Georg Lukács and the Demonic Novel
The Demonic as a Template for the Novel
Download 325.44 Kb. Pdf ko'rish
|
LUKACS - ŞEYTANİ ROMAN
The Demonic as a Template for the Novel
The difficulty of giving closure to a biographical narrative may have led Goethe to introduce “the demonic” in a series of interconnected excurses at the end of Poetry and Truth. This underlying formal difficulty as well as the substance of the excurses on the demonic are both directly relevant to the genre of the novel. The developmental-biographical paradigms of the Orphic “Urworte” may also be taken as a framework for the “novel of education” (Bildungs- or Entwicklungsroman). Poetry and Truth, as a biographical nar- rative, could be read as an application of a developmental paradigm such as that of the “Urworte.” In this reading, the demonic emerges at the end of Poetry and Truth as a symptom of the difficulties of fitting life’s events into the phases and stages of a systematic conceptual framework. The formal- ization of life into a system of heterogeneous factors unavoidably relies on memory to reconstruct their relations and causations. The demonic emerges from such an attempt as a by-product of the confrontation between merely subjective recollections and an intended synthesis of life into a coherent causal narrative. In the “Urworte,” the problem of the demonic originates in the unified force of an individual’s personality, talents, and drives—in the innate, unique productivity of the Dämon, which may produce geniuses like Mozart as well as more pathological “demons” like his protagonist, Don Giovanni. 1 In either case, the demonic drive sets the driven individual at odds with society by plac- ing him (or her) 2 above, below, or outside of it. Without constructing a canon of demonic heroes and antiheroes, the examples of which would be endless, one might postulate that especially when protagonists are depicted as excep- tional—whenever characters are characters with qualities—the demonic is in play. The “Urworte” thus pertains to the formation of protagonists and “characters,” while Poetry and Truth’s encounter with the limited represent- ability of such formations exemplifies the ironic relation of narrators to their own lack of omniscience. These two aspects of the demonic may not evidently apply to all novels or “life stories.” Kafka, for example, might represent a limit at which the 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 136
Georg Lukács and the Demonic Novel protagonist-narrator polarity dissolves into something more like a dream or a pure scenario, driven not by the dynamics of character and limitations in the narrator’s perspective but by demonic plot elements related to other forms of uncertainty, chance, expectation, and mediation. 3 Given the vast range of possibilities within these approaches, it may be that the paradigm of the demonic can include every possible novel—but it can only do so in the way that all paradigms relate to exceptions and limit cases. It is not my intent to pursue such a paradigmatic-taxonomic project, but, broadly, one might surmise that the traditional novel, at least up to Thomas Mann, fits easily into the framework of Goethe’s conceptions of the demonic. This coherence is reflected in Lukács’s 1916 Theory of the Novel, which represents a broadly synthetic and retrospective formalization of the nineteenth-century novel. Using the methods of the philosophy of history, 4
Lukács seeks to perceive the basic form of the genre’s underlying conflicts and define the transcendental status of the novel as the latest epic form. He treats the novel as a form that has reached its end, tested all of its limits and exhausted its possibilities. In order to establish the parameters of the genre in such a way as to permit this kind of historicization, he relies implicitly and explicitly on Goethe’s idea of the demonic. Lukács’s citation of the most enigmatic passage of book 20 of Poetry and Truth gives Goethe’s conception striking prominence—but the demonic never emerged as a correspondingly central conception in the reception of Lukács’s theory. The reason for this is obvious: the demonic was taken primarily for a pathos formula without an evident systematic function; The Theory of the Novel barely indicates how the demonic fits into the theory, and insofar as it is subordinated to a philosophy of history, it can be ignored as a superfluous difficulty. Especially if the complexity of Goethe’s concept is not recognized, or if Lukács is not credited with a solid grasp of it, the citation from Poetry and Truth looks like an afterthought. Setting aside Lukács’s direct engagements with the demonic, his familiarity with it is suggested by the similarity between Goethe’s analytic parameters and those of Lukács’s theory. The “Urworte” outline a universal model of character development and socialization, whereas Poetry and Truth pres- ents the demonic as the inability of retrospective knowledge to give univocal meaning to a biographical-developmental narrative. These two aspects pre- cisely reflect Lukács’s focus on protagonists (on the one hand) and the ironic perspective of narrators (on the other). This schematic reduction of the two sides of the demonic to a protagonist- narrator opposition allows the notoriously convoluted paths of Lukács’s text to be circumvented. Complexity-reduction is not an end in itself, however, and this formal derivation leaves Lukács’s conception of the demonic essentially unclarified. Nevertheless, new perspectives may be opened up by hypotheti- cally imagining the demonic without Lukács as representing an independent framework for theorizing the novel. From this perspective, Lukács appears to 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 137 have been surprisingly successful at synthesizing Goethe’s conception into his overall theory. Perhaps this comes as no surprise considering his proximity to Goethe biographers like Simmel and Gundolf, but what remains striking is the synthetic understanding that allowed him to incorporate the demonic into an infrastructure that might otherwise appear Hegelian. Lukacs’s way of combining the demonic with other conceptions does not allow it to be easily differentiated analytically. Goethe himself did not produce a theory of the demonic to which one might directly refer, while, between Goethe and Lukács, overtly theoretical conceptions such as those of Wundt and Freud had begun to explore the demonic’s systematic potential. The young Lukács also subjects Goethe’s understanding of the demonic to an intense systematization and, like his older contemporaries Spengler and Gundolf, he often opposed the demonic (as a figure of modernity) to an idea of originary authenticity reminiscent of the Dämon of Goethe’s “Urworte”: “The way of the soul [der Weg der Seele] is: To strip everything from oneself that does not really belong to it [was nicht ihr eigen ist]; to form the soul to true individuality [das Formen der Seele zur wirklichen Individualität].” 5 Rather than presenting a critical, analytical, or philological engagement with the paradigmatic potential of the demonic, Lukács wants to realize the Download 325.44 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
ma'muriyatiga murojaat qiling