Blanchot Encyclopedia
Blanchot Encyclopedia
Blanchot Encyclopedia
edu/blanchot/#SH3a
Thus far, Blanchot’s greatest influence has arguably been felt in the fields of literature
and literary theory. His fictional texts, Thomas the Obscure (1941), Death Sentence
(1948), and The Madness of the Day (1949) are among the most unique and challenging
texts in 20th century French literature. His critical essays on Kafka, Rilke, Sade,
Mallarmé, and Hölderlin, and his interpretation of the myth of Orpheus, are considered
canonical texts in the field of literary studies. His relationship to philosophy, though
equally significant, is more nuanced and complex.
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Throughout his writings, several other recurrent themes can likewise be discerned.
These include an exploration of the paradoxes associated with death, repetition, and
time, as well as the various aporias related to origins and ends. Blanchot’s writings show
him to be a thinker broadly committed to privileging anonymity and difference over
identity and sameness. Though his thinking, particularly with regard to politics,
undergoes a series of significant shifts over the course his life, there is a certain
consistency to Blanchot’s overall approach. His central concern is to draw philosophy,
literature, and theory-at-large, into relation with an otherness, a proverbial outside,
beyond its limits—to which it must constantly respond.
Table of Contents
1. Biography and Intellectual Itinerary
a. Early Life and Journalism
b. Bataille, the War, and the Èze Years
c. A Return to Politics
d. Responding to the Other
e. Writing the Disaster
2. Engagement with Major Philosophers
a. Levinas
b. Hegel
c. Nietzsche
d. Heidegger
3. Key Concepts and Themes
a. Two Kinds of Death
b. The il y a
c. The Neuter
d. Community and the Political
4. References and Further Reading
a. Major Works
b. English Translations
c. Secondary Bibliography
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Strasbourg, which at the time boasted one of the most extensive libraries in France. It
was here, around 1925 or 1926, that Blanchot first met Emmanuel Levinas, and the two
became life-long friends. By 1929, Blanchot had relocated to Paris, and briefly pursued,
during the early 1930s, the study of medicine at Saint Anne’s Hospital. It was around
this time that Blanchot began his first collaborations with the journals of the French far-
right. Espousing a vehemently anti-Hitlerian tone, Blanchot’s articles bemoaned the
perceived complacency of the French government in addressing the growing threat of
German expansionism. Blanchot’s writings from this period have come under
considerable scrutiny, in recent years, for their alleged filiation with anti-Semitic
currents on the French far-right. An exhaustive examination of all articles signed by
Blanchot during the 1930s, however, reveals no instances of racially-exclusionary
language or overt anti-Semitism. In his later writings, Blanchot addresses his dubious
political commitments of the 1930s, seeking to disambiguate his own youthful
involvement in reactionary politics from the anti-Semitism of his one-time associates.
With the outbreak of war in Europe, Blanchot momentarily withdrew from political
writing and concentrated his efforts on the writing of fictional texts and literary
criticism. His first novel, Thomas the Obscure, was published in 1941, meeting initially
with poor reviews in the Parisian press. A second novel, Aminadab, was published a year
later, in 1942. During this time, Blanchot was already beginning to develop a distinctive,
literary critical voice. His first collection of literary critical essays, Faux pas, appeared in
December 1943, featuring texts on a diverse-range of writers, including Mallarmé,
Proust, Kierkegaard, Rimbaud, and Melville.
Over the decades that followed, Blanchot would frequently engage with Bataille’s highly-
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The spring of 1944 was a difficult time for both men. Bataille became quite ill and
temporarily left Paris for Samois, while Blanchot himself departed for his family-home
in Quain. It was here, in June 1944, that Blanchot was put against the wall by a firing-
squad and “mock-executed.” These remarkable, undoubtedly traumatic, circumstances
would be later recounted by Blanchot some fifty years later in his text, “The Instant of
My Death” (1994). With the surrender of the German army in Paris, on August 25, the
war effectively came to an end for Blanchot, who was on the move between Paris and
various locales in the south of France throughout 1945 and 1946. It was during this
period that Blanchot penned important essays on Kafka, René Char, Nietzsche, and
Hölderlin, while assisting Bataille in bringing to publication the first edition of the
journal Critique.
The winter of 1946 saw the beginning of a new phase in Blanchot’s life as a writer. He
moved for several weeks to a small house in Èze, near Nice, where he lived without
electricity and worked on his récits at night. It was over the course of the following years
that Blanchot’s reputation as a writer would largely be won. He completed his
remarkable, cryptic récit, Death Sentence, in 1947 and saw it published in June 1948.
His third (and final) novel, The Most-High, featuring a more political bent, was also
published in 1948, followed by the fictional text, The Madness of the Day (1949), and
another volume of critical essays, The Work of Fire (1949), which contained the seminal
text, “Literature and the Right to Death” (first published in 1948). Rounding-out a
decade of incredible productivity, Blanchot’s Lautréamont and Sade was published in
1949.
By this point, Blanchot was producing a new critical essay for publication virtually every
couple of weeks. During this period of prolific writing, he continued to move frequently,
staying with his brother, René, whenever he found himself in Paris. In September 1949,
Blanchot returned to the small house in Èze, which he would make his primary
residence until 1957. Here, amidst the “essential solitude” of this medieval village
overlooking the Mediterranean coast, Blanchot would write some of the most influential
critical essays of his career, including the theoretical writings contained within The
Space of Literature (1955).
Indeed, it is perhaps for the writings found within The Space of Literature that Blanchot
is most widely-known. Here we find his frequently-cited accounts of the gaze of
Orpheus, the two kinds of death, and (in the text’s appendix) the two versions of the
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imaginary. At the heart of Blanchot’s writings here, which engage in turn with Kafka,
Rilke, Mallarmé, and Hölderlin, is a thesis about the radical non-essentiality of literature
and the exigency of worklessness (désoeuvrement) which is literature’s aim and
concern. If the story of Orpheus and Eurydice is important in this context, it is because
Orpheus shows us, in turning back to gaze at Eurydice, a concern for the origin of the
work, its absence and inspiration, which overrides any interest in its status as a
completed and consummated work. In turning to view Eurydice, Orpheus ruins the work
of bringing her out of the darkness, and yet this ruination, Blanchot insists, in his June
1953 essay, reveals what is most essential to literature, namely, its concern for the
impossibility and palpable absence that reside at its origin. Literature is less about the
completion of great “works,” than it is with maintaining a paradoxical relation with the
“worklessness” and impossibility that unravels every work.
Beyond his influential literary critical essays, the 1950s also saw the publication of three
more, increasingly spare and challenging, récits: When the Time Comes (1951), The One
Who Did Not Accompany Me (1953), and The Last Man (1957), in which plot-
development and characterization are pared-down to an absolute minimum, as if to
highlight the dislocation of presence and the disruption of time to which these texts each
bear witness.
c. A Return to Politics
Blanchot’s mother died, in 1957. By all accounts, her passing affected the family greatly.
After spending the winter with his brother and sister-in-law in Paris, Blanchot moved
into his own flat, on rue Madame, in late summer 1958, beginning a new phase in his
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intellectual and personal itinerary. The return to Paris, in 1957, was significant in a
number of respects. First, it marked a renewed engagement with national politics.
Second, it coincided with an increasing focus on questions of an explicitly philosophical
nature which called-forth a new, ever more rigorous and demanding style of writing.
The Algiers crisis of 1958, the collapse of the French Fourth Republic, and the rise to
power of de Gaulle ushered in a frightening new era in politics. Blanchot, who had not
participated in national politics since the 1930s, threw himself into the very middle of
the resistance against de Gaulle’s Fifth Republic. Throughout the late summer of 1958,
he frequently met-up with Marguerite Duras and Dionys Mascolo (a major influence on
Blanchot’s political thinking during this time), and became involved with Mascolo’s anti-
Gaullist paper (co-founded with Jean Schuster), Le 14 Juillet. The marked change in
Blanchot’s political thinking was clearly evident in his manifesto, “Refusal,” published in
October 1958, and in another anti-Gaullist piece, “The Essential Perversion.”
When Francis Jeansen and twenty-three other dissidents were put on trial, in September
1960, for opposing French colonial rule and supporting the Algerian struggle for
independence, Blanchot, Mascolo, and a group of other intellectuals, determined to pen
a declaration of solidarity with the defendants. The resulting piece, commonly known as
the “Manifeste de 121” was written by Blanchot, and declared support for Algerian
independence, as well as for those conscripts who refused to be drafted into the conflict.
On the heels of this intervention in national politics, Blanchot and Mascolo (along with
others) attempted, in 1960, to start an experimental new publication to be called “The
International Review.” The publication aspired to solicit short texts on a variety of
topics, in three languages (French, German, and Italian), to be written in fragmentary
form. Though the ambitious project never fully materialized, it marked an important,
early moment in Blanchot’s attempt at rethinking the notion of community beyond
borders and fixed identity.
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initially entitled “Waiting,” which would eventually reappear within the 1962 text,
Awaiting Oblivion. “Waiting” is significant for a couple reasons. It is a text comprised
solely of fragments, conjoined loosely by a shared emphasis on the themes of forgetting,
waiting, and temporality bereft of presence. In May 1959, these fragments were offered
by Blanchot to a Festschrift produced in honor of Heidegger’s 70th birthday. The
publication of Awaiting Oblivion involved a radical subversion of the categories of
genre. Readers are left to ponder: Is it a work of experimental fiction? Is it a
philosophical text? Or is it something altogether other? With Awaiting Oblivion,
Blanchot puts into play a form of fragmentary writing that refuses enclosure within any
fixed genre, serving as testimony, rather, to that which escapes all categorization, all
thematization, and all definition. It is a text dedicated to radical alterity, and thus, to the
neuter itself.
Published in 1969, The Infinite Conversation contains critical essays on a host of literary
topics (Char, Duras, German Romanticism, Kafka, Flaubert, Roussel), as well as essays
dealing with philosophical and theoretical considerations (Levinas, Simone Weil,
Nietzsche, Heidegger, Freud, Bataille, Foucault), which are in turn punctuated and
disrupted by instances of fragmentation and dialogue between unnamed interlocutors.
The Infinite Conversation is undoubtedly Blanchot’s most stylistically diverse text,
combining fragmentary texts and more standard literary critical writings, like those
found in The Space of Literature or The Book to Come (1959). It is a text without a
center-point, without a single unifying theme—unless this theme is the movement of
dispersion and dislocation that has always already destabilized all pretense of unity, and
exposed all interiority to that which is radically outside it.
During the events of May 1968, Blanchot found himself at the heart of the anti-
authoritarian movement as a member of the Comité d'action étudiants-écrivains.
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Penning numerous, unsigned pieces for the group’s magazine, Comité, Blanchot
espoused a radical politics based upon a rejection of all forms of hitherto existing
political order: a communism without communism. By mid-1969, however, Blanchot
had distanced himself from the group, citing as a reason (in a letter to Levinas) its
position in support of Palestine and opposition to the state of Israel.
As the 1970s began, a veritable changing of the guard was underway. As post-
structuralism entered its zenith, with Derrida and Deleuze producing many of their
seminal writings, Blanchot’s health began to decline precipitously and death seemed all
around him. Jean Paulhan passed away in 1969, then Paul Celan drowned himself in the
Seine in April 1970. Blanchot himself endured hospitalization in the early 1970s, and in
early 1972 wrote letters to his closest friends thanking them, as though retrospectively,
for a life in which he was privileged to meet them. His 1973 text, The Step Not Beyond,
which was written entirely in the fragmentary form, resembles at times a meditation on
death—though less as a statement of its impending reality, than as a testimony to its
interminable impossibility. Consigning us to a time without present, the act of writing,
Blanchot insists, makes the process of dying endless and the instant of death
unattainable.
Crucially, the disaster remains outside of all presence, beyond representation, and
divorced from possibility and truth. It is wholly “otherwise” than being or non-being.
Yet, despite the disaster’s exteriority (and anteriority) with respect to each of these
classic, philosophical notions, it is the disaster that accords each of these notions its
respective meaning, on the condition that this meaning never coincide fully with itself.
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The disaster has always already touched, inhabited, compromised, and ruined every
worldly edifice predicated upon stability, totality, unity, and Oneness before it can even
be founded. The disaster is a “name” for that which turns every subject, every text, every
historical narrative, and every political system ceaselessly outside itself, toward the
radical alterity that escapes its enclosure, and serves as its condition of both possibility
and impossibility.
Blanchot followed this, arguably his most challenging text, with another important text,
The Unavowable Community, in late 1983. Here Blanchot lays out, with reference to
Bataille and the novelist Marguerite Duras, among others, a rethinking of the notion of
community as irreducible to the notions of self-identity and presence. A small book,
entitled A Voice From Elsewhere, appeared in 1992, and final, striking piece of short
fiction, “The Instant of My Death,” was published in 1994. Blanchot passed away on
February 20, 2003.
a. Levinas
Blanchot and Levinas first met in Strasbourg in 1925 while studying philosophy. They
soon developed a deep friendship that would last until Levinas’s death in 1995. Various
anecdotes from their friendship are well-known. We know, for instance, that it was
Levinas who first introduced Blanchot to Heidegger’s Being and Time in the late 1920s.
A little over a decade later, it was Blanchot who helped secure a safe-haven for Levinas’s
wife and daughter in a monastery during the war. Yet anecdotes like these can only offer
a superficial sense of the profound bond that came to be formed between these two men,
so different in their respective backgrounds, beliefs, and interests. The mutual debt of
influence shared between them would alter each of their intellectual paths irrevocably,
and serve as a catalyst for some of the most important developments in Blanchot’s own
thinking.
When Blanchot, throughout his writings, engages with the ideas of Levinas (whom he
considered, along with Bataille, his closest friend), it is never Blanchot’s strategy merely
to repeat, uncritically, Levinas’s philosophical doctrines, much less to appropriate them
as his own. Rather, Blanchot pays tribute to Levinas most devoutly at the precise
moments in his texts when he accentuates the difference, and distance, between himself
and Levinas. Fidelity to one’s friend, Blanchot suggests, requires a measure of
compulsory infidelity. It is by bearing witness to the differences between himself and
Levinas that Blanchot most eloquently testifies unto the profundity of their relationship.
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Levinas’s name appears for the first time in Blanchot’s published work in a footnote to
“Literature and the Right to Death,” published in 1947. And though explicit references to
Levinas are rare within Blanchot’s voluminous critical output of the 1940s and 1950s,
the presence of certain Levinasian tropes is nevertheless unmistakable during this
period. Chief among these is the il y a, which both Levinas and Blanchot attempt to
construe as a challenge to the fundamental ontology of Heidegger, as well as to Hegel’s
philosophy of death. It is not until 1961, with the publication of Levinas’s Totality and
Infinity, that Blanchot undertakes an explicit engagement with Levinas’s philosophy.
This engagement initially takes the form of three chapters devoted to Levinasian
philosophy in The Infinite Conversation (1969), and is then followed by numerous
fragments in the pages of The Writing of the Disaster (1980), and a retrospective of
their friendship (“Our Clandestine Companion”).
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position within his texts, all the while refusing to spare it critique, interrogation, or
transposition. Throughout his writings of the 1960s and beyond, Blanchot does not
cease to pose probing questions towards Levinas’s texts. Who exactly is this Other to
whom Levinas refers? Is it possible to name the Other as such without compromising his
radical alterity? What is the meaning of the “ethics” to which Levinas refers? Is such an
ethical comportment exclusive to believers of the Jewish faith? Is it dependent upon a
belief in the Jewish God?
Difficult questions such as these are neither avoided by Blanchot, nor accorded facile
resolution. Rather, they are explored in all their complexity and allowed to ramify and
redouble themselves throughout the pages of Blanchot’s writings. Though he remains
thoroughly committed to a rigorous atheologism, Blanchot acknowledges, in light of
Levinas’s writings of the early 1960s, the profound philosophical importance of
Judaism. What makes Judaism so distinctive, so philosophically important, according to
Blanchot, is both its “nomadic” essence and the privilege it accords to man’s sacred
responsibility for the Other. Unlike Heidegger’s “pagan” philosophy, for example, which
situates truth in rooted dwelling and permanence, Blanchot highlights the impressive
manner in which the “truth” of Judaism develops amidst exile, dispersion, and up-
rootedness. Moreover, it is Judaism which accords an unparalleled importance to
mankind’s relation (of non-relation) with the infinite.
Yet while Levinas understands this relationship to the (transcendent) Other primarily in
terms of the paradigmatic “asymmetry” of man’s rapport with God, Blanchot seeks to
reconfigure this relationship in terms of the “double dissymmetry” of a relation between
two or more human beings. Where the Levinasian account stresses hierarchy and places
emphasis upon the verticality of man’s relationship with the Most-High, Blanchot
proposes a non-hierarchical relationship between human beings that is irreducible to
unity or duality. Dissymmetry, in the Blanchotian account, means that the relation (of
non-relation) between the Self and the Other, is redoubled by the Other’s relation (of
non-relation) with respect to the Self. Importantly, this redoubling does not lead, in
Blanchot’s account, to any dialectic of reciprocity or recognition. It is not the presence
of the divine, as in Levinas’s ethical metaphysics, that saddles the Self with infinite
responsibility; rather, it is the presence of one’s own neighbor, one’s fellow man, that
introduces a burden of responsibility that can neither be satisfied nor ignored.
While Blanchot remains skeptical of Levinas’s heavy reliance upon a conceptual lexicon
(God, the Other, ethics, and so forth) which seems to betray the very alterity it seeks to
evoke, he senses in Levinas’s project (and in Judaic philosophy, more broadly) a
provocative antidote to the philosophies of totality. Blanchot senses, moreover, within
Levinasian philosophy, a precedent for rethinking the meaning of social responsibility
and community outside of the economy of being. The influence of Levinas’s philosophy
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upon Blanchot’s thinking, particularly from 1961 onward, is thus far-reaching and
profound.
b. Hegel
Much as thinkers of the medieval period would have referred to Aristotle simply as the
philosopher, for Blanchot, it is Hegel who most embodies the discourse of philosophy
construed as a systematic whole. As Blanchot writes in The Infinite Conversation, Hegel
is the thinker “in whom philosophy comes together and accomplishes itself” (The
Infinite Conversation, p. 4). Hegelian philosophy thus becomes the backdrop for much
of what Blanchot has to say, not only about philosophy proper, but also about history
and literature. What Hegel represents is the false-promise of totality in all its various
forms (epistemological, ontological, political, historical, and textual). The “Hegelian
system” becomes an emblem for every system, that is, for every attempt at achieving
exhaustive, irrefutable self-enclosure—whether this be construed as a system of Absolute
Knowledge or even something like Mallarmé’s “Absolute Book.”
Confronted by a discourse that seeks authority and mastery over “the All,” Blanchot’s
strategy, in reading Hegel, is to position himself obliquely, along the margins of Hegel’s
text, neither opposing Hegel directly, nor endorsing him. A Blanchotian reading will
typically follow the author of the Phenomenology up to the point where the text begins
to unravel on the basis of its own logic and its philosophy gives way to aporia. Two early
examples of this can be found in Blanchot’s essays from 1947 and 1948, entitled
respectively, “The Spiritual Animal Kingdom” and “Literature and the Right to Death.”
Here we find Blanchot, under the influence of a Kojèveian reading of Hegel, coming to
highlight the paradoxes implied by the notions of death and negativity in Hegel’s text.
Not unlike Bataille, Blanchot senses an air of fraudulence surrounding the Hegelian
system’s pretense of enclosure. Beginning with Kojève’s thesis that Hegel’s philosophy is
a philosophy of death, Blanchot wonders what happens to this negativity, which serves
as the driving force for all history, once history has arrived at its end-point. Moreover, if
negativity is precisely what provokes the dialectic of history into motion in the first
place, then does this not assign to negativity a position simultaneously “before” and
“beyond” the very system in question? Such excess, or non-recuperable exteriority, is
precisely what Hegel’s system seems to presuppose and yet simultaneously reject. This
means that the coherence of the Hegelian system depends upon the very thing that it
excludes. Pointing out this dependency of the inside upon the outside is a frequently
recurring Blanchotian trope, and it is used with great effect here, with respect to Hegel.
As Blanchot himself writes in The Writing of the Disaster, “What exceeds the system is
the impossibility of its failure, and likewise the impossibility of its success” (The Writing
of the Disaster, p. 47).
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By the late 1960s and early 1970s, Hegel’s name is increasingly juxtaposed, in Blanchot’s
texts, with the name Nietzsche. If Hegel is seen by Blanchot as the great totalizer, then
Nietzsche, on the other hand, is the thinker without enclosure, without a Hauptwerk,
without a system, and without any doctrine that would not, simultaneously, suspend
itself. If Hegel, moreover, is the great thinker of possibility (the basis of which, according
to the Kojèveian interpretation, is death), then it is Nietzsche who comes to
emblematize, for Blanchot, the vertigo of eternal return which contests every origin and
every end, suspending the work of death, and consigning us to the impossibility of dying.
c. Nietzsche
Blanchot’s Nietzsche is a complex figure positioned both within metaphysics and
“always already” outside it. He is, as Blanchot asserts in 1958, “the last philosopher”
(The Infinite Conversation, p. 141), a thinker whose texts comprise the culminating
event in Western metaphysics. At the same time, Blanchot insists, Nietzsche is outside
metaphysics, gesturing us toward the dispersive, the fragmentary, and the
incommunicable. During his decades-long engagement with Nietzsche’s thought,
Blanchot offers incisive commentary on a wide variety of topics: nihilism, the Last Man,
the Will to Power, Dionysus, the philosophy of time, the future, the Death of God,
perspectivism, and ecstastic experience. Moreover, Blanchot’s texts from the late 1950s
onward demonstrate an acute sensitivity to the political efficacy and political baggage of
Nietzsche’s thought. Acknowledging Nietzsche’s horrific appropriation by fascist
ideologues during the 1930s and 1940s, Blanchot nevertheless seeks to portray
Nietzsche as a paradigmatically non-systematic thinker, whose thought (if followed
rigorously and without compromise) resists all attempts at appropriation and mastery.
To the extent that one reads Nietzsche attentively, one sees him to be a thinker at odds
with all forms of totality, totalitarianism, and anti-Semitism.
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and radical reading of the eternal return which views Nietzsche’s “thought of thoughts”
less as a doctrine, than as a simulacrum of a doctrine. In the pages of The Infinite
Conversation, Blanchot proposes a novel thesis concerning the reason for Zarathustra’s
(and Nietzsche’s own) regimen of postponement and deferral with respect to the
proclamation of the message of eternal recurrence. This postponement, Blanchot argues,
should not be attributed to some contingent incapacity on the part of the speaker to
articulate the thought faithfully or exhaustively, but rather, to the thought’s radical
aversion to all presence. The eternal return is continuously deferred from all thought,
according to Blanchot, because deferral of all presence is the very meaning of the
thought itself. What “returns”— if anything—is an event that has never been present; or
rather, an event that hollows out presence itself.
By the time of The Step Not Beyond (1973), Blanchot’s writing on Nietzsche becomes
increasingly oblique. In a set of remarks penned in direct response to Klossowski’s
Nietzsche and the Vicious Circle, but also suggesting engagement with Deleuze’s
late-1960s work on the eternal return, Blanchot suggests that “dissymmetry is at work in
repetition itself” (The Step Not Beyond, p. 42), meaning that the past does not repeat the
future in the same way that the future repeats the past. Further reinscription of the
thought of eternal return occurs in The Writing of the Disaster, where Blanchot
repeatedly evokes a modality of temporal repetition that has always already dislodged
presence, suspended the present, and withdrawn from the Self any basis upon which to
construct a coherent notion of self-identity or subjectivity.
d. Heidegger
The provocation posed by Heidegger to French theory during the mid-20th century is
well-documented. From Sartre and Lacan, to Levinas and Derrida, the imposing
demand of Heidegger’s philosophy weighed heavily upon countless thinkers. In this
respect, Blanchot was no exception. Blanchot’s good comprehension of German, and his
early exposure to Heidegger’s work (he was introduced to it via Levinas, in the late
1920s), made a significant engagement with the author of Being and Time perhaps
inevitable.
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in a public endorsement of Hitler in 1933, Heidegger had cast boundless suspicion over
his own discourse and forever tarnished it; on the other hand, Blanchot sees Heidegger’s
philosophy as worthy of commentary and to a certain extent inescapable as a point of
reference, insofar as it presents (like Hegel, but in a different register) an account of the
totalizing embrace of Being. Heidegger’s challenge to philosophy is a challenge that is
impossible to ignore.
As early as his review of Sartre’s Nausea, in 1938, Blanchot can already be seen insisting
upon the importance of Heidegger’s account of the crisis faced by modern art. And
though explicit references to Heidegger during the wartime years are rare, it is clear that
Blanchot had already assimilated, by this time, much of Heidegger’s thinking. Nowhere
is this more evident than in Blanchot’s early writings on Hölderlin, which strongly
reflect a Heideggerean bent. For Heidegger, Dichtung (which means “poetry” in
common parlance, but also refers etymologically to the notion of “invention”) comes to
be privileged as the most essential type of artwork because it serves as the basis for
Dasein’s historical being, as well as serving as the origin of language itself. According to
Heidegger, all genuine work of artistic creativity has Dichtung at its origin. Blanchot, in
the early 1940s, follows Heidegger by insisting upon the privileged role of poetic
language as foundational with respect to the world. It is poetic language that inaugurates
a world and discloses the human subject.
Only around 1946, with the publication of his “The ‘Sacred’ Word of Hölderlin,” does
Blanchot begin to take a noticeable distance from Heidegger. In this essay, Blanchot
finally rejects the Heideggerian reconciliation between Dichtung and Being, and offers
an account of Hölderlin’s poetic work that views it less as an act of ontological
foundation, than as a site of irresolvable tension wherein the poem ceaselessly confronts
its own impossibility and groundlessness.
By the time of Blanchot’s 1952 essay “Literature and the Original Experience,” the
similarities and differences between his and Heidegger’s views on art and poetry are
even more starkly defined. What the two thinkers share, in a general sense, is a refusal of
any aesthetic philosophy based upon the distinction between form and content, subject
and object. Moreover, each thinker builds his account from an initial confrontation with
Hegel’s Aesthetics, and its famous injunction that “art today is a thing of the past.” But
whereas Heidegger insists upon the work’s privileged relation to truth (as
“unconcealment”), and hence to the world, Blanchot develops an account of art and
literature that stresses their radical exteriority with respect to the world, work, and
truth.
Nor is Blanchot’s engagement with Heidegger by any means limited to aesthetics. In the
midst of his return to national politics, and his in-depth immersion into the philosophy
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Blanchot pays tribute here to the influence of Heidegger in this account of non-
representational, post-metaphysical temporality, and yet, as Blanchot’s essay on
Heraclitus, first published in 1960, makes clear, a profound divergence in their
respective approaches has occurred. While Heidegger’s Heraclitus famously offers us an
insight into the unconcealment of Being, Blanchot proposes to read the Heraclitian
fragments as an instance of language construed not as a shelter for Being, but as a
response to the radical alterity of that which remains outside of Being altogether. Here,
as in so much of Blanchot’s writings of the 1960s and 1970s, language assumes a double
function as that which names the possible—but also bears witness to that which
infinitely precedes and exceeds all ontology. Moving somewhat away from the notion of
the il y a, which was still an ontological construct (albeit a subversive one), Blanchot
increasingly deploys the notion of the neuter, a pseudo-concept intended to displace all
ontological primacy. Having nothing to do with either being or non-being, the neuter
serves as a condition of both possibility and impossibility for Heidegger’s ontological
framework, implicitly turning aside the question of the meaning of Being, and upstaging
it with the more urgent question of the other.
For Hegel, as Blanchot notes, death is what produces all possibility of meaning in the
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world by serving as the catalyst for the dialectic itself. Death is constantly put to work
and subsequently recuperated, in Hegel’s system, leading history toward its point of
inevitable culmination. For Heidegger, death is likewise related to the notion of
possibility. More specifically, it is construed, in Being and Time, as one’s own
possibility, a possibility which is non-transferable and not to be outstripped. It
comprises the very basis for Dasein’s authentic existence.
In his writings, Blanchot does not directly oppose these accounts of death. What
Blanchot suggests, however, is that there is also another side to death which these
philosophies marginalize or exclude. It is a side in which the power and possibility of
death are suspended. It is this phenomenon to which Rainer Maria Rilke, in a letter from
1910, seeks to bear witness with the words: “Nothing is possible for me anymore, not
even dying.” Here, all desire for a masterful, self-actualizing, proper death is forestalled
by the realization that death, in fact, is never accessible for the self.
In a manner somewhat reminiscent of Epicurus, Blanchot argues that this second kind
of death is incommensurable with any subjective, or personal, experience. Commenting
on death in The Space of Literature, Blanchot writes, “I have no relationship with it, it is
that toward which I cannot go, for in it I do not die, I have fallen from the power to die.
In it they die; they do not cease, and they do not finish dying” (The Space of Literature,
p. 155). Thus death, which for Hegel and Heidegger is associated with possibility, comes
to be contrasted with the anguish of anonymous death, which is impossible for the Self,
and can neither be willed, mastered, or even undergone by any personal subject—in the
present.
By articulating this doubleness associated with the notion of death, Blanchot is able to
challenge both Hegel and Heidegger on fundamental points of their respective
philosophies. If death contains within itself this trace of impersonality that expels all
attempts at mastery, propriety, and power, then the consequences of this are significant.
The so-called work of the concept in Hegel, which is powered by death, must now be
understood as silently accompanied by worklessness and impossibility. Likewise, in the
context of Heidegger’s thought, if death is double, then no death can ever be wholly
proper or authentic. In contrast to all philosophies, going back to Plato, in which death
is equated with Truth, presence, or consummation, Blanchot thus seeks to emphasize
the error, absence, and interminability associated with dying. In short, Blanchot is
showing that death remains a radically indeterminable, or volatile, concept whose
inclusion within any system poses not only a challenge to systemic coherency, but also to
definitive closure.
b. The il y a
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The notion of the il y a, which means “there is,” appears prominently throughout
Blanchot’s writings and comprises one of the most direct links between his texts and
those of early Levinas. Though the trope of the il y a appears in Blanchot’s literary
writings dating back to the mid-1930s (“The Last Word”), its most significant early
deployment occurs in Blanchot’s novel Thomas the Obscure, which Levinas then
explicitly references in his 1947 text, Existence and Existents. Blanchot and Levinas thus
develop the notion of the il y a somewhat in tandem during the period in question,
influencing one another, while gradually coming to propose subtly different points of
emphasis in their respective usages of the phrase.
The il y a features two seemingly contradictory traits. First, it involves the presence of
the absence of being. Second, it points toward the inescapability of being or its radical
resistance to negation. In coming to formulate these difficult notions, Blanchot and
Levinas are engaging critically with the account of fundamental ontology offered in
Heidegger’s Being and Time. In contrast to Heidegger’s insistence upon the primacy of
being-in-the-world, Blanchot and Levinas seek to articulate a more “primal” ontological
state, namely, one which involves the notion of being unmoored from all objects. It is a
state characterized by the sheer absence of a world. In the midst of the il y a, the world
and its possibilities vanish, leaving as a palpable residue the preconceptual singularity of
being itself. Gone is the original generosity of the Heideggerian “gift of Being.” In its
place, Blanchot and Levinas assert the vertiginous horror of objectless being, sheer
anonymity, and insomniac wakefulness. The il y a thus signifies something even more
archaic than ontological difference; it involves a state which serves subversively as a
condition of both possibility and impossibility for the Heideggerian distinction between
being (Sein) and beings (das Seiende).
Blanchot begins to move subtly beyond the limits of the Levinasian account of the il y a
when he turns this discussion back toward the question of literature. According to
Blanchot, what literature seeks as its aim is nothing other than this very state of
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Periodic references to the il y a continue to appear well into Blanchot’s later writings. Its
importance as a trope, however, is largely displaced, from the early 1960s onward, by an
even more provocative pseudo-concept that Blanchot calls “the neuter.” Whereas the il y
a remains situated, at least nominally, within the economy of being and non-being (even
as it challenges this economy), the neuter suspends the question of being or non-being
altogether and remains radically irreducible to any ontology whatsoever. While the il y
a, in the writings of Blanchot and Levinas, evokes the groundless ground of all being, or
as Blanchot puts it, the impossibility of not-being, the neuter gestures us even further,
toward the very limit of philosophy as such.
c. The Neuter
The neuter is one of the most difficult concepts in Blanchot’s critical apparatus. We
might casually think of the neuter as a kind of third gender opposed to the strictly male
or female genders. But this is an approach that Blanchot rejects. The neuter is not a
gender or a genre of any kind, he insists. It is not a class of beings. Indeed, for Blanchot,
the neuter is set apart from everything visible and invisible, everything present and
absent. It is commensurable no less with a subject than with an object. The neuter is not
of this world, or any world, for that matter. And yet, it is by no means transcendent
either. The neuter stands outside of all totality, all unity, all Oneness. It withdraws itself,
or effaces itself, the very moment it is uttered or inscribed. The neuter is precisely a
(nameless) name for the movement of thought that draws every word and every concept
ceaselessly towards its outside, its other.
In practical terms, the neuter evokes a word’s ability to suspend and remark itself in
such a way that it ceases to signify what it signifies, and it begins to drift into the
indeterminacy of multiple meanings. The neuter is a kind of principle of “original”
difference and differentiation that both conditions and threatens the installation of all
forms of self-identity, meaning, and truth. It thus bears striking similarities to Derrida’s
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“différance” to the extent that the neuter establishes the non-coincidence of language
with itself. If language is understood in terms of the differential relations between signs,
then it is the neuter which has always already brought this difference into play. The
neuter is what exposes every word to an infinity of meanings, making language possible
on the condition that it is constantly traversed by a radical alterity that both precedes
and exceeds it.
Blanchot’s “discovery” of the neuter (in the early 1960s, in this sense, though the term
had been used previously in his writings) was highly impactful on the development of his
thought as a whole. It is widely known that nearly all of the chapters in Blanchot’s 1969
text, The Infinite Conversation, had been previously published as stand-alone articles in
journals such as the Nouvelle Revue française. Significantly, many of these original
articles were substantially modified by Blanchot in the years that elapsed between their
initial publication (some date all the way back to the mid-1950s) and their ultimate
inclusion within the pages of The Infinite Conversation. These revisions reflect a shift in
Blanchot’s work that began to take place in the 1960s, and that impact his views on
being, language, and philosophy rather dramatically. Integral to this shift is the
emergence of the neuter in Blanchot’s theory and writings. His revisions leading up to
the publication of The Infinite Conversation reflect this increasing awareness of the
neuter’s capacity for displacing, suspending, and ungrounding the very language of
philosophy that it conditions.
Thus, in the 1969 republished versions his earlier articles, Blanchot places scare-quotes
around the words “being” and “presence,” replaces the word “logos” with “difference,”
and substitutes the terms “impersonal” and “anonymous” with “neuter.” These changes
are anything but cosmetic. Rather, they reflect a concerted effort on Blanchot’s part to
assert the trace of otherness and difference at the heart of philosophy and language. By
no means merely an exercise in semantics, the emergence of the neuter, in Blanchot’s
writings of the 1960s, goes hand-in-hand with the increasing emphasis on the ethico-
political that comes to the fore in his work around the same time, largely in response to
developments in Levinas’s thought. “Every encounter,” Blanchot writes, “where the
Other suddenly looms up and obliges thought to leave itself, just as it obliges the Self to
come up against the lapse that constitutes it and from which it protects itself—is already
marked, already fringed by the neutral” (The Infinite Conversation, p. 306).
In The Writing of the Disaster, Blanchot calls the neuter, alongside the notions of the
outside, the disaster, and return, the “four winds of the spirit’s absence…the names of
thought, when it lets itself come undone and, by writing, fragment” (The Writing of the
Disaster, p. 57). The neuter, like the disaster, refers to a movement of thought beyond
meaning, that makes meaning possible (on the condition that it never be identical to
itself). Together, these notions comprise Blanchot’s most rigorously elaborated tropes
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for thinking (the non-thought of) the absolute alterity of the outside.
One can readily identify a very early phase, spanning roughly the decade of the 1930s,
during which Blanchot contributed numerous articles and essays to the journals of the
French far-right. These articles espoused a virulently anti-Hitlerian rhetoric and took a
dim view of any attempts at appeasement or compromise with regard to the growing
German menace. Problematically, though, the immediate target of Blanchot’s derision in
these pieces was often the parliamentary French government, with its perceived
weakness in the face of the Nazi threat. Blanchot’s advocacy, during this period, of
terrorism against the liberal state as a means of “national salvation” showed a clear,
antidemocratic bent to his early thinking. Much later in his writings, Blanchot came to
address this period through a self-critical lens, claiming that despite his youthful
participation in French nationalist circles, he consciously refused association with anti-
Semitic elements on the far-right.
Between the start of the Second World War and 1957, Blanchot assumed a largely
apolitical stance, spending much time in the south of France, and producing an
extraordinarily prolific outpouring of literary texts and critical essays. With his return to
Paris in 1957, Blanchot reentered the sphere of national politics. He soon developed a
close friendship with Dionys Mascolo, who would launch, in July 1958, the paper Le 14
Juillet, alongside Jean Schuster. The paper was oriented around resistance to General de
Gaulle’s return to power, and Blanchot elected to write two important articles for
publication. Central to Blanchot’s opposition to the regime was his staunch refusal of de
Gaulle’s claim to embody the French national destiny. Blanchot saw de Gaulle’s recourse
to the rhetoric of national salvation and a quasi-religious politics as a perversion of the
highest order. Such perversion, according to Blanchot, demanded vigorous opposition
and categorical refusal. By 1958, therefore, one can see Blanchot explicitly and forcefully
rejecting precisely the kind of politics (based on military might, patriotism, and national
salvation) that he had advocated as a young journalist in the 1930s.
If anything, Blanchot’s politics in the years that followed his initial collaboration with
Mascolo’s paper only grew more progressive, more radical. In September 1960, when
twenty-four French and Algerian dissidents were put on trial for subverting the French
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colonial efforts in Algeria, Blanchot was a driving force behind the production of the so-
called “Manifeste de 121,” a text which endorsed the right of Frenchmen to refuse to be
drafted in to the Algerian conflict, and voiced support for Algerian independence. Along
with Mascolo, and several others, Blanchot then sought to channel his efforts on the
“Manifeste” into an even more ambitious project: the creation of an international
journal of “total criticism,” which would meld together political, literary, and scientific
discussions. This “International Review” would be published in three languages (French,
German, and Italian), in a format comprised primarily of fragments. By early 1964,
however, the project for this experimental journal was abandoned.
Blanchot’s participation in left-wing politics, however, would not wane. During the
évenéments of May 1968, Blanchot became a member of the Comité d'action étudiants-
écrivains, a group of revolutionary students and writers who agitated against the
government and passionately rejected all forms of representational politics predicated
upon the pursuit of power. As a member of this radical group, Blanchot anonymously
penned numerous texts for its semi-secret magazine, Comité. By March 1969, though,
the group had begun to break apart, and Blanchot himself disavowed any further
participation in it, due to the group’s position (which was then common in extreme
leftist circles) against Israel and in favor of Palestine.
Blanchot thus carried with him, into the 1970s, 1980s, and beyond, a rather unique
political style combining aspects of left-wing radicalism, social justice advocacy (as seen,
for example, in his writings against apartheid, in support of Salman Rushdie, and later,
in favor of gay rights), and unwavering support for the state of Israel. Indeed, the
impossible memory of the camps, and the burden of responsibility associated with it,
factors heavily into the fragments that came to comprise Blanchot’s texts, The Step Not
Beyond and The Writing of the Disaster. The Holocaust looms particularly large, here,
as a catastrophic provocation in relation to which all forms of politics whatsoever must
be judged, calling forth a political response which rejects all forms of totality or
totalitarianism, demanding an infinite attentiveness to the other.
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The politics evoked within these writings reject any notion of community based on the
notion of fusion, communion, or nationalism. They emphasize, instead, a double
demand. First, to affirm the necessity of a break, a rupture, in the dialectical
development of political history. This involves proactive political engagement, agitation,
and advocacy. Secondly, though, beyond this demand to create an interruption in the
politics of possibility through concrete, worldly intervention, there is the requirement of
bearing witness to an infinite demand for justice which exceeds all calculation, all
possibility, and all work. This second demand is what specifically requires the
community to look beyond all forms of self-identity or self-presence in order to assume
an impossible responsibility for the nameless other, without identification, and without
resources, who is always yet to come. Such is the challenge, as daunting as it is urgent,
that is inseparable from Blanchot’s later thought.
a. Major Works
Thomas l’Obscur, Gallimard, Paris, Gallimard, 2005.
Aminadab, Paris, Gallimard, 1942.
Faux Pas, Paris, Gallimard, 1943.
Le Très-Haut, Paris, Gallimard, 1948.
L’Arrêt de mort, Paris, Gallimard, 1948.
La Part du feu, Paris, Gallimard, 1949.
Lautréamont et Sade, Paris, Minuit, 1949.
Au moment voulu, Paris, Gallimard, 1951.
Celui qui ne m’accompagnait pas, Paris, Gallimard, 1953.
L’Espace littéraire, Paris, Gallimard, 1955.
Le Dernier Homme, Paris, Gallimard, 1957.
Le Livre à venir, Paris, Gallimard, 1959.
L’Attente L’Oubli, Paris, Gallimard, 1962.
L’Entretien infini, Paris, Gallimard, 1969.
L’Amitié, Paris, Gallimard, 1971.
La Folie du jour, Montpellier, Fata Morgana, 1973.
Le Pas au-delà, Paris, Gallimard, 1973.
L’Écriture du désastre, Paris, Gallimard, 1980.
La Communauté inavouable, Paris, Minuit, 1983.
Michel Foucault tel que je l’imagine, Montpellier, Fata Morgana, 1986.
Une voix venue d’ailleurs : Sur les poèmes de Louis-René des Forêts, Plombières-les-Dijon, Ulysse,
Fin de Siècle, 1992.
L’Instant de ma mort, Montpellier, Fata Morgana, 1994.
Écrits politiques 1958-1993, Paris, Lignes-éditions Léo Scheer, 2003.
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b. English Translations
Death Sentence (1978). New York: Station Hill Press.
The Gaze of Orpheus and Other Literary Essays (1981). New York: Station Hill Press.
The Madness of the Day (1981). New York: Station Hill Press.
The Sirens’ Song (1982). Brighton: Harvester.
The Space of Literature (1982). Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.
Vicious Circles, followed by ‘After the Fact’ (1985). New York: Station Hill Press.
When the Time Comes (1985). New York: Station Hill Press.
The Writing of the Disaster (1986). Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.
The Last Man (1987). New York: Columbia University Press.
Michel Foucault as I Imagine Him in Foucault/Blanchot (1987). New York: Zone Books.
Thomas the Obscure (1988). New York: Station Hill Press.
The Unavowable Community (1988). New York: Station Hill Press.
The One Who Was Standing Apart From Me (1992). New York: Station Hill Press.
The Step Not Beyond (1992). Albany: State University of New York Press.
The Infinite Conversation (1993). Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1993.
The Blanchot Reader (1995). Oxford: Blackwell.
The Most High (1995). Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.
The Work of Fire (1995). Stanford: Stanford University Press.
Awaiting Oblivion (1997). Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.
Friendship (1997). Stanford: Stanford University Press.
The Station Hill Blanchot Reader (1998). New York: Station Hill Press.
‘The Instant of My Death’ in Maurice Blanchot and Jacques Derrida, The Instant of My Death / De-
meure: Fiction and Testimony (2000). Stanford: Stanford University Press.
Faux Pas (2001). Stanford: Stanford University Press.
Aminadab (2002). Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.
The Book to Come (2003). Stanford: Stanford University Press.
Lautréamont and Sade (2004). Stanford: Stanford University Press.
A Voice from Elsewhere (2007). Albany: State University of New York Press.
Political Writings, 1953-1993 (2010). New York: Fordham University Press.
c. Secondary Bibliography
Bident C., Maurice Blanchot, partenaire invisible, Paris, Champ Vallon, 1998.
Bruns G., Maurice Blanchot: The Refusal of Philosophy, Baltimore, Johns Hopkins Press, 1997.
Collin F., Maurice Blanchot et la question de l'écriture, Paris, Gallimard, 1971.
Derrida J., Parages, Paris, Galilée, 1986.
Fort J., The Imperative to Write: Destitutions of the Sublime in Kafka, Blanchot and Beckett, New
York, Fordham University Press, 2014.
Fynsk C., Last Step: Maurice Blanchot’s Exilic Writings, New York, Fordham University Press,
2013.
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Hart K., The Dark Gaze: Maurice Blanchot and the Sacred, Chicago, University of Chicago Press,
2004.
Hewson M., Blanchot and Literary Criticism, London, Bloomsbury Academic, 2011.
Hill L., Blanchot: Extreme Contemporary, London, Routledge, 1997.
Hill L., Maurice Blanchot and Fragmentary Writing: A Change of Epoch, London, Continuum,
2012.
Holland M., Avant dire: essais sur Blanchot, Paris, Hermann, 2015.
Iyer L., Blanchot’s Communism, London, Palgrave Macmillan, 2004.
Kuzma J., The Eroticization of Distance: Nietzsche, Blanchot, and the Legacy of Courtly Love, Lan-
ham, Lexington, 2016.
Lacoue-Labarthe, P., Agonie terminée, agonie interminable: Sur Maurice Blanchot, Paris, Galilée,
2011.
Nancy J., The Disavowed Community, New York, Fordham University Press, 2016.
Nancy J., Maurice Blanchot, passion politique, Paris, Galilée, 2011.
Author Information
Joseph Kuzma
Email: jkuzma@uccs.edu
University of Colorado, Colorado Springs
U. S. A.
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