Georg Lukács and the Demonic Novel
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LUKACS - ŞEYTANİ ROMAN
Dämon and Tyche as “the non-compatibility of empirical life and the sensory
immanence of meaning” (das Nicht-eingehen-Wollen der Sinnesimmanenz in das empirische Leben, TdR 61). The immediate unity of life and meaning may look like a sentimental ideal, but the current unrealizability of this ideal means that Lukács (unlike Gun- dolf) does not seek a contemporary epitome (such as Goethe) to show the achievability of “heroic” existence. One might want to say that Dostoyevsky fulfills this function, with the difference that his epics—perhaps no longer novels—anticipate a future life ideal. 30 Lukács saw Dostoyevsky as a figure This content downloaded from 176.88.30.219 on Fri, 22 Jan 2021 23:33:11 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms
Georg Lukács and the Demonic Novel 151 pointing toward the dawn of a new epoch, but there is no unified perspec- tive available at present through which the meaning of life can be universally mediated without lapsing into a subjectivity that would contradict the univer- sality intended. To get around this problem, Lukács introduces irony in order to theorize the novel as a perspectival matrix, a system of foils that prevents access to final or authoritative meaning. The alternatives represented in the world of the novel are suspended by the limitations of a narrator who recog- nizes divisions without being able to overcome them. This limited acceptance reflects and partially stabilizes the rift at the base of the modern experience represented through the novel’s hero. Given various splits, but especially the one between individual and world—Dämon and Tyche, “soul” and “forms”—irony allows the novel’s given world to be structured into two perspectives that mark the extremes of interiority and exteriority. These perspectives are typically represented by a protagonist and a narrator: [Irony] means . . . an internal splitting [eine innere Spaltung] of the normatively poetic subject [des normativ dichterischen Subjekts] into [1] a subjectivity as interiority, which stands in opposition to alien power complexes [die fremde Machtkomplexen gegenübersteht] and strives to imprint this alien world with the contents of its longings [die Inhalte ihrer Sehnsucht] and [2] a subjectivity that is able to see through the abstractness [Abstraktheit] and thus through the limitations [Beschränktheit] of the opposing and mutually alien sub- ject- and object-worlds [Subjekts- und Objektswelten]; this perception [Durchschauen] indeed leaves the duality of the world untouched [die Zweiheit der Welt bestehen läßt], but at the same time, in the reciprocal conditionality [die wechselseitige Bedingtheit] of the two elements that are mutually and essentially alien to one another, it catches sight of and shapes [erblickt und gestaltet] a unified world [eine einheitliche Welt]. This unity is however purely formal [rein for-
The novel is the genre of the negative—ironic and counter-exemplary—depic- tion of the unity of fate and character. With irony, the universal lack of unity can become the basis of a speculative unification. In order to tell the story, the narrator must be able “to recognize as necessary” (TdR 64)—and perhaps even to accept, from a standpoint of “resignation” (TdR 61)—the unfathom- able split within the world. Importantly, this realization “of limits” (TdR 64) on the part of the narrator—of the limitations of any unifying perspective—is only possible on the basis of the paradoxical and partial knowledge called
(Entsagung), which would seek to unify this perspective into an ethical norm and universal possibility of conflict resolution. Novelistic irony, though it This content downloaded from 176.88.30.219 on Fri, 22 Jan 2021 23:33:11 UTC All use subject to https://about.jstor.org/terms 152
Georg Lukács and the Demonic Novel walks the fine line between ambivalent resignation and ambiguous moral- ization, allows problematic subjects to be depicted without moralizing or generalizing. The split between subject and narrator also reflects a temporal split between the time of experience and its later narration. In Poetry and Truth, in the context of the demonic, Goethe ironically characterizes this idea of irony: “That’s what makes it youth and life in general: we generally first learn to perceive the strategy after the campaign is over” (HA 10:183). Goethe takes irony ironically where Lukács takes it seriously (in that he implies that the problem that necessitates it is solvable). Thus the novel does not affirm the solution—the Notlösung—of irony, but employs it as a “merely formal” device to keep the real problem in focus: that the world is not a utopia but an “ever-lost paradise” (ein ewig verlorenes Paradies, TdR 74). Significantly, irony is less central in part 2 of The Theory of the Novel, which focuses on the problems of protagonists. Lukács, it seems, is unable to reintroduce irony in its proper place, the narrator-protagonist differential, which resurfaces in part 2’s discussions of memory (TdR 110–14). The con- text makes it clear, however, that hero and narrator are not fixed positions: the process of aging—of achieving “mature masculinity” (gereifte Männlich-
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