Systems and Things: A Response To Graham Harman and Timothy Morton
Systems and Things: A Response To Graham Harman and Timothy Morton
Systems and Things: A Response To Graham Harman and Timothy Morton
Morton
Jane Bennett
New Literary History, Volume 43, Number 2, Spring 2012, pp. 225-233
(Article)
O
bjects could not hope for more staunch or loyal advocates
than Graham Harman and Timothy Morton. I, too, am sym-
pathetic to things, but Harman and Morton have challenged
me to sharpen dimensions of my approach.1 Before I turn to what their
essays say, let me say more about what they do. How, in other words,
have the bodies of these texts affected my (page-turning, doodling,
head-shaking, head-nodding) body?
The short answer is that they induced a dizziness—they were overfull.
This was an alluring, slightly compulsive dizziness, like the kind you got
when you were a kid doing dizzy circles. Or maybe the texts’ affectivity
is better described as like that of a shadowy thicket whose fast-growing
vines begin encircling your legs as soon as you enter, but instead of
hightailing it out of there, you are drawn further in.
Such an account of the essays’ affections lends credence to Harman’s
and Morton’s claim that texts, as much as alcohol or vines or bodies
that read, qualify as “objects.” They define an object as a “weird entity
withdrawn from access, yet somehow manifest” (M 208). Withdrawn and
manifest. Withdrawn: even as the essays were having effects on me, none
of the bodies on the scene were wholly present to each other, for objects
exist as “entities . . . quite apart from any relations with or effects upon
other entities in the world” (H 187). Manifest: despite this apartness,
objects are coy, always leaving hints of a secret other world, “alluding”
to an “inscrutable” reality “behind the accessible theoretical, practical,
or perceptual qualities.” Objects play hide-and-seek.
Myself a player of childhood games, I will consider the figure of the
“object” that Morton and Harman defend. I will focus on the way it is
positioned as a repudiation of “holisms.” They include in that category
assemblage theories in which circulate bits and pieces of Gilles Deleuze,
Bruno Latour, Manuel De Landa, Brian Massumi, Alfred North White-
head, ecophilosophers like Val Plumwood and Barry Lopez, Spinoza,
and Heidegger. I will also try to make explicit just what turns—politically,
ethically—on Morton’s and Harman’s strong claims about the apartness
Relationality
Hyperobjects
we need some other basis for making decisions about a future to which
we have no real sense of connection.” Evidence of the unthinkability
of the hyperobject “climate change” is the fact that conversations about
it often devolve into the more conceptualizable and manageable topic
of weather. Weather, even with its large theater of operation, remains
susceptible to probabilistic analysis, and it can still be associated with
the idea of a (highly complex) natural order. Weather, in short, is still
an “object.” But with “climate change,” it’s much harder, impossible,
really, says Morton, to sustain a sense of the existence of “a neutral
background against which human events can become meaningful. . . .
Climate change represents the possibility that the cycles and repetitions
we come to depend on for our sense of stability and place in the world
may be the harbingers of cataclysmic change.”9
I agree, but also note that the terms “mind-blowing” and “ahuman
timescales” imply that we can indeed stretch ourselves to study how cli-
mate systems interact with capitalist systems to threaten our future on earth.
Modesty
Objects/Things/Bodies
Harman says that the distinction between “objects” and “things” is ir-
relevant for his purposes, perhaps because he does not want to restrict
himself unduly to the (weird) physicality of objects or to the power that
they exhibit in (relatively) direct, bodily encounters with us. I am more
focused on this “naturalist” realm, and here I find the term “thing” or
“body” better as a marker for individuation, better at highlighting the
way certain edges within an assemblage tend to stand out to certain
classes of bodies. (The smell and movement of the mammal to the tick,
to invoke Uexküll’s famous example.13) “Thing” or “body” has advantages
over “object,” I think, if one’s task is to disrupt the political parsing that
yields only active (American, manly) subjects and passive objects. Why try
to disrupt this parsing? Because we are daily confronted with evidence of
nonhuman vitalities actively at work around and within us. I also do so
because the frame of subjects and objects is unfriendly to the intensified
ecological awareness that we need if we are to respond intelligently to
signs of the breakdown of the earth’s carrying capacity for human life.
232 new literary history
I will close with a few tentative comments about those things that are
literary, using the essay and the poem as my examples. Like all bodies,
these literary objects are affected by other bodies, or, as Morton puts it,
“A poem is not simply a representation, but rather a nonhuman agent”
(215). I would also proclaim that the effectivity of a text-body, includ-
ing its ability to gesture toward a something more than itself, is a func-
tion of a distributive network of bodies: words on the page, words in the
reader’s imagination, sounds of words, sounds and smells in the reading
room, etc., etc.—all these bodies coacting are what “plunge [us] into
the abyss” (M 212). It is worth noting in this regard that Morton and
Harman and I and our objects are all in the game together, and that
the object-oriented philosophers’ figuration of the thing as a secret (as
having a “hidden surplus”) has a performative dimension. The figures of
“withdrawal” and “allure” help to induce into being the aloof star of the
philosophy. All three objects also operate in relation to human, reading
bodies who enjoy getting to the bottom of a mystery.
But there are also, it seems, some features of the text-body that are
not shared or shared differentially by bodies that rely more heavily on
smell and touch, and less heavily on the conveyances that are words. I’m
not qualified to say too much about the affectivity of a text as a material
body, and can only gesture in the direction that Walt Whitman takes
when he says that poetry, if enmeshed in a fortuitous assemblage of other
(especially nontext) bodies, can have material effects as real as any. If
you read Leaves of Grass in conjunction with “the open air every season
of every year of your life,” and also bound in affection to “the earth and
sun and the animals,” while also going “freely with powerful uneducated
persons and with the young and with the mothers of families,” then
“your very flesh shall be a great poem and have the richest fluency not
only in its words but in the silent lines of its lips and face and between
the lashes of your eyes and in every motion and joint of your body.”14
Texts are bodies that can light up, by rendering human perception
more acute, those bodies whose favored vehicle of affectivity is less
wordy: plants, animals, blades of grass, household objects, trash. One
of the stakes for me of the turn to things in contemporary theory is
how it might help us live more sustainably, with less violence toward a
variety of bodies. Poetry can help us feel more of the liveliness hidden
in such things and reveal more of the threads of connection binding
our fate to theirs.
Harman and Morton press me to reconsider the balances between
system and thing in my own perspective. I hope that I have helped them
a little, too.
NOTES
1 I thank also Levi Bryant for conversations at CUNY Graduate Center last September,
and Nathan Gies, Chad Shomura, Katherine Goktepe, Anatoli Ignatov, and Bill Connolly
for their comments and criticisms of this response.
2 Graham Harman, “Aesthetics as First Philosophy: Levinas and the Non-Human,” Naked
Punch 9 (Summer/Fall 2007), 21–30.
3 The terms are those of Deleuze and Guattari: “It seems to us that Husserl brought
thought a decisive step forward when he discovered a region of vague and material essences
(in other words, essences that are vagabond, anexact and yet rigorous), distinguishing
them from fixed, metric and formal, essences. . . . They constitute fuzzy aggregates. They
relate to a corporeality (materiality) that is not to be confused either with an intelligible,
formal essentiality or a sensible, formed and perceived, thinghood.” Gilles Deleuze and
Felix Guattari, A Thousand Plateaus, trans. Brian Massumi (Minneapolis: Univ. of Minnesota
Press, 1986), 407.
4 Deleuze and Guattari, A Thousand Plateaus, 70.
5 As Katrin Pahl shows in Tropes of Transport: Hegel and Emotions (Evanston, IL: Northwest-
ern Univ. Press, 2012), Hegel too offers a holism or relationism at odds with the organic
model.
6 William Connolly, A World of Becoming (Durham, NC: Duke Univ. Press, 2011), 35.
7 Harman, “Aesthetics as First Philosophy,” 30.
8 And in defining the stakes ecologically, I reveal the presence in me of a bias toward
human bodies (even as I share Harman’s and Morton’s desire to become more alert to
the power, beauty, and danger of the nonhumans around and within a human body).
9 Timothy Morton, “Hyperobjects and the End of Common Sense,” March 18, 2010,
http://contemporarycondition.blogspot.com/2010/03/hyperobjects-and-end-of-common-
sense.html.
10 Harman is right, I think, to note that “both philosophical and political problems arise
when individual selves and texts are described as holograms, as the relational effects of
hostile others and disciplinary power.” But I do not think that there are many theorists
in the humanities who still today would endorse such a strong version of constructivism.
11 To offer a political example of this creative power, I cite William Connolly’s account of
how the “evangelical-capitalist resonance machine” induced from out of the (human and
nonhuman) bodies of American culture a new set of actants: Christian-fundamentalist-free
marketeers.
12 See, for example, Stuart A. Kauffman, Reinventing the Sacred: A New View of Science,
Reason, and Religion (New York: Basic Books, 2008) and Terence Deacon, Incomplete Nature:
How Mind Emerged from Matter (New York: Norton, 2012).
13 See Jakob von Uexküll, A Foray into the Worlds of Animals and Humans. with A Theory
of Meaning, trans. Joseph D. O’Neil (Minneapolis : Univ. of Minnesota Press, 2011).
14 Walt Whitman, “Preface 1855,” in Leaves of Grass and Other Writings, ed. Michael Moon
(New York: Norton, 2002), 622.