Georg Lukács and the Demonic Novel
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LUKACS - ŞEYTANİ ROMAN
Dämon of Goethe’s “Urworte.” Lukács characteristically glosses the Dämon
idea with the word soul (Seele, TdR 56) and explains it as an experience in which the external world is able to become the extension and medium of the soul: “for the soul itself is the law” (denn die Seele selbst ist das Gesetz, TdR 56). The life of this soul is not that of modernity, but of Greek antiq- uity; it refers to a soul that does not (yet) encounter anything fundamentally opposed or foreign to it, which does not (yet) know the “searching” quality that Lukács attributes to the novel’s hero: The human world that comes into view is one in which the soul is at home [zu Hause], whether as man, god or demon [Mensch, Gott oder Dämon]. In this world the soul finds everything it needs [alles, was not tut]; it has no need to create or animate something out of itself [aus sich selbst heraus zu schaffen], because its existence [Existenz] is copiously fulfilled [überreichlich erfüllt] in the finding, collecting and shaping [Finden, Sammeln und Formen] of that which is immediately given and related to it as a soul [was ihr unmittelbar, als Seelenver-
The fact that this “soul” may ambiguously be that of “man, god or demon” indicates a prelapsarian existence more superhuman than human. Its lan- guage reconceptualizes Goethe’s Dämon. 28 Thus, more implicitly than in the Heidelberg Aesthetics, Lukács here also relies on Goethe to theorize the uni- fication of subject and object. A comparison with Goethe makes the one-sidedness apparent with which Lukács focuses on the Dämon (or “soul”) without regard for the balancing powers of Tyche, Eros, Ananke, and Elpis. 29 For Lukács as well as Goethe, however—at least in the modern state of the world—the idea of a completely unchecked Dämon is only a foil, a momentary ideal standing for everything that human life generally is not. Lukács’s next paragraph thus posits an impeding if not malicious Tyche: 176.88.30.219 on Fri, 22 Jan 2021 23:33:11 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms
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Georg Lukács and the Demonic Novel Interiority’s life of its own [das Eigenleben der Innerlichkeit] [inte- riority split off from a coherent connection to the outside world] is only then possible and necessary . . . when the gods are silent [wenn
and incapable of receiving the true meaning of deeds within itself [unvermögend, den wahren Sinn der Taten in sich aufzunehmen]. Interiority has become unable to make a symbol of itself in deeds [an ihnen ein Symbol zu werden] and to dissolve them into symbols [und sie in Symbole aufzulösen]: the connection between interiority and adventure [die Innerlichkeit und das Abenteuer] is forever severed [abgetrennt]. (TdR 57) For Lukács, this disconnection between the authenticity of the Dämon and a godless, meaningless world of contingent forms defines the modern world and its characteristic epic genre. Older epics told of heroes who symbolically represented communities—who did not search, but were led. This idea of heroism presumed the unity of “interiority and adventure”; whereas Tyche in antiquity was opportune and auspicious, in the modern world she is a hindrance to the Dämon’s self-actualization. Lukács reproduces of the basic schema of Goethe’s Dämon-Tyche opposi- tion, but he reads it very differently. Instead of viewing Tyche as a potentially productive socialization, he interprets her exclusively as an agonistic oppo- nent of Dämon; he resists Goethe’s attempt to bridge antiquity and modernity in the enduring validity of the “Urworte.” Whereas Goethe saw in them a timeless analytic system, for Lukács they express a unified relation of life and world that only existed in Greek antiquity. On this point, Lukács is close to Benjamin’s reading of the “Urworte,” which argues that the imagined unity of Tyche and Dämon—of fate and character—is always a regression to the
uation. Where Benjamin posits the unity of life and world as a perpetual phantasm of “myth,” Lukács supposes a primordial whole, which not only actually existed, but which remains the only possible goal of history. He thus characterizes modernity and the modern novel in the absent connection of
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