The Ideology of Modernism - György Lukács PDF
The Ideology of Modernism - György Lukács PDF
The Ideology of Modernism - György Lukács PDF
Volume Thirty-three
BOARD
OF
EDITORS
of
WORLD
PERSPECTIVES
GEORG LUKACS
ROBERT M. MAcIvER
JACQUES MARITAIN
J.
ROBERT OPPENHEIMER
I. I.
RABI
With a preface by
GEORGE STEINER
SARVEPALLI RADHAKRISHNAN
ALEXANDER SACHS
Contents
WORLD
by George Steiner
1
7
I.
II.
III.
1962
64: 12675
17
47
93
formative principle governing the narrative pattern and the presentation of character. Technique here is something absolute;
it is part and parcel of the aesthetic ambition informing ULysses.
With Thomas Mann, on the other hand, the monologue interiw,. is simply a technical device, allowing the author to explore
aspects of Goethe's wofld which would not have been otherwise
available. Goethe's experience is not presented as confined to
momentary sense-impressions. The artist reaches down to the
core of Goethe's personality, to the complexity of his relations
with his own past, present, and even future eXperience. The
in the pattern of the whole. However unconventional the presentation, the compositional principle is that of the traditional
epic; in the way the pace is controlled, and the transitions and
climaxes are organized, the ancient rules of epic narration are
faithfully observed.
It would be absurd, in view of Joyce's artistic ambitions and
his manifest abilities, to qualify the exaggerated attention he
gives to the detailed recording of sense-data, and his comparative neglect of ideas and emotions, as artistic failure. All this
was in conformity with Joyce's artistic intentions; and, by use
of such techniques, he may be said to have achieved them satisfactorily. But between Joyce's intentions and those of Thomas
Mann there is a total opposition. The perpetually oscillating
patterns of sense- and memory-data, their powerfully chargedbut aimless and directionless-fields of force, give rise to an epic
structure which is static, reflecting a belief in the basically static
character of events.
18
These opposed views of the world--<iynamic and developmental on the one hand, static and sensational on the otherare of crucial importance in examining the two schools of literature I have mentioned. I shall return to the opposition later.
Here, I want only to point out that an exclusive emphasis on
formal matters can lead to serious misunderstanding of the
character of an artist's work.
What determines the style of a given work of art? How does
the intention detennine the form ? (We are concerned here, of
course, with the intention realized in the work; it need not coincide with the writer's conscious intention). The distinctions
that concern us are not those between stylistic 'techniques' in
the formalistic sense. It is the view of the world, the ideology or
weltanschauung underlying a writer's work, that counts. And
it is the writer's attempt to reproduce this view of the world
which constitutes his 'intention' and is the fonnative principle
underlying the style of a given piece of writing. Looked at in
this way, style ceases to be a formalistic category. Rather, it IS
rooted in content; it is the specific form of a specific content.
Content detennines fonn. But there is no content of which
Man himself is not the focal point. However various the
donnees of literature (a particular experience, a didactic purpose), the basic question is, and will remain: what is Man?
Here is a point of division: if we put the question in abstract,
philosophical terms, leaving aside all formal considerations, we
arrive-for the realist school-at the traditional Aristotelian
dictum (which was also readred by other than purely aesthetic
considerations): Man is zoon politikon, a social animal. The
Aristotelian dictum is applicable to all great realistic literature.
Achilles and Werther, Oedipus and Tom Jones, Antigone and
Anna Karenina: their individual eXistence-their Sein an sich,
in the Hegelian terminology; their 'ontological being', as a more
fashionable terminology has it-cannot be distinguished from
their social and historical environment. Their human significance, their specific indiViduality cannot be separated from the
context in which they were created.
19
THE IDEOLOGY OF
MODERNISM
20
21
22
23
this experience:
24
25
26
27
28
29
THE IDEOLOGY OF
MODERNISM
ever indefinite the structure and content of this new order, the
will towards its more exact definition was not lacking.
How different the protest of writers like Musil! The terminus
a quo (the corrupt society of our time) is inevitably the main
source of energy, since the terminus ad quem (the escape into
psychopathology) is a mere abstraction. The rejection of modern
reality is purely subjective. Considered in terms of man's relation with his environment, it lacks both content and direction.
And this lack is exaggerated still further by the character of the
terminus ad quem. For the protest is an empty gesture, expressing
nausea, or discomfort, or longing. Its content-or rather lack of
content-derives from the fact that such a view of life cannot
impart a sense of direction. These writers are not wholly wrong
in believing that psychopathology is their surest refuge; it is the
ideological complement of their historical position.
This obsession with the pathological is not only to be found
in literature. Freudian psychoanalysis is its most obvious expression. The treatment of the subject is only superficially different
from that in modern literature. As everybody knows, Freud's
starting point was 'everyday life'. In order to explain 'slips' and
day-dreams, however, he had to have recourse to psychopathology. In his lectures, speaking of resistance and repression, he
says: 'Our interest in the general psychology of symptom-formation increases as we understand to what extent the study of
pathological conditions can shed light on the workings of the
normal mind: Freud believed he had found the key to the understanding of the normal personality in the psychology of the
abnormal. This belief is still more evident in the typology of
Kretschmer, which also assumes that psychological abnormalities
can explain normal psychology. It is only when we compare
Freud's psychology with that of Pavlov, who takes the Hippocratic view that mental abnormality is a deviation from a norm,
that we see it in its true light.
Clearly, this is not strictly a scientific or literary-critical
problem. It is an ideological problem, deriving from the ontological dogma of the solitariness of man. The literature of realism,
30
31
the rescuer himself sinks into idiocy. The story is told through
the parallel streams of consciousness of the idiot and of his
rescuer.
32
33
dispense with it, or can replace it with its dogma of the condition
humainc. A naturalistic style is bound to be the result. This
state of affairs-which to my mind characterizes all modernist
art of the past fifty years-is disguised by critics who systematic.
ally glorify the modernist movement. By concentrating on
formal criteria, by isolating technique from content and exag
gerating its importance, these critics refrain from judgment on
the social or artistic significance of subjectmatter. They are unable, in consequence, to make the aesthetic distinction between
realism and naturalism. This distinction depends on the presence
or absence in a work of art of a 'hierarchy of significance' in the
situations and characters presented. Compared with this, formal
categories are of secondary importance. That is why it is possible
to speak of the basically naturalistic character of modernist
literature-and to see here the literary expression of an ideological continuity. This is not to deny that variations in style reflect
changes in society. But the particular form this principle of
naturalistic arbitrariness, this lack of hierarchic structnre, may
take is not decisive. We encounter it in the all-determining
'social conditions' of Naturalism, in Symbolism's impressionist
34
THE IDEOLOGY OF
MODERNISM
35
selection. Let me go further: underlying the problem is a profound ethIcal complex, reflected in the composition of the work
itself. Every human action is based on a presupposition of its
inherent meaningfulness, at least to the subject. Absence of
meaning makes a mockery of action and reduces art to
naturalistic description.
Clearly, there can be no literature without at least the appearance of change or development. This conclusion should not be
i~terpreted in a narrowly metaphysical senSe. We have already
dIagnosed the obsession with psychopathology in modernist
lit~rature."s a desire to escape from the reality of capitalism. But
thIS Imphes the absolute primacy of the terminus a quo, the
condition from which it is desired to escape. Any movement
~owards a terminus ad quem is condemned to impotence. As the
Ideology of most modernist writers asserts the unalterability of
outward reality (even if this is reduced to a mere state of consciousness) human activity is, a priori, rendered impotent and
robbed of meaning.
The apprehension of reality to which this leads is most consistently and convincingly realized in the work of Kafka. Kafka
remarks of Josef K., as he is being led to execution: 'He thought
of flies, their tiny limbs breaking as they struggle away from the
fly-paper.' This mood of total impotence, of paralysis in the face
of the unintelligible power of circumstances, informs all his
work. Though the action of The Castle takes a different, even
an opposite, direction to that of The Trial, this view of the world,
from the perspective of a trapped and struggling fly, is all-pervasive. This experience, this vision of a world dominated by angst
and of man at the mercy of incomprehensible terrors makes
Kafka's work the very type of modernist art. Techniqt:es, elsewhere of merely formal significance, are used here to evoke a
primitive awe in the presence of an utterly strange and hostile
reality. Kafka's angst is the experience par excellence of
touch with the truth that was its raison d' etre. Composers are no
longer equal to the emotional presuppositions of their modernism. And that is why modernist music has failed. The diminution of the original angst-obsessed vision of life (whether due,
as Adorno thinks, to inability to respond to the magnitude of
the horror or, as I believe, to the fact that this obsession with
angst among bourgeois intellectuals has already begun to recede)
has brought about a loss of substance in modern music, and
destroyed its authenticity as a modernist art-form.
This is a shrewd analysis of the paradoxical situation of the
modernist artist, particularly where he is trying to express deep
and genuine experience. The deeper the experience, the greater
the damage to the artistic whole. But this tendency towards
disintegration, this loss of artistic unity, cannot be written off
as a mere fashion, the product of experimental gimmicks. Modern
philosophy, after all, encountered these problems long before
modern literature, painting or music. A case in point is the
prob~
lem of time. Subjective Idealism had already separated time, abstractly conceived, from historical change and particularity of
place. As if this separation were insufficient for the new age of
imperialism, Bergson widened it further. Expelienced time, subjective time, now became identical with real time; the rift between this time and that of the objective world was complete.
Bergson and other philosophers who took up and varied this
theme claimed that their concept of time alone afforded insight
into authentic, i.e. subjective, reality. The same tendency soon
made its appearance in literature.
36
37
modernism.
38
39
40
41
Allegory thus goes beyond beauty. What ruins are in the phYSical
world, allegOries are in the world of the mind.
not prevent the materiality of the world from undergoing permanent alteration, from becoming transferable and arbitrary.
Just this, modernist writers maintain, is typical of their own
apprehension of reality. Yet presented in this way, the world
becomes, as Benjamin puts it, 'exalted and depreCIated at the
same time'. For the conviction that phenomena are not ultimately
transferable is rooted in a belief in the world's rationality and
in man's ability to penetrate its secrets. In realistic literature each
descriptive detail is both individual and typical. Modern allegory,
and modernist ideology, however, deny the typical. By destroying the coherence of the world, they reduce detail to the level
of mere particularity (once again, the connection between
modernism and naturalism is plain). Detail, in its allegorical
transferability, though brought into a direct, if paradoxical connection with transcendence, becomes an abstract function of the
transcendence to which it points. Modernist literature thus replaces concrete typicality with abstract particularity.
We are here applying Benjamin's paradox directly to aesthetics
and criticism, and particularly to the aesthetics of modernism.
And, though we have reversed his scale of values, we have not
deviated from the course of his argument. Elsewhere, he speaks
out even more plainly-as though the Baroque mask had fallen,
revealing the modernist skull underneath:
not hesitate to point them out: 'Every person, every object, every
relationship can stand for something else. This transferability
constitutes a devastating, though just, judgment on the profane
world-which is thereby branded as a world where such things
are of small importance.' Benjamin knows, of course, that although details are 'transferable', and thus insignificant, they are
not banished from art altogether. On the contrary. Precisely in
modern art, with which he is ultimately concerned, descriptive
detail is often of an extraordinary sensuous, suggestive powerwe think again of Kafka. But this, as We showed in the case of
Musil (a writer who does not conSCiously aim at allegory) does
42
43
his spectral character from the fact that his own non-existence is
the ground of all existence; and the portrayed reality, uncannily
accurate as it is, is spectral iu the shadow of that dependence.
The ouly purpose of transcendence-the intangible nichtendes
Nichts-is to reveal the facies hippocratica of the world.
That abstract particularity which we saw to be the aesthetic
consequence of allegory reaches its high mark in Kafka. He is
a marvellous observer; the spectral character of reality affects
him so deeply that the simplest episodes have an oppressive,
nightmarish immediacy. As an artist, he is not content to evoke
44
45
Monnayeurs as a novel. But its structure suffered from a characteristically modernist schizophrenia: it was supposed to be
written by the man who was also the hero of the novel. And, in
practice, Gide was forced to admit that no novel, no work of
literature could be constructed in that way. We have here a
practical demonstration that-as Benjamin showed in another
context-modernism means not the enrichment, but the negation of art.
To
46
47