Body Prefers Not To
Body Prefers Not To
Body Prefers Not To
H y p e r i o n T h e B o d y P re f e r s Not To
ne of the main ideas in cultural studies, which takes into account the
transformative processes in society and which has the potential to
recongure humans, relies on the notion that individuals acquire agency only
when they are narrated. It is thus through extension, through the agency of an
others body and language, and through networking that a sense of identity
emerges. In other words, we are what we are because we are supplemented.
This law of the supplement in poststructuralist discourse opposes traditional
thinking, which holds the notion that transformations come from within. The
body as a container for thought poses several contradictions. First, insofar
as thinking depends on the ability to make distinctions through language, the
assumption that thought arises uncontaminated and in pure form rests on
fallacious ground. What characterizes language and its arbitrary relations is
not a unitary form framed by the singularity of one thought, but a fragmentary
relation of dependency between language and the body. It is through our
bodies that we articulate whatever conventions we follow, and hence a
second contradiction arises. If thinking materializes as it sometimes does (one
hopes), it is not because it nds itself in an immanent relation to the body,
but because it transcends the body on its own termsthe bodys, that is.
The materialization of thought occurs only insofar as the body desecrates it
through arbitrary articulation. Hence, one can concur that the relation between
thought and the body as mediated through language is bound to situate itself
in the inscrutable, and the incalculable. This irreverential relation may be said
to rely on opportunity rather than calculation, which means that the language
of the body, if it chooses to articulate, is unpredictable. In this relation, if
thought is capable of and hence retains any kind of singular manifestation,
it will be a thought of the bodys ability to express a desire for immortality.
According to cyber critics, this desire alone marks our entrance and ultimate
belonging to the realm of the cyborg.
A(h)nnunciation
One of the philosophers who have anticipated the modern discourse on
immortality in a most interesting way is Friedrich Nietzsche. In Nietzsches
desire to act as a physician of culture, he makes a most remarkable
statement, which I suggest links the idea of immortality with immortalitys
recurrent return as grammar. In his Twilight of the Idols he thus states: I
am afraid we are not rid of God, because we still have faith in grammar
(Nietzsche, 1984c: 483), indicating the paradox of Gods ethereal yet continual
domination over the body through the materialization of language. Nietzsche
writes by fragments when he posits the hermeneutic idea that afrming one
singular part of ones life means afrming it as a whole, in its entirety. How
the part becomes a whole, and how the part bestows singularity over the
whole is seen particularly in Nietzsches Ecce Homo (1888/1979). In the
paratextual subtitle of this autobiography, How one becomes what one is,
we nd Nietzsches attempt at translating description into an imperative that
has the afrmation of a singular experience at stake: become what you are.
As critics have already noted, there is a stringent correlation between the
idea of immortality and the ability of an individual to create a singular space
in society that can be called his or her own and that can be ensured to be his
or her own even after the persons death. Daniel Ahern, in his Nietzsche as
Cultural Physician (1995), juxtaposes Nietzsches concern with exhaustion,
decadence, sickness and healthall constitutive of a physiological
dynamicswith immortality and eternal recurrenceconstitutive of what
I would call ethereal dynamics. I suggest that what informs both these
dynamics is an attempt at formulating a singularity of presence through
afrmation. As Bert Olivier also observes in his Nietzsche, immortality,
singularity and eternal recurrence:
What interests me here is the link between singularity, immortality and the
belief in grammar. In Nietzsches work this link is formulated either as a
demand, an imperative, or an apostrophe. When he exclaims in The Gay
Science, beginning with an afrmation of a necessity: One thing is needful.
Giving style to ones charactera great and rare art! (290; 1984b: 98-99),
he indicates, by making a proto poststructuralist gesture, that we are already
other the moment singularity institutes itself in parenthesis, paratext, and
ellipsis, or one could also say, at the margins of grammar. Olivier provides a
good denition of singularity (as opposed to the eeting nature of particularity)
by way of quoting Joan Copjec: This notion of singularity, which is tied to the
act of a subject, is dened as modern because it depends on the denigration
of any notion of a prior or superior instance that might prescribe or guarantee
H y p e r i o n T h e B o d y P re f e r s Not To
the act. Soul, eternity, absolute or patriarchal power, all these notions have
to be destroyed before an act can be viewed as unique and as capable of
stamping itself with its own necessity. One calls singular that which, once it
has come into being, bears the strange hallmark of something that must be,
and therefore cannot die... (Copjec, 2002: 23-24 in Olivier, 2007: 79).
One way in which ones character acquires style is at the moment when
faith in grammar gets to be articulated while there is also an attempt at
escaping the constricting rules of grammar. If style in its more archaic form
means a reduction of things to the bare essential, to gesture, grammar in
its most reductive form is manifested through interjections; a mouth gesture
(speech) rather than a hand gesture (writing) is bound to have different value
stylistically. Interjections have no real grammatical value, and are known as
hesitation devices. It may be that Nietzsche, being well acquainted with
rigorous philological approaches to language, was aware of the value of
hesitation when he peppered his works, especially the aphoristic kind, with
such interjections as Ah! and Oh! These interjections usually have no
connection to the grammatical sentence which transmits a thought. Such
examples of interjective and interruptive yet supplemental kind, one might
add, are nowhere clearer articulated than in Thus Spoke Zarathustra. I will
engage no further with this work, but let it ghost other examples of writing in
which the faith in grammar, once it has come into being, cannot therefore die.
Insofar as it can be postulated that Nietzsche was engaged in ghostwriting for
Zarathustra, he was interested in the mechanisms of expressing himself in the
margins of Zarathustras eloquence through interjective interposition. In other
words, he explored the possibility of expressing himself through contingency
on the must be (Ah!) as a preference for not dying (Oh!).
In his book TechnoLogics: ghosts, the incalculable and the suspension of
animation, Gray Kochhar-Lindgren advances the argument that the ancient
dream of immortality is now realized through cloning, genetic research, and
articial intelligence. As he puts it:
expressing a right to never die, also takes refuge from itself in the guise of an
ethereal body. Immortality is on the run, a refugee, as it were, materialized
in the language of the body that would prefer not to die. As a departure
from Nietzsche, but not in spirit, I want to look here at such different texts as
Melvilles Bartleby, the Scrivener and Kathy Ackers The language of the
body and make the claim that the body, in its attempt to achieve immortality
by ghosting either being, writing, or machine, violates its own right to remain
in a state of becoming, or crossing over. Melvilles protagonist, a law-copyist,
by repeatedly informing his employer that he prefers not to do any of the tasks
imposed on him, institutes a crisis that has consequences for his body: he
ends up starving to death in a prison, a situation induced by the state of never
either refusing or accepting to eat. Ackers text posits a similar situation in
which the language of the body is translated into rendering an absence. By
having an abortion, the protagonist neither refuses nor accepts the potential of
the extra body (the baby) to cross over into life. Here I want to suggest that the
suspension of animation is contingent on the ethereal body as manifested in
the gure of a ghost or a cyborg.
O(h)ntology
One of the trajectories that the logic of the technological takes is to consider
the separation of the living from the dead. This separation is often seen
in cyber criticism as a relation based on annihilation: as bodies narrate
their existence through language, they at the same time undermine that
very existence through perpetual violations of language. Where bodies
are concerned, language functions as a mechanical supplement subject to
change, transformation, and improvement. In computer science, language is
already seen as a machine which can be coded and programmed according
to an object-oriented ontology, which is to say that desire is brought into the
machine as a means to operate with the differential and binary character
of language. As Aden Evans puts it: The result is a fold in the code, which
extends outside of its plane toward another dimension, to rub against the
human world (Evans, 2006: 90). This rubbing against each other of man and
machine engages creativity that does not rely on a transcendental subject.
This latter idea is traced back to Walter Benjamin by critics such as Warwick
Mules, for whom Benjamins search for a fold in language that would embody
experience as unmediated by form is an expression of materiality and
plasticity. Benjamins thoughts, claims Mules, are furthermore a reection on
the singularity of experience itself, bereft of the certainty of formal knowledge,
dangerous and ruined [...] Creativity is the release of singularity captured in
form. To write this sentence as I have just done (but who is this I; at what
time does this I write?) is to make a case for creativity (Mules, 2006: 75).
Some of the implications of considering subjectivity which is caught between
H y p e r i o n T h e B o d y P re f e r s Not To
Another
Quite a considerable amount of literature has been written on Melvilles story
Bartleby, the Scrivener: A Story of Wall Street (1853). However, only few
writings are dedicated to considering the relation between the character
Bartleby and a cyborg. (I am thinking here of Klaus Benesch: Romantic
Cyborgs: Authorship and Technology in the American Renaissance (2002).
H y p e r i o n T h e B o d y P re f e r s Not To
Other
Kathy Ackers story thematizes some of the same concerns with subjectivity,
a body which refuses to embody subjectivity, and a desire for ethereal
immortality. A female, yet unnamed, narrator begins to narrate a moment in
her life associated with the inevitable pain following an abortion. This pain is
however suspended insofar as the event takes place in a dream.
H y p e r i o n T h e B o d y P re f e r s Not To
This passage sets the tone for the way in which the narrator shifts between
narrative moments. One is tempted to say here: thus spoke Nietzsche:pain
is the true metaphysical realityinsofar as Acker can be said to subversively
re-interpret Nietzsches The Birth of Tragedy. If pain, for Nietzsche, is the
most powerful aid to mnemonics, as well as the main condition of all forms
of creation, for Acker, pain is the experience of a metaphysical dream. If, for
Nietzsche, pain reects the burden of biological existence, for Acker pain is
linked to the annihilation of existence, to death. In dreams, our metaphysical
reality is transformed into metaphysical illusion, a form of death that is not
nal but delayed by the presence of ghosts. In Ackers rst dreamwhich
species moments of which the narrator is conscious and hence can relate in
a coherent waywe also nd other dreams recounted either as they occur,
simultaneous with the moment of telling, or as they are retold in hindsight. The
simultaneity of narration at this second level is marked through direct speech
and dialogue (usually between the narrator and her husband, Steven). The
dialogue in turn launches other dreams, which are then retold. These dreams
follow both conscious and unconscious patterns and are the expression of
fragmented feelings. What the narrator is interested in is the extent to which
she can formulate what the body feels independent of cognitive subjectivity.
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The narrators approach to searching for the language of the body so that
she can locate sex points to the necessity of channeling experience through
a singular moment that dissolves form (or rather the faith in grammar). This
can be seen in the way in which the journal entries are put together, both at
the level of form and content. The entry for Day 1 begins with a sentence in
parenthesis: (This might not make any sense) and is followed by a couple
of other lines emphasizing movement and expectation. These lines have a
performative character insofar as they lead straight into another sentence
which can be read as a comment on movement and expectation: there is
nothing: it is here that language enters. Day 2 begins with this line: It starts
with bodily irritation, but then one has to forget the body, leave the body,
leave the body until the body quivers uncontrollably. While the body is here
rendered incalculable, it is also seen as a space with levels, but no dialectic.
In its singular existence, the body does not belong to the text; rather it
belongs to a textual multiplicity. In cyberspace the body is all about networking
and regeneration, rather than system and reproduction (Haraway). This
interconnectedness is what enables the narrator to offer descriptive images of
some levels of the body. Likening the body to a room, she states:
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H y p e r i o n T h e B o d y P re f e rs Not To
12
It is a violent society.
Klaras niece was Ezebeth Bathory, more well known as The
Scarlet Witch.
She murdered almost 610 young women, her secretary
added.
Yes, she kidnapped young girls in order to get their blood.
No.
She hung them up by their wrists, then whipped them until
their tortured esh was torn to shreds. My husband spoke for
the rst time.
He, the Countess, and her friend were sitting together on a
small sofa. I was perching on an armchair.
Oh yes, and she clipped their ngers off with shears,the
Countess.
Pierced their nipples with needles, yes, then tore out the tips
with silver pincers, my husband.
Because human blood is an elixir,the Countess.
...she bit them everywhere and pushed red hot pokers right
into their faces...my husband.
No!
And with the curses of witches..., said the young girl,
And with the curses of witches, especially the sorceress
Darvulia Anna, cut off pieces of their esh, grilled them, then
made them eat parts of their own bodies,
Go on go on go on.the girl.
Kissed their veins with rusty nails,the woman whom I had
desired.
Go on go on go on,her lover
...and when the young girls parted their lips in order to
screech, she plunged the aming rod into the caverns of the
throats... my husband began taking over...
No!
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H y p e r i o n T h e B o d y P re f e rs Not To
Your wife is very much in love with you, isnt she? the
countess asked him.
How does the story end? my husband replied. (URL)
While the narrator takes active part in the telling of this story based on the
practice of Ezebeth Bathory who bathed in the blood of young virgins so
that she could stay young and alive (a practice which Acker only alludes
to), she also indicates at the end of the story that she feels this and other
stories are all being talked to death. By exclaiming that she doesnt want
sexuality, she articulates a preference for precisely that stage where the body
enters a relation with what it prefers not: to be vampirized by language. In
a parallel that recalls Nietzsche, it is interesting to note that in the 1962 lm
The Slaughter of the Vampires (directed by Roberto Mauri) the role of Bram
Stokers protagonist Professor van Helsing is here replaced by a Professor
Nietzsche. This suggests a catachrestic relation between annihilating the
vampires eternal recurrence by using a hammer and the real Nietzsches
notion of philosophizing with the same weapon; for the latter the vampire even
has a name, Spinoza, as we are informed in The Gay Science (372). In a
cultural studies context we can further observe that Nietzsches proclamation:
God is dead is often echoed in pronouncements such as Dracula is dead
(The Brides of Dracula, 1960), thus suggesting the irony in having the
immortal overcome by the mortal.
As Ackers story ends with someone named Rodney waiting for her beyond
a door marked by a black O,1 which is also the last line in her story, it is clear
that what the body prefers not to is also to continue being a body in any real
sense. If we were to paraphrase one of Nietzsches most condensed and
charged maxims: Man is something to be overcome, we could say that the
body, in both Melville and Acker is also something to be Overcome. What is
further suggested in Ackers story is that in order for Rodney to be able to wait,
the narrator would have to hold a promise that potentially she will cross over
through the hole, suggested by the letter O. This roundness which we also nd
in Bartleby, when the narrator makes a consideration of his former employers
name, John Jacob Astor,2 is the name Acker gives to her objective: to become
immortal by placing her body in care of the ghost in the dream machine. The
Ah in Melville and the O in Acker each constitute moments of singular
expressions that eradicate language structures by undoing the NO, or O.
(Nietzsche nods).
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References
Acker, Kathy (1992) The Language Of The Body. CTheory.net. Eds. Arthur
and Marilouise Kroker. [http://www.ctheory.net/articles.aspx?id=1].
Agamben, Giorgio (1999) Bartleby, or On Contingency. Giorgio Agamben,
Potentialities: Collected Essays in Philosophy. Trans. Daniel Heller-Roazen.
Stanford: Stanford University Press.
Ahern, Daniel (1995) Nietzsche as Cultural Physician. Pittsburgh: Penn State
University Press.
Benesch, Klaus (2002) Romantic Cyborgs: Authorship and Technology in the
American Renaissance. Amherst, MA: University of Massachusetts Press.
Copjec, Joan (2002) Imagine theres no woman. Cambridge, MA.: The MIT
Press.
Evens, Aden (2006) Object-Oriented Ontology, or Programmings Creative
Fold. Angelaki. Journal of Theoretical Humanities. Vol. 2. Nr. 1. April.
Gasset, Ortega y, J. (2002) Toward a Philosophy of History. Chicago:
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Guattari, Flix (1995) Chaosmosis: An Ethicoaesthetic Paradigm. Trans. Julian
Pefanis. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
Haraway, Donna (1991) A Cyborg Manifesto: Science, Technology, and
Socialist-Feminism in the Late Twentieth Century. Simians, Cyborgs and
Women: The Reinvention of Nature. New York; Routledge.
Hegel, F. W. (1975) Aesthetics: Lectures on Fine Art. Vol. I (Aesthetics). Trans.
T.M. Knox. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Kochhar-Lindgren, Gray (2005). TechnoLogics: ghosts, the incalculable, and
the suspension of animation. Albany: SUNY.
Melville, Herman (1853) Bartleby, the Scrivener: A Story of Wall-Street.
[http://www.bartleby.com/129].
Mules, Warwick (2006) Creativity, Singularity and Techne: the making and
unmaking of visual objects in modernity. Angelaki. Journal of Theoretical
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Nietzsche, F. (1966) Beyond Good and Evil: Prelude to a Philosophy of the
Future. Trans. Walter Kaufmann. New York: Vintage Books.
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H y p e r i o n T h e B o d y P re f e rs Not To
Nietzsche, F. (1979) Ecce Homo. How one becomes what one is. Trans. R. J.
Hollingdale. Middlesex: Penguin Books.
Nietzsche, F. (1984) Thus Spoke Zarathustra. The Portable Nietzsche. Trans.
& ed. Walter Kaufmann. New York: Penguin Books, 103-439.
Nietzsche, F. (1984b) From: The Gay Science. The Portable Nietzsche. Trans.
& ed. Walter Kaufmann. New York: Penguin Books, 93-102.
Nietzsche, F. (1984c) Twilight of the Idols. The Portable Nietzsche. Trans. &
ed. Walter Kaufmann. New York: Penguin Books, 463-563.
Olivier, Bert (2007) Nietzsche, immortality, singularity and eternal recurrence.
South African Journal of Philosophy. 26 (1).
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