Georg Lukács and the Demonic Novel
Goethe and Lucifer in the Heidelberg Aesthetics
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LUKACS - ŞEYTANİ ROMAN
Goethe and Lucifer in the Heidelberg Aesthetics
There is no need to introduce Goethe into Lukács’s aesthetic theory, because it contains a full (and surprisingly approving) section on him (HÄs 183–92); only in the next subsection does the tone become more critical (HÄs 193). 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 143 The question Lukács pursues in Goethe, after having dismantled Hegel, 25
allow an idea of beauty—above all of artistic beauty—to be conceived, which would be simultaneously concrete, immanent, and empirical throughout all of its moments and stages. Hegel’s dialectical system reports an error when it comes to explaining the concrete developmental manifestations of aesthetic objects. Hegel was, according to Lukács, unable to conceive the (Luciferian) particularity of singular aesthetic objects in their self-sufficient “spheres.” In comparison with Hegel, Goethe’s morphology (which Lukács never refers to by this name) is an advance, because it stands a better chance of producing an idea of the aesthetic that is at once immanent and developmental. In light of Hegel’s failure to vanquish Kant, Goethe’s “way of observing nature” (Art der Naturbetrachtung) is an intervention “in the development of specula- tive philosophy” (in die Entwicklung der spekulativen Philosophie), which Lukács characterizes as “fatefully decisive” (schicksalhaft-entscheidend, HÄs 183). To support this, he draws on a variety of mostly later works of Goethe, including the “Maxims and Reflections,” The Theory of Colors, Faust, and
the light?” (Wär’ nicht das Auge sonnenhaft, / Wie könnten wir das Licht erblicken? HÄs 186)—set up an opposition between Faust and Makarie (from Wilhelm Meister), in which the latter represents the “utopian-real cosmic completion” (utopisch-real kosmische Vollendung) of Faust’s human inadequacies. Makarie is “the highest realization of this form of life [die höchste Verwirklichung dieser Lebensform], . . . in which the solar system has become truly alive, who is the solar system and lives it immediately [die das
Lukács’s idea of the “spherical” life and “rounded” existence that is impos- sible in the fragmentary reality of modernity. The young Faust, on the other hand, exemplifies the modern predicament in solipsistic limitations defined by the earth-spirit (Erdgeist): “you are like the spirit that you conceive, but not like me” (du gleichst dem Geist, den du begreifst, / Nicht mir, HÄs 187). Lukács is more convinced by this “tragic” figure of Faust than by the pos- sibility of a development leading to perfection (Vollendung) or redemption (Erlösung). Faust’s encounter with the earth-spirit represents a struggle with the Luciferian in which “reality” triumphs, even before there is a wager that can be lost. Lukács sees the definitive and inescapable reality in Faust’s rest- less striving, and on this basis he rejects the later harmonizing moments as ideals—or as ironic-critical abstractions. Yet Goethe’s organological aesthet- ics is nevertheless emphatically affirmed: The doubly guiding role [die doppel-leitende Stellung] of the organic in the system is that which is ultimately determinant [als letztlich Download 325.44 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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