Noir
Humanism
Donald K.
Hedrick
Department
of English
Kansas State University
Manhattan, KS 66506
hedrick@ksu.edu
NOT FOR
QUOTATION OR PUBLICATION
Paper for
MLA Session on Humanities Futures, Chicago, 1999
"Maybe
the trouble is my name's not Johnny and I never taught college anywhere
and I don't appreciate the finer things in life--like looking at a doll
cry and taking the rap for a murder she committed." (Humphrey Bogart in
Dead Reckoning)
Mean Cities
While I
value complexity as much as the next guy, I propose here what may not
only appear to be simplifications, but may actually be so. I do not, of
course, presume to suggest what we might collectively expect or do for
our next thousand years of literary study, only what we might more modestly
do for, say, a generation or two, by way of grafting an identity on humanism's
long revolution.
First of
all, let me begin my take here in a tangential way, by simplifying the
massively freighted discourse of the moment around the topic of violence,
a subspecialization of mine, as it happens, which I have taught both here
and abroad. I regard myself as somewhat of an expert on this topic--"somewhat"
because when in Central Europe, where I was teaching, most Americans like
me are presumed to be experts on violence. While exceptionalist and indeed
innovative violence constitute questions, I suppose, for Americanists
to ponder, for my purposes here I want to reflect on a different sort
of question. The problem of modern violence is not so much, as Eric Hobsbawm
has pointed out, its causes or its extremity, but something more like
its geography: that is, why it exists in such close proximity to nonviolence,
perhaps even in some way dependent upon it. The Columbine school killings
in Colorado, where hypernormal suburbia jumpcuts hyperabnormal Gothic,
are, like the cultured aestheticizations linked to fascism, a current,
lurid instance of this apparent paradox.
Shifting
for a moment nearer our spot at the MLA Convention in Chicago, we find
ourselves some hundred years back as my great-grandfather Teofil was guiding
tourists through the White City of the World's Columbian Exposition with
its wonders predicting the next millennium of powerful marvels of technology,
of consumption, and, perhaps less expectedly, of advertising itself. The
fair thus spoke multiculturally and even globally to its visitors, as
did also the voice of my great-grandfather himself, whose skills in seven
languages, as a recent emigrant from the Ukraine, earned him the position
of a specialist guide and interpreter, one assigned to VIP visitors to
the Fair.
On the outskirts
of the fair were the hotels and pensions he must have known, which served
the massive influx of these tourists. One of these hotels, later called
the "Holmes Castle," became infamous, however, in another of the modernist
juxtapositions of nightmare and utopian dream. A tourist trap in the worst
sense, it had been constructed in the early nineties by Herman Webster
Mudgett, aka Holmes, whose twenty-seven confessed murders in the place
may have been the tip of the iceberg, it is thought, for the estimated
several hundreds of murders that may have taken place there. These would
make Mudgett perhaps America's most prolific serial killer, and certainly
a most notorious figure of the turn of the century. With its concealed
passages, sliding panels, secret staircases, peepholes, and trapdoors,
the building itself was designed as a murder factory, an instrument of
torture and destruction (quite literally so, including torture racks,
surgical tables, vaults of quicklime and vats of acid). In its up-to-date
innovations of gas and electricity, it drew upon the same technological
fantasies touted at the fair, pointing toward various technical means
by which Mudgett, for example, was apparently able to control from valves
in his own bedroom the gassing of his victims (primarily young women)
and perhaps their incineration in asbestos lined rooms below. As in other
cases (such as, famously, "domestic" violence, "date" rape, etc.), violence
is in proxmity with nonviolence, and it thus staggers thought why no movie
has yet been contrived for us out of this grim, sensational history, for
our extended appreciation of "art-horror." Significantly, at the outset
of the spectacularization of such serial violence by the media, we have
an economic exchange by which Holmes, awaiting execution, sold his story
to the Hearst publications for $7,500, perhaps diminishing his purity
as a killer to become sullied in yet another way, at the same time implicating
the media in the very spectacularization which feeds the pathology.
If our century's
legacy is indeed a pathological public sphere, of such tangled complicities
and such proximities of the public and the criminal, the privileged and
the abject, it may be that the most apt collective fantasy for this situation
is the film noir, whose spiritual locus is rather Los Angeles than Chicago.
Los Angeles, where, as Mike Davis has shown us in different ways, late
capitalism plays itself out at its limits, is capitalism's canonical city
that helps to explain the paradoxical juxtaposition I have referred to.
Thus, we have Fredric Jameson's account of the often forgotten Marxist
position that capitalism is a progressive historical form, one responsible
for producing, through capital and its lack, the best and the worst that
there is, hells alongside its heavens, a heaven of safety nets for some
and a trapdoor to the basement for others.
Shakespeare:
The Franchise.
In the case
of the humanities, the close juxtaposition of the lowbrow to the extremes
of cultural capital exists by analogy, at least, in the case of Shakespeare,
whose historical shift toward the highbrow in the previous millennium
has been deftly traced by Lawrence Levine. It is to this example in its
current phase that I now turn, in the hopes that it provides some transferrable
insights for the identity of the humanities.
A sometimes
barometer of the fate of the humanities, the space of Shakespeare seems
to be one of boom and bust cycles--a figure now threatened by highbrow
elitism, anti-canonicity, or the academic market of specialization, now
only to be renewed by forces as disparate and incommensurable as new historicism,
Harold Bloom, or Hollywood. That this status should be in such flux, even
increasing flux, is only fitting, given Shakespeare's role as the exemplary
model of cultural capital, and given what we know of capital's transformative
powers. As cultural capital he is not only volatile but pivotal, the author
inevitably cited as test case in debates both theoretical and curricular
about reforming the humanities to come. Given the increasing commercialization
and corporatization of everything whatsoever, including academia and its
classrooms, it is unsurprising that the value of this capital would remain
volatile.
Attempting
to supplement my cultural or other income from teaching Shakespeare, I
contacted the promotions and sponsorship division of the Pepsi Corporation,
which had just struck a multi-million dollar deal with my university,
Kansas State University, for exclusive soft drink rights on campus. This
corporate coup managed in one single action to distinguish us from our
rival state university, the University of Kansas, which last year went
Coca Cola, so that a Bourdieuan fine academic distinction now exists between
Pepsi U and Coke U, the latter uncannily reproducing the Board of Regents
representation of the school as the state's "flagship" university. The
deal I offered Pepsi was to wear my Pepsi jacket in class, the one I got
at a second-hand store on Melrose Ave. in LA and which is embroidered
with "Don" on it, for some sort of consideration from the company, as
yet to be negotiated. The smooth-talking representative was doubtful about
working this out, since she was frequently contacted to sell such jackets
to people willing to wear them as advertising. But she encouraged me to
keep wearing my jacket, complimenting me on my "loyalty." Where Coke and
Pepsi were concerned, as I discovered from the torch song of Elizabeth
Scott in Dead Reckoning, "Either it's love or it isn't; there's no compromise."
I felt like
I was being played for a sucker. If the Shakespearean teacher and perhaps
by extension the humanist is, according to Richard Burt in his recent
study of sub-pop adapations of Shakespeare, increasingly identified as
a "loser," it is in part because everything is increasingly identified
as either winning or losing. Loser cycles, like downsizings, become ever
more expected and naturalized, even where, or especially where, Shakespeare
is concerned.
Shakespearean
critics Richard Burt and Harold Bloom offer contrary authorities for us
proceeding into the next century, providing competing versions of the
security and value of the cultural capital of the humanities: Burt tracing
the popular figure of Shakespeare increasingly "unmoored" from his works
and irrelevant, and Bloom authorizing Shakespeare's high status as the
"inventor" of a usable human nature, and thus always again relevant. While
both positions contend for the position of "public intellectual" some
academics are calling for now, what they seem to embody as a pair is the
very cyclical and unstable nature of this valuation, and perhaps, by extension,
of the humanities themselves--neither flourishing, nor, as Bill Readings
proposes in some sort of usable ruins, but both, and sometimes both at
once. As universities become more enmeshed in the marketplace, particularly
identifying with and entangled with the corporate world of image-production
and rationalization of intellectual and pedagogical activities, it may
be that the case of Shakespeare becomes an even more crucial model for
the place of the humanities. And it may be that such cycles, rather than
simply being deplored or tolerated, can, in the manner of the market itself
managed on a long-term basis, be exploited for our own profit. Some effort
at viewing the bigger picture is in order.
Historical
Coalitions
Whether
the new "public intellectual," however becoming more "public," will constitute
a continuity or a break with the traditions of the humanities should be,
I think, an important question for the academy. The figure of Shakespeare,
as it happens, may be instructive in such a question. While many, among
whom I include myself, would hope for radical rethinkings along progressive
political lines, to re-create the humanities as a committed weapon for
social justice as Dick Ohmann has consistently proposed through his editions
of English in America, I would suggest that there is a continuity within
the humanities tradition which, at our present historical moment, might
actually serve us better than that of a radical break, although I am by
temperament drawn to the latter. The continuity or longer-term consensus
I refer to is--and I oversimplify deliberately questions of economic history
here--that of the anti-commercial. From the wary glimmerings in Renaissance
writers such as Shakespeare and Jonson about commodification, reification,
and consumerism, to the full-blown sympathizing with underclasses and
workers after the ravages of industrialization, and finally, to postcolonial
critiques of the encroachments of globalization, the relationship of the
humanities--whether in Elizbethan, Enlightenment, Romantic, modernist,
or postmodernist forms--to the commercial sphere has been perennially
and predominantly critical. Despite the revolutions of criticism and theory
over the years, there has been more continuity in this regard than it
would appear from our internal divisions, often such small change within
the broader picture of academic change.
It may be
possible, then, to achieve some kind of historical consensus by acknowledging
this longstanding tradition more explicitly and publically, in fact, asserting
the anti-commercial tradition as both our critical heritage and as our
identity. One problem would arise, I think, of a certain contradiction
in our practices. While Shakespeare, as others have recently argued, may
provide an early modern example of such an anticipatory critique, the
recent work on his place in the early modern market suggests that, whether
or not you view his work as having either transcended (Bristol et al)
or else as having been constrained by the market, one cannot ignore that
a chief beneficiary of this commercialization was Shakespeare himself,
along with the institution of his theater, the first commercial entertainment
industry known. If Shakespeare was critical, he was also complicit, inhabiting
the tangle of race, class, and gender that current scholarship works to
undo.
On the other
hand, our century's image of the scholar, a figure ranging through the
revolutions of criticism and now of theory, has largely been that of the
investigator--the Holmesian detective, explorer, and excavator of truth,
meaning, irony, structure, ideology, history, and, to bring the catalogue
up to the present, even surface itself. Whatever seems an obviousness,
as it happens, has always become less obvious under our successive scrutinies.
If we were
to adopt the distinction made by Slavoj Zizek between two traditional
detective roles, we would have, I think, one productive resolution of
the contradiction. Zizek distinguishes the Holmesian detective, who objectively
overviews the crime, from the noir detective, who is always implicated
or becomes somehow implicated in it. This latter, as it happens, is the
same role that has been argued for postmodernism as a political practice,
namely, as complicit critique. Thus, if the standpoint of noir were to
become the figure for the stage of our development, it would behoove us
to acknowledge and to examine how we are often beneficiaries of what we
critique--from a commercialized humanities in the public sphere, to part-time
academic work in our institutions, like the increasing use (and abuse,
as it happens) of the hired men by Shakespeare's company. Marlowe and
company--the detective rather than the writer--would show us how tangled
is our own complicity in what we investigate; while Marlowe and company--the
writer rather than the detective--would show us how an entertainment industry
could itself be founded on complicities. It may be that our job, if not
our heritage, is to be hired to investigate the hidden crimes of the powerful,
even as we benefit from their patronage, and from the attentions of their
fascinating and dangerous spouses. And it may be that, as Pierre Bourdieu
has recently argued, the resistance to the commercial will mean that what
is most progressive will now require a certain traditionalism or even
conservatism, the humanities as an invented counter-tradition to the commercial,
its public role acknowledged publically not as an enemy in the culture
wars, but the dirty job everybody knows somebody's got to do.
As the commercial
inevitably fills more and more public and cultural space, and even as
our public institutions themselves devolve into entertainment industries,
we can make use of the contradictory circumstances we find ourselves in,
recognizing our conditions of possibility for what they are. We can thus
decide that noir humanism, the marriage of Burt and Bloom, may be our
best, perhaps only, hope.
CODA: Noir
Canonicity, Pedagogy, and So Forth
"You know,
the trouble with women is they ask too many questions" (Bogart, Dead Reckoning)
A Noir Humanism
would entail rethinkings of everything from canonicity to pedagogy, for
which a few scattered suggestions must suffice for now. A noir canonicity
would entail spending cultural capital rather than critiquing it; teaching
an informed Eurocentrism (as Spivak suggests) but with its barbarisms
juxtaposed with its civilizations; sometimes, though not always, historicizing,
in order to establish contemporary complicities with the past; "greatness"
of literature in quotes, allowing a full fetishization acknowledged as
such.
A Shakespearean
example or two of a transhistorical noir pedagogy. Let students, for instance,
collect the manipulative techniques of Shakespeare's Iago, but in order
to construct a contemporary manual of ways to incriminate and defeat a
colleague in the workplace, an increasingly noir habitation it would appear.
Or let students memorize the immortal words of the bard, not however "All
the world's a stage," but rather the submission speech of Kate at the
end of Shrew, an exercise which does wonders to defeat any illusions about
Shakespeare's timelessness, and appears to have salutary effects as well
when male students are required to take these lines to heart, momentarily
experiencing Deleuzian transversality.
If, like
Shrew, noir is really, beneath its crusty cynicism, about love, then it
is again on all fours with the traditions, and countertraditions, constituting
the humanities, even though love, in such a city, may only be able to
announce itself in smirking worldweariness and repartee, or, updated a
couple of generations, in the "whatevers" and "as ifs" of Burt's loser
criticism. Ultimately, if the realm of literature now, as I see it from
the border of the millennium, approaches the condition of Los Angeles,
as the contradictory space of later capitalism, then the archetypal genre
of the city provides us with a register, if not a research paradigm, for
an ever more hard-boiled critical function. Our canonicity, and our community,
will increasingly form in the image of our canon city, a public sphere
for a private eye, where we get the goods from anyone we can--from some
feminism fatale, always already asking too many questions; from those
queers down the alley performing god knows what next; from that nutcase
hawking workers' pamphlets on the corner; from the homeless foreign chick
with her loud gripes--living not exactly resistantly but by codes more
or less smashed. But it's a town we already know.
On these
damp streets, smoking will still, as always, look cool, but we'll know
more about what it does to us next time.
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