The first half of On Interpretation-

Jameson’s first chapter On Interpretation begins with a lengthy introduction and repudiation of previous modes of interpretation. He begins with Althusserian Marxist variant of structural causality, which is embedded in that thinker’s structural approach. Structuralism is very important to Jameson’s conception of the dialectic of Utopia and ideology as manifested in modern literature, but not without considerable qualification. To begin with, Jameson argues that structural causality as it was fought in various encoded political battles (namely the French Communist Party against Stalin) used the concept of (semi) autonomy was used as a reductive term to quantify the various levels of economy and society. The debate was that Stalin’s use of causality allowed his particular brand of ideology to cross cut and flatten the various levels of culture and society in order to maintain a direct (and alienated) network to subjects. This, Jameson argues, is a syllogistic approach to a structuralism whose causality is rather situated within mediation between these structures, and not the levels, themselves. The difference between autonomous levels in structuralism, versus a structursl relationship of mediation is that, synchronically, the relationship from one level to the next to the next, are inextricably inter-woven and show a kind of origin within the “base;” that is, the relationships lose their autonomy insofar as they express the homology of relations themselves. (Which, as a side note, clearly also counteracts post-structural critiques that quantify the levels as autonomous and interchangeable into a situation that is not only undialectical, but also un-Marxist.) All of these qualifications serve to suggest that Althusserian Marxism must be understood as a (modern) modification of the Marxist mode of interpretation, rather than a break with it. Indeed, earlier in the chapter, Jameson brackets Althusserian Marxism as a type of local law, presumably the local laws of modernism, and therefore cannot be abandoned or washed away in the critique of modern literature.

Jameson goes on to dismantle the “alternate” side of the debate, which is the Lukacian analysis of modern literature, which the author says is reductive of the modernist problematic and completely ignores the Utopian vocation of reification. So, while Lukacs is not wrong in his historical identification of reification as an oppressive ideological force, his essentially un-dialectical mode of interpretation is not useful in conducting a genuine literary analysis of modernism. Althusserian structuralism in the highly qualified and historically corrected sense, is still applicable on a level of modern history, though structuralist Marxism as a master-code approach must be limited or qualified within a properly dialectical hermeneutic that is trans-historically valid. So, the first chapter of The Political Unconscious introduces the dialectical relations as embodied in the form of the novel as the mediatory force between modern structural levels of reality in late capitalism (late modifying the recentness of events, not a suggestion of impending capital failure).

Jameson also engages with other allegorical lexicons of interpretation, namely Freud’s schematic. Here, he works to qualify the structure of Freud’s interpretive apparatus by freeing it from the essentially private sphere of individualized libidinal desire. Freud maps the unconscious impulses of desire, which relates to wish-fulfillment, not as a personal libidinization of private desires, but a filtering of history and Utopian impulse along axes in order to free dialectical bearing to an otherwise ideologically bound system of individual impulse. (Jameson also validates Freud’s lexicon from the Freudians as its own mode of interpretation in exposing that the only group who is invested in making sense of the Freudian lexicon within its own context are themselves, and that symbolism in its direct/contextual sense has long been outmoded approach to the unconscious, specifically because it does not gesture towards the political without extensive qualification.) This moment in the text is a direct pre-cursor to his analysis of Conrad, whose literature contains a dialectical relationship to (desired) value as it was discussed in terms of that author’s contemporaries, Nietzsche and Weber. Jameson completes this lexical liberation by transferring the Freudian interpretative mode from the individual onto the allegorical organization of modeling society as presented by Northrop Frye. Frye’s mythical allegory of social relations, while imbued in religious imagery, is useful with the infused terminology of Freud’s lexicon, a mode of interpretation for social relationships as a unifying ideological process that provides surface cohesion for an otherwise conflicting formation (i.e. ideology as religion). Freud’s interpretive code is explicitly useful in terms of Frye’s allegorical level of the Myth/Archetypal, but when this interpretive function is expressed, it passes into the anagogical mode of “meaning” that always re-invests itself as a contained ideological impulse.

In this sense, the reader can quickly branch out the book’s Conclusion, wherein the dialectical mode of ideology is also clearly Utopian, but forever re-invested in its own ideological code (in late capitalism, the dream of eternal life or bliss is always folded into an insistence of consumption). Returning to Frye’s allegorical mode of social interpretation, Jameson is in fact drawing out a doubled critique of the Lukacian critique—while the Anagogic impulse does contain the Utopian content within ideology, it is always reinvested in ideology because it does not explicitly realize the imminence and necessity of the Utopian; that is to say, Frye’s conception resolves the dialect by functionally leaving it within the unconscious of the Anagogical desire, itself.

Something to let stew, chew over, swallow or spit.

In the second place, this fragmentation of the object of production necessarily entails the fragmentation of its subject. consequence of the rationalisation of th e work-process the human qualities and idiosyncrasies of the worker appear increasingly as mere sources of error when contrasted with these abstract special laws functioning according to rational predictions. Neither objectively nor in his relation to his work does man appear as the authentic master of the process; on the contrary, he is a mechanical part incorporated into a mechanical system. He finds it already pre-existing and self-sufficient; it functions independently of him and he has to conform to its laws whether he likes it or not. As labour is progressively rationalised and mechanised his lack of will is reinforced by the way in which his   less and less activity and more and more contemplative. The contemplative stance adopted towards a process mechanically conforming to fixed laws and enacted independently of man’s consciousness and impervious to human intervention, i.e. a perfectly closed system, must likewise transform the basic categories of man’s immediate attitude to the world; it reduces space and time to a common denominator and degrades time to the dimension of space.

-Lukacs, History and Class Consciousness

I don’t know, maybe I’m the only one who thinks that’s amazing.

Getting back to the point that I had tried to ignore

…but I couldn’t. There is a little snippet in Lukacs’ essay that sort of… well… to say the very least, made me double-take. After all, there is so much in these so few pages that it’s hard not to get quite excited over the material. (Like, for instance, the disarmingly concise visualization of modernism on page 23:

The more conscientiously the facts are explored–in their isolation, i.e. in their unmediated relations–the less compellingly will they point in any one direction. It is self-evident that a merely subjective decision will be shattered by the pressure of uncomprehended facts acting automatically ‘according to laws.’

I must remember to pull-out Mrs. Dalloway and excerpt the plane scene before the royal gates. But this is just me rambling on and pretending I understand all this.) But it is important to scrutinize the discrepancies in the learning process. I am hoping (and fairly certain) that it is a discrepancy in my own understanding of the material.

So here it is, my conundrum. Lukacs is going on and on about the purpose of Orthodox Marxism, right? And that’s important, but in order to fully explicate the importance of Marxism, Lukacs has to prove the relationship between man and society… or consciousness and society in relation to the proletariat’s self-knowledge as the subject and object of history. He states:

Marx urged us to understand ‘the sensuous world’, the object, reality, as human sensuous activity. this means that man must become conscious of himself as a social being, as simultaneously the subject and the object of the socio-historical process. In feudal society man could not yet see himself as a social being because his social relations were still mainly natural. Society was far too unorganized and had far too little control over the totality of relations between men for it to appear to consciousness as the reality of man. (The question of the structure and unity of feudal society cannot be considered in any detail here.) Bourgeois society carried out the process of socialising society. Capitalism destroyed both the spatio-temporal barriers between different lands and territories and also the legal partitions between the ‘estates.’

I am thinking that his minor parenthetical concession statement is the key to my misunderstanding. But even so, this one paragraph, seemingly so full of eye-opening material, fills me with doubt. When Lukacs says “[i]n feudal society, man could not yet see himself as a social being because his social relations were still mainly natural,” it hits a sour chord in my thought-processes.

I can’t help but postulate that perhaps man did not see himself as a social being within the constraints of feudalism because he was not a social being to the extent that humanity ‘recognizes’ itself to be today. In fact, the argument presented in this essay i.e. that consciousness is a product of society and not vice versa, seems to support the idea that consciousness and society are changing, and that it would be expecting too much from poor little history to lead to the over-determined belief in the social system of capitalism as a means (after nearly 7 thousand years of written and political history) of FINALLY discovering that man is an intrinsically social being.

Although (I’m hoping) that this is an instance of my ignorance, I wonder why Lukacs doesn’t cover his bases (sorry, I hate sports) and go into a little bit more detail about it. Just wondering. Does anyone have anything for me?

Working through Lukacs: “What is Orthodox Marxism?”

Let me just say, it is so nice to read someone who can write well. In his 1919 essay “What is Orthodox Marxism?” Georg Lukacs attempts to answer the title question in terms of clarification.

Getting straight in to things, here are a number of excerpts from his essay (as read in an anthology entitled History and Class Consciousness) and my comments (that, in actuality, end up being questions). I have only one thing to ask of any reader: do not grow too frustrated with me; I know that I am completely helpless in this field as of yet and nothing can be said for me…

What is Orthodox Marxism?

Orthodox Marxism… does not imply an uncritical acceptance of the results of Marx’s investigations. It is not in the ‘belief’ or that thesis, nor the exegesis of a ‘sacred’ book. On the contrary orthodoxy refers exclusively to method. It is the scientific conviction that dialectical materialism is the road to truth and that its methods can be developed, expanded and deepend only along the lines laid down by its founders. It is the conviction, moreover, that all attempts to surpass or ‘improve’ it have led and must lead to over-simplification, triviality, and eclecticism.

(1)

Here, Lukacs attempts to untangle the various misconceptions of OM. Aside from the quippy sentence where he employs both ‘belief’ and ‘sacred’ to counter his position, I found his writing to be especially clever when he says “dialectical materialism is the road to truth.” I am wondering if in many ways this is quite an exacting thesis. Dialectical materialism (in terms of his essay) can only lead insofar as it moves both in and out. (I think that ‘in’ and ‘out’ are better terms than ‘left’ or ‘right’ because of the way Lukacs goes on to describe historical totality in relation to the immediate present.) Road, as a conceptual image, is the fundamental starting-point in my understanding this essay as a whole.

Only in this context which sees the isolated facts of social life as aspects of the historical process and integrates them in a totality, can knowledge of the facts hope to become knowledge of reality.

(2)

In this section of the essay, Lukacs moves into his discussion of the capitalist modes of thought. This section of the essay prefaces his eventual discussion of the proletariat as both the subject and the object of dialectical materialism. But, before he can move on to this, Lukacs goes to great pains to explain the upside down conception of social structure to though (or better stated as the misconception between consciousness and reality). He says, “[Capitalism's] determinants take on the appearance of timeless, eternal categories valid for all social formations.” As well as, “When the idea of scientific knowledge is applied to nature it simply furthers the progress of science. But when it is applied to society it turns out to be an ideological weapon of the bourgeoisie.” (10)

Paying careful attention to the last quote (where it is entirely too easy to misconceive the author’s point) there are several reasons for this statement. According to Lukacs, the affinity between the method of natural and science and capitalism exists because they share the same ability/drive to distill the ‘facts’ into a contained unit of pure truth. (Which I am guessing in terms of science would gesture towards the alienation of society in terms of science.) Since science (as we practice and perceive its methods in today’s reality) is a product (a ‘plant’ if you will) resulting from the soils of capitalism. But, in the case of, let’s say, philosophy or theory, the inherent antagonisms in that field do not harmonize with capitalist modes of thought and science. To continue this train of thought:

When, for example a thinker of Ricardo’s stature can deny the “necessity of expanding the market along with the expansion of the production and the growth of capital,” he does so (unconsciously of course), to avoid the necessity of admitting that crises are inevitable.

(11)

Hmm…. will finish the second half in a bit.

Signing off.

B