Hontology: Depressive Anthropology and the Shame of Life
By Mark Payne
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Hontology - Mark Payne
2010).
1
The shame of life
Derrida’s Specters of Marx has had an enormous influence on recent thought about the fate of human capabilities in late capitalism, especially in Europe — I am thinking, of course, of the late Mark Fisher, and of Ghosts of My Life, in particular. What I want to do in this book is to explore a road not taken in Specters of Marx — the idea that shame is the route by which we access the capabilities for living that are abrogated in modernity. This is the hontology of my title, as opposed to the hauntology that Fisher took up. More particularly still, I want to consider the loss of the New World as a horizon in which these abrogated capabilities were still in play, and the inhabitants of the New World as presenting forms of life before which Europeans felt shame in comparison with their own. Finally, I want to think — quite speculatively — about what might take the place of the New World now that its productive horizon of shame has receded from view.
Shame — la honte — makes its only appearance in Specters of Marx as a prelude to the conjuration of Marx:
More than a year ago, I had chosen to name the specters
by their name starting with the title of this opening lecture. Specters of Marx,
the common noun and the proper name had thus been printed, they were already on the poster when, very recently, I reread The Manifesto of the Communist Party. I confess it to my shame: I had not done so for decades — and that must tell one something. I knew very well there was a ghost waiting there, and from the opening, from the raising of the curtain. Now, of course, I have just discovered, in truth I have just remembered what must have been haunting my memory: the first noun of the Manifesto, and this time in the singular, is specter
: A specter is haunting Europe — the specter of communism.
What is this specter-ridden Europe? Or, more to the point, where is it? Derrida will go on to imagine that if Marx had gotten some help with the Manifesto, he would have diagnosed today the same conjuration, this time not only in old Europe, but in the new Europe, the New World, which had already interested him very much a century and a half ago …
Derrida updates his specters to the geopolitical realities of the present, most obviously the hegemony of the United States, but at what cost? What disappears in this remarkable apposition, the new Europe, the New World,
is the possibility that the New World might have been — might even still be — something other than the new Europe. More precisely, it is the possibility that the New World, in its non-Europeanness, might tell old Europe something about itself; that the oldness of the New World might show new Europe what it once was, put it in touch again with its own primordial capabilities, lost to it in the present, but reproduced — to its shame — in the spectral image of the inhabitants of the New World.
I confess it to my shame.
Je l’avoue dans la honte. We never hear from this shame again. We hear the interruption of ontology that hauntology stages, but we never arrive at a hontology, the ontic shame of the confessional. Let us remind ourselves that Specters of Marx does not begin with a conjuration of Marx, but with a question about what it would be like to be really alive in the present: "Someone, you or me, comes forward and says: I would like to learn to live finally. The questioner senses that the life he is living is not really life, not all that life could or ought to be. Perhaps he is ashamed of the person he is. We can put his question on hold by turning it back on him, asking him (rhetorically) whether
to learn to live, to learn it from oneself and by oneself, all alone … is not impossible for a living being?" And by confirming that there can be no question of teaching ourselves how to live, we fashion an entrance for Marx and his specters — the ethics and politics that follow in his train.
But this is not what the questioner was asking about. The questioner wanted to live now, not tomorrow, and he (is it?) wanted to know what was stopping him from living — really living — in the present. He is looking for someone at the edge of life
who can teach him how to live. This edge is not a border in time — the limit of life and death — but a border in space — the frontier (perhaps) that once separated the New World from Europe, that held them apart and prevented their being collapsed into one another in acts of breathless apposition. The questioner wants to know if there is anywhere he can look to see what life looks like when it is really being lived. He is open to the idea that there might be such a place. He never meant to suggest that learning to live meant learning "from oneself and by oneself, all alone." Is the other who can teach us still there? Is there any place we can catch up to him and the shame he inspires in us?
There will never be another New World.
In A Little Glass of Rum,
Claude Lévi-Strauss looks ahead to the end of anthropology, when there will no longer be any place anywhere in the world where it will be possible to witness forms of life that are meaningfully different from those in Europe. For us European earth-dwellers,
he reflects, the adventure played out in the heart of the New World
is over. All that remains is responsibility for the crime of its destruction, and a lingering awareness that the opportunity to become conscious of ourselves that the confrontation with the New World offered is now gone.
For Lévi-Strauss, it was Rousseau who best understood what was at stake in this missed opportunity. In the superior capabilities of the inhabitants of the New World Rousseau saw everything that Europeans were incapable of in their over-developed forms of social organization reflected back to him as losses — powers for the living of a genuinely happy life that Europeans had surrendered, and then forgotten they ever had. Foremost among these is the opportunity to live life in the pursuit of matters of life and death — what, in The Discourse on the Arts and Sciences, he calls duties and natural needs,
in contrast to