that takes interdependence and coexistence (or what Morton terms “coexistentialism”) seriously, as Morton argues, we’re going to have to dissolve “the barrier between ‘over here’ and ‘over there,’ and more fundamentally, the metaphysical illusion of rigid, narrow boundaries between inside and outside.”[13] And while we may certainly be in something—following the physicist David Bohm’s idea of the “implicate order,” everything might be folded into everything else and what we see around us every day might be a kind of explicate, unfolded holo-projection of that reality—nevertheless, this is a something, or a someplace, “that has no center or edge,” and there can never be “a background against which our thinking makes sense.”[14] There is still separation and difference, however, and this is an important point. As Morton puts it, “all beings are related to each other negatively and differentially,” and while there is no authentic zero-point of origin or “specific flavor” for any one being (no absolute uniqueness)—“evolution jumbles bodies like a dream jumbles words and image”[15]—nor is there any way to hold the life and non-life distinction in place, nor can we hold the human and non-human distinction in place, nor is consciousness necessarily intentional or even “superior” (“sentience” may be the lowest, and not the highest, function implicit in evolution),[16] and evolution itself may be “pointless” . . . nevertheless, as Morton also asserts,

We can’t in good faith cancel the difference between humans and nonhumans. Nor can we preserve it. Doing both at the same time would be inconsistent. We’re in a bind. But . . . . The bind is a sign of an emerging democracy of life forms.[17]

Subjectivity may ultimately be a bottomless void, but saying that there is no coherent “something” there is not the same thing as saying there is “nothing” there at all. Cadging from Morton, something is always “seeping through.”[18] Further, every object I encounter, including persons (human and nonhuman), in Steven Shaviro’s words, both draws me “into extended referential networks whose full ramifications I cannot trace” and also “bursts forth” in its singularity, “stun[ning] me in excess of anything that I can posit about it.”[19] So, for me, the trick in going forward now, as regards an ethics of interdependence, or co-implicated dependence, also means becoming more, and not less, human. The human is also an inescapable here, a some-place, and not a no-place.

III. A Text is a Sentient Object/Objects in the Mirror are Closer Than They Appear/You Are Closer to Me Than It Appears/The Past Is Closer Than It Appears/You Do No Service To History By Keeping It Behind You/I Wish We Could Go On Talking Like This But I Have to Move Beyond the Title of This Section

. . . contrary to a deeply rooted belief, the book is not an image of the world. It forms a rhizome with the world, there is an aparallel evolution of the book and the world; the book assures the deterritorialization of the world, but the world effects a reterritorialization of the book, which in turn deterritorializes itself in the world (if it's capable, if it can).—Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guatarri, A Thousand Plateaus

I want to turn now to the question of how literature might have anything to do with any of this and, following the thought of Jane Bennett, I want to say something like . . . texts are objects that possess vibrant materiality; they are “quasi forces” that possess something like “tendencies of their own.”[20] They possess thing-power, and as much as they are able, they strive, in the words of Spinoza, to “persist in existing.” Texts are, in some sense, alive, while at the same time they are, even while produced by humans, utterly inhuman. No matter how many people—that is to say, characters—you put into a text, they still come out flat and dead. By which I mean, those aren’t really people. Anna Karenina doesn’t really exist and the only reason she feels alive to you when reading Tolstoy’s novel is because you animated her through a technique we humans are particularly good at—I call it “lying to ourselves.” In addition, Michael Witmore reminds us that,

Our work with narratives puts us in touch with forms of reduction or compression that are every bit as diagrammatic and so (potentially) inhuman as those who study the compression algorithms of physics or planetary biology. The key for us is the way in which narratives of human action introduce counterfactual ideals—impossible, limiting, but also operative and effectual—that are immanent in the objects we study, not simply projections of the creators or interpreters of those objects.[21]

So, again, literary characters aren’t really human, although we often treat them as if they are (they’re more like symptoms of the human), nor are they completely limited by their authors and readers. But they do possess the qualities of Bruno Latour’s actant—in Graham Harman’s words, “a force utterly deployed in the world” which is on the same ontological footing as everything else, including us. As Harman writes of Latour’s thinking on actants, if everything is on the same ontological footing, “this ends the tear-jerking modern rift between the knowing human subject and the unknowable outside world, since for Latour the isolated Kantian human is no more and no less an actor than are windmills, sunflowers, propane tanks, and Thailand.”[22] Again: you are here. So is everything else. There is nowhere else to go.

I am recalled to the meeting of the New Chaucer Society in Siena, Italy last July, when Aranye Fradenburg delivered her plenary lecture, “Living Chaucer,” and she argued that “the experience of narrative is a rapprochement with another mind”—that we share with authors like Chaucer a kind of inter-subjectivity in which it is not always easy to tell where the self ends and Otherness begins. Let’s take this another step further and say that the experience of narrative is also a rapprochement with a “persisting object” that uses humans as an activation device, an on-switch. Literature is therefore also a form of magical neuro-plasticity, a living and cognitive process, even what Aranye terms an affective companionship between author-objects, reader-objects, and other objects (including language) that enables a shared, and most importantly, in Aranye’s formulation, “a playful attention to a world that we might approach together, with love, unafraid, or maybe a little afraid?”

Think, further, of literature as a kind of poetic DNA, an inter-subjective, living, and dynamic process and also an open “signaling system,” which means—and this is the really important part for me—literary narratives, especially the ones crafted with a high degree of artistry and whose authors generously and playfully leave the most important questions unsettled (Hamlet is one great example of such a narrative as are, I would argue, all of Chaucer’s Tales) . . . these narratives are never really done, never really “over,” and it may be that change (through which anything that counts as everything that happens has to pass), and also the kind of un-static always-jostling eternity that leaves everything radically available for perpetual transformation and becoming-otherwise, accomplishes a special purchase within the realm of the imaginative, narrative arts, which I want to argue includes literary criticism, includes scholarship, includes thinking. We might say that literary narratives, although they are, in one sense, completely unreal, or sur-real, and inhuman, pitch themselves at the real world and also create space (underground passageways, shelters, hiding places, root cellars), for that which cannot be brought into being, or cared for, anywhere else.

This open “signifying system” of literary narratives, which also forms for us, if we are readers, a significant portion of our shared cognitive inheritance, could also be described, as Aranye suggested in Siena, as a “territorial assemblage,” one that enables an endless series of relations within and across various temporal zones that are, in some sense, always here with us now. The human body is itself a time capsule of all previous times, just as texts are time capsules of all previous writing, and the “junk”—whether junk-DNA or spilled ink in the margins, is always with us. Nothing is ever lost, although if Harman is right, everything is always withdrawing from everything else. Again: you are here, but a part of you is also somewhere else. Same with texts. Although, strictly speaking, that “somewhere else” is also here. Even right in this room. You can’t get out. The exits of this universe are locked. But don’t worry, as the view “from here” is beautiful.

According to Harman, all objects in the world—which can be armies, persons, ants, chalk, earthworms, raindrops, stones, etc.—are always in retreat from each other, always withdrawing, and every possible relation between any two objects is also an object. While Harman doesn’t deny reciprocity and symbiosis and even celebrates them, he insists on a ‘weird realism’ whereby no one real object could ever really ‘touch’ any other real object. Nevertheless, there are relations, and he uses the term ‘allure’ to describe the distance between any real object and the qualities that stream out of it, constituting the sensual object with which we engage. As he puts it, “Whereas real objects withdraw, sensual objects lie directly before us, frosted over with a swirling, superfluous outer shell.”[23] Therefore, real objects can only ‘touch’ other real objects by way of a sensual object, a “vicar of causation,” as it were, that leads to ever more new objects being formed—in other words, new relations. Furthermore, and this is the really important implication of Harman’s thought for me in thinking about how this might affect a speculative medieval studies, “we do not perceive insofar as we merely exist, but only insofar as we are pieces of larger objects composed of us and other things.” And it is in what Harman calls “the molten inner core” of these larger objects where sentience takes place, “as the perception of sensual objects.”[24] For Harman sentience is happening all the time between all sorts of objects, and—who knows?—maybe even stalks of wheat and bricks ‘encounter’ each other in some fashion in some sort of wheat-and-brick assemblage mediated by a sensuous vicar, which could be a person, or an ant, or a moonbeam.

In Harman’s speculative realism, “the world is packed full of ghostly real objects signaling to each other from inscrutable depths, unable to touch one another fully.” And yet, the “side-by-side proximity of real and sensual objects is the occasion for a connection between a real object inside an intention [for example, my desire to be absorbed by these objects] and another real object lying outside it. In this way, shafts or freight tunnels are constructed between objects that otherwise remain quarantined in private vacuums.”[25] Literary criticism, especially in medieval studies but really in any-studies of texts that are, in some sense, already-there (i.e., historical), might be re-imagined as a networks of sensuous object relations within which a more capacious yet still bounded sentience might take place—“bounded” in the sense of: everything was here, and then you arrived, and now we’re all here. Start digging, but remember, we can’t get out of here. Tunnel away all you want, for, as Harman says,

We do not step beyond anything, but are more like moles tunneling through wind, water, and ideas no less than through speech-acts, texts, anxiety, wonder, and dirt. We do not transcend the world, but only descend or burrow towards its numberless underground cavities—each a sort of kaleidoscope where sensual objects spread their wings and colors. There is neither finitude nor negativity in the heart of objects.[26]

Part IV. So, Here’s This Plan I Have

Those who care only to generate arguments almost never generate objects. New objects, however, are the sole and sacred fruit of writers, thinkers, politicians, travellers, lovers, and inventers.—Graham Harman, “On Vicarious Causation”

So, what now? As regards medieval studies, literary studies, the humanities? Step One might be following Julian Yates’s suggestion (and I think this is a step Jane Bennett, Graham Harman, Levi Bryant, Timothy Morton, Cary Wolfe, Jeffrey Cohen, Karl Steel, and many others are mightily engaged in at present): to force the “solipsistic human dasein . . . to idle and to listen or try to listen to the figurative chatter, songs or screams of the countless non-human actors whose manufactured declensions fund the networks that wrote the ‘human’ as self-identical being.”[27] The human being, but also the humanist, as slow recording device. Have you heard of the experimental artist Douglas Gordon who slowed down Hitchcock’s Psycho to 24 hours?[28] Or the sound artist Lief Inge who stretched out Beethoven’s 9th Symphony for 24 hours?[29] Or Longplayer, a piece of music started in 1999 that is designed to go on playing for a thousand years, and whose chief “listening post” is a lighthouse in London?[30] Something like that. While also recognizing that these are follies.

Step Two would be to recognize that everything is a person of some sort and to start forming alliances and “personnel services committees” and special packet-switching stations with as many self-objects and literary-objects and other object-objects as possible in order to build a larger and more capacious and “stranger” sentience that could then form a sort of auto-poetic system that might take better account of how, in Morton’s words, “[e]verything is [already] intimate with everything else.”[31]

This will require a Step Three as well, which probably really comes before Step One: self-donation. Giving ourselves over to each other and to everything else; making ourselves hospitable so that things and events can take place in and with and around us, so that the world can happen to us for a change. The fact of the matter is, we’re already “occupied,” so let’s make it official now with a sign posted out front that says, “Hello, Everybody!” Related to this: making room, like a broom of the system, for the initial starting conditions of spontaneous acts of combustive generosity and impossible unconditionalities.

Step Four: making new objects. Giving birth to things. Radical acts of coupling and natality and hetero-queer reproduction. Until you can’t anymore. That’s when you drop dead. But don’t worry . . . you’ll always be with us, by which I mean: with me. I’ll never forget you and I trust you’ll do the same for me. I’m talking to you but also to my dog, the hawthorn outside my study window, the window itself, my favorite plate, and the imaginary pen I write my imaginary books with that never get published. We’ll designate mourners and record their grieving, then play it on an endless feedback loop machine that has a one-thousand-year battery. Some call this medieval studies. Or the humanities, which need to get more, and not less human.

But this will also entail, contra to but also with our tears, better developing what Simon Critchley has called “the experience of an ever-divided humorous self-relation,” where we would work to find ourselves “ridiculous,” to see ourselves from the [impossible] outside, and to “smile”—humor as “a powerful example of what we might call the human being’s eccentricity with regard to itself.”[32]

In the end, this what ethics is all about: Slowing down, paying better attention to what is close at hand and always already intimate with us—which is everything—welcoming the Other, not taking ourselves too seriously, and working together to add something of beauty to the world, which is always more than truth could ever calculate or bear.

Endnotes

1. Jean-Paul Sartre, Nausea, trans. Richard Howard (New York: New Directions, 2007), 2.

2. J.G. Ballard, “The Overloaded Man,” in The Best Short Stories of J.G. Ballard (New York: Picador, 1995), 112 [112-124].

3. Ballard, “The Overloaded Man,” 114.

4. Ballard, “The Overloaded Man,” 115.

5. Bill Brown, “Thing Theory,” Critical Inquiry 28 (Autumn 2001): 5 [1-22].

6. Ballard, “The Overloaded Man,” 116.

7. Ballard, “The Overloaded Man,” 124.

8. Ballard, “The Overloaded Man,” 124.

9. J.G. Ballard, “The Concentration City,” in The Best Short Stories of J.G. Ballard (New York: Picador, 1995), 19 [1-20].

10. Jane Bennett, Vibrant Matter: Toward a Political Ecology of Things (Durham: Duke University Press, 2010), 3.

11. Bennett, Vibrant Matter, 3.

12. Timothy Morton, The Ecological Thought (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2010), 39.

13. Morton, The Ecological Thought, 39.

14. Timothy Morton, “Materialism Expanded and Remixed,” Conference Paper: “New Materialisms,” Johns Hopkins University, 13 April 2010: 11 [1-17]; accessed at http://www.scribd.com/ doc/25830212/Materialism-Expanded-and-Remixed. See also David Bohm, Wholeness and the Implicate Order (London: Routledge, 1980).

15. Morton, The Ecological Thought, 66, 65.

16. On this point regarding sentience as a possibly “lower” achievement of evolutionary biology, see Morton, The Ecological Thought, 72. I would also point those interested in this idea to the work of Rodney Brooks, who directs the Artificial Intelligence Laboratory at M.I.T., and to his influential paper, “Elephants Don’t Play Chess,” Robotics and Autonomous Systems 6 (1990): 3-15.

17. Morton, The Ecological Thought, 76.

18. Morton, The Ecological Thought, 113.

19. Steven Shaviro, “The Universe of Things,” Symposium Paper: “Object-Oriented Ontology,” Georgia Tech. University, 3 April 2010: 7 [1-18]; accessed at http://www.shaviro.com/Blog/?p=893.

20. Bennett describes “vibrant matter” as objects that are “active” and “earthy” and which possess a “not-quite-human capaciousness” (Vibrant Matter, 3). This is to ultimately “think” objects outside of their traditional roles “as passive stuff, as raw, brute, or inert” (vii) and to invent (dream?) for objects a lively ontology of “vital materiality” in which things “act as quasi agents or forces with trajectories, propensities, or tendencies of their own” outside of human will and human designs (viii).

21. Michael Witmore, “We Have Never Not Been Inhuman,” in When Did We Become Post/human? ed. Eileen A. Joy and Craig Dionne, special issue of postmedieval: a journal of medieval cultural studies 1.1/2 (2010): 213 [208-214].

22. Graham Harman, Prince of Networks: Bruno Latour and Metaphysics (Melbourne: re.press, 2009), 14.

23. Graham Harman, “On Vicarious Causation,” COLLAPSE: Philosophical Research and Development, Vol. II, ed. Robin Mackay (Oxford: Urbanomic, 2007), 179 [171-205].

24. Graham Harman, “On Asymmetrical Causation: Influence Without Recompense,” Parallax 16.1 (2010): 107 [96-109].

25. Harman, “On Vicarious Causation,” 187, 201.

26. Harman, “On Vicarious Causation,” 193.

27. Julian Yates, “It’s (for) You; or, The Tele-t/r/opical Post-human,” in When Did We Become Post/human? ed. Eileen A. Joy and Craig Dionne, special issue of postmedieval: a journal of medieval cultural studies 1.1/2 (2010): 225 [223-234].

28. See Lee Ferguson, “Douglas Gordon’s Stunning 24 Hour Psycho,” CBC News, 13 Sep. 2010: http://www.cbc.ca/news/tiff2010/2010/09/douglas-gordons-stunning-24-hour-psycho-update-screens-at-tiffs-lightbox.html.

29. See Kyle Gann, “Norwegian Minimalist Raises Beethoven’s Molto Adagio Bar,” The Village Voice, 10 Feb. 2004: http://www.villagevoice.com/2004-02-10/music/norwegian-minimalist-raises-beethoven-molto-adagio-bar/.

30. On Longplayer, see http://longplayer.org/what/overview.php.

31. Morton, The Ecological Thought, 78.

32. Simon Critchley, Infinitely Demanding: Ethics of Commitment, Politics of Resistance (London: Verso, 2007), 86.