3: The Conquest of the Unhappy Consciousness: Repressive
Desublimation
Having discussed
the political integration of advanced industrial society, an achievement rendered
possible by growing technological productivity and the expanding con- quest
of man and nature, we will now turn to a corresponding integration in the
realm of culture. In this chapter, certain key notions and images of literature
and their fate will illustrate how the progress of technological rationality
is liquidating the oppositional and transcending elements in the "higher
culture." They succumb in fact to the process of desublimation which
prevails in the advanced regions of contemporary society.
The achievements
and the failures of this society invalidate its higher culture. The celebration
of the autonomous personality, of humanism, of tragic and romantic love appears
to be the ideal of a backward stage of the development. What is happening
now is not the deterioration of higher culture into mass culture but the refutation
of this culture by the reality. The reality surpasses its culture. Man today
can do more than the culture heros and half-gods; he has solved many
insoluble problems. But he has also betrayed the hope and destroyed the truth
which were pre- served in the sublimations of higher culture. To be sure,
the higher culture was always in contradiction with social reality, and only
a privileged minority enjoyed its blessings and represented its ideals. The
two antagonistic spheres of society have always coexisted; the higher culture
has always been accommodating, while the reality was rarely disturbed by its
ideals and its truth.
66
Today's
novel feature is the flattening out of the antagonism between culture and
social reality through the obliteration of the oppositional, alien, and transcendent
elements in the higher culture by virtue of which it constituted another
dimension of reality. This liquidation of two-dimensional culture
takes place not through the denial and rejection of the "cultural values,"
but through their wholesale incorporation into the established order, through
their reproduction and display on a massive scale.
In
fact, they serve as instruments of social cohesion. The greatness of a free
literature and art, the ideals of humanism, the sorrows and joys of the individual,
the fulfillment of the personality are important items in the competitive
struggle between East and West. They speak heavily against the present forms
of communism, and they are daily administered and sold. The fact that they
contradict the society which sells them does not count. Just as people know
or feel that advertisements and political platforms must not be necessarily
true or right, and yet hear and read them and even let themselves be guided
by them, so they accept the traditional values and make them part of their
mental equipment. If mass communications blend together harmoniously, and
often unnoticeably, art, politics, religion, and philosophy with commercials,
they bring these realms of culture to their common denominator-the commodity
form. The music of the soul is also the music of salesmanship. Exchange value,
not truth value counts. On it centers the rationality of the status quo, and
all alien rationality is bent to It. As the great words of freedom and fulfillment
are pronounced by campaigning leaders and politicians, on the screens and radios and stages, they turn into meaningless
sounds which obtain meaning only in the
context of propaganda, business, discipline, and relaxation. This assimilation
of
the ideal with reality testifies to the extent
to which the ideal
has been surpassed. It is brought down from the sublimated realm of the soul
or the spirit or the inner man, and translated into operational terms and
problems. Here are the progressive elements of mass culture. The perversion
is indicative of the fact that advanced industrial society is confronted with
the possibility of a materialization of ideals. The capabilities of this society
are progressively reducing the sublimated realm in which the condition of
man was represented, idealized, and indicted. Higher culture becomes part
of the material culture. In this transformation, it loses the greater part
of its truth.
The higher culture
of the West-whose moral, aesthetic, and intellectual values industrial society
still professes -was a pre-technological culture in a functional as well as
chronological sense. Its validity was derived from the experience of a world
which no longer exists and which cannot be recaptured because it is in a strict
sense invalidated by technological society. Moreover, it remained to a large
degree a feudal culture, even when the bourgeois period gave it some of its
most lasting formulations. It was feudal not only because of its confinement
to privileged minorities, not only because of its inherent romantic element
(which will be discussed presently), but also because its authentic works
expressed a conscious, methodical alienation from the entire sphere of business
and industry, and from its calculable and profitable order.
While this bourgeois
order found its rich-and even affirmative-representation in art and literature
(as in the Dutch painters of the seventeenth century, in Goethe's Wilhelm
Meister. in the English novel of the nineteenth century, in Thomas Mann),
it remained an order which was over- shadowed, broken, refuted by another
dimension which was irreconcilably antagonistic to the order of business,
indicting it and denying it. And in the literature, this other dimension is
represented not by the religious. spiritual. moral heroes (who often sustain
the established order) but rather by such disruptive characters as the artist.
the prostitute. the adulteress. the great criminal and outcast, the warrior.
the rebel-poet. the devil. the fool-those who don't earn a living. at least
not in an orderly and normal way.
To
be sure. these characters have not disappeared from the literature of advanced
industrial society. but they survive essentially transformed. The vamp, the
national hero, the beatnik. the neurotic housewife, the gangster, the star,
the charismatic tycoon perform a function very different from and even contrary
to that of their cultural predecessors. They are no longer images of another
way of life but rather freaks or types of the same life. serving as an affirmation
rather than negation of the established order.
Surely,
the world of their predecessors was a backward. pre-technological world, a
world with the good conscience of inequality and toil, in which labor was
still a fated misfortune; but a world in which man and nature were not yet
organized as things and instrumentalities. With its code of forms and manners.
with the style and vocabulary of its literature and philosophy. this past
culture expressed the rhythm and content of a universe in which valleys and
forests, villages and inns, nobles and villains, salons and courts were a
part of the experienced reality. In the verse and prose of this pre-technological
culture is the rhythm of those who wander or ride in carriages. who have the
time and the pleasure to think, contemplate, feel and narrate.
It
is an outdated and surpassed culture. and only dreams and childlike regressions
can recapture it. But this culture is, in some of its decisive elements. also
a post-technological one. Its most
advanced images and positions seem to survive their absorption into administered
comforts and stimuli; they continue to haunt the consciousness with the possibility
of their rebirth in the consummation of technical progress. They are the expression
of that free and conscious alienation from the established forms of life with
which literature and the arts opposed these forms even where they adorned
them.
In
contrast to the Marxian concept, which denotes man's relation to himself and
to his work in capitalist society, the artistic alienation is the conscious
transcendence of the alienated existence-a "higher level" or mediated
alienation. The conflict with the world of progress, the negation of the order
of business, the anti-bourgeois elements in bourgeois literature and art are
neither due to the aesthetic lowliness of this order nor to romantic reaction-nostalgic
consecration of a disappearing stage of civilization. "Romantic is a
term of condescending defamation which is easily applied to disparaging avant-garde
positions, just as the term "decadent" far more often denounces
the genuinely progressive traits of a dying culture than the real factors
of decay. The traditional images of artistic alienation are indeed romantic
in as much as they are in aesthetic incompatibility with the developing society.
This incompatibility is the token of their truth. What they recall and preserve
in memory pertains to the future: images of a gratification that would dissolve
the society which suppresses it. The great surrealist art and literature of
the 'Twenties and 'Thirties has still recaptured them in their subversive
and liberating function. Random examples from the basic literary vocabulary
may indicate the range and the kinship of these images, and the dimension
which they reveal: Soul and Spirit and Heart; la recherche de l’absolu,
Les Fleurs du mal, la femme-enfant; the Kingdom by the Sea; Le Bateau
ivre and the Long-legged Bait; Ferne and Heimat; but also
demon rum, demon machine, and demon money; Don Juan and Romeo; the Master
Builder and When We Dead Awake.
Their
mere enumeration shows that they belong to .a lost dimension. They are invalidated
not because of their literary obsolescence. Some of these images pertain to
con- temporary literature and survive in its most advanced creations. What
has been invalidated is their subversive force, their destructive content-their
trth. In this transformation, they find their home in everyday living. The
alien and alienating oeuvres of intellectual culture become familiar goods
and services. Is their massive reproduction and consumption only a change
in quantity, namely, growing appreciation and understanding, democratization
of culture?
The
truth of literature and art has always been granted (if it was granted at
all) as one of a "higher" order, which should not and indeed did
not disturb the order of business. What has changed in the contemporary period
is the difference between the two orders and their truths. The absorbent power
of society depletes the artistic dimension by assimilating its antagonistic
contents. In the realm of culture, the new totalitarianism manifests itself
precisely in a harmonizing pluralism, where the most contradictory works and
truths peacefully Coexist in indifference.
Prior
to the advent of this cultural reconciliation, literature and art were essentially
alienation, sustaining and protecting the contradiction-the unhappy consciousness
of the divided world, the defeated possibilities, the hopes unfulfilled, and
the promises betrayed. They were a rational, cognitive force, revealing a
dimension of man and nature which Was repressed and repelled in reality. Their
truth was in the illusion evoked, in the insistence on creating a world in
which the terror of life was called up and suspended- mastered by recognition.
This is the miracle of the chef- d’oeuvre; it is the tragedy, sustained
to the last, and the end of tragedy-its impossible solution. To live one's
love and hatred, to live that which one is means defeat, resignation,
and death. The crimes of society, the hell that man has made or man become
unconquerable cosmic forces.
The
tension between the actual and the possible is transfigured into an insoluble
conflict, in which reconciliation is by grace of the oeuvre as form: beauty
as the "promesse de bonheur." In the form of the oeuvre, the actual
circumstances are placed in another dimension where the given reality shows
itself as that which it is. Thus it tells the truth about itself; its language
ceases to be that of deception, ignorance, and submission. Fiction calls the
facts by their name and their reign collapses; fiction subverts everyday experience
and shows it to be mutilated and false. But art has this magic power only
as the power of negation. It can speak its own language only as long as the
images are alive which refuse and refute the established order.
Flaubert's Madame Bovary
is distinguished from equally sad love stories of contemporary literature
by the fact that the humble vocabulary of her real-life counterpart still
contained the heroine's images, or she read stories still containing such
images. Her anxiety was fatal because there was no psychoanalyst, and there
was no psychoanalyst be- cause, in her world, he would not have been capable
of curing her. She would have rejected him as part of the order of Yonville
which destroyed her. Her story was "tragic" be- cause the society
in which it occurred was a backward one, with a sexual morality not yet liberalized,
and a psychology not yet institutionalized. The society that was still to
come has "solved" her problem by suppressing it. Certainly it would
be nonsense to say that her tragedy or that of Romeo and Juliet is solved
in modem democracy, but it would also be nonsense to deny the historical essence
of the tragedy. The developing technological reality undermines not only the
traditional forms but the very basis of the artistic alienation-that is, it
tends to invalidate not only certain "styles" but also the very
substance of art.
To be sure,
alienation is not the sole characteristic of art. An analysis, and even a
statement of the problem is outside the
scope of this work, but
some suggestions may be offered for clarification. Throughout whole periods
of civilization, art appears to be entirely integrated into its society. Egyptian,
Greek, and Gothic art are familiar examples; Bach
and Mozart are usually also cited as testifying to the "positive"
side of art. The place of the work of art in a
pre-technological and two-dimensional culture is very different from that
in a one-dimensional civilization, but alienation characterizes affirmative
as well as negative art.
The
decisive distinction is not the psychological one between art created in joy
and art created in sorrow, between sanity and neurosis, but that between the
artistic and the societal reality. The rupture with the latter, the magic
or rational transgression, is an essential quality of even the most affirmative
art; it is alienated also from the very public to which it is addressed. No
matter how close and familiar the temple or cathedral were to the people who
lived around them, they remained in terrifying or elevating contrast to the
daily life of the slave, the peasant, and the artisan- and perhaps even to
that of their masters.
Whether
ritualized or not, art contains the rationality of negation. In its advanced
positions, it is the Great Refusal -the protest against that which is. The
modes in which man and things are made to appear, to sing and sound and speak,
are modes of refuting,
breaking, and recreating their factual existence.
But these modes of negation pay tribute to the antagonistic society to which
they are linked. Separated from the sphere of labor where society reproduces
itself and its misery, the world of art which they create remains, with all
its truth, a privilege and an illusion.
In
this form it continues, in spite of all democratization and popularization,
through the nineteenth and into the twentieth century. The "high culture"
in which this alienation is celebrated has its own rites and its own style.
The salon, the concert, opera. theater are designed to create and invoke
another dimension of reality. Their attendance re.. quires festive-like preparation;
they cut off and transcend everyday experience.
Now
this essential gap between the arts and the order of the day, kept open in
the artistic alienation, is progressively closed by the advancing technological
society. And with its closing, the Great Refusal is in turn refused; the .other
dimension" is absorbed into the prevailing state of affairs. The works
of alienation are themselves incorporated into this society and circulate
as part and parcel of the equipment which adorns and psychoanalyzes the prevailing
state of affairs. Thus they become commercials-they sell, comfort, or excite.
The
neo-conservative critics of leftist critics of mass culture ridicule the protest
against Bach as background music in the kitchen, against Plato and. Hegel,
Shelley and Baudelaire, Marx and Freud in the drugstore. Instead, they insist
on recognition of the fact that the classics have left the mausoleum and come
to life again, that people are just so much more educated. True, but coming
to life as classics, they come to life as other than themselves; they are
deprived of their antagonistic force, of the estrangement which was the very
dimension of their truth. The intent and function of these works have thus
fundamentally changed. If they once stood in contradiction to the status quo,
this contradiction is now flattened out.
But
such assimilation is historically premature; it establishes cultural equality
while preserving domination. Society is eliminating the prerogatives and privileges
of feudal. aristocratic culture together with its content. The fact that the
transcending truths of the fine arts, the aesthetics of life and thought,
were accessible only to the few wealthy and educated was the fault of a repressive
society. But this fault is not corrected by paperbacks, general education,
long. playing records, and the abolition of formal dress in the theater
and concert hall.[1] The cultural
privileges expressed the injustice of freedom, the contradiction between ideology
and reality, the separation of intellectual from material productivity; but
they also provided a protected realm in which the tabooed truths could survive
in abstract integrity-re- mote from the society which suppressed them.
Now
this remoteness has been removed-and with it the transgression and the indictment.
The text and the tone are still there, but the distance is conquered which
made them Luft von anderen Planeten.[2]
The artistic alienation has become as functional as the architecture of
the new theaters and concert halls in which it is performed. And here too,
the rational and the evil are inseparable. Unquestionably the new architecture
is better, ie., more beautiful and more practical than the monstrosities of
the Victorian era. But it is also more "integrated"-the cultural
center is becoming a fitting part of the shopping center, or municipal
center, or government center. Domination has its own aesthetics, and
democratic domination has its democratic aesthetics. It is good that almost
everyone can now have the fine arts at his fingertips, by just turning
a knob on his set, or by just step- ping into his drugstore. In this
diffusion, however, they be- come cogs in a culture-machine which remakes
their content.
Artistic
alienation succumbs, together with other modes of negation, to the
process of technological rationality. The change reveals its depth and the
degree of its irreversibility if it is seen as a result of technical progress.
The present stage redefines the possibilities of man and nature in accordance
with the new means available for their realization than, in their light, the
pre-technological images are losing their power.
Their
truth value depended to a large degree on an uncomprehended and unconquered
dimension of man and nature. on the narrow limits placed on organization
and manipulation. on the "insoluble core" which resisted integration.
In the fully developed industrial society. this insoluble core is progressively
whittled down by technological rationality. Obviously. the physical
transformation of the world entails the mental transformation of its symbols.
images. and ideas. Obviously. when cities and highways and National Parks
replace the villages, valleys, and forests; when motorboats race over the
lakes and planes cut through the skies-then these areas lose their character
as a qualitatively different reality, as areas of contradiction.
And
since contradiction is the work of the Logos-rational confrontation of "that
which is not" with "that which is"-it must have a medium of
communication. The struggle for this medium. or rather the struggle
against its absorption into the predominant one-dimensionality. shows forth
in the avant-garde efforts to create an estrangement which would make the
artistic truth again communicable.
Bertolt
Brecht has sketched the theoretical foundations for these efforts. The total
character of the established society confronts the playwright with the question
of whether it is still possible to "represent the contemporary world
in the theater"-that is. represent it in such a manner that the spectator
recognizes the truth which the play is to convey. Brecht answers that the
contemporary world can be thus represented only if it is represented as subject
to change[3]-
as the state of negativity which is to be negated. This is doctrine which
has to be learned. comprehended. and acted upon; but the theater is and ought
to be entertainment. pleasure. However, entertainment and learning are not
opposites; entertainment may be the most effective mode of learning. To teach
what the contemporary world really is behind the ideological and material
veil, and how it can be changed, the theater must break the spectator's identification
with the events on the stage. Not empathy and feeling, but distance and reflection
are required. The "estrangement- effect" (Verfremdungseffekt)
is to produce this dissociation in which the world can be recognized as
what it is. "The things of everyday life are lifted out of the realm
of the self-evident.
. . ."[4]
"That
which is 'natural' must assume the features of the extraordinary.
Only in this manner can the laws of cause and effect reveal themselves."[5]
The
"estrangement-effect" is not superimposed on literature. It is rather
literature's own answer to the threat of total behaviorism-the attempt to
rescue the rationality of the negative. In this attempt, the great "conservative"
of literature joins forces with the radical activist. Paul Valery insists
on the inescapable commitment of the poetic language to the negation. The verses of this language
"ne parlent jamais que de choses absentes."[6]
They speak of that which, though absent, haunts
the established universe of discourse and behavior as its most tabooed possibility-
neither heaven nor hell, neither good nor evil but simply “le bonheur."
Thus the poetic language speaks of that which is of this world, which is visible,
tangible, audible in man and nature--and of that which is not seen, not touched,
not heard.
Creating
and moving in a medium which presents the absent, the poetic language is a
language of cognition-but a cognition which subverts the positive. In its
cognitive function, poetry performs the great task of thought:
le travail qui fait vivre en nous ce qui n'existe pas.[7]
Naming the "things
that are absent" is breaking the spell of the things that are; moreover,
it is the ingression of a different order of things into the established one-
“1e commencement d'un monde."[8]
For the expression
of this other order, which is transcendence within the one world, the poetic
language depends on the transcendent elements in ordinary language.[9]
However, the total mobilization of all media for the defense of the established
reality has coordinated the means of expression to the point where communication
of transcending contents becomes technically impossible. The spectre that
has haunted the artistic consciousness since Mallarme-the impossibility of
speaking a non-reified language, of communicating the negative-has ceased
to be a spectre. It has materialized.
The truly avant-garde works
of literature communicate the break with communication. With Rimbaud, and
then with dadaism and surrealism, literature rejects the very structure of
discourse which, throughout the history of culture, has linked artistic and
ordinary language. The propositional system[10]
(with the sentence as its unit of meaning) was the medium in which the two
dimensions of reality could meet, communicate and be communicated. The most
sublime poetry and the lowest prose shared this medium of expression. Then, modem poetry "detruisait les rapports du langage et ramenait le discours a des stations de mots.”[11]
The word refuses
the unifying, sensible rule of the sentence.
It explodes the pre-established structure of meaning and, becoming
an "absolute object" itself, designates an intolerable, self-defeating
universe-a discontinuum. This subversion of the linguistic structure implies
a subversion of the experience of nature:
La Nature y devient un discontinu d'objets solitaires et
terribles, parce qu'ils n'ont que des liaisons virtuelles; personne ne choisit
pour eux un sens privilegie ou un emploi ou un service, personne ne les reduit
a la signification d'un comportement mental on d'une intention, c'est-a-dire finalement d'une tendresse
. . . Ces
mots-objets sans liaison, pares de toute la violence de leur eclatement . . . ces
mots poetiques excluent les hommes; il n'y a pas d'humanisme poetique de la
modernite: ce discours debout est un discours plein de terreur, c'est-a-dire
qu'il met l'homme en liaison non pas avec les autres hommes, mais avec les
images les plus inhumaines de la Nature; le ciel, l'enfer, le sacre, l'enfance,
la folie, la matière pure, etc.[12]
The
traditional stuff of art (images, harmonies, colors) re-appears only as "quotes,"
residues of past meaning in a con- text of refusal. Thus, the surrealist paintings
sind der Inbegriff dessen, was die Sachlichkeit mit einem
Tabu zudeckt, weil es sie an ihr eigenes dinghaftes Wesen gemahnt und daran,
dass sie nicht damit fertig wird, dass ihre Rationalität irrational bleibt.
Der Surrealismus sammelt ein, was die Sachlichkeit den Menschen versagt; die
Entstellungen bezeugen, was das Verbot dem Begehrten antat. Durch sie errettete
er das Veraltete, ein Album von Idiosynkrasien,
in denen der Glücksanspruch verraucht, den die Menschen in ihrer eigenen technifizierten
Welt verweigert finden.[13]
Or, the work
of Bertolt Brecht preserves the "promesse de bonheur",-
contained in romance and Kitsch (moonshine and the blue sea; melody and
sweet home; loyalty and love) by making it into political ferment. His characters
sing of lost paradises and of unforgettable hope ("Siehst
du den Mond über Soho, Geliebter?' "Jedoch eines Tages, und der Tag
war blau." "Zuerst war es immer Sonntag." "Und ein Schiff
mit acht Segeln." "Alter Bilbao Mond, Da wo noch Liebe lohnt")-and
the song is one of cruelty and greed, exploitation, cheating, and lies. The
deceived sing of their deception, but they learn (or have learned) its causes,
and it is only in learning the causes (and how to cope with them) that they
regain the truth of their dream.
The efforts
to recapture the Great Refusal in the language of literature suffer the fate
of being absorbed by what they refute. As modem classics, the avant-garde
and the beatniks share in the function of entertaining without endangering
the good conscience of the men of good will. This absorption is justified
by technical progress; the refusal is refuted by the alleviation of misery
in the advanced industrial society. The liquidation of high culture is a by-
product of the conquest of nature, and of the progressing conquest of scarcity.
Invalidating the cherished
images of transcendence by incorporating them into its omnipresent daily reality,
this society testifies to the extent to which insoluble conflicts are becoming
manageable-to which tragedy and romance, archetypal
dreams and anxieties are being made susceptible to technical solution and
dissolution. The psychiatrist takes care of the Don Juans, Romeos, Hamlets,
Fausts, as he takes care of Oedipus-he cures them. The rulers of the world
are losing their metaphysical features. Their appearance on television, at
press conferences, in parliament, and at public hearings is hardly suitable
for drama beyond that of the advertisement,[14]
while the consequences of their actions surpass
the scope of the drama.
The
prescriptions for inhumanity and injustice are being administered by a rationally
organized bureaucracy, which is, however, invisible at its vital center. The
soul contains few secrets and longings which cannot be sensibly discussed,
analyzed, and polled. Solitude, the very condition which sustained the individual
against and beyond his society, has become technically impossible. Logical
and linguistic analysis demonstrate that the old metaphysical problems are
illusory problems; the quest for the "meaning" of things can be
reformulated as the quest for the meaning of words, and the established universe
of discourse and behavior can pro- vide perfectly adequate criteria for the
answer.
It
is a rational universe which, by the mere weight and capabilities of its apparatus,
blocks all escape. In its relation to the reality of daily life, the high
culture of the past was many things-opposition and adornment, outcry and resignation.
But it was also the appearance of the realm of freedom: the refusal to behave.
Such refusal cannot be blocked without a compensation which seems more satisfying
than ~e refusal. The conquest and unification of opposites, which finds its ideological glory
in the transformation of higher Into popular culture, takes place on a material
ground of increased satisfaction. This is also the ground which allows
a sweeping desublimation.
Artistic alienation is
sublimation. It creates the images of conditions which are irreconcilable
with the established Reality Principle but which, as cultural images, become
tolerable, even edifying and useful. Now this imagery is in- validated. Its
incorporation into the kitchen, the office, the shop; its commercial release
for business and fun is, in a sense, desublimation-replacing mediated by immediate
gratification. But it is desublimation practiced from a "position of
strength" on the part of society, which can afford to grant more than
before because its interests have become the innermost drives of its citizens,
and because the joys which it grants promote social cohesion and contentment.
The Pleasure Principle
absorbs the Reality Principle; sexuality is liberated (or rather liberalized)
in socially constructive forms. This notion implies that there are repressive
modes of desublimation,[15]
compared with which the sublimated drives and objectives contain more deviation,
more freedom, and more refusal to heed the social taboos. It appears that
such repressive desublimation is indeed operative in the sexual sphere, and
here, as in the desublimation of higher culture, it operates as the by-product
of the social controls of technological reality, which extend liberty while
intensifying domination. The link between desublimation and technological
society can perhaps best be illuminated by discussing the change in the social
use of instinctual energy.
In this society, not all
the time spent on and with mechanisms is labor time (i.e., unpleasurable but
necessary toil), and not all the energy saved by the machine is labor power.
Mechanization has also "saved" libido, the energy of the Life Instincts-that
is, has barred it from previous modes of realization. This is the kernel of
truth in the romantic contrast
between the modem traveler and the wandering poet or artisan, between assembly
line and handicraft, town and city, factory-produced bread and the home-made
loaf, the sailboat and the outboard motor, etc. True, this romantic pre-technical
world was permeated with misery, toil, and filth, and these in turn were the
background of all pleasure and joy. Still, there was a "landscape,"
a medium of libidinal experience which no longer exists.
With
its disappearance (itself a historical prerequisite of progress) , a whole
dimension of human activity and passivity has been de-eroticized. The environment
from which the individual could obtain pleasure-which he could cathect as
gratifying almost as an extended zone of the body-has been rigidly reduced.
Consequently, the "universe" of libidinous cathexis is likewise
reduced. The effect is a localization and contraction of libido, the
reduction of erotic to sexual experience and satisfaction.[16]
For
example, compare love-making in a meadow and in an automobile, on a lovers'
walk outside the town walls and on a Manhattan street. In the former cases,
the environment partakes of and invites libidinal cathexis and tends to be
eroticized. Libido transcends beyond the immediate erotogenic zones-a process
of nonrepressive sublimation. In contrast, a mechanized environment seems
to block such self-transcendence of libido. Impelled in the striving to extend
the field of erotic gratification, libido becomes less "polymorphous,"
less capable of eroticism beyond localized sexuality, and the latter is
intensified. Thus diminishing erotic and intensifying sexual energy, the technological
reality limits the scope of sublimation. It also reduces the need
for sublimation. In the mental apparatus, the tension between that which
is desired and that which is permitted seems considerably lowered, and the
Reality Principle no longer seems to require a sweeping and painful transformation
of instinctual needs. The individual must adapt himself to a world which does
not seem to demand the denial of his innermost needs-a world which is not
essentially hostile.
The
organism is thus being preconditioned for the spontaneous acceptance of what
is offered. Inasmuch as the greater liberty involves a contraction rather
than extension and development of instinctual needs, it works for rather
than against the status quo of general repression-one might speak of
"institutionalized de sublimation." The latter appears to be a vital
factor in the making of the authoritarian personality of our time.
It
has often been noted that advanced industrial civilization operates with a
greater degree of sexual freedom- "operates" in the sense that the
latter becomes a market value and a factor of social mores.. Without ceasing
to be an instrument of labor, the body is allowed to exhibit its sexual features
in the everyday work world and in work relations. This is one of the unique
achievements of industrial society-rendered possible by the reduction of dirty
and heavy physical labor; by the availability of cheap, attractive clothing,
beauty culture, and physical hygiene; by the requirements of the advertising
industry, etc. The sexy office and sales girls, the handsome, virile junior
executive and floor walker are highly marketable commodities, and the possession
of suitable mistresses-once the prerogative of kings, princes, and lords-facilitates
the career of even the less exalted ranks in the business community.
Functionalism,
going artistic, promotes this trend. Shops and offices open themselves through
huge glass windows and expose their personnel; inside, high counters and non-
transparent partitions are coming down. The corrosion of privacy in massive
apartment houses and suburban homes breaks the barrier which formerly separated
the individual from the public existence and exposes more easily the attractive
qualities of other wives and other husbands.
This
socialization is not contradictory but complementary to the de-erotization
of the environment. Sex is integrated into work and public relations. and
is thus made more susceptible to (controlled) satisfaction. Technical progress
and more comfortable living permit the systematic inclusion of libidinal components
into the realm of commodity production and exchange. But no matter how controlled
the mobilization of instinctual energy may be (it sometimes amounts to a scientific
management of libido), no matter how much it may serve as a prop for the status
quo-it is also gratifying to the managed individuals, just as racing the outboard
motor, pushing the power lawn mower, and speeding the automobile are fun.
This
mobilization and administration of libido may account for much of the voluntary
compliance, the absence of terror, the pre-established harmony between individual
needs and socially-required desires, goals, and aspirations. The technological
and political conquest of the transcending factors in human existence, so
characteristic of advanced industrial civilization, here asserts itself in
the instinctual sphere: satisfaction in a way which generates submission and
weakens the rationality of protest.
The
range of socially permissible and desirable satisfaction is greatly enlarged,
but through this satisfaction, the Pleasure Principle
is reduced-deprived of the claims which are irreconcilable with the established
society. Pleasure, thus adjusted, generates submission.
In
contrast to the pleasures of adjusted desublimation, sublimation preserves
the consciousness of the renunciations which the repressive society inflicts
upon the individual, and thereby preserves the need for liberation. To be
sure, all sublimation is enforced by the power of society, but the unhappy
consciousness of this power already breaks through alienation. To be sure,
all sublimation accepts the social barrier to instinctual gratification, but
it also transgresses this barrier.
The
Superego, in censoring the unconscious and in implanting conscience, also
censors the censor because the developed conscience registers the forbidden
evil act not only in the individual but also in his society. Conversely, loss
of conscience due to the satisfactory liberties granted by an unfree society
makes for a happy consciousness which facilitates acceptance of the
misdeeds of this society. It is the token of declining autonomy and comprehension.
Sublimation demands a high degree of autonomy and comprehension; it is mediation
between the conscious and the unconscious, between the primary and secondary
processes, between the intellect and instinct, renunciation and rebellion.
In its most accomplished modes, such as in the artistic oeuvre, sublimation
becomes the cognitive power which de- feats suppression while bowing to it.
In
the light of the cognitive function of this mode of sublimation, the desublimation
rampant in advanced industrial society reveals its truly conformist function.
This liberation of sexuality (and of aggressiveness) frees the instinctual
drives from much of the unhappiness and discontent that elucidate the repressive
power of the established universe of satisfaction. To be sure, there is pervasive
unhappiness, and the happy consciousness is shaky enough-a thin surface over
fear, frustration, and disgust. This unhappiness lends itself easily to political
mobilization; without room for conscious development, it may become the instinctual
reservoir for a new fascist way of life and death. But there are many ways
in which the unhappiness beneath the happy consciousness may be turned into
a source of strength and cohesion for the social order. The conflicts of the
unhappy individual now seem far more
amenable to cure than those which made for Freud's "discontent in civilization,"
and they seem more adequately defined in terms of the "neurotic personality
of our time" than in terms of the eternal struggle between Eros and Thanatos.
The
way in which controlled desublimation may weaken the instinctual revolt against
the established Reality Principle may be illuminated by the contrast between
the representation of sexuality in classical and romantic literature and in
our contemporary literature. If one selects, from among the works which are,
in their very substance and inner form, determined by the erotic commitment,
such essentially different examples as Racine's Phedre, Goethe's Wahlverwandtschaften,
Baudelaire's Les Fleurs du Mal, Tolstoy's Anna Karenina, sexuality
consistently appears in a highly sublimated, "mediated," reflective
form-but in this form, it is absolute, uncompromising, unconditional. The
dominion of Eros is, from the beginning, also that of Thanatos. Fulfillment
is destruction, not in a moral or sociological but in an ontological sense.
It is beyond good and evil, beyond social morality, and thus it remains beyond
the reaches of the established Reality Principle, which this Eros refuses
and explodes.
In
contrast, desublimated sexuality is rampant in O’Neill's
alcoholics and Faulkner's savages, in the Streetcar Named Desire and
under the Hot Tin Roof, in Lolita, in all the stories of Hollywood
and New York orgies, and the ad- ventures of suburban housewives. This is
infinitely more realistic, daring, uninhibited. It is part and parcel of the
society in which it happens, but nowhere its negation. What happens is surely
wild and obscene, virile and tasty, quite immoral-and, precisely because of
that, perfectly harmless.
Freed
from the sublimated form which was the very token of its irreconcilable dreams-a
form which is the style, the language in which the story is told-sexuality
turns into a vehicle for the bestsellers of oppression. It could not be said
of any of the sexy women in contemporary literature what Balzac says of the
whore Esther: that hers was the tenderness which blossoms only in infinity.
This society turns everything it touches into a potential source of progress
and of exploitation, of drudgery and satisfaction, of freedom
and of oppression. Sexuality is no exception.
The
concept of controlled desublimation would imply the possibility of a simultaneous
release of repressed sexuality and aggressiveness, a possibility which
seems incompatible with Freud's notion of the fixed quantum of instinctual
energy available for distribution between the two primary drives. According
to Freud, strengthening of sexuality (libido) would necessarily involve weakening
of aggressiveness, and vice versa. However, if the socially permitted and
encouraged release of libido would be that of partial and localized sexuality,
it would be tantamount to an actual compression of erotic energy, and this
desublimation would be compatible with the growth of unsublimated as well
as sublimated forms of aggressiveness. The latter is rampant throughout contemporary
industrial society.
Has
it attained a degree of normalization where the individuals are getting used
to the risk of their own dissolution and disintegration in the course of normal
national preparedness? Or is this acquiescence entirely due to their impotence
to do much about it? In any case, the risk of avoidable, man-made destruction
has become normal equipment in the mental as well as material household of
the people, so that it can no longer serve to indict or refute the established
social system. Moreover, as part of their daily household, it may even tie
them to this system. The economic and political connection between the absolute
enemy and the high standard of living (and the desired level of employment!)
is transparent enough, but also rational enough to be accepted.
Assuming
that the Destruction Instinct (in the last analysis: the Death Instinct) is
a large component of the energy which feeds the technical conquest of man
and nature it seems that society's growing capacity to manipulate technical
progress also increases its capacity to manipulate and control this instinct,
i.e., to satisfy it "productively." Then social cohesion would
be strengthened at the deepest instinctual roots. The supreme risk, and even
the fact of war would meet, not only with helpless acceptance, but also with
instinctual approval on the part of the victims. Here too, we would have controlled
desublimation.
Institutionalized
desublimation thus appears to be an aspect of the "conquest of transcendence"
achieved by the one-dimensional society. Just as this society tends to reduce,
and even absorb opposition (the qualitative difference!) in the realm of politics
and higher culture, so it does in the instinctual sphere. The result is the
atrophy of the mental organs for grasping the contradictions and the alternatives
and, in the one remaining dimension of technological rationality, the Happy
Consciousness comes to prevail.
It
reflects the belief that the real is rational, and that the established system,
in spite of everything. delivers the goods. The people are led to find in
the productive apparatus the effective agent of thought and action to which
their personal thought and action can and must be surrendered. And in this
transfer, the apparatus also assumes the role of a moral agent. Conscience
is absolved by reification, by the general necessity of things.
In
this general necessity, guilt has no place. One
man can give the signal that liquidates hundreds and thousands of people, then
declare himself free from all pangs of conscience,
and live happily ever after. The antifascist powers who beat fascism on the
battlefields reap the benefits of the Nazi scientists, generals, and engineers;
they have the historical advantage of the late-comer. What begins as the horror
of the concentration camps turns into the practice of training people for
abnormal conditions-a subterranean human existence and the daily intake of
radioactive nourishment. A Christian minister declares that it does not contradict
Christian principles to prevent with all avail- able means your neighbor from
entering your bomb shelter. Another Christian minister contradicts his colleague
and says it does. Who is right? Again, the neutrality of technological rationality
shows forth over and above politics, and again it shows forth as spurious,
for in both cases, it serves the politics of domination.
"'The
world of the concentration camps. . . was not an exceptionally monstrous society.
What we saw there was the image, and in a sense the quintessence, of the infernal
society into which we are plunged every day."[17]
It
seems that even the most hideous transgressions can be repressed in such a
manner that, for all practical purposes, they have ceased to be a danger for
society. Or, if their eruption leads to functional disturbances in the individual
(as in the case of one Hiroshima pilot), it does not disturb the functioning
of society. A mental hospital
manages the disturbance.
The
Happy Consciousness has no limits-it arranges games with death and disfiguration
in which fun, team work, and strategic importance mix in rewarding social
harmony. The Rand Corporation, which unites scholarship, research, the military,
the climate, and the good life, reports such games in
a style of absolving cuteness, in its "RANDom News" volume 9, number
1, under the heading BETTER SAFE THAN SORRY. The rockets are rattling,
the H-bomb is waiting, and the space-flights are flying, and the problem is
"'how to guard the nation and the free world." In all this, the
military planners are worried, for ccthe cost of taking chances, of experimenting
and making a mistake, may be fearfully high." But here RAND comes in;
RAND relieves, and "devices like RAND'S SAFE come into the picture."
The picture into which they come is unclassified. It is a picture in which
,.the world becomes a map, missiles merely symbols [long live the soothing
power of symbolism!], and wars just [just] plans and calculations written
down on paper. . ." In this picture, RAND has transfigured the world
into an interesting technological game, and one can relax-the "military
planners can gain valuable 'synthetic' experience with- out risk.-
PLAYING
THE GAME
To
understand the game one should participate, for understanding is "in
the experience.”
Because
SAFE players have come from a1most every department at RAND as well as the
Air Force, we might find a physicist, an engineer, and an economist on the
Blue team. The Red team will represent a similar cross-section.
The
first day is taken up by a joint briefing on what the game is all about and
a study of the rules. When the teams are finally seated around the maps in
their respective rooms the game begins. Each team receives its policy statement
from the Game Director. These statements, usually prepared
by
a member of the Control Group, give an estimate of the world situation at
the time of playing, some information on the
policy of the opposing team, the objectives to
be met by the team, and the team's budget. (The policies
are changed for each game to explore
a wide range
of strategic possibilities.)
In our
hypothetical game, Blue's objective is to maintain a deterrent capability
throughout the game-that is, maintain a force that is capable of striking
back at Red so Red will be unwilling to risk an attack. (Blue also receives
some information on the Red policy.)
Red's
policy is to achieve force superiority over Blue.
The
budgets of Blue and Red compare with actual defense budgets. . .
It
is comforting to hear that the game has been played since 1961 at RAND,
"down in our labyrinthine basement- somewhere under the Snack Bar,"
and that "Menus on the walls of the Red and Blue rooms list available
weapons and . hardware that the teams buy. . . About seventy items in all."
There is a "Game Director" who interprets game rules, for although
"the rule book complete with diagrams and illustrations is 66 pages,"
problems inevitably arise during the play. The Game Director also has another
important function: "without previously notifying the players,"
he "introduces war to get a measure of the effectiveness of the
military forces in being." But then, the caption announces "Coffee,
Cake, and Ideas." Relax! The "game continues through the remaining
periods-to 1972 when it ends. Then the Blue and Red teams bury the missiles
and sit down together for coffee and cake at the 'post mortem' session."
But don't relax too much: there is "one real-world situation that
can't be transposed effectively to SAFE," and that is- "negotiation."
We are grateful for it: the one hope that is left in the real world situation
is beyond the reaches of RAND.
Obviously,
in the realm of the Happy Consciousness, guilt feeling has no place, and the
calculus takes care of conscience. When the whole is at stake, there is no
crime except that of rejecting the whole, or not defending it. Crime, guilt,
and guilt feeling become a private affair. Freud revealed in the psyche of
the individual the crimes of man-kind, in the individual case history the
history of the whole. This fatal link is successfully suppressed. Those who
identify themselves with the whole, who are installed as the leaders and defenders
of the whole can make mistakes, but they cannot do wrong-they are not guilty.
They may become guilty again when this identification no longer holds, when
they are gone.
[1] No misunderstanding: as far as they go, paperbacks, general education, an long-playing records are truly a blessing.
[2] Stefan George, in Arnold Schönberg's Quartet in F Sharp Minor. See Th. W. Adorno, Philosophie der neuen Musik. (J.C.B. Mohr, Tübingen, 1949), p. 19 ff.
[3] Bertolt Brecht, Schriften zum Theater (Berlin and Frankfurt, Suhrkamp, 1957), p. 7, 9.
[4] Ibid., p. 76.
[5] Ibid., p. 63.
[6] Paul Valery, Poésie et Pensée Abstraite,
in Oeuvres (édition de la Pléiade, Paris, Gallimard, 1957), vol I,
p. 1324.
[7] "the effort which makes live m us that
which does Dot exist." Ibid., p. 1333.
[8] Ibid., p.
1327 (with reference to
the language of music).
[9] See chapter VII below.
[10] See chapter V below.
[11] "destroyed the relationships of the language and brought discourse back to the stage of words." Roland Barthes, Le Degré zéro de l’écriture. Paris, Editions du Sevil,1953, p. 72 (my emphasis).
[12] "Nature becomes a discontinuum of solitary and terrible objects because they have only virtual links. No one chooses for them a privileged meaning or use or service. No one reduces them to mean a mental attitude or an intention, that is to say, in the last analysis, a tenderness. . . . These word objects without link, armed with all the violence of their explosive power . . . these poetic words exclude men. There is no poetic humanism that it entity : this heady discourse is a discourse full of terror which means nature relates man not to other men, but to the most inhuman images mature, heaven, hell, the sacred, childhood, madness, pure matter etc. Ibid., p. 73 f.
[13] "[Surrealist paintings] . . . gathered together what functionalism
covers with taboos because it betrays reality as reification and the irrational
in its rationality. Surrealism recaptures what functionalism denies to man;
the distortions demonstrate what the taboo did to the desired. Thus surrealism
rescues the obsolete--an album of idiosyncrasies where the claim for happiness
evaporates that which the technified world refuses to man." Theodor W. Adorno, Noten
zur Literatur. (Berlin-Frankfurt, Suhrkamp, 1958), p. 160.
[14] The legendary revolutionary hero still exists who can defy even television and the press--his world is that of the "underdeveloped' countries
[15] See my book Eros and Civilization (Boston: Beacon Press, 1954), esp. Chapter X.
[16] In accordance with the terminology used in
the later works of Freud: sexuality as "specialized" partial drive;
Eros as that of the entire organism
[17] E. Ionesco, in Nouvelle Revue Francaise, July 1956, as quoted in London Times Literary Supplement, March 4, 1960. Herman Kahn suggests in a 1959 RAND study (RM-2206-RC) that "a study should be made of the survival of populations in environments similar to overcrowded shelters (concentration camps, Russian and German use of crowded freight cars, troopships, crowded prisons. . . etc.). Some useful guiding principles might be found and adapted to the shelter program.”