Georg Lukács and the Demonic Novel


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LUKACS - ŞEYTANİ ROMAN

werden] that the will to produce a system [der Wille zum System

with its necessary will to produce a harmony of values [die Harmonie 



der Werte], almost always strives from the outset to produce, through 

a process of synchronization [Abstimmung], the harmony it presup-

poses. This kind of systematic approach attempts to veil and diminish 

[verschleiern und vermildern] the essence of the aesthetic [das Wesen 



der Ästhetik], which strives to go beyond the level of the other values 

[aus der Ebene der anderen Werte hinausstrebt]. Here, however, an 

appeal will be made in the name of the simple understanding of the 

aesthetic sphere [im Namen der einfachen Erkenntnis der ästhetischen 



Sphäre], which leads me also to emphasize that the metaphysical 

“enemies” of art—such as Plato, Kierkegaard or Tolstoy—have rec-

ognized its normative essence [ihr normatives Wesen] as well as its 

metaphysical significance [ihre metaphysiche Bedeutung] with much 

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140

 

Georg Lukács and the Demonic Novel



greater clarity than its harmonizing defenders. Thus, if someone 

were tempted, on the basis of the present purely value-theoretical 

analysis, to think that the Luciferian [das Luciferische] is the proper 

metaphysical “location” [der metaphysische “Ort”] of the aesthetic, 

I would not be able to contradict him (nor would I wish to do so). 

(HÄs 131–32)

At the beginning of the passage, Lukács argues that because philosophical 

aesthetics itself has the goal of producing systematic harmony and coherence

philosophy obscures the oppositional—negating, contrary—character of art. 

This will to harmoniousness contrasts with the chaos of everyday reality in 

the same way that art does, thereby revealing philosophy’s complicity with 

the aesthetic. That which “cannot be left unsaid” (nicht verschwiegen werden 



kann) is philosophy’s own aesthetic tendency.

Once a philosophical system is bracketed in this way, its meaning is no 

longer stable. Lukács calls his own system into question in an exposed 

self-contradiction. With false modesty, he stresses that his work is only an 

“immanent value-theoretical analysis,” thereby calling attention to the limi-

tations of such an analysis. This does not mean that he retracts his theory of 

aesthetic positing; but what counts here is not the theory’s internal coherence 

or descriptive accuracy, but the horizons of its possible meanings. In view of 

such horizons, Lukács displays obvious ambivalence toward his own concep-

tion of art. He is unsure whether to side with the metaphysical “enemies” 

of art or with its “defenders.” He concedes that the enemies would be right 

to conclude that the “metaphysical location” of the aesthetic is “the Lucife-

rian,”

18

 but the “somebody” (jemand) who plays the devil’s advocate here is, 



however, Lukács himself. The radical defender of the autonomy of art unex-

pectedly changes sides and raises doubts about his defense. The traditional 

defenses were based on art’s double tendency toward transcendence—either 

toward life and “reality” or toward norms of beauty, ethics, and moral-

ity—but in Lukács’s conception, these rationalizations and justifications are 

disallowed. The oppositional character of art in the Heidelberg Aesthetics 

makes it Luciferian in its essential tendency to replace the world with a plu-

rality of seductive, short-lived, and ultimately unlivable counter-worlds. In 

the terms of Maurice Blanchot: Luciferian art is a siren’s song that calls away 

from the world.

19

Lukács’s idea of the immanence and autonomy of art is blocked by an idea 



of reality that prevents him from affirming his defense of art. With respect 

to a singular reality, art tends to produce virtual realities. The “better” a 

work, the more Luciferian it is. On the flip side, the philosophical-conceptual 

rationalization of art—toward the beautiful, the sublime, the ethical, or the 

political—neutralizes its Luciferian aspect, but does so in a way that makes art 

itself irrelevant. Thus, according to consequences Lukács does not explicitly 

draw: art is utterly otherworldly—but this is precisely what causes it to be of 

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Georg Lukács and the Demonic Novel 

141

the utmost consequence for the “real world.” Its “Luciferian” aspect, which 

its “enemies” perceived, is that if it does not lead upward—if it cannot be 

instrumentalized—then it must lead downward. If it is not self-transcending, 

then it is hostile to every system that seeks to stabilize its meaning.

Art is an unsublatable, “Luciferian” principle of opposition, and its seduc-

tions are even more seductive and uncontrollable when their normative 

instrumentalization is revealed as the defense mechanism of a beleaguered 

reality. Given this setup, it is still not easy to say what side Lukács takes. 

Precisely the harmoniousness of art’s siren song makes it dissonant and 

false with respect to reality. This might mean that, instead of working on 

works, artists should work on reality itself. Lukács cannot go in this direc-

tion without turning his habilitation into a manifesto, and thus the degree of 

his sympathy with the enemies of art remains ambiguous. If he were to fully 

side with them, his “defense” of “aesthetic positing” would become the pre-

text for its condemnation. This reading cannot be ruled out, but it overlooks 

Lukács’s obvious fascination with the unstable and destabilizing functions 

of art. The idea of the Luciferian suggests its author’s susceptibility to it; he 

may have found its anarchist “negation” of a deficient reality more salutary 

than this reality’s attempts to rationalize and harmonize art as propaganda or 

“aesthetic education.” Without trying to resolve this point, I find it plausible 

to imagine that Lukács identified with art’s Luciferian aspect—not because it 

represents a revolutionary potential, but because it represents a this-worldly 

beyond, a normative inversion with respect to the world and the polarities 

of its conceptualization (good/evil, idealism/realism, state/society, progress/

decline, etc.).

20

There is no evidence that Lukács takes his idea of the Luciferian from 



Goethe, but because The Theory of the Novel cites the demonic from book 

20 of Poetry and Truth, it seems reasonable to read the Luciferian in connec-

tion with book 8’s “pulsing” conception of man’s simultaneous participation 

in the Luciferian and the divine. Lukács’s and Goethe’s versions of the 

Luciferian are roughly compatible in their reading of the impulse toward 

individualization and specification (in the form of “aesthetic positing”) in 

terms of an opposition or distance from the divine. Goethe’s opposition of 

the Luciferian and the divine in the figure of systole and diastole, however, 

differs greatly from Lukács’s more schismatic understanding. Goethe allows 

the individual to have a double home, whereas for Lukács this doubleness 

is the essence of homelessness. For Lukács, perfect specification is only pos-

sible through “aesthetic positing,” whereas “real life”—including the life of 

the artist—is defined by alien contingencies. In comparison to Goethe, the 

most difficult question posed by Lukács is whether the ideal of “specifica-

tion” might be realizable in life—outside of the artificial closure of aesthetic 

positing. The choice of the word “Luciferian” itself seems to be premised on 

the idea that the lure of the aesthetic always breaks its utopian promise.

21

 In 



a naive way, one might wonder if Lukács is not asking too much of art. He 

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