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Exiles in the City To all the exiles in the world: this testament to the witness of two, who, “between domains, between forms, between homes, and between languages,” saw and spoke the truth to power G Exiles in the City Hannah Arendt and Edward W. Said in Counterpoint William v. Spanos ThE OhiO ST aTE UnivErSiTy PrESS • COlUmb US Copyright © 2012 by The Ohio State University. All rights reserved. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Spanos, William V. Exiles in the city : Hannah Arendt and Edward W. Said in counterpoint / William V. Spanos. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 978-0-8142-1193-9 (cloth : alk. paper) — ISBN 0-8142-1193-3 (cloth : alk. paper) — ISBN 978-0-8142-9294-5 (cd-rom) 1. Politics and literature. 2. Criticism—Political aspects. 3. Arendt, Hannah, 1906–1975—Criti- cism and interpretation. 4. Said, Edward W.—Criticism and interpretation. 5. Emigration and immigration—Political aspects. 6. Exiles. I. Title. PN51.S637 2012 320.092'2—dc23 2011048193 Cover design by Thao Thai Type set Adobe Minion Prio Text design by Juliet Williams Printed by Thomson-Shore, Inc. The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of the American Na- tional Standard for Information Sciences—Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials. ANSI Z39.48–1992. 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Those few refugees who insist upon telling the truth, even to the point of “indecency” [the “conscious pariahs”], get in exchange for their unpopularity one priceless advan- tage: history is no longer a closed book to them and politics is no longer the privilege of Gentiles. . . . Refugees driven from country to country represent the vanguard of their people—if they keep their identity. —Hannah Arendt, “We Refugees” (1943) Yet it is no exaggeration to say that liberation as an intellectual mission, born in the resistance and opposition to the confinements and ravages of imperialism, is now shifted from the settled, established, and domesticated dynamic of culture to its unhoused, de-centered, and exilic energies, energies whose incarnation today is the migrant, and whose consciousness is that of the intellectual and artist in exile, the polit- ical figure between domains, between forms, between homes, and between languages. —Edward W. Said, Culture and Imperialism (1993) Irreparable means that these things [the beings of being] are consigned without rem- edy to their being-thus, that they are precisely and only their thus . . . ; but irreparable also means that for them there is literally no shelter possible, that in their being-thus they are absolutely exposed, absolutely abandoned. —Giorgio Agamben, The Coming Community G COnTEnTS acknowledgments ix inTrOdUCTiOn 1 ChaPTEr 1 The devastation of language under the dictatorship of the Public realm: reading Global american with hannah arendt 5 ChaPTEr 2 The Exilic Consciousness and the imperatives of betweenness 49 ChaPTEr 3 The Calling and the Question Concerning the Secular 64 ChaPTEr 4 The Exodus Story and the Zionist march 104 ChaPTEr 5 hannah arendt and Edward W. Said: an affiliation in Counterpoint 141 notes 207 bibliography 252 index 259 G aCknOWlEdGmEnTS Exiles in the City had its origins in a distant and now rather murky past, but one moment of that inaugural time stands out clearly in my mind. It was in May of 1982, when David Farrell Krell, one of Martin Heidegger’s ablest crit- ics and translators, invited me to give a series of lectures on the American reception of the controversial philosopher at the universities of Mannheim, Frankfurt, Heidelberg, and Freiburg in Germany. By that time, the French discovery of Heidegger, particularly his “deconstructive” side, had gone far to minimize his Nazi affiliations. But in Germany, at least in German academia, he was still suspect, as I found in the always polite but invariably resistant responses to my efforts to draw out the radically progressive implications of his “de-struction” of the Western philosophical tradition. After my last lec- ture at Freiburg, my generous host drove me to Todtnauberg to visit the cabin high up in the Black Forest where Heidegger did most of his writing. We were standing by a trough drinking spring water pouring out of a carved head of a bear or wolf adjacent to the cabin and talking about the Holzwegen—the indissoluble relationality of light and shadow so fundamental to Heidegger’s thinking. Out of what seemed the clear blue, but, I learned shortly after, was actually triggered by the suspicion with which my talks had been met by my German audiences, David told me of the recent publication of For Love of the World, a massive, richly documented biography of Hannah Arendt by Elisabeth Young-Bruehl, in which, in the process of acknowledging her intel- lectual debts, informed her readers that she had not been given access to the life-long Arendt–Heidegger correspondence that had its origins in the love affair they had when she was his student at Marburg University beginning in ix x • acknowledgments 1925. In contrast, David told me in confidence, but without going into the reasons, that the Heidegger family, despite its having sequestered the cor- respondence for three generations, had recently allowed him to look at it, and that the eventual publication of the correspondence would disclose an image of Heidegger that was quite different from the anti-Semitic and Nazi Heidegger who, through the “scholarship” of the traditionalist humanists he and the French poststructuralists had called into question, was beginning to re-emerge. David’s prediction, clearly, did not turned out to be the case. But his summary of the life-long relationship between Hannah Arendt and Martin Heidegger—one, he underscored, that was maintained primarily by Han- nah’s initiative—in the context of a complex human history that had been reduced to “Jew” and “German anti-Semitic Gentile” made her seem to me an extraordinarily attractive figure. And this impression was deepened by David’s enthusiastic portrayal of Arendt’s generous mind and, not least, by his nuanced affirmation of the continuity between her and Heidegger’s efforts to rethink thinking—the legacy of the Western tradition—of which I was only vaguely aware at the time. As a result of David’s compelling conjuration of the image of Hannah Arendt into the shadows and light of the Holzwegen, I decided then and there to immerse myself in her writing after I returned to the United States. In the fall of 1997, after teaching a number of graduate courses on Hei- degger in which I had invoked Arendt’s work, particularly The Human Condi- tion, in a preliminary way, I decided that I was ready to teach a first graduate seminar on Heidegger and Arendt. In that course, we explored, as the course description attests, “the relationship between Heidegger’s ontological inquiry into the question of being and Hannah Arendt’s political inquiry into the question of the polis in the light of the mounting representation of Heidegger’s philosophical writing (by important thinkers such as Jürgen Habermas) as complicitous with Nazism and anti-Semitism.” This was followed by a gradu- ate seminar on Michel Foucault and Edward Said in the fall of 1999, and, then, in the spring of 2000, a seminar on Arendt alone, this time attempt- ing to show that “a too exclusive focus on Arendt’s ‘Habermasian’ affinities deflects attention away from the train of thought from which her thinking derived: that which proceeds from Nietzsche through Heidegger and culmi- nates in the poststructuralist theory.” Following two further graduate courses on “The Criticism of Foucault and Said” (Fall 2004) and “Foucault, Said, and Globalization” (Spring 2007), which occasionally invoked Arendt, this peda- gogical itinerary that had begun in Todtnauberg in 1982 culminated in the fall of 2009 in a graduate seminar on Arendt, Foucault, and Said, in which acknowledgments • xi we considered “1) the contested relationship between Michel Foucault and Edward Said as it pertains to the question of the secular/humanism; and 2) the relationship, all too often unremarked, between Said’s and Arendt’s par- ticular interest in the now globally central issue of the Middle East, not least, the highly fraught question of Israel’s relationship to the Palestinian people.” What seemed on the surface to have been a long errant process turned out to be an improvisational one that, in fact, brought the singular voices of Arendt and Said, “conscious pariah” and “exilic consciousness” or “non-Jewish Jew” and “non-Palestinian Palestinian,” together in intimate strife—or counter- point—in my mind. Thus, this belated retrieval of that inaugural occasion in Todtnauberg in illo tempore and my expression of gratitude to David Farrell Krell. During that long period of time between David Krell’s introduction of Hannah Arendt’s work to me and the completion of this book, I not only incurred many intellectual debts, but also instigated the opposition of various other colleagues who have thought my reconstellation of Edward Said into an affiliative context that includes Friedrich Nietzsche, Martin Heidegger, Michel Foucault, Hannah Arendt, Giorgio Agamben, and Alain Badiou to be misconceived. Though I have not change my mind, I nevertheless, and in the spirit of dialogue, offer these unnamed latter critics my sincere thanks for compelling me to consider more deeply my all-too-easy original ver- sion of this affiliation. As to the former they are far too many to acknowl- edge adequately in this limited space. But it would be remiss of me not to express my gratitude to a number of students in those seminars who con- tributed, without knowing it, to that improvisational process that eventu- ally brought the singular voices of Hannah Arendt and Edward Said into contrapuntal play in my mind. They include Assimina Karavanta, Andrew Martino, Soenke Zehle, Marina Zaharopol (1997); Robin Andreason, Monica O’Brien; Evi Haggipavlu, Michael Logan, James Martin, Firat Oruc, Ruth Schnabel (2000); Evrim Engin, Saygun Gokariksel, Susan McGee, Taras Sak, Ayse Temiz (2004); Tamkin Hussain, David Michelson, Jame Stanescu, Kevin Volk, Charles Wesley, Laura White (2007); and James Capozzi, Shawn Jascin- ski, Mary DiNapoli, Guy Risko, Melissa Sande, and Ubaraj Katawal (2009). On a more personal level, I wish to express a very special thanks to my longstanding SUNY Binghamton colleagues and friends Jim Stark of the Art Department and David Bartine and Susan Strehle of the English Department. To David, for his abiding interest in and support of my work, but also for the substantial contributions he made to this book by way of the numerous biweekly conversations we had over beer at The Ale House while I was writ- ing it. I am, above all, grateful to him for sharing with me his encyclopedic xii • acknowledgments expertise in the technical aspects of classical music and, more particularly, his deep and subtle understanding of Edward Said’s writing in that field. I would be happy to know that my contributions to those intense and often startlingly luminous conversations were half as productive for him as they were for me. To Susan, not only for graciously tolerating my obsessive harangues in the process of writing, but also for those sudden insights that changed the direc- tion of my thinking. To Jim, for the resonant cover of this book. Above all, I, once again—and with measureless and abiding love—want to express my deepest thanks to my son, Adam, for being there. Without his interest and invariably wise commentary on the book while it was in progress, particu- larly on those parts pertaining to the Palestinian struggle—and, not least, his uncanny attunement to the agonic polyphonic play struggling to articulate itself in its pages—it would no doubt have ended in utter cacophony. If this play has not been fully realized in what follows, it is not the consequence of his being misguided, but of the clumsiness of my own efforts. Finally, I thank, with pleasure, Sandy Crooms, senior editor of The Ohio State University Press for her faith in my controversial project and to the staff members of the press for their patience, generosity, and efficiency in guid- ing the original manuscript through the publication process. Chapters 1 and 4, are considerably revised versions of previously published essays originally entitled “Global American: The Devastation of Language under the Dictator- ship of the Public Realm,” Symplokē, vol. 16, no. 1–2 (Spring–Fall 2009); and “Edward W. Said and Zionism: Rethinking the Exodus Story,” boundary 2, vol. 37, no. 1 (Spring 2010). I wish to thank the editors of these journals, Jef- frey Di Leo and Paul A. Bové, respectively, for permission to reprint.

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The Calling and the Question Concerning the Secular. 64. ChaPTEr 4. The Exodus Story and the Zionist march. 104. ChaPTEr 5 hannah arendt and Edward W.
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