Ethan Kleinberg: Theory of History As Hauntology: Ethan Kleinberg: Teoria Da História Como Fantologia
Ethan Kleinberg: Theory of History As Hauntology: Ethan Kleinberg: Teoria Da História Como Fantologia
Ethan Kleinberg: Theory of History As Hauntology: Ethan Kleinberg: Teoria Da História Como Fantologia
Keywords
Theory of History; History of Historiography; Hauntology.
Palavras-chave
Teoria da História; História da Historiografia; Fantologia.
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I would like to thank Fulbright/CAPES for funding me during the academic year of 2015-2016 at Stanford
University as a visiting student researcher. In Stanford, I was advised by Professor Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht,
who encouraged me to spend the month of June of 2016 at Wesleyan University to work with Professor
Ethan Kleinberg. I would like to thank Professor Gumbrecht for his kind advice and generosity. Professor
Gumbrecht’s guidance was fundamental during my entire research internship at Stanford University. I would
also like to extend my gratitude to Professor Ethan Kleinberg; in addition to this interview, we met several
times to discuss my PhD research. I would like to thank as well my PhD colleagues, André Luan Nunes Macedo
and Liliana Mendoza Ortiz, of the Nucleus of History of Historiography and Modernity at Federal University
of Ouro Preto (NEHM/UFOP), who translated this interview into Portuguese and Spanish and Júlia de Melo
Arantes, for helping me with the proofreading. In addition, the questions I raised then were connected with the
debates surrounding NEHM/UFOP’s agenda in the last decade. Therefore, I would like to extend my gratitude
to all professors, graduate, and undergraduate students that formed this exciting intellectual environment,
especially my advisor Professor Valdei Lopes de Araujo and Professor Marcelo de Mello Rangel.
1. André da Silva Ramos: Professor Kleinberg, please speak about how your
interest in the field of Theory of History emerged and affected your career?
1
On the occasion of the Second International Network for Theory of History Conference (2nd INTH), in Ouro
Preto, Brazil, from August 23 to August 26, I had the opportunity to record a short version of this interview.
It was a pleasure to be part of the Brazilian Society of Theory and History of Historiography’s (SBTHH)
organizing committee, headed by Professors Marcelo Abreu, Andre de Lemos Freixo, Valdei Lopes de Araujo,
Helena Mollo, Marcello de Mello Rangel, Julio Bentivoglio, and Pedro Caldas, responsible for hosting the 2nd
INTH at Federal University of Ouro Preto (UFOP). I would like to thank the TV UFOP’s coordinator, Fernanda
Luiza Teixeira Lima, and its crew for making it possible. It can be watched in the following link: <https://www.
youtube.com/watch?v=PH9q_bJboHs>.
2. A. S. R.: Could you speak a little bit about your first book, on Heidegger’s
reception in France?
3. A. S. R.: Could you tell us about your personal and professional relation with
the journal History and Theory?
E. K.: As I mentioned earlier, History and Theory was very important during my
graduate studies and was in some ways the intellectual center of my work. I
spent hours reading the journal and arguing with my peers and professors about
the topical issues or debates of the day. Thus it really is a dream come true to
now be the editor. When I applied for the position at Wesleyan University, it was
with the hope that I could eventually join the editorial committee and to my
good fortune I was allowed to do so in 2003. Since then I have been active with
the journal and, as in graduate school, it is the center of my intellectual life.
But beyond this, I have developed great relationships with the other editors,
Gary Shaw, Vijay Pinch, Laura Stark, and Matthew Specter, as well as with
members of our editorial board. I should also say that Brian Fay, Phil Pomper,
and Dick Vann were incredibly influential figures for me, especially Brian who
is still a wonderful mentor and friend. And I would be remiss if I didn’t mention
our executive editor Julia Perkins who really makes the journal run. I guess the
point is that History and Theory is both my intellectual home and also like a
family to me.
4. A. S. R.: What are the main challenges of History and Theory today?
215
E. K.: There are a number of challenges facing History and Theory today. I
think first is the precarious position of philosophy of history in the discipline of
philosophy. Frank Ankersmit has written about this and it seems to be the case
that fewer and fewer philosophers are being trained to work in this field. I would
say that we need to start thinking differently about what counts as philosophy
of history and perhaps look to philosophers engaging in questions of temporality
or fields such as virtue ethics. Still, we need to find ways to direct philosophers
toward a sustained interest in history and the past. A separate but important
challenge has to do with the expansion of the field of theory of history beyond
the western canon. Over the last five years we have worked hard to engage with
scholars from China, India, and South America in order to pursue a larger global
conversation about history and theory. But we also realize that the desire to
encourage a more global conversation, laudable as it is, is also rife with difficulty.
As Vijay Pinch and I have argued, “The West” is a difficult, slippery geo-cultural
signifier; more so the “non-West.” Why else the compulsion to put them in
scare quotes? Where does the West end? Especially when such a substantial
portion of the journal’s global, and putatively “non-Western,” readership inhabits
intellectual cultures that themselves have emerged, historically, as a result of
intellectual dialogue and political exchange with the West—uneven though that
dialogue and exchange may have been. Even those pockets of intellectual culture
E. K.: Hayden White’s work is incredibly important for thinking about the ways
that history, especially historical narratives, function like literature. I think it is
a mistake to infer that this means that for White the historical text is a pure
fantasy, but instead to understand the way that the historical text is a particular
form, or perhaps genre, of literature itself. As you note, my interest departs or
perhaps builds on that of White, insofar as I am interested in what literature and
specifically literary fiction can tell us about the past and the ways we think about
the past. In short, the ways that the past haunts history. For most historians,
literary fiction is used solely as evidence of something or for something. It is
important not in and of itself, but as evidence in the way that one could argue
216 that the work of Erich Maria Remarque in France or Ernst Jünger in Germany
can inform us about the cultural or intellectual climate in interwar France or
Germany. In the way that Shakespeare’s plays can tell us about gender roles
in Elizabethan England or Machado can tell us about nineteenth century Brazil.
This is of course a rather utilitarian argument about the value of literature and
literary fiction but I would contend that the rise of new historicism indicates that
this valuation extends beyond the disciplinary guild of historians into the realm
of literary scholars as well. To my mind, the issue that most troubles the modern
historian is the possibility of an inversion whereby the matters of fiction, the
imaginary or the unreal, take priority over the matters of fact, the “as it really
happened”, the surety that we understand and comprehend the strange artifact
that is the past. If history is to take itself as a “science”, surely it cannot be more
akin to literature than to neuroscience! Thus many historians only find value in
works of literature as matters of fact, evidence, in the service of demonstration.
But I want to approach the issue from the other side and suggest that
literature and literary fiction can serve to challenge this utilitarian argument
by troubling our underlying assumptions about what is “real”, about facts and
fictions and about our own utilitarian and materialist assumptions. When I use
works of literature as the instrument of a critical engagement with history I
am often asked why would I choose works of literary fiction to make my point
rather than historical ones. The answer is two-fold. One aspect hinges on the
historian’s obsession with the fantasy of a historical science and the related
overemphasis on empirical evidence. With literary fiction, the evidentiary
6. A. S. R.: You are quite critical of the realistic tradition of historical studies that
is based, in your terms, in an ontological, realistic approach to history limited
by an analog ceiling. But you are critical as well of Hayden White’s approach
E. K.: There are several aspects to this question, so I’ll try to address them
systematically. I will start with my criticism of the conventional, or what I call
the ontological realist, understanding of history because I believe that Hayden
White, Hans-Ulrich Gumbrecht, Frank Ankersmit, Eelco Runia and I are all critical
of this position even if we may disagree on the details. I define ontological realism
as a commitment to history, as an endeavor concerned with events assigned to
a specific location in space and time that are in principle observable and as such
are regarded as fixed and immutable. Here the historian accepts that there is
a possibility for epistemological uncertainty as to our understanding of a past
event, but this is mitigated by the ontological certainty that the event happened
in a certain way at a certain time. Central to this position is a commitment to
empirical data that serves as something of a false floor to hold it. In the end,
getting the past “right” is a question of historical method. So one question
we need to ask is what holds the ontological certainty of the past event given
220 the assumptions of ontological realism and the limitations of analog publishing
practices serve to substantiate each other as necessary.
Even with innovations in the theory of history and in the digital tools/
formats available to us, we are in danger of using them to simply replace the old
ones. Thus the article on-line looks exactly like the one published in the journal.
The e-book is indistinguishable from the codex. We are hitting our heads against
the analog ceiling rather than crashing through to see how these innovations in
theory and form can change the way we research, write, and teach about the
past. The way we do history. But the discipline of history is facing a paradigm shift
and historians whose mindsets were formed and constrained by print must now
confront the changes that digital media makes in every aspect of their discipline.
One part of this shift is the possibility of reconceptualizing historical works as
multimodal, multi-temporal, and multi-media so as to resist the presentation
and restrictions of a monolithic temporal narrative. In these models, time and
space is, or can be, out of joint and it is in this way that new forms align with
a hauntological narrative reconstruction focused on non-simultaneity, divergent
historical paths, and the instability of time. Here we are talking about the multiply
heterogeneous iterations of a narrative form that does not unfold in a strict
linear fashion but is threaded through itself in a nonlinear polysemic topology.
One that defies the smooth continuous strategies of ontological realism but
coincides much more closely with what we know about space and time and how,
to my mind, we should think of the latent ontology of the past. Such a narrative
accommodates an understanding of what I call the past as something that is, as
E. K.: One reason I look to the German historicist tradition is because these
thinkers are often used to justify or validate current theoretical or methodological
approaches. In the book I cite a forum in the American Historical Review where
the American intellectual historian David Hollinger references Dilthey to concede
the fallibility of the historian but not the definite nature or retrievability of the
past. In a similar vein, Felix Gilbert asserts that “Droysen is closer to the modern
historical approach than many historians of the generation which followed him”
(GILBERT 1983, p. 336) while Blanke, Fleischer, and Rüsen can claim “for
Droysen it is not possible to endanger [the empirical character of history] for he
still explains the historical research epistemologically and finds the beginnings of
his philosophy of history in the epistemological foundations of historical studies”
(BLANKE; FLEISCHER; RÜSEN 1984, p. 350). And more recently, Chladenius’s
concept of the viewpoint or Sehepunkt has been deployed in the service of an
221
argument similar to Hollinger’s, wherein the fallibility of the historian is given
but not the instability of the past event. Each of these serve to determine the
past as a stable and fixed object that can be represented accurately so long as
the historian adheres to the proper methodological approach.
The key issue here is that, as a result of this approach, the instability of
the past is replaced by a sense of fixity that is based on the representation and
re-experiencing of the past event. It is one’s belief in the continuity of events,
as if they really happened as such, that is proffered, not the reality of those
events. But the priority of the representation in securing this belief is effaced
in favor of the holding power of the originary event itself. Once the proof of the
historical account is considered to be its adherence to the ontological reality
of the past event, the role of the historian in assembling the fragments into
a whole is demoted to one of epistemological method rather than ontological
construction. That is, the role of the historian in constructing what is to be
considered the ontological reality of the past event is effaced. The repercussion is
that the historically contingent nature of the particular historical representation
is considered to be valid for all time and with this other possible historical
understandings or representations are closed. But the fiction of a stable past is
the fiction of a stable present.
What I try to demonstrate is the way that the positions of Chladenius and
Droysen are predicated on a theological understanding of order and stability
222 pair the standpoint or perspective (the historically conditioned moment from
which we begin our investigation into history) with différance in order to place
this entry point into the hermeneutic circle into question. Indeed, the very
notion of stability is placed in question by the complex relation between the
historian operating within the context of their historical moment and the sources
(Quellen), remains (Überreste), or monuments (Denkmäler) through which the
past haunts the present and the historian attempts to understand the context of
the past. For historians, a context is never absolutely determinable because it is
always gathered/ascertained within another context. If we really want to think
with the past, rather than simply try to control it, we must learn to focus on its
instability and the ways that the past haunts history.
9. A. S. R.: Could you speak a little about the book that you are working on now,
“The Myth of Emmanuel Levinas”?
10. A. S. R.: Could you present your thesis about historians’ ambition to define
history as a discipline in the same terms as those of the hard sciences and how
it relates to neo-liberalism? In short, could you speak about your recent article
“Just the Facts: The Fantasy of a Historical Science”, published in the journal
“History of the Present”?
E. K.: One aspect of the historical discipline that has always fascinated me is
the way that historians regularly offer paradigms for discerning the truth of the
past that they know and admit are unattainable and then efface those aspects
of their model that expose the limitations and inadequacies in the histories that
they write or tell. I think this is what is at play in the recent turn to “science”
among historians in the United States through neuro-history, evolutionary
history, biological history, or Big History. This most recent infatuation with
science is new and troubling because to my mind it serves to close off discussion
and debate between historians and scientists rather than promote it, but also
because the impetus for it is, to my mind, primarily a financial one. One ill
effect is that the purported rapprochement or conversation between biology
and history is actually quite one-sided because it takes place on the nomothetic
224 and local governments have invested increased amounts in the “hard sciences”,
enrollments in the humanities and history in particular have declined. The pursuit
of capital stimulates ideas and paradigms, and one result is that historians now
run toward science in search of those funds. To my mind, the interpretative
choices of neurohistorians or the Bill Gates-supported proponents of Big History
must be seen in this light, whatever the merits of their particular interpretations.
Such choices also point to the way that their supposedly insurgent position
against the mainstream of historical work is actually, in the larger sense, aligned
with the most mainstream trends in emphasis and funding. Here, the logic
accords with that of neo-liberalism insofar as we see the dissolution of traditional
divisions of labor: the labor of the historian is consolidated with and replaced
by that of the biologist. To my mind this is not a rapprochement, conversation,
or interaction between history and the sciences but an unconditional surrender.
By ceding ground to this fantasy of science, historians also cede the space for
critical intervention that is the strength and heart of our discipline.
11. A. S. R.: I can find some similarities between your reading of the limits of
disciplinary historiography, and your proposal to explore how the past haunts
the present, with Reinhart Koselleck’s theory of modernization and the notion of
layers of time. However, despite worldwide academic recognition of Koselleck’s
work, it is possible to argue about the limitations of his conceptual history for
the transmission of meaning as a template for historiographical investigation.
Here, the “paradigm of presence” that you know well presents other possibilities
E. K.: I guess I should start with the caveat that I am not an historian of Brazil
and what I know of Brazilian historiography has come from recent articles on the
subject. But I think your question points to some of the key issues I address in
my book Haunting History. One of the problems with traditional approaches that
ascribe to the ontological realist position is that even in moments when they
open new possible paths of interpretation, they simultaneously close off others.
So one might consider traditional European historiographical accounts of Brazil
226 as restricting the sorts of stories or accounts that can be considered “history”
or proper historical sources. But promoting these sources and constructing new
“histories” that account for the history of slavery or indigenous peoples will
not be sufficient if each of these diverse and differing narratives seeks “firmer
ground” on which to set their own identity. When identity politics comes into
play what I would label a truncated deconstruction appears and simply inverts
the power dynamics rather than actually destabilizing them. Here the rejection
of deconstruction is the repression of the realization that there is no stable
foundation. From this perspective, the organizing principle of conventional
historical investigation and the relation with dominant or competing ideologies/
political positions is never truly put into question but simply redeployed to make
the “colonizer” the “colonized”. What I refer to as the “analog ceiling” reinforces
these limitations by constraining our historical narratives within the realm
of realist fiction and linear narrative. By contrast, a hauntological approach
acknowledges the way that these competing, conflicting and polysemous pasts
are always already inside of each other and encourages exploration of new forms
to account for them, even if it never seeks to contain them. Far from implying the
death or abdication of the author, deconstruction for history requires a strong
and careful historian whose rhetorical style guides the reader along the poros
that simultaneously introduces and acknowledges the aporia. It is a giving and
taking that makes the reader aware of the openings at play and the polysemous
nature of the past. This is all to suggest that the conventional history of Brazil
articulated by professional historians is haunted by a past replete with ghosts
13. A. S. R.: Between August 23 and August 26, 2016, the 2nd INTH took
place in Ouro Preto, Brazil. We had the opportunity to meet specialists in the
fields of Theory of History, History of Historiography, Philosophy of History,
and Intellectual History from around the world. Among many interesting things
that happened at the conference, I highlight a first meeting to create a Latin
American Network dedicated to gathering specialists committed to thinking
about history. You had the opportunity to participate in the Closing Remarks
Roundtable, whose purpose was to address the main intellectual challenges that
we faced at this meeting and will face at future ones. Could you speak a little
bit about your impressions regarding the 2nd INTH? What do you think about the
solidification of INTH and other international networks with regard to the future
of studies in the mentioned fields?
E. K.: I thought the meeting was wonderful and I was especially impressed by
227
the strength and originality of the graduate students and young scholars working
in the field. In particular, it was a great opportunity to meet scholars from South
America, Central America, and Mexico and to cultivate new relationships. I am
very enthusiastic about the creation of the Latin American Network because of
the creative, vibrant thought I encountered at the conference. This all bodes
well for the future of the theory of history.
In terms of the conference content, I was struck by a tension announced
in the more Nietzschean side of the conference theme: “On the Advantage and
Disadvantage of History for Life”. The great advantage of the INTH endeavor is
the desire to find common ground, to bring together scholars with an interest
in theory and philosophy of history from around the globe to engage with
each other. Such interaction is undoubtedly a positive thing, but the desire to
find a common ground is not unproblematic. There is always a danger when
one embarks on the project of comparison that the project will be based on a
control group that is taken to be the “norm” and against which all other groups
must be measured. In our conference, that might be the Western concept of
“history”, Koselleck’s concept of modernity, or Halbwachs’ model of memory.
The danger here is that the claim to common ground is actually predicated on
a theoretical imposition.
Sanjay Seth made this clear when he asked whether the historical code,
the one designed in the West, is adequate to the task of non-Western histories?
References
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_____. Haunting History: for a deconstructive approach to the past. Stanford:
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_____. Just the facts: the fantasy of a historical science. History of the Present,
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