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The Architecture of Freedom: Hegel, Subjectivity, and the Postcolonial State PDF

331 Pages·2019·2.972 MB·English
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Preview The Architecture of Freedom: Hegel, Subjectivity, and the Postcolonial State

For Ayla vi “Philosophy is its time grasped in thought” – G. F. W. Hegel viii LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS 1 The Colossi of Memnon. Etching by Baltard. Based on a drawing by Dutertre. Description de l’Egypte (Paris: Imprimerie impériale, 1809), Vol. II, Plate 20, 1809 47 2 Memnon. Engraving by Bernard Picart. The Temple of the Muses, 1731 68 3 The Departure of Memnon for Troy, Greek, 6th century BC. Courtesy of Royal Museums of Art and History, Brussels 69 4 Memnon and His Ethiopian Warriors, Greek, c. 530 BC. Courtesy of British Museum, London 70 5 Eos Tearing Her Hair in Grief over the Body of Memnon, 6th century BC. Courtesy of Gregorian Etruscan Museum, Vatican City 71 6 Achilles Battles Memnon as Thetis and Eos Watch Attic red figure volute krater, 500–480 BC. Courtesy of British Museum, London 72 7 Goethe as “Mohammedan Poet.” Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, West-östlicher Divan (Stuttgart: Cotta, 1819), Frontispiece. Courtesy of Houghton Library, Harvard University 101 8 The Pyramids at Meroe, View from the Northeast. Engraving by Fédéric Cailliaud. Voyage à Méroé : au fleuve Blanc, au-delà de Fâzoql dans le midi du royaume de Sennâr, à Syouah et dans cinq autres oasis; fait dans les années 1819, 1820, 1821 et 1822 (Paris: Imprimerie Royale, 1826), Plate XXXVI 125 9 Kunta Kinte and the Overseer. From Roots [miniseries], dir. Chomsky, Erman, Moses et al. USA: Wolper Productions, 1977. Still from episode 2 212 10 The Last Supper. Barthélémy Toguo, Dak’Art Vert, 2014. Rendering by Boaz Balachsan 289 PREFACE Hegel has plausibly been called the “inaugural thinker of the contemporary world.”1 And yet foundational elements of his thought have escaped attention—not only those buried in neglected manuscripts, marginal notes, and obscure literary and political allusions, but also those hiding in plain sight. This book attends to a constellation of such moments across Hegel’s work. Ranging from Egyptian “architectonics” to the logic of borders, from Persian poetry to the sublimity of representation, from “beautiful” democracy to forced labor, and from African history to international “right,” the book offers a new reading of Hegel’s related theories of architecture and language, aesthetics and history, mastery and slavery, and subjectivity and the state. I wrote this book for scholars in philosophy as well as those in other fields impacted by Hegel’s thought, including architecture, postcolonial studies, political theory, and the history of slavery. I would recommend that readers resist the urge to pass directly to chapters most relevant to their area of study. The argument of the book proceeds methodically from beginning to end; the later sections will make little sense if read out of sequence. My hope is that the payoff will have been worth the effort of a patient reading. This book has had a long gestation, and I have accrued more debts along the way than I could possibly acknowledge. I wrote and completed Part One of this book in 2004; this section appears here in essentially the same form. I am deeply grateful to Claudia Brodsky and Michael Wood for reading the manuscript at that time, just as I was going on academic leave for personal reasons. I am indebted to both for their early encouragement and insistence that I continue with my work. Since then, I have had the privilege of tapping the prodigious intelligence and friendship of both Claudia and Michael on numerous occasions. Barbara Johnson served as a mentor during my years at Harvard. I will never forget her steadfast passion, generosity, and commitment to excellence, even as writing and speaking became difficult for her: I continue to feel her loss keenly. Walter Johnson shared his encyclopedic knowledge of the history and theory of slavery; to him I also owe the book’s title. Tom Conley, Ann Smock, Sebastian Wogenstein, Sarah Johnson, and Peter Constantine provided invaluable feedback on various aspects of the manuscript. While I have benefitted from the generosity and erudition of these and other scholars, all shortcomings and errors in this book, including those of fact, interpretation, and translation, are mine alone. I am grateful to the journal October for generously granting permission to reprint material that appeared in my essay entitled, “Hegel’s Werkmeister: Architecture, 1Jean-Luc Nancy, Hegel: L’inquiétude du négatif (Paris: Hachette, 1997), 5. Preface Architectonics, and the Theory of History.”2 I am particularly thankful to the Humanities Institute at the University of Connecticut for support as I completed research for the final chapter of this book. Michael Lynch, Brendan Kane, and other fellows at the Institute created a collegial and fertile intellectual environment. I am deeply appreciative of my other colleagues at the University of Connecticut, especially Roger Célestin, Anne Berthelot, Eliane DalMolin, Valérie Saugera, Jennifer Terni, and Gustavo Nanclares. Their support has meant more to me than they could know. A number of scholars have played a formative role in my intellectual development, including Suzanne Nash, Gerhard Böwering, Alan Trachtenberg, and Langdon Hammer, as well as David Underdown and Wolfhart Heinrichs, whose memories I honor here. I am humbled to have benefitted from these scholars’ instruction and example. Mary Gaylord, James Irby, John Hamilton, Karen Feldman, Luis Girón-Negrón, Fernando Rivera-Díaz, Fermin Rodriguez, Paola Cortes-Rocca, Pablo Ruiz, Ana Yáñez Rodriguez, Amr Shalakany, Katherine Stevens, and Yamila Hussein have each had a hand in this book in ways large and small. Susan Holman proved a most generous and valuable proofreader. No one deserves more appreciation than my beloved wife, Emily. To my parents, siblings, and children, I owe simply everything. This book is dedicated to Ayla, who as an infant slept on my shoulder while I labored over Hegel, who taught me the meaning of unconditional love, and who made me a Daddy. 2Hassanaly Ladha, “Hegel’s Werkmeister: Architecture, Architectonics, and the Theory of History,” October, 139 (Winter, 2012), pp. 15–38. © 2012 by October Magazine, Ltd. and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. xii INTRODUCTION In the 1820 preface to the Philosophy of Right, Hegel argues that freedom through “ethical life,” shaping a polity into a “well-formed building” [gebildeten Bau], constitutes “the architectonic [Architektonik]” of the state’s “rationality.”1 In 1824 he likewise characterizes the state as “a great architectonic building or hieroglyph of reason that presents itself in reality.”2 Hegel here echoes the Lectures on Aesthetics, where the “architectonic” emerges from the interpenetration of built and linguistic form or, in their respective aesthetic modes, architecture and poetry. As I will show, for Hegel the opposition of these two “arts”—one principally material, the other verbal—defines the dialectic of the aesthetic and propels what he calls, engaging Kant, the “architectonic” unfolding of history. For Hegel the “architectonic” manifests in particular as the Egyptian “hieroglyph,” a term he applies not only to written signifiers engraved in stone, but also to pyramids and obelisks arranged in rows over the desert, like inscriptions on a page. Most quintessentially, the architectonic and hieroglyphic converge in the colossus of Memnon, an African warrior appearing in ancient Egyptian architecture and in Greek myth and art from Homer to the Hellenistic period. As non-referential, built form voicing only the poetic signifier, the colossus marks the circulation of the architectonic across dialectical limits, hence the coimbrication of concept and matter, aesthetics and logic, and East and West. Moreover the Memnon, bearing the “African element” into history, isolates the subject’s possible freedom from dialectical stasis. In the Phenomenology of Spirit, the Memnon, as embryonic self-consciousness, appears as the enslaved “work-master” [Werkmeister] laboring for freedom. This “statue in 1G. W. F. Hegel, Werke, 20 volumes, ed. E. Moldenhauer and K. M. Michel (Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp, 1969–1971), 7: Grundlinien der Philosophie des Rechts, 19. All translations of Hegel are mine, unless otherwise noted. Following customary scholarly practice, I will designate “additions” and “remarks” in the various versions of the Philosophy of Right or the Encyclopedia of the Philosophical Sciences with a simple “A” or “R” after the paragraph citation from the text. For the sake of economy, in this book I will refer to Hegel’s Outlines of the Philosophy of Right as simply the Philosophy of Right. I refer to Hegel’s Encyclopedia of the Philosophical Sciences by its full name or as simply the Encyclopedia, and to its constituent parts as the Encyclopedia Logic, the Philosophy of Nature, and the Philosophy of Spirit. In the same vein, I also refer to the Phenomenology of Spirit as simply the Phenomenology and to the Lectures on Aesthetics as simply the Aesthetics. I use the same method of abbreviation for his other lecture courses. 2Hegel, Werke 7: §279A, 449. The term “architectonic” in Hegel ultimately signifies the unstable entanglement of conceptual and material form, hence language and phenomenality, that gives rise to apparently enduring objects of experience. I examine Hegel’s relation of architecture to architectonics in Part One of this study. The Architecture of Freedom human form” hypostatizes the twin aesthetic operations through which the slave in Hegel’s system struggles for emancipation: first, through the “formation” [Formierung] of material form, or of the objectified “thought” through which he attempts to produce and know himself as a subject; and second, through the poetic dissolution of inherited form, which will ultimately enable the recognitive and thus discursive reconciliation of the self-liberated slave and ousted master in the state.3 The aesthetic articulation of freedom underwrites the political theory advanced through the critique of the “architectonic” state in the Philosophy of Right. In its most immature conception, the state posits itself as a sealed “building,” a self-sufficient totality predicated on the “ideality” of “right” only within its borders. By contrast the free state, endlessly superseding its territorial or other material boundaries, attains to a coherence of “internal” and “external” right. Polities at the telos of history—effecting the reciprocal recognition of their concrete freedom—realize “universal right” everywhere and for “everyone.”4 Astonishingly, scholars of Hegel have overlooked the architectonic and its implications in his work, resulting in significant distortions in the interpretation of his corpus.5 Partly to blame is the critical tendency to view Hegel’s works in isolation, neglecting their dialectical place in the system set forth in the Encyclopedia of the Philosophical Sciences, 3Hegel, Werke 3: Phänomenologie des Geistes, 510. As I will show in Part Two of this book, for Hegel the activity of Formieren or Bilden underpins the relation between aesthetics and political economy. 4Hegel, Vorlesungen über die Philosophie der Weltgeschichte, ed. G. Lasson (Leipzig: Felix Meiner, 1920), 761; Hegel, Vorlesungen über Natturecht Staatswissenschaft, 247, 280. Since all dialectical oppositions are unstable, they articulate the principle of their own undoing, hence the possibility of freedom from given signs and their referents. I use the phrase “telos of history” as a heuristic to refer to this idea of freedom paradoxically internal to the dialectic, not to a chronological “end of history” as the positive outcome of a temporal process. As we will see, history for Hegel does not bend to chronology or the arbitrarily linear conjunction of purported causes and effects, but rather emerges from the dialectical structure of logic: indeed, historical concepts emerging after a “fact” can be shown to have constructed its always belatedly attributable “causes” and “effects.” (Cf. Alexandre Kojève’s reading of “reason” [Vernunft] as a “teleological action” in Introduction à la lecture de Hegel [Paris: Galimard, 1947], 531). 5An important exception is Claudia Brodsky Lacour, the only scholar who considers seriously the dialectic of architecture and poetry in Hegel’s Aesthetics (see her “Architecture in the Discourse of Modern Philosophy: Descartes to Nietzche,” in Nietzche and “An Architecture of Our Minds,” eds. Alexandre Kostka and Irving Wohlfarth [Los Angeles: Getty Research Institute, 1999], 19–34 and “From the Pyramids to Romantic Poetry: Housing the Spirit in Hegel,” in Rereading Romanticism, ed. Martha B. Helfer [Amsterdam: Rodolpi, 2000], 327–66, two studies to which this book must make continual reference). Informing my general approach to the aesthetic in Hegel are Jacques Derrida’s “Architecture Where the Desire May Live,” in Domus, vol. 671, 1986, 17–25; “Point de folie—maintenant l’architecture,” in Psyché (Paris: Galilée, 1987); “From Restricted to General Economy: A Hegelianism without Reserve,” in Writing and Difference, transl. Alan Bass (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1978); “The Pit and the Pyramid: Introduction to Hegel’s Semiology” and “White Mythology,” in Margins of Philosophy, transl. Alan Bass (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1982); and Glas, transl. John Leavey Jr. (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1986); the seminal essays on Kant and Hegel in Paul de Man’s Aesthetic Ideology, ed. Andrzej Warminski (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1996), including especially the discussion of the “architectonic” in Kant (ibid., 125ff.); de Man’s The Resistance to Theory (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1986); and Jean Hyppolite’s Logique et existence (Paris: Presses Universitaires de France, 1961). 2 Introduction the purported armature for all of Hegel’s work, including his lectures.6 Failing to connect the pyramidal sign in the Encyclopedia with the architectonic delineation of form in the Aesthetics, scholars have misconstrued key elements of Hegel’s theory of language. In turn, commentators on Hegel’s theory of art have failed to notice his definition of the aesthetic as the dialectic of architecture and poetry—and, consequently, the foundational place of their covalence in his system.7 They have thus not accounted adequately for the impingement of the aesthetic on Hegel’s theories of logic, subjectivity, and history. Most readers of the Phenomenology have ignored the slave’s aesthetic fashioning of “form”; they have accordingly missed the relation between the dialectic of master and slave in the section on “Self-Consciousness” and the necessarily aesthetic appearance of the servile self-consciousness in the section on “Religion.” The latter section, uncoupled from its complementary passages in the Aesthetics, has thus remained largely impenetrable. Scholarship on the theory of recognition tends to focus on only the phenomenological iteration of “self-consciousness,” abstracting it from the dialectic of subjective and objective spirit. Scholars engaging Hegel’s critique of political economy and the state in the Philosophy of Right and the Encyclopedia have accordingly not registered the aesthetic mediation of person and property, the resulting centrality of slavery in political economy, and the movement from the slave’s recognitive agency to the reconciliation of states in universal right. Most damaging to Hegel’s reputation, readers of the Lectures on the Philosophy of History, seduced by its deceptive accessibility, have missed its governing principle—namely that there is no history, only the aesthetically mediated “narration of history [Geschichtserzählung].”8 Embracing precisely the positivism Hegel eschews, these readers have not fully grasped his conception of “world-history” as the 6This understandable tendency results from the critical rejection of any claim to systematicity binding the works to each other. I am, of course, not suggesting that the Encyclopedia subsumes or converges neatly with the Phenomenology, the Science of Logic, the Philosophy of Right, and the lecture courses—or that there is only consistency or even complementarity across Hegel’s works. Even so, the reworked encyclopedic versions of the Phenomenology, the Science of Logic, and the Philosophy of Right connect these texts to the Encyclopedia, to each other, and to the lecture courses on world-history, art, religion, and philosophy in a manner that at least merits consideration. The intertextualities to which we will attend across the “works” will indeed undermine the notion that any of them stands apart as an independent totality. Ultimately Hegel’s system, subject to endless revision and reiteration, will reveal its components as fragments of a paradoxically ungraspable whole; accordingly I suggest they should be read alongside each other. On the relation of the Phenomenology to the Encyclopedia, see Martin Heidegger, Gesamtausgabe (Frankfurt: Vittorio Klostermann GmbH, 2009), 68: 69ff. Heidegger demonstrates that Hegel established the encyclopedia system between 1808 and 1811, hence within a few years of the publication of the Phenomenology of Spirit (ibid.). In a salutary turn, scholars like Robert Pippin, Slavoz Žižek, Catherine Malabou, Frederic Jameson, Rebecca Comay, and Frank Ruda— to name a few—have taken more comprehensive approaches to Hegel’s oeuvre. On the relation between the Phenomenology and the Science of Logic see, inter alia, Hyppolite, Logique et Existence; Robert Pippin, Hegel’s Idealism: The Satisfactions of Self-Consciousness (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1989), 91ff.; Frederic Jameson, Valences of the Dialectic (London: Verso, 2009), 75ff., and Rebecca Comay and Frank Ruda, The Dash—The Other Side of Absolute Knowing (Cambridge: MIT Press, 2018), 29ff. 7This oversight has unfortunately clouded views of Hegel among scholars of architecture. I present Hegel’s theory of architecture in Part One of this book, in the hopes of supplementing such texts as Denis Hollier’s seminal Against Architecture: The Writings of George Bataille, transl. Betsy Wing (Cambridge: MIT Press, 1992). 8Hegel, Werke 12: Vorlesungen über die Philosophie der Geschichte, 83. 3

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