Poetics of Relation: Edouard Glissant
Poetics of Relation: Edouard Glissant
Poetics of Relation: Edouard Glissant
EDOUARD GLISSANT
Poetics of Relation
3487495
translated by Betsy Wing
Ann Arbor
2010 7 6
A CIP catalog record for this book is available fram the British Library.
Imaginary 1
APPROACHES
The Open Boat 5
Errantry, Exile Il
Poetics 23
A Rooted Errantry 37
ELEMENTS
Repetitions 45
Expanse and Filiation 47
Closed Place, Open Word 63
Concerning a Baroque Abroad in the World 77
Concerning the Poem's Information 81
PATHS
Creolizations 89
Dictate, Decree 91
To Build the Tower 103
Transparency and Opacity III
The Black Beach 121
THEORIES
Relation 131
The Relative and Chaos 133
Distancing, Determining 141
That That 159
Relinked, (Relayed), Related 169
POETICS
Generalization 183
That Those Beings Be Not Being lB5
For Opacity 189
Open Circle, Lived Relation 195
The Burning Beach 205
Notes 211
References 225
x
Glossary
xxii
vodou ritual), and aIl the canny detours, diversions, and
ruses required to deflect the repeated attempts to recu-
perate this cultural subversion.
mornes: The hills rising abruptly behind the Caribbean
beaches in Martinique. Deeply forested in places still, they
are the savage and life-preserving land in which the
Maroons took refuge.
Pitons: The high,jagged, voIcanic mountains.
Quechua: Amerindians of South America known for their
obstinate silence.
yole: Traditional skiff used by Martinican fishermen.
zouc: Martinican dance music.
XXIll
IMAGINARY
APPROACHES
*The Slave Trade came through the cramped doorway of the slave ship,
leaving a wake like that of crawling de sert caravans. It might be drawn
like this: Mrican countries to the East; the lands of America
to the West. This creature is in the image of a fibril.
Mrican languages became deterritorialized, thus contributing to
creolization in the West. This is the most completely known confronta-
tion between the powers of the written word and the impulses of oral-
ity. The only written thing on slave ships was the account book listing
the exchange value of slaves. Within the ship's space the cry of those
deported was stifled, as it would be in the realm of the Plantations. This
confrontation still reverberates to this day.
this dizzying sky plastered to the waves. Over the course of
more than two centuries, twenty, thirty million people
deported. Worn down, in a debasement more eternal than
apocalypse. But that is nothing yet.
What is terrifying partakes of the abyss, three times linked
ta the unknown. First, the time you fell into the belly of the
boat. For, in your poe tic vision, a boat has no be11y; a boat
does not swallow up, does not devour; a boat is steered by
open skies. Yet, the belly of this boat dissolves you, precipi-
tates you into a nonworld from which you cry out. This boat
is a womb, a womb abyss. It generates the clamor of your
protests; it also produces aIl the coming unanirnity. Although
you are alone in this suffering, you share in the unknown
with others whom you have yet to know. This boat is your
vvomb, a matrix, and yet it expels you. This boat: pregnant
with as many dead as living under sentence of death.
The next abyss was the depths of the sea. Whenever a fleet of
ships gave chase to slave ships, it was easiest just to lighten the
boat by throwing cargo overboard, weighing it down with
balls and chains. These underwater signposts mark the
course between the Gold Coast and the Leeward Islands.
Navigating the green splendor of the sea-whether in melan-
cholic transatlantic crossings or glorious regattas or tradi-
tional races of yoles and gommiers--still brings to mind, com-
ing to light like seaweed, these lowest depths, these deeps,
with their punctuation of scarce1y corroded balls and chains.
In actual fact the abyss is a tautology: the entire ocean, the
entire sea gently collapsing in the end into the pleasures of
sand, make one vast beginning, but a beginning whose time
is marked by these balls and chains gone green.
But for these shores to take shape, even before they could be
contemplated, before they were yet visible, what sufferings
came from the unknown! Indeed, the most petrifying face of
the abyss lies far ahead of the slave ship's bow, a pale mur-
mur; you do not know if it is a storm cloud, rain or drizzle, or
6
smoke from a comforting fi.re. The banks of the river have
vanished on both sides of the boat. What kind of river, then,
has no middle? Is nothing there but straight ahead? Is this
boat sailing into eternity toward the edges of a nonworld that
no ancestor will haunt?
'Je te salue, vieil Océan!" Vou still preserve on your crests the
silent boat of our births, your chasrns are our own uncon-
scious, furrowed with fugitive memories. Then you lay out
these new shores, where we hook our tar-streaked wounds,
our reddened mouths and stifled outcries.
Experience of the abyss lies inside and outside the abyss. The
torment of those who never escaped it: straight from the beUy
of the slave ship into the violet belly of the ocean depths they
went. But their ordeal did not die; it quickened into this con-
tinuous/ discontinuous thing: the panic of the new land, the
haunting of the former land, finally the alliance with the
imposed land, suffered and redeemed. The unconscious
memory of the abyss served as the alluvium for these meta-
morphoses. The populations that then formed, despite hav-
ing forgotten the chasm, despite being un able to irnagine the
passion of those who foundered there, nonetheless wove this
sail (a veil). They did not use it to return to the Former Land
7
but rose up on this unexpected, dumbfounded land. They
met the first inhabitants, who had also been deported by per-
manent havoc; or perhaps they only caught a whiff of the rav-
aged trail of these people. The land-beyond turned into land-
And this undreamt of sail, finally now spread, is
watered by the white wind of the abyss. Thus, the absolute
unknown, projected by the abyss and bearing into eternity
the WOITlb abyss and the infinite abyss, in the end became
knowledge.
For us, and without exception, and no matter how much dis-
tance we ITlay keep, the abyss is also a projection of and a per-
spective into the unknown. Beyond its chasm we gamble on
the unknown. We take sides in this game of the world. We
hail a renewed Indies; we are for it. And for this Relation
8
made ofstorms and profound moments ofpeace in which we
may honor our boats.
9
Err"antry, Exile
Il
order of the world-because, by so doing, one reverts to ide-
ological claims presumably challenged by this thought. 3
But is the nomad not overdetermined by the conditions of
his existence? Rather than the enjoyment of freedom, is
nomadism not a form of obedience to contingencies that are
restrictive? Take, f<Jr example, circulaI' nomadism: each time
a portion of the territory is exhausted, the group moves
around. Its function is to ensure the survival of the group by
means of this circularity. This is the nomadism practiced by
populations that move [rom one part of the forest to another,
by the Arawak communities who navigated from island to
island in the Caribbean, by hired laborers in their pilgrimage
from farm to farm, by circus people in their peregrinations
from village to village, aIl of whom are driven by sorne
specifie need to move, in which daring or aggression play no
part. CirculaI' nomadism is a not-intolerant fornl of an impos-
sible settlement.
Contrast this with invading nomadism, that of the Huns,
for example, or the Conquistadors, whose goal was to con-
quel' lands by exterminating their occupants. Neither pru-
dent nor circular nomadism, it spares no effect. It is an
absolu te forward projection: an arrowlike nomadism. But the
descendants of the Huns, Vandals, or Visigoths, as indeed
those of the Conquistadors, who established their clans, set-
tled down bit by bit, melting into their conquests. Arrowlike
nomadism is a devastating desire for settlement. *
Neither in arrowlike nomadism nor in circulaI' nomadism
are roots valid. Before it is won through conquest, what
"holds" the invader is what lies ahead; moreover, one could
alrnost say that being compelled to lead a settled way of life
* The ide a that this devastation can tum history around in a positive
manner (in relation to the decline ofthe Roman Empire, for example)
and beget sorne fertile negative element does not concern us here.
Generally speaking, what is meant is that arrowlike nomadism gives
birth to new eras, whereas circular nomadism would be endogenous
and without a future. This is a pure and simple legitimation of the act
of conquest.
12
would constitute the real uprooting of a circular nomad.
There is, furthermore, no pain of exile bearing down, nor is
there the wanderlust of errantry growing keener. Relation to
the earth is too immediate or too plundering to be Iinked
with any preoccupation with identity-this daim to or con-
sciousness of a lineage inscribed in a territory. Identity will be
achieved when communities attempt to legitimate their right
to possession of a territory through myth or the revealed
word. Such an assertion can predate its actual accomplish-
ment by quite sorne time. Thus, an often and long contested
legitimacy will have rnultiple forms that later will delineate
the afflicted or soothing dimensions of exile or errantry.
In Western antiquity a man in exile does not feel he is
helpless or inferior, because he does not feel burdened with
deprivation-of a nation that for him does not yet exist. It
even seems, if one is to believe the biographies of numerous
Greek thinkers induding Plato and Aristotle, that sorne expe-
rience of voyaging and exile is considered necessary for a
being's cornplete fulfillment. Plato was the first to attempt to
base legitimacy not on community within territory (as it was
before and would be later) but on the City in the rationality
of its laws. This at a time when his city, Athens, was already
threatened bya "final" deregulation. *
In this period identification is with a culture (conceived of
as civilization), not yet with a nation. ** The pre-Christian
West along with pre-Columbian America, Africa of the time
of the great conquerors, and the Asian kingdoms aIl shared
this mode of seeing and feeling. The relay of actions exerted
*Platonic Dialogues take over the function of the Myth. The latter
establishes the legitimacy of the possession of a territory based usually
on the uninterrupted rigors of filiation. The Dialogue establishes the
City's justice based on the revelation of a superior reason organizing
rigorous successions of a political order.
**Through the entirely Western notion of civilization the experience of
a society is summed up, in order to project it immediately into an evo-
lution, most often an expansion as weIl. When one says civilization, the
immediate implication is a will to civilize. This idea is linked to the pas-
sion to impose civilization on the Other.
13
by arrowlike nomadism and the settled way of lite were first
directed against generalization (the drive for an identifying
universal as practiced by the Roman Empire). Thus, the par-
ticular resists a generalizing universal and soon begets
specific and local senses of identity, in concentric circles
(provinces then nations). The idea of civilil.ation, hit hy hit,
helps hold together opposites, whose only former identity
existed in their opposition to the Other.
During this period of invading nomads the passion fôr
self-definition first appears in the guise of personal adven-
ture. Along the route of their voyages conquerors established
empires that collapsed at their death. Their capitals went
where they wen t. "Rome is no longer in Rome, it is wherevcr
1 am." The root is not important. Movement is. The idea of
errantry, still inhibited in the face of this mad reality, this too-
functional nomaelism, whose enels it coulel not know, eloes
not yet make an appearance. Center and periphery are equiv-
aIent. Conquerors are the moving, transient root of their
people.
The '!\Test, therefore, is where this movement becomes
fixed and nations de clare themselves in preparation for their
repercussions in the world. This fixing, this declaration, this
expansion, aIl require that the idea of the root gradually take
on the intolerant sense that Deleuze and Guattari, no doubt,
mean t to challenge. The reason for our return to this episode
in Western history is that it spread throughout the world. The
mode! came in handy. Most of the nations that gained hee-
dom from colonization have tended to form around an idea
of power·-the totalitarian drive of a single, unique root-
rather than around a fundamental relationship with the
Other. Culture's self-conception was dualistic, pitting citizen
against barbarian. Nothing has ever more solidly opposed
the thought of errantry than this period in human history
when Western nations were established and then made their
impact on the wodd.
At first this thought of errantry, bucking the current of
nationalist expansion, was disguised "within" very personal-
14
ized adven tures-just as the appearance of Western nations
had been preceded by the ventures of empire builders. The
errantry of a troubadour or that of Rimbaud is not yet a thor-
ough, thick (opaque) experience of the world, but it is
already an arrant, passionate desire to go against a root. The
reality of exile during this period is felt as a (temporary) lack
that priInarily concerns, interestingly enough, language.
Western nations were established on the basis of linguistic
intransigence, and the exile readily admits that he suffers
most from the impossibility of communicating in his lan-
guage. The root is monolingual. For the troubadour and for
Rimbaud errantry is a vocation only toid via detour. The call
of Relation is heard, but it is not yet a fully present experi-
ence.
15
ning of something entirely different fi'om massive, dogmatic,
and totalitarian certainty (despite the religious uses to which
they will be put). These are books of errantry, going beyond
the pursuits and triumphs of rootedness required by the evo-
lution of history.
Sorne of these books are devoted entirely to the supreme
errantry, as in the Egyptian Book of the Dead. The very book
whose function is to consecrate an intransigent conununity is
alreadya compromise, qualifying its triumph with revelatory
wanderings. *
In both L'Intention jJoétique (Poetic Intention) and Le DisCOUT'i
antillais (Caribbean Discourse)-of which the present work is a
reconstituted echo or a spiral retelling-I approached this
dimension of epic literature. 1 began wondering ifwe did not
still need such fùunding works today, ones that would use a
similar dialectics of rerouting,4 asserting, for example, politi-
cal strength but, simultaneously, the rhizome of a multiple
relationship with the Other and basing every community's
reasons for existence on a modern form of the sacred, which
would be, a11 in aH, a Poetics of Relation.**
16
itself implicitly at first ("my root is the strongest") and then is
explicitly exported as a value ("a person's worth is deter-
mined by his root"). * The conquered or visited peoples are
thus forced into a long and painful quest after an identity
whose first task will be opposition to the denaturing process
introduced by the conqueror. A tragic variation of a sear'ch
for identity. For more than two centuries whole populations
have had to assert their identity in opposition to the
processes of identification br annihilation triggered by these
invaders. Whereas the Western nation is first of aIl an "oppo-
site,"** for colonized peoples identity will be primarily
"opposed to"-that is, a lirnitation from the beginning.
Decolonization will have done its real work when it goes
beyond this limit.
The duality of self-perception (one is citizen or foreigner)
has repercussions on one's idea of the Other (one is visitor or
visited; one goes or stays; one conquers or is conquered).
Thought of the Other cannot escape its own dualism until
the time when differences become acknowledged. From that
point on thought of the Other "comprehends"5 multiplicity,
but mechanically and still taking the subtle hierarchies of a
generalizing universal as its basis. Acknowledging differences
do es not compel one to be involved in the dialectics of their
totality. One could get away with: "I can acknowledge your
difference and continue to think it is harmful to you. I can
think that my strength lies in the Voyage (I am making His-
tory) and that your difference is motionless and silent."
Another step remains to be taken before one really enters the
dialectic of totality. And, contrary to the mechanics of the
Voyage, this dialectic turns out to be driven by the thought of
errantry.
17
Let us suppose that the quest for totality, starting from a
nonuniversal context of histories of the West, has passed
through the füllowing stages:
-the thinking of territory and self (ontological, dual)
-the thinking of voyage and other (mechanical,
multiple)
-the thinking of errantry and totality (relational,
dialectical) .
We will agree that this thinking of errantry, this errant
thought, silently emerges from the destructuring of compact
national entities that yesterday were still triumphant and, at
the same time, from difficult, uncertain births of new forms
of identity that calI to us.
18
In contrast to arrowlike nomadism (discovery or conquest),
in contrast to the situation of exile, errantry gives-on-and-
with the negation of every pole and every metropolis,
whether connected or not to a conqueror's voyaging act. We
have repeatedly rnentioned that the first thing exported by
the conqueror was his language. Moreover, the great Western
languages were supposedly vehicular languages, which often
took the place of an actual metropolis. Relation, in contrast,
is spoken multilingually. Coing beyond the impositions of
economic forces and cultural pressures, Relation rightfully
opposes the totalitarianism of any monolingual intent.
19
erbated introduction to the thought of errantry. Most often it
is diverted into partial, pleasurable compensations in which
the individual is consumed. InternaI exile tends toward mate-
rial comfôrt, which cannot l'eaUy distract fi"om anguish.
20
exporting as a model. The thinking of errantry conceives of
totality but willingly renounces any claims to sum it up or to
possess it.
*
As far as literature is concerned (without my having to estab-
lish a pantheon, an isolation these works would refuse), there
are two contemporary bodies of work, it seems to me, in
which errantry and Relation are at play.
Faulkner's work, somehow theological. This wntlng is
about digging up roots in the South-an obvious place to do
so in the United States. But the root begins to act like a rhi-
zome; there is no basis for certainty; the relation is tragic.
Because of this dispute over source, the sacred-but hence-
forth unspeakable-enigma of the root's location, Faulkner's
21
world represents one of the thrilling moments in the modern
poe tics of Relation. At one time 1 regretted that such a world
had not gone farther, spreading its vision into the Caribbean
and Latin America. But, perhaps, this was a reaction of
unconscious frustration on the part of one who felt excluded.
And Saint:John Perse's erratic work, in search of that
which moves, of that which goes-in the absolute sense. 6 A
work leading to totality-·to the out-and-out exaltation of a
universal that becomes exhausted from being said too much.
22
Poetics
23
the entrance of French Iiterature into modernity beginning
in the nineteenth century. A theory of depth, a practice of
language-in-itself, and the problematics of tex tuaI structure
were thus formulated. (1 simplifY for effect, to critical
extremes.) They have pretended to forget that, in literature,
just like everywhere else in the world, one of the full-senses 1
of modernity is provided henceforth by the action of human
cultures' identifying one another for their mutual transfor-
mation.
24
A poetics of language-in-itself. It sanctions the moment when
language, as if satisfied with its perfection, ceases to take for
its object the recounting of its connection with particular sur-
roundings, to concentrate solely upon its fervor to exceed its
limits and reveal thoroughly the elements composing it-
solely upon its engineering skill with these. This practice does
not proceed without rambling, because rambling-as Mal-
larmé weIl knew-is an absolute challenge to narrative.
Rather than discovering or telling about the world, it is a mat-
ter of producing an equivalent, which would be the Book, in
which everything would be said, without anything's being
reported. * Mallarmé, who experienced, of course, the temp-
tations of elsewhere, spent his energy solely on producing this
totality of language. The world as book, the Book as world.
His heroism within confinement is a way of celebrating a
desired, dreamt-of totality within the absolute of the word.
The poetics of language-in-itself strives toward a knowl-
edge that by definition would only be exercised within the
limits of a giyen language. It would renounce (Mallarmé
notwithstanding, with his anxious pleasure in being profes-
sor and translator of English) the nostalgia for other lan-
guages-for the infinite possible languages-now germinat-
ing in every literature.
25
The neutral rather than harsh actuality of the object; the
tightening of a locus; the low regard for anl' thought claim-
ing falsely to be final; the literaI and the flat-these are a few
of the factors linked with the works of numerous contempo-
rary French authors that provide access to them within the
context of this poetics.
26
tural influences were initially of a general nature, affecting
communities progressively; today the individual, without hav-
ing to go anywhere, can be directly touched by things else-
where, sometirnes even before his community, farnily, social
group, or nation has been enriched by the same effect. This
imrnediate and fragmentary repercussion on individuals, as
individuals, permitted the premonitions of Victor Segalen or
Raymond Roussel or the Douanier Rousseau-the first poets
of Relation.
Finally-the third condition-the consciousness of Rela-
tion became widespread, including both the collective and
the individual. We "know" that the Other is within us and
affects how we evolve as weIl as the bulk of our conceptions
and the development of our sensibility. Rimbaud's "1 is an
other" is literaI in terms of history. In spite of ourselves, a sort
of "consciousness of consciousness" opens us up and turns
each of us in ta a disconcerted actor in the poetics of Rela-
tion.
27
humanities chaotically onward, needs words to publish itseif,
to continue. But because what it relates, in reality, proceeds
from no absolute, it proves to be the totality of relatives, put
in touch and told.
28
the peripheries. 1 take the work of Victor Segalen as an inno-
vative example of this; but is it necessary to mention aIl those
who, whether critical or possesse d, racist or idealist, frenzied
or rational, have experienced passionately the calI of Diver-
sity since his time: frorrl Cendrars to Malraux, trom Michaux
to Artaud, from Gobineau to Céline, from Claudel to Michel
Leiris?
A second itinerary th en began to form, this time from
peripheries toward the Center. Poets who were born or lived
in the elsewhere dream of the source of their imaginary con-
structs and, consciously or not, "make the trip in the opposite
direction," struggling to do so. Jules Supervielle. Saintjohn
Perse. Georges Schéhadé.
In a third stage the trajectory is abolished; the arrowlike
projection becornes curved. The poet's word leads frorrl
periphery to periphery, and, yes, it reproduces the track of
circular nomadism; that is, it makes every periphery into a
center; furthermore, it abolishes the very notion of center
and periphery. AlI of this germinated in the works of writers
such as Segalen, Kateb Yacine, Cheik Anta Diop, Léon
Gontran Damas, and many others it would be impossible to
name.
29
the shock of elsewhere is what distinguishes the poet. Diver-
sity, the quantifiable totality of every possible difference, is
the motar driving universal energy, and it must be safe-
guarded from assimilations, from fashions passively accepted
as the norm, and from standardized customs.
Segalen wrote novels that are at the same time ethnologi-
cal studies, declarations, and defenses; he struggled to
explain the thought processes of Gauguin (in this instance
his double); he projected also the main lines of a theoretical
essay on exoticism, considered as an experience of some-
thing new and unique and not a silly delight in novelty. And,
just as Mallarmé was unable to see his Book through to the
end, Segalen did not complete this basic work, though its
main points were fortunately preserved. The theory of the
poem is resistant to expression.
ln A",ia, another land of conjuriction and permanence,
alongside the building crises, these three poets (among oth-
ers)-Segalen, Claudel, and Saint:John Perse-·either met or
succeeded one another. An important part of their work is
played out there. But Saint-John Perse and Segalen took the
road in opposite directions. Saint-John Perse began by fixing
in memory, in what would be Éloges) the scenery of his native
island, Guadeloupe. However, his real vocation was getting
away, no matter how it made him suffer. Segalen, on the
other hand, went toward the other, ran to elsewhere. Saint-
John Perse, born in this elsewhere, returned to the Same-
toward the Center. He proclaimed the universality of the
French language and declared this language his country. The
poems that followed attempted, to the very end, to erect the
murmuring cathedrals of this chosen universal. *
Similarly, in Georges Schéhadé's poetry: the quarrying of
place, the fantastic fantasy that unleashes all known geogra-
phy, prophetically give an account-many years before the
event-of the dramatic breakup of Lebanon, the place of
Relation. Expressed there again, in the ethereal suspension
30
of language, is a renunciation of the earth: a disorientation
of words-which end up joining with the only available
authority, the poetic grace of the French language.
This sort of effort, in which pathos contributes to genius,
had its forerunners in far less convincing attempts to return
and, frankly, be reintegrated through the language: the Par-
nassians, Leconte de Lisle, and José Maria de Heredia are
examples. Without counting the immeasurable adventure,
entirely on the Ievel of the absolute, of another poet from
elsewhere, who, like Saint:John Perse, wanted to "inhabit his
name," making language his country: Lautréamont.
This thought of the Same and the Other 2 thus put poets at
risk but became hopelessly banal as soon as emerging popu-
lations made its formulation obsolete. Converging histories
have also joined forces with this contingent of the world's lit-
eratures, bringing to life new forms of expression "within"
the same language. Poets from the Caribbean, the Maghreb,
and other parts of Africa are not moving toward that else-
where that is the airn of projectile movement, nor are they
returning toward a Cen ter. They create their works in metro-
politan regions, where their peoples have made a sudden
appearance. The old expansive trajectory and the spirituality
of the itinerary (always frorn Paris toJerusalem or elsewhere)
yield to the world's realized compactness. We have to enter
into the equivalencies of Relation.
31
prqjection of a sensibility toward the world's horizons, the
vectorization of this world into metropolises and colonies.
Theoretician thought is loath to sanction this abolition-
thereby shutting dmvn its bastions. lt tries to be clever with
the thrust of the '\Torld and sidesteps it. It thinks up screens
for itself.
In addition, the poe tics of Relation remains fürever con-
jectural and presupposes no ideological stability. It is against
the comfortable assurances linked ta the supposed excel-
lence of a language. A poetics that is latent, open, multilin-
guaI in intention, directly in contact with everything possible.
Theoretician thought, focused on the basic and fundamen-
tal, and allying these with what is true, shies away from these
uncertain paths.
32
pIex as the whole that cannot be reduced, simplified, or nor-
malized. Each of its parts patterns activity implicated in the
activity of every other. The history of peoples has led to this
dynamic. They need not stop running on their own rnomen-
tum to join in this movernent, since they are inscribed in it
already. They cannot, however, "give-on-and-with" until they
reach the point at which they go beyond assenting to their
linear drive alone and consent to global dynamics-practic-
ing a self-break and a reconnection.
33
inferring any advantage whatsoever to their situation, the
reality of archipelagos in the Caribbean or the Pacific pro"
vides a natural illustration of the thought of Relation.
What took place in the Caribbean, which could be
summed up in the word creolization, approximates the idea of
Relation for us as nearly as possible. It is not merely an
encounter, a shock (in Segalen's sense), a métissage/' but a
new and original dimension allowing each person to be there
and elsewhere, rooted and open, lost in the mountains and
free beneath the se a, in harmony and in errantry.
If we posit métissage as, generally speaking, the meeting
and synthesis of two differences, creolization seems to be a
limitless métissage, it,; elements diffracted and its conse-
quences unforeseeable. Creolization diffracts, whereas cer-
tain forms of métissage can concentrate one more time. Here
it is devoted ta what has burst forth from lands that are no
longer islands. Its most obvious symbol is in the Creole lan-
guage, whose genius consists in always being open, that is,
perhaps, never becoming fixed except according ta systems
of variables that we have to imagine as much as define. Cre-
olization carries along then into the adventure of multilin-
gualism and into the incredible explosion of cultures. But
the explosion of cultures does not mean they are scattered or
mutually diluted. It is the violent sign oftheir consentual, not
imposed, sharing. 4
34
"postage stamp" ofYoknapatawpha County, the literary dou-
ble of Oxford, Mississippi, where he chose to live.
And at stake once again in Brazilian and Hispano-Arneri-
can literatures: the explosion of baroque expression, the
whorls of time, the Iningling of centuries and jungles, the
saIne epic voice retying into the weft of the world, beyond any
iInposed solitude, exaction, or oppression.
35
A Rooted Errantry
37
nence, he kept a resolute distance from any Here conferred
in advance (not willfully meditated).
Saint:John Perse's stern errantry sets its course ,,\ragering
on a Here (Europe) toward which one must choose to return
and an elsewhere (the Antilles) from which one leaves. He
could not have tolerated playing colonial in the universe, as r
long thought he had, nor being its vagabond, as Rimbaud
attempted. He heightens the universal within himself, forg-
ing it from things impossible. These are the very reasons his
universality has nothing to do with exoticism, severely cri ti-
cizing it, instead, and serving as its natural negation.
The poe tics thus set in play must be addressed. On a crude
and elementary level ofanalysis one might emphasize its con-
tradiction: Saint:John Perse, descendant of the class of colo-
niallandholders, liked to think of himself as a Frenchman of
noble stock; nurtured by the orality of Creole, he made the
choice to establish himselfin the purest of French styles. One
could push this further, imagining the wounds there beneath
the formaI, lacquered surface, a drama that both cancels out
and elevates itselfinto arrogant rigidity. But let's not. The les-
son of the poet goes much deeper. It leaves behind the ordi-
nary regions laid out in biography.
Saint:John Perse renounces any sort of "grasp" of the his-
tory of the place he was born and projects, into an eternally
given future, the Ail he takes for his grounding. The com-
monplace ofsuch a future is the name, his name as poet, one
deliberately forged: a word. "1 shall inhabit ml' name."
With these words he announces not the obsolescence of
narrative but a new and original aesthetic form: the narra-
tion of the universe. This is why his writing takes on added
strength from his considerable efforts as an entomologist,
cartographer, or lexicographer. The rigors of material and
his encyclopedic knowledge weave a controlled prolifera-
tion through which the universe overflows and recounts
itself for us.
38
Clearly, one of the places engraved in Antillean memory is
the circle drawn around the storyteller by the shadows of
night. On the borders of this ring the children who will relay
the word are beside themselves. Their bodies are hot with the
fever of day; their eyes grow larger in this time that does not
go by. These children understand nothing of the formulas,
nor do they catch the allusions, but the man with the stories
speaks to them first. He is quick to guess when they will
shiver, wide rnouthed in terror, or laugh to coyer up their
fear. His voice cornes frorn beyond the seas, charged with the
movement of those Mrican countries present in their
absence; it lingers in the night, which draws the trembling
children into its womb.
It astonishes me to hear people sometimes try to reduce
Saint:John Perse's orality to that of declamation. Yet it could
never be produced onstage. Too many broad zones of obvi-
ousness stretch out within it, blocked here and there by root
stumps, when language thickens into nodules. When the
obvious is declaimed, it immediately becomes a tautological
transparency. Believing that this poet's text can fill or define
the stage of a theater is a mistake too often made. His sort of
orality do es not lead to things of a public nature; it is the
equivalent of (alternative to) modesty. Underneath, the
inner voice weaves its redundant repetitions. This is an oral-
ity that is not spoken aloud but articulated in underground
understandings.
The lack of any circle summing up the night around him
is the first distinction between Saint:John Perse and the Antil-
lean storyteller. There are no torches surrounding his words;
there is only a hand stretched toward the horizon that rises
up as ocean swells or high plateaus. It is the always possible
infinite. The ring made by the voice is diffracted into the
world. The orality of Saint:John Perse is not wrapped by
rustling shadows suggestive of the surroundings; it greets
dawns, when faraway echoes are already mingling with famil-
ial' sounds, when the caravan makes its departure from the
undying desert.
39
Saint-john Perse does not piece back together the torn
memory of one place, where another lost place still lies con-
cealed or is finally revealed. The Antillean story, diverting the
traces it maintains of an original Afl-ica, laces the swells of this
previous country into echoes and, refusing the inertia of
transparent words, makes us think of the real world, this
wodd he writes about. But this poet, likewise, who begins by
"celebrating a childhood," refuses the comforts of an album
to be -leated through. vVhat, in fact, is this always vanishing
memory? '''That is this place (this house) the one they say we
come from? And this princely solitude in the midst of "al1
things" dazzling, exploded, and permanently bright? The
work of Saint-John Perse aims at pushing memory (ofa place,
of people, of the things seen in childhood) far forward. This
orality does Ilot invite listeners to the shadow's edge; it throws
each one of us into the resolution of one to come. Éloges is
not a tormented memory that is repeated in shadows but the
suspense heralding solemn departures. The poet knows that
he has absolutely lost the thing he always remembers, the
thing he leaves behind.
In the works of Saint:John Perse there exist simultaneously
a totalization one might caIl baroque and a revolution in the
technique of the plainsong. They work together. But 1 arn
confident that this i5 a "naturalized" baroque; that is, it has
nothing to do with any reference and would be opposed ta it.
Rerouting [détou.rnement] is its only norm, or its fundamental
nature. And plainsong here, ordinarily an occasion for trans-
port or escape, holds us clearly in the world at its fuUest.
Thus, it is around interactions of memory and place that
things irreconcilable for both poet and storyteller are perpe-
trated. The Antillean locus appears to Saint-John Perse with a
dazzling clarity that 1 would mistrust. Isn't the memory for
detail (this poe tics of diffracted moments) employed here in
order to ward off something else: the temptation of some-
thing stirring for so long in the background of the Caribbean
landscape? It is at this moment in the work that the explosion
of the instant obliterates duration, which will later be recov-
40
ered but under the auspices ofuniversality. In contrast, in the
orality of the Antillean story the drive of this duration (of this
collective memory-of this "history"-whose energy must be
made wholeheartedly dear) cancels out the detail of the
place. Obsession with a possible duration douds the explo-
sive dazzle of the present.
For Saint:fohn Perse, however, as for the man who tells the
tales, the same avenue awaits. In the poem's harsh transcen-
dence, as in the cunning organization of the story, there are
ruptures and densities of orality that calI up these impossible
things: for the latter the place where he remains and for the
former the world where he goes.
*
Departure and errantry in Saint:John Perse are to be inter-
preted as a rejection of the histories of peoples but their
magnificence as an assuming of History, in the Hegelian
sense. This errantry is not rhizomatic but deeply rooted: in a
will and an Idea. History or its negation, the intuition of the
One, these are the magnetic poles of Western thought at
which Saint:John Perse grounded his name. He thought that
the condition of freedom is that the individual not be ruled
by a history, except one that generalizes, nor limited by a
place, unless that place is spiritual. Because the universal has
this heroic dimension, we are able to recognize ourselves in
his work, even though we challenge its generalizing models.
It may also be possible that this passion driving the work
(because it is foreign to a space and a time-the Antillean
history and place-that are so problematic for it and because
it is rooted in such absolute errantry) is reassuring to us
regarding the contradictions we experience here and now.
For the poetry of Saint:John Perse, though it is not the
epic linking together of lessons from a past, augurs a new
rnode of connection with the Other, which, paradoxically,
41
and precisely because of this passion for errantry, prophesies
the poetics of Relation. By constantly moving on, one can
gather stones and weave the materiality of the universe from
which Saint-John Perse created his narrative. This is how, in
the end, he met with Victor Segalen, about whom he said lit-
tIe, doubtless because in the same sumptuous manner, but in
opposite directions, their itineraries parted.
*
Unaware of us, he precedes us on this road through the
world. When we catch up with him, we find him still and
always drawing for us figures of our solitudes to share-
though these are figures frozen in his noble renunciation.
42
IV
THEORIES
The position of each part within this whole: that is, the
acknowledged validÜy of each specifie Plantation yet at the
same time the urgent need to understand the hidden order of
the whole-so as to wander there without becoming lost.
133
simple connection between Relativity and the principle of
the relative. AIl the l'est lies in ambush within the bastion of
theorems. Substituting or compensating for its lack of direct
access to \vhat Einstein said, the public bas mythologized the
scientist. This mythrnaking is a sign of the extent to which the
relative is powerfully present for us. To the point at which the
formula E = mc 2 has becorne a common place (or common-
place)2 that we use advisedly, that is for its sl'mbolic freight,
without being sure we really appreciate its content.
"Vhat part of this theory do we retain concerning the sub-
ject at hand, when vve are not lirnited bl' our infirrnities as
nonspecialist'i? That there is no thought of the absolute but
also that the Relation of uncertainty postulated by Heisen-
berg is not perhaps the basis for an irreversible probabilism.
(Are "prirnary" particles subjected to chance?) For Einstein
Relativity is not purely relative. The universe has a "sense"
that is neither chance Bor necessity: a georneter god (the
sarne as Newton's), in any case a "powerful and rnysterious
reason"-and not, therefore, a rnalicious spirit, as in
Descartes-provides us with a riddle to decipher. This puzzle
(something to be divined through intuition and verified
through experirnentation) "guarantees" the interactive
dynarnics of the universe and of our knowledge of it.
Experimental thought has its basis in this interaction and
"guarantees" in turn that the puzzle will not be taken into
l'eaIrns of the impossible (something will al ways be there to
grasp) nor into realms of the absolute (something will always
remain to be grasped).
The totality within which Relativity is exerted and to which
it is applied, through the workings of the mind, is not totali-
tarian, therefore: not imposed a priori, not flxed as an
absolute. And, consequently, for the mind, it is neither a
restrictive dogmatism nor the skepticisrn of pl'obabilist
thought.
Consent to cultural relativisrn ("each hurnan culture has
value in its own milieu, becoming equivalent to everl' other in
the ensemble") accompanied the spreading awareness of,
134
and adherence or at least habituation to, the idea of Relativ-
ity.
This cultural relativism has not al ways come without a
tinge of essentialism, which has colored even the concepts
that contributed to challenging the domination of conquer-
ing cultures. The idea of one Africa, conceived of as un di-
vided, and the theory of Negritude (among French speakers)
are two examples of this frequently debated for that very rea-
son.
Furthermore, this relativism in turn has been regarded as
falling into the category of a "golden mean." Here diversity
exists among cultures but does not prevent the formation of
hierarchies among civilizations. Or, at the very least, an
ascent (regular or intermittent) tmvard the transparency of a
world-or model- that is universal. And, consequently, for
the mind there is neither totalitarian ethnocentrism nor the
anarchy of a tabula rasa. Montaigne's invaluable ide a was
adapted to suit the tendentious drone of this new version of
humanism. This form of relativism has no pertinence to the
relative.
Just as Relativity in the end postulated a Harmony to the
universe, cultural relativism (Relativity's timid and faltering
reflection) viewed and organized the world through a global
transparency that was, in the last analysis, reductive. This cul-
tural "Society of Nations" could not withstand the maelstrom.
But the dogmatic feeling of superiority and the clever
maneuvers of false relativism were succeeded by an elegant
disenchantment, the acute sense of the futility of it aIl. If
everything in this maelstrom was equal in fact to everything
else, if the realization of an Earth-totality opened onto
chaos-what was the use? Pervading what should have been
an exhilarating arrivaI at totality was a flavor of declining
empire, reinforced, perhaps, after World War II by the antag-
onistic presence of the two Roman empires of our time, the
United States and the Soviet Union. Both were driven by the
same naive belief, frequently confirmed by reality, in their
preeminence over other populations. And you might imag-
135
ine each of these powers, which, having plentifuI wealth, did
not have to torment themselves so, going around muttering
ta themselves, "Tonight Lucullus will be eating at Lucullus's
table."
Meanwhile, poor nations, by their very eruption, had
made it possible for new ideas to be born: ideas of otherness,
of difference, of minority rights, of the rights of peoples.
These ideas, however, seemed only to dust the surface of the
swirling magma. It was not clear how anyone could conceive
of the global dereliction of humanities meeting and con-
fronting one another in the spaces and times of the planet.
Then, bit by bit, an idea came together from scientific
intuitions: it was possible to study Chaos without succumbing
to a vertigo of disillusion over its endless transformations.
136
attempts to imagine or to prove a "creation of the world" (the
Big Bang), which has always been the "basis" of the scientific
project. The old obsession with filiation carves out a new
adornment for itself. Linearity ties in. The idea of God is
there. And the notion of legitimacy reemerges. A science of
conquerors who scorn or fear limits; a science of conquest.
The other direction, which is not one, distances itself
entirely from the thought of conquest; it is an experimental
meditation (a follow-through) of the process of relation, at
work in reality, among the elements (whether primary or
not) that weave its combinations. A science of inquiry. This
"orientation" then leads to following through whatever is
dynamic, the relational, the chaotic-anything fluid and var-
ious and moreover uncertain (that is, ungraspable) yet fun-
damental in every instance and qui te likely full ofinstances of
invariance.
It is true that each of these two tendencies relays and rein-
forces each othec But the first perpetuates an arrowlike pro-
jection, whereas the second, perhaps, recreates the processes
of circular nomadism. It is also true that dispossessed
regions, countries in the throes of absolute poverty, are iso-
lated from participation. But, though they don't "count" for
conquering science (except as a ruthless reserve of prirnary
material), their presence constitutes another material, the
one covered by inquiring science. The subject matter of this
science is chaos-monde, one of the modes of Chaos.
137
thetics, scientific knowlcdge thus develops one of the ways
poetics is expressed, reconnecting with poetry's earlier ambi-
tion to establish itself as knowledge.
One can see why philosophies issuing from differen t
"stages" of science have driven successively "established"
ideas of cultures and their entanglements. It is because sci-
entific ideas always presuppose generalization (uncon-
sciously influenced by the metaphysics fl'om which they freed
themselves) and are suspicious of it in each instance (as every
poetics in the world inspires us to be). They have finally been
able to understand generalization from the angle of general-
ity, abandoning filiation's linearity tôr the surplus of expan-
s1veness. This 15 how the evolution of cultures works.
In expanse/extension the forms of chaos-mondf' (the
immeasurable intermixing of cultures) are unfôreseeable
and fôretellablc. We have not yet begun to calculate their
consequences: the passive adoptions, irrevocable rejections,
naive beliefs, parallellives, and the many forms of confronta-
tion or consent, the many syntheses, surpassings, or returns,
the many sudden outbursts of invention, born of impacts and
breaking what has produced them, which compose the fluid,
turbulent, stubborn, and possibly organized matter of our
common destiny.
Is it meaningful, pathetic, or ridiculous that Chinese stu-
dents have been massacred in front of a cardboarcl repro-
duction of the Statue of Liberty? Or that, in a Rmnanian
house, hatecl portraits of have been replacecl bl'
photographs cut fi'om magazines of characters in the televi-
sion series "Dallas"? Sim ply to ask the question is to imagine
the unimaginable turbulence of Relation.
Yes, we are just barell' beginning to conceive of this
immense friction. The more it works in favor of an oppressive
order, the more it caUs forth disorder as well. The more it
produces exclusion, the more it generates attraction. It stan-
dardizes-but at every node of Relation we will And callouses
of resistance. Relation is learning more and more to go
beyond judgments into the unexpected clark of art's upsurg-
138
ings. Its beauty springs from the stable and the unstable,
from the deviance of many particular poetics and the clair-
voyance of a relational poetics. The more things it standard-
izes into a state of lethargy, the more rebellious conscious-
ness it arouses.
139
ever, it is only the human imaginary that cannot be contami-
nated by its Because it alone diversifies them
infinitely yet brings them back, nonetheless, to a füll burst of
unity. The highest point of knowledge is always a poetics.
140
Distancing, Determining
141
define or impossible to maintain, leads inexorably to the
refuges of generalization provided by the universal as value.
This is how the elite populations in southern countrics have
usually reacted when choosing to renounce their own
difficult dennition. A generalizing universal l'eassures them.
Ickntity as a system of relation, as an aptitude fùr "giving-
on-and-\vith" [donner-avec], is, in contrast, a form of violence
that challenges the generalizing universal and necessitates
cven more stringent clcrnands for specificity. But it is hard to
kcep in balance.* "\Thy is there this paradox in Relation? \Vhy
the neccssity to approach the specificities of communities as
closely as possible? To cut clown on the danger of bcing
boggecl clown, clilutecl, or "arrestecl" in unditferentiated con-
glomerations.
But, in any case, the speecl with which geocultural entitics,
aggregates f()l'med through cncounters and kinships, change
in the world is relative. For example, there is a real situational
community among the creolizing cultures of the Caribbean
and thosc of the lndian Ocean (in Réunion or Seychelles).
Hovvever, therc is nothing to say that accelerated evolution
willnot soon entail equally powerful and decisive encounters
between the Caribbean region and Brazil, or among the
smaller Antillean islands (both French- and English-speak-
ing), that wiIllead to the formation of new zones of relational
community. It would not be possible to base ontological
thinking on the existence ofentities such as these, whose very
nature is to vary tremendously within Relation. This variation
is, on the contrary, evidencc that ontological thought no
longer "{ünctions," no longer provides a founding certainty
that is stock-still, once and for aIl, in a restrictive territory.
In such an evolution vve are justified in maintaining the
f()llowing principle: "Relation exists, especially as the particu-
Jars that are its interdependent constituent have first fl'eecl
themselvcs hom any approximation of depenclency."
*There is a growing tendeney in \Vestcrn aesthctie theorics. IJOm
ethnopoctics Lo gcopoctics to cosmopoetics, to makc sorne daim of
going bc:'ond notions or dimensions of identity,
142
GraduaIly, premonitions of the interdependence at work
in the world today have replaced the ideologies of national
independence that drove the struggles for decolonization.
But the absolute presupposition of this interdependence is
that instances of independence will be defined as closely as
possible and actually won or sustained. Because it is only
beneficial to aIl (it only stops being a pretext or ruse) at the
point at which it governs the distancings that are determi-
nant.
One of the most dramatic consequences of interdepen-
dence concerns the hazards of emigration. "\Then identity is
determined by a root, the emigrant is condemned (especially
in the second generation) to being split and flattened. Usu-
ally an outcast in the place he has newly set anchor, he is
forced into impossible attempts to reconcile his former and
his present belonging.
Despite their French citizenship, most of the Antilleans
who live in France, participating in the widespreadmove-
ment of emigration into this country (North Mricans, Por-
tuguese, Senegalese, etc.), have not been spared this condi-
tion. It is through a rather impressive turnabout in history, in
Martinique, that its leaders are now speaking up to suggest
that it would not, after aIl, be such a bad thing to participate
in a dignified manner in this citizenship.
Root identity
-is founded in the distant past in a vision, a rnyth of the
creation of the world;
-is sanctified by the hidden violence of a filiation that
strictly follows from this founding episode;
-is ratified bya daim to legitimacy that allows a commu-
nity to prodaim its entitlement to the possession of a
land, which thus becornes a territory;
-is preserved by being projected onto other territories,
143
making theiI' conquest legitimate-and through the
project of a discursive knowledge.
Root identity therefore rooted the thought of self and of
territory and set in motion the thought of the other and of
voyage.
Relation
-is linked not to a creation of the world but to the con-,
scious and contradictory experience of contacts among
cultures;
-is produced in the chaotic network of Relation and not
in the hidden violence of filiation;
-does not devise any legitimacy as its guarantee of enti-
tlement, but circulates, newly extended;
-cioes not think of a land as a territory from which to
project tmvard other territories but as a place where
one gives-on-and-with rather than grasps.
Relation identity exults the thought of errantry and of
totality.
144
to endure while comfortably receiving state assistance, with
aIl the obvious guarantees implied in such a decision? This is
what the technocratie elite, created for the management of
decoy positions, have to talk themselves into before they con-
vince the people of Martinique. Their task is aIl the less
difficult since they use it to give themselves airs of concilia-
tion, of cooperative humanism, of a realism anxious to make
concrete improvements in circumstances. Not counting the
pleasures of permissive consumption. Not counting the
actual advantages of a special position, in which public funds
(from France or Europe) serve to satisfy a rather large num-
ber of people (to the benefit, however, of French or Euro-
pean companies that are more and more visible in the coun-
try or castes of békés converted from former planters into a
tertiary sector and thus won over to the ideas of this elite)
and serve to foster the hopes ofan even greater number.*
And it is true that in a context of this sort one spares one-
selfboth the sacred violence, which is boundless, and the vio-
lence of absolute destitution, which is spreading with such
lightning speed over half the planet. What rernains here is
only the suppressed and intermittent violence of a commu-
nity convulsively demonstrating its sense of disquiet. What
sense of disquiet? The one that cornes from having to con-
sume the world without participating in it, without even the
least idea of it, without being able to offer it anything other
than a vague homily to a generalizing universal. Privileged
disquiet.
Traumatic reaction is not, however, the only form of resis-
tance in Martinique. In a nonatavistic society of this sort
three rallying points have grown in strength: relationship
with the natural surroundings, the Caribbean; defense of the
145
people's language, Creole; protection of the land, by mobi-
lizing everyone. Three modes of existence that challenge the
establishment (three cultural reflexes that are not without
ambiguity thcmsclves), that do not link, however, the severe
demand for specificity to the intolerance of a root but,
rather, to an ecological vision of Relation.
146
descendants of deported Africans or to the békés or to the
Hindus or to the mulattoes. But the consequences of Euro-
pean expansion (extermination of the Pre-Columbians,
importation of new populations) is precisely what forms the
basis for a new relationship with the land: not the absolute
ontological possession regarded as sacred but the complicity
of relation. Those who have endured the land's constraint,
who are perhaps mistrustful of it, who have perhaps
attempted to escape it to forget their slavery, have also begun
to foster these new connections with it, in which the sacred
intolerance of the root, with its sectarian exclusiveness, bas
no longer any share.
Ecological mysticism relies on this intolerance. A reac-
tionary, that is to say infertile, way of thinking about the
Earth, it would almost be akin to the "return to the land"
championed by Pétain, whose only instinct was to reactivate
the forces of tradition and abdication while at the same time
appealing to a withdrawal reflex.
In Western countries these two ecological options (politi-
cal and mystical) corne together in action. Still, one cannot
ignore the differences that drive them. Not acknowledging
these differences in our countries predisposes us in favor of
mimetic practices that are either quite sim ply imported
because of the pressures of Western opinion or else the bag-
gage of standardized fashion, such as jogging and hiking.
We end up every time with the following axiorn-one not
given in advance: Pronouncing one's specificity is not
enough if one is to escape the lethal, indistinct confusion of
assimilations; this specificity still has to be put into action
before consenting to any outcome.
But the axiom, though not a priori, is unbending when
applied. A perilous equilibrium exists between
edge and another's practice. If we are to renounce intoler-
ances, why hold out against outright consent? And, if we are
to follow our freedom to its "logical consequences," why not
have the right to confirm it in a radical negation of the
Other?
147
These dilemmas have their own particular areas of appli-
cation ta govern. Such as the need for pOOl' countries ta exer-
cise self:·sufficiency that is economically and physically sus-
taining. Such as the definition ofhow forms ofindependence
are experienced or hoped for. Such as the putting into prac-
tice of ethnotechnology as an instrument of self-sufficiency.
Never have obligations been so chancy in reality.
148
the poetics of a language irrigated by Creole, spoke disdain-
fully of "dachinisme" (from the word dachine [dasheen], or
Chinese cabbage, another local vegetable). Thus, the sarne
negativity is used to punish any production that does not con-
sent to international standardization or conform to the gen-
eralizing universal.
In rich nations, in which imports are balanced with more
or less difficulty by exports and in which, consequently, for-
eign goods offered for consumption are exchanged rnore or
less indirectly against local production, it is easier to main-
tain equilibrium between the levels. The international prod-
uct has a less severe impact on sensibilities; "desire" for it is
not so irnplacable.
In poor countries any appeal for self-sufficiency grounded
solely in economics and good sense is doomed to failure.
Good sense is of no consequence in the tangle ofworld Rela-
tion. Sensibilities have become so profoundly contaminated,
in most cases, and the habit of rnaterial comfort is so weIl
established, even in the midst of the greatest poverty, that
political dicta tes or proclamations are inadequate remedies.
Here, as elsewhere, one ITlust figure out how much we have
to consent to the planetary evolution toward standardization
of consumer products (the present course in Martinique,
with French products widely imported) and how much we
should push for invention and a new sensibility in association
with "national" products.
This is where the irnagination and expression of an aes-
the tics of the earth-freed from quai nt naïveté, to rhizome
instead throughout our cultures' understanding-become
indispensable.
149
Daily wc hear about how occupations connected \vith the
land are among the sorriest that exist. The birmer's tradi-
tional solitude has become exacerbated by the embarrassed
thought that his work is anachronistic, in developed coun-
tries, or pathetic, in poor coun tries. In the f()rmer he strug-
gles against productivity, taxes, markets, and surplus; in the
latter against dust, the lack of tools, epidcmics, and short-
ages. Roth here and there the display of technological wealth
overwhelms him. It would be obnoxious to indulge in idiotie
praise of the peasantry when it is going downhill this way
everywhere. vVill it die, or will it be transfùnned into a reserve
labor force for advanced techniques?
It is said-·a commonplace-that the future of humanity is
at stake, unless, before extinction, such techniques make pos-
sible the massive production of artificial foods that would
take care of the richest. Picture an uncultivated land when
the factories producing synthetics have provided enough for
the stomachs of the chosen te\v. It would only be used for
leisure, for a kind of Voyage in which seeking and knowledge
would have no place at aIl. It would become scenery. That is
what would happen to our countries, since it is entirely possi-
ble that the aforesaid factories wendd never be located in
them (unless they are really responsible for producing too
much waste). We would inhabit Museums of Natural Non-
History. Reactivating an aesthetics of the earth will perhaps
help differ this nightmare, air-conditioned or not.
This trend toward international standardization of C011-
sumption will not be reversed unless we make drastic changes
in the diverse sensibilities of communities by putting forward
the prospect--or at least the possibility-of this revived aes-
thetic connection with the earth.
How can such a poe tics be resuscitated, when its mind-s,et
drifts bctween the obsolete mysticism that we noted and the
mockery of production that is emerging everywhere? An aes-
thetics of the earth seems, as always, anachronistic: or naive:
reactionary or sterile.
150
But we must get beyond this seemingly impossible task. If
we don't, aIl the prestige (and denaturation) felt in interna-
tionally standardized consumption will triurnph permanently
over the pleasure of consuming one's own product. The
problem is that these denaturations create imbalance and
dry things up. Understood in its full-sense, passion for the
land where one lives is a start, an action we must endlessly
risk.
151
Self-sufficiency can be worked out. With the sole condition
that it not end up in the exc1usivity of territory. A necessary
condition but not enough to incite the radicalities capable of
saving us [rom an1biguity, rallied together within a land-·
scape-reforrrlÏng our taste, without our having to force OUl"-
selves into it.
Thus, within the pitiless panorama of the worldwide com-
mercial market, we debate our problems. No matter where
you are or what government brings you together into a com-
rnunity, the forces of this market are going to find you. If
there is profit to be made, they will deal with you. These are
not vague forces that you might accommodate out of polite-
ness; these are hidden forces of inexorable logic that must be
answered with the totallogic of your behavior. For exarnple,
one could not accept state assistance and at the same time
pretend to oppose it. You must choose your bearing. And, to
get back to the question raised earlier, simply consenting
would not be worth it, in any case. Contradiction would knot
the community (which ceases to be one) with impossibilities,
profoundly destabilizing it. The entire country would
become a Plantation, believing it opera tes with freedom of
decision but, in fact, being outer directed. The exchange of
goods (in this case in Martinique: the exchange of imported
public money against exported private profit) is the rule.
Bustling commerce only confirms the fragmentation and
opposition to change. Minds get used up in this superficial
comfort, which has cost them an unconscious, enervating
braining.
This is the dilemma to be resolved. We, have learned that
peremptory dec1arations, grounded in the old Manichaean-
ism of liberation, are of no use here, because they only con-
tribute to reinforcing a stereotypical language with no hold
in reality. These are allliabilities whose dialectics must first be
either realized or bypassed.
Thinking, for example, that ethnotechnology would save
us from excessive importation, protect the vivid physical qual-
ity of the country, find an equilibrium for our drive to COD--
152
sume, and cement links among all the individuals concerned
with producing and creating amounts to saying that we would
return to a pretechnical, artisan level, elevated to the rank of
a system, leaving it to others to take care of providing us with
the spin-off from their dizzying experirnents, making us
admire from afar the achievements oftheir science, and rent-
ing us (but un der what conditions) the fruits of their indus-
try. Have sornething to exchange that isn't just sand and
coconut trees but, instead, the result of our creative activity.
Integrate what we have, even if it is sea and sun, with the
adventure of a culture that is ours to share and for which we
take responsibility.
There is no value to practicing self:'sufficiency, or consent-
ing to interdependance, or mastering ethnotechnology,
unless these processes constitute both distancings from and
accord with (and in relation to) their referent: the multiform
e1sewhere always set forth as a monolithic necessity in any
country that is dominated.
We struggle against our problems, without knowing that
throughout the world they are widespread. There is no place
that does not have its elsewhere. No place where this is not an
essential dilemma. No place where it is not necessary to come
as close as possible to figuring out this dialectic of interde-
pendencies or this difficult necessity for ethnotechniques.
153
lapsed or exterrninated, and in what fôrrn? vVhat is our expe-
rience, even now, of the pressure of dominant cultures?
Through \vhat accumulations of how many exis-
tences, both individual and collective? Let us try to ca1culate
the result of aIl that. We will be incapable of doing so. Our
experience of this confluence will forever be only one part of
its totality.
No matter how many studies and references we accumu-
late (though it is our profession to carry out such things), we
will never reach the end of such a volume; knowing this in
advance makes it possible fùr us to dwell there. Not knowing
this totality is not a weakness. Not wanting to know it certainly
is. Consequently, we imagine it through a poetics: this imagi-
nary l'ealm provides the full-sense of aIl these always decisive
differentiations. A lack of this poe tics, its absence or its nega-
tion, would constitute a failing.*
Similarly, thought of the Other is sterile without the other
ofThought.
Thought of the Other is the moral generosity disposing
me to accept the principle of alterity, to conceive of the world
as not simple and straightforward, with only one truth-
mine. But thought of the Other can (twell within me without
making me alter course, without "prizing me open," without
changing me within myse1f. An ethical principle, it is enough
that l not violate it.
The other of Thought is precisely this altering. Then l
have to act. That is the moment 1 change my thought, with-
out renouncing its contribution. l change, and l exchange.
154
This is an aesthetics of turbulence whose corresponding
ethics is not provided in advance.
If, thus, we allow that an aesthetics is an art of conceiving,
imagining, and acting, the other ofThought is the aesthetics
implemented by me and by you to join the dynamics to which
we are to contribute. This is the part fallen to me in an aes-
thetics of chaos, the work 1 am to undertake, the road 1 arn to
travel. Thought of the Other is occasionally presupposed by
dominant populations, but with an utterly sovereign power,
or proposed until it hurts by those un der them, who set
themselves free. The other of Thought is always set in motion
by its confluences as a whole, in which each is changed by
and changes the other.
155
The suffering of human cultures does not confine us perma-
nentIy within a mute actuality, mere presence grievously
closed. Sometimes this suffering authorizes an absence that
constitutes release, soaring over: thought rising from the
prisms of poverty, unfurling its own opaque violence, that
gives-on-and-with every violence of contact between cultures.
The most peacefül thought is, thus, in its turn a violence,
when it imagines the risky processes of Relation l'et nonethe-
less avoids the always comfortable trap of generalization. This
antiviolence violence is no trivial thing; it is opening and cre-
ation. It adds a füll-sense to the operative violence ofthose on
the margins, the rebels, the deviants, all specialists in distanç-
ing.
The marginal and the deviant sense in advance the shock
of cultures; they live its future excess. The rebel paves the way
for such a shock, or at least its legibility, by refusing to be
cramped by any tradition at aIl, even when the force of his
rebellion comes from the defense of a tradition that is
ridiculed or oppressed by another tradition that simply has
more powerful means of action. The rebel defends his right
to do his own surpassing; the lives of marginal and deviant
persons take this right to extremes.
We have not yet begun to imagine or figure out the results
of aIl the distancings that are determinant. They have
emerged from everywhere, bearing every tradition and the
surpassing of them all, in a confluence that does away with
trajectories (itineraries), aIl the while realizing them in the
end.
Though the cultural contacts of the moment are territy-
ingly "immediate," another vast expanse of time looms
before us, nonetheless: it is what will be necessary to coun-
terbalance specifie situations, to defüse oppressions, to
assemble the poe tics. This time to come seems as infinite as
galactic spaces.
Meanwhile, contemporary violence is one of the logics-
organic--of the turbulence of the chaos-monde. This violence
156
is what instinctively opposes any thought intending to make
this chaos rnonolithic, grasping it to control it.
157
That That
The world's poetic force (its energy), kept alive within us, fas-
tens itself by fleeting, delicate shivers, onto the rambling pre-
science of poetry in the depths of our being. The active vio-
lence in reality distracts us from knowing it. Our obligation
to "grasp" violence, and often fight it, estranges us fi'om such
live intensity, as it also freezes the shiver and disrupts pre-
science. But this force never runs dry because it is its own tur-
bulence.* Poetry-thus, nonetheless, totality gathering
strength-is driven by another poetic dimension that we aIl
divine or babble within ourselves. It could weIl be that poetry
is basically and mainly defined in this relationship of itself to
nothing other than itself, of density to volatility, or the whole
to the individual.
This world force does not direct any line of force but
infinitely reveals them. Like a landscape impossible to epito-
mize. It forces us to imagine it even while we stand there neu-
tral an d passive.
Borne along by this force or raging to control it-not yet
having consented to the greatness that would come from par-
*The idea of this energy makes for a good joke: "the Force" is the leit-
motiv fùr a very fari10us metaphysicaljwestern movie sequence.
159
taking of it-it will be a long time before we finally recognize
it as the newness of the world not setting itself up as anything
new.
The expression of this force and its way of being is what we
caIl Relation: what the world makes and expresses of itself.
vVe reassure ourselves with this overly vague idea: that Rela-
tion diversifies forms of humanity according to infinite
strings of models infinitely brought into contact and relayed.
This point of departure does not even allow us to outline a
typology of these contacts or of the interactions thus trig-
gered. Its sole merit would lie in proposing that Relation has
its source in these contacts and not in itself; that its aim is not
Being, a self-important entity that would locate its beginning
in itself.
Relation is a product that in turn produces. "Vhat it pro-
duces cioes not partake of Being. That is why, without too
much anthroponl0rphic reductiveness perhaps, we can risk
individuating it here as a system, so as to speak about it by
name.
160
questioning is possible-because Being cannot bear having
any interaction attached to it. Being is self-sufficient, whereas
every question is interactive.)
Prime elements do not enter into Relation. Any prime ele-
ment would call up the shadow of Being. Lacking any reduc-
tive criteria, the undefinable realities of human cultures are
here looked upon as constituents, ingredients, with no possi-
bility of our clairning them as primordial. We have ended up
thinking of cultures from a national, ethnic, generic (civiliza-
tional) angle, as "natural" phenomena of the movement of
interaction that organizes or scatters the world we have to
share.
This way of considering cultures has become widespread
through Relation's very involvement. It is through this win-
dow that we watch one another reacting together. Before
being perceived as the thing urging us into community, cul-
ture calls to mind what it is that divides us from aIl otherness.
It is a discriminating factor, with no ostensible discrimina-
tion. It specifies without putting aside. This is why cultures
are considered the natural elements of Relation, without
really calling the latter by name and without, for aH that,
their constituting its prime elernents.
161
in a planetary perspective, inflects the nature and the "pro-
jection" of every specific culture contemplated. Decisive
mutations in the quality of relationships result from this, with
spectacular consequences that are often thus "experienced"
long before the basis for the change itself has been perceived
by the collective consciousness.
For example, the placid, traditional belief in the superior-
ity of written languages over oral languages has long since
begun to be challenged. Writing no longer is, nor does it
appear to be, any guarantee of transcendence. The first
result of this was a widespread appetite for works of folklore,
sometimes wrongly considered to be bearers of truth or
authenticity; but then came a dramatic effort on the part of
most oral languages to become fixed-that is, to become
akin to writing, at the very instant that the latter was losing its
absolute quality. Behind this change is the oral/written rela-
tionship; its first, spectacular result, giving no clear indica-
tion of the interaction, ,vas the resurgence of folklores.
Henceforth, one of the least disputed measures of "civi-
lization"-technological capability, with its basis in mastery of
sciences and control of economic factors-will find itself
branded as something negative (the catastrophes of the sor-
cerer's apprentice). Ecological protests (which the generic
anxieties of the science of ecolog)-' have led up to) have taken
up this interrupted cry even more resoundingly.
Cultures develop in a single planetary space but to differ-
ent "times." It would be impossible to determine either a real
chronological order or an unquestionable hierarchical order
for these times.
One of the results of current cultural processes is a wide-
spread anxiety magnifying worries about the future we must
contemplate together; this is every\vhere translated into a
need for futurologies. Never, until this contemporary period,
did any individual culture experience such an intense obses-
sion with the future. The passion for astrology, the predic-
tions and prophesies that were Assyrian or Babylonian in ori-·
162
gin and that spread most actively, perhaps during the Euro-
pean Middle Ages, were far more the products of a synthesiz-
ing or magical thought than anything produced by concerns
about really safeguarding the future. The same held true for
the Mayans and Aztecs or in ancient China. Nor did the
notion of progress, so much touted by Victor Hugo, take
shape as motifs of anticipation. These days futurology is an
obsession that tends to set itself up as a science. But any pos-
sible laws of such a science would be stamped by the same
principle ofuncertainty that governs the métissage of cultures.
Our planetary adventure does not permit us to guess
where solutions to the problems born in precipitate contact
between cultures will arise. This is why we cannot put a hier-
archical order to the different "times" pressing into this
global space. It is not certain that technological time will
"succeed," where ethnotechnical time, not yet decided upon
by cultures threatened today, would fail. It is not certain that
the time of History leads to confluences any faster or more
certainly th an the diffracted times in which the histories of
populations are scattered and calI out to one another.
Within this problematic, beyond decisions made by power
and domination, nobody knows how cultures are going to
react in relation to one another nor which of their elements
will be the dominant ones, or thought of as such. In this full-
sense aIl cultures are equal within Relation. And altogether
they could not be considered as its prime elements.
163
them, "create" them by definition? Can we preserve them
from the blIout (pressure or domination) that will take place
within them? The tendency, reinforced by how situations are
reported, to distinguish between a North and a South, indus-
trialized countries and countries existing in absolute poverty,
barely disguises the scorn felt by the former for the latter.
Nor does it conceal the pitiless, agreed-upon stakes, main-
taining and exacerbating distances; nor, alas, the inability of
pOOl' countries on their own, or through decisive effort by
those who govern them, to progress beyond the twilight zone
of deprivation. But this distinction, sanctioning an estab-
lished fact, does not permit its full-sense to be completely iso-
lated. As if the observation and the established fact, obeying
underground laws, and following their set path, gave rise
around them to an indifference of a new sort, which, in fact,
is neither egoism nor quite idiocy, and even less is it igno-
rance or lack of courage. Eroded or standardized forms of
sensibility are th us spread, but by both sides at once of the far
too visible dividing line.
There are pseudo force-lin es, like so many traces that explain
too much, prophesied in this maelstrom. Planetary con-
sciousness, rnanipulated from underground by anyone
profiting thereby, creates barriers for itself. By confusing, for
example, State and culture, the notion grows that there is
such a thing as legi timate States (democracies), a rank to
which progress will later lead the effective States reported to
be presently places of tyranny and brute violence. An odd lie,
one that is simultaneously political and cultural. Violence,
which determined which human communities sprang up,
today governs the difficult search for sorne balance in their
relations. The question should not be to transform effective
States gradually into legitimate States but to work toward
164
making there be an effective state everywhere corresponding
to the legitimate state.
165
What is a flash agent? To conceive the question we must first
consider the age-old ways in which cultures have interacted
each time they have been in contact. Notjust the interaction
of their tendencies tO\vard attraction or repulsion but the
workings of their inner structures that become modified
each time-the network of similarity or osmosis, or
01' renaturing, that fonned, manifested itself, canceled itself
out, sirnply because of what could have been called rc1ay
agents. Formerly (and by agreement), these relay agents
needed relative obscurity, like a latency period, in relation to
their perception of the results of their action-to really work.
The relay agent was active because, tirst of a11, he went unno-
ticed.
Today flash agents are the relay agents who are in tune
with the irnplicit violence of contacts between cultures and
the lightning speed of techniques of relation. They send con-
sciousness hllrtling into the sudden certainty that it is in pos-
session of the obvious keys of interaction or, usually, into the
assurance that it does not need such keys. They dictate
ion and commonplace-these two modern embodiments of
interrelation.
If these risky keys (fashion and commonplace) seem to us
so very obvious, it is because the flash agents impress us espe-
cially through the immediacy (pure pressure) of their com-
munication techniques. Their action is sufficient unto itself
here; there is no statecl ideology of communication. The
ones in control of it in the \vorld do not even have to justify
this control. They plainly sanction itjust by the fact that com-
munication is continuously in flux: that is, its "[reedom"
made legitimate by its topicality, that is, its transience.
Relay agents, today transformed into flash agents, tend
thllS to reject as illoperable t\VO notions that were forrnerly of
importance: the idea of structure and that of ideolobry.
The transformation of lday into flash strikes at the wcak
point of these two notions: their overemphasized generaliza-
tions in space and time. They too, the idea of structure and
the idea of ideology, also required a latency period to shed
166
some light on what they were about. The violent haste of the
present offers them a challenge. Fashion sends the analysis
inferred by ideology drastically off course, and the common-
place scatters the intent preserved in structure's thought-
or, at least, this is what they fiercely claim to do.
167
Relinked, (Relayed), Related
169
can be considered as a prime clement in Relation. The result
is that we come back to our original propositions, completing
the circle-the round-of our space-time. Paradoxically,
every breakthrough toward a definition of this extcrnal rela-
tionship (benveen cultures) perrnits us a better approach to
the components of each of the particular cultures consid-
ered.
Analysis helps us to imagine better; the imaginary then
helps us to grasp the (not prime) elements of our totality.
Case by case and society after society, the humanities, from
anthropology to socÏology, have studied these structural com-
ponents and dynamic relationships. But none of these disci-
plines forms any conception of the ove raIl rhythm, though
without their work this would be inaccessible.
170
relationships. Nor is it to be confused with sorne marvelous
accident that might suddenly occur apart from any relation-
ship, the known unknown, in which chance would be the
magnet. Relation is aU these things at once.
171
ducts), but aIso these principles must be supposed to change
as rapidly as the elements thus put into play define (embody)
new relationships and change them.
Let us repeat this, chaotically: Relation neither relays nor
links afferents that can be assimilated or allied only in their
principle, for the simple reason that it always differentiates
among them concretely and diverts them from the totalitar-
ian-because its work always changes all the elements com-
posing it and, consequently, the resulting relationship, which
then changes themaIl over again.
172
approaching it, the infinite interaction of cultures. Magma in
profusion, tending to empty aIl thought of ideology, which is
considered inapplicable to such an amalgam. Collective
drives tend more toward the literaI and utilitarian (the reas-
suring heft of coner'ete results promoted to the dignity of a
value) or toward the providential and ideal (the reassuring
determination of a cause or hero making choices for you).
LiteraI and ideal make good company for each other.
Repressed in this manner, ideological thought (the need
to analyze, understand, transforrn) invents new forms for
itself and plays tricks with profusion: it projects itself into
futurology, which also has no limits. It attempts, for exarnple,
to create a synthesis with likely applications from the sci-
ences, which gradually leads into theories of model making.
The models dairn to base the rnatter of Relation in relation-
ships; in other words, they daim to catch its movement in the
act and then translate this in terms of dynamic or energized
structures.
Thus, ideologicai thought and structural thought come
together in their use of models to protest against the amal-
gam's mixing action. Making models is a (generalizing)
attempt to get beyond the transient currency of fashion and
the falsely definitive obviousness of the comrnonplace.
173
ance (or depth) shows nothing revealing on the surface. This
revealer is set astir when the poetics of Relation calls UpOll
the imagination. What best emerges from Relation is what
one senses.
El' the same token, whenever vve try to analyze Relation,
the analysis as such being in turn an element of relation, it
seems pointless to grant every new proposition in a succes-
sion of convincing examples. The example only bears a rela-
tionship to one element of a multiple whose parts are in har-
mony with and repel one another in many areas at once.
Choosing one exanlple (introducing it as evidence, using it
for dernonstration) also unduly privileges one of these areas:
misperceiving relationship within Relation.
The accumulation of examples is reassuring to us but is
outside of any clairn to system. Relation cannot be "proved,"
because its totality is not approachable. But it can be imag-
ined, conceivable in transport of thought. The accumulation
of exalnpIes aims at perfecting a never complete description
of the processes of relation, not circurnscribing them or giv-
ing legitimacy to sorne impossible global truth. In this sense
the most hannonious analysis is the one that poetically
describes flying or diving. Description is no proof; it sim ply
adds something to Relation insobr as the latter is a synthesis-
genesis that never is cornplete.
174
unheeded, thus aIl the more decisive contacts whose quality
of interrelation was not immediately forseeable or measur-
able, in the same way that haste today distracts us, spreading
out before our eyes the networks of causality whose workings
we might have been able to discover. The results ofunheeded
contact became as essential as original elements, just as if
only the internaI movement of a particular culture had
caused them-an infinite and undefinable movement.
Industrialized nations have long beat time for this precipi-
tousness, determining its speed and giving rhythm to trends,
through the control they exert over modes of power and
means of communication. The situation worldwide "inte-
grates" cultures becoming exhausted by this speed and oth-
ers that are stuck somewhere offby themselves. The latter are
kept in a state of sluggish, passive receptivity in which fan-
tasies of spectacular development and overwhelming con-
sumption remain fantasies.
175
without verification. Proof by elite has ceased to count. The
enormous divagation replacing it leaves no time for retreat
or re-seizure.
Such an analysis, whose gears start to engage at the place
where flash agents are generated (roughly, the industrialized
countries) , is absolutely valid for those subjected to its impo-
sition (roughly, the countries existing in absolute poverty).
We will never be able to list aIl the commonplaces echoing
throughout Relation: an idea rerun across many, in princi-
pIe, heterogeneous fields; repetitions (in a rudimentary and
caricatural but irrlmediately triumphant form) by flash
agents of sorrle reflected-upon information, which moreover
had gone under and vanishedjust because it was a reflection,
that is, suspiciously deep; baroque assemblages of force lines
that intensify in unexpected places, etc.
176
sidelines (because ofbeing cut offfrom relay lines or because
it has no flash agents or because it chose, defining its own
dazzle to scorn such lines) , but it nonetheless plays a part-
because things couldn 't be otherwise-as an active relay of
Relation.
The relaying action of cultures does not depend on their
will or even their power to relay. The consequences of the
succession of relays go beyond the occasion of the first relay,
or the original relay, which claimed to have started it aH. The
inadequacy of this claim is revealed when the sequence stops
or becomes realized in another area or another cycle. This is
why Relation, which is the world's newness, drives every pos-
sible fashion faster and faster. In contrast with the parade of
fashions, Relation does not present itself as anything new.
Indiscriminately, it is newness.
177
discerning the effects of interaction is what allows one to dit:..
ferentiate bet\,yeen neutral and active agents. A cultural pres-
ence can be active and ignored, whereas an intervention càn
be, on the contraI')', spectacular and neutral. Here the neu-
tral is not the ineffective but, rather, what is concealed
beneath the spectacle. The active is not dominant; it acts in
the continuum.
Flash agents transform into a neutral relay (neutralized in
the dazzle of its manifest proofs) the very thing that formerly
functioned as an active relay, one not immediately perceived
but long rendered dynamic by relay agents.
In consequence, we know what these relay agents are
today: they are échos-monde working with the matter of Rela-
tion. And, conversely, we can define the scope of the tactics of
flash agents; they literally reflect this matter, their reflections
manifCsting its violence without shedding any light on it or
shifting it or changing it.
178
It is the nature offlash agents to keep a distance, to widen the
gap between surfacing cultures and cultures of intervention
(one of the "undisciplined" forms of the generalizing univer-
saI). They wear thought out with the apparatus of its delu-
sion. They divert it toward the certainty that its "end" is to
perfect the very thing that reinforces their ernergence alone
as flash agents and maintains their simultaneously logical
and distorting power. They need the gap (between produc-
ing countries and recipient countries) to hold to their line. *
*It would seem that, strictIy corresponding to the oid division hetween
the discoverers and the discovered, there is now a redivision bet\\leen
producer countries and recipient countries, except for japan. But let us
repeat that this redivision is no longer the result oflaw; it sanctions a de
facto domination, one not based on any privilege of knowiedge nor on
any daim to be absolute.
179