Reality itself founders in hyperrealism, the meticulous reduplication of the real, preferrably through another, reproductive medium, such as photography. From medium to medium, the real is volatilized, becoming an allegory of death. But it is also, in a sense, reinforced through its own destruction. It becomes reality for its own sake, the fetishism of the lost object . . . the hyperreal.[1]
Not only couldn't I make myself malevolent, I couldn't make myself anything: neither good nor bad, neither a scoundrel nor an honest man, neither a hero nor an insect. . . . [A] wise man can't seriously make himself anything. . . . After all, the direct, immediate, legitimate fruit of heightened consciousness is inertia. . . . I practise thinking, and consequently each of my primary causes pulls along another, even more primary, in its wake, and so on ad infinitum. That is really the essence of all thinking and self-awareness. . . . And finally, "Soon we shall invent a method of being born from an idea.[7]
As Hazel E. Barnes comments, in Sartre "consciousness exists as consciousness by making a nothingness arise between it and the object of which it is consciousness. Thus nihilation is that by which consciousness exists."[9] Therefore, the phenomenon of existence is determined by the series of "internal negations," proceeding from the consciousness as pure nothingness. In this case, the absurdity of being, as it appears to the nullifying consciousness, can be understood as the derivative of this nothingness, of this abstraction that strips concrete things of their meaning. One would imagine that there is nothing more abstract than "nothing," since it is draws itself away from all peculiarities and specificities of being; but being, as it is posited in Existential philosophy, is even more abstract than non-being, since it emerges as the second order projection of this nothingness. This is no longer that nothingness which has a reality in-and-for-itself, like the self-effacing nothingness of self-consciousness. This is a nothingness which has lost that intimate relationship to its for-itself and which is turned towards the absurd Being which surrounds it, which is pure abstraction, deprived of even the concreteness of self-consciousness and of self-negation. This Being is simple nonentity -- a being-for-no-one.The type of existence of the For-itself is a pure internal negation. . . . Thus determination is a nothing which does not belong as an internal structure either to the thing or to consciousness, but its being is to-be-summoned by the For-itself across a system of internal negations in which the in-itself [the world of objects] is revealed in its indifference to all that is not itself.[8]
Heinz R. Pagels, "Uncertainty and Complementarity," The World Treasury of Physics, Astronomy, and Mathematics, ed. Timothy Ferris (Boston: Little, Brown and Co., 1991) 106. Back
As a reader will see, the concept of "hyper-textuality" in the context of this article has nothing to do with the "hyper-text" in commonly-understood, "electronic" sense of the word. "Hyper" is used here in the sense "super" and "pseudo" which relates it to the concepts of "hyper-sexuality," "hyper-sociality," etc. Back
George Steiner, Human Literacy, in The Critical Moment. Essays on the Nature of Literature (London, 1964) 22. Back
Umberto Eco, "The Analysis of Structure," ibid. 138. Back
Saul Bellow, "Scepticism and the Depth of Life," The Arts and the Public, ed. James E. Miller Jr. and Paul D. Herring (Chicago-London: U of Chicago P, 1967) 23. Back
Fyodor Dostoevsky, Notes From Underground/The Double, Trans. Jessie Coulson (London: Penguin Books, 1972) 16, 26, 27. Back
Jean-Paul Sartre, Being and Nothingness, trans. Hazel E. Barnes (New York: Washington Square Books, 1966) 256, 257. Back
Sartre 804. Back
C.S. Lewis, The Allegory of Love (New York: Oxford UP, 1958) 196. Back
Cited in D.H. Lawrence: A Critical Anthology, ed. H. Coombes (Harmondsworth: Penguin Education, 1973) 244. Back
John Bayley, The Characters of Love (New York: Basic Books, 1960) 24, 25. Back
Jacques Derrida, "Différance," A Derrida Reader. Between the Blinds, (New York: Columbia UP, 1991) 73. Back
In more detail the phenomena of hyper-textuality and hyper-sexuality, though in different terms, are considered in my articles "Kritika v konflikte s tvorchestvom" ("Criticism in Conflict with Creativity"), Voprosy literatury (Moscow, 1975) 2: 131-168; and "V poiskakh estestvennogo cheloveka" ("In Search of a Natural Human Being"), Voprosy literatury, (1976), 8: 111-145. Both articles are included in my book Paradoksy novizny. O literaturnom razvitii XIX-XX vekov ("The Paradoxes of Innovation. On the Development of Literature in the l9th and 20th Centuries") (Moscow: Sovetskii Pisatel', l988). The affinity between these two modes of hyper (hyper-textuality and hyper-sexuality) is formulated in the following way: "What is the general meaning of the paradoxes examined in the articles about 'critical situation' and 'sexual revolution?' In one case criticism attempts to extract from its object, literature, the most 'literary' essence and to isolate it from non-literature; as a result, it takes up the priority that was designed for the text purified from all 'metaphysical' contaminations. In another case, literature (and art in general) attempts to extract from its object, a human being, the most 'natural' essence, to purify it from all 'intellectual' contaminations; the result is the devastation of nature itself and the triumph of pure rationality" (Paradoksy novizny 249). Back
K. Marx. "Marx, Engels, Lenin: On Dialectical Materialism," Preface, A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy (Moscow: Progress Publishers, 1977) 43. Back
Compare Lacan's "There is no sexual relation." "A Love Letter (Une Lettre D'Amour)," Feminine Sexuality: Jacques Lacan and the école freudienne, ed J. Mitchell and J. Rose, trans. J. Rose (London: Macmillan, 1983) 149-161. Back
A Dictionary for Believers and Nonbelievers, trans. Catherine Judelson (Moscow: Progress Publishers, 1989) 336. The same formulation can be found in all Soviet textbooks of dialectical materialism. Back
Derrida's own comments on the relationship between the concepts of "perestroika" and "deconstruction" can be found in his small book on his trip to Moscow in 1990. Zhak Derrida v Moskve: dekonstruktsiia puteshestviia ("Jacques Derrida in Moscow: a deconstruction of the journey") (Moscow: RIK "Kul'tura," 1993) 53. Back