Death, Time and Mortality in the Later Novels of Don DeLillo This book offers the first systematic study of death in the later novels of Don DeLillo. It focuses on Underworld to The Silence, along with his 1984 novel White Noise, in which the fear of death dominates the protagonists most hauntingly. The study covers eight novels, which mark the development of one of the most philosophical and prestigious novelists writing in English. Death, in its close relation to time, temporality and transience, has been an ongoing subject or motif in Don DeLillo’s oeuvre. His later work is shot through with the cultural and sociopsychological symptoms and responses death elicits. His “reflection on dying” revolves around defensive mechanisms and destruction fantasies, immortalism and cryonics, covert and overt surrogates, consumerism and media, and the mortification of the body. His characters give themselves to mourning and are afflicted with psychosis, depression and the looming of emptiness. Yet writing about death also means facing the ambiguity and failing representability of “death.” The book considers DeLillo’s use of language in which temporality and something like “death” may become manifest. It deals with the transfiguration of time and death into art, with apocalypse as a central and recurring subject, and, as a kind of antithesis, epiphany. The study eventually proposes some reflections on the meaning of death in an age fully contingent on media and technology and dominated by financial capitalism and consumerism. Despite all the distractions, death remains a sinister presence, which has beset the minds not only of DeLillo’s protagonists. Philipp Wolf is an adjunct professor of English and American literature at the University of Giessen in Germany (Hesse). He has widely published on early modern literature, modernist and postmodernist literature, as well as on theory. Routledge Research in American Literature and Culture Alzheimer’s Disease in Contemporary U.S. Fiction Memory Lost Cristina Garrigós Pragmatism and Poetic Agency The Persistence of Humanism Ulf Schulenberg Toni Morrison and the Writing of Place Alice Sundman Marginalisation and Utopia in Paul Auster, Jim Jarmusch, and Tom Waits The Other America Adriano A. Tedde Lynd Ward’s Wordless Novels, 1929-1937 Visual Narrative, Cultural Politics, Homoeroticism Grant F. Scott Authoritarianism and Class in American Political Fiction Elite Pluralism and Political Bosses in Three Post-War Novels David Smit Death, Time and Mortality in the Later Novels of Don DeLillo Philipp Wolf For more information about this series, please visit: https://www.routledge.com/Routledge-Research-in-American-Literatureand-Culture/book-series/RRAL Death, Time and Mortality in the Later Novels of Don DeLillo Philipp Wolf First published 2022 by Routledge 605 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10158 and by Routledge 4 Park Square, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon, OX14 4RN Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an informa business © 2022 Philipp Wolf The right of Philipp Wolf to be identified as author of this work has been asserted in accordance with sections 77 and 78 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilised in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers. Trademark notice: Product or corporate names may be trademarks or registered trademarks, and are used only for identification and explanation without intent to infringe. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data A catalog record for this title has been requested ISBN: 978-1-032-26003-7 (hbk) ISBN: 978-1-032-26795-1 (pbk) ISBN: 978-1-003-28993-7 (ebk) DOI: 10.4324/9781003289937 Typeset in Sabon by SPi Technologies India Pvt Ltd (Straive) I wish to thank my wife Stefanie Rück Complete Acknowledgement: I wish to thank my wife Stefanie Rück for her unswerving support and patience. Contents 1 Introduction 1 The Culture of Death: Fear of Death, Responses to Death and the Management of Death or “Terror Management” 2 Methodological Problems 7 Notes 10 2 White Noise: The Inconceivability of Death, Hitler and the Supermarket 12 Consummatum Est 12 “Why Can’t We Be Intelligent About Death?” Capitals in Quotation? 16 “Hitler Studies” 20 The Fearful Beauty of Apocalypse: Apparition 26 Notes 27 3 Underworld and “Terror Management”: Apocalypse, the Bomb, Cold War, Crowds “Terror Management”: Apocalypse 31 Socio-Cultural and Anthropological Contexts 32 The Bomb and the Cold War 35 Crowds 41 Pop and Consumption: “Rejoice, Redeemed Flock” (J. S. Bach) or “Cocksucker Blues” 43 Consumerism and Waste 45 Media, Killing, Death 48 Moment of Moments: Apparition 50 Notes 52 31 viii 4 Contents The Body Artist: Death, Mourning, Time and the “Humanity of Man” 56 Mindfulness and Emptiness: Lived and Dead Time 56 The Provo-Care of the Death of the Other: The “Humanity of Man” 60 “Body Time” and the Sublation of Death (“Trauerspiel” or “Play of Mourning”) 67 Redeeming Moment 69 Notes 70 5 Cosmopolis: Cybercapitalism, Alienation and Death 73 The Tenacity of Capitalism and Alienation 73 Alienation, (Auto-)Aggression, Death 76 “He Died so You Can Live” 76 De-Individuation and Disembodiment 78 Data, Acceleration, and the Disappearance of the Presence 81 Temporal Alienation 83 Monetary Alienation 87 Physical Alienation 91 The Journey to Self-Destruction and Death: “The desolation of reality” (W. B. Yeats) 93 A “Smart” Epiphany of Death 97 Notes 98 6 Falling Man Relating Unspeakable Loss 102 Images of Loss, Two Victims, Two Terrorists and Death Dealers 103 Shirts 103 Shrapnels 104 Still Lives 105 Falling Man: Performing Death and Mourning 107 Keith: Trauma and Lethargy 110 Lianne: Mourning, Care and an Epiphanic Moment 112 Hammad and Amir: Terrorist Cult of Death 115 Notes 117 102 Contents ix 7 Point Omega: “When Time Stops, so Do We”: The Aesthetics of Disappearance 120 Temporality and Death 120 The Anonymous “Man,” Caillois and Lacan: “But Imagination Was Itself a Natural Force, Unmanageable.” (P 81) 121 Murder or not? 126 Elster, Teilhard, “Dead Matter” and the Epiphany of a “Handful of Mucus” 127 Notes 133 8 Zero K: The Ideology and Aesthetics of Immortality 135 Cryonics and a Tale of Two Worlds 135 End Time: Apocalypse and Eschatology 138 The Aesthetics of Apocalypse and Eschatology 140 Video and Corridors 140 Architecture and Sculpture 143 Heidegger and the Cryonic Transhumanists: “Man Alone Exists” 146 Heidegger as Antithesis: Existentialism 146 The Rock as Art 150 Art as Untruth 155 Art in Pods 158 Moment of Moments: The Affirmation of Life 163 Notes 165 9 The Silence and the Death of Civilization 169 The End of “Being-in-the-World” 169 An Electricity Failure 169 The Endgame 170 Notes 178 10 Epilog Index 180 181 1 Introduction When it comes to death and killing, popular forms of narrative entertainment (TV features, crime thrillers) are primarily interested in the person of the deceased, the reason for their demise or the plot of the whodunit, including the motives or craziness of the (psycho-)killer. Not so Don DeLillo. In an interview, following the publication of Underworld, DeLillo remarks: People talk about the killing, but they don’t talk about what it does to them, to the way they think and feel and fear […]. They don’t talk about what it creates in a larger sense. The truth is, we don’t quite know how to talk about this, I don’t believe. Maybe that’s why some of us write fiction.1 The effects of killing and, more generally, death, whether of natural or nonnatural causes, have indeed been an ongoing subject in Don DeLillo’s fiction, notably in End Zone, White Noise and, of course, the recent Zero K. When asked in 1993 about the meaning of the “accelerated but vague mortality” in some of his novels to date, DeLillo responded: “Who knows? If writing is a concentrated form of thinking, then the most concentrated writing probably ends in some kind of reflection on dying.”2 (Conversations, 102) It is not only that people die in his novels, death is also a looming presence, which has beset the minds of the protagonists, who either respond with defensive mechanisms, with subliminal death and destruction phantasies, or both. In 1987, after having returned from a three-year sojourn in Greece, he had to learn that “[d]eath seems to be all around us […] I can’t imagine a culture more steeped in the idea of death.”3 (Conversations, 24) In the present study, I want to focus on DeLillo’s “reflection on dying” in his later novels from Underworld to The Silence along with his 1986 novel White Noise, in which the fear of death dominates the protagonists most markedly and “death,” as a human idea, phantasma or construct, is dealt with throughout. But before going into the novels, it seems appropriate to put the “fear” and the “idea of death” into a historical and larger sociopsychological context. DOI: 10.4324/9781003289937-1 2 Introduction The Culture of Death: Fear of Death, Responses to Death and the Management of Death, or “Terror Management” Surely, death, mortality, and their concomitant time and transience have always been “natural” themes and subjects of literature, philosophy and theology (not to mention medicine and esotericism). Death was paramount to classical antiquity from Plato to Epicurus to Seneca; it was and is pivotal to the medieval and early modern ars moriendi4 or the morality play (Everyman), to Thomas Browne’s Urn Burial or the highly successful Carpe Diem/Memento Mori genres, to novels such as Tolstoy’s The Death of Ivan Ilyich, Faulkner’s As I Lay Dying or Nabokov’s Pale Fire and to the recent work of Julian Barnes (Nothing to Be Frightened Of, Levels of Life) – to drop only a few names. These texts, generally speaking, reflect on dying, on death as a (ontological) fact, and, of course, the way the consciousness of death determines life. Yet the way we deal with death is also very much a historical phenomenon, omnipresent, supratemporal and pertinent as it is.5 While the 19th century developed, as often claimed, a highly complex and publicly visible culture of death and mourning, modernity is much more inclined to repress or even deny and hide away death. The reasons are manifold: secularization and the waning belief in an afterlife (but also in purgatory and hell), the decreasing likelihood that you or one of your children might die early, the separation of the location where one dies (in a hospital) from one’s home, the immediate removal of the corpse, the technologizing and medical rationalization of death, to name only a few. Yet the fact that people are more likely to attain old age, as well as the displacement and covering up of the phenomenon, has not led to its disappearance, on the contrary. The late 20th and the early 21st centuries have shown an unheard-of wealth of publications on death and mourning.6 The waning of public forms of mourning, of sepulchral culture, and the tabooing of public expressions of pain and grief has not only brought forth more clandestine and individualized ways of dealing with it, but it has also resulted in more or less conscious surrogate strategies, ersatz religions or compensatory means (such as (self-)destructiveness and anticipatory or preemptive, but often forlorn defenses, as, e.g., fame) to repress, escape or deny the inevitable. In fact, the 1980s of the past century, when Don DeLillo’s White Noise appeared, and its author felt that death was “all around us,” were more prone to the fear of death than the preceding decades. In those years, the feeling of social insecurity among many Americans was increasing; self-esteem, however, was decreasing. Ronald Reagan’s neoliberalism (“Reaganomics”) and social cuts, his Manicheism, a reinforced risk of a nuclear clash with the Soviets as well as a depreciation of one’s significance after the disaster of Vietnam (or e.g., the Challenger catastrophe in 1986) led to a sustained sociopsychological destabilization. In addition, after the technological disasters and a new awareness of ecological and economic scarcity, the optimism Introduction 3 of modernism was ceasing. It gave way not only to political conservatism but also to a new historical pessimism and even apocalyptic thinking. One may assume, on the other hand, that the new social and political insecurity called for new mechanisms of self-protection. If, according to the psychologists Sheldon Solomon, Jeff Greenberg and Tom Pyszczynski, we can cling to a stable “cultural worldview,” a sense of “personal significance” and an appropriate degree of “self-esteem,” we may well be protected from the “fear of inevitable death.”7 In order to maintain these protective shields, premodern society, they claim, was relatively well equipped with the supernatural, with ritual, myth, religion, forms of art (and, one might add, organic memory) that serve to ban the terrible. (63– 81) Through all ages to the present, human beings have aspired to literal immortality or after symbolic immortality. (82–123) The first one tries to achieve by evocation of the eternal soul (and resurrection) or by means of alchemy (panaceas or nostra, secret cure-alls, etc.). The latest attempts in respect thereof are made by high-tech immortalists in Silicon Valley and – most graphically – by cryonics (96) with companies such as the “Alcor Life Extension Foundation” or “The Cryonics Institute” (the subject of Zero K). Symbolic immortality one tries to attain through fame (by creating literary works, as e.g., John Keats did) or other public achievements, through procreation, family and children, heroism and nationalism, wealth and the acquisition of scarce and apparently lasting objects, and (conspicuous) consumption in general, an almost ongoing topos in DeLillo. The identification, or at least fascination, with a (seemingly) charismatic leader who appears to be the master of death (like Hitler) and who pretends to make his followership stand out forever, has also been helpful. These protective shields are still working, but in modernity “terror management” (IX, 9 et passim) becomes more varied. My death-transcending and death-managing worldviews are more likely to be called in question by competing “belief systems.” (131) They relativize one’s own convictions, thereby undermining my self-esteem. We react with the discrimination, inclusion/exclusion, humiliation or dehumanization of the other. We instigate (updated) crusades, Jihads and go to war against “the axis of evil.” In fact, the terrorist attacks on the “West” by radical Muslims – often under the motto “death to the unbelievers” – may well be put down, according to Pankaj Mishra,8 to a deeply felt humiliation of Muslim identity. Terrorism may thus be seen as a kind of retaliation and a discharge of sustained resentment. But bringing death to Western “civilization” is also, I think, an attempt at restoring the validity of (radical) Muslim beliefs which are to ensure symbolic immortality by also shattering the death-managing self-esteem of the West. But precisely because the old mythological, religious or supernatural systems have been weakened (or relativized), we have turned much more to the natural, this-worldly or earthy side of existence. From here we try to exclude, taboo and negatively fetishize anything material and chthonic 4 Introduction that seems to be reminiscent of death. We try to suppress our animality, our excretions and excrementitious matter, and we have developed intricate systems of doing away with our waste and refuse and bury it underground or in the “Underworld” – as in Don DeLillo’s novel of the same name. On the other hand, we mortify and manipulate our bodies. We purify it, and with the aid of health food, sports and cosmetics we try to evade portents of mortality and death. We shun our vegetative-animal nature and castigate our body by “working out” and excessive running. It becomes a reified and malleable instrument for overcoming death. Interestingly, Solomon et al. also point out what they call “distal and proximal defenses.” Proximal defenses are probably the most banal, if efficient, way to deal with the fear of death. When conscious of death, we make “rational (or rationalizing) efforts” to “repress” the thought about death; we “try to distract ourselves” or “push” the problem into a “distant future.” (171) Corresponding formulas are “I am still very fit” or “I still have a long time to live.” (173) Distal defenses are more intricate and more relevant on a cultural scale. They have “no logical or semantic relation to the problem of death,” yet once we think we may have resolved our fear of death (by means of proximal defenses) “our distal defenses kick in.” Distal defense mechanisms basically consist of what constitutes culture. They make people want to believe they are “valuable contributor[s] to a meaningful cultural scheme of things.” (172) Pursuing a mission, accomplishing an ambitious project, identifying and defending a worldview, altruism, social commitment but also challenging death by reckless behavior, a shooting or driving rampage, may convey the illusion of power. But those activities will also bolster self-esteem and cover up the unconscious death fears, that, according to the findings of Solomon et al., are always present in your subconsciousness. Toward the end of their study, (185) Solomon et al. go into a number of psychological disorders that may also be caused by death anxiety (schizophrenia, phobias, depression, suicide, obsessions, compulsive disorders, drug, alcohol abuse – and, one may add, gambling and computer addiction). Clearly, people who were exposed to death very closely and dramatically are prone to develop “post-traumatic stress disorders.” This became only too significant after 9/11 (the subject of Falling Man). It frequently occurs to people directly involved in military action or those who lose their spouses or near relatives through accident or suicide (as in The Body Artist). It is noteworthy that Solomon et al. are not occupied with states and acts of mourning and grief. This is perhaps because mourning seems to be directed toward the other more than to oneself. Mourning denotes, however, a highly variable subjective response to the “role of death in life.” Mourners are not only painfully reminded of death, they also claim that a part of themselves has passed away, too; and they often melancholically want to reintegrate what has been lost. Mourning, on the other hand, is Introduction 5 one of the most crucial – culturally and individually highly diverse – ways of coming, more or less, to terms with death. Rituals of mourning have been globally ubiquitous. DeLillo gives us an impressive example in Cosmopolis. It seems a little oversimplified to describe culture or the aspiration to the significance and fortification of “cultural values” (183) as a means of channeling and limiting the death drive. One could well have second thoughts about such a reductionism, which can be traced back to Schopenhauer and Freud. Arguably, we simply become fascinated by categories of novelty and difference just for their novelty and difference (and not for the sake of self-delusion). Spatio-temporal extension, symmetry or beauty are attractive in themselves along with the desire to be creative and to overcome the given. Thus, many cultural activities can develop a dynamic and flow of their own that we simply enjoy. Nonetheless, human beings want continuity, permanence and durability, which life, by itself, so sorely misses. But death (more exactly, awareness of mortality) is the ultimate condition of cultural creativity as such. It makes permanence into a task, into an urgent task, a paramount task – a fount and a measure of all tasks – and so it makes culture that huge and never stopping factory of permanence.9 Culture is, after all, the mode and space through which we go beyond ourselves. By taking a position outside and toward one’s self, one cannot help realizing that the body and the whole framework of our being are transient, perishable and bound to nothingness. Yet by the same token, we add a timeless or time-transcending value to objects (from money to trivial collector items to “high” art and not least to our bodies), which is not inherent in those objects. Commodities and art appear to open up what death precisely cuts and closes down, namely the prospect of new, indefinite and other possibilities. The fetishization of consumer goods and the transfiguration of the common into something everlasting – art – have furnished culture with the tenacious illusion of deathlessness in this life. One should, moreover, keep in mind that especially postmodern humans seem to have become incapable of enduring boredom and emptiness, empty spaces or empty time. It is hardly bearable to be simply there with one’s body alone. Boredom – or exposure to time – gives a premonition of nothingness and, by the same token, death. The portent of emptiness has certainly led to an increasing urge for ekstasis and intensity (through sports, speed, “the event,” sex).10 People not only get hooked to, or lost in, computer screens, there is also a strong desire to merge with masses of people and to get absorbed into a crowd of other bodies. This seems evident enough to suggest a need for and the omnipresence of “terror management.” Yet ever so often, when we think we can abandon ourselves to those objects or crowds, the prospect of nothingness – or 6 Introduction empty time – returns most threateningly. In an age, moreover, in which the only historical alternative to consumption (and work) appears to be consumption (and work), the feeling of tedium and surfeit has become much more virulent. Since the 1980s and “The End of History” (Francis Fukuyama), that is, the disillusionment of progressivist (critical) thinking and future expectations, the present has come to be without alternative. But the lack of historical meaning has once again brought forth eschatological scenarios, doom, gloom and the desire for some ending, or at least, the disruptive event. White Noise, Underworld, Cosmopolis, Point Omega and The Silence are informed by this mindset. The clinical psychologists Solomon and his colleagues do not really go into what accordingly could be called historical mentality (or the temporal consciousness of particular historical phases), they also only touch upon (meta-)historical consciousness at large. In spite, or precisely on account of Western secularization, intellectuals (such as the main figure in Point Omega) are spinning out spatio-temporal ideologies and projections to counter the limitation of our time on earth: geological time, apocalyptical, teleological, messianic time, eternal recurrence, cosmological space-time (Martin in The Silence), eternity, or vice versa, ecstatic now-time (Cosmopolis), technological timelessness by means of digital immortality (Zero K, Underworld, Cosmopolis). To talk about death, then, also means to talk about time, to which it is phenomenologically and thematically closely related. Time has often been seen as precursor to death; since Horace, one has been frequently asked to “seize the day”: Life is short, your time is limited. That is, human consciousness of time is shaped by and unfolds against the latent knowledge of timeliness, finitude and death. We want time to pass, yet are afraid of the passing of our time. Time means becoming and, likewise, passing away, growth and decay, no time without transience, transitoriness and mortality. As death is within as well as outside time, it is and it is not – a temporal ambiguity that has been cogently formulated by Bernhard Taureck: “Death exists, inasmuch as it is possible, and loses its existence inasmuch as it becomes real.”11 It appears both in the mode of possibility and a future mode (of irrealis) that remains uncatchable in the future. Other philosophical questions ensue. Is time only a series of incidents and death only one in a row, or is time like a cohesive wave or line and death an ongoing phenomenon? Time, then, historical, and structural, will be another focus in this study. Literature as a linguistic and mimetic medium has a temporal dimension which may be expanded or shortened, interrupted and even brought to a standstill; it may give a “sense of an ending,” or may linger on. There is the time of the narrator and narrated time. Especially in his novellas, short as they are, Point Omega and The Body Artist, DeLillo makes the reader perceive this phenomenological and existential dimension of experience. White Noise and The Silence take place in both a historical deadlock and end time. Introduction 7 Methodological Problems The ontology of death (in post-metaphysical and post-mythological times) deals primarily with notions of absence, presence and nothingness (or absolute difference and the singularity of the event). Surely, modernist literature in particular may well evoke (non-)spaces of nothingness (through silence, blanks, endings); narrators or characters may ponder over it. Yet narrative literature is more poignant if it reflects upon deathin-life, its significance for the living and on conventional and changing attitudes toward death.12 This points to a methodical problem which the notion of the absence (or irreal factuality) of death already bears upon. If one identifies culture or any cultural activity as a vehicle to avert (the fear of) death, a study on death in literature will be bound to find death in virtually any subject, motif or topic in a given work. This means its research value will be rather limited, unless one focuses and contextualizes one’s research interest and object. The perspective, in other words, will only turn out more fruitful if there are conspicuous traces, motives and behavior patterns in the narrative or life story which will make the ensuing action (here: that embodies a concern with death, the fear of death) plausible.13 If, in addition, the fear of death can express itself in so many ways, it may be owing to the very inconceivability of the phenomenon itself. The fear of death, in other words, could only be countered if death is proved nameable and identifiable. Its suppression, moreover, implies that death as a fact and the subliminal fear come to pass only indirectly in symptomatic ways. Death, along with Time, therefore, poses a cognitive problem: “who knows?” It is for certain an empirical reality, but it nonetheless eludes objective description: “The truth is,” to quote DeLillo once again, “we don’t quite know how to talk about this, I don’t believe.” Death itself, inaccessible as it is, can only be described from outside in abstract phenomenological or temporal categories. Corresponding phrases are either “life as (timely) being-toward-death,” death as post-(mortem, human), standstill, nothingness, a cancellation or sublation of time, or one ends up with mere tautology, as Dostoevsky does in The Master of Petersburg. In this novel,14 J. M. Coetzee arrestingly demonstrates the methodical and linguistic impasse which ensues from the desire to understand death. The exiled Dostoevsky has come to Petersburg to retrieve his dead stepson Pavel. Halfway through the novel, he meets the former terrorist friends of Pavel (also possibly his murderers). They take him up to the platform of a disused tower on Stolyarny Quay from which the young man was pushed to death. When climbing up, Dostoevsky counts the stairs trying to transform space into time. “Pavel. Here.” […] “He counts backwards to the day of Pavel’s death, reaches twenty, loses track, starts again, loses track again” – realizing that he cannot bring Pavel back by dialing time back, he must continue his way toward Pavel’s “not-being-here.” The platform, then, only 8 Introduction shows the place of an absolutely singular rupture and discontinuity. Pavel was “no more” within seconds, smashed to death. He fails to grasp the “not-being-here” of death: “He takes off his hat and grips the railing, trying not to look down. A metaphor, he tells himself, that is all it is – another word for a lapse of consciousness, a not-being-here, an absence.” Dostoevsky, who first thought he could approach death via metaphor by comparing it to his epileptic blackouts, now takes it in in exasperation: “Metaphors – what nonsense! There is death, only death. Death is a metaphor for nothing. Death is Death.”15 Each death is singular; it eludes comparison, with no common tenor to share with someone or something else. The will to understand death ends up in non-sequiturs and tautology.16 Tautological and intangible as notions of death eventually are, the writer faces a representational and the critic a methodical problem,17 the existential omnipresence of death notwithstanding. But precisely since it has become impossible to banish, mystify or allegorize death, it goes on, for all its indeterminacy and opacity, to occupy both the unconscious and subconscious of society. If there is no immediate causal relationship between the above-mentioned cultural phenomena and death, one may hope for a comprehensibility and likelihood of the association between, say, the fetishization of commodities or the evocation and temporal consciousness of apocalypse, and death. And even if there are no definite statements about dying or death, literature, through its (subjective) perspectivity, preliminarity and (intended) ambiguity, may offer an intuitively accessible account of our fear of death and the corresponding strategies. DeLillo leaves throughout traces which ironically erase or question those cultural activities from shopping to sightseeing, traveling, sports or media consumption that are supposed to raise us above the daily mementos of futility and transience. Entertaining as they are, a vapid feeling of voidness may nonetheless loom ahead. Don DeLillo’s later work is, indeed, shot through with the (above mentioned) various manifestations of the fear of death, of cultural symptoms and responses which death elicits. It also addresses the ineluctable ambiguity, opacity or failing presentability of “death.” His “fiction” and “reflections” revolve around defensive mechanisms and/or subliminal death and destruction phantasies, around immortalism and cryonics, covert and overt surrogates, such as consumerism and wealth, the fascination with (apparently) charismatic leaders, terrorism (or the “symbolic exchange of death”) and, notably, apocalypse. They center around the (underworld) exclusion of (excretious) matter and waste, the mortification and purification of the body, and “distal and proximal defenses.” His characters escape and merge into crowds, give themselves to media and intensity, and are afflicted with depression, post-traumatic stress disorder, grief and mourning, as well as the looming of boredom or emptiness. In formal terms, DeLillo manipulates (textual) temporality (including disruption and discontinuity) to the effect that mimetically something like “death,” an awareness of death or even the “death drive” may become Introduction 9 manifest (The Body Artist). There is, finally, his central and recurring interest in art, that is, the transfiguration of time into performance art, still lives or natura morta. The second chapter is on White Noise. A focus here will be on the question of the conceivability or rather inconceivability of “death,” the function of consumption and the protagonist’s most outrageous response to the fear of death. The third chapter on Underworld (1997) takes up apocalypse, which was already dealt with in White Noise, and addresses a number of the means of “terror management,” such as crowds, tedium, hedonism, the fitness cult, art, and, most of all, the objectification of annihilation in the bomb. It ends with what could be called the externalization of death to Kazakhstan along with a profane miracle, a kind of antithesis to the omnipresent culture of death. Chapter 4 focuses on the short novel succeeding Underworld, The Body Artist (2001). It is almost entirely dedicated to the process of mourning (clinically speaking: “posttraumatic stress disorder”) by castigating the body, taking care of someone and re-presenting grief (and the dead husband) in an artistic performance. The novel can also be read as a meditation on or formal attempt at (representing the awareness of) time and death. Chapter 5 on Cosmopolis (2003) is concerned with cybercapitalism, the acceleration of time and the destructiveness and alienation which a society and some individuals may engender that are completely and exclusively given to digital screens, consumption, the “physical” and the accumulation of capital. Gloomy and somber as Cosmopolis may be, there are instances of redemption. Chapter 6 on Falling Man (2007) is about the individual response (trauma) to a terrorist attack and devastating disaster, which has death most dramatically “protrude into being-there,” to use Martin Heidegger’s language. The point here is that the novel indicates modes of getting to terms with the inconceivable while insisting at the same time that the rupture it inflicts can never be fully mended. Chapter 7 on Point Omega (2010, DeLillo’s darkest text perhaps) deals with the pathological desire of a psychotic “Anonymous” and a deeply frustrated war consultant to merge with an object or state beyond time and processuality. Their wish comes down to their disappearance and farcical nothingness. The eighth chapter on Zero K centers on the ideology and aesthetics of a project called “Convergence” in the steppe hinterland of Kazakhstan. Apocalypse (versus eschatology), video, architecture and sculpture are to legitimize and enforce immortality, to be realized by cryonics and other technologies. As in Underworld, Kazakhstan serves as a “non-place” for the reification or (in Heidegger’s terminology) evasion of death, which is taken out and literally covered up in some remote hinterland. The final Chapter 9 is dedicated to DeLillo’s most recent work The Silence (2020). In this novel, there are no deaths in person, yet death is more present perhaps than in any other of his texts – if one regards language (media and communication) as a necessary requirement for “Being-in-the World.” 10 Introduction Critics have repeatedly pointed to the Catholic background of Don DeLillo.18 This may account for his rather cautious and unobtrusive allusions to spirituality and (also digital) transcendence. The novels not only suggest an alternative way of dealing with death through mourning and remembrance (in The Body Artist or Falling Man), they also evoke epiphanic moments of salvation, albeit never without ambiguity. While on the one hand, the emptiness of unfulfilled time may well give a premonition of nothingness to postmodern man, DeLillo still points to moments of – sensuously – fulfilled experience, which may break unexpectedly into the dreariness of ongoing time. As these moments are not reducible to the fast interests of the market or other-directed ideologies, their sociopsychological effect goes beyond the short-termed comfort late capitalist surrogates of inauthenticity, media, consumerism and ideologies continue to offer. Even as secular epiphanies, they will create more memorable and lasting states of relief, or even elevation and transcendence in which the otherwise omnipresent fear of death seems to be absent. Notes 1 Don DeLillo, Conversations with Don DeLillo, ed. Thomas DePietro (Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 2005), 144. The conversation with David Remnick (first published in The New Yorker, Sept.15, 1997) was conducted on the day when TV was full of reports on the killing of the fashion designer Gianni Versace. 2 DeLillo, Conversations, 102. Killing, dying and death surely signify different processes. But since in DeLillo’s work the process or phase of dying, apart from Love-Lies-Bleeding and perhaps Zero K, does not stand out as a major subject of its own (even if it is implicated), we do not have to differentiate. The overall subject is fear of death, subliminal fascination with death, its repression, escapism, and elevating or transcendental experiences, which I take as a profane answer to the threat. The Interview was conducted by Adam Begley and originally published in The Paris Review, Fall 1993. 3 DeLillo, Conversations, 24, originally with Mervyn Rothstein and published in The New York Times on Dec. 20, 1987. 4 Well-known English examples are Anselm of Canterbury’s Admonitio Morienti et de peccatis suis nimium formidanti or Robert Southwell’s A Foure-Fould Meditation (1606). 5 The seminal work on its history is Philippe Ariès, The Hour of our Death (Oxford: Oxford UP, 1991). 6 An overview for the United States offers e.g. Lawrence R. Samuel, Death, American Style: A Cultural History of Dying in America (Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield, 2017, 20131). 7 Sheldon Solomon, Jeff Greenberg and Tom Pyszczynski, The Worm at the Core: On the Role of Death in Life (London: Penguin, 2015), 9. I have dealt with this at some length because it presents an update of Ernest Becker’s The Denial of Death, a book regarded highly by Don DeLillo. The current studies were conducted in the field of empirical psychology. The clinical studies are based on systematic and methodologically sound double-blind experiments – and are convincing. Further references to this book are given in the text. Introduction 11 8 Pankaj Mishra, Age of Anger: A History of the Present (London: Allen Lane, 2017), 330–46. Terrorist resentment against the “West” is also a subject in Falling Man. 9 Zygmunt Baumann, Mortality, Immortality and Other Life Strategies (Stanford: Stanford UP, 1992), 4. 10 See Tristan Garcia, La Vie Intense: Une Obsession Modern (Paris: Autrement, 2016). 11 Bernhard H.F. Taureck, Philosophieren: Sterben lernen? Versuch einer ikonologischen Modernisierung unserer Kommunikation über Tod und Sterben (Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp, 2004), 46. My translation. 12 Dante’s Hell, Hades and other realms of death (or Lethe) are still present but only as literary and mythological references. It is one of the disillusioning effects of our post-modern culture that the many traditional allegories and metaphors can no longer capture our imagination, even if in fantasy novels or films they may still strike a chord. The allegory of the reaper, even though or precisely because it contains a skeleton figure and a scythe, does not really help us to comprehend the fact. Communicative substitutes and props, such as hourglasses, unrigged ships and lilies only refer to life, i.e., transitoriness, its temporality, annihilation or simply defunctness. For the problems and aporia of our communication about death, see Taureck. 13 The problem, on the other hand, is not that significant in Don DeLillo since all his novels in question explicitly refer to death, if not explicitly to the fear of death. 14 J. M. Coetzee, The Master of Petersburg (London: Vintage, 1999, 19941). 15 Ibid., 117–8. 16 The aporia is that, even as a metaphor for “nothing,” “death” will go on to signify – as a proposition without proposition or predicate. Death is a “fact,” as Bernhard Taureck has appropriately put it, “without continuity.” (Taureck, 212). 17 Strictly speaking, one had to distinguish between mental states and processes of affectivity (fear, etc.), the many outer forms and imagery those states may assume, the process of dying and the fact of death itself, possible transcendent, spiritual or philosophical narratives of the same (mimetic adaptation), as well as posthumous states and forms of mourning and grief. To rigorously follow such a systematics would have made it very difficult, though, to follow the chronology of DeLillo’s novels. 18 Paul Giaimo, Don DeLillo: The Moral Force of a Writer’s Work (Santa Barbara, CA: Praeger, 2011). John A. McClure, “DeLillo and mystery,” in The Cambridge Companion to Don DeLillo, ed. John N. Duvall (Cambridge: CUP, 2008), 166–78. 2 White Noise The Inconceivability of Death, Hitler and the Supermarket The logical incompatibility of death’s “being-here” with its “not-beinghere” is at the center of Don DeLillo’s White Noise. It is a multifaceted satirical novel in which the fear of death and various discussions of the issue of death (by unreliable narrators or cynical protagonists) are due, of course, to complex cultural and historical interrelations.1 DeLillo depicts (as he will do extensively in Underworld) a narrative tableau and kaleidoscope of American society in its individualistic multifariousness, along with its generality or homogenized individuality. The novel contains only a few allusions to the historical time in which it may be set. But references to “strange new diseases” (W 158) and the “modern virus” (W 174) of the recent AIDS epidemic (and hysteria), the introduction of the barcode or generic (grocery) goods and, most of all, the evaporation of the academic spirit of 1968 in academia and its replacement by postmodern “Cultural Materialism” are indicative of the early 1980s.2 Consummatum Est The two brief and succinct initial chapters already line out the cultural superstructure that hovers above a lurking underside beset with the fear of death and disintegration. The new September term at the College-onthe-Hill is about to start. The students return in station wagons with their parents, the fathers “accomplished in parenthood” with an air of “massive insurance coverage,” their conscientiously suntanned wives “in diet trim.” The students spring out of the cars and open the trunks – a vast cornucopia – to receive all the commodities dear to them: from “stereo sets” to “personal computers” to “lacrosse sticks” and “controlled substances” to “birth control pills” to “the junk food still in shopping bags,” the “Waffelos and Kabooms,”3 the “Dum Dum Pops, the Mystic Mints.” (W 3) For Jack Gladney, the first-person narrator, “it is a brilliant event, invariably.” The assembly of the station wagons leads on to the reunion of “the like-minded and the spiritually akin.” (W 4) It has something liturgical about it, remotely reminiscent of a spring procession or, for that matter, harvest festival which is to ensure – albeit by means of reverence – one’s DOI: 10.4324/9781003289937-2 White Noise 13 existence lastingly. The arrivals “feel a sense of renewal, of communal recognition.” Communion and renewal are also what religio and religious services are supposed to perform. The like-minded become one; they assure themselves of the fullness, but more so, of the perpetuation and continuance of their being, the eternal recurrence of the same. Another term of abundance may begin, while annihilation and death are temporarily warded off on this brittle level of cultural ritual. When at home Jack Gladney tells his wife Babette about the procession of the station wagons, she remarks: “I have trouble imagining death at that income level.” (W 7) However, immediately after the depiction of the student arrivals, we are given a picture of the college town suburb, which (through Gladney’s eyes on his way home) is rather glum and slightly evocative of the films of David Lynch. There is “an insane asylum,” there were “deep ravines,” there are signs “concerning lost dogs and cats” and the noise from the below expressway is perceived at night like “a steady murmur […] as of dead souls babbling at the edge of a dream.” (W 4–5) As if to counterpoint the gloomy tone, Gladney introduces himself immediately thereafter as follows: “I am chairman of the department of Hitler studies at the College-on-the-Hill. I invented Hitler studies in North America in March of 1968 […] It was an immediate and electrifying success.” (W 4) His studies “around Hitler’s life and work” are, perversely enough, paramount means to work against his fear of death, his manner, as we shall see, of managing “terror.” Of course, Jack and his patchwork family are equally dependent on the world of goods in order to cushion their being against the void of nothingness. As a rule, the family stays in the kitchen and the bedroom: “the power haunts, the sources.” (W 7) Here they gather in a “deadly serious anticipation” of a wide range of “brightly colored food” individually designed, packed, wrapped or tinned in plastic, carton or foil. The rest of the house serves as “storage space” for “furniture, toys, all the unused objects of earlier marriages […] and rummages. Things, boxes.” (W 7–8) Naturally, Gladney and his family are very fond of shopping. After one of their massive sprees, he feels more than elated, enthusing about the “sheer plenitude,” the “well-being” or “security” the exuberant products bring to “some snug home” in their “souls” achieving “a fullness of being.” (W 24) But the “fullness of being” is soon undermined when, on leaving the supermarket, Gladney’s colleague, the Elvis Presley specialist Murray J. Siskind, appears to “sneakily” approach and covet Babette. In fact, in the supermarket, it had already become obvious that in an advanced consumer society reification is no one-way road. Human beings are likewise turned into spuriously idealized objects and reduced to partial aspects or functions beyond their command or disposal. Not long after having taken his pleasure in sniffing out the commodities, the “extra-strength pain reliever,” “honey dew melons” or “ginger ale,” in the Gladney’s cart, Siskind 14 White Noise turns covetingly to the “living wonder” of Babette’s hair: “[S]he has important hair.” As if this was proof of her motherliness, he alleges that “[S]he must be good with children […] the type to take control, show strength and affirmation.” (W 23) Babette will turn out to be the most vulnerable and weak protagonist in the novel. Shortly thereafter in the subsequent chapters, his son Heinrich’s receding hairline and the recently unusually glorious sunsets make Gladney muse about technology. It is the 1980s of the “American Century,” and he sees in the erstwhile promise of salvation, which technology used to be, already the “daily seeping falsehearted death.” (W 25) Technology is closely linked to and the very precondition of modern consumption. It is one of the characteristics of late capitalism that consumers copiously surround themselves with innumerable objects which are only of very limited or of no use to them.4 This is not at all to say that objects, whether artifacts, tools, natural or found objects or consumer goods, do not serve benign purposes possessing a cultural or natural right in and for themselves.5 They open up the world and may impart positive values, and – as the baseball in Underworld – social and historical identity to individuals and communities. But precisely because of the eccentric position of man beyond his bodily center, humans tend to symbolically overcharge and confer a meaning to things not intrinsic to them. DeLillo exposes the symbolic overdetermination of objects, when – quite unexpectedly, often in the form of a rhythmic incantation – he recites brand names as the ones above or such as “Kleenex Softique, Kleenex Softique” (W 46) or “Clorets, Velamints, Freedent.” (W 263) The brands are to suggest pleasure, desire, even transcendence,6 but as they only resound emptily lacking narrative significance, they appear as pure and redundant signifiers – signifying nothing. Siskind, who functions as a kind of advocatus diaboli in the novel, reasserts the symbolic charging of commodities with “veils of mystery,” or “ceremonial phrases.” If religion and the church used to be the antidote to our mortality, it is now shopping and the supermarket that “recharge[s] us spiritually […]. Here we don’t die, we shop.” The supermarket is a “place” that is “sealed off” and “timeless.” (W 44–45) It is outside of the world, pointing to the (postmodern) end of history, the “historical gap” and “empty time”7 that White Noise denotes and out of which Gladney will fail to lift himself. The “affluent society” (Galbraith) is characterized by redundancy and superfluity, and yet by an increasing feeling of existential disenchantment, disillusion and even remorse.8 This is due, of course, to the nature of desire itself but also to the “things” in themselves that one acquires. Since Marx, we have been well aware of the fact that objects, rather than through their use value, are defined through an exchange value, attaining a fetish character.9 But most of the commodities stored in one’s house become even devoid of their exchange value. They are no longer embedded in a continuous and self-evident interrelation with one’s environment. They turn into what White Noise 15 Walter Benjamin calls a souvenir (“Andenken”): “manifestation of the increasing self-alienation of man who takes stock of his past as dead possessions.”10 Phenomenologically speaking, those “things” are – in terms of their temporality – doubly marked. They appear to imaginarily transcend space and time, yet once they are simply “there,” they are too obviously located in and limited by space and time. Things that one thinks are worth keeping refer to a lived time, evoking perhaps vivid memories, while they relate at the same time to a past that is indelibly gone or consumed. Still and motionless as they are, they indicate loss. “Simple things are doomed,” Gladney thinks, when the “question of dying” turns up again. (W 18) The “comfort of things” (Daniel Miller) no longer holds. Aliveness is also always undermined by emptiness, transience and mortality. This is the reason why they convey melancholy: “Why do these possessions carry such sorrowful weight? There is a darkness attached to them, a foreboding. They make me wary not of personal failure and defeat but of something more general, something large in scope and content.” (W 8) Sure, one may ask oneself what was there first: Does the “darkness attach” itself to things because of the ongoing fear of death, or is it the other way round: Do those “possessions” prompt and keep up the fear of death? The answer is that there is a mutual relation and effect. The “things” are, after all, active agents, they “carry” the “foreboding,” they make “wary.” As long as we are subconsciously attached to things, we seem to be under the illusion to keep living on and on. “Tibetans,” Siskind claims disenchanted, “try to see death for what it is. It is the end of attachment to things.” (W 44) Babette is “not happy with her hips and thighs.” She therefore regularly runs up “the stadium steps” and intends to put herself on a diet of “yoghurt and wheat germ” she keeps buying only to throw it away “before she eats it,” as her daughter Denise asserts. (W 8–9) Babette feels guilty both when not buying and when buying health food, yet cannot resist the shiny junk food which makes her also feel uncomfortable. She is therefore in a double bind: The promises of food as sensually elevating pleasure here and the promise of the chastened body there. Babette then fulfills what consumere originally meant, namely “the using up and physical exhaustion of matter” as well as of the body (also originally applied only to (wasting) diseases such as tuberculosis). Consumere is etymologically related to consummare, meaning “to complete something, as in Christ’s last words: ‘It is finished’ (consummatum est).” Thus “waste” and “finished” were and are still used in the same breath. The English word “consummate” can now mean “perfect” or “accomplished,” but “consummated” can also mean “executed.” That is, consumption, satisfactory as it may be for the moment, has always a frustrating ring of finality to it. Babette buys the stuff, but yoghurt, wheat germ or Kaboom cannot bring the hoped-for consummation. She throws it away since it turns bad, indicating thereby its own wastefulness or consumption. Redemption negates itself. Therefore, she has to endlessly go on shopping. 16 White Noise “Why Can’t We Be Intelligent About Death?” Capitals in Quotation? However, it is the very opacity and unpredictability of death itself (which also accounts for the continuous material self-verification of consumers and collectors) that is more distressful than the wastefulness of consumption. For waste, industrialized countries have found ways of, albeit preliminary, disposal; consumption is made palatable over and over – if only for a short time – through the promise of novelty, even if it leaves an insipid taste of emptiness. The fear of death, in contrast, could only be done away with if death might be identified. If one takes a look at the novel as a whole, regarding the main metaphor “white noise,” the ambiguity and inconceivability of “death” stand out. Already at the beginning of the novel, Gladney mentions his doubts about the knowability of death, adding some interesting conjecture: “Maybe there is no death as we know it. Just documents changing hands.” (W 7) That is, we even do not know about the physical eventuation of death. We are left in doubt about the date of its arrival. Hence the question “Who will die first?” (e.g., W 17, 35) runs like a thread through the narrative. Death and particularly the time of death must be officially certified by a medical authority. Death, then, is similarly puzzling as identity. Identity and name, together with the certified time of birth, are conferred to me on account of an official document. Otherwise, one is a non-person, legally entitled to nothing. Death, accordingly, is the mere result of a conventional (or contingent and not necessary) act. There is moreover a linguistic and logical problem. Even if “death” comes down to nothing but a metaphor for “nothing” (as Coetzee’s Dostoevsky thinks), it will go on to signify, if only itself as a proposition without proposition or predicate. Pointless as death as/or nothingness may be, in ontological terms there is nothingness and death. Death includes and results in nothing; it is a “fact without continuity.” However, by making a statement using the verb “to be,” we cancel the nothingness of death, just as we affirm the existence of nothing by negating nothingness or proposing that there is nothing. This paradox insolubly determines and permeates our attitudes toward death (and mourning). As one cannot talk oneself out of it, it stays on. The closure of death does not lend itself to resolution and closure. In order to get a grasp on or at least approach the phenomenon of death, Siskind, Gladney and Babette refer to The Tibetan Book of the Dead, (W 44–45) biomedical data, the computer (W 165) is brought forward, and one turns to reflexive or esoteric discourse (on afterlife W 166, 328). Yet death evades rational grasp: It is “hard to fathom.” It is “everywhere and nowhere,” (W 44–45) Murray Jay Siskind asserts: “[M]odern death […] has a life independent of us […]. We know it intimately. But it continues to grow […].” (W 175) And Jack Gladney futilely tries to comfort his wife, who is severely depressed from fear of death: “Death is so White Noise 17 vague. No one knows what it is, what it feels like or looks like.” (W 225) He himself has to learn from a manufacturer of anti-fear-of-death-pills (of all persons): “[D]eath adapts […] It eludes our attempts to reason with it.” (W 354) Death remains as impenetrable and diffuse as “white noise”11 or the “airborne toxic event” in the sky, which looms above like “a shapeless growing thing,” (W 129) the “billowing dark mass,” reminiscent of “some death ship in a Norse legend.” (W 148) Gladney, who has apparently been exposed to the toxic substance, is told by his doctor that he may develop a “nebulous mass” in his body without “definite shape, form or limits.” (W 322) The metaphors to denote the vague threat, both from outside and inside, become indistinct and blurred. Gladney is at a loss; on his way home, watching “racing clouds across the westering moon,” he speciously comforts himself with a hollow slogan of the medical industry: “Your doctor knows the symbols.” (W 323) And yet, it is precisely its inconceivability and unfathomability, its tautological character and refusal to be subsumed to the principle of identity, which makes death a fearful and covert medium of social communication and a pertinent motif in literature. Common and less common ways of coping with the daunting openness (or overdetermination) of the fact are nicely spelled out in Chapter 37 of White Noise. Significantly, Gladney and Siskind begin with the “obvious” question “Why can’t we be intelligent about death?” (W 324) And they embark upon a longer discourse, even though they surmise that it is out of “our fear” that “we talk ourselves into it.” (W 325) Gladney wants to have his “dying” valorized; what he gets are only echoes of the received assumptions about the fear and meaning of death. Siskind acts as a kind of (Socratic) straight man, Gladney responds. The first point Siskind makes is “accomplishment” (or, vice versa, incompleteness). It is a very common argument, suggesting that Gladney would be less angst-ridden and regretful if he had reached the life goals he might have set for himself. Gladney rejects this rather trite argument first by reaffirming his basic will to live, prior to all achievements in contents. “There’s only one issue here. I want to live.” (W 326) This sounds obvious, but he might have invoked a philosophical discourse12 lastingly (and interestingly) revived in the early 1980s, especially by Thomas Nagel. “Life,” according to Nagel, should be seen as “emphatically positive” even if the bad elements of one’s experience outweigh the good ones. The “positive weight” accrues “by experience itself, rather than by any of its contents.”13 This is to mean that constitutive human properties, intentions, abilities, such as perception, thought, desire, and, one might add, hopefulness or the very possibility to sense oneself in one’s own aliveness, make it in principle more valuable to live than not to live. People do not want to defer death only to achieve something or something more. One would not ask a grocery bagger, Siskind points out, if he fears death “because it is death” or if he fears death because he might not be able to bag more or enough nice groceries in his given lifetime. Accordingly, 18 White Noise Gladney does not “want it to tarry awhile” for a monograph; he wants it “to go away for seventy or eighty years.” (W 326) The next point (which protestant parsons are particularly fond of) is “love.” To the question whether he believes love is “stronger than death,” Gladney (who appears to be in love with his wife Babette) answers: “Not in a million years.” (W 327) Surely death also deprives of the ability and possibility to love. The (rather trite) psychological presumption that only those fear death who are “afraid of life” is brusquely discarded as “completely stupid.” Then they get on to “completion,” which is, philosophically, probably the most challenging argument pro an acceptance of death. “Do you believe,” Siskind asks, “life without death is something incomplete?” If life dragged on indefinitely, or if one were not conscious of one’s finitude, life would lose, thus the underlying argument, its existential value (as commodities generally do). Precisely because of its limitation (or scarcity of time), life and one’s beloved become precious. It is due to the knowledge of one’s mortality, Siskind contends, that one “can begin to live life to the fullest.”14 Even if this represents the most serious and convincing – subjective – argument about death, Gladney remains adamant: “Death is what makes it [i.e. life] incomplete,” and more firmly: “Once our death is established, it becomes impossible to live a satisfying life.” Common and inevitable as Siskind’s point may be, like the often-raised objection of global overpopulation, it comes down to a commodification of individuals. Each being by virtue of being alive and a being with the (unlikely or likely) potential for preferences or interests should have the right to live on. Subjects are geared, as it were, to look forward to an open future, always hoping for other and new possibilities. Accordingly, Gladney would never want to know when he is going to die: “Absolutely not. It’s bad enough to fear the unknown, we can pretend it isn’t there.” (W 327–8) Thus if we do not know the date of our demise, we can still cherish the illusion that life may be an open process. For the moral philosopher James Rachel, this is the reason why there might be something “bad about the death. It is because we are able to view life as in principle open-ended, as always having further possibilities15 that still might be realized, if only it could go on.”16,17 Since death cuts off everything that a subject may potentially wish for and realize for his or her self, including the very subject of this self itself (“this consciousness,” “subjective time”), death, one must concede, may well be considered as evil in principle: It is true that various of my possibilities […] will remain unrealized as a result of my death. But more fundamental is the fact that they will cease then to be possibilities – when I as a subject of possibilities as well as of actualities cease to exist.18 Against the background of the contemporary (American) philosophy of death, it is only understandable that Gladney remains inconsolable faced with his (assumed) imminent demise. Gladney prefers to live with the White Noise 19 paradox and self-contradiction inherent in the “unknown,” or, for that matter, death. It is frightening because it is unknown, but since it is unknown “we can pretend it isn’t there.” (W 328) According to a much older philosophical tradition, there is no rational point in dreading something of which we are ignorant, hence one of the most frequently quoted sentences of classical Stoic philosophy: “Death […] is nothing to us, since so long as we exist death is not with us; but when death comes, we do not exist.”19 The early materialist Epicurus should actually appeal to the modern mind. But the Western ennoblement of the self – as it shows exemplarily and satirically in Gladney’s very selfcenteredness and self-aggrandizement20 – does not allow for this equanimity. Gladney would not have been impressed. One does not know who one prenatally was (if one had been conceived or the fusion of sperm cell and oocyte had occurred at another time, one would have become an entirely different person). But most people are pretty self-assured about who they are now and what they are probably going to miss in the future. Apart from that, if death as non-existence is something bad (like pain) that lies in the past, it may still be nagging, but it is surely not as frightening as a future misfortune (pain, nothingness, death) that lies ahead still to be expected. Modern individuals are teleological rather than retrogressive. Siskind’s philosophical suggestions cannot convince Gladney. Thus, the conversation turns to those (post-)modern means of “terror management,” which seem appropriate to conceal, occlude or repress (“get around”) the fact of death. The first cultural agency Siskind comes up with is, hardly surprising, technology: “It creates an appetite for immortality” and helps to cover over “the terrible secret of our decaying bodies.” (W 328) Technology – in its very ambiguity – is, of course, one of Don DeLillo’s paramount motifs and themes anticipating the Silicon Valley “Immortalists” who hope to defeat death by means of technology.21 It promises to raise us beyond our physical limitations (“nature”) while threatening at the same time “universal extinction,” as Siskind remarks. Technology nurses the temptation, as we shall see in Cosmopolis and Zero K, to go beyond all limits, unmaking the world together with one’s own life. The decaying body, “real” and “abject” as it appears to us, has always been the most imminent reminder of death. Overcoming and transfiguring the body – the technical devices (medical or prosthetic appliances) are innumerable – has long been a remedy for the fear of death. It is not so much the devices’ actual efficacy as their suggestive, imaginary or even religious effect that might do the job: “God’s own goodness.” (W 328) This metaphysical idealization turns up again in Underworld or in Cosmopolis or Zero K. In The Body Artist, we will encounter a very distinct form of bodywork. But Gladney’s horror of doctors makes him also reject that alternative, so that Siskind proposes, in his postmodern fashion of randomness, the vast esoteric supermarket, which sells various forms of afterlife from 20 White Noise reincarnation to hyperspace: “Pick one you like.” DeLillo’s Siskind was obviously not yet aware of the “cyberspace” in which immortalists such as Ray Kurzweil want to store the content of their brains for good. Yet Gladney rightly realizes that without genuine conviction these beliefs won’t do the job. And after a brief and useless consideration whether it would help to narrowly escape a life-threatening situation (and a short side trip into a shoe store),22 they finally turn to Gladney’s Hitler Studies. “Hitler Studies” One would think it a matter of moral and historical responsibility to see in Hitler and the Nazis, first of all, the cause for an abominable disruption and collapse of civilization (“Zivilisationsbruch,” Dan Diner), resulting in many millions of innocent victims.23 But in his department, Gladney is only interested in the doubtful aesthetics of the movement, its mass rallies, propaganda, media, signs and ideology.24 It comes down to nothing but a more or less covert affirmation of the ignominious and megalomaniac mixture of false mythology and cheap ritual that still attracts so many men (less so women) stuck in adolescence. But Siskind is well aware of the real motive behind Gladney’s fascination with “magical […] mythic figures” such as Hitler: “Some people,” he argues, are larger than life. Hitler is larger than death. You thought he would protect you. […] You wanted to be helped and sheltered. The overwhelming horror would leave no room for your own death. ‘Submerge me,’ you said. ‘Absorb my fear.’ On one level you wanted to conceal yourself in Hitler and his works. On another level you wanted to use him to grow in significance and strength. (W 330–1) The eerie question is: In which (terrifying) sense may Hitler (the master of annihilation) have been larger than death, so that one’s individual fear of death might be masked, overlaid and even fade away? There are three possible explanations. For the first, we can turn again to Solomon et al. In a hypothetical election, they could experimentally demonstrate that participants were much more inclined to vote for a charismatic leader, emphasizing greatness, if they were reminded of death. Drawing on Ernest Becker, they could also show that when “the cultural scheme of things” denies “a reliable basis for feeling significant and secure” people look out for a bold personality with a “vision” of “collective immortality.”25 If their narrative does not mention the economic crisis at the beginning of the 1980s, the double threat of ecological and technological disaster certainly looms in the background. Gladney, by his own account, had invented “Hitler studies” already in 1968, the year that marked in many respects a cultural revolution. Nevertheless, the White Noise 21 student rebellion did hardly stop the development of a culture industry and consumer ideology which led to the socio-cultural recurrence of sameness and historical vacuity the novel so aptly depicts.26 And, one should add, Gladney’s Hitler Studies were not really meant to responsibly come to terms with and to account for the “collapse of civilisation.” The narrator Gladney professes that his “Advanced Nazism”-course, with “special emphasis on parades, rallies and uniforms” was “designed to cultivate historical perspective.” But the “historical perspective” appears to be devoid of any contemporary relevance, closer examination or a social and political context. Rather, it is designed to arouse excitement and sublime thrill, with a special emphasis on the suggestive power of crowds and the related death cults. The core of the class consists of Nazi propaganda films, which Gladney has edited into an impressionistic eighty-minute documentary. Crowd scenes predominated […] people surging, massing. […] Halls hung with swastika banners, with mortuary wreaths and death’s-head insignia. […] Ranks of thousands of flagbearers arrayed before columns of frozen light, a hundred and thirty anti-aircraft searchlights aimed straight up – a scene that resembled a geometric longing, the formal notation of some powerful mass desire. There was no narrative voice. Only chants, songs, arias, speeches, cries, cheers, accusations, shrieks. (W 29) The scene Gladney has cut out, with the frozen searchlights aiming straight up into the sky, is cinematically and pathetically arranged to be tantamount to and to express “powerful mass desire.” The mass recipients are aesthetically deluded to experience something like their own ascension and even apotheosis, which is, of course, strongly linked with the ideology and mentioned power insignia of the Nazis. It points to a strong propagandistic means of “terror management” (only to prepare millions for their own death on the battlefields). Yet Gladney does not much more than add just another facet to the intellectual entertainment industry, which is in line with a society that revolves around itself and foregoes any historical perspective. Even if, or precisely because, his cultural approach belittles Hitler, the fascination of the fascist “pathological affection for death” (with slogans like “Long live death”) should be appealing to Gladney. This even more so as “the Thousand-Year Reich” managed to combine cleverly its morbidity with an ideology of heroic resurrection. With regard to the victims of the First World War, in particular, Hitler proclaimed that “the dead” were “never really dead” and that “the graves” would “open and send the silent mudand blood-covered back as spirits of vengeance to the homeland.”27 For two further explanations, Theodor W. Adorno and Hans Blumenberg might be helpful, two (if ideologically very different) philosophers, scarred for life by Nazism and the Holocaust. In his Negative Dialectics Adorno wrote: 22 White Noise “In the camps death has a novel horror; since Auschwitz fearing death means fearing worse than death.”28 What happened in Auschwitz defies words and description. Before the victims were led into the gas chambers, they were reduced to mere numbers, they were deprived of their names and identity, utterly dehumanized and de-individualized. The Nazis did not only want to kill, they wanted to totally efface and obliterate their victims. In this sense, the millionfold death they realized was larger than death. Since man or humanity was annihilated as such, the question for Adorno was whether it was still possible to “go on living” after Auschwitz.29 How can a survivor live with this memory of horror? The Holocaust was nothing short of a singular negation of humanity and, according to Adorno, everyone must be filled with terror if he or she wants to be or, rather, wants to become human again.30 Against this background, Gladney’s accommodation of Hitler is particularly perverse. He uses Hitler to relieve himself from his individual fear of death, precisely because the murderous executions were “worse than death,” or “larger than death,” annihilating and negating all individuality. The killing of an anonymous and naked humankind is so “overwhelming” – or, in a negative sense, “sublime” – that it will exceed Gladney’s power of imagination and take his mind off his own individual death: There is no room left for it. At least his own individuality is to subsist, and he will die an individual death surrounded and commemorated by his large patchwork family. Gladney does not respond to Siskind’s rather critical remarks on the monstrosity of his motive for “using” Hitler. Instead, he immediately reasserts his awe and horror of death, and reveals his entirely inappropriate association of his own prospective death with the death or degree of annihilation Hitler brought about. Overwhelmed by his emotions as Gladney is, the reader clearly senses an undercurrent of uncanny admiration in his exclamations: ‘The vast and terrible depth.’ ‘Of course, he [i.e., Siskind] said.’ ‘The inexhaustibility.’ ‘I understand.’ ‘The whole huge nameless thing.’ ‘Yes absolutely.’ ‘The massive darkness.’ ‘Certainly, certainly.’ ‘The whole terrible endless hugeness.’ ‘I know exactly what you mean.’ (W 331) Gladney, whose exclamations are consistently (duplicitously and falsely) endorsed by Siskind, uses a language reminiscent of the sublime. The sublime is characterized by a spatial dimension that cannot be apprehended White Noise 23 and conceived of in sensory, especially visual terms. Here it seems to collapse into an eschaton of dark nothingness. He perceives the morbid culture and practice of Nazism in the same way as one would vision an apocalypse, which is fueled here by nothing but a neurotic fear of death. What Gladney admits to is not a moral and historical mistake in personally using Hitler (and instrumentalizing the victims) but a “confusion of means,” namely to use him to boost his career and personality and to conceal his fear behind the “endless hugeness” of Hitler: “Dumb.” (W 331) Yet, after another (and logical) interim visit to the surrogate realm of the supermarket,31 they soon come back to the ghoulish interrelation of dying and killing. Siskind once more takes the role of a Mephistophelian tempter who wants to instill the advantage of killing over dying. It is worth quoting these remarkable passages at some length. I believe, Jack, there are two kinds of people in the world. Killers and diers. […] We let death happen. […] But think what it’s like to be a killer. […] If he dies you cannot. To kill him is to gain life-credit. The more people you kill, the more credit you store up. (W 333–4) Gladney first responds with astonishment and doubts to these suggestions: “What does this have to do with me?” Thus, Gladney continues with his purportedly Socratic dialogue (“I only want to elicit truths you already possess,” W 336–7): Nothingness is staring you in the face. […] The killer, in theory, attempts to defeat his own death by killing others. He buys time, he buys life. […] It’s a way of controlling death. […] You can’t die if he does. He dies, you live. […] They [people] do it on a small intimate scale, they do it in groups and crowds and masses. Kill to live. […] The more people you kill, the more power you gain over your own death. (W 334–5) Even though Siskind does not explicitly mention Hitler here, he may have the Nazi murders (and the “precision” of Auschwitz) in mind: “There is a secret precision at work in the most savage and indiscriminate killings.” Gladney still hesitates to accept the “theory” and suspects Siskind of instigating him to “plot a murder,” which for him means “to die” anyway. But Siskind picks up on that and underpins his thinking with a decisionist concept of “plot”: “To plot is to affirm life, to seek shape and control.” (W 335) DeLillo may have intended here a metatextual and ironic reference to the novel, associating the conventional “murder plot.” But “plot” also denotes the determination to control, to decide and to unwaveringly take things into one’s own hands in the sense of an existentialist selfempowerment, propagated by some precursors of fascism such as Carl 24 White Noise Schmitt (“Decisionism”). When Siskind moreover proffers an anthropological-essentialist justification (or naturalization)32 of killing only to eventually and “honestly” exclaim: “Better you [die] than me,” (W 337) Gladney acquiesces. If we take Siskind’s above logic at face value, the fear of death may be tackled by hastening the death of others before the bell tolls for oneself. The killer gains “life-credit,” buys “time,” controls “death,” – the more killings, the more “power” over death and time. In this respect, Hitler and his accomplices (Himmler, Goebbels, Heydrich, etc.) were surely masters in organizing death, from the war machinery to the Holocaust. And yet there is, as Hans Blumenberg pointed out, another final monstrosity to the “Führer’s” willing to be “larger than death”: the violent “enforcement” of the “convergence” of “life-time” and “world-time.”33 Blumenberg quotes from a conversation between Hitler and his air force adjutant von Bülow after the failure of the Battle of the Bulge (Ardennes): “We do not capitulate, never. We may perish. But we will take along a world.” (80) The indefinite article, Blumenberg explains, leaves open the extent of what should be dragged along into his downfall.34 (It obviously depends, one might add, on your means, space of action and megalomania whether the world to be brought to naught consists of one person (a “little world” or a nation.) But only by also wiping out the/a world, and thus an indefinite future, one can be larger than death and thereby surpass and, as it were, outperform death and time. One captures death’s job acting arbitrarily at one’s own discretion; the killer gains more space, and the scope of death is diminished. The world has to end in a bang, not a whimper. Psychologically the desire to take someone along discloses an extremely narcissistic personality. “A single life defines its meaning precisely by claiming that it is something whereupon nothing else may come.” (Blumenberg 80) The narcissist cannot endure the knowledge that something is withheld and denied to him or her, and that this subsequently goes to someone else who will profit instead. (See Blumenberg 72,78) World and time are indifferent to me. The world was and will be the same, no matter if I existed or not. (cf. 75)35 This is an important motivation behind individual killings and killing sprees, and clearly behind ideas of apocalypse and eschatology. To believe that one will not be survived has a consolatory effect if it goes hand in hand with the conviction that all will be lost, even if one gets deprived of what one had in and of the world (which will happen through death anyway). (Blumenberg 78) White Noise is an apocalyptic novel, or rather, a novel in which apocalypse and death have beset the minds and phantasies of the protagonists. If apocalypse or eschatology do not fulfill themselves, one has to hasten the end of all things. This is symptomatic for a consumerist world that literally and figuratively revolves only around itself, the more so if it is unsettled by ecological and technological incalculables. In Underworld, one both fears and reveres the “bomb.” White Noise 25 Before he sets about his killing mission, Gladney, interestingly enough, throws out remainders, remnants and reminders of consumption from his “picture-frame wire” to his “ridiculous hip boots.” The attachment to these things means, after all, an existential stalemate: “I bore a personal grudge against these things. Somehow they’d put me in this fix. They’d dragged me down, made escape impossible.” (W 338) When Gladney proceeds to kill Willy Mink, he also does so out of exasperation. The former psychologist and pharmacist had seduced Babette by offering her “Dylar,” the pill which is supposed to mitigate the fear of death. Yet it is no less a violent – ideologically and psychologically well-prepared – attempt to escape the socio-historical drabness and pointlessness of his existence.36 Gladney drives to the tellingly named “Germantown” in “Iron City” (“looking for signs of some erstwhile German presence” (!), W 349) with a “German-made” (W 291) gun carrying the very Germanic name “Zumwalt” (which is today the name of a devastating navy destroyer). The gun creates “a second reality” for him, a reality he “could control.” When he was given the gun by his father-inlaw Vernon Dickey, it is at once to him a “second life, a second self, a dream, a spell, a plot.” (W 292) His mind – that is, his object-relation – appears to undergo a fundamental change. He sees the things of his environment no longer as disconnected and dead, and becomes “aware of processes, components, things relating to other things. […] I saw things new.” (W 350) His new decisiveness finds expression in the often (eightfold) repeated affirmation of his “plan” (“Here is my plan,” W 349). Sentences become short and crisp, often with an imperative structure, expediating the action. The new clear-sightedness and purposefulness convey to him a “heightened reality,” a “denseness.” He finds himself “[c] lose to a violence, close to death,” (W 353) in “the network of meanings.” (W 358) Peter Boxall has also drawn attention to the temporal acceleration of the narrative, which tries to follow Gladney “as he blasts open the continuum”37 of historical standstill, so arrestingly described by Walter Benjamin in his “Thesis on History.” But the decisionist attempt at a disruption and breakout of cultural dead-end comes down to a farce. Gladney’s repetitive reaffirmation of his plan may equally imply a kind of (other-directed) compulsiveness. Toward the climax, the narrative also changes into “slow motion,” taking on a “cinematic” quality.38 In fact, when one sees “blood squirt,” in a “delicate arc,” one is reminded of sequences in films by Kurosawa or Quentin Tarantino. The killing fails ridiculously; Gladney drags Mink to a hospital with nullifidian, Germanspeaking nuns and an absurdly kitschy representation of afterlife: Jack Kennedy and Pope John XXIII holding hands in heaven. (W 363) Gladney does not, of course, learn anything that could make him break open his vacuum; he fails to apprehend and realize the meanings of networks beyond ideological and late-capitalist delusion. Accordingly, the book and the narrator end up in the supermarket, now equipped with the 26 White Noise scanner: the “carts stocked with brightly colored goods” and at the checkout tabloids providing “cults of the famous and the dead.” (W 374) However, even White Noise offers, if arguably, a redeeming perspective or, for that matter, an alternative attitude toward death. There is, for one, the unpretentious neuroscientist Winnie Richards. She seems not only to be able to genuinely experience the “beauty” of the sunset (W 261), without “postmodern” (W 260) awe and the apocalyptic predisposition. She also tells Gladney that only through the boundary and defining power of death does life attain beauty and meaning. If this is not a thoroughly surprising argument,39 her pleading for a less consequential attitude to one’s self is also a plea for a demystification of death and for equanimity: “Self, self, self. If death can be seen as less strange and unreferenced, your sense of self in relation to death will diminish, and so will your fear.” (W 263) Vernon Dickey, Gladney’s father-in-law, surely embodies the cliché of the traditional American male with macho attitudes and the belief in the defensive necessity of weapons, but his stance on both objects and death is indeed different. Vernon is a versatile repairman. He is capable of mending what needs to live and abide; he does shingling and rustproofing, repairs caskets and washers and knows about “grouting, caulking, spackling.” Thereby, he commands Gladney’s respect: “These were the things that built the world. Not to know or care about them was [according to Vernon] a betrayal of fundamental principles, a betrayal of gender and species.” (W 282) Vernon does not see in things mere commodities to be thrown away before long; he cares and appreciates their use value, “techniques and procedures.” He is, on the other hand, completely indifferent to consumer goods, money or the state of his car and, although a heavily coughing smoker, he is not at all worried about his health. “That’s the way it’s supposed to be.” (W 294) Given all this serenity, he is nevertheless aware of death: “You get old […] You’re always getting prepared.” (W 285) Even if this made him visit his daughter after all, there is a great deal of stoic calm in Vernon.40 One can assume that Vernon has always been intuitively familiar with the “network of meanings.” However, as any of Don DeLillo’s characters, Vernon is not univocal. He almost imposes the handgun upon Gladney who initially resists Vernon’s persuasive attempts: “Was he death’s dark messenger after all?” (W 291), Gladney first wonders. Yet he soon willingly accepts his “second life” with a “lethal weapon.” If the gun is a metonymy and symbol for death, Vernon only transfers death symbolically to someone else, and may indeed be its “messenger.” The Fearful Beauty of Apocalypse: Apparition At the end of White Noise, just before the final visit to the digitalized Supermarket, Gladney, Babette and their son Wilder go, as they often do now, to a motorway overpass to watch the setting sun. The overpass is regularly visited by a large crowd of people, predominantly the middle-aged, White Noise 27 older adults, handicapped and helpless in wheelchairs. They watch the sunset, which appears to be irradiantly and luminously transfigured by the toxic cloud. The sky has taken on “content, feeling, an exalted narrative life” with “turreted skies, light storms, softly falling steamers.” (W 373) There are even epiphanic moments: “Something golden falls, a softness delivered to the air.” (W 374) The spectacle engenders a fearful beauty, which in its sublime mixture of doom and aesthetic elatedness appealed to writers and poets from Milton to Rilke. William Blake’s speaker is fascinated by the “fearful symmetry” of the “Tyger, burning bright.” In DeLillo the spellbound onlookers are also not sure how to feel; some are “scared,” some “determined to be elated.” There is certainly “awe,” but they are not sure whether they are “watching in wonder or dread.” There is an “anticipation,” but the introverted beholders do not know whether this means “a level of experience […] into which our uncertainty will eventually be absorbed.” (W 373) Nonetheless, if White Noise paints the picture of a profoundly alienated society, steeped in the fear of death, there remains the fleeting glimpse of beauty (and perhaps salvation) in a sky that rings “like bronze.” (W 369) Notes 1 The conceivability of death is questioned both by the protagonist and Hitler specialist Jack Gladney and his colleague, the Elvis specialist Murray Siskind. As the occupation of the main persons already suggests, White Noise displays both the social folly and alienation of the American middle classes in the 1980s. Apart from the fear of death, it relates and satirizes academic vogues (cultural materialism), consumerism, TV, technology, media and virtualization, as well as the American family. As, in addition, the story is set in the catastrophic 1980s and is also told from Gladney’s unreliable perspective (who converses with the cynic Murray), it is always questionable to take this or that particular assumption and statement as authoritative and binding for an analysis of the subject in DeLillo’s later work. Nonetheless, Siskind’s partly gratuitous statements and Gladney’s fears may well tell us something about the dominant consciousness of the society and class in question. 2 The “historical vacuum” of and within the narrative due to the capitalist assimilation of the 1968 avant-garde forms the interpretative foil for Peter Boxall’s account of White Noise. See Peter Boxall, Don DeLillo: The Possibility of Fiction (London and New York: Routledge, 2006), 109–30. For an excellent essay on White Noise see also John N. Duvall, “The (Super) Marketplace of Images: Television as Unmediated Mediation in DeLillo’s White Noise,” the text is reprinted in Don DeLillo, White Noise: Text and Criticism, ed. Mark Osteen (London: Penguin, 1998), 432–55. Duval focuses on Jack’s “Hitler Studies” and sees the Supermarket and Television as serving “the Participant (shopper/viewer) as a temporary way to step outside death by entering an aestheticized space of consumption.” (433) 3 Here the cereal brand is meant, of course. But it is worth mentioning that Kaboom was also a very popular contemporary video game: “Kaboom! is an Activision video game published in 1981 for Atari 2600 that was designed by Larry Kaplan. David Crane coded the overlaid sprites. It was well received and successful commercially, selling over one million cartridges by 1983. 28 White Noise 4 5 6 7 8 9 Kaboom! is an unauthorized adaptation of the 1978 Atari coin-op Avalanche. The gameplay of both games is fundamentally the same, but Kaboom! was re-themed to be about a mad bomber instead of falling rocks. An ex-Atari programmer, Larry Kaplan, originally wanted to port Avalanche to the Atari 2600. In Avalanche all the boulders are lined up at the top, which is difficult to accomplish on the 2600, hence the shift to the Mad Bomber.” (Accessed September 9, 2018, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kaboom!(video_game). The 1983 change in contents is worth stressing. An average German now owns more than 10,000 objects, which he almost exclusively stores in his house. See Frank Trentman, Empire of Things: How We Became a World of Consumers, from the Fifteenth Century to the TwentyFirst (London: Penguin, 2016), 1. See Stefanie Samida, Manfred K.H. Eggert and Hans Peter Hahn, eds., Handbuch Materielle Kultur: Bedeutungen, Konzepte, Disziplinen (Metzler: Stuttgart/Weimar, 2014) for the social, psychological and phenomenological significance of objects and things. See in particular the balanced articles by Aida Bosch, “Identität und Dinge,” 70–7 and Hans Peter Hahn, “Orientierung/ Desorientierung durch Dinge,” 125–32. See also Christopher Tilley, Webb Keane, Susanne Kuechler-Fogden, Mike Rowlands and Patricia Spyer, eds., Handbook of Material Culture (London: Sage, 2013), passim; and the Work of Daniel Miller for a rather positive view of things and consuming. It is worth quoting another nice passage in which the religious and redemptive connotation of consuming is made explicit: “The utterance was beautiful and mysterious, gold-shot with looming wonder. It was like the name of an ancient power in the sky, tablet-carved in cuneiform. It made me feel that something hovered. But how could this be?” (W 180) Boxall 2006, 115. Consumer skepticism has been commercialized in itself now for some time with slogans such as “Small is Beautiful” or movements such as the “New Minimalism.” The corresponding famous passage from Das Kapital is as follows: In order, therefore, to find an analogy, we must have recourse to the mistenveloped regions of the religious world. In that world, the productions of the human brain appear as independent beings endowed with life and entering into relation both with one another and the human race. So, it is in the world of commodities with the products of men’s hands. This I call the Fetishism which attaches itself to the products of labor, so soon as they are produced as commodities, and which is therefore inseparable from the production of commodities. 10 11 12 13 14 See Karl Marx, Capital: A Critique of Political Economy, Volume I, Trans. Ben Fowkes (London: Penguin Books (1990) [1867]), 165. Walter Benjamin, Charles Baudelaire: Ein Lyriker im Zeitalter des Hochkapitalismus (Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1992), 177 (my translation). The metaphor may likewise connotate the permanent background humming of advertisement slogans and brand names. It is notable that the discourse hinges on the modes of possibility, and the possible future which subjects in their subjectivity may be deprived of through death, no matter how old. This also seems to mirror the spirit of the time. Thomas Nagel, Mortal Questions (Cambridge: CUP, 2012), 2. One of the two positive counter-examples (as the relation to death is concerned) is Winnie Richard, a neuroscientist at the university. After Gladney White Noise 29 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 had asked her to analyze the anti-fear drug “Dylar,” she gives him the following advice: “[…] I think it’s a mistake to lose one’s sense of death, even one’s fear of death. Isn’t death the boundary we need? Doesn’t it give a precious texture to life, a sense of definition?” (W 262) See also Thomas Nagel, The View from Nowhere (New York/Oxford: Oxford UP, 1986), 228: “My existence seems [from a subjective view] to be a universe of possibilities that stands by itself […] The subjective view projects into the future its sense of unconditional possibilities, and the world [i.e., death) denies them.” Or: Mortal Questions, 8–10. James Rachels, The Elements of Moral Philosophy (New York: Random House, 1986), 51. Robert Nozick develops this point even further in his Philosophical Explanations (Cambridge, MA.: Harvard UP, 1981), 571ff. (“Philosophy and the Meaning of Life”). Nagel 1986, 226. Epicurus is discussed and quoted in John Broome, “The Badness of Death and the Goodness of Life,” in The Oxford Handbook of the Philosophy of Death, eds. Bradley et al. (Oxford: OUP, 2015), 218–33, here: 218–9. There are many references to this end. His pompous demeanor at the campus, his repeatedly telling his wife that he wants to die before her, while he is certain he does not, and there is, of course, his Hitler project, to name only a few instances. “Technology is lust removed from nature.” The new immortalists are also proposing to remove culture definitely from nature. One method is “to provide new organs.” (W 328) “Weejuns, Wallabees, Hush Puppies,” (330) It is, of course, not possible (and, since it is not a matter of quantity, morally dispensable) to give exact numbers of the overall victim of Nazi tyranny. But according to a reliable source (www.comlink.de), they amount to approximately 50 million people killed owing to the reign of violence and the war. As mentioned above, the 1980s marked the beginning and high times of Cultural Materialism and Semiotics in the English and American Humanities. Don DeLillo satirizes this. The approach, focusing on the signifier, the iconography, structural or functional make-up of cultural expressions or artefacts, was prone, however, to neglect the moral and socio-economic content side of the phenomena in question. “There are full professors in this place,” Siskind remarks, “who read nothing but cereal boxes.” (11) Solomon et al., 121, 117. As commentators of the novel have repeatedly pointed out, DeLillo uses in White Noise the déjà vu topos as well as the postmodern simulacrum phenomenon. I think it is appropriate to interpret these as indicative of the historical deadlock of aimless recurrence and self-reproduction. “I saw all this before,” Gladney’s daughter Steffi exclaims, when they evacuate the town. They ascribe the déjà vu to the effects of the poisonous cloud (“Nyodine”), but cannot be sure of that: “Is there a true déjà vu and a false déjà vu?” (W 146, see also 155). “THE MOST PHOTOGRAPHED BARN IN AMERICA” exists only on the strength of being an endlessly photographed barn: “No one sees the barn,” Siskind asserts. “We are not here to capture an image, we’re here to maintain one. […] We see only what the others see […] They are taking pictures of taking pictures.” (14) See Boxall (2006) and, for an application of Jean Baudrillard’s corresponding theory and consumption, see Marc Schuster, Don DeLillo, Jean Baudrillard, and the Consumer Conundrum (Amherst, New York: Cambria Press, 2008), here Chapter 1. 30 White Noise 27 Solomon et.al., 121; the quote is from Hitler’s Mein Kampf. 28 Theodor W. Adorno, Negative Dialectics, trans. E. B. Ashton (New York: Continuum, 1992), 371. The German original can be found in Negative Dialektik (Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1966), 364: “Neues Grauen hat der Tod in den Lagern: seit Auschwitz heißt den Tod fürchten, Schlimmeres fürchten als den Tod.“ 29 Adorno, Negative Dialectics, 363, German Original: “ob nach Auschwitz noch sich leben lasse […],“ 355. 30 See also the Chapter on “Annihilation” (“Vernichtung”) in Petra Gehring’s good overview on the “Theories of Death,” (publ. in German as Theorien des Todes, Hamburg: Junius, 2010), esp. 154–55, which I have drawn on here. 31 With its “Blasts of color, layers of oceanic sound” and banners that Siskind likens to a “Tibetan prayer flag.” (W 331) 32 He claims that there is a deep male “prehistoric” remnant of a killing instinct, “buried” in one’s “soul,” which one might tap into, occasionally. (W 336) 33 Hans Blumenberg, Lebenszeit und Weltzeit (Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1986), 80. All other references to this book are given in the text, all translations are mine. Die “Erzwingung der Konvergenz von Lebenszeit und Weltzeit” or: the enforcement of a convergence of one’s individual and definite life span with the time of what exists (in all indefinite future) apart from me. It is probably another humiliation of man that in post-eschatological times the life span of the micro-cosmos (man) and that of the macro-cosmos (world or universe) are ever drifting apart. 34 But Hitler (unlike Napoleon), Blumenberg further explains, “had no world” and no world horizon. It did not matter to him, just as his posthumous fame or reputation did not matter to him. (84) 35 Blumenberg also recognizes here a Faustian impulse: if one considers the limited time one has on earth and realizes its disproportion with the abundancy of wishes and possibilities, it may come to one’s (malevolent) mind to make up for this discrepancy by an overabundance of misdeed. 36 “Routine things,” Gladney says in another context, “can be deadly.” (285) 37 Boxall 2006, 128. 38 Ibid., 128–9. 39 There are numerous versions of the argument. One of the first known also dates back to Blumenberg. 40 Heidegger would certainly have been pleased with that, looking at death as something that is always already within the horizon of one’s being. 3 Underworld and “Terror Management” Apocalypse, the Bomb, Cold War, Crowds “Terror Management”: Apocalypse The surreal scenery at the end of White Noise may be taken as iconographic for modern apocalypse, which is logically marked by paradox and, experientially, by contingency. The sunset and sky are exceptional and thereby transcend the common frame of perceptional experience and everyday life. Like an extraordinary experience with the beauty of art, natural spectacles may also hold the promise of revelation and illumination. Yet on DeLillo’s overpass, the marvelous sky is bound up with terror and devastation. Out of it may unfold, after all, an ecological apocalypse1 foreboding the end of a world. This causes anxiety, yet there is also a sense of expectation and elation induced by the possibility of reaching a level of being where all uncertainty has been dispelled. On the one hand, this comes down to a modern version of a Burkeian and terror-stricken version of the sublime, surpassing in a fearfully threatening manner our absorbing capacities. On the other, it presents a weakened form of the premodern strictly dualistic forms of apocalypse, especially in their millenarian, eschatological or chiliastic varieties. There is still some hope for redemption and resolution as an alternative to the current state. Even if divine redemption (or the second coming of Christ) is “clipped off,”2 and the “contemporary zeitgeist brims with the most diverse apocalyptic narratives,”3 one may anticipate, if no divine revelation, at least some kind of resolution. Apocalypse holds out an answer to “uncertainty,” which is also due to the “concealment” or opacity of our Being-toward-death and death itself. Death and the fear of death are closely related to our perception of time (not least as the result of our fleetingly unstable object-relation in a consumerist world), as we have seen. Apocalypse – for the time being – anticipates not only a radical cancellation of time but also, hopefully, the disclosure of a radically different time, subsequent to “the end of the world as we know it.”4 According to Klaus Vondung, the leading (nontheological) scholar in this research area, the apocalyptic zeitgeist springs from a deep-felt deficiency in one’s lifeworld, meaning “experiences of failure […], of physical, intellectual, also moral inadequacy right up to DOI: 10.4324/9781003289937-3 32 Underworld and “Terror Management” the all-pervasive experiences of transience, of loss, of aging, illness and death.”5 Apocalypse, in contrast, will bring about some cathartic purification resulting (necessarily vaguely) in “fullness” and concord. Even if the sociopsychological causes and the (religious) structure of apocalypse have changed, in its secular as well as diverse sectarian forms, it remains ever-present. It belongs, as the German intellectual Hans Magnus Enzensberger once wrote, to “our ideological hand luggage.”6 According to a 2002 Time/CNN poll, 59% of Americans thought the “Book of Revelation would come true.”7 This was after 9/11, but at the height of the Cold War, one can assume, numbers were not all that different. Socio-Cultural and Anthropological Contexts Apart from The Body Artist,8 apocalypse (and more specifically, the fear of death) looms more or less large in all of Don DeLillo’s novels dealt with here. This is remarkable, since the time in which White Noise and Underworld are set (the latter extends from 1951–1992), was characterized by (a relative) social affluency. Medical progress should have diminished the quotidian fear of death. Diverse vaccines had been found; polio,9 tuberculosis and many other potentially deadly diseases had been defeated. The mortality rate sank; the birth rate, procreating the “Boomers,” rose. Yet (the fear of) death works on two levels. As an anthropological constituent, it is covertly always there. Since it could happen any time and nobody knows the time of his or her own demise, it forms the deep structure of our being. In this respect, Underworld is an existential novel in which the same incomprehensible and (in itself) meaningless undercurrent of death lurks beneath the surface. Don DeLillo has the fact of death voiced by the two most conspicuous social outcasts of the novel. For one, there is the black New York street preacher who, on the basis of his 15-year study of a dollar bill, is able to predict the apocalypse,10 “the day and the hour […] when the time is come,” (U 354) preaching Matthew 24: “Nobody knows the day or the hour.” (U 352, 354) The paranoid “old man with a hungry head, veined at the temples” appears (chronologically) for the first time in October 1951 after the Giants had defeated the Dodgers, and Manx Martin is about to sell the ball (also U 653–4) his son had captured. Interestingly enough, the novel’s major figures (see e.g., U 140) have all come across the apostle of death. So has Lenny Bruce, the “postexistential” satirist and “persecuted junkie” who speaks in tongues and dies (in 1966) of an overdose. In 1962, in front of a large audience at Carnegie Hall, Lenny does the preacher’s voice – “unavoidably:” “Nobody knows the day or the hour.” The voice of death, the underworld or undercurrent of death recurs, speaking through him: “[H]e could not seem to stop doing the voice.” (U 628)11 The “national unconscious”12 can only be articulated “cross-voiced,” by “wastelings of the lost world” as Lenny calls the preacher, the latter’s small audience, and, implicitly, himself. That is, only Underworld and “Terror Management” 33 the desperate are free to bring into the open what lurks underneath. (see also U 506–7) They live outside the cultural mainstream of “terror management,” to which we will return soon. Lenny’s performance had been given just after the Cuban Missile Crisis had been settled. The historic-anthropological or existential substructure cannot be clearly differentiated from contemporary social circumstances. As any, the American post-war period was marked by a process of modernization and globalization that called forth new collective anxieties. Underworld was moreover written against not only the backdrop of an apocalyptic Cold War but also “hot” wars in Korea and Vietnam or the Iran Crisis. The conservative modernist W. B. Yeats responded to an entirely disillusioning and miserable First World War with the apocalyptic and extremely effective poem “The Second Coming.”13 The ambivalent and absorbing poem displays a fearfulness which is shot through with fascination, even though it announces the possible advent of a “beast” (communist rather than a fascist) or despot following the dissolution of the naturalized and closed (hierarchical and patriarchal) social entities dominating old Europe. The United States saw its “falling apart” of social matters and cultural self-understanding after the Second World War. The hegemonial classes, unable to recognize modernization as the reason for the sociocultural changes, found their antichrist most of all in the Communist as such, most vigorously embodied by Stalin and then Brezhnev. I do not have the space to outline even remotely the highly complex post-war social culture; some general remarks, leading us back to Underworld, must suffice. The German historian and hermeneutic Reinhard Kosellek, a close friend of the above-mentioned Hans Blumenberg, has drawn attention to the critical consequences of the increasing incongruity between what he calls the “space of experience” and the “horizon of expectations” in modernity.14 Especially after historically incisive events, such as the French Revolution, the First or, for that matter, the Second World War, society anticipates an un-heard-of bounty of new possibilities. Those possibilities, however, become contingent, particularly in an age of expedited mobility, technology and media domination, as after the Second World War. The new options that offered themselves were neither necessary nor impossible, but only possible options. There may have always been alternatives, for better or worse. With the mobilization and medialization of culture, the experience of reality is accelerated, while a new plurality and heterogeneity of life design and social agents emerge. More and more appear to exist synchronically.15 The expectant individual becomes disoriented and insecure in the face of open and multifarious horizons of future possibilities, precisely because they are increasingly disconnected from one’s past experience, and, moreover, because they are not instantaneously fulfilled. They just repeat themselves diachronically and synchronically. The way out is a suspension of the contingency of what lingers on, through the 34 Underworld and “Terror Management” invocation of a historical revolution and the return to an assumedly homogenous past, or an evocation and the precipitation of an entirely different salvific historical state. Both concepts work by exclusion, the first is suffused with nostalgia, the second with an “angstlust” or thrill in the face of the annihilation of what is, of destruction and apocalypse. Especially the first strain needs enemy images, but both can be intricately and ambivalently interwoven in one personality (as in Edgar J. Hoover, for example). On the more individual level, the desire to speed up redemption may prompt Dionysian experience, attempts at disrupting time by way of violence, dissolution in the crowds, consumerism and drug abuse. James T. Patterson, in his monumental history spanning the years from 1945 to 1974, very convincingly describes the “Grand Expectations”16 the United States developed after two triumphantly won and, by all indications, just wars: “In this golden age it often seemed that there were no limits to what the United States could do both at home and abroad.” But in the 1960s at the latest, in the wake of the assassination of a president, of less righteous, misguided wars, McCarthyism, civil unrest and racial conflict, this euphoric optimism was undermined: “Both the internal divisions and the blunders aroused dissension and enlarged the gap between what people expected and what they managed to accomplish.”17 The gap between the horizon of expectations, finding expression in remarkable sentences such as “The impossible takes a little longer,”18 and the space of experience widened. The problem was not least immanent to what we look upon as (technological) modernization, media and mobility. The years after the Second World War were, as Patterson notes, “an automobile age.” In 1945, 69,500 cars were sold; in 1955 the sales rose to 7.9 million.19 In the three final decades of the 20th century, the sense of consumerism and the modern dialectics of expectancy and disenchantment did not subside. In his follow-up to Grand Expectations, Restless Giant (covering the time from 1974 to 2000) Patterson remarks: “The explosive power of America’s consumer culture, while liberating in many ways, was seductive and disorienting: The more people bought, the more they seemed to crave. Wants became needs.”20 In 1975, 106.7 million passenger cars were registered.21 The automobile boom strongly stimulated the housing boom but also the decline of the downtown22 and, on the other side, what Eric Avila calls the “suburbanization of American culture.”23 This was a major reason for the dissolution of traditional neighborhoods. The new suburban homes were soon equipped, moreover, with television sets, which in their turn contributed to the “retreat from public life” and the “privatization of cultural experience.” Television and cars opened new and multitudinous perspectives and possibilities but effected at the same time social closure. The automobile took the family along ever the same billboards to their suburban home; TV reduced the world to a small screen with tiny dots and lots of commercials. “At the height of the Cold War, in the shadow of the nuclear bomb, television promoted an ideal of domestic containment, shaping an Underworld and “Terror Management” 35 inward cultural focus upon the home as a sanctuary of mass consumption and traditional gender roles.“24 Yet a mentality that relied on social closure and cultural seclusion, the constraint of women to the kitchen and a promise of consumption that revolved only about itself, proves the more vulnerable, the more it tries to shut out what is not provided for in those microcosms. Apocalyptic films such as War of the Worlds, (1953) Them (1954) or The Invasion of the Body Snatchers (1956) were symptomatic of the fear of dissolution which only increased in the 1960s and 1970s. Violent anticommunism, antifeminism, a hatred of hippies and all that was different, especially by the New Right, which continued to idealize the “white nuclear family,” were, to be sure, motivated by the fear of losing social and political hegemony but also a despairing response to contingency, or the waning illusion that the seemingly impossible might be possible after all. Underworld, like no other of DeLillo’s novels, illustrates the tension between a secular,25 but highly expectant, capitalist society (which has invested enormous amounts of consumption and labor into this new identity of affluence and boundless opportunities), on the one hand, and, on the other, the corresponding fear of the undermining and destruction of that very identity, informed by a horizon of the expectations of salvation that is always receding. The Bomb and the Cold War26 In Underworld, the latent desire for apocalyptic resolution materializes most potently in the nuclear bomb along with (a possible Third) War of cataclysmic consequences. Death hovers over society in a Cold War like the mushroom of the atomic bomb (U 466), which has taken on an iconic quality for the collective American consciousness, fascinated with weapons, secret threats, conspiracies and money (dollar bill) and waste. The nuclear mushroom cloud in Underworld works indeed as a manifestation of the sublime and thus on the same phenomenological and sociopsychological level as the toxic cloud in White Noise. Before and after the nuclear tests were moved underground, the Nevada or New Mexico test sites were vast media and tourist attractions. “People went willingly to these places […] to meet some elemental need […] to locate some higher condition.” (458) Films and photos of the explosions were widely distributed and sold as posters. A number of them include spectators watching in the foreground, as well as camera men filming. The figures highlight the enormity of the detonation that fills out the picture.27 The photos may well be likened to Caspar David Friedrich’s romantic paintings of small figures against a misty, sepulchral and gloomy scenery such as “Der Wanderer über dem Nebelmeer,” “Sonnenuntergang (Die Brüder).” Painted against the background of the Napoleonic wars and a crucial historical turning point, they try to visualize, and hence somehow come to terms with, the existential, but opaque, perils of modernization. By 36 Underworld and “Terror Management” placing the – comparatively small, sometimes minute – individual within the picture (see “Mönch am Meer”) in front of and in an appropriate distance to the mystical and staggeringly beautiful horizon (or a jagged and rugged rocky or icy landscape), the (transcendental) subject is still brought into a relation with the incomprehensible. The self perceives it, stays on (unharmed for the time being) and, by his or her very sensuousness, can still make sure of their own psychosomatic being. At the same time, though, one can place oneself in some melancholic and mystical relationality with what is yet unconceivable and potentially obliterating. The sublime effect of the atomic bomb was made explicit by contemporaries. After the first detonation of an atomic bomb in July 1945, the following lines from the Hindu Bhagavad-Gita crossed, according to Robert Jungk, the mind of Robert Oppenheimer, another modern mystic: “If the radiance of a thousand suns/were to burst into the sky/ that would be like/ the splendour of the Mighty One” and “I am become Death, the shatterer of worlds.”28 A radiance that exceeds our sun’s a thousandfold (which is hardly conceivable), bursting into the sky, splendidly godsent and godlike, is more than an impressive depiction of apocalypse. The second quote refers both to Oppenheimer himself, the “father” of the bomb, and to God alike. Vishnu and the scientist merge. A mortal being has now also become the primary agent, prime mover of apocalypse. Yet this human selfempowerment has an ambivalent quality. By transferring, on the one hand, the origin of apocalypse onto man, apocalypse loses some of the old horror of the Mysterium tremendum (et, though, fascinosum); one is no longer at the mercy of the entirely Other. If he or she through their relational presence seem to partake, they become both object and subject of the apocalypse. It appears to be manageable to a degree, as was the Cold War. But by the same token, another source of the uncanny sneaks in. While one could formerly still hope for God’s mercy, technology is relentless, it merely functions – or not. This is what the nuclear scientists – approved of by the state – wanted to find out when they first dropped the bomb on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. “All technology refers to the bomb,” Matt Shay, an employee of the nuclear industry and Nick Shay’s, the main protagonist’s brother, ponders. Matt visits, with his spouse Janet, a military testing ground in Arizona, the Sonoran Desert, which excites him, because the terrain, in its interplay with the war machinery, “remaps” a “neural process,” a “craving” from the “brain stem.” (U 451) The external mirror imaging of his covertly annihilatory mindset reaffirms his identity. For him people went “willingly” to the storage sites for nuclear weapons; scientists wanted to “meet some elemental need.” People wanted to find sites of “some higher condition.” Thus, the storage facilities for the most powerful instruments of death became destinations of pilgrimage. The skeptical Janet gets to the heart of the matter: “You make it sound like God,” while Matt goes on to fantasize “or some starker variation thereof,” in the country of evil – notably – the Russian tundra: “the visionary flash Underworld and “Terror Management” 37 of light, the critical mass that will call down the Hindu heavens, Kali and Shiva and all the grimacing lesser gods.” (U 485) Don DeLillo does not tell us if Oppenheimer was also present in Matt’s mind. We may well assume that Matt’s fantasies were shared by the vast majority of the US-Americans. Edgar Hoover was always fearful of apocalypse, which, in his case, was mainly due to subversive (predominantly anarchist, hippyish and communist) insurgents, “who tried to bring about apocalyptic change.” It was a relief when the state came to hold sway over “the most destructive power available. With nuclear weapons, this power became identified totally with the state. The mushroom cloud was the godhead of Annihilation and Ruin. The state controlled the means of apocalypse.” (U 563) But Hoover, uptight and paranoid as he was, was still apprehensive of internal (socio-cultural) “scruffy and free-fucking” forces, intent on shaking “the world.” (U 564) Clearly, the social changes in the three decades after the war engendered, as we shall see, existential to abysmal anxieties. Yet the atomic bomb (framed by the Cold War) proved by far the grimmest and hence most reliable reaper to visualize and bring death home to a degree. It provided the mixture of both subcutaneous pleasure and awe, of secular transcendence and existential reassurance: Death is imminent, but one is still there; it can be contained for the time being. On the other side, the globally cataclysmic effect the bomb held ready points again to Blumenberg’s idea that the Cold War may have been driven by a forced desire for a convergence of lifetime and world time. If our life ends, the Soviets and maybe the rest of the world will have to perish just the same. The Cold War bomb offered the very possibility of mediating death. It could be, superseded, sublated and distanced into something both feasible and abstract to a degree that for some it was no longer felt as instantaneously threatening. It moreover worked similarly to Thomas Hobbes’s biblical Leviathan, who was to embody all the citizens of a state on the grounds of their common fear of destruction. The description of the appearance of the bomb as “The godhead of Annihilation and Ruin” matches the evil God of the Gnosis as well as the wrathful Jahweh, the Old Testament God, who exceeds our power of imagination and cannot be named. Klara Sax, a garbage artist who repaints decommissioned B-52 airplanes, thereby turning the fatal machines into art, wistfully remembers the early years of the Cold War and its symbol and metonym, the sublime bomb: “[I]t out-imagined the mind.” (U 76) It evades easy media processing and framing, and thus provides one of the last approaches to the “Real”29: “You can’t name it. It’s too big or evil or outside your experience.” (U 77) In the early years of the Cold War, Albert Bronzini, Matt’s teacher, reads the Times coverage of the explosion of the first Soviet bomb, but fails to grasp and verbalize the unspeakable: He could not keep the image from entering his mind, the cloud that was not a cloud, the mushroom that was not a mushroom – the sense 38 Underworld and “Terror Management” of reaching feebly for a language that might correspond to the visible mass in the air. (U 668) Lenny Bruce, the sardonically clear-sighted comedian, realizes the parareligious and apocalyptic significance of the bomb: “We feel at home with this judgement.” The impending Last Judgement gives us, in other words, a sense of being. It directs our attention either to life itself, a kind of decisiveness (“Entschlossenheit”) to live it conscientiously and responsibly, or, much more common, to the distractions of “man” (to use Heidegger’s terms). It surely conveys intensity, emotions that we have lost in a technological society that has overcome most of the hazards our ancestors were exposed to. Eric Deming, a colleague of Matt, who, like other “bombheads,” is “awed by the inner music of bomb technology,” (U 404) enjoys spreading stories about the mortal effects (mainly cancerous) of the nuclear: “For the edge. The bite. The existential burn.” (U 406) Sister Alma Edgar, a nun and social worker in the Bronx, lined her walls with “Reynolds Wrap as a safeguard against nuclear fallout.” Yet she thought “a war might be thrilling. She often conjured the flash […].” (U 245) The Cold War deterrence strategy marked the appropriate political framework. The core of the “mutually assured destruction” – concept was that one must be capable and ready to fatally strike at any time, first, or in retaliation, without actually carrying it out. Its logic was both highly alarming and comforting. While the Soviets (as the story goes) were in possession of sufficient intercontinental ballistic missiles which could reach the US territory within a very short time, the Americans had B-52s, which were always in the air, equipped with bombs, of course. The aircrafts alternately approached the Soviet airspace at a very high altitude and peeled off only close to the border. They were “sweeping the Soviet borders,” (U 75) as Klara Sax maintains. Both parties knew, of course, that the other would always have enough time for a deadly response if one struck first. Any response would have a by far more disastrous effect than the bombing of Hiroshima. Consequently, one could be relatively sure that no one would strike. “The men came back and the targets were not destroyed.” (U 76) This means one was or could be permanently and thrillingly conscious of the fact of death and likewise relatively confident of its deferment on grounds of a first-strike determent. Death may happen, but not now. In this way, the bomb and the Cold War worked excellently as “proximal defenses” against death. Therefore, it is understandable that people looked back to the Cold War with nostalgia.30 In the early 1990s Klara Sax, the waste artist, remembers feeling “a sense of awe […] of mystery and danger and beauty.” She connects those emotions right away with “power”: It was stable, it was focused, it was a tangible thing. It was greatness, danger, terror, all those things. And it held us together, the Soviets and Underworld and “Terror Management” 39 us. Maybe it held the world together. You could measure things. You could measure hope and you could measure destruction. (U 76) Given that apocalypse, howsoever terrible it may be, appears to be gaugeable, balanced and sensuously palpable for all, it can even bring about some overarching collective identity. In these respects, Cold War apocalypse strongly resembles the religious medieval and early modern one. Traditional apocalypticists could foresee the date (based on some more or less willful interpretation of the Holy Scriptures and natural phenomena), measure tangibly the consequences and form large communities of followers (as e.g., Thomas Münzer). Klara does rather an intricate job and keeps pace with the times, retro as they were in the 1990s. By colorfully and lastingly repainting the B-52s, the bringers of death, she converts them into sublime works of art, removing them thus from timeliness. “We are not going to let these great machines expire in a field.” (U 70) She was motivated to start this gigantic project when she realized she had to “salvage” (U 78) the sexy pinup girls the former crew of the machines had painted on the nose as “a charm against death.” (U 77) She wants especially a “very blond” girl, called “Long Tall Sally,” to be part of her project: “This luck, this sign against death.” (U 78) Unnamable and unimaginable as the Old Testament bomb was, it could well channel and anchor the individual consciousness of death into something abstract beyond their space of experience. Klara wants to maintain its “awful” memory by lifting the B-52s out of time beyond transitoriness. She does not want to bring back the “force” of the Cold War, yet retain its sublime and identity-forming aesthetics. She conserves and exhibits the defunct B-52s because she thinks she can “find an element of felt life” and “show who we are.” (U 77) Yet all the same: They are converted into remote museum pieces amounting to another form of deadness and fetish, which will effect only a mitigated shudder of fear. Toward the end of Underworld, Nick Shay, the now global waste manager, visits a Soviet site where contaminated nuclear waste from Western countries is to be disposed of underground by “means of nuclear explosions.” (U 791) The mutual nuclear armament driven forth by the Soviets and more so by the Americans (from the 1970s at least) entailed “Five hundred nuclear explosions at the test site.” (U 799) After the victorious end of the Cold War, nuclear waste, the scrapped “godheads” and fetishes of death, are outsourced to find a temporary burial place in remote Kazakhstan. “The place is strange, frozen away, a specimen of our forgetfulness.” (U 793) The nearby city of Semipalatinsk features a “Museum of Misshapens” in which – in “Heinz pickle jars” – disfigured fetuses, monstrosities of all kinds, are preserved and displayed. And a local radiation clinic accommodates the radiated and doomed, blind and cancer suffering children who play a game of falling down and getting up: “They all 40 Underworld and “Terror Management” fall down, get up.” For the narrator they seem like the remains and remnants of the Cold War culture, the underworld and subconscious culture of the fear of death: “All the banned words, the secrets kept in whitewashed vaults, the half-forgotten vaults – they’re all out here now, seeping invisibly into the land and air, into the marrowed folds of the bone.” (U 802–3) Not unlike the American landscapes of consumer waste and debris outside the big cities, the Kazakhstan steppe absorbs the “halfforgotten” tokens, remainders of the Cold war. However, as it also seeps “into the marrowed folds of the bone” (U 803), it will return like “the secret history, the underhistory” (U 791) of any human waste. The iconic bomb is surely the most drastic and intuitive metonymy of apocalyptic death in Post-War Societies. But DeLillo employs a variety of other figurative representations that haunt, attract and capture the American imagination. He calls his first chapter “The Triumph of Death.” It is the title of an early modern painting by Pieter Bruegel (dated 1562) that reveals the most formidable and recurring (or revenant) doomsday scenario in the novel. The motif “haunts the novel, and infects it with its epic morbidity.”31 Peter Boxall not only extensively pursues reverberations and semantic fields of Bruegel’s painting, “lending the novel a medieval deathly hue,”32 he moreover juxtaposes it with another of Bruegel’s works that appear in the novel, namely “Children’s Games” (1560), which, rather than light-heartedness and innocence, comes to signify something “sinister,” (U 682) some “medieval awe […] that crawls beneath the midnight skin,” (U 678) for Klara and Bronzini. If the picture is related to the disconcerting play of the (above mentioned) doomed children in Kazak, late victims of the Cold War, then the novel may indeed be marked throughout by sinister negativity, or, in Boxall’s words, “an underlying connectedness between birth and death, innocence and corruption, redemption and damnation.”33 The close existential connection of birth and death has a respectable philosophical tradition associated with Sophocles (Antigone), Seneca, Schopenhauer or Emil Cioran, so has Negativity,34 especially since Hegel’s dialectics. But there is no negativity without positivity. Thus, the novel’s “celebration” and “witnessing” of “the triumph of death” is not only interwoven with (rather marginal) “unhomely” voices or “glossolalia” (as Lenny Bruce’s or the street preacher’s) and Nick Shay’s (self-)alienation and desire for (self-)transgression. Don DeLillo’s novel also unfolds an affirmative sensuousness and counter-memory (in the tactility and memory of the baseball leitmotif, or Klara’s desire to retain a memory of the young woman behind the pinup of “Long Tall Sally,” or the backward images of the Bronx)35 that opens up no less of a positive perspective.36 In those passages, DeLillo does not celebrate death. The blackened pages notwithstanding, the entire text in its descriptive and lyrical richness is a celebration of life, sublating its, to be sure, largely melancholic content in an extraordinary aesthetic experience. Underworld and “Terror Management” 41 Crowds Bruegel’s “The Triumph of Death” was reproduced large-scale in Life Magazine on the first of October 1951. It floats down from the stands among other bits and pieces of paper at the climax of the legendary baseball match between the New York Giants and the Dodgers on 3 October 1951, and gets stuck on Edgar J. Hoover’s shoulder, deeply arresting his attention. He “can’t take his eyes off” the “painting crowded with medieval figures who are dying or dead.” (U 41) It is highly significant that at the same time when Hoover becomes absorbed into the apocalyptic scenery, the crowd goes frenetic, delirious, merging ecstatically. Bobby Thomson has swung and tomahawked the ball, and Russ, the stadium speaker, “feels the crowd around him, a shudder passing through the stands.” (U 42) He gets carried away, becomes nothing but “shout,” repeating excitedly: “The Giants win the pennant and they’re going crazy.” (U 43) The teammates “are stunned by a happiness that has collapsed on them,” (U 44) the fans “are coming down to crowd the railings,” (U 44) “a thousand pounding hearts,” people “dipping frantically.” (U 45) The crowd is “happy and dazed,” the fans “pressed together […] screamers and berserkers […] those who will light the city with their bliss.” (U 51) Russ’s “voice is dead and buried. It went to heaven on a sunbeam.” (U 54) The famous opening chapter of Mao II portrays the wedding of thirteen thousand devotees37 of Sun Myung Moon, the leader of the Unification Church, in the Yankee Stadium New York. “The future belongs to the crowds,” the chapter ends. (M 16) Indeed, modernity has created many occasions for the secular subject to merge in and with a crowd (which may well represent an anthropological disposition). People love to assemble as they are taken up, absorbed in the communication with the other, the more so if the common cause is ritually and/or emotionally highly charged as in mass weddings or crucial sports events.38 The climax of the match of the Dodgers versus the Giants resembles a modern version of a Dionysian orgy. The mass is getting beside itself; people transcend the principium individuationis, overcome their individuation. For the time being, they lose their sense of temporality and go beyond themselves. Although mitigated within “the civilizing process,”39 this nevertheless means a return to amorphous anonymity, a form of selfdissolution (Nietzsche’s “Entzweiung:” disfigurement, dismemberment or diremption), and, amounting to the same, an immersion into an allencompassing unity. What happens is, on the one hand, a kind of rehearsal of self-loss,40 yet, on the other, the quotidian life-toward-death, the everlatent fear of death becomes absent in the wake of Bobby Thomson’s “Shot Heard ‘Round the World.” Modern mass events, such as Baseball, American football or soccer (besides, e.g., rallies, pop concerts, funerals), form culturally constructed access doors for the contingent miracle. Even 42 Underworld and “Terror Management” the (technically) outstanding favorite may be defeated and succumb to the zeal and stamina of the competitor. It is also a matter of luck, coincidence, or fatum, with no life-threatening consequences, though. The fans form a religio, a secular religious bond. Russ, asserting the miraculous character of the event, “thinks they will carry something out of here that joins them all in a rare way, that binds them to a memory with protective power […] a thing like this keeps us safe.” (U 59–60) The memory of the state of exception attains a magical potency to fend off death. Bobby Thomson becomes the prophet and the memorabilia or relics become devotional objects. Nick Shay eventually pays 34,500 dollars for the ball, which has turned into a sensuous worship surrogate. The Dodgers, the losers, form no less of a deep bond over loss and mourning, having suffered a kind of proxy death, which entails a melancholy in which one may even self-compassionately please oneself. It will help to reconcile oneself with loss.41 The very moment when the miracle happens becomes an extraordinary instant in everyone’s life history. They make “it a point to register the time:” 3:58. People are throwing all kinds of paper waste, from laundry tickets to torn-up love letters they had carried on their bodies for years, revealing “the fans’ intimate wish to be connected to the event, unendably, in the form of pocket litter, personal waste, a thing that carries a shadow identity.” (U 45) The moment marks an outstanding breaking-up of the continuum of abstract history, of the existential tedium of work and reproduction, always reminiscent of transience and the course of life: “[T]his midcentury moment enters the skin more lastingly.” (U 60) Rather than the history of “eminent leaders,” it is another condition of a deep psychosomatic resonance that will define the past for those who were present.42 In Hoover’s eyes (and Don DeLillo’s language) the action in the stadium (“[T]he fans pressed together,” 51), the action within Bruegel’s painting (“The meatblood colors and the massed bodies,” 50) and the action on the Kazakh Test Sites (U 50) commingle. In the two months preceding this memorable and legendary game, the Soviets (according to Wikipedia) had conducted five nuclear tests in Kazakhstan, which were featured in Times Magazine with a spectacular cover story. On the very day the Thomson shot resounded around the earth, the Soviets successfully detonated another bomb precipitating the Cold War.43 Yet while the fans are entirely absorbed by this state of exception, Hoover is incapable of abandoning himself to the ecstasy. The temporary self-loss of the orgiastic fans and the orgy of death in Bruegel’s painting exercise some morbid fascination but no release or catharsis. Uncontrolled behavior is excruciating for him. The powerful and paranoid director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation continues to be pursued by images of death and morbidity. (See U 574, 575, 576, 577, 578) For him, unlike Nick Shay, there is no relief. Underworld and “Terror Management” 43 Pop and Consumption: “Rejoice, Redeemed Flock” (J. S. Bach) or “Cocksucker Blues” The possibility of death, fetishized, transferred, and thus temporarily fended off, pervades Don DeLillo’s post-war society. In fact, the imaginary representation of, or visual allusions to, death are often closely related to forms of entertainment which modern culture has precisely formed to aestheticize (romanticize, or transfigure) death, divert from death and even transcend mortality. Pop culture has devised multifaceted arrays of “terror management,”44 esoteric orgies and cults among hippies (Aleister Crowley, professing the extinction of the self, The Tibetan Book of the Dead, The Egyptian Book of the Dead, “Conflation”). The Grateful Dead became the eminent rock band of the 1970s; the skull, a popular accessory on rings or black t-shirts; Metal (“Black Sabbath”) or Gothic rock became phenomenally successful music styles. This was also, to be sure, a matter of pure provocation, a means to break up decrepit structures or simply a strategy for creating media attention (and high sales figures). The anti-bourgeois stance of the post-war generation was politically motivated, but to a large degree it also came down to no more than a kind of cultivated decadence, which, in its mixture of fascination and repulsion, went beyond a merely fictive play with doom and demise. Part 4 of Underworld, entitled “Cocksucker Blues,” offers an impressive instance of that historical mentality. It is particularly remarkable for DeLillo’s extraordinary skill in conveying the corresponding atmosphere.45 In 1974, Klara, her boyfriend Miles and her sister Acey meet a film group in a loft to watch Robert Frank’s 1972 documentary (now accessible on YouTube) of the first Rolling Stones US Concert Tour after the Altamont concert in 1969, notorious for a murder right in front of the stage. The focalizer, often indistinguishable from the heterodiegetic narrator, is Klara, but Acey, who has been to one of the concerts, chips in with her comments and memories (a roadie had tried to abuse her in one of the tunnels beneath the concert hall). Frank’s film is, of course, a highly defamiliarized and selective medial representation of the tour, using transition and aperture to immerse the fast-changing settings in “washed blue light” suggesting “an unreliable reality.” It is yet no less real, for that matter, even if it appears “subversive.” The aesthetics of the film is in keeping with what it depicts. It creates a hazy and shaky montage of concert sequences and intimate pictures of scenes behind the stage, in hotels and on an airplane. The scenes “fly by.” They radiate “a kind of crepuscular light […] corruptive and ruinous, a beautiful tunnel blue.” (U 382–3) People hang around in anonymous rooms or are asleep on planes, indulging in “that edge-of-time feeling.” (U 383) The tour entourage appears to have entered a time tunnel and emptied-out vacuum, which leads either into nothingness or hazy indeterminateness, or, alternatively, onto the stage and the hysteria of the masses: “the loud white glare and prehistoric 44 Underworld and “Terror Management” roar.” (U 384) The orgies of Dionysian disfigurement take place in front of and behind the stage. The shutter dissolve, in contradistinction to the other takes, uses “gelled red,” producing, as Klara thinks, “the backlit nimbus of higher dying.” But rather than on the ecstatic self-forgetfulness of the concert crowd, the film focuses on “[p]eople sitting around, two people asleep in a lump or tripped out or they could be unnoticeably dead, the endless noisy boredom of the tour – tunnels and runways.” (U 383) Klara loves the “blue” and these “nothing-happening parts” The indulgence in nothingness is accompanied and reinforced by “dope, sex” and, again, mutual “picture taking,” (U 385) narcissistically losing themselves in images of themselves. Some voice asks whether she “suck[s] him off.” “No,” she answers, “Just took a picture with him.” (U 384) The entourage continues to film themselves, “nothing happening.” There are heroin, cocaine and ribald sex scenes in which pale and girlish groupies are evidently used and abused. There are “mumbling junkies on a bed” squinting at the needle. While a man threads a needle into his arm, another one talks about the “Tomb of the Unknown Junkie.” Rather than a celebration of vitality, freedom, and protest against an ossified and deadening post-war society, the film depicts a gloomy doomsday scenario. Pop culture’s hedonism comes down to narcissism and escapist self-destruction. It would be too easy, though, to reduce this demeanor to the tedium of some spoiled children of an affluent society. The drugged and sexed absorption into the pleasure principle, which, in fact, becomes devoid of pleasure and an utter linguistic and mental indifference mark the climax of what Heidegger (in Being and Time) would call “Fallenness” (“Verfallenheit”). Bored with themselves, and with being in general, they desire the “edge,” a definite mortal kiss. They seek the closeness of nothingness or death to overcome the very fear of nothingness. The weary historical time, which is always also a time-toward-death, appears suspended. One rushes forward on planes and nonetheless seems to be in a time capsule. It is notable that this dreariness forms also the material for an artifact and a wider audience. For the latter, the film – in its very fleetingness – aestheticizes and thereby distances the orgiastic absences. The audience can imaginatively and without harm indulge and partake in the experience of “fallenness.” One of the postmodern ways with death or terror management: Life is sped up to get more out of it, it is intensified, moving faster from one timeframe of surrogate diversion into another. Yet seen from a distance, it is only the flight from nothingness and boredom, which gives a premonition of death. Accordingly, there is a lot of traveling in Underworld; Nick Shay is always on the road or in the air, globally managing waste, unless he is running. “Everybody is everywhere at once,” his son remarks. (U 805) In airports and planes, “incredibly many people” are “intersecting,” Nick observes, vast crowds “scatter and vanish in minutes.” (U 105)46 Underworld and “Terror Management” 45 Consumerism and Waste Watching the “Cocksucker Blues,” Klara Sax’s attention is caught by Mick Jagger’s mouth, a public eye-catcher which seemed to be omnipresent: “Maybe,” she thinks, “it was the corporate logo of the Western world.” As such, Acey replies “everything that everybody’s eaten in the last ten years has gone into that mouth,” (U 382) which in the feature is shown “gargling and spitting, licking ice-cream cone.” The Jagger logo may have had a satirical touch, but his pouting mouth, thick lips and licking tongue became something of the oral icon and symbol of the 1960s to 1980s for the never-ending intake of products charged with desire and promise. Like no other group in the 1970s, The Rolling Stones, notwithstanding their anti-bourgeois demeanor, fueled conspicuous consumption, demonstrating ostentatiously a sexualized flamboyant jetset life. Pop and design, which, from the 1960s onwards, lastingly inspired one another, created the desire to aestheticize and transfigure one’s lifeworld. The modernist Klara Sax, without naming any movement, may have that in mind, when (in 1974) she perceives contemporary art as something “in which the moment is heroic, American art, the do-it-now, the fuck-the-past – she could not follow that.” (U 377) Even the most trivial consumer objects and commodities were now given a brightness and radiance, as well as linguistic charm,47 that pop artists such as Andy Warhol, Peter Blake or Richard Hamilton only needed to reproduce and exhibit (in the institutional context of art, to be sure) to label and identify them as art. The artistic effects of alienation and distanciation both exposed (and ironized) what the commodities promised, namely elation and elevation over the hard and stolid facts of reality. With the splendor of bright colors and their beauty, they associate what art traditionally was to represent, namely timelessness and, if not immortality, a sphere beyond sordid transitoriness (as the mural wall paintings in the “Condomology” U 109). Consumption, less for use value than imaginary value, held the prospect of regeneration and continuation. It worked and works as a fortification and shelter against the contingencies of life, the more so in what Ulrich Beck described as modern “risk society”48 with potentially apocalyptic (ecological, nuclear, virus epidemic) dimensions. Objects and commodities serve to avert and absorb the undercurrent prospect of nothingness;49 consumption affirms your identity and existence: I consume, therefore I am.50 If they do not suggest a sense of (self-) transcendence, they convey an erotic, even sexual impression of individual procreation and reproduction. To consume then means to continue one’s self; consumerism makes sure that one lives on: consummatum est, or, put another way: “Consume or die.” (See Fn. 107) In White Noise, the spheres of consumerism, especially the world of supermarkets, were comically, often farcically, represented as spheres of spiritual and communal elation. Here, Eric Deming, the son of one of Nick’s 46 Underworld and “Terror Management” colleagues, opens the large fridge and assures himself of the brilliant surrogate world of consumption. He masturbates with a condom (he enjoys its “sleek metallic shimmer, like his favorite weapons system” U 514) and finds that Jane Mansfield’s breasts are reminiscent of the “bumper bullets on a Cadillac.” (U 517) Self-perception and the awareness of others are completely filtered by the images created by the entertainment, advertisement and weapons industries. Eric then opens the fridge only to take a reassuring look at the cornucopian wealth inside: The bright colors, the product names and logos, the array of familiar shapes, the tinsel glitter of things in foil wrap, the general sense of benevolent gleam, of eyeball surprise, the sense of a tiny holiday taking place on the shelves and in the slots, a world unspoiled and ever renewable. (U 517–6) In Eric’s “eyes” the commodities have assumed (in the words of Karl Marx) “a fantastic form […] the productions of the human brain appear as independent beings endowed with life.” They have “changed into something transcendent,” – a “sinnlich übersinnliches Ding,” i.e., “sensuous supersensible or supernatural thing.” Rather than to the use value of the products, Eric is drawn to the independent life the products seem to have taken on, the “bright” and “tinsel glitter,” the “benevolent gleam” and “tiny holiday” celebrated in the fridge. Cut off from the conditions of their production,51 done up and sexed up aesthetically and market-compliantly, they adopt a magical appearance, which suggests the “mistenveloped regions of the religious world.”52 A lotusland “world unspoiled and ever renewable” is the allure to keep the capitalist society consuming and probably a very efficient antidote to existential angst, decline and death. Constant renewal through the purchase of something “new” makes people look to a brighter future without woe and degeneration. In Underworld, as in White Noise, DeLillo enjoys quoting and satirizing commercial tags (“War and treaties, eat your Wheaties,” (U 141) and brand names, as “Lexus,” “Jell-O” and “Kelvinator.” By interspersing them into his narrative, often disconnected and without an immediate reference to the context, he exposes the linguistic arbitrariness as well as utter emptiness of those phrases. The signified or even referent is, if at all, of secondary importance. Indeed, as soon as the product is used up, its imaginary charm wanes and fades away. As we saw in White Noise, the effect, beyond the short-term release of dopamine and other happiness hormones, is quite to the contrary. Commodities continuously point to the passage of time and the fading of possibilities, or, by the same token, transience and mortality. Melancholy is always already inscribed into them. Consumere, as we saw above, also meant, “the using up and physical exhaustion of matter,” the wasting of the body and (related to consummare), the completion of something: consummatum est. Underworld and “Terror Management” 47 Indeed, there is no life without metabolism and no metabolism without wastage, excretion and energy dissipation. Becoming entails fading and perishing. Products in advanced consumerist societies are manufactured precisely not to last in the function they were purchased for; they are made to become what people by no means wish to become, namely waste. This is one of the ironic consequences of the advanced consumption industry. But due to oil-based plastic, metalworking and the nuclear industry, waste has increasingly achieved durability, the transient commodity a certain, albeit dysfunctional and useless, lastingness. The higher the turnover of products and consumption (in increasingly non-agricultural societies), the higher the amount of waste. As a breeding ground for germs and disease, it has always been a source of anxiety, but with the evolution of inorganic chemistry and nuclear physics it turns out, at a progressive rate, to be imminently life-threatening. In an affluent society of hyperconsumption and growing energy turnover (such as post-war North America), both the industrial management and the cultural reverberations of waste became a significant issue. Waste, then, besides historical and individual (counter-) memory, the Cold War and the bomb, is probably the outstanding motif of Underworld. Nearly all of the commentators53 on the novel have dealt with it and its sociopsychological undercurrents. Waste turns up again and again in the novel. Nick Shay and his friend Brian Classic are waste managers; in the New York of the 1970s, garbage is frequently piling up in the streets (after labor strikes), the recycling of garbage has evolved into a household ritual, Klara Sax turns trash into art. Waste is a disconcertingly ambiguous and ambivalent matter. It is immanently linked with what imaginatively and really perpetuates our lives. Yet as a meaningless and potentially obnoxious remainder, waste reminds us incessantly of the endless preliminaries and futility of consumption. It points to the compulsive repetition and disillusionment consumption entails, and hence works as a constant portent of death. It must be disposed of and buried underground.54 Waste, on the other hand, is linked with what makes life possible. As it maintains our leftovers and cultural memory, it preserves at least the semblance of immortality. It persists as a (although bacteriologically) living matter; without cease rubbish plants emit odors which remain subcutaneously connected with us: “Every bad smell is about us,” Nick reflects on occasion of a visit to a huge waste-treatment plant in Holland: “We make our way through the world and come upon a scene that is medieval-modern, a city of high-rise garbage, the hell reek of every perishable object ever thrown together, and it seems like something we’ve been carrying all our lives.” (U 104) Smells bring back past experiences involuntarily. (Proust had, of course, different scents in mind.) Owing to their very durability, garbage dumps have become memorials and reuniting archives of human civilization. “It is necessary,” Nick asserts, “to respect what we discard.” Brian Classic, “invigorated” when visiting a huge landfill near New York, thinks of the “Great Pyramid at Giza,” a “unique cultural deposit,” (U 184) which merges, includes and preserves the consumptive leftovers of 48 Underworld and “Terror Management” humankind: “[I]t all ends up here, newsprints, emery boards, sexy underwear […].” (U 185) In our waste, we appear to live individually and collectively on; it forms, according to a Russian specialist, “the secret history, the underhistory, the way archeologists dig out the history of early cultures.” (U 791) Waste gives the impression of resurging and arising again by itself from the underground. It may suggest some mundane redemption: “Maybe we feel a reverence for waste, for the redemptive qualities of the things we use and discard. Look how they come back to us, alight with a kind of brave aging.” (U 809) Waste management (the more so for the “Church Fathers of waste,” U 102) has evolved into a form of religion: “Waste is a religious thing.” (U 88) Yet, like human remains, waste, for its potentially noxious effects, must be buried,55 with care and reverence, though. Even waste management has become a means of terror management. To manage waste is to manage death. Media, Killing, Death The (historical) Texas Highway Killer “Richard” leads, in DeLillo’s narrative, a non-existence. He is largely disregarded by his sick and infirm father and his morose and pushy mother, with whom, in his 40s, he still lives. His friend Bud, who “wasn’t really his friend,” (U 262) doesn’t respect him either. Walking into Bud’s house, the latter “barely noticed him, it was like the normalcy of dying. It was the empty hollow thing of not being there.” (U 268) He has been relegated from a supermarket booth to a checkout counter, where he is yelled at by dissatisfied customers. It depresses him that now he “has to talk in the open space where anyone could hear.” (U 272) In his parallel life, though, Richard has developed the routine to maintain the “normalcy” of living by shooting people to death while driving on highways. He, moreover, calls “the superstation in Atlanta” (U 269) to talk and make (a one-sided) eye contact with the TV anchorwoman Sue Ann. When he drives out to kill, he feels “the true force of the wind.” (U 269) These are his ways to fill in the void of his being. For Richard to do someone to death seems less a means of exerting absolute power, to be – deliberately and instantaneously – the godlike master of life and death (surely the main motive of serial killers, as it was, on another level, Hitler’s.) He wants to be taken notice of and thereby become someone, in and through the perception of the other – perversely and most effectively in those of the next of kin of his victims: He came alive in them. He lived in their histories, in the photographs in the newspaper, he survived in the memories of the family, lived with the victims, lived on, merged, twinned, quadrupled, continued into double figures. (U 271) Underworld and “Terror Management” 49 If this desire has not been created by media in the first instance, media is certainly highly accommodating. With his special voice device, he can talk to Sue Ann “from the heart,” while watching her lips and eyes: “This was the waking of the knowledge that he was real […]. He was coming into himself.” (U 270) Through the medium as an intermediary, he metamorphoses into an imaginary “person.” Yet since his identity is only constituted through the other on the set, who will (according to the logic of the medium) soon lose interest, he has to keep on killing.56 There is, as one may assume, probably a recursive and intrinsic relationship between media, violence and death, which has beset the American (indeed the global) imagination, with the Hollywood dream factory, TV, reality TV and not least private videotaping as catalysts.57 Since Americana, media has been an ongoing subject in DeLillo’s novels. Especially in Libra, he paradigmatically demonstrates that we are and become the way we are only against the background of the pictures and images which media produces and which we cannot help consuming. They produce a subject position. Media is the vehicle for adopting or becoming the image of the masses. Doing an outrageous thing of extreme violence will help. It fascinates and captures. According to a 1993 report of the American Psychological Association, “[a]n average American youth will witness 200,000 violent acts on television before age 18.” Another source states that “weapons appear on prime-time television an average of nine times each hour.” Almost all movies (91%) “contain violence, even extreme violence.”58 Of course, it would be shortsighted to claim that media “hyperconsumption”59 furthers our disposition to commit violent acts. One must not forget that especially American TV performs in accordance with a clearly communicated moral code and manipulation of sympathy. Yet it certainly affects our imaginary and the way we psychologically manage violence and death. The fact, however, that there are copycat killers, following Richard’s steps without being recognized, points back to the first possible motive for murder: to bring someone to death willfully, abruptly and randomly just for the absolute power kick. This upsets Richard: “I know who I am. Who is he?” (U 272) Accidentally, one of the murders of the Texas Highway Killer was videotaped by a teenage girl in a family car. DeLillo’s narrator first wonders about the consequences of this random and innocent shooting for the girl, the hazy and strange phenomenology of the video itself filming a man in the fast process of dying.60 It is indeed hardly imaginable what such an unheard-of “event” that cuts through “reason” and “expectation” does to an ingenious teenage girl. Toward the end of the chapter, he reflects on the perception of the moment itself: Seeing someone at the moment he dies, dying unexpectedly. This is reason alone to stay fixed to the screen. It is instructional, watching a 50 Underworld and “Terror Management” man shot dead as he drives along on a sunny day. It demonstrates an elemental truth, that every breath you take has two possible endings. (U 159–160) The tape has a strange appeal. One keeps on watching it “every time,” even though it becomes “deader and colder,” sucking “the air right out of your chest.” (U 160) The gripping thing here is the simultaneity of the nonsimultaneous, in other words, the ordinary continuity of existence along with its immediate cessation (“driving along on a sunny day”). Due to the incursion of the unheard-of, breath as the epitome of life may discontinue all of a sudden, leaving a void in time. It is a reminder of the basic fragility and contingency of existence: [I]t could happen anytime, or not. For the spellbound spectator, it comes to pass like the crisis, a peripeteia plus catastrophe without the retarding moment. What occurs, is the absolute Other. To be sure, the medial framing predetermines and guides our perceptual process. There is some inevitability: “Because once the tape starts rolling it can only end one way. This is what the context requires.” (U 160) Yet dying fascinates here not only because death comes across in a mediatized, slightly unreal way. It is the other who dies. The film engages your visual and aural senses and thereby drags you in more intensely than written news. Yet, even though the video shows a real event, you are at the same time aware of the virtual status of your involvement. You realize continuously or at least intermittently that you are outside of the picture61; once you have got off and escaped with your life, the “distal defense” mechanism is at work. Dying by proxy is, after all, the most effective way to fend off the fear of death. Moment of Moments: Apparition There is a structural analogy between death and epiphany. Even if death announces itself (if the person suffers from a terminal illness), it nevertheless bursts into life underivably. It effects a hiatus in and cessation of temporality. Thereafter, everything is different from aforetime. Epiphanic apparitions mark an unpredictable and indeterminable temporal crisis that results in something not comprehensible in rational terms. Unlike death, though, they do not lead into darkness,62 but to spiritual illumination and enlightenment, which may entail even a possible reconciliation with death. It is toward the end of the novel that DeLillo relates such a spectacular virtual incident, which involves the apparition and resurrection of the 12-year-old girl Esmeralda and the spiritual transformation of Sister Edgar63 in the Bronx (Nick Shay’s former teacher and place of origin). It is less of an epiphany,64 which (in their modern versions) are usually singular, but rather a vision that shows up repeatedly to attract an overwhelmed crowd. What happens is a secular version of a Marian apparition, a “mystery.”65 Underworld and “Terror Management” 51 Esmeralda was a homeless and derelict girl, Sister Edgar an “old spindle-shanked” and embittered nun who wanted to save the girl both physically and spiritually. (U 810–11) Esmeralda becomes the victim of an utterly senseless crime of a psychotic who rapes her, hits her, and throws her off a four-story building. Sister Edgar is shattered by her cruel fate, but reconciled with the sheer fact of death through the apparition that descends upon the Bronx community like a divine miracle. When the headlights of a commuter train sweep across a billboard, advertising a brand of orange juice (“Minute Maid,” U 820), it is the face of the murdered girl that appears: “She sees Esmeralda’s face take shape under the rainbow of bounteous juice […] and there is a sense of someone living in the image, an animating spirit […] She feels something break upon her. An angelus of clearest joy.” (U 822) The crowd, along with Sister Edgar, goes into a religious ecstasy: Women “roll their eyes to heaven,” fall into a “trance.” Edgar experiences a kind of Pentecostal revelation, which makes her “pour into” and become one with the enthused crowd, embracing the Bronx gang leader and graffiti artist Ismael: “She looks into his face and breathes the air he breathes and enfolds him in her laundered cloth.” (U 823) The stadium transcendence of the merging crowd at the beginning of the novel is paralleled by this religious communion at the end – another most effective way of “terror management.” Edgar’s mortal fear of the impure, of germs and fatal contagion is gone. She keeps the girl’s image tightly in her mind and dies “peacefully in her sleep.” (U 824) She ironically ends up in a Cyberspace fantasy,66 which closes the novel. One should note, however, that DeLillo’s miraculous event is to be taken with a pinch of salt. The face reappears only for a split fleeting second on the billboard before it is dark again, and on the following day the board is wiped blank for new commodity advertisements: “Space available.” (U 824) The apparent miracle is first replaced by blankness and nothingness, which in turn will soon be filled up again with another glorified item of consumerism that comes down, after all, to another, yet far less satisfactory means of “terror management.” Consumption is nevertheless a profane and fast surrogate, which dispels the fear of death for the time being, and has rendered religion superfluous for many. The apparition may also have been contrived, as DeLillo suggests, by Ismael who has a record of painting trains and whose friends had already sprayed memorial graffiti for Esmeralda. Visions, epiphanies and miracles always depend, of course, on a subjective perspective; Don DeLillo never fails to communicate the ambiguity of those experiences. There are second-order views, especially when it comes to death and its seeming overcoming. The vision nevertheless epitomizes visually the mnemonic effect a deceased person may have in the imaginary of the bereaved. She appears somehow really present and perceptible, to be at the same time (or within a moment) unconsolably absent. This is the subject of Don DeLillo’s subsequent novel The Body Artist. 52 Underworld and “Terror Management” Notes 1 Contemporary ecological apocalypses may be traced back to the Club of Rome’s “Limits to Growth,” which was published in 1972 (against the background of a looming oil crisis in 1973). Other notable incidences which motivated the apocalyptic consciousness were the Bhopal gas disaster in 1984, the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill in 1989 or the emblematic German “waldsterben” in the 1980s and 1990s. The 2020ff. Corona crisis, with viruses probably passed over from wildlife animals, marks a new frightening quality. These crises appear to permeate more and more upon individual realities. 2 Klaus Vondung sees a “kupierte[n] Apokalypse” at work in modernity. Klaus Vondung, Apokalypse ohne Ende (Heidelberg: Winter, 2018), 122 and his seminal study Die Apokalypse in Deutschland (München: DTV, 1988). 3 John R. Hall, Apocalypse: From Antiquity to the Empire of Modernity (Cambridge: Polity Press, 2009), 220. 4 Ibid., 3. 5 Quoted in Alexander-Kenneth Nagel, “‘Siehe, ich mache alles neu?’: Apokalyptik und sozialer Wandel,” in Apokalyptik und kein Ende? Apokalyptik und kein Ende?, ed. Bernd U. Schipper/Georg Plasger (Göttingen: Vandenhoek & Ruprecht, 2007), 253–72, here 254. 6 Hans-Magnus Enzensberger, “Randbemerkung zum Weltuntergang,” in Finale! Das kleine Buch vom Weltuntergang, ed. Dietrich Harth (München: Beck, 1999), 185–88, here 185. 7 Hall 2009, 2. 8 Yet the death of her husband is for Lauren existentially so incisive that, for a certain period, it marks for her the end of time or personal apocalypse. 9 For the devastating effects of the polio epidemic in 1944, one may turn to Philip Roth’s heart-rendering novel Nemesis (London: Jonathan Cape, 2010). 10 The street preacher’s mythology is typical for the structure of conspiracy theories. He offers a highly complex, but somehow immediately comprehensible story on analogy, to utterly reduce the complexity of contemporary social and political risks. 11 See Boxall 2006, 189–90. 12 Ibid., 190. 13 W. B. Yeats, The Collected Poems of W. B. Yeats (London: Macmillan, 1985), 210–1: “Turning and turning in the widening gyre/The falcon cannot hear the falconer. Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold.” 14 Reinhart Kosellek, Vergangene Zukunft. Zur Semantik geschichtlicher Zeiten (Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1989). 15 See also Michael Makropoulos, who refers to Kosellek and Blumenberg, “Modernität als Kontingenzkultur. Konturen eines Konzepts,” in Kontingenz, eds. Gerhart v. Graevenitz, Odo Marquard (München: Fink, 1998), 55–80. 16 James T. Patterson, Great Expectations: The United States, 1945–1974 (New York/Oxford: Oxford UP, 1996). 17 Patterson 1996, viii. 18 This slogan is quoted by the editor of the Oxford History of the United States C. Vann Woodward in his introduction to Grand Expectations, (xvii). 19 Patterson 1996, 70. 20 James T. Patterson, Restless Giant: The United States from Watergate To Bush v. Gore (New York/Oxford: Oxford UP, 2005), 6. 21 Patterson 2005, 5. 22 Patterson 1996, 71. 23 Eric Avila, American Cultural History (Oxford: Oxford UP, 2018), 84. Underworld and “Terror Management” 53 24 Avila, 91. 25 “Secular” does not mean there were no religious energies, aspirations, desires, etc., left in the United States, on the contrary. 26 There is by now a vast corpus of literature on Underworld. Good essays to begin with are Patrick O’Donnell, “Underworld,” in The Cambridge Companion to Don DeLillo, ed. John N. Duvall (Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2008), 108–21; Thomas Hill Schaub, “Underworld, Memory, and the Recycling of Cold War Narrative,” in Don DeLillo: Mao II, Underworld, Falling Man, ed. Stacey Olster (New York/London: Continuum, 2011), 69–82; John Duvall, Underworld: A Reader’s Guide (New York/London: Continuum, 2002). 27 See, e.g., https://www.history.com/news/live-from-nevada-its-an-a-bomb-test; https://www.google.de/search?q=nuclear+blast+nevada&client=firefox-bab&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwiymNjqqczpAhVN6QKHaKiD68Q_AUoAnoECA0QBA&biw=1366&bih=626#imgrc=q8uZR folnzpWkM. 28 See Robert Jungk, Brighter than a thousand suns: a personal history of the atomic scientists (New York: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 1958), 201. The quote can also be found on: http://www.faktoider.nu/oppenheimer_eng.html. For a corresponding reference to Oppenheimer (and Teller), see U 466. 29 Klara Sax refers to Oppenheimer, who, according to her, called the early bomb “merde,” that is “shit.” Shit belongs indeed to the sphere of the “Real.” 30 Surely, the so-called asymmetric wars that replaced the symmetric Cold War proved by far less calculable and comfortable. 31 Boxall 2006, 179. 32 Ibid., 181. One example will do: When the “old war nun” (U 245) Edgar watches people come out of the subway, she cannot help associating the skeletons, that deeply impressed her in a subterranean chapel in Rome and she remembers thinking “that these are the dead who will come out of the earth to lash and cudgel the living, to punish the sins of the living – death, yes, triumphant.” (U 249) 33 Boxall 2006, 182. 34 For Negativity see my essay “Über die Unvermeidbarkeit der Modernisierung. Oder warum wir uns mit Transhumanismus und neuen Technologien beschäftigen müssen: Neue Perspektiven und alte Vorbehalte,” in Transhumanismus, Posthumanismus und neue Technologien, ed. Philipp Wolf (Leipzig: Leipziger Universitätsverlag, 2020), 1–37. 35 See my chapter on Underworld in: Philipp Wolf, Modernization and the Crisis of Memory (Amsterdam/New York, NY: Rodopi, 2002), 169–91. 36 I would not share Boxall’s teleological interpretation of Don DeLillo’s postwar history as an apocalyptic movement toward the “arrival of the millennial moment.” The apocalypse – a figure of thought – remains one of endless deferment. I would share even less Boxall’s identification of death or the “catastrophe” with the “globalization of capital,” (Boxall 183) the “Americanisation” (Boxall 177) of everything, “global capitalism” and “apocalyptic truth.” (Boxall 207) I would rather contend that capitalism is per se nothing but a now universally accepted (and rather successful) system of organizing work and trade, for better or worse. But I do also think that capitalism (esp. growth and accumulation) holds a number of means (surrogates, escapist diversions) in store which enable people – if only temporarily – to “terror-manage” death and nothingness: consumption, work, mobility. 37 “They assemble themselves so tightly […] that the effect is one of transformation. […] they become one continuous wave.” (M 3) 38 Totalitarian regimes are certainly very good at making use of this. On the other hand, they are strongly suspicious of the basic right to assembly. 54 Underworld and “Terror Management” 39 The term is borrowed from Norbert Elias, The Civilizing Process (London: Blackwell, 1994). 40 DeLillo mentions two heart attacks. (U 48) 41 Nick’s early loss of his father is an “unconscious motive” for his “eventual purchase of the Thomson ball.” (Duvall 2002, 39) 42 For many West-German “boomers,” the peace demonstrations in Bonn in 1981 (300,000 people) and 1982 (500,000) against the NATO Double-Track Decision had a similar life-shaping effect. 43 The juxtaposition of the events was clearly intended by DeLillo. 44 One should make clear that it would be too easy to claim that the many pop stars who died too early – most of them through the abuse of drugs or alcohol (Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, Jim Morrison) were escapist hedonists, who failed to manage death. The psychological as well as media backgrounds and circumstances differ and are surely too complex. Here I can only deal with general symptomatic trends and tendencies. 45 Ekphrasis, or for that matter, the description of (historical) filmic material is a means DeLillo frequently recurs to. Don DeLillo’s short story “BaaderMeinhof” provides an impressive example, reprinted in The Angel Esmeralda: Nine Stories (New York: Scribner, 2011), 105–18. See also my essay “Memory and Ekphrasis in Early Modern, Modern and Postmodern English and American Literature,” in Anglistentag München 2003, eds. Christoph Bode et al. (Trier: Wissenschaftlicher Verlag, 2004), 411–25. 46 For “Locomotion and Flexibility” in Underworld, see: Wolf 2002, 177–8. 47 DeLillo caricatures this in a passage where Brian Glassic and Nick visit the Condomology shop, set in the 1980s (when the Aids pandemic was still at its height): “Behind the products and their uses we glimpsed the industry of vivid description. Dermasilk and astroglide and reservoir-tipped.” (U 111) 48 Ulrich Beck, Risk Society: Towards a New Modernity (London: Sage Publications, 1992). The “Risk Society” is already virulent in the many hazard warnings on various packagings DeLillo cites in his portray of the Demings’s household in 1957: “If swallowed, induce vomiting at once,” or “May cause discoloration of urine or feces.” (U 515, 516) Eric Deming also works for the nuclear industry. 49 Cf. Duvall 2002, 60. 50 Similarly, Don DeLillo in an interview given in 1993, although he primarily means one’s social exclusion and death, if one is incapable of consuming: “If you could write slogans for nations […] the slogan for the US would be ‘Consume or die.’” (Conversations 115) 51 There is hardly a better literary description of Marx’s analysis of the “social (and imaginary) relationship” commodities have adopted in a capitalist society than the following from Underworld: “All these [various ads for consumer products] were on the billboards around him, systematically linked in some self-referring relationship that had a kind of neurotic tightness, an inescapabilty, as if the billboards were generating reality.” (U 183) 52 Karl Marx, Capital, 165, 164. I have also quoted here from the German original, which seems more fitting to me. 53 I have dealt with it at length in Wolf 2002, 181–84, see also: O’Donnell, 110–13. 54 The German word “entsorgen,” with regard to waste, seems quite appropriate, meaning literally “de-woe” oneself, “to get rid of one’s woes or concerns.” 55 It is interesting to point out the phenomenon of what has been called “Messy” (a proper German word now), which no longer means only “disorderly.” “Messies” now refers to people who cannot help storing their trash nearby in their houses, flats or under their beds. Usually there is, of course, some compulsion neurosis. Underworld and “Terror Management” 55 56 Don DeLillo once again proves up to date. Serial killers and terrorists regularly use camcorders to place their rampages on the internet. 57 The mutual relation has been suggested by Don DeLillo’s narrator himself. With reference to the video taken at random of one of Richard’s murders, he ponders: “You sit there and wonder if this kind of crime became more possible when the means of taping an event and playing it immediately, without a neutral interval, a balancing space and time became widely available. Taping and playing intensifies and compresses the event. It dangles a need to do it again.” (U 159) 58 The data (and resources) are summarized in https://www.aafp.org/about/policies/all/violence-media.html. 59 Don DeLillo disapprovingly uses this term in an interview with the Austrian paper Der Standard, Oct. 30, 1998 (A1): “Sprache ist der einzige Fluchtweg.” 60 “There’s something here that speaks to you directly, saying terrible things about forces beyond your control, lines of intersection that cut through history and logic and every reasonable layer of human expectation.” (U 157) 61 The question why virtual or imaginary experiences affect and capture us to such emotionally intense degrees has still not been satisfactorily answered. I have dealt with this in “Contemporary Theory: Difference, Différance and an Aesthetics of Literary Freedom,” in REAL 10, ed. Herbert Grabes (Narr: Tübingen, 1994), 95–23. 62 For faithful Christians, to be sure, death is the entrance into a sphere of eternal light. 63 Sister Edgar, a poor-relief worker in the Bronx, who holds a rigorously harsh Manichean world picture of good and bad, betrays a neurotic fear of germs, yet not at all of dying: “She intended to meet her own end with senses intact, grasp it, know it finally.” (U 245) 64 An epiphany originally meant the appearance of God and later of some saint. Esmeralda will, by the force of her apparition, certainly undergo some apotheosis. 65 A good overview of mystery in DeLillo’s work offers John A. McClure, “DeLillo and Mystery,” in The Cambridge Companion to Don DeLillo, ed. John N. Duvall (Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2008), 166–78. 66 It seems clear who carries out the “Keystroke” which leads to http://blk. www/dd.com/miraculum (U 810), where (in the paragraphs below) Esmeralda’s death and the billboard miracle are reported. Nick’s son Jeff visits a website “devoted to miracles.” (U 806) But “Keystroke 2,” which initiates Sister Edgar’s cyberspace apotheosis visiting “the H-bomb home page,” may well have been executed by the nun herself shortly before she dies. Interestingly enough, she not only traces the test explosions of the past Cold War, she also feels “the power of false faith, the faith of paranoia” and is united with “her male half,” J. Edgar Hoover (826): a final ironic deconstruction of the nuclear culture of death. 4 The Body Artist Death, Mourning, Time and the “Humanity of Man” After the neurosis, deaths, and fears of death in Underworld, Don DeLillo went through a kind of catharsis or profane exercitation in his enigmatic novella The Body Artist. The first chapter, a condensed exercise in the narration of time, depicts the body artist Lauren Hartke and her husband, the film director Rey Robles, in the kitchen of the seaside house they have rented for six months. They have breakfast together, he asks for his car keys, leaves, and the next thing we read is an obituary, interspersed before Chapter 2. “The cause of death,” it informs us, “was a self-inflicted gunshot wound.” (BA 27) The remainder of the book is dedicated to the ways she deals with his death and his memory; in between Chapter 6 and the final one, there is another journalistic text which reports a body performance she has given in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Mindfulness and Emptiness: Lived and Dead Time The kitchen scene is revealing less for the relationship of the couple as for the way the recounting of temporality reveals the subjectivity or beingthere of the protagonists. It both parallels and contrasts a temporality in the remaining text, experienced and acted out by Lauren after the event of death and realization of her loss. Time in the initial episode is represented as contiguity. The subsequent act of mourning aims at inverting it; it is informed by Lauren’s desire to retain and preserve what seems to have passed and get lost in contiguity. Time first appears objectively, that is, it depends – as usually and quite trivially – on the successive perception of exterior things and acts. Subsequently, it is Lauren’s time of memory that defines the body artist’s (Lauren’s) consciousness, first in a traumatic, then creative and redemptive way. The novel begins with an explicit reference to time in its transitoriness: “Time seems to pass. The world happens, unrolling into moments, and you stop to glance at a spider pressed to its web.” (BA 7) Time, Kant’s continuous inner sense, appears to pass and becomes conscious in the exterior intuition as (what we sense, or DeLillo’s anonymous implied reader “you” senses as) a moment of a seemingly arresting object. The DOI: 10.4324/9781003289937-4 The Body Artist 57 prose style is congruous and highly effective.1 By means of simple paratactic sentences, the connectives “and,” “then” and the pronouns “his,” “he,” “her” and “she,” DeLillo structures the text and arranges temporality and difference throughout the chapter: She went to the counter […]. He got up and took his toast […] and she had to lean away from the counter […]. She poured milk into the bowl. He sat down and got up. He went to the fridge […]. (BA 10) For the time being, the narrative suggests, their life is reduced to the banality of ordinary routine, organized by the kettle she takes “back to the stove because this is how you live your life,” (BA 12) and carried on by soya granules (which are mentioned at least eight times), the news and the “glass of juice.” (BA 19) All this makes sense only through simple grammatical opposition and allocation: “It was her newspaper. The telephone was his […]” (BA 12) – and only insofar as the reader is likely to do a similar thing, have breakfast, in the morning. In this vacuum, it does not matter that the perception of endlessly “identical lines of print” in an outdated paper becomes interchangeable (as to content and quality) with seeing a glass of juice. (BA 19) Without a differential exterior object – the division of time into days – time becomes all alike: “All day yesterday I thought it was Friday.” (BA 20) The first chapter, then, consists of what Boxall calls “evacuated time” without a “narrative quality.”2 Put another way: The chapter takes place in a temporal continuum with utterly trivial acts in a secluded space apart from the quotidian distractions of the city. This initial sequence may be an impressive exercise in the narration of time; narrating time and story time converge. But if it was not for some beautifully lyrical sentences, it is also a stretch one has to endure, a performance of tedium and nullities. The place, on the other hand, turns out to be the appropriate setting “to know more surely who you are.” (BA 7) Thereat, even the smallest trivia may draw attention, raising, by the same token, one’s self-awareness. There ought to be, though, the mental disposition to give and abandon oneself to the exterior intuition with its given objects, no matter how irrelevant in functional terms they are. It is contingent upon the question whether (uneventful) time may nevertheless be experienced as lived or fulfilled time or, conversely, as empty, utterly boring or dead time, no matter whether there is a “narrative quality” or not. If one is no longer immersed in an exterior reality with unceasing and spectacular medial, communicative, and extraordinary stimuli, a person must subjectively furnish, or rather animate, their environment with significance. A “leaf,” then, may be “stabbed with self-awareness.” (BA 7) It depends on the receptivity or “mindfulness” of the subject, if she or he hears, sees or tastes the spectacular phenomenon as something meaningful that can still 58 The Body Artist “make a day,” or if those phenomena just add to the feeling of another pointless day in a series of pointless days. This difference is crucial for a person’s being-there in the world. It accounts, as I suggest, for Rey’s suicide (not altogether, to be sure) and Lauren’s arrestingly devoted work of mourning. It is clear from the beginning that Lauren can abandon herself to the moment, to get something sensual out of it, even if that moment has oftentimes been the same. Rey cannot. If Lauren is more of a Virginia Woolf-or Peter Handke-like figure, Rey has a Beckett-like ring to him. Lauren uses all her senses to discern and discriminate. She “noticed [for “the first time”] how water from the tap turned opaque in seconds. It ran silvery and clear and then in seconds turned opaque […] she’d never noticed how the water ran clear at first and then went not murky exactly but opaque […].” (BA 8) She is “feeling a sense” of the blue of her jeans “runny and wan,” (BA 9) and she repeatedly tries to identify and distinguish accurately the smell of soya granules.3 When she reads the outdated paper, she gets absorbed and loses herself in the text. Yet her sensuous mindfulness and receptivity for what at the moment and from moment to moment connects her with the outside world become most striking when (only) she notices4 the birds cracking off the feeder again. They passed out of the shade beneath the eaves and flew into sunglare and silence and it was an action she only partly saw, elusive and mutely beautiful, the birds so sunstruck they were consumed by light, disembodied, turned into something sheer and fleet and scatter-bright. (BA 12–3) These passages are not only highly graphic, lyrical and aesthetic; through the frequent use of past and present participles, time seems to gain momentum to fulfill itself in a moment of sublimity. Being and language, bodies in action and their phonetic manifestation, and signified and signifier appear to onomatopoetically coincide – if only for an illusionary moment: “The birds broke off the feeder in a wing-whir that was all b’s and r’s, the letter b followed by a series of vibrato r’s. But that wasn’t it at all. That wasn’t anything like it.” (BA 17) At least temporarily, she feels something like the cancellation of difference (time and language), getting hold of, or merely glimpsing, a thing in motion in itself (“a wing-whir that was all….”). It looks and sounds as if this event would take up, though only momentarily and fleetingly, everything else. This basically aesthetic point of view – or spatialization of time and motion – becomes more explicit in a little scene following a talk about the identity of the current weekday and her “waiting for him to say yes or no to coffee.” Against the nugatory background, she suddenly becomes aware of a jay: “She stopped dead and held her breath. It stood large and polished […] and she could nearly believe she’d never seen a jay before. It stood The Body Artist 59 enormous, looking in at her.” (BA 21) She watches on and is fascinated: “[S]he thought she’d somehow only now learned how to look. She’d never seen a thing so clearly […].” It comes to her as an epiphany: “There was also the clean shock of its appearance […].” (BA 22) Depicted with a minimum of static verbs (“stood,” “was posted where it was”) and an overabundance of predicates, the Jay is transfigured into a momentary manifestation and revelation beyond time. She wants to probe its essential being-there “past the details to the bird itself” (BA 22) and establish a kind of mutual relationship through the reciprocity of seeing: “She wanted to believe the bird was seeing her, a woman with a teacup in her hand.” The epiphanic view, metaphysical as it is, makes the bird drop out of time and context, turning it into another still life in motion5: “[…] never mind the folding back of day and night, the apparition of a space set off from time.” (BA 22) It moreover creates some mutuality, even identity between the thing outside and Lauren, who is at the same time, however, aware of the transitoriness of the moment, which she yet seems to sense in the bird: “She was alert to the clarity of the moment but knew it was ending already. She felt it in the blue jay. Or maybe not.” Even if or precisely because DeLillo makes Lauren feel ambiguous about the status of this “clear moment,” the whole passage sounds like a typical instance of an (outdated) modernist aesthetics. It is, nevertheless, highly significant for the notion of “terror management” – as well as an ethos of mourning, which does not want to give in to the absolute difference of death and which wants to – belatedly – resuscitate the dead. The spatialization of time (in the mnemonic form of a work of art, an epiphany or even a lasting memory), which necessarily contains transience and failure, is, as one must stress, a most sustained means to counter the hard fact of death. Lauren’s passing epiphany (within the emptiness of a sequential now and then in the kitchen) anticipates her later striving at transcending time in the process of mourning.6 She will return – if only figuratively – a presence to her deceased husband he lacked already before his suicide. For Lauren “the apparition of a space set off from time” “made my day. My week.” (BA 23) To Rey, all this does not make a difference. When she wants to tell him about the blue jay, he only half turns to answer without any enthusiasm: “Don’t we see them all the time?” (BA 22) Rey is excluded from this lifesustaining experience, remains unaffected, and is probably no longer able to feel something similar. She wants to tell him to look up, but she does not, since “if Rey looked up, the bird would fly.” (BA 22) What he sees when looking out of the window is “an untended meadow tumbled to the rutted dirt road that led to a gravel road.” (BA 23) Before he had already lost “interest” in talking. What appears to be “insignificant” he takes, other than Lauren, “as a kind of self-diminishment.” He watches the foam in his glass but “wasn’t paying attention” and doesn’t remember the “details.” (BA 9, 10, 11) Rey is obviously worn out by the dreariness of 60 The Body Artist the course of time: ‘“I’m the one to moan. The terror of another ordinary day,” he said slyly. “You don’t know this yet.”’ (BA 15) The only question that might have led to some communication, he stops short with: “It’s boring.” (BA 17) Eventually, he disrupts the taedium vitae of sequentiallinear temporality by driving to New York to shoot himself in the flat of his former wife. Perhaps with a further tinge of allegory, he tells her before leaving: “All my keys are on one ring.” (BA 25) Rey’s and Lauren’s different backgrounds give us some hints as to their divergent responses. Lauren, the body artist, is dependent and focused on the mimic and gestic subtleties of her own constitution and subjectivity. She looks and listens into herself to discover something meaningful. This enables her, as we shall see, to bring perception, action and her own being into a synchronic or even simultaneous accordance. Rey, the film director, does of course also and necessarily draw upon his subjectivity, but he is also dependent on a film set, a script, narrative and actors, that is, a stimulating object world, which now is no longer available to him. Time and action are contingent on media (the camera, etc.). The obituary speaks for itself: “His subject is people in landscapes of estrangement. He found a spiritual knife-edge in the poetry of alien places, where extreme situations become inevitable and characters are forced toward life-defining moments.” (BA 29, a quote within the intertext) His “answer to life,” he had told an audience once, “is the movies.” (BA 28) Having forfeited professional success (after phases of alcoholism and depression) and without the artistic fulfillment and experience of “extreme situations” and “life-defining moments,” Rey must have found himself in a vacuum. For him, the boredom in the setting of a solitary kitchen will signify only the “terror of another day.” The Provo-care of the Death of the Other: The “Humanity of Man” The (subsequent) obituary recounts in a chronological, formal and rather hackneyed way his life and aims at closure, as all obituaries do. Lauren does not follow this traditional, public and private way of putting up with death. After Rey’s cremation, she returns to the lonely house they have rented for six months, declining her friends’ pointless offers of consolation.7 Rather than “directing herself out,” she has the firm intention of getting “into” mourning – in spite of the physical and psychological consternation she undergoes. Phone calls by friends keep coming in who cannot understand why she spends her time (it will be more than two months) in a lonely and rundown house by the sea, which will permanently work as a mnemonic token of the parting and demise of her husband. Isolation is after all additionally conducive to depression and pain. No one can understand that it is the only way for Lauren to mourn appropriately. She is as existentially shaken at the beginning of the narrative of The Body Artist 61 her mourning as she is toward the end; before she regains her Self, only in the last paragraph of the novel, she has transformed and virtually physically received her dead husband in a body performance and imaginative sexual act. Lauren “refused to yield to the limits of belief.” (BA 122) Similarly to other mourners, she suffers a confusion of fundamental rational and perceptive categories, of inside and outside. She also wants to die. The world only “seems” to her, (BA 31) “doubtful” and “ever changing” (BA 36) and she feels a “painful weight” in her chest, (BA 31) days move achingly slow, (BA 32) her body feels different, “tight, framed” and she nearly collapses (BA 33): “The world was lost inside her.” (BA 37) Like Dostoevsky in Coetzee’s The Master of Petersburg,8 who is stricken with grief for his son, she identifies with the dead, and wants to be dead: “She wanted to disappear in Rey’s smoke, be dead, be him.” (BA 34) It is the death of the other person that reveals her own vulnerability and therefore her own being, as we shall see. She encounters herself in her own (unsubstantial) singularity via the provo-care of the death of the other. She becomes obsessed with disinfecting the house, using a “bottle with a pistol-grip attachment.” She finds it “hard to stop pressing the trigger,” simulating the final moment of Rey. And like many other mourners she continues to feel (throughout the narrative) his presence: “[S]he felt him in the rooms,” “[s]he felt him behind her.” (BA 32–4) Death, in its incomprehensibility, means an absolute rupture of time. Consequently, Lauren loses her sense of time (see BA 37) and gets absorbed into a life-streaming video, which keeps on showing nothing but a road in a remote Finnish city, cars going monotonously in and out all day long. Each day she reserves some time for it, since it gives her an impression of simultaneity, of an ongoing presence of a spatial now, “a place contained in an unyielding frame.” (BA 38) She gets captured by the “mystery of seeing over the world to a place stripped of everything but a road that approaches and recedes, both realities occurring at once.” (BA 39) Evidently, “containment in an unyielding frame” implies the same “death-in-life, life-in-death” paradox that has bewildered so many modernist writers from Keats to Wilde, or Yeats (“Byzantium”). But the very ambivalence of an unrelated state that leaves one static, unchanging and therefore dissevered from a world of lived (i.e., temporal) life (call it “melancholic” or “traumatic”), actually represents the state of those who are left behind, perceiving the world as something seemingly unreal (movie-like), their sense of time being broken. Lauren has a vague plan “to organize time,” (BA 37) but she has no specific intentions; if she possesses an identity at this time, it is certainly “nonsubstantial” (Emmanuel Levinas) and without autonomy. It is in this state of suspension that she comes across a strange figure. Lauren calls him “Mr. Tuttle” in honor of her science teacher, with whom she happens to associate him. The identity of the “smallish and fine-bodied” person of indefinite age (from Lauren’s focal point of view) has 62 The Body Artist posed a major riddle to critics.9 Nevertheless, he is described in a realistic way. There is nothing ghostly about him, even though the circumstances of his existence in the house, where he must have been without (or hardly any10) food for months,11 are highly improbable. Similarly strange are his appearance, bearing and manner of speaking. The narrator (with Lauren as the focalizing subject) uses the predicate of a “stick-figure” to describe the unlikely character: “a cartoon head and body, chinless, stick-figured.” (BA 62) Interestingly enough, the focalizer Dostoevsky, who, albeit ambivalently, wants to salvage his dead son Pavel, uses the same expression when becoming aware of the strange appearance in his room: “if not a full person then a stick figure.”12 Drawn with only one line and a circle for its head, a stick figure is suitably reduced to suggest an “everyman” with no particular qualities. It is precisely for this blankness and reduction that it allows for an effective animation (in cartoons) as well as the evocation of something essential and existential that is common to all of us. Yet Tuttle, reminiscent of “the first toy ever built with moving parts,” (BA 62) is far removed from the contextual spaces of animated cartoons (or even empty stock figures). She wonders about his possible origin (see BA 49) without a feasible result; instead, she hears something in his voice, “at the edge, unconnected to income levels or verb tenses […].” (BA 50) The reader (and critic) is left at a cognitive loss, less so Lauren. When she finds him, following the noise, she is not at all surprised to meet “something so strange.” Not that she had been intentionally looking for something to mitigate her grief. But she thinks of him as “inevitable.” (BA 42) He has “a foundling quality” with necessarily only her as “the finder.” (BA 43) It is as if “she had to find him, a waif who did not call, whose call she yet responded to.”13 He, therefore, touches upon something of crucial significance: “She didn’t know how to think about this. There was something raw in the moment, open-wounded. It bared her to things that were outside her experience but desperately central, somehow, at the same time.” (BA 63) He evades age classification, is “unfinished,” (BA 45) not a child, but “not quite a man either,” outside the “sway of either/or.” (BA 69) He is indefinable, indeterminate, does not know his original name, if there was ever one (BA 54–5)14 and cannot be brought to give any new (or synthetic) information. He simply parrots Lauren and utters tautological sentences: “Say some words to say some words.” (BA 55). Even Tuttle’s eyes, traditionally the window to human inwardness and subjectivity, do not give a clue to what we take as an individual personality: “[…] there were no stirrings of tremulous self.” His eyes,15 as anything else, forego objectifying intentionality, the more arresting thereby her attention and responsivity: “the gaze that demonstrates we are lonely in our souls [?].” (BA 85) No less interesting is his lack of a linear-sequential sense of time. He commingles different tenses in an utterance referring to one action, replaces “rained” for “will rain” and seems to exist only in the presence: “Being here has come to me. I am with the moment […] I will The Body Artist 63 leave the moment from the moment […] Coming and going I am leaving.” (BA 74) If it is through narrative that we structure our history and identity, Tuttle has none. “He is here and there, before and after” and lives in a “kind of time” that has “no narrative quality,” (BA 64–5) unable to make “arbitrary divisions.” (BA 91) In this timelessly vacuous state, this indefinite being speaks not only in her voice but also – without having been asked – in Rey’s, which Lauren realizes with “a brief fit of shivering.” (BA 51) While she is reading about childbirth from a book about the human body, Tuttle suddenly starts speaking: “This was not some communication with the dead. It was Rey alive in the course of a talk he’d had with her […].” (BA 61) Lauren understands that she “could not miss Rey, could not consider his absence, the loss of Rey, without thinking along the margins of Mr. Tuttle.” (BA 82) Tuttle presents pieces of Rey’s speech, but the point is that it is not or does not seem the deliberate repetition of something that is over once and for all: “[S]he didn’t think the man was remembering. It is happening now. […] reporting helplessly, what they say.” Sensing his presence physically, she feels that Rey lives “in this man’s mind” now, “in his mouth and body and cock.” (BA 87, my italics) One is reminded of Derrida’s “mnesic representations which are only lacunary fragments,”16 through which the dead come to speak in us. I think it is too simple to reduce Tuttle to a purely psychological phenomenon or projection of a traumatized woman. DeLillo’s realistic language creates (from Lauren’s point of view!) a figure nowhere suggesting a figment or phantasmagoria. Lauren deals with him in a thoroughly sensible way, with no signs of schizophrenic or neurotic self-delusion.17 One should take him as he appears: as a de-individualized person who has come to stay, albeit mysteriously, in a remote and neglected chamber of a lonely house by the sea, and, furthermore, as the literary correlative or allegorical manifestation of a situation that follows the death of a beloved person. He represents the presence of someone beyond temporal and conceptual difference, a singular event lacking the received socio-cultural framing. Labeling him as “autistic” will satisfy our own discursive needs but will remain exterior to Tuttle and what goes on between him and Lauren. It may be equally simplifying to pin the figure down as the Other or Otherness,18 although Tuttle, intangible and impenetrable as he apparently is, comes close to that non-concept. The Otherness that arrives (arrivant) precludes, according to Derrida, identification and a priori concepts. That is, the epistemic openness on the part of the receiver (Lauren) necessarily implies indeterminateness and namelessness on the part of the arrivant. The latter remains both inaccessible and completely unassuming.19 He is human and male, and different, but beyond that he cannot be categorized, since he himself appears to act and speak outside of those categorical aspects such as time and causality that make up reality for us. He never judges. He has an indistinct appearance, is completely open and 64 The Body Artist makes no demands; he simply looks at her. (BA 43) His first unclassifiable and grammatically impossible utterance is “It is not able.” He is indeed impossible or only potentially possible. He is merely there, without any pretension, empty eyes that look at the other and a voice that comes from other people, most notably Rey’s. He brings Rey’s voice to pass, without being Rey. He is and is not Rey. He lives “in this man’s mind” (see above), and “[i]t isn’t true because it can’t be true. Rey is not alive in this man’s consciousness or in his palpable verb tense.” (BA 91) Tuttle embodies the paradox of death. The deceased Rey seems to become present in Tuttle’s voice and gestures, only to indicate at the same time Rey’s absence. (Lauren tries to record and maintain his voice on tape which comes down, of course, to only another substitution.) Tuttle appears to somehow call forth Rey, or at least some other sphere of being, yet he/they remain elusive: But this is the point, that he laps and seeps, somehow, into other reaches of being, other time-lives, and this is an aspect of his bewilderment and pain. Somehow. The weakest word in the language. And more or less. And maybe. Always maybe. She was always maybeing. (BA 92) It is important to note that Tuttle’s intangibility as a person also reveals an “aspect of his bewilderment and pain.” His lack of intentional personality traits, his nakedness and defenselessness, lay bare, moreover, what can be called, according to Derrida (calling forth Kant), “the humanity of man”20 or the substantial and indissoluble dignity inherent in any human being, no matter whether dead or living. In his extremely reduced existence (anonymous,21 and merely present), he brings forth potentially everything that is human, and also “bares her” to the individual generality that is fundamental to all of us. He, thus, comes as a “gift” that gives himself or itself to her as “goodness itself but also as the law.” Tuttle in his very vulnerability not only offers an echo of Rey but also “the memory of humanity.” Thereby, he acts as a “command to the donnee”22 to be open to change and to take care. Unable to sleep, she goes to his room after midnight and listens to “the raspy nasal intake” and finds herself moved in an unusual way. In sleep he was no more unknowable than anyone else. Look. The shrouded body feebly beating. This is what you feel, looking at the hushed and vulnerable body, almost anyone’s, or you lie next to your husband after you have made love and breathe the heat of his merciless dreams and wonder who he is, tenderly pondering the truth you’ll never know, because this is the secret that sleep protects in its neutral depths, in its stages, layers and folds. (BA 54) The Body Artist 65 Facing such profoundly existential, “almost anyone’s,” states (which draw our empathy more to children and animals than rationally minded adults), we are emotionally the more inclined to respond and take care of the other. This is what Lauren does. In a very mindful way, she attends to his body and baths him, washing “his chest and arms, wordlessly naming his parts for him.” (BA 68) In an almost ritual manner, she pays respect and dignifies his whole body (including penis and testicles). The act is reminiscent of both a last ablution and the motherly love and care for her baby. It evokes the ritual with which we pay respect to the dead and at the same time the maternal devotion at the beginning of a (new) life. She salvages and redeems the body and also re-members and reintegrates it by naming its parts for him. The rather chaste sexual undercurrent is emphasized by an indirect unification and identification of the two: “His hand came out of the water holding the cloth. She took it from him and held it spread across her face and pressed into the pores and she rubbed it over her mouth and gave it back to him.” (BA 68) Since he lacks a “protective surface,” “alone and unable to improvise” in “the howl of the world,” she offers “touches and calming sounds.” And since he is (“was,” she changes into past tense) simply here and scared, she provides (like Coleridge in “Frost at Midnight”) protection and consolation. She still wonders how she could at all know about his state of mind. However, beholding him in his utter defenselessness, “curled in a thin blanket,” (BA 90) she does not hesitate to express her ethical imperative: “You are supposed to offer solace,” and does so in a wholly devoted way, lies on top of him, rubs him and begins “to breathe with him.” (BA 90) Her sympathy for the other, “humanity in man,” manifests itself in a kind of mimetic adaptation and identification with the other. When he stops eating, she does so too and finds it “suitable.” (BA 94) She keeps on looking after his most fundamental needs, feeding “him soup while he sat on the toilet once.” (BA 95) Her protective urge amounts to “a deathly devotion almost,” which is – from an economic-pragmatic point of view – of course not especially useful. Yet it is in accordance with the absolute ethical claim of the other, who in his creatureliness shows nothing but “a surplus of vulnerability.” (BA 96)23 Lauren responds conscientiously and willingly to that, simply out of a basic feeling of sympathy. Doing justice to the deceased by recognizing the other in his or her peculiarity (individuality or singularity) is another important dimension of the ethos of mourning. Thus, when Rey’s lawyer calls to point out his “debts cascading on other debts,” Lauren is not at all worried. On the contrary, it makes “her feel good,” because “[i]t was the Rey she knew and not some other.” It is not inappropriate, then, when she responds to the grave numbers brought forth by the lawyer with gaiety, wishing him luck. (BA 94) It is also notable that Tuttle’s presence reminds her of Ray telling her once “that she was helping him recover his soul.” This “iceblink of 66 The Body Artist memory” is accompanied by Rey’s words rendered in Tuttle’s most coherent utterance: I regain possession of myself through you. I think like myself now, not like the man I became. I eat and sleep like myself, bad, which is bad, but it’s like myself when I was myself and not the other man. (BA 61–2) Tuttle/Rey speaks in the present tense. During and on account of her mindful mourning, Rey is therefore re-membered and once again dignified as the singular self that he was or wanted to be. It is self-evident that the bereaved experience some profound personal alteration while mourning. Along with Rey’s posthumous, spiritual individuation, Lauren will also regain her own unique human self together with her sense of beauty. (See BA 82) If Tuttle works as a kind of “catalyst”24 for Lauren’s own transmutation, it is not surprising that at some point of their relationship silence begins to take place and that Tuttle vanishes eventually without leaving a sign. She misses him and looks for him for days, even though she knows that he has gone for good. His sudden disappearance is within the logic of the other (as well as of death itself) who has gone and come without announcement, eschewing our rational expectations or intentions. His ontological status of timeless and pure presence (as opposed to becoming or passing) has been replaced by absence, even though this absence cannot eliminate the impressions and traces left in Lauren. Don DeLillo has her sensuously, visually, and bodily live through and accomplish this ambiguity. She imagines him from afar looking like “someone you technically see but don’t quite register in the usual interpretative way. […] Like someone you see and then you forget you see.” (BA 95) Back in the house, she thinks she would find him sitting on his bed again, while knowing at the same time he would not. When she realizes that the rooms have become empty, she still feels “something in her body try to hold him here.” (BA 96) She has become aware of the continuation and persistence of those who seem to have gone into nothingness, which foregoes the simple binary logic of 1 and 0, there and not-there. Her life with Tuttle, by the way, will not be meaningless in a practical sense. It will find its way into her body performance. What remains moreover for Lauren is the basic experience of humanity and care beyond all intentional and temporal contingencies. In her devotion to the other, she has “taken upon herself” his gift of humanity, performing, as it were, a spiritual and ethical sublation of the death of the other (not processing in the sense of Freud’s grief work) in and through Tuttle. She continues to feel with him and still wants to “take him in.” (BA 100) The reality status of Tuttle, whether a “ghostly” manifestation of Rey, a psychic “phantom,” or a real person25 does not matter. What matters is that he was capable of making “her husband live in the air that rushed from his lungs.” (BA 62) Tuttle has become the medium that helps The Body Artist 67 her to mourn Rey appropriately; on the telephone she now uses his voice, turning partly into Tuttle, “where Rey lives.” (BA 100) Thereby, he has shown her a possibility of creating a future of her own. (See BA 98) Early on, Lauren had already taken up her bodywork, stretching and breathing exercises, to regain possession of her body. Toward Tuttle’s departure, she moreover embarks on a rigid physical transformation of herself, which amounts to her very own de-identification, baring or disclosure of her fundamental humanity. This is in line with Tuttle’s reduced state of being. She literally wax-strips, scrubs, scratches or rubs anything from her body that can be taken or peeled off, depigments herself and cuts off her hair: “to disappear from all her former venues of aspect and bearing and to become a blankness, a body slate erased of every past resemblance.” She wants to transmute into a kind of nowhere woman without qualities, someone one usually does not notice or someone one looks through. (BA 83–4) Scouring even her tongue she becomes determined to “alter the visible form” and close off “outlets to the self.” (BA 97) Lauren, that is, removes anything that seems accidental, confining herself (passingly) to some essential being beyond the spatio-temporal thingness of the material present. She uses her body to appear bodiless, while the process of depersonalization she pursues marks both an alienation from her body and its re-presentation. Rather than recovering the outer sense of sequential time, she turns toward the autogenous time of her body-self. “Body Time” and the Sublation of Death (“Trauerspiel” or “Play of Mourning”) By means of the body, which is defamiliarized and stripped of all received referentiality, she is ready to give form to her mourning – combined with a symbolic memorial for Rey. Her performance, called “Body Time,” which she has given for three nights in Boston, is conveyed through a review article by a former friend, Mariella Chapman, who has met Lauren in a café. This adds a third and necessarily public, social and general dimension to her mourning. To Mariella she looks “bloodless and ageless […] rawboned and slightly bug-eyed,” (BA 103) while Lauren tells her that she works toward “emptiness.” “Hartke,” the journalist comments, “tries to shake off the body – hers anyway.” (BA 104) Paradoxically, Lauren stages a highly intense (BA 104) body performance to also assimilate into a (dead) body, a Bone Man or “Knochenmann,” the traditional allegory of Death. She enacts the contradictio in adiecto of nothingness: Even if there is nothing anymore for us, there is still “nothing,” or the very possibility of something. It is the utterly unconditional condition for the possibility of the event of the “arrivant.” Lauren does not know “if the piece went” where she “wanted it to go.” (BA 104) When acting, she is “always in the process of becoming another.” (BA 105) She is open to what may come or not. 68 The Body Artist The temporal dimension, which refers back to the initial kitchen scene, is of crucial importance. Lauren slows down time to a degree that it becomes hardly bearable so that people walk out: She “wanted her audience to feel time go by, viscerally, even painfully.” (BA 104) The artist, thus, reminds us of the possibility of a temporal horror vacui and standstill, which is especially for modern man unendurable, pointing, as it does, to the very possibility of death: “When time stops, so do we.”26 By repeating actions countlessly, “stopping time and stretching it out,” “halfpirouetting in very slow motion,” she exerts a hypnotic effect on the remaining people, making them feel “physically and mentally suspended.” Lauren thereby transforms not only her time of mourning into “still life, that’s living, not painted,” (BA 106–7) she reenacts Rey’s ennui or temporal vacuum preceding and ending in his suicide, without referring to Rey’s act itself and its finality. Her presence works as a memento mori (without the latter’s moral subtext, of course), which evokes cessation, stasis and termination and, yet, the expectation of something else – “living” – to come. Her body will flow or inch into another unlikely posture. Lauren performs the loss of a body as well as the “transposition” of sequential temporality into a “figurative spatial,” yet not motionless, “simultaneity.”27 As the Morandi still life paintings (“Natura Morte”) in Falling Man, her “still life” unfolds a processual dynamics, it is “living.” With this seeming paradox, she cites and overcomes the paradox of the traditional genre of “terror management,” which, rather than withdrawing its subject from transience, fixes or arrests it in its (unrelated) stillness. It, therefore, transforms it only the more into a dead or lifeless thing. Benjamin’s characterization of the “Trauerspiel” (“Tragic Drama,” literally: “play of mourning”) as opposed to the “spasmodic chronological progression of tragedy,” fits Lauren’s act well, “the Trauerspiel takes place in a spatial continuum which one might describe as choreographic.”28 The “transposition” performance is accompanied by a video that shows the sparsely trafficked, almost empty Finnish highway, along with a display recording the time: “A car goes one way, a car goes the other.” The audience thus sees and hears both “past and future” at the same time (BA 107), accompanied by the voice of a telephone recorder repeating “relentlessly” (BA 106) its announcement. After the incorporation of two coincidental events, she quite randomly had come across after Rey’s death (a Japanese woman as out of “a Noh drama,” (BA 105) and an executive woman who repeatedly checks the time on her watch), she finally embodies or rather disembodies Tuttle, Rey or Everyman: “the naked man stripped of recognizable language and culture.” (BA 107) When she finally speaks or only lip-syncs Tuttle’s incoherent and decontextualized voice, it is also “somehow” Rey who speaks. But this reincarnation is far from conciliatory and comforting: “Have I ever looked at a figure on a stage and seen someone so alone?,” Mariella asks rhetorically. Lauren’s “Trauerspiel” has finally come down to a “whipping and spinning,” The Body Artist 69 utterly stripped-down “stick figure” as if out of an “animated cartoon.” Her body impersonates bared humanity. The “Trauerspiel” ends with a seizure that has the figure vault into another “reality.” (BA 108) In the conversation with Mariella, Lauren declines a simple interpretation of her performance as coming straight out of “what happened to Rey” and a drama “versus death.” Yet she immediately switches to a male voice. Mariella is certainly right, when she concludes that Lauren’s body art “is never the grand agony of a stately images and sets.” (BA 109) It is not “tragedy,” it is a “Trauerspiel”: “It is about you and me.” (BA 109)29 The performance does not bring about redemption. Mourning is surely a form of “terror management.” However, an ethics of mourning neither objectifies death nor passes it light-mindedly over (as in the by now psychotherapeutic cliché of the “work of mourning” or “grief work”). In contrast to Heidegger, it simply does not want to accept death as an existential fact and, therefore, opens up to non-trivial or symbolic forms of resuscitation of the dead in memorials, pictorial or literary representation, or, for that matter, in body art. These forms, and clearly Lauren’s, are non-trivial as they do not pretend to fend off or evade fetish-like the fact of death. They rather bear its temporal trace with and in them. It is given a form beyond reification and the short-lived satisfaction of daily interests, agendas and vague desires; the form must prevent us from proceeding as if nothing had happened. In her transgressive performance, Lauren exposes herself to the utmost existential degree. It opens up to the “event,” to interrupt present temporality and to suggest an alternative time (and space) outside the time toward death. Lauren’s “Body Time” was repeatedly staged, yet the (subjective) event is singular and without closure, and thus, other than Freud’s grief work, never really completed or finished. The dead, due to the paradoxical ontology of death, are absent and likewise present, not only in psychological terms. Lauren returns to the rented house by the coast, responding to a remark she is not sure Rey has made or not: “[S]he would be here in the end.” (BA 111–12) In any case, she fulfills her responsibility of the provo-care one owes the “call of” the deceased person. The departed is there and not there, she sees him in her mirror image, yet “not really,” (BA 112) but without doubt about his “arrival.” She knew “this was the day it would happen;” (BA 113) she never gives up and stays open to his reality, his language and stories and finally comes to a point, where she wants to surrender completely to her grief: “Let death bring you down.” (BA 116) She still refuses any “work of grief”: “Why shouldn’t the death of a person you love bring you into lurid ruin”? (BA 116) Redeeming Moment Eventually (after an awkward visit from her landlord), Lauren’s lamentation receives some response. She hears a chant “Being has come to me.” 70 The Body Artist Her world appears to have come unconcealedly back to her; she has, after all, “refused to yield to the limits of belief.” (BA 122) She approaches Rey’s (former) room and feels or imagines Rey inside her chest, even his “cock” in her hand. However, DeLillo maintains the ontological ambiguity to the very end of the novel. Before Lauren actually enters Rey’s room, she nurtures a fantasy, a kind of resurrection epiphany: “The room faced east and would be roiled in morning light, in webby sediment and streams of sunlit dust and in the word motes […].” (BA 123–4) The language or formal level that is addressed here (“the word motes”) undercuts already a possible metaphysical or even religious experience. Accordingly, when she looks she finds the room and the bed “empty all along.” Nevertheless, even if Rey is “not there,” he has become a part of her and the world outside. She does not know why, but opens the window – facing east30 – and realizes she “wanted to feel the sea tang on her face and the flow of time in her body, to tell her who she was.” (BA 124) To give oneself to the subjectivity of a spatial continuum offers a mode of resistance to death, if it is cast into a mold, brought into some intuitive form (as in a sculpture, body performance, Trauerspiel or even a memorial image). Yet it may turn into the rigidity of some frozen and asocial (aesthetically idealized) image, giving a premonition of what it wants to shut out. Thus, when Lauren is ready to feel again “the flow of time in her body,” the redeeming moment has eventually come to her. She opens up again to the vivid resonance of the world out there. To become conscious again of one’s subjective sensuousness and sensibility does not only tell us “who we are,” it is probably the most elemental way of “terror management.”31 Notes 1 For good accounts of language and time in The Body Artist, see also Boxall 2006, 215–21 and Henry Veggian, Understanding Don DeLillo (Columbia, The University of South Carolina Press, 2015), 80–87 (esp. 82). 2 Boxall 2006, 216. There is, though, the occasional but small hint, that makes the reader anticipate some narrative development: There is something “about the house” (BA 8) or when Rey says “I want God to see my face.” (BA 14) 3 “[S]omewhere between body odor, yes, in the lower extremities and some authentic podlife of the earth, deep and seeded.” (BA 15–6) 4 She does so, one should mention, through the window, that is, beyond the vacuum of the hermetic space in which the couple lingers. 5 One is reminded of Yeats’s birds in “Sailing to Byzantium” and “Byzantium,” which seem to be beyond “what is past, or passing, or to come,” and “all complexities.” See Yeats 1985, 217, 280. 6 After her tentative completion of the process of mourning and at the end of the novella, she experiences another worldly epiphany. 7 “Alone is no good. […] you have to direct yourself out of this thing, not into it. Don’t fold up.” (BA 39) 8 See note above. The Body Artist 71 9 See Laura Di Prete, “Don DeLillo’s The Body Artist: Performing the Body, Narrating Trauma,” Contemporary Literature 46, no. 3 (Autumn 2005): 502–3, 508; and Mark Osteen, “DeLillo’s Dedalian artists,” in The Cambridge Companion to Don DeLillo, ed. Duvall (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008), 147–8. 10 At their breakfast Lauren discovers a hair in her cereal, the origin of which she cannot explain: “[…] a short pale strand that wasn’t hers and wasn’t his.” The “short pale strand” may point to Tuttle having pinched some food from the kitchen. 11 Three months earlier they had already heard some noise which “[s]he didn’t think […] was an animal noise.” (BA 40) 12 Coetzee 1994, 236. 13 Using suchlike paradoxical formulations, Coetzee’s Dostoevsky strives to open himself to the possible/impossible arrivant (J. Derrida) of his stepson Pavel. 14 Names, in postmodern times, are taken to be the only reliable identity tags. Tuttle does not have one. “[…] he’d forgotten it or lost it and could not get it back.” 15 Cf. also: “She didn’t think his eye was able to search out and shape things.” (80) 16 Jacques Derrida, Memoires for Paul de Man (New York, Columbia University Press, 1986), 37. 17 “She knew, she told herself she was not an unstrung woman who encounters a person responsive to psychic forces, able to put her in touch with her late husband. This was something else.” (66) 18 One may ask about the point of the “Other,” if this ever-withdrawing, i.e., negative notion is dissolved into psychological or theological categories. 19 Jacques Derrida, Aporias (Stanford: Stanford UP, 1993), 33–5. 20 Derrida 1993, 35. 21 “She realized she’d never called him by his name.” (BA 81) “His name” was, of course, assigned to him by her. 22 Jacques Derrida, The Gift of Death (Chicago & London: The University of Chicago Press, 1995), 41. 23 It is worth quoting the whole passage: “How could such a surplus of vulnerability find itself alone in the world? Because it is made that way. Because it is vulnerable. Because it is alone.” (BA 96) 24 Osteen 2008, 146. 25 After his departure, she asks herself quite soberly whether “she could have made it up, much of it […] in memory,” but finds “she had it on tape and it was him and he was saying it.” (BA 99) 26 Yet even here, DeLillo’s narrative refuses to be pinned down to an idea what time, mourning or even death, could be about. She continues: “We don’t stop, we become stripped down, less self-assured. I don’t know.” (BA 107). Later on, she tells Mariella: “How simple it would be if I could say this is a piece that comes directly out of what happened to Rey. But I can’t. Be nice if I could say this is the drama of men and women versus death. I want to say that but I can’t.” (BA 108) 27 I am referring here to Walter Benjamin’s “Ursprung des Deutschen Trauerspiels,” in Gesammelte Werke I (Frankfurt: Zweitausendeins, 2011), 763–955, here: 813. 28 Walter Benjamin, The Origin of German Tragic Drama, trans. J. Osborne (London: Verso, 1985), 95. The German original: “Im Gegensatz zu einem zeitlichen und sprunghaften Verlauf, wie die Tragödie ihn vorstellt, spielt das Trauerspiel sich im Kontinuum des Raumes – choreographisch darf man es 72 The Body Artist nennen – ab.” (828) It is worth quoting Judith Butler’s comment in her reflection on “Loss”: “So now it seems that the loss of history is not the loss of movement, but a certain configuration (figural, spatial, simultaneous) that has its own dynamism, if not its own dance.” Judith Butler, “Afterword: After Loss, What Then?” in Loss: The Politics of Mourning, eds. David L. Eng and David Kazanjian (Berkeley/Los Angeles: University of California Press, 2003), 469. 29 “What begins in solitary otherness becomes familiar and even personal. It is about who we are when we are not rehearsing who we are.” (BA 110) 30 Although there is no obvious religious reference, there remains an undertone of spiritual salvation. 31 See Connie S. Rosati, “The Makropulos Case Revisited: Reflections on Immortality and Agency,” in The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy of Death, eds. Ben Bradley et al. (Oxford: OUP, 2013), 355–390, esp. 367–373: “The Value of Simply Being.” 5 Cosmopolis Cybercapitalism, Alienation and Death The Body Artist is about the sublation of sequential-linear time in a spatial continuum, or simply, the mourning widow’s desire to slow down and to stop time – if only for the time being. Cosmopolis is about the acceleration of time and the elimination of space – for the purpose of capital accumulation and as a defense against death. The one after the other is sped up leaving behind the (spatial) one beside the other, as fast as possible. The Body Artist is a (narrative) exercise in asceticism, in the mindfulness and awareness of the given somatic moment, concretization, and release. Lauren Hartke appears to alleviate grief and, to a degree, the “terror” of death. Cosmopolis presents an exercise in excess and thriftlessness, the negation of the moment and the body, abstraction and selfloss. In modernity, the speeding up of time, acceleration, along with the accumulation of capital, are both widespread methods of “terror management,” which yet turn out often enough to be self-defeating. Cosmopolis is steeped in death. Within 24 hours, we have four casualties who die of unnatural causes and a funeral procession for a rap star (death by natural causes). There is also a film shooting of 300 seemingly lifeless and stark-naked people prostrate in a New York street and numerous allusions to death, the fear of death and the wish for immortality. It also ends with a vision of some virtual, albeit deeply disturbing transcendence, which, other than Sister Edgar’s Cyberspace apotheosis, lacks all spiritual qualities. Incidentally, the fast-moving narrative includes various modes of “terror management” which we have come across before, such as emphatic mourning, (merging into) the crowd, consumption, hypochondria, sports, sex and killing. The Tenacity of Capitalism and Alienation The novel may be read as a parable (with rather a covert moral lesson) of postmodern cybercapitalism, featuring the exemplum and epitome of a global financial shark, Eric Packer. One should note, though, that rather than to personal moral shortcomings,1 excess and enormousness are systemic to the logic of financial capitalism per se, the more so in a digitally DOI: 10.4324/9781003289937-5 74 Cosmopolis globalized age. Eric is a 28-year-old Wall Street multibillionaire who owns a company that speculates on the international money and asset market. One morning in April 2000, he sets out for a trip in his stretch limousine from Manhattan New York’s West Side to get a haircut. Most of what happens, diverse meetings, financial transactions, medical checks, take place within (roughly) a day and half a night in or in the vicinity of his fabulously geared and armored car. The story leaves no doubt that death and late financial capitalism, concordant with digital technology, are closely related. The inner logic of advanced technology either to functionally occupy and assimilate or to neutralize spaces (to move ad libitum) finely dovetails with the inner logic of capital, that is, its fastest possible accumulation.2 Accumulation and economic growth appear more than expedient for one’s personal expansion, the transcendence or “contraction” of present time and the “management” of the “terror” of death. Yet, the purported containment and seclusion in a placeless and virtual world of finance and quick consumption does not come off after all. “Black swans,” the inertia and Real of the body and, for that matter, death itself, interfere. Capitalism is, as I will contend, linked to a destructive urge, Freud’s notorious “death drive.” Yet I do not think that the death drive is structurally imminent to “the system itself” as Cristina Garrigós suggests.3 There is, as neoliberal theorists claim, the inbuilt possibility of destruction (of agents, players, industries within the system, old industrial structures), but only to create something new and more resilient. As in the case of Eric Packer, there may be individual ruins by speculation, sociopsychological crashes, but another agent will soon replace the failing or failed investor. Markets fail, markets recover, especially since politics and central banks have chosen to intervene and refinance the private sector (or to require “capital adequacy ratios”). There are no self-regulatory market forces as the classical ideology would have it, yet, failing liquidity or credit crunches (which happens evidently after Packer’s excessive leverage) have never resulted in a destruction and dissolution of the system per se. There have been “crises” (in the proper sense of the word), in 1997 (Asia), in 2000 or 2006/7 and 2011, but financial capitalism and consumption, and the Dow, Nikkei and Nasdaq indexes were soon in full swing again. The “gales of creative destruction” (Joseph Schumpeter) have been compensated for by indefinitely rotating money machines. There is, after all, an indefinite demand with plenty of trusted money around (by far more than commodity value) and an ever-growing readiness to both invest and consume. The continued recovery of capitalism (on a more basic economic level) is, most of all, owing to the necessity to raise and repay interest rates and to (product) innovation, which in turn stimulates consumption. This does not mean that there are no ongoing asymmetries and uncertainties. The reasons for those are (still) informational discrepancies, and, what Alan Greenspan famously called, “irrational exuberance” together with a chain of liquidity bottlenecks Cosmopolis 75 triggered off by an investor who out of some more or less informed uneasiness withdraws his or her funds.4 One of Don DeLillo’s characters seems to support the theory of capitalism’s resilience. When Packer reaches Times Square, he encounters a group of anti-capitalist protesters who have crowded around the Nasdaq center, soon attacking his car. Packer and his chief theorist Vija Kinski (who like others of his advisory staff joins him for a short time in his hermetic vehicle) are prompted to discuss the recursive and assimilatory resistiveness of the system at large. “They are working with you, these people. They are acting on your terms,” Vija claims, “as a way to reemphasize the idea we all live under.” (C 92) Old markets are “harshly eliminated,” only to make way for more profitable new markets. Thus, the set temporal pattern of Capitalism (and Packer): “Destroy the past, make the future.” (C 93) Packer himself concludes (mentally, with a tinge of melancholy): The protest was a form of systemic hygiene, purging and lubricating. It attested again, for the ten thousandth time, to the market culture’s innovative brilliance, its ability to shape itself to its own flexible ends, absorbing everything around it. (C 99) Among the deep psychological reasons for the persistence of the system is, however, the anxiety of perishing socially and individually, in the sense, though, that it precedes or motivates the disposition to an ever more “irrational exuberance.” New products, increased consumption and a fat bank account work, as we have seen, against the fear of death. Capitalism and growth thus profit first from a profound anthropological effect mechanism. Accumulation or growth may reach climaxes or tipping points, giving rise to destructive forces, even if those will not bring the system itself to a downfall.5 It produces a self-destructive urge, even death wish, in those who are driven to a negation of death, precisely by way of the appropriation of capital,6 of space and the “totalization of the time of the self.”7 Neoliberal capitalism8 subjects everything, including body and psyche, to a mechanism of valorization, utilization and self-exploitation.9 If individuals have become a mere function of commodification, exchange value and media (reinforcing “value added”), and if even public political protest is to recursively bolster the system, a weariness of life, selfdestruction or death seem to be the only alternative. The “ever more” exhausts itself when immortality turns out not to substantiate in accumulated property, remaining too abstract to become tangible. The subject realizes that money remains somehow alien to what it aspires to. Capitalism, moreover, produces a self-alienation in its reified agents that results in a hubris, a deadening of empathy and sympathy, in autoaggression as well as aggression against others, foregoing any resonant 76 Cosmopolis relationality. What remains is pain and the “Real.” The hope for an up-todate spiritual state or transubstantiation to an immaterial (ethereal, airwave) data existence comes only down to death, bodiless as it is. In Packer all this comes together: sophomoric megalomania, the fear of death, death wish and a vague desire for an immaterial immortality. He has grown weary of himself, yet still fears death, wishes for death and vaguely desires an immaterial immortality, saturated ad nauseam, as he is. Alienation, (Auto-)Aggression, Death In fact, all is not well in the financial realm of Eric Packer. “In the stir of restless identities,” he seems to have lost his mental orientation. His severely sleepless and friendless life in his splendidly imposing apartment is a “matter of silences.” (C 5) Eric is as alienated from his inner being as he is from his environment. He will seek out, as we shall see, “his pain” (C 207) and his death – the only liminal phenomena that remain essentially his own and feasible. His “palest thought carried an anxious shadow,” he feels “self-haunted” in his acts. (C 6) But rather than his father’s spectral shadow, it is capitalism itself that haunts him, even though, or precisely because, he is one of the biggest financial players on earth. He recognizes his own state of mind when he witnesses outside an investment bank, with growing “respect for the protesters’ ingenuity,” a textual variation on The Communist Manifesto: “A SPECTER IS HAUNTING THE WORLD—THE SPECTER OF CAPITALISM.” (C 96) Pecker’s selfalienation is symptomatic of individuals who have devoted body and soul to the medial and monetary abstraction of late capitalism. There is no longer a mutual exchange or relationality with the world: “Nothing existed around him. There was only the noise in his head, the mind in time.” (C 6) This mental and perceptive self-centeredness is only partly owing to the atmosphere and solitude in the early hours of the morning. It is the inner state of a man whose acts are “synthetic” (in the sense of artificial), whose mind is in time only. For Eric, having changed to Einstein’s Special Theory, Freud “is finished.” Famously, the theory is not only about the relativity of time (to the observer), it also states that, by traveling faster, approaching the speed of light, time will slow down, and, moreover, the faster an object, the bigger its mass. There is no doubt that, more than Freud’s psychology, this appeals to Eric. “He Died so You Can Live” Packer’s self-estrangement from the world is quite drastically borne out by a subsequent short paragraph of two sentences. In a typically DeLilloan way, they abruptly strike a blow, prompting metaphysical or at least deeply existential questions, not to mention the frame of mind at the bottom of that: “When he died he would not end. The world would end.” (C 6) Cosmopolis 77 In White Noise we noticed Gladney’s fascination with Hitler’s outrageous delusional idea to force his lifetime and world time into absolute convergence: “A single life,” Blumenberg explained, “defines its meaning precisely by claiming that it is something whereupon nothing else may come.”10 Eric’s phantasm is even more monstrous (and the expression of an extreme fear of death). The world, in a moral sense, does not only mean nothing to him, the world is going to cease not just in coincidence but also as a result of his death (as Hitler hoped would happen). Packer solipsistically absolutizes his own subjective time and negates intersubjective time. But what does Packer mean by “the world?” The world is, one should think, all-encompassing and Packer necessarily included. How could he subsist, then, if the world ends? Packer probably fantasizes about some immaterial, metaphysical, or, most likely, virtual state (in the form of a mind upload as planned, e.g., by the transhumanist Ray Kurzweil). Even if this is supposed to mean that only the world, as hitherto known to him, could end, no one will be there to recognize or socially acknowledge him in such a singular ethereal condition (nor will he himself). Packer ignores the simple fact that one’s Dasein is through one’s relation to the other human being and object. Yet for the megalomaniac narcissist, this does not matter, doomed as he still may be in the long run: He will make it, surviving the others. His individual time increases in reverse proportion to the foreshortening of the time of others. When later on, during his odyssey through New York, he witnesses (almost real time) the murder of another finance and media magnate in Moscow, Nikolai Kaganovich, “he was glad to see the man in the mud.” (C 81) He “felt good about it […] It relaxed him, the death of Nikolai Kaganovich.” His chief theorist makes the proper comment: “He died so you can live.” (C 82) This is, as we saw above, in line with Packer’s totalitarian narcissism. The death of someone else enlarges one’s life, reaffirms one’s existence and the illusion of one’s triumph over death. The time of the other is Eric’s time, especially if they are potential competitors. Since it is the magnate who is annihilated, his own life and scope of action increase. Another death Eric welcomes befalls Arthur Rapp, whose assassination in “Nike North Korea” is broadcast live “on the Money Channel.” (C 33) Eric hated Rapp violently and cannot get enough of the scene, watches all the replays and wants “them to show it again.” (C 34) Rapp was the director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF). Especially in the 1980s and 1990s of the past century, the IMF (together with the World Bank and the World Trade Organization) was supposed to be the spearhead of global neoliberalism. It issued loans to developing countries or other highly indebted countries with balance-of-payment problems. The credits, amounting to billions, were granted on the condition of a “structural adjustment policy,” which among other things included cuts in state expenditures and a deflation of the respective currencies.11 The IMF, in other words, “adjusted” currency values all over the world, 78 Cosmopolis taking care of the global liquidity and accumulation of money. It enabled states to reduce or deleverage some of its debts (they mainly owed to global funds and banks who had invested in government bonds), relaxing the interest rates and improving their credit rating. The IMF (or its director), then, became a hate figure for extreme adversaries of neoliberal globalization. But it also encroached upon the territory of currency speculators, who were geared to speculate on and propel the fall of the currency.12 This is, after all, what Packer does and tries to do with the Yen. Rapp, in other words, infringed on and diminished Packer’s scale and scope of action. Even though Rapp stabilizes and encourages global financial economy (the IMF at least proposes to do so), for Eric he is an “interference factor.” Eric cherishes his death wholeheartedly. The third death Eric witnesses is an interference factor of another kind. There is a pinch of irony in the fact that the victim is an anti-globalization (at that time predominantly anti-WTO) activist, immolating himself. (C 99–100) Although the transgressive character of the self-sacrifice makes a difference to Packer (as we shall see), the act will confirm those comfortably settled within the system – precisely because of its outstanding and hardly comprehensible radicality. Toward the end of the novel, Eric clears the way to encounter his assassinator and meet his own death. Eric kills the last person who requires his time and limits his action scope, namely his chief security man, responsible for his body and life: “Torval was his enemy, a threat to his selfregard. When you pay a man to keep you alive, he gains a psychic edge. […] Torval’s passing cleared the night for deeper confrontation.” (C147–8) It is clear by now that he is driven to the destruction of his monied, if not necessarily his virtual existence: “[H]e would not end.” De-Individuation and Disembodiment Having shot Torval, Eric takes a contemptuous look at the dying man: “He had mass but no flow. […] no true fluency of movement.” (C 146) Even in the dying body, Eric can only appreciate what has come to determine his existence. He wishes for a kind of liquid state; everything should be fluid and on the move. Liquidity, movement and change is also what he “absorbs” in his penthouse, “retaining every fleck of energy in rays and waves,” (C 8) when he walks through his 48-room apartment in the “tallest residential tower in the world.” Yet for all its (swanky) immensity, he feels ambivalent about it. It mirrors his own enormousness, giving “him strength and depth,” (C 9) yet he sees “a commonplace” in its “oblong whose only statement was its size,” a “banality;” the word “skyscraper” he finds anachronistic. He has set himself up within sheer material magnitude and quantitative excess. His stretch limousine “was not only oversized but aggressively and contemptuously so, metastasizingly so, a tremendous mutant thing that stood astride every argument against it.” (C10) Like his “overdeveloped chest,” his personal Cosmopolis 79 possessions fill a space that may hardly be exceeded, likewise, they have attained a dimension and manifestation where they aggressively go beyond their physical size. They make a “statement”: Like a cancer or gene mutation, they will have their way and will prevail, whatever the argument. The objects’ surfaces are, of course, conducive to this effect. They are opaque, the tower has “an aura of texture and reflection,” (C 9) like so many glass or aluminum facades of the neoliberal era. Apart from a heliport about to be built on his roof, there is (besides food and sex and money) one material thing (with an auratic surplus of course) he insistently asks for, namely the Rothko Chapel (which is not for sale) with 14 paintings located in Houston. A single Rothko will not do for him. He is convinced he will get it all: “There is sufficient space, I can make more space,” he assures his art dealer and lover, Didi Fancher. (C 27) “I want everything that’s there. Walls and all.” This may be a grandiose overestimation (the Menil foundation has become a public charity foundation now, according to Wikipedia), yet his adamant choice also points to an inclination, that is “receptive to the mysteries.” (C 30) Eric has his apartment already furnished with abstract color-field paintings that suggest a “prayerful hush.” (C 8) The paintings in Rothko’s Houston chapel consist of dark brown and grey monochrome canvasses. They may suggest some structural processuality, yet most of all evoke meditative focus and pause. Like all of Rothko’s late non-figurative works they are meant to convey (and, to my mind, really do) a spiritual or “transcendent” experience. That is, your (causal, functional and material) principle of identity is suspended for the time being. Schopenhauer’s “Veil of Maya” is torn apart. Rothko pointed out in 1956 that he was not interested in the relationships of color or form or anything else. […] I’m interested only in expressing basic human emotions — tragedy, ecstasy, doom and so on — and the fact that a lot of people break down and cry when confronted with my pictures shows that I communicate those basic human emotions. […] The people who weep before my pictures are having the same religious experience I had when I painted them.13 The later Rothko is not interested in “Abstractionism,” whose representatives are occupied with the materiality of form, space and the mutual relationship of color and those spaces. He is into a religious or mystic experience that comes down to the dissolution of the coordinates of one’s spatio-temporal and categorial being-there: “ecstasy,” and possibly also, “doom.” Human beings cannot but weep (or resort to either unmotivated laughter or blind violence), when confronted with something – such as “doom” or “death” – they fail to rationally understand. Rothko was an admirer of Nietzsche’s Birth of Tragedy, which tries to redefine art out of the dialectic interplay between a Dionysian and an Apollonian principle.14 Rothko’s emphasis was more on the Dionysian pole – the “ecstatic.” Dionysian rites, 80 Cosmopolis lacking the formative sublation in and through Apollo, could well end in de-individuation, self-dissolution or disembodiment and death. In 1958, Rothko named a number of “ingredients” for “a work of art,” the first was the following: “There must be a clear preoccupation with death – intimations of mortality […] Tragic art […] deals with the knowledge of death.”15 Assuming an intensely focused reception, one may well conclude that Rothko’s non-figurative art functions as an exercise into the pre-discursive abyss of death. Packer, highly educated as he is, must have been aware of the “intimations” Rothko associated with his art. He subcutaneously yearns for an archaic ritual which pivots on death and killing as essential elements. Hearing “the swell of blowing horns,” a fantasy crosses his mind which he did not choose to wish away. It was the tone of some fundamental ache, a lament so old it sounded aboriginal. He thought of men in shaggy bands bellowing ceremonially, social units established to kill and eat. Red meat. That was the call, the grievous need. (C 14) Packer’s psyche is moved by desires that appear hardly compatible; they both come down, though, to the “management” of the terror of death. On the one hand, he wants an existentially chthonic, a physical, experience of the real, an “ache” so fundamental that it can be called forth only by killing and red meat. This denotes a primordial society that lives through an unmediated, yet symbolic, “ceremonial” and socially organized exchange with nature. Reproduction is still directly related to killing and death. The death of the game (or hunting competitor) guaranteed life, the more killing, the more power, the longer one’s life. The digital cosmopolite, on the other hand, wants “to leave behind the inertia of the material world, the realm and state of property and the physical.”16 He or she seeks to find a mystic self-loss (in parareligious art) or, more significantly, transcend the physical to become undying in cyberspace. Packer pursues his atavistic fantasy through his greedy, sexualized and highly physical rampage through New York. The moribund journey stands in stark contrast, but nevertheless constitutes a response, to his desire for a digital dematerialization or disembodiment. Packer’s world-weary aspirations to go beyond the materiality of beingthere are evident. They do not exclusively concern “touchless” information on screens, which his techno-nerd Shiner calls “our sweetness and delight,” giving “meaning to the world.” (C 13–4) He contemplates Platonism, imagining (of all things) his monstrous car (in his world all stretch limousines look alike) as “a platonic replica, weightless for all its size, less an object than an idea.” (C 10) Plato’s Idea is, of course, the ideological core of the much and rightfully criticized philosophy of presence (which is indeed virtual and surely not meant in a spatio-temporal sense). Even Packer’s poetic Cosmopolis 81 predilections are characterized by a kind of world withdrawal or, respectively, the subjectivity that arises out of the gaps or silence “in the white space around the lines […]. The white was vital to the soul of the poem.” (C 66) This is in accordance with his painterly mysticism, which purports to renounce semantic referentiality. As with abstract expressionism, the white gaps allow for an egocentric projection into and absorption by a field of interpretative openness, which may engender (a very modern) process of individual self-loss in a blank perceptive field of amorphous generality.17 Data, Acceleration, and the Disappearance of the Presence Yet, more than anything else, he is fixated on digitalized data in which the stubborn “structures” of the outdated life-world can be neutralized, Packer surmises. It is most of all his body he wants to transform, even though and ironically he excessively shapes it with “barbells and weights” to permanently expand his physical being-in-the world. As with his stretch limousines, he remains stuck in the duality of res extensa and res cogitans. When he has his daily health check in his car, he realizes: He was here in his body, the structure he wanted to dismiss […]. He wanted to judge it redundant and transferable. It was convertible to wave arrays of information. It was the thing he watched on the oval screen […]. (C 48) The especially postmodern obsession with health – frequent health checks and workouts – is, as we saw, a common strategy to manage the fear of death. Yet a postindustrial society that, in addition, tries to objectify its general knowledge, individual performance and efficiency by converting them more and more into “arrays of information” on “screens,” will find itself in a contradictory situation. Digitalization allows for an increasing number of parametric data about our body and its correlation with what we get as an input from our environment. Data may be influenced, the body is not, though, at our disposal. The intuitive relation with our body is replaced with second-order information and the more physiological and objectified data one receives, the more the body eludes one’s subjective and practical disposability.18 The ersatz religion of the body leads in fact to a growing distance from our body, a form of disembodiment. Packer is still mystified, almost sublimely (“dwarfed”), but also slightly unsettled, uncertain whether he was watching a computerized mapping of his heart or a picture of the thing itself. […] The image was only a foot away but the heart assumed another context […]. There it was and it awed him […] outside him. (C 44) 82 Cosmopolis “The technological extension of man,” according to Hartmut Rosa, “undermines our self-efficacy, rather than enlarging it.”19 The latitude of subjective action becomes in fact smaller, self-alienation a consequence. To be sure, any use of media implies a shifting of my communicative action to the exterior, a turning away from my body. Especially digitalization leads to a restriction or even loss of one’s relationality with the world. Heidegger’s things (“Zeug”) at hand become mere objects.20 Things are no longer toward him or her; they lose their presence (“Gegenwärtigkeit” or “beingthere”). Likewise, Packer’s tools are no longer “at hand;” he talks his “systems into operation” or waves them “go blank.” (C 13) Their magic is so charming that Packer apotheosizes data: “In fact data itself was soulful and glowing.” Data are “eloquent”: “the digital imperative that defined every breath of the planet’s living billions.” (C 24) Rather than the Holy Ghost, it is zeros and ones that today inform and animate the pneuma (old greek: pneũma, i.e., spirit, breath) of humanity. The digital data are our bodies and oceans incarnate: the transubstantiation of our being-there into the virtual. Only here the totality of the world reveals itself: “knowable and whole.” As in the Eucharist, no visible data about the substance is discernible, only the accidence and the purely sacred is left: “pure spectacle, or information made sacred, ritually unreadable.” (C 80) The generation “Packer” does not “need God or miracles” (C 95) anymore. Digital technology holds a more feasible promise of immortality than once the miraculous Eucharist did, the disk has taken the place of the wafer. “People,” Kinski expounds, “will not die.” They “will be absorbed in streams of information.” (C 104) As a matter of fact, transhumanists still ask the same question: “Why die when you can live on a disk?” (C 105) Consequently, Packer is placed in a narcissistic panopticon of himself. Like the Highway Killer in Underworld (or Oswald in Libra), he is only through the image on the screen. (C 22) Videocams stream his image continuously “worldwide,” for his health and security a nurse and two guards watch him constantly, (C 15) so does he himself. (C 22) Yet even though his image constitutes his identity, it diverges from what he expects to see at present, anticipating future states, the image is “saturated” by protention, retention is more or less (never completely) blanked out.21 He wonders why he sees his face – videotaped in real time – with “eyes closed, mouth framed in a soundless simian howl.” His image is “independent” and only later on he feels his “body catching up.” (C 52) In terms of psychology, this could easily be explained, yet DeLillo’s realistic text does not indicate selfdelusion or autosuggestion here. (As respects the Yen he is deluded, but his failure in predicting the currency trends has obvious reasons.) A similar incident takes place when his car gets into the anti-globalization demonstration. He sees himself live recoil in shock, but the detonation occurs after that. His chief of theory, who witnesses (so she says) the same asynchronicity (philosophically speaking, the non-simultaneity of the simultaneous), has a lofty but not completely wayward, explanation: Packer “the Cosmopolis 83 true futurist,” with a “hypermaniacal” consciousness, “may have contact points beyond the general perception,” altering “the terms of” his “habitat.” The hysteron proteron that confuses Packer’s sense of temporal sequentiality22 may well be interpreted as a satirical device to hyperbolically stress the degree to which Packer (as a technological exemplum) has been interpellated (L. Althusser) and alienated by the digital medium and its temporal mode. In accordance with the requirements of cybercapitalism, algorithms have been programmed to calculate what is most likely going to happen, scanning respective environments as regards all possible events. On the basis of that, algorithms are not only predicting future (financial) market trends for speculation purposes, they “alter” the terms of the “habitat,” they make the future. Google or Amazon have long been in a position to extrapolate your future decisions determining recursively those very decisions. As Packer’s consciousness has become that of the media, his mind may thus anticipate and perceive (likely) future scenarios, or, reversely, media, on account of the extensive data they have collected about him, know and screen beforehand what is going to happen to him.23 Yet, the most conspicuous leap ahead is, after all, when Packer watches his own death and corpse on the monitor of his “almost metaphysical” smart watch, which is also equipped with an “electron camera.” (C 204) He can see his corpse being taken to the hospital morgue, “dead inside the crystal of his watch but still alive in original space.” (C 209) Packer’s death is within the logic (i.e., digitally predictable) of his own spatial evacuation, his “fallenness” and oblivion of being (“Seinsvergessenheit,” Heidegger). Temporal Alienation Packer’s habitat (his person included) is geared to contract or shrink the present: “The present,” Kinski explains, “is harder to find. It is being sucked out of the world to make way for the future of uncontrolled markets and huge investment potential. The future becomes insistent.” (C 79) But what does a “new theory of time” (C 86) implicate which takes account of a present that is “being sucked out of the world”? Benno Levin, Packer’s eventual angel of death, used to analyze currencies for Packer’s company but could not keep pace, was “demoted,” became “generic labor” and was dismissed “without notice or severance package.” (C 60) Benno may have had previous psychological problems, but the temporal conditions of his work have certainly contributed to his “extreme confusion.” This is what he tells Packer: I loved the baht. But your system is so microtimed that I couldn’t keep up with it. I couldn’t find it. It’s so infinitesimal. I began to hate my work, and you, and all the numbers on my screen, and every minute of my life. (C 191) 84 Cosmopolis Benno was dispossessed of his present time and therefore of his presence as “being-there” (“Da-Sein”) or “being-in-the-world.” Having lost his identity, he “can only pretend to be someone.” Run-down, he squats in a derelict factory building. He is completely on his own and removes, notably, walls for more space. Here he tries to regain his individual time without a clock: “I think of time in other totalities now. I think of my personal time-span set against the vast numeration […].” (C 59–60) He will however perish just as well; technological time or acceleration forms the inbuilt momentum of social and economic modernity. The alienation from space, time and others is not only true for Packer’s former slave Benno, it also affects the master. For Packer, the point is the ever faster, “urgent and endless replenishment of data,” dissolving and recurring at a speed the eye can hardly follow: “This is the point, the thrust, the future.” (C 80) It is notable that not only “microtimed” financial data compress (or suppress) Packer’s present, he receives updated data from virtually everywhere, his body and watch included. He is a multitasker, continuously meets his consultants, and responds intermittently to various stimuli outside his car, indiscriminately gobbles food, has sex repeatedly and quickly and so on. Packer, consciously or unconsciously, has become subject to the vast illusion of late capitalist consumer and media society that the more options and actions your day holds and comprises, the more fulfilled your life; the more data or experiential units one compresses into increasingly smaller time slots, the more the plus or gain in time, in experience and competitive edge. The existential motive behind that is, in principle, an infinite extension of your life. As the world always offers more options than can be realized in a lifetime, one has to cram as much as possible into this life and speed up or accelerate the “pace of life.”24 If one can multiply and speed up options, acts or experiences (in terms of making money, having sex, consumption, travel, etc.), you can act out and accomplish proportionally more in your lifetime, and thereby prolong your life or live multiple lives in the course of your given life – ad infinitum, as it were. In our post-religious age, the (above mentioned) disconcerting divergence or gap between one’s individual “lifetime” and “world time” thus appears to be amendable. Social (economic and communicative) acceleration, in other words, seems to be fit to manage the terror of finitude and death: “Clock time,” Vija Kinski explains, “accelerated the rise of capitalism. People stopped thinking about eternity. They began to concentrate on hours, measurable hours, man-hours, using labor more efficiently.” (C 79)25 However, there is a category mistake that results not only from a confusion of quantity and quality but more fundamentally from a misunderstanding of our time and temporality. First of all, investment capital and the growth imperative (along with technology) are bound to create always more options (in proportion, of course, to his or her income). The faster the processor and the means of transportation, the larger the range of Cosmopolis 85 goods, the increase of information, messages or financial platforms and providers, the more time it will take to plug into these options and take account of them26: “[T]he proportion of options realized and experiences made to those missed does not rise, but falls incessantly.”27 In fact, since the pressure to use all of these offers gets stronger, the growing varieties of possibility lead to a temporal and mental overload; that is, rather than to individual freedom, they lead to self-alienation. An increasing variety of financial papers are not only dealt with for 24 hours in one “billionth of a second,” as the hyperbolic Packer claims (C 79). Financial platforms, supply and demand, virtual currencies multiply. Although trading is mostly done by computers, humans are still permanently involved (observing the data on monitors). Since many others are in the business, rates are moved from pillar to post (in accordance with the economic code of have/have not). And since no one is ever up-to-date, trading is a continuous process. It propels the market by virtue of a perpetual iteration of the same numbers, borne only by the prospect of a competitive advantage, which is the other’s disadvantage (or the other way round). It alters in terms of quantity, but there is no real development; things do not “go anywhere.”28 To forego the impression of a standstill, and to not fall into depression, “we create our own frenzy.” (C 85) One must indeed be extremely “rigorous” to be able “to take adequate measure of the world around us,” Kinski remarks. Packer’s life is crammed with isolated, disconnected activities or encounters with things, people and episodes. He does not take or have the time for an authentic and sustained experience. The spaces of his life-world, his car, his wife, and his consultants are means to a fleeting transaction, a matter-of-fact settlement; they remain external and indeed alien to him. He has no inner relationship to his apartment or to his job, or his wife. Packer lives outside a world characterized by a mutual relationship of resonance with his environment. This comes down to nothing but a severe form of self-alienation.29 Packer’s (eventually failing) desire to get a haircut at the place of his childhood is symptomatic. Anthony, the hairdresser, was a close friend of his father, who had died when Packer was five. The benevolent Anthony resonates with authenticity and reminds Packer of a time of innocence. Packer is not nostalgic in the usual sense of yearning for the past, he wants to feel “what his father would feel” (C 159) in this place. It is indirectly by identifying with his father that he can evoke an atmosphere of familiarity or nearness he has lost elsewhere: “This is what he wanted from Anthony. The same words. The oil company calendar on the wall. The mirror that needed silvering.” (C 161) Packer feels at home so much that he trusts and confides in this “particular place, where elapsed time hangs in the air, suffusing solid objects and men’s faces. This is where he felt safe.” The insomniac even falls asleep. Eric feels in his bones that the elapsed time here has been a lived or unalienated time of being-there. However, the visit to his childhood remains only another episode. He discovers that the threat (by 86 Cosmopolis an assessor) has not yet “taken material form” and feels stuck in a “suspended state,” that is, a time of no immediate consequence. Thus, he leaves abruptly with only the left side of his hair done, in order to face a “culminating moment ahead,” (C169) “eager for action, for resolution.” (C 171) Packer’s backward-looking desire for a world in which people and objects resonate with time is only indicative of the alienated touchless technological bubble in which Packer now moves, in which only the future counts. The past, determined by the analogical world of tools and the correlating language, is denounced. The absolutely flexible and mobile professional finds the word “office […] outdated now. It had zero saturation.” (C 15) Even the advanced walkie-talkies are “already vestigial” and “degenerate structures.” (C 19) Automated teller machines are “antifuturistic […] even the acronym seemed dated.” He explains their obsolescence, interestingly enough, by the burden of “historical memory” and “the inference of fuddled human personnel.” (C 54) When they move (always slower) through the diamond district (or Jewish Quarter), he is again disconcerted about the real exchange of gems or watches and physical money that takes place here, “so obsolete Eric didn’t know how to think about it.” (C 64) “The street,” he thinks, “is an offense to the truth of the future.” (C 65) Incredibly, people negotiate and speak about real things (but have also stopped to “touch each other.” C 66). Not only this particular street, streets in general are redundant, impeding a further acceleration of his cybercapitalist society (Packer is looking forward to the flight basis on his apartment building). Even the president is an outdated figure that belongs to the pre-cybercapital era, existing “in some little hollow of nontime.” He is the “undead.” For Packer, the president, although “omnipresent,” just occupies space sitting physically and inertly “in quotidian stupor.” (C 76–7) His appearance is incompatible with Packer’s idea of post-analogous speed of action. Ironically enough, the car stops dead more than once on his route. Packer’s fast-paced, yet directionless existence comes to a halt precisely because he cannot help being on the move (he was warned beforehand). In DeLillo’s novel, Paul Virilio’s metaphorical “polar inertia” attains quite a literal exemplification. Lacking any historical consciousness, Packer detests the traditional “thing-world” and therefore continuity. His rejection of the past debases everything to mere commodities present-at-hand. This is true also for his attitude toward his fellow human beings. When he happens to see his former employee Levin in the street, he does not “care whether this was someone he’d once known. There were many people he’d once known. Some were dead, other in forced retirement, spending quiet time alone in their toilets […].” (C 54) As indifferent as he is to the memory of things, as callous is he to his former employees, whom he uses only as a means to an end without any compassion. An episodic life that consists of mere sequences of isolated and, therefore, detached events has an enormous and disastrous impact on the Cosmopolis 87 future but does not allow for tradition. Ideally, the present is or should be a fusion of the (hermeneutic) horizons of the past and of the horizon of expectations. The dialectic mutuality guarantees both personal and social continuity and stability. Yet oblivious of the past as he is, Packer’s mind is only on the future (and the satisfaction of imminent physical needs), which he wants to draw, as it were, into the contracting present, the latter diminishing to ever shorter intervals. The interim between now and then, here and there, becomes not only insignificant, it appears a nuisance. Yet it is the contemplation of the past in the present interval that provides not only a period of self-understanding, it also “protects the future of the violence of untimeliness.”30 But Packer acts erratically and discontinuously. He lets himself be carried away by mere moments in time, the quick alterations of data. He is unable to arrive at a thoughtful conclusion, because there are always more connectivity options which ask for some, albeit directionless, action.31 Completely under the delusion of currency, his decisions are born instantaneously out of an inconsiderate present, thinking no longer about the consequence for the world and his environment. Packer, thereby, forgoes the autonomy which can only be achieved with regard to and acceptance of the past and the other. He does not listen to his advisers who warn him; they only serve as entertaining episodes. The present, if only compressed to the discontinuous moment, reverses into the feeling of empty time, and fears of nothingness and death, especially in the silence of the night when not much seems to happen. Packer’s insomnia, then, is due to his frenzied existence, as it is to the unbearable experience of an empty time and pure duration. Driven as he is, his episodic actions do not allow for contemplation, only for other options without end. He just hurries on to the only despairing conclusion of real consequence, namely murder and suicide. Monetary Alienation Analogies between money and God and wafer and money have often been drawn.32 What they share is that they function by virtue of symbolic generalization, context independence and what Alfred Sohn-Rethel called “Realabstraktion” or “Reality Abstraction.”33 Wafers, (ritual) words of institution or money have no intrinsic value. They, thereby, attain a quasitranscendental index and thus make the impossible possible: [W]afers become God, words flesh or the Holy Ghost (Pneuma), money may be converted to commodities and, potentially, anything else. They appear to reconcile the most dissimilar experiences and perceptions. Money and God (like language) are media that hold an imaginary promise and claim general validity. They work as supratemporal stores of unlikely equivalences and value assignments that can be realized anywhere anytime. Money, like God, synthesizes beings (or being and consciousness) and transcends the contingency and complexity of objects guaranteeing 88 Cosmopolis continuity. It creates unity, motivates action,34 and at the same time positions the subject, on the basis or code of to have/to have not. “Money for anything,” Didi Fancher says, “It helped me be a person.” (C 29) It thus both individualizes and separates subjects by virtue of the dialectics of inclusion/exclusion.35 Packer, within a communicative cluster (of finance and his company), constantly displays his difference and superiority: “It’s mine if I buy it.” (C 28) If money, according to Sohn-Rethel, provides the “explanation for the ‘a priori’ of understanding,”36 mediating between being and thinking, it constitutes the transcendental signifier which relates to God in a metonymic rather than metaphoric way. It organizes thought, psyche and society in the way God, or, more precisely, theology, used to organize thought. People in monetary societies may still profess some credo but actually believe in credit. The “god-term” money has equivocal implications, though. Pre-secular times had a narrative and teleological imprinting, with the transcendental signifier God still leading the way, the telos being eternity, a timeless time beyond time. Now, Kinski asserts, it is “[m]oney” that “makes time. […] Clock time accelerated the rise of capitalism. People stopped thinking about eternity. […] It’s cyber-capital that creates the future.” (C 79) In fact, money “has lost its narrative qualities […] Money is talking to itself.” (C 77)37 Unlike theology, money has no clear beginning and no end (coins seem to have been invented in 680 BC, other forms of exchange value are certainly much older). It has become a self-referential process with its own dynamics. The consequence is that money not only becomes an end in itself, it absorbs or casts a veil of secondary reality over the world. As with King Midas, “money as the medium of secondary coding of the world becomes primary itself.”38 Money leads to a global simulation, the symbolic and real indistinguishable. “The market culture is total,” (C 90) Kinski asserts. The enormous sums people (such as Packer) spend on luxury apartments, boats or planes no longer serve “traditional self-assurances,” or “personality.” (Likewise, there is nothing “wickedly expensive” anymore.) “The only thing that matters,” she tells Packer, “is the price you pay.” Packer has paid the money “for the number itself. One hundred and four million [for his apartment]. This is what you bought. […] The number justifies itself.” Yet Kinski’s crucial point is, “property” […] no longer “has weight or shape.” (C 78) Money has concealed the categorial qualities whereby we make out the world. Money leads, in other words, to an inexorable alienation from being that may be only momentarily broken through sheer and thoroughgoing profligacy. Trust forms another problem. Both money and God are founded on trust (the more so with fiat money): “In God we trust,” the one-dollar bill proclaims. But if God or monotheism, in general, have shown to be able to cope with the renunciation of individuals, financial capitalism can be thrown into a liquidity crisis if only a few creditors lose confidence and withdraw their credit, bonds or securities. A precarious psychological Cosmopolis 89 response to either system is doubt, which in Puritan thought could be sinful in itself. (God is beyond our faculties, but omniscient and noncontingent.) However, the complete absence of doubt and too much selfassuredness would also indicate the sin of hubris. The dot-com bubble in 2000 or the real estate bubble in 2006/7 was indeed the result of too much of a lack of doubt.39 (Money as opposed to God is contingent.) While Didi Fancher seems to recognize “an element of doubt” in Packer, he declines: “Doubt? What is doubt?” He said, “There is no doubt. Nobody doubts anymore.” (C 31) Packer goes on to leverage the yen against all advice and evidence. (See, e.g., C 84) His hubris will contribute to his utter self-estrangement and downfall. Another ambiguity of money (which is of course also its advantage as a generalized medium of communication) is its complete insensibility or indifference to individuals. God may listen to the believer; money does not. Money is a “cold” medium which produces cold-heartedness (a familiar romantic and post-romantic topos) in “money-grubbers.” Dickens’s Scrooge is, of course, the best-known example. Scrooge is saved, Packer falls. Money is moreover not only subject to the code of to have/to have not (credit/debit), it creates a sense of scarcity (among the few moneyed) and real scarcity and social deprivation (among the many poor). Withdrawing money from circulation will lead to financial straits (or, e.g., unemployment); pumping too much into an economy may lead to inflation (and, e.g., to unpayable prices for necessary imports). Packer borrows yens in large quantities, hoping for falling interest rates. He throws the money onto the market, buys out (leveraged) company shares and expects a twofold profit. This worked well in 1997, when boomers speculated on the fall of the Thai baht. The baht underwent a massive depreciation, the loans went down in value and the speculators could repay the credits easily and with profit. The consequences were an equally massive withdrawal of lenders – for whom even smaller margins of interest are a matter of scarceness – and bankruptcies of banks as well as in the private sector. The outcome was disproportionately many have-nots or, more generally spoken, scarcity on a large social scale. Poverty spread into small rural villages. For the (fictional) Packer, we may assume a different situation. The yen, backed by a much sounder economy and foreign currency deposits, did not become cheaper, but rose (perhaps also responding positively to growing demand). Consequently, Packer lands on the negative side of the balance sheet. The scope of his speculation is yet of such a vast degree that he nevertheless arouses mistrust to effect debit, have-nots or scarcity worldwide. “There were currencies tumbling everywhere. Bank failures were spreading.” (C 115) Even speculative bubbles (feigning fullness and bounteousness) are always at risk to overturn into what an expansive monetary society is based on, namely scarcity. The highly ambivalent character of money is, after all, that the more of it is 90 Cosmopolis around the scarcer it seems to become. Late- or post-capitalist societies of affluency are still stuck with lack or want of money (and social inequality.) There are necessarily those who are on the losers’ side, or in the drastic words of Kinski: “The force of cyber-capital that will send people into the gutter to retch and die.” (C 90) The structural similarity of God and money ultimately expresses itself in its apparent management of or defense against death. Cybercapital may effect impoverishment to the point of starvation, but to those on the side of the haves, it nurtures the hope for immortality. If money has transcendent connotations and a transcendental form, changing everything into something else, then it is suitable for expanding one’s possibilities indefinitely. One argument against death was its curtailment or limitation of experiential possibilities. The accumulation of money may then be felt to potentially extend one’s life infinitely, ultimately granting immortality. One bolsters up one’s existence with as many nest eggs as one can acquire for averting the worst. The secondary (or virtual or second-order) status of money engenders and advances precisely the false (sub-)consciousness of this: The more you possess, the less you will die. The early modern sale of indulgences in Europe was already indicative of that fantasy. The Christian creditors bought the forgiveness of sin, salvation and hence eternal life. Capital accumulation and, by implication, the imperative of economic growth work as antidotes against “absolute loss. Death generates the compulsion to production and growth.”40 The American ethnologist Edward Smith Craighill Handy made similar anthropological observations in Polynesia that may account for the modern compulsion to amass money. Warriors, one assumed, incorporated the “mana” of all their victims. The mana of his spear increased; he ate from the dead and wore parts of his enemies’ remains on his body (such as a dried hand, or skull). The aboriginal practices appear to continue in a sublimated manner. They come down to what we saw above, the hoarding of (superfluous) consumer goods, exchange value and, today, of data. We buy assets, bonds or shares (together with the data); fuel growth and cherish the illusion to buy more lifetime. Time solidifies in (moneyed) liquidity. Han also points to archaic violence rites that might have paved the way for the modern urge for accumulation. One’s power within societies that exerted blood vengeance grew the more, the more you compensated for a death of your kin by killing enemies. Also, the sense of power had to be restored. Achilles avenges his friend Patroclus by killing indiscriminately. Money also refers, according to the historian of religion Georg Baudler, to ritual sacrifice. It is at its roots in: “[D]eep frozen sacrificial blood, as it were. To throw money around, to make it and see it flow engenders a similar effect as the flow of blood in a fight or on the altar of sacrifice.”41 The carnivorous accumulation as well as the excessive overspending of money “immunizes […] against death.”42 Packer’s financial, eating and sex rampage through New York may well be indicative of a regression into archaic rite. Cosmopolis 91 Physical Alienation Yet, Cosmopolis, like Underworld, White Noise, or the later Point Omega and Zero K is nonetheless a materialist novel, in the sense that it refers to the ineluctable materiality of our being. I think it is reasonable to read it also as a parable about the inevitability of the body, reshaped and estranged from itself in a society in which everything is encoded by money. Packer has reached an existential point, where, like Adelbert Chamisso’s Peter Schlemihl, he realizes that his life lacks what existentially belongs to life, namely both the shadow of his body and death. Packer’s obsession with health and fitness, the attempt at escaping death, comes down in fact to the reification of his body, an object being “ready to hand,” but nonetheless “death-in-life,” “insubstantial” (C 9) and incomplete (see C 140). The quasi metaphysics of data and money and the attention to his body are objectified means to repress or ban death from his life-world. Yet by the same token he becomes only the more determined by death, ex negativo. Life is reduced, according to Baudrillard, to the illusion of “an absolute surplus-value,” while, in fact, the indestructible logic of symbolic exchange re-establishes the equivalence of life and death in the indifferent fatality of survival. In survival, death is repressed; life itself, in accordance with that well known ebbing away, would be nothing more than a survival determined by death.43 In an interview with John Barron, DeLillo asserts that Packer, from the outset, “is feeling a certain imitation of mortality.”44 The negative and mutual relationship between “survival” and death is enforced by the subordination of Packer’s living space and time to the abstraction of capital, and heightened by the corresponding objectification of the body.45 This is only too obvious in one of his daily medical checks in his car. When his chief of finance, Jane Melman, asks him whether he undergoes the same “routine every day,” she learns that on weekends the doctor comes to his house: “We die, Jane, on weekends. People. It happens.” And he reiterates a little later: “We die every day.” (C 44–5) Packer’s hypochondriac obsession with his health transforms his body into a potentially mortal enemy, a malign object likely to disintegrate, rather than an integrated subjective body or “Leib.”46 Even an entirely innocuous “blackhead” upsets him and makes him ask for treatment, to “do something about this.” The doctor only replies: “Let it express itself.” The latter simply trusts the body in itself (its self-regulation), Packer, the doer, does not. For him, his body appears rather a placeholder for death. During the medic, he is watching “arrays of information” on some oval screen. Melham instructs him on the Japanese economy and by implication currency. (She is pleased to tell him about the increase of bankruptcies. (C 46)) Concurrently, his doctor palpates his prostate through his 92 Cosmopolis anus, which is the climax of the whole procedure.47 The all-absorbing pain he feels makes him negatively aware of the “fact of his biology,” (C 50)48 yet, likewise, arouses his sexual tension. He realizes that he is “here in his body, the structure he wanted to dismiss […]. He wanted to judge it redundant and transferable” and convert it into pure information. On the other side, he has an erection with the doctor’s excruciatingly probing “finger up his ass.” While he is looking at Melman with his sunglasses on, “in a posture of rank humiliation,” (C 50) they reach their climaxes without bodily contact. In psychological terms, the starkly hypochondriac Packer shows symptoms of a masochistic neurosis, or more precisely, a form of “self-defeating personality disorder.” His fractious relationship to his body is only too self-evident. Packer’s response to an insignificant side remark by his doctor – “Your prostate is asymmetrical” – is again quite telling.49 The smart Packer is certainly aware of the fact that without asymmetry, matter and antimatter would have canceled one another out after the Big Bang and no evolution would have taken place. (See C 52) Yet when applied to his body he begins “to feel pale and spooked,” deeply “haunted” again, but still with “a perverse reverence toward the word.” (C 52) Sure, most body parts (including the prostate) consist of two parts that are never alike. Packer, on the other hand, is not only neurotic. His mind (in spite of his inclination to modern art) is obfuscated by the metaphysics (and ideology) of symmetry in math and natural processes.50 Consequently, one of the initial reasons for his bad speculation is precisely the transfer of apparently symmetric natural patterns onto economic data fluctuations. His executor Benno Levin puts him right: “You were looking for balance, beautiful balance, equal parts, equal sides.” Packer should have observed the “misshape,” the “misweave” in his “body,” of his “prostate.” The advice that Packer had better resort to his body for counsel and rescue is of course another final irony of the novel. He trusted the natural beauty of data, yet deeply distrusted his body, his metonymy of death. Levin has proved to be a “worthy assassin after all.” (C 200) However, it is less the false correlation between money and nature that precipitates his downfall; Packer’s disintegration is deliberate. From the beginning, he does not heed his own enshrined data on his screen at home (“The yen rose overnight,” C 8) nor the analyses and advice of his specialists. Melman warns him emphatically against his imminently looming crash. His disregard for advice – which runs through the novel – is partly due to his arrogance. Yet it is telling and no coincidence that he neither looks at Melman nor listens to her convincing arguments. He rather watches a slouching and shabby man at an ATM who will turn out to be his murderer some hours later and also prefers to think about the obsoleteness of the ATM that still needs human “fuddled” bodies to operate. His desire for immaterial and unbodied functionality is counteracted, though, by the last sentence of his doctor (which concludes the chapter): “Your prostrate is asymmetrical.” (C 54) Cosmopolis 93 The Journey to Self-Destruction and Death: “The Desolation of Reality” (W. B. Yeats) From the outset, Packer’s journey through New York is marked by irrationality and waywardness; his fascination with the virtual is increasingly interfered with, countermined by his albeit painful obsession with the body. It is, in other words, a bad trip into the real. To the confusion of his chief bodyguard, he insists on a haircut in the salon of his childhood at the other end of the precariously congested town. In financial terms, a haircut can mean a reduction (or debt relief) and financial loss. Yet, trivial as it appears, it comes to stand for the turning point in his life. Packer’s (material) self-alienation has reached a point where it can no longer be compensated for by the accumulation of capital, consumption and power. “You’ve outperformed it [i.e. the market], consistently.” Packer is saturated up to his throat. If the accumulation of capital works against death, he has come to a liminal stage. The “more” has become an end in itself; having scaled a mega- or supermaniac level of accumulation, it becomes meaningless. Paradoxically, he can find himself now only through willful waste and self-defeat, which is in line, though, with his masochistic inclinations. In addition, his desire for his transubstantiation to data is a double-edged sword. Data (any information) needs a material basis and (still) a human body to make something out of it. The virtual and monied overcoming of death refers ineluctably back to the hard materiality of the body. We do not have a body, we are “body.” Packer, steeped in a world of unsubstantial fiat money, which no longer appears to fulfill its transcending purpose for him, longs for an immediate exchange with the physical, which he likewise wants to eliminate. The pure presence in time has as a logical consequence the eventual destruction of one’s spatial or corporeal existence (which in turn will uproot or probably render impossible any presence of a subject-person). Packer’s desperate answer to these contradictions is an increased exposure of his material existence to a process of devastation. He, thereby, gets to experience his (financial and bodily) being-there more and more intensely, yet damages it at the same time. The stronger he feels pain and disintegration, the more he feels alive or immortal, and the more he invites his death and mortality. Pain ruptures the illusion of his virtual existence in front of his monitors, but brings him closer to self-loss and death, or, perhaps, another illusionary immortal existence in cyberspace within his monitors. The hypochondriac attention that he normally devotes to his body (against the terror of death) has tipped over into violence and auto-aggression, furthering precisely what he wanted to evade, namely death. But even auto-aggression or, if you wish, the death drive can be a form of terror management. It propels disintegration, yet diverts from the fear of derealization and death (the more so if there is still a vague hope of digital immortality.) Born out of these irreconcilable contradictions and deep alienation 94 Cosmopolis Packer’s self seeks an alternative, even if this means pure negativity, or negative Dionysian self-laceration. One is tempted (in the wake of Bataille51) to interpret Packer’s overspending as a form of excess, exuberance and transgression that reaffirms death for the sake of an intensification of life. But Packer’s progress is devoid of all eroticism or love even when he has excessive sex; he never loses himself completely in the other and remains (with only some temporary and passing uncertainty) a narcissist to the end. Packer’s day trip is a Conradian journey into the “Darkness” of the “Real,”52 beyond the Apollonian, the symbolic and imaginary. He is continuously craving for “red meat,” and “to live in meat space.” (C 64) He urges his wife to have sex, as it “has an element of cleansing,” and, quite graphically, wants “to bite her lower lip, seize it between his teeth and bite down just hard enough to draw an erotic drop of blood.” (C 72–3) According to Euripides’s The Bacchae (esp. v 2.1) and other sources, omophagia (the consumption of red meat and blood) was a preferred ritual of Dionysus’s disciples. Nietzsche saw in it an act of reconciliation with the self-alienated individual.53 At Times Square, Packer gets hemmed into an anti-capitalist/anti-globalization demonstration. The uproar appears similarly forceful, multifaceted (and creative, distributing rats for currency, chanting the modification of Marx’s famous sentence) and as offensive as the one in Seattle, six months before.54 The demonstrators are about to break into the Nasdaq Center at Times Square. But Packer is not, as one would expect, worried or irritated. “He was enjoying this.” (C 89) He asks himself whether he “envies them” (C 92), his “respect” grows and eventually he finds it exhilarating.55 It is not yet clear whether it is the spectacle he enjoys (knowing that it will only “re-emphasize” (C 92) the “market culture” (C 90)) or whether he is drawn into a process with an end even “total” capitalism cannot absorb. “Rapt” (C 94) as he is, he spends all the money he can get hold of, against all economic rationality and evidence to the contrary (spending thereby also himself). It marks the second transgressive response to the omnipresence and omnipotence of financial capitalism. But immediately after that Packer witnesses an incident which is indeed exceptional and terrifying. DeLillo leads into the scene by suggesting a spatial rupture: “There was a shift, a break in space.” The break is caused by a protester on fire: “[H]is glasses melt into his eyes.” Eric is intrigued by the selfimmolation and mentally reenacts the suicide; he wants “to imagine the man’s pain, his choice, the abysmal will.” (C 97–8 and 100) Death and more so suicide, especially if as unsettling as this one, represents one of the few56 remaining acts of “starkness and horror” that cannot be absorbed by capitalism.57 Eric, as opposed to Kinski, eventually acknowledges this (for his being): “What did this change? Everything, he thought.” (C 99) When immediately afterward, he is informed about a serious threat to his life, he feels “a burst of self-realization.” (C 102) The more imminent and Cosmopolis 95 likely his own death, the more invigorated and tangible his self seems to become to him. The rising yen (which entails a “lubricious plunge”) seals his bankruptcy, yet sexualizes him like a “cunnilingual.” He actually feels and draws in “rain and sky,” along with the “sour reek” of urine, and the pleasure about the misfortune in the “markets.” Yet he enjoys most “the threat of death at the brink of night […].” For him this means, after all, that he now “could begin the business of living.” (C 107) Packer wants to clear things up. His existential self-contradictions ask to be solved. In doing so, he seeks the proximity and possibility of death, which yet implies another contradiction. He has sex with Torval’s lover, makes her pour vodka on his genitals, stun him with a 100,000 volts, and “jellify” his muscles, which leaves him for some time on the floor “electroconvulsive and strangely elated, deprived of his faculties of reason.” (C 115) Once more, he attracts real pain self-destructingly but overcomes the “principium individuationis” of reason. Packer is now intent on letting “it all come down.” (C 123) That is, he even squanders the entire fortune, his wife had offered to support and save him: “all air anyway.” (C 124) When he becomes involved in and deeply moved by the Rapper Brutha Fez’s funeral ceremony, he delights the more in his own fall. “Emptied of everything,” Packer comes to terms with himself, feels “blessed,” “disinterested and free.” (C 136) Remarkably enough, he is also “tired of looking at screens” now. (C 140) In the following, Eric becomes more and more alive to his physis; his “body awareness,” (of, e.g., his “nasal mucous membranes,” 140), however, goes hand in hand with his disintegration. He is hit by the notorious “pastry assassin,” uses his hanky to wipe his face, but smells and tastes it, “soured by his own secretions of the testes and seminal vesicles and various other glands.” (C 141) With the cream all over his body, a wound on his forehead and the need for “a leak,” Eric feels “great.” He punches back, feels his stinging fist, “quick and hot. His “body whispered to him. […] He was brass-balled again.” (143–4) He then shoots Torval, which in moral terms is surely abominable, especially when he comes up with an aesthetic justification. (Torval had “no true fluency of movement.”) Yet Eric finds also a (no less disturbing) logical reason for the murder. Torval stands in his path to “deeper confrontation,” to ruin. “Torval was his enemy,” paid to keep him “alive.” (C 147–8) The visit to the for decades unchanged barbershop is to re-collect his father, with whom, along with the owner of the shop, he associates an authenticity his life is now utterly lacking. His father died when he was five. Not surprisingly, the evocation only half works out even if he falls asleep, dreams of his father and feels safe. He leaves abruptly with only one side cut and a gun left to him by the old barber, his father’s old friend. What strikes him for the first time, though, is his driver Ibrahim’s blind and scarred eye “twisted away from the nose.” (C 164) Eric fantasizes 96 Cosmopolis about the possible torture and violence the man might have suffered in his Arabic homeland and feels the “depth” of his driver’s “experience […] He respected the eye.” (C 170) The body, marked, injured and scarred for life, impresses Eric. The following scene is quite absurd, although it symbolically fits the picture of Packer’s downward development, in a novel which is indeed a negative Entwicklungsroman. On his way to “resolution,” he comes across three hundred naked people motionlessly scattered in the street. It is a film set, but the “bodies were blunt facts,” powerful phenomena in and for themselves, “sad,” and “more naked than ever.” (C 173) Eric undresses and lies down among them, taking in the intense and immediate olfactory and tactile stimuli of “oil leaks,” of the “pearly froth of animal fat,” as well as of the “body breath,” “heat” and “blood” of all the other bodies, “now alike, amassed, heaped in a way, alive and dead together.” Packer is spellbound: “he could barely think outside it.” (C 174–5) As it happens, Elisa Shifrin has also joined the setting and lies next to him. To her question whether they should feign death, he replies “Be dead then.”58 Yet Packer becomes more and more engrossed in the unreal atmosphere which nonetheless merges him into and with the bare facts of the real, the other and the many. “He wanted to be here among them, all-body, the tattoed, the hairy-assed, those who stank.” DeLillo graphically details too many body features to be quoted here in full. Packer thinks about the “raised veins,” “bump,” “wasting diseases,” “skin flaking away,” “morbidly obese,” all in close proximity. (C 176–7) He has found his way into “all-body,” a universal individual existence in its mere creatural being-there, both alive and decaying and, therefore, subject to time and mortality. He has descended from the virtual heights of his apartment tower to the mire at street level. Reduced to his very bareness, “in the stone odor of demolition,” he makes love for the first and last time to Elisa in a manner that is not merely consumptive, and beyond mercantile “refinancing.” They are lovers, “free of memory and time.” (C 177) But the instant he realizes that he loves her, she disappears. (C 178) Still, back in his car, the desire to feel space in its delicate look and feel – “the flow of space” – has come back to him. Packer, lying in the street and sincerely in love, appears to have temporarily overcome his alienation from others and the space he lives in. Yet this only happens in a run-down state of degradation, which, moreover, represents a scenery of death. This is another instance of the fateful process Packer is engaged in: to come into his self by way of (bodily, socially) devastating that very self. It is, eventually, his executor Benno Levin (squatting on a floor of a derelict industrial building in Hell’s Kitchen) who has figured out Packer’s mind: “Your whole waking life is a self-contradiction. That’s why you’re engineering your own downfall.” (C 190) Levin once worked for Packer, was fired and is since obsessed with killing the billionaire. Packer could Cosmopolis 97 have escaped the forlorn man, could have shot him first (reckless as he is) and could, moreover, have averted his killing during the conversation when they are facing one another. Levin is fixated on killing Packer, but, even so, wants some kind of spiritual salvation or respect from the man who has determined his fate (“I wanted you to save me.” C 204). Packer remains relentless and arrogant. When he is nonetheless seized with some remorse (on behalf of Torval), he shortly thereafter fires his last bullet right through his hand. Overwhelmed, his hand “pervertedly alive in its own little subplot,” (C 197) it is the pain that becomes his “world.” It lets him feel himself inwardly and outside: “being himself and seeing himself.” (C 201) At one point, he considers telling Benno about his changed thoughts and situation. But refrains yet again. A “Smart” Epiphany of Death The novel does not end with Packer’s redemption. After having ignored Levin’s helpless and “retroactive” pleas, he happens to look at his watch that was programmed to film and display his immediate environment. It first shows his face and eventually a prone body, “facedown on the floor.” Even though the phenomenon anticipates the future (as before), which is or was one of his presumptuous desires (for technological novelty and speculative advantages), he cannot make out whose body it is. On the one hand, his body is still outside, apart from his self, and keeps on staying “on-screen.” (C 205) On the other, he is upset by the shift of temporal levels: “Whose body and when? Have all the worlds conflated, all possible states become present at once?” If this comes down to what he wanted, a presentative communion or prolepsis of his future into the present, then it occurs only in the moment of his perishing. Recognizing a tag reading “Male Z,” attached to a man in a hospital morgue,” he realizes: “O shit I’m dead.” (C 206) His old technological fantasy about being immortalized on disk – “the master thrust of cyber-capital” returns. Yet “his pain interfered with his immortality. It was crucial to his distinctiveness.” There is no apotheosis or ascent into cyberspace (as with Sister Edgar in Underworld). His very own being is not subject to exchange value, it remains insurmountably “untransferably” (C 207) his. There is no reconciliation but only the self-knowledge that his identity is, after all, forever made up of the ineluctable materiality of his being-there and his irreducible disparity of his psychosomatic existence. “He’d come to know himself, untranslatably, through his pain.” (C 207) As a road to self-understanding, for Packer, pain has led on to the knowledge that his pain is necessarily toward his death. Thoroughly alienated (from his body, his human and non-human environment) as he is, his journey to himself ends in nothingness. At the end, he is “waiting for the shot to sound.” (C 209) Packer has been “Ravening, raging, and uprooting that he may come/Into the desolation of reality.”59 98 Cosmopolis If White Noise, Underworld, The Body Artist (as Falling Man or Zero K do) end with a secular epiphany, Cosmopolis ends at best with a parody of an epiphany. The protagonist’s appearance on his smartwatch has nothing of a felicific moment in time. Notes 1 The otherwise very informed essay by Jerry Varsava tends to somewhat overmoralize and strongly personalize capitalism as “rogue capitalism” and Eric Packer as a “rogue capitalist.” There are, of course, individual agents, led or possessed by greed – one of the dominant descriptive categories during the 2007–8 crisis – but I think collective and systematic factors, owing to the very abstraction of money and the irrational principle of indeterminate accumulation, are more conducive to the understanding of the ongoing capitalistic proliferation of investment and consumption. Jerry A. Varsava, “The ‘Saturated Self’: Don DeLillo on the Problem of Rogue Capitalism,” Contemporary Literature 46, no. 1 (2005): 78–107. 2 A number of critics have stressed and elaborated on this relation. See Varsava, p. 88, 90, on the “disembedding” of cybercapitalism, p. 99. Alison Shonkwiler, insisting on the representability and persistence of the material basis of a mystified cybercapitalism, questions “the sublime aesthetics of abstraction and global connectivity.” (253) See Alison Shonkwiler “Don DeLillo’s Financial Sublime,” Contemporary Literature 51, no. 2 (2010): 246–82. Cf. also Matt Kavanagh’s “Collateral Crisis: Don DeLillo’s Critique of Cyber-Capital,” in Don DeLillo after the Millennium, ed. Jacqueline A. Zubeck (Lexington Books: Lanham, 2017), 27–44. Kavanagh has a strong and enlightening chapter on “The Cosmology of Cyber-Capital” and, similarly to Shonkwiler, focuses on the insuperability of the “reality principle” precisely because of our technological urge to “shape reality in our own image” along with “a debilitating loss of reality.” (38–9) Mark Osteen’s “The Currency of DeLillo’s Cosmopolis” in the same volume (45–64) offers a very impressive account of the socio-psychology of money “as an expression of human psychology and social life” (51) and the “rat,” that is, the body or human mortality as a “counterforce” that “inspires Packer’s plunge into self-destruction.” (52) 3 Cristina Garrigós, “Death Drive and Desire in Cronenberg’s Adaptation of DeLillo’s Cosmopolis,” Critique: Studies in Contemporary Fiction 56, no. 5 (2015): 519–30: “The journey from being a homo economicus […] to being nothing but a corpse, an empty carcass, is thus symbolic of the death drive of the system itself.” (519) 4 Even the most devastating crisis so far in 1929 (which was aggravated by state policies of retrenchment) was contained – in European countries, however, by fascist governments acting in unison with major agents of fascism. 5 Sure, the exploitation of resources, climate change and general pollution may restrain its progress. Yet there is no evidence of that. Capitalism may even be put to good use, working against the destruction of our environment. 6 The Puritan spirit, according to Max Weber, took a successful capital accumulation (not consumption) as an evidence of one’s chosenness for eternal life. 7 I owe this sententious formulation to Byung-Chul Han. See http://www. byungchulhan.de/. The German reads “Totalisierung der Zeit des Selbst.” 8 I am aware of the fact that my statements in the following would need more empirical evidence. Yet there are, apart from Han’s work, quite a few academic books – in the tradition of the Frankfurt School – to confirm my Cosmopolis 99 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 generalizing remarks. See the work of Horkheimer and Adorno, Erich Fromm’s Anatomy of Human Destructiveness (New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, 1973); critically: R.C. Smith, Society and Social Pathology: A Framework for Progress (London and New York: Routledge, 2017). I also sketch only exemplarily extreme effects in order to account for the type specimen of Eric Packer. See Michael J. Sandel, What Money Can’t Buy. The Moral Limits of Markets (London: Allen Lane, 2012), for the scope of commodification. See above. See J.E. Stiglitz, Globalization and Its Discontents (New York: W.W. Norton, 2002). For short overviews: Matthew Eagleton-Pierce, Neoliberalism: The Key Concepts (London/New York: Routledge, 2016), entries: “adjustment,” “development.” The monetary intervention in Greece, following the Eurozone crisis in 2010, was in fact aimed at warding off speculations about the fall of the euro against the dollar. Mark Rothko, Writings on Art, Ed. Miguel López-Remiro (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2006), 119–20 [“Notes from a Conversation with Selden Rodman 1956”]. See my chapter on Nietzsche in Philipp Heinz-Walter Wolf, Die Ästhetik der Leiblichkeit: W.B.Yeats, die Moderne und das Andere der Vernunft (Trier: Wissenschaftlicher Verlag, 1993), 56–76. Achim Borchardt-Hume, ed., Rothko (London: Tate Gallery, 2008), 91. Joseph Vogl, Das Gespenst des Kapitals (Zürich: Diaphanes, 2010), 11 (my translation). The reader’s response theory, which I do not want to dismiss as such here, was developed by the conservative literary theorists Roman Ingarden, HansRobert Jauss and Wolfgang Iser, David Bleich or Norman Holland. It surely reflects modernist tendencies to individualization. I draw here on my essay “Über die Unvermeidbarkeit der Modernisierung. Oder warum wir uns mit Transhumanismus und neuen Technologien beschäftigen müssen: Neue Perspektiven und alte Vorbehalte,” in Transhumanismus, Posthumanismus und neue Technologien, ed. Philipp Wolf (Leipzig: Leipziger Universitätsverlag, 2020), 1–37. See Hartmut Rosa, Unverfügbarkeit (Wien/Salzburg: Residenz Verlag, 2019), 127 (my (loose) translation). Martin Heidegger, Sein und Zeit (Tübingen: Max Niemeyer, 2001), 66 ff. To be sure media images are always imbued with notions of what one ideally wishes to be, could or should be. But Packer’s anticipation does not consist of an idealization, it is temporal or, at most, an expression of his death drive. For Packer experiencing “an effect before its cause” (“hysteron proteron”), see also Joseph M. Conte, “Conclusion: Writing amid the ruins: 9/11 and Cosmopolis,” in The Cambridge Companion to Don DeLillo, ed. John N. Duvall (Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2008), 179–92, here: 186. Kinski’s diagnosis of hypermania, better known as bipolar disorder, may be another clue (but, nota bene, she claims to have seen it herself on the screen). Bipolar people can project entirely into parallel, or for that matter, future worlds, manipulating the given to a degree that it appears to have come true. Hartmut Rosa, Alienation and Acceleration (Copenhagen: NSU Press, 2010), 30. See Rosa 2010, 30: “The eudaemonistic promise of modern acceleration therefore lies in the (unspoken) idea that the acceleration of ‘the pace of life’ is our (i.e. modernity’s) answer to the problem of finitude and death.” (Italics in original text.) 100 Cosmopolis 26 Technology could save us time yet engenders a whole range of new social communicative practices. Twenty years ago, one wrote maybe four letters per week and used the phone perhaps twice a day. Today one posts dozens of messages per day and receives many more. 27 See Rosa 2010, 30. 28 Ibid., 41. 29 For the connection between resonance and alienation, see Rosa 2010, 97. 30 Byung-Chul Han, Duft der Zeit: Ein philosophischer Essay zur Kunst des Verweilens (Bielefeld: Transcript, 2015), 14. 31 Referring to Walter Benjamin, Rosa distinguishes between “Erlebnissen (i.e. episodes of experience) and Erfahrungen (experiences which leave a mark […] touch or change who we are),” 2010, 94–5. Packer’s life surely consists merely in “Erlebnissen.” 32 I have dealt with the semantics of money and the Eucharist both historically and systematically in detail in Philipp Wolf, Einheit, Abstraktion und literarisches Bewußtsein (Tübingen: Narr, 1998), 274–77. 33 Philipp Wolf, “The A Priori of Money: Alfred Sohn-Rethel and Literature,” in Tropismes No 9: “L’Argent” (Nanterre: Université Paris X, 1999), 179–91. 34 For the cultural historian Kenneth Burke, the “displacement” of God by money is even something positive. Burke sees in money the “god-term,” since it “transcends” the complexity of life to achieve unity. (Burke 1969, 93) 35 See Jochen Hörisch, Gott, Geld, Medien (Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 2004), 113. Hörisch draws here on Simmel’s famous Philosophie des Geldes, as on Sohn-Rethel. 36 Alfred Sohn-Rethel, Das Geld, die bare Münze des Apriori (Berlin: Wagenbach, 1990), 22. 37 See also 84: “The yen itself knew it could not go higher. But it did […].” 38 Hörisch 2004, 117. Here Hörisch draws on Baudrillard’s Symbolic Exchange and Death. 39 The NASDAQ rose within four years from 1,000 points (1996) to 5,000 in March 2000. Cosmopolis is set in April 2000. 40 Byung-Chul Han, Kapitalismus und Todestrieb (Berlin: Matthes & Seitz, 2019), 14. 41 Georg Baudler, Ursünde Gewalt. Das Ringen um Gewaltfreiheit (Düsseldorf: Patmos, 2001), 116. Also quoted in Han, 14. 42 Han 2019, 14. 43 Jean Baudrillard, Symbolic Exchange and Death, Rev. Edition, trans. Iain Hamilton Grant (Los Angeles et al.: Sage, 2017), 148. 44 Don DeLillo, “DeLillo Bashful? Not This Time,” interview by John Barron, Chicago Sun-Times, March 23, 2003. Quoted in Matt Kavanagh, “Collateral Crisis: Don DeLillo’s Critique of Cyber-Capital,” in Don DeLillo after the Millenium, ed. Jacqueline A. Zubeck (Lanham: Lexington Books, 2017), 39. 45 It is quite revealing that Packer in his “meditation cell,” bypassing sleep, reaches only “the briefest of easings” upside down, “rounded in counterpoise.” (C 5–6). 46 The German language distinguishes between “Leib” and “Körper,” the former as an entity which is fundamentally, intuitively and intrinsically mine as opposed to the body as an object of functional-pragmatic exteriority. 47 This examination is rather painful and usually only recommended to men over 50 or 60 once a year. 48 The reduction to prostate and bladder makes him even ask questions about his self-relation: “Does he love himself or hate himself?” (C 51) 49 He actually anticipates the remark, having previously heard it from his regular doctor, Nevius, see C 8. Cosmopolis 101 50 Interestingly enough, a “scientific” criterion for the “theory of everything,” the “world formula,” is still symmetry. 51 Georges Bataille, Eroticism (London: Penguin, 2012), see esp. Ch. V and IX. See also Byung-Chul Han for his anti-capitalist interpretation of Bataille’s affirmative concept of death and excess. (21–2) 52 I use Lacan’s term here, which is not to be confused with reality, it is rather the unimaginable beyond symbolic representation: the rest that cannot be signified, death being only one of its placeholders. 53 See my Die Ästhetik der Leiblichkeit and of course Nietzsche’s The Birth of Tragedy. 54 Cosmopolis surely denotes political ways of responding to advanced financial capitalism. There are (or were), on the one hand, the civil society’s attempts at attacking (more or less symbolically) political and economic institutions behind the global financial sector. The anti-WTO demonstration in Seattle in November 1999 struck a chord, not least because there was considerable violence on both the side of the state power and the demonstrators. The last spectacular movement, the Occupy Movement, is today (in 2021) hardly noticeable anymore. 55 “It was exhilarating, his head in the fumes, to see the struggle and ruin around him, the gassed men and women in their defiance, waving looted Nasdaq T-shirts, and to realize they’d been reading the same poetry he’d been reading.” (C 97) 56 Others may still be: giving away all property, disregarding all value added, or simply to cease working as Melville’s Bartleby the Scrivener did: “I would prefer not to.” 57 I do not think, though, that death and especially suicide form such a challenge to the capitalist system that it will bring about its ruin. See Baudrillard’s Symbolic Exchange for the corresponding theory. During the Corona crisis, it became apparent that one would accept the reduction of economic production only for a limited time, the number of corona deaths notwithstanding. 58 The film shooting, notably, will be finished prematurely. Probably as a consequence of Packer’s financial action, they are out of money. 59 William Butler Yeats, Collected Poems (London: Macmillan, 1985), 333 (“Meru”). 6 Falling Man Relating Unspeakable Loss A desire for slowing down (or conversely speeding up) time – to the point of halting time and abandoning it to space – seems to capture Don DeLillo’s characters in his later work (including Underworld’s Nick Shay). This consciousness of temporality is owing to a sense of late modern alienation and is always infused with a premonition of mortality, which no less permeates the novels. Whereas in The Body Artist or Point Omega (as we shall see) individuals are concerned with time and death, in Falling Man it is society if not civilization at large that is affected. An unheard-of disaster and unprecedented incursion from outside bring time to a halt, arresting people in a spatio-temporal vacuum: “as if all of this […] might be placed in a state of abeyance.” (F 4) Even though the focus is on Keith Neudecker, one of the traumatized survivors of 9/11, Don DeLillo delineates a tableaux vivant of all-encompassing apocalypse in his first chapter: “It was not a street anymore but a world, a time and space of falling ash and near night.” (F 3) However, what we subsequently get is not the broad and allinclusive painting of a society in shock and awe, but the narrative of a handful of individuals. To the dismay of many critics, DeLillo refused “the massive spectacle,” which would not only have infringed on the dignity of the victims but also disregarded the fact that a historically all too real and singular event of extreme suffering simply refuses comparison and repetition in a panoramic fictional work subject to the codes of entertainment. Given the fact that there is the need for a mimetic treatment and representation of the traumatic experience, “the practiced response” can only be given on a small and individualized scale. There is, in addition, the mnemonic necessity for a relation of the “marginal stories,”1 as well as a “counter-narrative” to the terrorists’ attempts at dominating the transmission history of the attack together with our consciousnesses.2 Something must be set against their “management” and interpretation of death (their admirers and followers, though, will never read Don DeLillo). By concentrating on the marginal, DeLillo manages to delineate a variety of responses to the traumatic confrontation with death, including, DOI: 10.4324/9781003289937-6 Falling Man 103 ex negativo, that of the media. Yet the remarkable thing about Falling Man is that it points both to modes of coming to terms with the inconceivable (or forms of “terror management,” to use again the here not quite appropriate term of Solomon et al.) and that it leaves no doubt that the rupture it inflicts can never be fully mended, Lianne’s final impulse of relief – another of DeLillo’s concluding epiphanies – notwithstanding. (Lianne is Keith’s estranged wife.) The interminability of grief is commensurate to the singularity of the event. For the survivors it resists closure. The terrorists, on the other hand, are obviously able to make up a final narrative, which allows them to manage their impending demise. DeLillo does not need a lot of space to signify impressively the apocalyptic ubiquity of death after the fall of the towers. The language and imagery (focalized through Keith Neudecker) are telling enough. The prose is, on the one hand, marked by a dark, dimmed-down, even sepulchral tone and, on the other, by paratactic sentences alternating with sentences compounded with present participle constructions. The breathless people appear unhinged and distraught, smoke and objects, pieces and fragments go adrift and take on an unreal, even surreal aspect: “This was the world now. Smoke and ash came rolling down streets and turning corners, […] with office paper flashing past, […] otherworldly things in the morning pall.” (F 3) There is one sentence in this first chapter that refers to the actual casualties: “The world was this as well, figures in windows a thousand feet up, dropping into free space […].” (F 4) Surely, the utter desperation of the victims faced with conflagration and collapsing walls made them jump into the void. It also denotes one of the novel’s leitmotifs, the “dropping” or “falling” into “free space.” As always, DeLillo’s counter-narrative includes more or less incidental perceptions of objects concomitant or correlative with the major subject of the novel (the attacks and the sociopsychological resonance). The objects linger in the memory and thereby take on a symbolic and cognitive meaning. A fleeting garment, “shrapnels,” two paintings and a public performance act may then help to better comprehend, if not necessarily to process the fact of death. They prove to be manifestations of the insuperability of the disaster and inconsolability of the survivors more or less immediately affected. I will first focus on the metaphorical correlatives, then, in an exemplifying way, on the sociopsychological impact (of death) on Keith and Lianne, and, finally, in contradistinction, on the “terror management” (or the fundamentalist way to cope with of their imminent death) of the “Jihadists.” Images of Loss, Two Victims, Two Terrorists and Death Dealers Shirts Apart from its existential enormity, the falling to death of the victims signifies a (present) continuous fall into a space that does not yield a 104 Falling Man concluding grief work. The people continue to fall in the memory of the survivors. The image of falling is figuratively extended by a shirt3 that comes down. It is worth quoting the entire passage: There was something else then, outside all this, not belonging to this, aloft. He watched it coming down. A shirt came down out of the high smoke, a shirt lifted and drifting in the scant light and then falling again, down toward the river. (F 4) The metaphor or rather metonymy of the shirt conveys an inconsolable sadness. Like the remains of the victims in the German concentration camps (shoes, glasses), the shirt points to an irredeemable loss of lived lives. By associating something very individual, personal and intimate, it heightens the sense of absence. The “drifting” and “falling” of it out of the smoke and into the river creates an expressive filmic image, whose melancholic effect will last.4 For this very reason, DeLillo also ends the circularly structured novel with the image of the – now “waving” – shirt: “He walked and saw it fall, arms waving like nothing in this life.” (F 246) The arms go on beckoning to us in the air, the man or woman to whom it belonged is still there and not there. The singularly lamentable sight will always remain with Keith. Shrapnels The omnipresence of death after 9/11 is nevertheless tantamount to an incubus that remains inconceivable and impossible to come to terms with. Trauma means, after all, recurrence of the injury and the ongoing experience of loss. It is moreover impossible to block out the images of the deceased and their mnemonic presence. Long afterward, they can be felt even in a tactile way. The gruesome (and macabre) effect of the detonation was the physical fragmentation of both the terrorists and their many victims into small particles. They were virtually blown into the environment. The dead were everywhere, in the air, in the rubble, on rooftops nearby, in the breezes that carried from the river. They were settled in ash and drizzled on windows all along the streets, in his hair on his clothes. (F 25) This went so far that the doctor, who treats Keith, spreads the (rather unlikely) theory that “tiny fragments of the suicide bomber’s body” (who obviously were in the most forcible center of the explosion) might have even entered the bodies of the survivors. After months, the “organic shrapnels” are said to come to the surface of the skin creating “bumps.” Falling Man 105 (F 16) If this is a myth which mirrors primal fears (see, e.g., the film Alien), it is yet true that, owing to the intensity of the conflagration, more than 40% of the casualties could not be identified up to date. No remains of a large number of victims could be found (and no definite number ascertained). This certainly contributed and still contributes to the feeling that the whole matter can never be brought to a close. The experience of death is going to permeate life throughout. The death, moreover, that hit the people (their kin, partners, friends) by surprise, is not what one calls a “natural death.” In the latter case, many people find a way to sort out their lives and to cope, more, less or not at all. These deaths were, after all, utterly meaningless and a terrorist humiliation. Still Lives Don DeLillo employs ekphrases (partly in rudiments) in Underworld (Brueghel), Cosmopolis (Rothko), the short story “Baader-Meinhof” (Richter)5 or the (fictional) stone sculpture and still lives in Zero K. In Falling Man, we meet with paintings by Giorgio Morandi, two of which are hanging in Nina Bartos’s apartment,6 the art historian and mother of Lianne Glenn (the estranged wife of Keith Neudecker). Nina, who is in frail health (her demise is looming, and she will die in the course of the novel), got the Morandis as a gift from her lover, the art dealer Martin Ridnour. Lianne, already scarred by the suicide of her father and, of course, 9/11, also faces her mother’s death.7 The reception of the paintings is interwoven with the experience of mortality, although, on the representational surface, they display only mundane kitchen objects: These were groupings of bottles, jugs, biscuit tins, that was all, but there was something in the brushstrokes that held a mystery she could not name, or in the irregular edges of vases and jars, some reconnoiter inward, human and obscure, away from the very light and color of the paintings. (F 12) It seems reasonable to see the paintings (most likely the 1949 or 1962 Natura Morta versions) in terms of the subjective states of mind of the viewers, that is, of Nina, Lianne and Martin. To be sure, any work of art is always also constructed in the (imaginary) perspective of the recipient. And it is not surprising, if highly significant, that on one occasion Martin, and subsequently Lianne, “keep seeing the towers in this still life.” (F 49) On another occasion, Nina perceives mortality in the painting: “It’s all about mortality, isn’t it?” (F 111) After the death of her mother (who has returned the paintings) Lianne goes to a Morandi exhibition in New York. Now she blends in “Nina’s living room […] memory and motion. The objects in the painting faded into the figures behind them.” (F 210) 106 Falling Man The paintings mirror what occupies the protagonists most: the towers, death and her mother’s memory together with the now-vanished space in which she lived. However, it is equally immanent to the appropriately named Natures Mortes, in themselves, to effect a sense of mortality and mourning. Lianne identifies the bottles etc., yet, moreover, “something in the brushstrokes that held a mystery she could not name, or in the irregular edges […].” (F 12) The “things” or “equipment” (to use Heidegger’s terminology again) in the paintings are “mysterious” because they are precisely not objects “present-at-hand.” In fact, Morandi’s work draws on Cubism; his interest pertains to form and materiality, shade, color and space and the interplay of those elements. The things in the painting may morphologically be associated with towers, but unlike the (former) World Trade Towers they are detached from a functional purpose. The abstraction from the purposiveness (as tools, boxes, etc.) engenders what Heidegger calls a strife between world and earth, between what may be categorized and what forever escapes definition. The strife leaves a surplus of unfathomable meaningfulness in and on account of the “self-seclusion of earth.”8 By letting shine forth the very materiality, or “earthiness” of the material, the work of art creates a sense of beauty, yet also of obscurity, the ominous and awe. Like hardly any other artist, Morandi makes visible this “selfsecluding” beauty of the “earth” and, by the same token, our own finiteness. The pale light that tinges the shaded pastel colors evokes thereby their evanescence. The thingly shapes “jut,” protrude and fade into an empty, open and undefined space which suggests metaphysical forsakenness. Some of the vessels and boxes either blend or grow into a somber darker background. (In other paintings the items cast a shadow.) Stilled, silenced and somewhat forlorn as they seem, they point to their own disappearance and absence or, as Martin and Lianne saw, the towers in absentia. In one painting in Nina’s room, “[t]he full array, in unfixed perspective and mostly muted colors, carried an old spare power.” (DeLillo possibly refers to the 1949 “Natura Morta.”) There are two rectangular shapes (vaguely resembling irregular vases) “set against a brushy slate background.” They are “dark and somber, with smoky marks and smudges.” By virtue of their very indeterminacy or “self-seclusion” (“too obscure to name”) a cognitive withdrawal (gap or abyss) occurs. They “thrust[…] up the awesome.”9 They thereby may come to signify the disaster that befell the towers. (F 49) The loss of comprehension in this context of beauty may lead to the feeling of an existential loss, which in turn makes us realize that we “care” (Heidegger’s German term is “Sorge”), not only for ourselves but also for others. We are reminded of our dependency on and responsibility for the other. The oxymora Natura morta or Still Life express what the paintings perform: the weak effulgence of lived beauty passing into the melancholy of absence. Transience and mortality are maintained and equally suspended in the inner texture of the work of Falling Man 107 art, which always constitutes a process. The paintings entail a momento mori, which means, in ethical terms, that the dead have placed the duty on us to remember and to acknowledge that, even if they have gone, they are still somehow present, still alive, or, to use Lauren Hartke’s description of her body performance: “a still life that’s living.” (BA 107) Indeed, for Lianne, the Natures Mortes harbor the memory of her loss. When she finally visits the Morandi exhibition, she is overcome by the desire to become one with the pictures. This time, it is not, as we will see with the anonymous man in Point Omega, the psychotic drive to assimilate into a representation. She simply wants to absorb and keep alive in herself what the paintings have come to mean for her identity, namely the mnemonic presence of the dead: She was passing beyond pleasure into some kind of assimilation. She was trying to absorb what she saw, take it home, wrap it around her, sleep in it. There was so much to see. Turn it into living tissue, who you are. (F 210) Falling Man: Performing Death and Mourning Falling Man is the title and leitmotif of the novel. David Janiak turns up thrice in the novel, twice in the coincidental presence of the focalizer Lianne and finally posthumously, three years after the attacks, when Lianne comes across his obituaries: “Dead at 39, apparently of natural causes.” (F 220) It is very likely that his early death was a consequence of his numerous falls, which caused a “heart ailment” and “chronic depression due to a spinal condition.” (F 220, 222) Janiak had deliberately sought out what the existentialist philosopher Karl Jaspers has called the “ultimate situation.”10 A “Grenzsituation” occurs when a human being is thrown (or throws him- or herself) into a situation of fundamental hazard and existential exposedness (birth, death, destitution, affliction, disaster, etc.). When one is accordingly subjected to an overwhelming force and, notably, guilt, one is bound to experience what it really means to be human. (This is not to be confused with what some extreme athletes on, e.g., Mount Everest are looking for.) The physical comment of an anonymous journalist following the Falling Man’s death may also attain a symbolic and, for that matter, all too literal meaning: “subject only to the earth’s gravitational field.” (F 221) His acts were mimetic, yet each time he exposed himself anew to an extreme existential risk or “Grenzsituation.” In fact, his final jump was planned to be the ultimate one, without the strand of a simple safety harness he used. The safety harness (no “pullies, cables or wires […] no bungee cord,” F 220) was, not least, to stop his fall midair and leave the man upside-down, dangling in the air (the reiteration in various places was also of tantamount importance, to be sure). 108 Falling Man Janiak’s performances are reminiscent of the action artists of the US Happening and Fluxus movement or the 1960s Vienna school who craved for public attention (moral indignation and outrage) through the violation of taboos. Janiak surely aims at a shock effect, but not at media attention or even becoming a (negative or positive) media celebrity. His falls occur where people come together, but unannounced and spontaneously; he declines an invitation by the Guggenheim Museum and other institutions of the culture industry. (F 222) The Falling Man’s identity remains obscure (there is no immediate press coverage, the performances “were not designed to be recorded,” F 220), he thereby directs the bypasser’s (or resident’s) attention to the performative process itself and, more importantly, to the suffering and dead individuals whom his action is to bring back into the consciousness of an oblivious public. He acts anonymously, but always on behalf of the individual victim. The one relevant external background, then, for the form and structure of his performances are the people that out of utter despair threw themselves to death from the Towers. The other motive is the notorious photo by Richard Dew depicting the “man falling, the towers contiguous […] behind him.” (F 221–2, through Lianne we get a detailed ekphrasis.) Janiak dresses similarly (“business suit,” F 33) and adopts the same position: “headfirst, arms at his sides, one leg bent.” (F 33, 221) I do not have to discuss here whether Dew’s beautiful photos violate the dignity of the victims.11 But DeLillo’s “Falling Man” certainly shuns aestheticization (and spectacularizing) of his mimetic acts. Rather than (aesthetic-reflexive) distancing, his intention is to create an immediate and sudden psychosomatic impact, which will go lastingly deeper than apparent beauty (on a superficial level, though, Dew’s catching and globally disseminated picture may outlast any other impression). Time and again David Janiak interrupts the daily routine, to which the New Yorkers, so used to dissipation and distraction, are inclined to return all too quickly: “he brought it back of course.” (F 33) Janiak evidently succeeds in unsettling, even unhinging people, and breaking through indifference. Bystanders and bypassers see “something elaborately different,” (F168) “all jarred out of their reveries,” (F165) they are “outraged […]” at “the puppetry of human desperation.” (F 33) A puppet theatre, through its effects of alienation, may well convey a disconcerting sense of eeriness. He is arrested for “criminal trespass, reckless endangerment,” (F 220) for “creating a hazardous or physically offensive condition” (F 223) and, not least, is “beaten up.” (F 220) Lianne’s response (to the general and her own reaction) is more subtle, thoughtful, and sensitive: “There was the awful openness of it, something we’d not seen, the single falling figure that trails a collective dread, body come down among all of us.” (F 33) She realizes what is so important about the performance. It opens up, lays bare and affects the more or less covert trepidations people are afflicted with after 9/11. An individual Falling Man 109 figure hits both the collective consciousness (and unconscious), and that of the individual. Her individual encounter with the Falling Man (36 days after the attacks) occurs on her way home after a session with her Alzheimer’s group. His plan is to jump from a maintenance platform in front of an incoming train. Heavily confused by what appears thoroughly “irrational,” she desperately looks about to meet the understanding or confirming eye of another person. The disruption creates the desire for an intersubjective need of affirmation and acknowledgment. In contrast to the more subjectivist reception of the Morandi paintings, the experience with the Falling Man has much more of a physical and social impact. This distinguishes the latter fundamentally from the first. Yet to be “too near and deep, too personal” (F 163) is an integral part of the act. The action performs a double movement; it touches “us all” (F 33) in our innermost and defies at the same time communication and rationalization. From her position, almost below the dangling man, she “could have spoken to him but that was on another plane of being, beyond reach.” (F 168) And even after his death (and her research) the Falling Man remains beyond grasp: “The man eluded her.” (F 224) Whereas some react to this with an aggressive defensiveness, Lianne is transfixed and compelled to watch. She perceives “her husband somewhere near” and “his friend” in the smoke-filled tower. When Janiak jumps, “drawing a rustle of awe,” her body goes “limp.” (F 168) She sees the fallen body suspended in midair and finds herself running, while prompted to think involuntarily about her dead father: “Died by his own hand.” (F 168) Janiak’s performance is, therefore, not mimetic in the sense of imitation; it comes down to a physical assimilation or adaptation to the previous event (in Adorno’s sense of “making oneself equal”),12 inducing the recipient to see from up close. “Janiak’s art,” Duvall observes, “allows his viewers themselves to become witnesses of the horror.”13 Whereas Dew’s photograph remains an exterior medium and depiction, Lianne herself, or, for that matter, her body, becomes the medium: “She was the photograph, the photosensitive surface. The nameless body coming down, this was hers to record and absorb.” (F 223) In Lianne the performance effects physically, into the depths of her person, what it is meant to effect: to call back the dead. What is eventually most striking – and significant in ethical terms – is a doubleness that is structurally compatible with the oxymoronic still lives of Morandi. The haunting and crucial momentum of the performance is the “jolt,” the “midair impact and bounce,” and subsequently “the worst,” the “stillness itself.” The man himself is suspended in the process of falling, remains motionless, but keeps dangling for some time in stillness. (F168) Especially the word “dangling” is repeatedly used to describe the man’s dire position. (F 33, 219–20)14 The aporetic correlation of “falling” and “suspension,” “dangling,” “stillness” and “motionlessness” points symbolically to what an ethical responsive memory should mean. The headlong fall is suspended, yet at the same time it never 110 Falling Man comes to an end, and it is never supposed to come to an end in our perception. The man is “set forever in free fall.” (F 221) Janiak reminds us of the interminableness of the fall. The person is bound to die, maybe gone already, but his or her demise is at the same time suspended in our remembrance and continues to be so. The two levels (motion and stillness) interminably cross-fade into one in our consciousness. It tells us to keep the dead in their very stillness alive, that is, not to terminate their memory. How, then, do individual survivors deal with the “ultimate situation,” the experience of death, and, in contrast, how do the murderers? Keith: Trauma and Lethargy Devastating as the disastrous experience itself was, many survivors had to moreover cope with feelings of guilt. Keith Neudecker had only just managed to get down through the staircase from his office in the north tower. He is taken to the hospital by Lianne, who he had returned to immediately after the attack despite their separation. He receives a strong sedative shot, which was supposed to black out his memory, but the “waking image” of his friend Rumsey “in the smoke, things coming down” (F 22) persists. He had tried to take him along downstairs, yet Rumsey falls “away from him” and dies. (F 243) Rumsey was one of his poker pals, another one had also died and a third severely injured. The weekly poker game with his friends in his apartment had marked an “uncomplicated interval,” a ritual that meant a time-out or hiatus in a day-to-day life “of severed connections.” When he goes back to his apartment (near the now wrecked towers) to pick up some clothes, he has a long close look at the card table, realizes that the “poker table mattered,” but also that he “wouldn’t need the table, two players dead, one badly injured.” (F 27) Poker used to be “the code they shared.” (F 129) In a kind of mimetic repetition or, rather, re-enactment, he will dedicate his future life to poker. It is not with his wife Lianne that Keith talks about what he had to go through, but another survivor, Florence Givens, whose briefcase he happened to pick up in the burning tower. After a few days, he decides to take it to her and meets a similarly unhinged person. They sit down together and it seems as if their shared memory and his presence enable her to express the traumatic experience: “I’m still on the stairs. I wanted my mother.” (F 57) She talks incessantly, he listens attentively. For Florence, this seems to have a tentatively releasing effect, whereas Keith still ‘tries’ to “find himself in the crowd.” (F 59) His “body in raw motion,” he cannot help being further caught up in “some dim space that bears his collected experience.” (F 66) Yet her confidential openness toward him does not hide the fact that she, like Keith, is too much occupied with her own calamity. Despite their shared vulnerability,15 they will not get together. She only needs to hear her own voice and talk to herself to “confirm the grim familiarity of the moment.” (F 91) Even if, or precisely because, they both went “down through the Falling Man 111 smoke,” they eventually are only “someone else” (F 138) or “still figure[s]” for each other. (F 158) (The “still lives” by Giorgio Morandi have a similar function for Lianne and her mother Nina after 9/11.) The experience of the void makes it impossible for them to form a relationship. They both somehow know “together” what it means to be caught “in the timeless drift of the long spiral down.” (F 137) Yet the “timeless drift” affects existential layers of personality that are beyond sharing.16 Keith cannot maintain the relationship with Lianne either. Instead, he decides to play solely professional poker, a game which previously only meant a jaunty weekly pursuit with his friends. For Lianne, who joins Keith and Justin watching a tournament in Las Vegas, the game itself means no more than “anesthesia,” “tedium,” “nothing.” In the players, she sees, more interestingly, “deadpan […] slouched souls in misfortune,” struggling souls, stuck in a “continuing dilemma.” Without telling her husband, she rather appropriately describes what Keith is heading for. Keith, on the other hand, makes it a point to “alert” his son to the camera shot of the “hole cards,” revealing “in the making” that the player would soon be dead: “[H]e’s dead.” (F 118) Poker, therefore, comes to be both an “anesthetic” escape and endless mimetic repetition of his traumatic experience – although with a remarkable variation. Keith is not interested in taking up employment in New York; instead, he spends most of his time in Casinos, intermittently visiting his family. In those locations, mainly in Las Vegas, he finds an environment that is suggestive of that in the tower after the crash. Keith is psychologically steeped in and deeply marked by an un-heard-of situational condition to which he was fatally and helplessly exposed. 9/11 has become a constitutive part of his psychological structure and an ongoing reality of his present experience. He has, therefore, sought out a place that corresponds with his psychic disposition. Here he feels “hemmed in […] enclosed by the dimness […] and by the thick residue of smoke that adhered to his skin.” (F 188) The spaces appear “to be made to his shape,” and there are times when the game absorbs him fully: “[T]here was nothing outside, no flash of history or memory.” (F 225) In his new environment, on the other hand, he seeks something he can fast hold onto. Therefore, it is not for (the abstraction of) money he wins or loses, it is the material, tactile and sensuous steadfastness of the poker table that provides the security that was profoundly shattered when faced with the deadly collapse of the tower: He was playing for the chips. […] It was the disk itself that mattered, the color itself. […] There was the fact that they would all be dead one day. He wanted to rake in chips and stack them. The game mattered, the stacking of chips, the eye count, the play and dance of hand and eye. He was identical with these things. (F 228) 112 Falling Man Whereas the anonymous man in Point Omega wants to disappear in an imaginary space, Keith is driven by the mimetic desire to assimilate into the material atmosphere of the casinos. By merging into the sounds (the “clink,” “toss and scatter,” 229, see also 211), colors, air, he half consciously wishes to blot out the person that is still caught in the noise and smoke of the tower: “He was becoming the air he breathed. He moved in a tide of noise and talk made to his shape.” His existence is confined to the games in the halls: “There were no days or times except for the tournament schedule.” The manifest purpose consists in deadening his feelings and becoming insensible and insensitive even, or precisely, to the “bleeding” of others: “The point was one of invalidation. Nothing else pertained. Only this had binding force. […] Make them bleed. Make them spill their precious losers’ blood.” (F 230) If Keith abandons himself to a numbing mimesis of his traumatic experience, he still maintains the illusion of autonomy, which makes the most conspicuous difference. 9/11 also meant an accidental or fatal incursion into a seemingly safeguarded life. The disruption confronted people with death and an existential thrownness beyond intentionality and control. At the poker table, Keith is, to a degree, at the mercy of fatum (as he was defenselessly in the tower), but in the game he is, or assumes to be, in control: “The cards fell randomly, no assignable cause, but he remained the agent of free choice.” (F 211) This is Keith’s self-centered, if not narcissistic, method of “terror-management”: He gives himself up to the aisthetics of the poker hall and the belief in the freedom of his decisions. His psychological wound, however, will not heal thereby: “These were the days after and now the years, a thousand heaving dreams, the trapped man, the fixed limbs, the dream of paralysis, the gasping man, the dream of asphyxiation, the dream of helplessness.” (F 230) Lianne: Mourning, Care and an Epiphanic Moment Lianne takes another, ethically more appealing, path in confronting death, grief, loss and perishing. She is not only personally affected by 9/11 (Keith’s disturbing return home; her son Justin continues to scan the sky for possible planes), she is also haunted by the suicide of her father, who shot himself after he was told about his beginning Alzheimer’s disease. “Died by his own hand.” (F 169, 218) Lianne fears she might have inherited this disposition to forgetfulness. She is troubled, moreover, by the increasing frailty of her mother Nina. Yet Lianne does what can be done, albeit never conclusively, when one is all too aware of death and vanishing. Whereas Keith wants to escape memory, she tries to re-­member, salvage and represent. As a sort of an exposure therapy (or “cognitive behavior therapy”), Lianne had started to conduct meetings with Alzheimer’s patients, suggesting that they write about topics such as “[r] emembering my father.” (F 29) After 9/11, owing to her own bewilderment, Falling Man 113 she wants to increase the frequency of meetings. The responsible consultant Dr. Apter warns her that the disease is “all about loss” and the therapy should be for the patients, not for her sake. And indeed, she “needed these people.” The reason is remarkable: “These people were the living breath of the thing that killed her father.” (F 61–2) Alzheimer’s is an irreversible illness, progressively annihilating precisely those faculties and abilities that allow for “a living breath.” The longer and more it breathes, the closer it is to death. To attribute “living breath” to Alzheimer’s is, therefore, in line with the other self-contradictory motifs in the novel undermining themselves. It only makes one realize the more what one wanted to come to terms with, namely loss and grief. She is scared by the cognitive fading of her patients, which manifests itself in the failing handwriting and reading of their texts. But “the act of writing” nevertheless releases moments of recognition at “the crossing points of insight and memory.” (F 30) A woman called Rosellen S. sees “her father walk in the door after a disappearance lasting four years.” The patients rejoice in their narrative and, more so, the sessions become religious congregations: “This was their prayer room,” a man called Omar R. remarks. Writing becomes “revelation.” (F 30–1) Indeed the participants are both “authors” of their own stories and “characters” represented in those stories. That is, by means of prosopopoeia, they give a face and presence to someone absent, they can – fictionally – bring back not only what has been lost but also hold on for a moment to what is about to go. Not long before the definite extinction of their identity, they have the “final authority” to evoke a “Real Presence,” which is, as noted above, the provisional antidote against death. When they decide to write “about the planes,” it is no wonder then that they settle on the subject of God and, almost inevitably, on the question of how “God could let this happen.” (F 60) Lianne wants them to write about the terrorists and express their anger. Yet in an existential state in which demise is foreseeable, first and last questions are more urgent. However, as everywhere else, questions of theodicy also here come to nothing. A woman, finally, named Anna C. makes the appropriate comment about the entrenched and dutiful, nonetheless shallow custom of assigning blame after the attacks, which only serves as an inexpensive and populist solution in order to return to business as usual. She refers primarily to the terrorists, the context, though, may also suggest God: “But this, what happened, it’s way too big, it’s outside someplace, on the other side of the world. […] You don’t know what to do.” (F 64) Of course, the murderous culprits must be identified, and their deeds must never be justified, yet the enormity of the act defies easy assignment of guilt; the suffering is outside our imaginative powers, as it is beyond the closure of grief work. Admitting to one’s helplessness is one appropriate response to the unspeakable. After a subsequent meeting Rosellen could not find her way home and thus never returns. Lianne becomes painfully aware of what is going to 114 Falling Man happen or has happened, “the breathless moment when things fall away,” and recalls one of the final sentences Rosellen could write: “Do we say goodbye, yes, going, am going, will be going, the last time go, will go.” (F 156, italics in original) The sentence vacillates between present continuous, future continuous and future. It expresses the state of uncertainty or “abeyance” that permeates the whole novel. She is “inscribing,” Linda S. Kauffman remarks, “her own epitaph,”17 but she still clings to her being-there, her “Dasein.” She takes her leave, is leaving yet holds on to being present and still is present. Therefore, it “is a demand, a command, and a lament against oblivion.”18 The imposed and unwanted departure of the other always defies, for the sake of the dignity of the departed, a resolution of mourning. In fact, Lianne repeatedly reveals an ethos of remembrance and thereby resistance to death. In one of her Alzheimer’s sessions, as the remaining members write about the now-absent Rosellen and the “inevitable,” she contemplates the old sepia passport photos Martin had collected. She sees “faces […] lost in time,” blends in her patients and, proleptically in a way, recognizes them in these old photos. For the anonymous people, she invents a context (“human ordeal set against the rigor of the state”) to bring herself narratively “into the lives of the subjects.” She discovers “innocence and vulnerability […], people on long journeys, people now dead. Such beauty in faded lives […].” (F 141–2) This is a very personal and subjective act of commemoration, but nevertheless a retrieval of those long gone and due to go soon. It is a way to demonstrate respect for the dead. To think about the deceased and to realize, or at least imagine, who they were is a moral imperative that holds the more for the victims of 9/11. Lianne reads all their newspaper profiles without exception: “Not to read them, every one, was an offense, a violation of responsibility and trust.”19 Months after Nina’s death (three years after the attacks), Lianne still senses her mother (who treated her daughter condescendingly) all around her, “her face and breath, an attending presence.” (F 190) The ongoing nearness of death marks another argument, if only a subjective and phenomenological one, against forgetting. Mourning is a state, not a process one accomplishes. Lianne had retained an affinity to transcendence (from her father) and, still troubled after three years, seeks some comfort by regularly going to a church. Even though she is too much of an enlightened skeptic and a deliberate disbeliever, she is, despite her doubts and her resistance to the overwhelming idea of God, somehow attracted. (See 232) So she decides upon a God who is absent, a deus absconditus: “God is the voice that says, “I am not here.” (F 236) This is remarkable, since if not for God (the ritual, congregation, aesthetics), for what else should one go to church? Lianne comes to feel “a sense of others. […] She felt the dead, hers and unknown others. […] It was a comfort, feeling their presence, the dead she’d loved and all the faceless others who’d filled a thousand churches.” (F 233) Falling Man 115 Lianne has found a way to pay silent tribute to the dead; she gives her time and shares her time with them. She resists God, but she also resists death, not, however, the dead. The dead never cease to lay claim on those to whom they have left their remembrance and legacy. Hence, the socalled “work” of mourning will never end.20 After her communication with the dead, but inconclusive approach to God, Don DeLillo has Lianne have an albeit ephemeral moment of epiphanic awakening. Late at night, she pulls a shirt over her head, and with that her body comes back to her: “just her, the body through and through.” She comes to herself, recovers a sense of herself and what she thinks made up her old being: “It was something she’d always known. The child was in it […].” But as all (secular) epiphanies, this is only a momentary revelation, not a perpetual release from responsibility to what has happened: “It was a small moment, already passing, the kind of moment that is always only seconds from forgetting.” (F 236) Lianne’s revelatory moment precedes, in DeLillo’s narrative construction, the minutes before and when the planes actually hit the towers (“In the Hudson Corridor,” 237). The novel thus returns to the beginning, describing the devastating minutes prior to Keith’s walk through the swath of destruction. The narrative comes, as it were, full circle. But the circular construction also reminds us of the never-ending impact of the disaster on our consciousness and the memory we owe to the victims. Lianne is now “ready to be alone” with Justin, as “before the planes,” but the planes will nonetheless remain. (F 236) Hammad and Amir: Terrorist Cult of Death In terms of Solomon’s, Greenberg’s and Pyszczynski’s “terror management,” it is only the terrorists that (eventually) seem to feel absolutely confident about the management of death. Martin (the possible former German RAF terrorist Ernst Hechinger) may well be right. Hammad and Amir (Atta) did not “die only for God.” (F 116) On a deeper level, there surely were political, economic and socio-cultural motives (as focalized by Hammad, see 79, 80, 173, 175), particularly a more or less diffuse, more or less justified, hatred of the United States and the West in general.21 However, their self-understanding or ideological basis is couched in religious terms. They feel called upon. Initially, Hammad is not free from doubts, yet Amir (and other men in Afghanistan and a Hamburg Mosque) succeed in convincing and radicalizing their spirit brother “to close the distance to God.” (F 172) Their rather religious cult of death and martyrdom includes all those ingredients that make (as Hammad learns in the Afghan training camp) “death stronger than life.” (F 172) Putting sacrifice and death above life provides a most efficient ideology not only to suppress the fear of dying, it also encourages homicide. Their readiness for holy death feeds on 116 Falling Man binary and clear-cut values. There is the collective singular in which the “We” (F 173) is spelled with a capital letter. Brotherhood (women are perceived, if at all, as prostitutes) binds them closely together in a plot, which exerts a “magnetic effect” on them. Plot can mean conspiracy, the process of their planned action and, notably, a grave. On the one side, the “unbelievers” who are doomed to perdition and, on the other, “they” who were chosen by the “claim of fate.” But the “strongest claim of all” was “the statement that death made.” (F 174) Hence, they can also justify what the Islam actually prohibits, namely suicide: “We are finding the way already chosen for us.” (F 175) It seems, according to Falling Man, that the Jihad against infidels is only secondary. The primary fascination is indeed death, as an end in and for itself. Death has become their definite “Existential,” and surely not, as in Heidegger’s sense, as awareness of the temporality of life. It is an imaginary figment born out of a Manichean bubble. They do not spare a thought for the lived lives they will arbitrarily take (many of them Muslims): “Those who will die have no claim to their lives outside the useful fact of their dying.” A masculine and “raptured” heroism of the definite, all-consuming and all-empowering shock (“We die once, big time.”) has seized them. One is reminded of the male fascination with death in the Storms of Steel (by the German “Decisionist” Ernst Jünger) and the Japanese Kamikaze or Samurai cult as nurtured, e.g., by Yukio Mishima. The “magnetism” of the event occludes entirely the “purpose of their mission. All he saw was shock and death.” (F 177) This surely raises them above the rest of mankind, the “shameless dogwalkers” not “willing to die.” (See F 177–8) Shortly before the end (“In the Hudson Corridor”) the religious surfaces again, although, perhaps only in self-affirming formulae. Hammad gathers strength by thinking about the Iranian child soldiers who wore plastic keys “to open the door to paradise;” he tells himself to recite “the sacred word” and assures himself that “every sin” will be forgiven and “eternal life” soon be won. (F 238–9) It is apparent that the terrorist speaks the language of religious martyrdom, which has been used often enough by martyrs on the brink of their demise. If one takes a look at martyrologies such as John Foxe’s 16thcentury Act and Monuments, culminating in the reign of Mary Tudor, one can easily see that the prospect of forgiveness, paradise and eternal life in heaven had such a strong appeal that the martyrs not only welcomed death, they appeared to feel no pain and embraced the fire and faggots which were soon to end their lives. Thomas Hokes, Thomas Watts and Anne Askew were “all dying full of the glorious hope of immortality,” Laurence Saunders welcomed “everlasting life!,” John Hooper prayed: “For God’s love, good people, let me have more fire!” John Bradford “embraced the reeds, and said, ‘Strait is the gate, and narrow is the way, that leadeth to eternal life, and few there be that find it.’ He embraced the flames.”22 Falling Man 117 There are yet two differences between the old protestant martyrs and the new Islamic Jihadists. The first, even if firmly convinced of their martyrdom and the righteousness of their faith (in contradistinction to the “Popish Babylon”), were still in doubt about the forgiveness of their sins. The Jihadists, on the other hand, seem to be absolutely sure of their deeds. One may also assume that not many people (including their own kin) have been mourning for “Amir” and “Atta.” Their sympathizers believe, after all, that the terrorists, or rather, martyrs, are justly destined for a better place in heaven. Their victims, however, will be mourned for a long time. Notes 1 Thus, Don DeLillo in an essay he published shortly after the attack: “In the ruins of the future: Reflections on terror and loss in the shadow of September,” Harper’s Magazine, December 2001, 33–40, here: 35. 2 There is great amount of critical response to Falling Man. A number of the comments focus on DeLillo’s account of the protagonists’ process of coming to terms with the attack, including its processing by the media and the “Falling Man” David Janiak, as well as DeLillo’s representation of the terrorists. One of the “traumatological” examples is Silvia Caporale Bizzini’s “Grieving and Memory in Don DeLillo’s Falling Man,” in Terrorism, Media, and the Ethics of Fiction, eds. Peter Schneck and Philipp Schweighauser (New York/London: Bloomsbury, 2010), 40–50. I cannot agree with Bizzini’s interpretation of Keith’s escape into the poker casino. She sees it as “a search for a new spirituality” and an “homage to all his poker mates that died in the attacks.” (49) Keith abandons himself to the “clink of Chips” (F 229) and shuns his old poker mate Terry Cheng, who also becomes a professional player. For Falling Man as a “counter-narrative,” as well as on loss, mourning and trauma, see the illuminating essay by Ronan McKinney “Staging the Counter-Narrative in Don DeLillo’s Falling Man,” in Don DeLillo: Contemporary Critical Perspectives, eds Katherine Da Cunha Lewin and Kiron Ward (New York/ London: Bloomsbury, 2010), pos. 2494–817. 3 On the image of the shirt in comparison with Samuel Beckett’s Molloy, see Peter Boxall, “Slow Man, Dangling Man, Falling Man: DeLillo and the Ethics of Fiction,” in Terrorism, Media, and The Ethics of Fiction: Transatlantic Perspectives on Don DeLillo, eds. Peter Schneck and Philipp Schweighauser (NewYork/London: Bloomsbury Publishing, 2010), 173–83, here: 182. 4 When Keith arrives at Lianne’s flat, it is almost the first thing he says: “He said there was a shirt coming down out of the sky.” (F 88) 5 See my essay “Memory and Ekphrasis in Early Modern, Modern and Postmodern English and American Literature,” in Anglistentag 2003 München: Proceedings, eds. Christoph Bode, Sebastian Domsch and Hans Sauer (Trier: Wissenschaftlicher Verlag, 2004), 422–4. 6 Ronan McKinney offers an interpretation of the Morandis (as well as of David Janiak’s performances): “The paintings both stage and mitigate that loss [of Lianne’s father, husband and mother], summon its pain and enable Lianne to mourn.” pos. 2576. McKinney also takes into account Judith Butler’s theory of relational mourning. 7 “Her mother wasn’t dying, was she?” (F 48) 8 Martin Heidegger, “The Origin of the Work of Art,” in Martin Heidegger, Basic Writings, ed. David Farrell Krell (London et al.: Harper Perennial, 2008), 173, see also 172, 180 (or in German: Der Ursprung des Kunstwerks, 53ff.). 118 Falling Man 9 Heidegger, “Origin,” 200. According to Roman McKinney, the “experience of art” provokes the “disruption” of Lianne’s “psychic interiority.” pos. 2633, see also 2728. 10 The German philosophical or existentialist term “Grenzsituation” (as, e.g., the confrontation with death) means literally “border or limit situation,” the more literal translation “borderline situation” would be misleading, though: “Ich muß sterben, ich muß leiden, ich muß kämpfen, ich bin dem Zufall unterworfen, ich verstricke mich unausweichlich in Schuld. Diese Grundsituationen unseres Daseins nennen wir Grenzsituationen. Das heißt, es sind Situationen, über die wir nicht hinaus können, die wir nicht ändern können.“ Karl Jaspers, Einführung in die Philosophie. Zwölf Radiovorträge (München: Piper, 1971 [1953]), 18. (“I must die, I must suffer, I am subject to accidence, I inevitably incur (literally: become entangled in) guilt. We call these fundamental existential situations ultimate situations. With this we mean situations which cannot be overcome or (literally: we cannot go beyond), we cannot change.” My translation.) 11 For the debate and further references see Linda S. Kauffman, “Bodies in Rest and Motion in Falling Man,” in Don DeLillo: Mao II, Underworld, Falling Man, ed. Stacey Olster (London et al.: Continuum, 2011), 135–51, McKinney, “Staging the counter-narrative,” and, very nuanced, John N. Duvall, “Witnessing Trauma: Falling Man and Performance Art,” in Don DeLillo: Mao II, Underworld, Falling Man, ed. Stacey Olster (London et.al.: Continuum, 2011), 152–68. 12 See Adorno, 1997 (Aesthetic Theory). 13 Duval, “Witnessing Trauma,” 161. 14 For an interesting comparative study of the “Dangling Man,” see Peter Boxall, “Slow Man, Dangling Man, Falling Man: Don DeLillo and the Ethics of Fiction,” in Terrorism, Media, and The Ethics of Fiction: Transatlantic Perspectives on Don DeLillo, eds. Peter Schneck and Philipp Schweighauser (New York/London: Bloomsbury Publishing, 2010), 173–4. 15 Keith has become so sensitive to possible injuries that he furiously attacks a man who assumedly insults Florence: “Keith was ready to kill him.” (F 133) 16 For the relationship between Keith and Florence see also Linda S. Kauffman, “Bodies in Rest and Motion in Falling Man,” in Don DeLillo: Mao II, Underworld, Falling Man, ed. Stacey Olster (London et al.: Continuum, 2011), 135–51: “Florence and Keith are both stuck, fixated on a moment neither of them can transcend.” (138) 17 17 Kauffman 2011, 145: “Falling Man portrays Alzheimer’s as a metaphor for the post-September 11 condition.” 18 Ibid. 19 Other motives may also play a role, the self-affirmation of the one who got away or a need to understand Keith better. (See F 106) 20 The vast bulk of pertinent 20th-century literature from Freud to Kübler-Ross aims at “coping,” “overcoming,” “accepting” or “severing” grief and mourning and their “objects” in order to restore the mourner to life, to make her “fit for life” again. Hence, the fifth stage in Kübler-Ross’s therapeutic process of mourning is dedicated to “Acceptance.” See Elisabeth Kübler-Ross and David Kessler, On Grief and Grieving: Finding the Meaning of Grief Through the Five Stages of Loss (New York et al.: Scribner, 2005), ch. 1, 7–28. Sigmund Freud, in his seminal essay “Mourning and Melancholia,” evidently privileges the first to the second, which is hardly surprising from his therapeutic (and economic-utilitarian) point of view. Mourning – as against melancholia – passes the “testing of reality,” carries out the “behest of reality.” The successful Falling Man 119 mourner, having realized that “the loved object no longer exists,” manages to withdraw “all the libido […] from its attachments to this object,” “hypercathects” “each single one of the memories” (126) and transfers his or her libido to a “new” object. (131, see also 136–7) Melancholia, on the other hand, is “pathological.” (132) The melancholic mourner “incorporates” and identifies with the “abandoned object” resulting in “a loss in the ego.” (131) The narcissistic melancholic takes revenge on the lost object “by the circuitous path of self-punishment.” (132) Melancholia, then, drains the ego “until it is utterly depleted.” (134) Freud offers only one alternative: either one is sound and declares “the object to be dead,” “as no longer of value,” or one regresses into a kind of self-destructive or “manic” fixation, losing any hold in the outer matter-of-fact world. Yet this simple opposition not only disregards the psychological benefits, one may attain through an ongoing mnemonic occupation with the deceased. One may well gain in clarity about one’s own psychological inheritance, one’s relation to others, past and future responsibility for others. Melancholia need not come to a deadlock in an unproductive fixation on narcissist sameness; the melancholic knows, after all, “whom he has lost but not what he has lost in him.” (127) The image or “memory trace” of the other is never identical with itself. If the ethical and literary mourner cannot help replacing or going on re-presenting the “object” of mourning with symbolic substitutes (as Freud would recommend for successful mourning), he/she may well remain in a state of melancholia. But thereby the mourner not only accepts her own finitude “which is also that of memory” but also “the trace of the other in us, the other’s irreducible precedence.” (Derrida, Memoires, 29) Ethical mourning is marked by respect (or, if you wish, love) for the other, rather than by narcissism and (introverted) hate. For an ethics of mourning the other is not at our disposal, their death and memory rather a “gift” (Jacques Derrida) left to us. Responsive memory defies obliteration and closure. Other than stagnating in a state of mute narcissist sameness, the mourner could welcome the departed as another benevolent and productive person to talk to. 21 See my “Die neue Weltunordnung: Geopolitik, Internationales Recht, ‘Realismus,’ Neoliberalismus,” in Die neue Weltunordnung: Krise, Chancen und die Rolle Europas, ed. Philipp Wolf (Leipzig: Leipziger Universitätsverlag, 2018), 1–34. For a decisive criticism of DeLillo’s not sufficiently complex, “binary” and “orientalist” representation of the terrorists, see Sascha Pöhlmann, “Collapsing Identities: The Representation and Imagination of the Terrorist in Falling Man,” in Terrorism, Media, and The Ethics of Fiction: Transatlantic Perspectives on Don DeLillo, eds. Peter Schneck and Philipp Schweighauser (New York/London: Bloomsbury Publishing, 2010), 51–64. 22 Among the easily accessible sources: https://www.ccel.org/f/foxe/martyrs/ fox116.htm. 7 Point Omega “When Time Stops, so Do We”: The Aesthetics of Disappearance Temporality and Death Cosmopolis was about acceleration, the compression of the present to make the future happen now. The protagonist was driven by an urge for ecstasis drifting toward death. The Body Artist was about the deceleration of time to allow for commemoration and mourning as a resistance to death. Lauren Hartke is led by the desire to focus on and attend to the processuality of temporal experience and presence. Point Omega is about the slowing down of time to a point close to utter stasis; the protagonists are merging or hoping to merge with an object or state beyond time1 and processuality, which is tantamount to absence. Whereas in Cosmopolis and The Body Artist death (murder and suicide) is an evident and motivating element of the narrative, in Point Omega it forms, no less dauntingly, a background noise or horizon against which the narrative unfolds. The incipient and closing parts, called “Anonymity” and “Anonymity 2,” focus on the 24 Hour Psycho installation by Douglas Gordon in the MOMA, or rather the reception of the significantly slowed-down Hitchcock film by an anonymous man in the museum. The iconic film deals, of course, with the psychopathic murderer Norman Bates, whose bloody stabbing of Janet Leigh in the shower seems to be in the focus of the man’s interest, or for that matter, DeLillo’s rendering of the man watching. The man’s attention is on the phenomenology of motion, or more precisely, on the perception and experience of objects beyond the engrained linearity of time. If this does not immediately suggest a connection between temporality and death, there is one in psychoanalytical terms. The man’s obsession with the identification of (and with) ever-smaller percepts in a succession of perceptive contents (approaching stasis), his concomitant fantasies of violence (P 112, 116) as well as his imaginary dissolution into Norman Bates have at the least an uncanny if not psychotic ring to it. Death looms more evidently in the four central chapters of the novel. Elster, the main figure of the novel, has contributed to the killing of Iraqis (or Afghans) in the Bush war against terrorism. As a “defense intellectual” (P 28) at the Pentagon, he was “to DOI: 10.4324/9781003289937-7 Point Omega 121 conceptualize […] matter as troop deployment and counter-insurgency.” (P 19) His job obviously was to discursively frame and hence legitimize military action. Frustrated and disillusioned, and still rather full of himself, he leaves the military (not though his belief in war) behind for the “distances,” the space and geological time (P 19) in an Arizona desert, where he owns a remote house with a corrugated roof. “Extinction was a current theme of his,” (P 20), the narrator Jim Finley remarks. The young filmmaker has joined Elster to produce a portrait of the war theorist. Also, Elster’s daughter Jessie, quite unexpectedly, comes for a visit and disappears all of a sudden. She is not found or salvaged in the course of the novel; Finley looking for her only discovers a knife, without any traces, however, that may point to Jessie. Between the framing episodes at the museum and the main narrative in Anza-Borrego, there is one obvious connection and one only hinted at. As noticed by the (focalizing) “man,” Finley and Elster had also briefly visited the Gordon installation. Elster, though, resists the “[s]tillborn images, collapsing time.” The concept behind the slowed-down film “left him no clear context to dominate.” (P 47, 61). During “Anonymity 2,” a young unnamed woman (perhaps Jessie, who was actually there, see P 47) also comes to the installation. The “man,” who “dissolves” into Bates (P 116), manages to get her phone number. Yet more interesting are the spatio-temporal transformations the “man” and Elster strive for. Even if (or precisely because) Elster pretends to think in geological and cosmological dimensions, they both want to overcome their evanescent self to be suspended in a spatial entity, ­representation, or object out there, driven, as they are, by the psychotic desire to sever their connection to the world, to be depersonalized and de-­subjectivized by assimilation into an external object. The Anonymous “Man,” Caillois and Lacan: “But Imagination Was Itself a Natural Force, Unmanageable.” (P 81) The rather extraordinary wish to become “non-time space”2 may be accounted for by the mimetic (or, more precisely, mimicry) theories of Freud, Lacan, Adorno and, perhaps most originally, Roger Caillois’s concept of “le mimétisme.”3 The fact that a person spends six straight days in a dimmed-down gallery to watch an extreme slow-motion film and to wait until “the film’s time scheme absorbed his own” (P 6) wants some explanation. This also holds for the other protagonist of the novel who, staring out into the desert, wishes “time to fall away,” (C 72) looking forward to “become the dead matter we used to be.” (P 50) It is worth dwelling on Caillois’s and Lacan’s theories for a while. Caillois first turns against the traditional view of “mimicry as defensive action,” particularly among insects. Predators will still find and devour their prey, the latter’s homomorphy or homochromy notwithstanding. 122 Point Omega As it may even be disadvantageous to the survival of animals,4 mimicry – the assimilation into environment or “lure of space” – should therefore be put down, Caillois claims, to “a disorder of spatial perception.”5 Interestingly enough (and perhaps a little daringly), Caillois recognizes a similar behavior in human magic or incantatory practices (“like produces like”), and also in what he calls “legendary psychasthenia,”6 meaning psychosis, from a distorted perception or processing of reality to depersonalization. In this state, people do not wish to preserve their selves; rather, they abandon themselves to spatial representations outside of their selves. He diagnoses a “widespread instinct d’abandon,” which may lead to the inertia of the elan vital.”7 It is notable that Caillois sees the reason for an increase of this disposition in the “human organism’s shifting relationship to space in modern mass media culture.”8 Caillois differentiates between a vertical and perceived space determined by, comprising, and changed by, the perceiving persons themselves, and a represented space, in which “the organism […] is no longer located at the origin of the coordinate system but is simply one point among many.” “Modern science” has confusingly multiplied those spaces (“hyperspace, abstract spaces” et al.) in which a being “no longer knows what to do with itself.” Modern media are surely paramount to the permanent reformation of the intuitive forms of space and, by implication, time. The ongoing shifting and succession of spatio-temporal experience and everfaster alteration of perspectival scenes will surely exacerbate the ability to situate oneself, to form an identity of one’s self and thereby a coherent image of one’s self. Psychologically vulnerable person might then be susceptible or “lured” to not only obliterate the boundaries between inside and outside space, they might lose and even wish to lose themselves in external objects: “Under these conditions, one’s sense of personality (as an awareness of the distinction between organism and environment and of the connection between the mind and a specific point in space) is quickly, seriously undermined.”9 The effect amounts to forms of depersonalization, an extinction of one’s being-there and Freud’s death drive.10 Jacques Lacan, who received Caillois favorably, is helpful in substantiating the psychological process in question. In his essay on “The Mirror Stage as Formative of the I function,”11 Lacan famously states that human identity forms itself between the 6th and 18th month by virtue of an outside spatial, or for that matter, media representation in a mirror (or the eye of the mother). The child, still “trapped in his motor impotence and nursling dependence” receives this “specular image” with a “jubilant assumption,” which is foundationally reaffirmed by the psychological parent, who in most cases is still the mother. By virtue of this “homeomorphic identification,”12 the child perceives itself as an (albeit imaginary) whole which from now on will ground his or her subject status. Yet, the body, in its fragility, incompleteness or deficient coordination, subsists. The represented identity is, therefore, precarious; it is illusionary Point Omega 123 and depends on the approving glance of the other (the mother or a third person). Narcissus becomes suspended between an idealized but inexorably extrinsic self, which is in fact not his self, and the instance who perceives this self. This fundamental discrepancy may induce the narcissistic subject to develop acts of auto-aggression and/or to merge with its imaginary other. That is, the conflict can only be overcome through the dissolution or selfdestruction of one of the poles, unless the symbolic order, “law” or “name of the father,” intervenes. The latter (which hopefully comes down to a negotiation of Freud’s ego and superego) offers more socially compatible links or references, which can evolve different identificatory spaces for the self, or in Lacan’s words, “elements representing the diversified images of the ego, and these are so many points of anchorage, of stabilization, of inertia.”13 However, if the person in question only unsatisfactorily manages to compensate for the mother’s absence (which is to happen sooner or later) by (painfully) developing a language along with a sense of difference (Freud’s Fort-Da, one after the other),14 the mentally unstable self is bound to fail to situate him/herself in the symbolic world. The “picture of the relation to the world” is likely to be de-realized, that is, a “heteromorphic identification” occurs, a “morphological mimicry” due to “an obsession with space.”15 The subject lacks a social identity since it is devoid of points of contact, “points of anchorage” in the view of the other social person. Significantly, the “man” in the MOMA gallery is an “Anonymity” (P 3, 101). It points to both his existential past (as a person) and the state of being, which he strives for through mimicry. Names are tags, after all, through which we are given an identity. Identity is furthermore obtained through the way one looks like to others. Yet he had no idea what he looked like to others. He wasn’t sure what he looked like to himself. He looked like what his mother saw when she looked at him. But his mother had passed on. […] What was left of him for others to see?” What, he asks himself, would the woman “be seeing when she looked at him?” (P 8, 108) This is the typical Lacan-Freudian constellation. As he was, and narcissistically continued to be, only through the eyes of his mother, he was unable to find other points of contact without her glance, and evolve a differential sense of his personality. Caught up in his represented, but potentially self-disrupting and psychotic space, and, in addition, devoid of and evading extrinsic social resonance,16 the anonymous “man” literally “no longer knows what to do with itself,” (Caillois, 99) falls prey to “legendary psychasthenia” and attempts at mimicking and eventually assimilating into his environment. 124 Point Omega The introduction of the man is already indicative of his psychological confusion: “There was a man standing against the north wall, barely visible.” The “darkness was nearly complete and the man standing alone moved a hand toward his face, repeating, ever so slowly, the action of a figure on the screen.” (P 3) Animal-like he inches along the walls, compelled to perceive and confirm visually what he knows already, the fact, namely, that Anthony Perkins uses “the right hand.” He “needed to see it.” (P 5) The man himself has already become so much part of the interior of the gallery that the guard does not seem to take notice of him: “[T]he guard did not count him as a presence any more.” (P 7) If the darkened space therefore already allows for a mimicry, it is dependent on him and his body. His frame would still be present, even if hardly distinguishable from the surroundings. Caillois’ mimesis (“mimétisme”), on the other hand, would mean assimilation into an environmental space, and thus disappearance or absence. Only “mimétisme” would allow for the overcoming of the unsolved discrepancy between the fragmented body and the imaginary, but alien, representation. Narcissus had to pay with his life for this. Given the man’s predisposition, the aesthetics of the filmic installation in the darkened and hermetic space virtually invites mimetic behavior. It requires extraordinary perceptive abandon to the extremely (artificially) alienated temporal-spatial mode, unless one gets irritated, even repelled (like Elster in front of the performance does; he desires a geological spacetime). The man, therefore, watches as closely and intensely as he can, exerting “total concentration,” “watchfulness” or “absolute alertness.” “The closest watching” does, after all, not aim at synthetic experience, narrative recognition, the maintenance of the unity of consciousness and recovery of emotional balance (which is the eventual reward one gains through watching suchlike dreadful films). “Anonymous” strives, on the contrary, for the very dissolution of the “unity of his inner sense” of time by dissociating content from form in order to aisthetically morph into the latter. Ironically, the man’s wish “to feel time passing, to be alive to what is happening in the smallest register of motion,” is undercut by the retarding dissociative temporality, which will absorb his own “time scheme” (P 6) and thereby his very identity. “Continuous motion” is split up into “incremental movements.” The latter appear like distinct “bricks in a wall, clearly countable” and no longer inserted into a continuous process: “the flight of an arrow or a bird.” However, if the successive oneafter-another transforms into a juxtapositional side-by-side, one still or shot beside another, coherence, continuity and meaning drop away: “Then again it was not like or unlike anything.” From up close he sees “snatches and staticky fragments,” (P 6) from a distance “abstract moments, all form and scale.” (P 101) The incisive slowdown is tantamount to a (surely never total) spatialization, which absorbs the mentally instable observer “beyond the usual assumptions” (as the artwork was probably meant to, P 7). He is Point Omega 125 mesmerized, (P 13) and increasingly willing, on the sixth consecutive day, to “transmigrate,” “passing from this body into a quivering image on the screen.” (P102) He wants “complete immersion,” “the thing he sees” to share “consciousness with him,” imagines “all motion stopping on the screen,” and eventually assimilation and dissolution: “The man separates himself from the wall and waits to be assimilated, pore by pore, to dissolve into the figure of Norman Bates.” (P 115–6) This process of encompassing self-abandon to an imaginary space comes down to the (self-)obliteration of the subject, which is constituted and reaffirms itself by temporal categories (future, present, past), by memory, language and relationality (causality). The detached and disjointed components, which make sense only in relation to action, isolate the watcher “from every expectation.” (P 8) Protension, so elemental to orientation and identity, is canceled. The experience becomes “drugged,” eludes language (P10), involves an “element of forgetting.” (P 11) He thinks of the gallery as a “hushed tomb,” and wonders if he would be able to walk out “after living in this radically altered plane of time.” It is noteworthy that he uses a spatial metaphor for time. (P 12) More significantly, he asks himself if he would eventually be “forgetting who he was and where he lived,” when he walked out, and, finally, if he could return here for some more time: “[W]ould it be possible for him to live in the world? Did he want to? Where was it, the world?” For the nameless man, both depersonalization and derealization (in Caillois’s sense) have taken place. He therefore feels that, rather than the original film, “this was real.” (P 13) He is drawn to “stillness,” and stasis, where almost nothing happens, and to a “reality” where “cause and effect [are] so drastically drawn apart.” (P 14). Indeed, the stills or shots he takes in are “outside all categories,” and, as a logical consequence, “open to entry.” (P 102) The “man” has moved beyond (the Kantian) categories, whereby we necessarily and a priori structure and order our perception of the world, assuming we want to act sensibly and comprehensibly in this world. By abandoning those categories (which permit memory and relationality), the “man” will divest himself of his self-reflectiveness, and hence his identity. His (imaginary) assimilation into space will then mean utter alienation from his self, while the dissevered continuity of time will also entail cognitive, moral and social disconnectedness. Rather than an aesthetic attitude, the man’s reception of the film corresponds with an archaic and – still non-conceptual – behavior, with the consequence that “what makes itself like itself, does not become truly equal.”17 There is, after all, no reflexive self left. Absolute mimicry amounts to absolute selfestrangement; he or she literally “exists” no longer.18 The price for the regressive natural assimilation to the respective imaginary object is that “the subject himself becomes an object,” incapable of establishing an inner relationship.19 Eventually, this comes down to a state of non-being: “Life withdraws to a lesser state.” Depersonalization means a “kind of diminished existence,”20 but, in the long run, a return to an “original 126 Point Omega insensate condition” and the Freudian “inorganic” and “inanimate.” It entails, in other words, the death of the subject. Murder or Not? Critics have been reluctant to identify the “man” as the murderer of Jessie. The reason for her sudden disappearance remains indeed in the dark. Yet there is some evidence that points to the “man.” Like Norman Bates’s, his imaginary has remained that of his mother. He wishes for a woman but is highly confused when she speaks to him “changing every rule of separation.” (P 105) After the confrontation he has to check his appearance in a mirror (P 108): “What would she be seeing.” She becomes part of his represented “heteromorphic representation” regarding her as “a shadow unfolding from the wall.” He asks her (after thinking about “Norman Bates and Mother”) if she can imagine “living another life” (which she does not reject outright). (P 111) He develops fantasies of violence, “pinning her to the wall,” follows her and manages to get her phone number, before he dissolves “into the figure of Norman Bates.” In psychoanalytical terms, he might have reasons to eliminate the invasive and consternating Other – an attractive woman. She is not identified as Jessie, but she visits the gallery at about the same time as the unnamed woman. (P 47) Jessie’s “authoritarian” mother, with whom alone she shares an apartment, sends her daughter to Elster because she distrusts the “manner” or “appearance” of the man Jessie now sees. (P 57) Jessie moreover displays some characteristics that might explain the mutual, if unsettling, attraction. She listens, according to her father, to “words” from “some interior presence” (which suggests some form of borderline condition). At times, she seems “deadened” to any external “response,” completely turned inward: “She was missing, fixed tightly within” (P 59–60, this again points to depression). She ignores Finley’s warnings about sitting in the sun (“You’ll die”), and does not know where she is staying. (P 65) As a child, Jessie had to touch her body to realize who she was: “She was imaginary to herself.” (P 71) Finley tries to come closer to her, but she remains elusive and non-committed, rather a disoriented and airy woman. After her disappearance, she seems to have passed “into air.” She leaves all her belongings and the two men completely baffled behind. Finley wonders whether she has gone “past the edge of conjecture” but cannot help the worst imaginings. (P 81) After Jessie has left New York, the anonymous phone calls, according to Jessie’s mother, cease. Rangers find a knife in the not too far away “impact area.” (Janet Leigh, as Marion Crane, nota bene, was also stabbed to death.) But the knife shows no traces of blood. When Finley goes to search for Jessie on his own in the desert area, he gets lost between the “cliff edges” but has one of the unlikely epiphanic moments that are so characteristic for the endings of DeLillo’s later novels. Almost blinded by the “tides of light and sky,” (P 93) he is “crushed” Point Omega 127 by “the heartbreaking beauty” and “the indifference of it.” He cannot imagine someone “dead” in here, yet believes he will never have the answer. Interestingly enough, he becomes immersed into an atmosphere (his hands to a “cliff wall,” a geologically significant stone formation) which evokes the stillness, timelessness, and nothingness, Elster, and, in a different way, the “man” sought after. In Finley’s daydream, an erotic reverie blends in, however: I closed my eyes and listened. The silence was complete. I’d never felt a stillness such as this, never such enveloping nothing. But such nothing that was, that spun around me, or she did, Jessie, warm to the touch. I don’t know how long I stood there, every muscle in my body listening. Could I forget my name in this silence? (P 94) Finley unexpectedly undergoes a profane transcendent experience of selfforgetfulness. He feels a “nothing” that “is”; he can almost break through his identity and attain something like the Buddhist Nirvana (the paradox of a nothingness that “is” in being). But for all that, he fully maintains his physical receptivity (“warm to the touch,” “every muscle”), which magically includes even the deceased Jessie, who had “passed into air.” However, one should at least mention in passing, that Jessie might have committed suicide, merging into the desert and thereby virtually acting out Elster’s fantasies. It would be an ironic realization of her father’s exalted ideas. And yet, the idyllic desert scene is soon interrupted and counteracted by a buzzing fly: “It had found me and come near, in all this streaming space, buzzing.” (94) The symbolism of flies is manifold, they are associated with death (in the Bible), or with spirit ancestors (Navajo mythology).21 Yet it might just as well be an ironic turn in the narrative, preventing it from sliding into shallow mysticism. It is obvious that Don DeLillo holds the case in abeyance. In a good postmodern manner (or as in a good detective novel), he lays traces, makes metatextual allusions (the knife, “impact area,” the fly, the later blocked phone call, “imagination is a natural force,” “[h]e (Elster) wanted pure mystery,” P 83), only to revoke or cross out these traces. It is the outstanding art of DeLillo (not least in Point Omega) to construct literary indeterminacy, ambiguous places or gaps, to open up manifold points of imaginative contact for the reader.22 DeLillo’s novels are virtuoso open works of art. Elster, Teilhard, “Dead Matter” and the Epiphany of a “Handful of Mucus” Whereas Finley may have found some timeless elatedness in a “streaming space” and the anonymous “man” some redeeming (yet imaginary and psychotic) transformation in a heteromorphic space, Elster will tragically 128 Point Omega and ridiculously fail. Elster, as opposed to the “man,” seeks his temporal redemption not through his projection (from hermetic darkness) into an almost distinct space on a screen, the pompously self-conscious intellectual projects himself from a wide desert opening into immeasurable earth history. Especially during his hushed hours, he is located on his deck tucked onto his house. It is his “vertical plane,”23 from which he looks into his “represented space”: “nothing but distances, not vistas […] but only distances.” (P 18) Elster is strongly suspicious of human subjectivity, intentionality, and their externalizing media, the “spoken or written” word. He mistrusts a categorial consciousness diverting from what he calls “the true life.” This happens, he claims, in “the submicroscopic moments,” when “staring at a blank wall.” It takes place “beneath the running thoughts and dim images, wondering idly when we’ll die.” (P 17) Even an 800-hundredpage biography would be wholly incongruous (“dead”) to the inner train of prereflexive impulses. Only when the cerebral basis is left to itself, producing involuntarily and autogenously what comes to pass, he thinks he “becomes himself.” This is in line with his (rather unstrung) relation to his body, where, rather than through his mental acts or products, he thinks his identity is founded and formed. Elster (like the nerd in Cosmopolis) is in the habit of biting off the dead skin of his thumbnail: “Not my books, lectures, conversations, none of that. It’s the goddamn hangnail, it’s dead skin, that’s where I am, my life, there to here.” (P 43) Elster has fled the temporal unsteadiness of the media- and trafficpervaded city life of New York. The broad expanse of the desert may (or may not) convey the relieving impression of temporal opening and continuity. More important is the occupation he “left behind.” (P 18) He had been hired by the Pentagon for more than two years to “conceptualize.” That is, he was supposed to develop “overarching” notions and ideas for “troop deployment and counterinsurgency.” (P 119) His job, in other words, was to give ideological and practical guidelines to the American military to wage their asymmetric war in Iraq and possibly Afghanistan. As a university professor and “defense intellectual” (P 28), he had to take care of the framing of a war the legitimacy of which was doubted and which claimed many victims. If (following Kant) conceptualizing means structuring potential experience and actions according to temporal, spatial, modal and relational or causal categories, Elster’s job was to render killing as rational and convincing as possible. Yet his aversion against conceptualizing does not seem to have a moral ground; he simply seems to have been weary of the “tight minds” and the general “background noise” in the “closed world” of the “methodological” war “plotters.” While he affirms the constructive and projective – unreal or fake – ­character of the new realities the war strategists devise,24 his approach to the production of the perception of war was not one of “force levels or logistics,” (P 29) he rather wanted to create something aesthetic, furnished with a good portion of ontology. He wanted a “Haiku,” the effect Point Omega 129 of which he understands as “human consciousness located in nature.” A “haiku” he thinks is appropriate for representing war, because the (often pointillist) three lines are suggestive of transience. It makes us see something, only to prepare us “to watch it disappear.” (P 29) The haiku, then, is to signify disappearance and death through its very form. The fact that this, understandably, did not click with the war planners, their “statistics” and “rationalizations,” does not dissuade him from his affirmation of war: “The force of will, the sheer visceral need.” (P 30) Elster’s philosophy of life sounds materialistic and physiological. The subtext is a cultural pessimism, which is backed by an organicist-teleological dimension, reminiscent of the tragic vitalism and fatalism of philosophers (and physiologists) such as Nietzsche or Schopenhauer. The opening of the barren desert, in which space and time seem to purely unfold, thus serves as an antithesis to the spatio-temporal corruption of civilization, especially in cities. These, he feels, are ruled by the “usual terror” of “the minute-to-minute reckoning.” (P 44) The objective of cities is to “measure time, to remove time from nature,” producing thus “dimwit time, inferior time.” (P 45) For Elster, “city street” means “conflict,” just as any “other people” do. (P 23) Elster’s dislike of city life is typical of a cultural antipathy which is as old as urbanization itself. Georg Simmel, in his Cities and Intellectual Life (Die Großstädte und das Geistesleben), diagnosed as early as 1903 an intensification and aggravation of the neural or psychological life (“Nervenleben”) among intellectuals due “to the rapid and perpetual change of outward and inner impressions.”25 While, on the one hand, modern (mass) city life induces the intellectual to distinguish himself as an individual, his or her heightened “sensitivity” causes him, on the other, to develop a kind of blasé attitude or arrogance. This surely fits Elster. The opposition Elster cultivates is rather stale, setting chronological and measured (if contiguous) time, tantamount to technological progress and modernity, against a supposedly organic and overarching time, unimpeded by time management: “Time that precedes us and survives us.” (P 44) This notion of “enormous” time is, of course, strongly metaphysical and, in spite of Elster’s resentment, a conceptual brainchild. Remarkably enough, his subjective sense of time shrinks in the desert: “Time becomes blind.” (P 23) No longer bound by chronometric time, he feels unrestrained to “absorb” “the force of geologic time,” and “weathered bone,” (P 19) to descend into the “protoworld” and ponder “the nature of later extinctions.” In fact, it is the spaciousness of the landscape (into which he immerses himself) which inspires his “current theme” of “extinction,”26 along with and in contrast to “claustrophobia.” Evidently, this was caused by his pentagon work as a “war intellectual”: “War,” he claims, creates a “closed world” for all, the “plotters” and “strategists” included. “In those rooms, with those men” a hermetic and auto-poietic world of “rationalizations” (P 30) prevailed over the visceral haiku-war he wanted to wage. Elster’s claustrophobia may also 130 Point Omega point to his occupation with the term “rendition,” on which he has written an essay. In this, he analyzed the diachronic and synchronic semantics of the word to focus particularly on two or three of its meanings, the rendering (or plastering) of a wall of a “walled enclosure” and the “enhanced interrogation techniques” (P 33) within those “covert prisons.” People are forcefully badgered to “surrender” (also a meaning of rendition). The historical context is well-known. During the “war against terrorism” the United States maintained for legal reasons “rendition prisons” or “black sites” outside of its territory, most notoriously in Guantanamo: “Within those walls, somewhere, in seclusion, a drama is being enacted […] actors naked […] the renderers […] a revenge play that reflects the mass will and interprets the shadowy need of an entire nation, ours.” (P 34) The essay is informed by an apodictic tone of inevitability: “In future years, of course, men and women, in cubicles, will be listening […].” (P 33) Accordingly, he interprets the staunch American war on terror as a fateful drama in which all actors are inexorably driven to accomplish their gruesome part. The determination to take revenge at all (legal) costs (for the certainly barbarous attacks in 2001) can indeed be interpreted as a premodern political response to an archaic and irrational desire, which, without alternative, had to be satisfied. Finley is not sure whether Elster means it, romanticizing “the shameful subject,” or whether the semantic exercise on variations of “rendition” is an ironic whim. Yet Elster’s teleological (and morbid) weltanschauung is based on a regressive naturalism. By comparing “the evolution of a word to that of organic matter,” (P 34) language and consciousness become material facts and processes that evolve autonomously on their own. “Rendition,” then, materialized in military torture and destruction – and human consciousness heading for its own extinction at large, or dissolution in timeless space, cannot be helped. It is rather enigmatic why Don DeLillo has Elster quote Teilhard de Chardin as his crown witness. (P 51)27 Perhaps, Teilhard’s all-encompassing (and eccentric) super-theory, which purports to reconcile science and religion, may have seemed the only construct befitting the self-important war intellectual. The linchpin, however, of Teilhard’s theory, besides evolution and Christology, is consciousness (or, rather its apotheosis), that is, the human ability to go beyond or transcend oneself and to thereby create all kinds of reflecting and reflective cultural artifices. Taking the (indeed mysterious) emergence of consciousness out of matter as a starting point, Teilhard proposes a progressive coming-into-itself of consciousness: “The consciousness of each of us is evolution looking at itself and reflecting upon itself.”28 After the evolutionary phases of “geogenesis” and “biogenesis,” grown into “psychogenesis,” we live in an increasingly complex state of “noogenesis.” The noosphere then forms “a thinking layer of the earth” or “circumterrestrial layers.” The teleological function of the noosphere and Teilhard’s central point is “Survival” – as opposed to Elster’s “extinction.”29 Point Omega 131 The noosphere unites or hyperlinks the individual with the general (converges all consciousnesses and all the conscious) in a “super-consciousness” which culminates in the “Hyper-Personal – at the Omega Point.” At the Omega Point, the universe reflects upon itself, transcends time and space, and becomes “independent of the collapse of the [evolutionary] forces.” Accordingly, “something in the cosmos escapes from entropy.” The mutually energetic momentum among consciousnesses, and here Teilhard’s Christian belief comes in, is love, and, eventually, an “extra-human energy,” namely the Christian phenomenon. When the omega point, the complexity and centralization of all consciousnesses, reaches its endpoint, and, concomitantly, the material world perishes; all will be sublated in “God-Omega.” In Christ, who not only presents the most sublime form of love but also the oneness of the spiritual and the material, the telos of Omega fulfills itself. Survival is maintained.30 This is incompatible with Elster’s statements. For Teilhard, noogenesis is an ontotheological reality. Elster, in contrast, does not see in God and consciousness the prime movers and telos of being, but in matter: “Matter wants to lose its consciousness.” He actually believes civilization is driven to rid itself of “the burden of consciousness.” This he can claim because his anthropology is fundamentally materialist, and consciousness only a burdensome and contingent epiphenomenon: “We want to be the dead matter we used to be.” Teilhard’s panentheism wants to overcome time and space; evolution for him is essentially the movement toward eternal life in Christ. It constitutes a positive eschatological (or millenarian) apocalypse. Elster’s evolution comes down to an abandonment to space (i.e., movement toward death). Teilhard, who fought in the First World War, wants to salvage mankind in the face of the possible destruction of the earth, Elster appears to welcome the end: “Time to close it all down.” The Iraq war and “nuclear flirtations,” he brags, are “[l]ittle whispers” (P 50) in comparison to what he expects to come. Elster, the urban neurotic and frustrated war designer, is deeply pessimistic about the “condition humaine” and tired of civilization to the degree that he appears to wish for “the last flare.” When he thus gives Teilhard a Freudian twist, he entirely misconstrues the Jesuit’s intentions: “Consciousness is exhausted. Back now to inorganic matter. This is what we want. We want to be stones in field.” (P 53) This is Caillois, rather than Teilhard. In the above-mentioned essay, Caillois quotes from Gustave Flaubert’s “La Tentation de Saint-Antoine”: Anthony wants “to descend into the heart of matter – to be matter.” It evokes in Caillois’s Freudian interpretation: “the return to an original insensate condition and prenatal unconsciousness.”31 Elster’s Anza-Borrego desert forms the ideal space for the frustrated life philosopher to give in precisely to what Caillois diagnoses (against Bergson) as “the inertia of the elan vital,” exhausted as human progress seems. Here he can nurture his obsession with transience and perishability. 132 Point Omega True life, he thinks, takes place in the subconscious “moment” in which the self knows “that it will not live forever.” (P 63) Thus, feeling that time is “falling away,” (P 72) he reasserts his theory of an intentional will not to power but to extinction: “We want it to happen. Some paroxysm. […] We pass completely out of being. Stones.”32 What follows, though, is a deeply ironic deconstruction of Elster’s selfpleasing apocalypticism. His daughter, vanishing without a trace in the desert, seems (although mysteriously) to individually fulfill his conception. The fact that she is not found in the space, Finley’s experience of stillness and nothingness among the rocks, and more significantly, a knife lacking any residue of blood or fingerprint, are, if vaguely, suggestive of her disappearance in the vastness and depth of the place. But in the face of the real – of death – Finley brings the speculation back down to earth: “The omega point has narrowed, here and now, to the point of a knife as it enters a body. All the man’s grand themes funneled down to local grief, one body, out there somewhere, or not.” (P 98) The irony manifests itself in Elster’s utter personal disintegration and depersonalization. It begins with the spatial and perceptual disorientation of the theorist of geological space. He becomes insecure about his immediate environment, develops “a fear from one step to the next,” and sees things that are not there and speaks in “fragments.” (P 87) He “no longer knows what to do” with himself, to use Caillois’s language again.33 His apparently (spatiotemporally) unlimited desert now bears him down and tightly “hems” him in. What he is “left with” are “lost times and spaces.” (P 88) He turns inwardly and actually reaches a state in which his consciousness, yet not in the way he has hoped for, is about to wane. To Finley, he now appears “beyond memory”: “One man past knowing.” (P 99) Along with a “diminished sense of personality and vitality,” and “inertia of the elan vital,”34 he shrinks physically. His face “sinks” into his head, he loses weight substantially, and looks like an “x-ray.” The degenerative process he undergoes does not terminate in “paroxysm,” or the end of consciousness, but in a handful of phlegm, which in classical humorism was associated with senectitude and the brain. The scene is singular and proves once more DeLillo’s great art of description: He ejected the mass finally, hawked it up and spewed it into his open hand. Then he looked at it wobbling there […], a thick stringy pulsing thing, pearly green. […] I didn’t know what he saw in that handful of mucus but he kept looking. (P 97) In T. S. Eliot’s “I will show you fear in a handful of dust,” (“The Waste Land,” 1922) the immediate context of the line is indeed a “waste land,” with a “stony rubbish,” a “dead tree,” a “dry stone.” There is also the “shadow” of death.35 The larger reference is Ecclesiastes 3:20: “All go to the same place; Point Omega 133 all come from dust, and to dust all return.” The biblical phrase may have suggested Elster’s initial geological teleology, as it may have influenced Freud’s death drive. We don’t know what Elster thought when contemplating the mucus, a product of his very own body, self-engrossed and reduced as it is. If he saw no foreshadowing of his own death, he may have realized how much, in the real face of death, his “Point Omega” has become “dead echo now.” Finley takes Elster back to noisy New York to Jessica’s mother, who he hopes will take care of Elster. The sublime is never too far removed from the ludicrous; this is one of the many things the novel shows us. Notes 1 This, in the phenomenology of inner time sense, may well be experienced as “pure time.” (P 6) 2 See Catherine Gander, “The art of being out of time in Don DeLillo’s Point Omega,” in Don DeLillo: Contemporary Critical Perspectives, eds. Katherine da Cunha Lewin and Kiron Ward (London and New York: Bloomsbury Academic, 2018), pos 2887: “narratively and historically suspended, the novel crafts a pocket of ‘non-time Space’ that both escapes and enacts the transitional disorientation produced by shifts in era, or changes of phase.” Gander quotes Hannah Arendt here. 3 Roger Caillois, “Mimicry and Legendary Psychasthenia,” in The Edge of Surrealism: A Roger Caillois Reader, ed. Claudine Frank (Durham/London: Duke UP, 2003), 91–103. 4 Ibid., 96. 5 Ibid., 99. 6 Ibid., 97, 100. 7 Ibid., 102. 8 Mark Meyers, “Secret Societies, Animal Mimicry, and the Cultural History of Early French Postmodernism,” Journal of the Western Society for French History 42, (2014): 126–34, here: 130. 9 Caillois 2003, 99–100. 10 It is noteworthy that Freud, on a more fundamental biological level, puts traumatic neurosis down to “an extensive rupture of the barrier against stimuli.” “Beyond the Pleasure Principle (1920),” 155. 11 Jacques Lacan, Écrits, Trans. Bruce Fink (New York/London: Norton, 2006), 75–81. 12 Lacan, Écrits, 76–77. 13 Jacques Lacan, The Seminar of Jacques Lacan. Book II. The Ego in Freud’s Theory and in the Technique of Psychoanalysis 1954–1955, ed. Jacques-Alain Miller (New York/London: Norton, 1991), 166–7. I am here indebted to Peter Geble’s clarifying essay “Der Mimese-Komplex,” ilinx 2, (2011): 185– 95, 183–4. 14 I am referring here again to Freud’s “Beyond the Pleasure Principle.” 15 Lacan 2006, 77. 16 When the woman, who may turn out to be the victim of his psychotic mimicry, is speaking to him, he is utterly confused: “that was sort of never supposed to happen. Being spoken to. This woman standing somehow next to him was changing every rule of separation.” (P 105) 17 Theodor W. Adorno, Aesthetic Theory, Trans. Robert Hullot-Kentor (London: The Athlone Press, 1997), 111. The German original is more straightforward and clearer: “daß, was sich gleichmacht, [wird] nicht gleich,” Ästhetische Theorie (Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1973), 169. 134 Point Omega 18 See also Max Horkheimer and Theodor. W. Adorno, Dialectic of Enlightenment. Trans. John Cumming (New York: Continuum, 1990), 180. Cf. Josef Früchtl, Mimesis, Konstellation eines Zentralbegriff bei Adorno (Würzburg: Könighausen & Neumann, 1986), 33. 19 Früchtl 1986, 34. 20 Caillois 2003, 103, 102. 21 See https://www.worldbirds.org/fly-symbolism/ 22 I refer here to the Reception Theory (Ingarden, Iser). 23 Caillois 2003, 99. 24 “We tried to create new realities overnight, careful sets of words that resemble advertising slogans in memorability and repeatability.” (P 28–9) 25 Georg Simmel, Die Großstädte und das Geistesleben (Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 2006), 9 (my translation). 26 Elster was called by the Pentagon, when lecturing on “what he called the dream of extinction” in Zürich. (P 36) 27 David Cowart recognizes in Elster’s speculations “the denial or mockery of Teilhard’s thinking.” See his “The Lady Vanishes: Don DeLillo’s Point Omega,” Contemporary Literature 53, no. 1 (2012): 47. 28 Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, The Phenomenon of Man (New York: Harper, 1959), 221, 226, passim. 29 Ibid., 181, 226, 235. 30 Ibid., 251, 260, 270, 271, 288. 31 Caillois 2003, 101–2. 32 Notably, he briefly contemplates the “mystical” possibility that “stones have being.” (P 73) Stones in their relative persistence have always been objects of mystical, mythological, esoteric, and aesthetic attributions. Through their simple and often beautifully complex presence, they have shown to be suited to philosophical meditations. Don DeLillo will elaborately thematize an (exhibited) stone in Zero K. See also Roger Caillois, The Writing of Stones (Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 1985). 33 Caillois 2003, 99. 34 Ibid., 101–2. 35 T.S. Eliot, The Waste Land and Other Poems (New York: Penguin, 1998), 55–6. 8 Zero K The Ideology and Aesthetics of Immortality Cryonics and a Tale of Two Worlds Cryobiologists (in action) or cryonicists (in theory) are technocratic optimists, of course, only where their own future is concerned. For them, “Death” is merely due to some medical dysfunction which may be sorted out any time soon. “The body,” according to the founder of the movement, Robert C. W. Ettinger, “can be thought of as dead, but not very dead.”1 This may sound a little unsettling, but the body, one should presume, must indeed not be very dead before it is put on or, rather, in ice. A body already passed into advanced putrefaction would be rather difficult to restore satisfactorily. But if one adds cryoprotective agents (to inhibit the cell-damaging effects of ice), cryonicists believe the “not very dead” and “vitrified” body may then be preserved for decades or centuries until thawed and restored to youthful health.2 In some not-too-distant future, nanotechnology, genetics or AI will cure all (hitherto malignant) diseases, one hopes. Yet, since the body is at one’s technological disposition (and death no longer a relevant category), it is only of secondary interest. What is more important is the brain. The neurological hardware with its individual information imprinting must be intact when frozen, hence taken care of in good time. “Reawakening” without personality and identity would be pointless.3 Against this background, cryobiologists – as in Don DeLillo’s novel Zero K – have no ethical problem cryoconserving a human being, whether dead or alive. Nor have they any difficulty in severing trunk from head and freezing it separately – hoping, as they credulously do, to overcome mortality in principle. Yet however optimistic cryonicists may be in technical terms, they are still at odds with current socio-cultural and legal attitudes toward death as well as a certain skepticism about the medical promises and larger (individual and collective) consequences. Especially in a frozen state, one is bound to have no influence on the future; even for technocrats, it is a highly indeterminate matter and contingent on numerous incalculables. DOI: 10.4324/9781003289937-8 136 Zero K DeLillo’s cryonics institute in Zero K – tellingly called “Convergence” – has been devised to clear up and remove precisely all those conceivable barriers and doubts still surrounding the cryonics immortality project. Technologically, the “Convergence” commands “the science of present and future.” (Z 74) The bodies, according to two of the dynamic communicators of the institution, are “[e]ncased in vitreous matter, refashioned cell by cell, waiting for their time.” (Z 75, see also Z 71) They are, or pretend to be, rather advanced: “Our devices enter the body dynamically and become the refurbished parts and pathways we need in order to live again.” (Z 128) For good reasons, the place is located in the remote and uninhabited steppe somewhere in the southeast of Kazakhstan, near the border of Kyrgyzstan: “There was nothing else, nowhere else.” (Z 4) In this isolated wasteland, one does not have to grapple with legal problems and ethical questions about the definition of the time of death, about reverence or piety for the dead. In the United States, the freezing process (which in most other countries is generally prohibited) may only be started if the demise of the person in question has been officially certified. The criterion is brain death, for the simple fact that a few minutes after the cessation of the supply of oxygen, the cells become irretrievably damaged and the person discontinues to be one. Yet, as we saw, a somewhat functioning brain is paramount to successfully “reawakening” the “patient.” Thus, DeLillo’s compound has been set up in a normative nowhere land: “beyond the limits of believability and law,” (Z 254) as Jeffrey Lockhart, the homodiegetic narrator of the novel, remarks. Yet there is much more to the “Convergence” than technology4 or legal aspects. The ambition of the enterprise is to set up and promote immortality (via cryonics and biotechnology) by means of an ideological superstructure that goes far beyond material questions. Designed as a total Gesamtkunstwerk in which aesthetics, architecture, philosophical or psychological discourse, religion and technology converge, the “dome” is to “make the future” now: “This future, this instant.” (Z 30, 128) The “Convergence” is an ontological project. The massive facility was built “with every conceivable safeguard against system failure,” (Z 129) that is, mostly underground and fortified in order to withstand all possible geological insecurities, as well as social or political challenges. “The site is fixed, we are fixed,” (Z 129) another representative of the “Convergence,” named Ben Ezra by Jeff, explains. Its buildings are “in hiding, agoraphobically sealed,” (Z 4) Jeff observes. Agoraphobia denotes a fear of open places, as well as a neurotic defensiveness against gatherings and the public. Under exclusion of the public and beyond our “risk society,” the immortality project can be implemented and carried out from scratch, unimpeded by the course of time and history. “History,” Jeffrey’s father Ross explains, “is buried here. […] We’re outside the limits. We’re forgetting everything we knew.” (Z 30–1) Rather than to “liminality,” the “Convergence” amounts to an absolute Zero K 137 crossing of the boundaries of what constitutes human and humanist identity in principle. Thus, total isolation is crucial to the overall scheme of the Convergence, which, more than the physical elimination of death, is about the rescindment of “death as a cultural artifact.” (Z 71) As there has (hitherto) been nothing that determines the human condition more than death, Ben Ezra is right when he reasserts: “We have fallen outside of history.” (Z 129) In order to enforce its transhumanist project, an alliance of the superrich has erected a historical vacuum in which the experience of temporality and contingency – fundamental to our cultural idea of death – can be dispelled. In a kind of synergetic interplay with the experiential or aesthetic quality of the building and its exhibits, it brings to bear both in discourse and video the old fear of apocalypse, juxtaposing it with the mythical desire for eschatology. In contradistinction to a disastrous past and present, one anticipates a salvific time in which all history and contingent temporality come to our or my end, that is, the end of the chosen few. We partake of all this through the skeptical eyes of Jeffrey Lockhart (see, e.g., Z 94), who was asked by Ross to visit the “Convergence” and see off his frail stepmother (and former land artist) Artis, Ross’s second wife. Two years after the first visit, he returns, this time to keep Ross company, who wishes to follow Artis to an adjacent freezer pod. He is both socially and ideologically a “non-committed” drifter, who lives from “week to week, year to year […] Job to job, city to city,” (Z 115, see also 209, 218, 220) to put up with the “plotless days and nights” that “had begun to define” the world “folding up around him.” (Z 187) Mentally uncertain about his identity and with a somewhat limited self-assuredness, he checks compulsively on his wallet, locks, keys, zipper, or, pedantically, “the expiration dates on bottles and cartons.” (Z 183, 222, 270, 267) Yet his most salient characteristic is his obsession with names. Obsessively he tries to sort out the identity and narrative of places (Z 187–8), of the people in the “Convergence” (as of the “Stenmark twins”) as well as of random people in the streets of New York.5 (Z 210) Whereas he takes the arbitrariness of naming for granted (disregarding naming’s identity-establishing power, see Z 82, 95), the “Convergence” linguists seriously believe they can manufacture the definite scientific and univocal language, as the quondam Royal Society did: approximating “the logic and beauty of pure mathematics.” (Z 130) Jeffrey’s father Ross left his mother Madeline when Jeff was 13. This may partly explain why the son, now in his 30s, is very critical about his father’s undertakings (he declines his father’s inheritance); it may also account for his uncertainty, doubts and questioning. At 14, he develops a fake limp to make himself “visible” (Z 102) to “recognize” and “define” himself. (Z 103) As we learn in detail about his ordinary life, especially when he abandons himself to the fleetingness and vicissitude in the streets of New York, he serves distinctly as a contrasting background to the 138 Zero K totalitarian definitude of the “Convergence.” He is given to the unspectacular, “the ordinary moments” that “make the life,” (Z 109, 209) to temporality and memory: “and we [i.e. Jeff with his sometime lover Emma] watched a barge being towed downriver, inch by inch, discontinuously, with a few tall structures fragmenting our view.” (Z 193) When he thinks about his deceased mother, he remembers most of all her devotion to the (seemingly) most trivial household jobs (as removing lint from cloth, Z 109), which she does minutely along “the simple timelines that shaped the day.” (Z 106) The narrative constellation of the novel appears rather simple: here the temporally open, fleeting and contingent everyday world of Jeff, who accepts the passage of time and public space, and there the closed world of the “Convergence,” which aspires to a state beyond temporality. But there are, however, moments in the institute when Jeff begins to falter about his rejection of cryonics, which yields a more nuanced picture. In the hospital section of the “Convergence,” Jeff comes across a fearfully ravaged boy, his body twisted to a degree that he is unable to speak or move except mouth and eyes. Jeff feels genuine pity for the creature and ponders on the chance that someday technology might nevertheless enable the boy to lead a life worth living: “How could I fail to consider the idea, even in my deep skepticism?” (Z 94) Even the doubtful Jeff cannot rule out (the contingent moments of) future possibilities. The relativization of his doubts makes Jeff not only a more reliable narrator, it also attests to Don DeLillo a non-biased approach to the subject.6 In the New York world of contingency, existentially devastating events may unexpectedly and unnecessarily occur. There are indications of terror in the streets of New York. (Z 179) Jeff’s partner Emma’s adopted son Stak bets on terrorism and disaster, (Z 194) gets gradually absorbed in a mentality of martial (self-)sacrifice and runs away to die in the war in the Eastern Ukraine. The video transmission of Stak’s death in the halls of the “Convergence” is part of its manipulative strategy, but the intertwining of the two worlds adds to the irony and complexity of the whole novel. Yet the “Convergence” is supposed, above all, to eliminate complexity. Immortality and salvation do not get along with ambiguity and doubt. End Time: Apocalypse and Eschatology In Underworld, an anonymous American, or the allegorical American voice (ostensibly by the matchday announcer) sets the tone for an epic narrative that is imbued with apocalypse and death. Similarly, Zero K begins with a sentence that resonates like a thunderbolt motto through the rest of the novel: Everybody wants to own the end of the world. (Z 3, italics in original) The remark, which Jeff remembers during his first visit to the “Convergence,” is Ross Lockhart’s, who had “conjured” it “from this same stark terrain.” Ross, a prominent financial billionaire, acts as Zero K 139 the chief backer of the “Convergence.” He has made his money by investing (i.e., betting), among other things, in risk management and natural disaster. (Z 14) Ross’s apodictic statement should not be understood in a spatial sense only. It is much more about the desire to command and possess the temporal end of the world. The “Convergence” is about “money and immortality,” (Z 76, my italics) with the emphasis on the latter. It proves to be a focal point for post-capitalist profiteers with – almost – unlimited global possibilities but one, namely the hegemony over human finitude. This desire is due to the realization of the scandalous discrepancy between the brevity of an individual human life and the length of everything before and after that: “Think of your life span […] Think of the age of the earth […] Think of […] the age of the universe. […] And us, you and me. We live and die in a flash.” (Z 34) Ross’s anaphoric use of “think,” the climactic rhetoric and the opposition of “billions of years” and “a flash” stress the indignation about his own tininess and insignificance. Thus, in Zero K we come upon the same figure of thought as in White Noise. Modern humans are in the metaphysical position to realize the vast disparity between their life-time (“Lebenszeit”) and world-time (“Weltzeit”). For Hans Blumenberg, this led, as we saw, to a profound anthropological offense. Especially for those who can afford everything, the knowledge that their spheres of action may be curtailed is very difficult to bear. In respect of their death and after, they are denied ever more7 spaces of effectiveness built to last against the very terror of death. Instead, these spaces will subsequently go to someone else who will then benefit and even supersede their legacy.8 History or the way of the world may well be indifferent to them; the banal quotidian events will take their course, irrespective of individual lives. They may just as well have not existed.9 This aspect (the prospect of ontological nothingness) surely also accounts for the endeavors in the desert of Kazakhstan. They are to enforce a “convergence” of one’s individual and definite life span and the time of what exists (in all indefinite future) apart from me. Against this background, the anticipatory theorizing in the “Convergence” is quite understandable: “Are we adjusting the future, moving it into our immediate time frame?” (Z 66), a man called Miklos Szabo by Jeff rhetorically asks. “We are here,” he continues, “to reconsider everything about life’s end. And we will emerge in cyberhuman form into a universe that will speak to us in a very different way.” (Z 67) When the future has been absorbed by the cryonicists, the universe will be no longer indifferent; it will turn toward them. The ontic and depressing perspective of modernity (to be insignificant) will be reversed. Rather than rewriting “the future, all our futures” and ending “with a single empty page,” the Stenmark twins, two of the chief theoreticians, clearly favor the other “possibility”: to be “among those few who altered all life on the planet, for all life to come.” (Z 71) 140 Zero K In order to “alter” all future “life” (and no longer to be at the mercy of contingency), Western culture has come up with time-referenced ideas that are basically religious. Worldly time is to be superseded by transcendent time and sacred space (or, in maniac and demiurgic versions, nothingness), in which the chosen will not die for good. This implies and requires a status of almightiness, which forms an additional motivation. The mere prolongation of life will not do. This ambition, according to Blumenberg, was first spelled out in Adam’s myth of the Garden of Eden. Adam had all possible options in the paradisal Schlaraffenland, apart from one: “Only the strongest of all temptations, namely, to be like gods, could outpace the knowledge of what it means to die; to that end it had to include the expectation to make the time of the world one’s own time.” Only a godlike mode of being can be imagined to cancel the immense divergence between “world-time” and “life-time,” the latter ludicrously small in comparison. The alternative then is either to willfully hasten the apocalypse or, preferably, to not only deliberately prolong lifetime at will but also to be free of all (natural) bonds and spatio-temporal restrictions. Accordingly, the “Convergence” is conceived of as a sacred space, which is to suggest the possibility of a holy time of eschatology (cum salvation and immortality). This it opposes to contemporary images and evocations of apocalypse as (non-redemptive) end or final time. “Apocalypse is inherent,” one of the Stenmarks lectures, “in the structure of time and long-range climate and cosmic upheaval. But are we seeing,” he rhetorically asks, “the signs of the self-willed inferno?” (Z 243) Given those Manichean scenarios, it is easy for the cryonic aspirants to look forward to the salvific alternative. A woman in the audience is full of optimism: “She was eager to slip out of this life into timeless repose, leaving behind all the shaky complications of body, mind and personal circumstance.” (Z 244) This is precisely what the “Convergence” is all about: joyful acceptance of their technological idea of immortality along with the overcoming of the “complications” of “circumstance.” The Stenmark messages of redemption (based on technology) may indeed come across more “assured” than those of the “world’s organized religions.” (Z 74) Accidental “circumstance” (and no necessity to believe) has long caught up with the established churches. The Aesthetics of Apocalypse and Eschatology Video and Corridors Yet the ideological apparatus of the “Convergence” is not only built on the rhetoric of its principal evangelists. As in a totalitarian state, its media are encoded doubly to effectively appeal to and manipulate the sensuous apparatus of the visitors. Videos and the many corridors are to infuse its clients with the dismal prospect of apocalypse. Architecture and sculpture, including the encased bodies, point at or are supposed to point at eschatology. Zero K 141 When the newly arrived and “uneasy” Jeffrey Lockhart walks for the first time the “nearly empty” halls, he sees himself confronted with “a screen jutting from a niche in the ceiling” that “began to lower, stretching wall to wall and reaching nearly to the floor.” The screen, much higher and wider than that of a TV set is to achieve an immediate reality effect outdoing the customary news program. It shows apocalyptic scenes of cataclysmic flooding in the wake probably of climate change (to which the apocalyptic prophets in the “Convergence” also refer). On his “level” in “front” of him, he sees “temples flooded, homes pitching down hillsides. […] [C]ars and drivers going under. […] a woman sitting life-sized on a lopsided chair […]. A man, a face, underwater, staring out at me.” Jeff is overwhelmed and looks for someone in the hall to share the terrifying experience with, yet the “looming” “images” build and cling to him. (Z 11) During his two stays at the “Convergence,” Jeffrey is repeatedly assailed by similarly awful end-time scenarios. He has to face tornados with the casualties “arrayed on many floorboards” and is left with a “[t] otal wasteland.” The catastrophe is represented both “in slow motion” and “ultra-real”: the people are coming “this way […] nearly out of the screen and into the hall.” (Z 36) Another scenario is dominated by an all-devouring fire that appears “to spring into the camera” and the hallway. (Z 126) The hyper-realistic effect is even augmented and almost surreal when he observes desperate crowds who try to run away from some terrible threat, yet actually turn up in the hall. This happens soon after he has begun to doubt the documentary character of the films. He suspects that it might be digitally generated. But on a sudden, the runners come “wheeling around the corner […] images bodied out, spilled from the screen.” Jeff is bewildered: “They were drenching me, out-thinking me.” (153) The halls, one should note, are also equipped with surveillance cameras. Thus, the responses of the prospective patients can be registered and used for further handling. The manipulative videos fit well into the overall totalitarian strategy of the “Convergence.” When reading or watching a film, one usually remains in a distanced as-if position to receive the related events as fictional and independent from oneself; we like to watch or read the most horrible narrative precisely because it does not affect us existentially here and now. We can relish strong endorphin-induced emotions. In the halls, this difference is removed. The clients, not yet fully convinced, get absorbed to the degree that they willy-nilly feel to be part of the disastrous event itself. They are really frightened. This is totalitarian aisthetics; it aims at overawing and instrumentalizing its recipients. When Jeff manages to follow a monk into a level where consenting “patients” are finally ready for cryoconservation, he no longer senses “reverence” and “awe,” but human “subjects” under disability, “submissive and unstirring […] under the authority of others.” (Z 93) The screens can be let down or withdrawn ad libitum. The videos in the halls, with their fast-changing shots, convey a 142 Zero K world in which the four elements (each video focuses on one) are out of bounds. Both natural and cultural phenomena are out of control to culminate in a murderous war (in the last video). Jeff, moreover, the recipient, can no longer rely on his perception; even that has become uncertain for the subject. The actual fear generated in the hallways is complemented by a more subcutaneous anxiety or angst that befalls the not yet initiated visitor. Since the 18th century (paradigmatically since Horace Walpole’s The Castle of Otranto) corridors or hallways have become a literary topos (a famous 20th-century filmic example is Kubrick’s adaptions of Stephen King’s The Shining). This tradition may well have contributed to those feelings of uneasiness or even eeriness that we connect especially with empty and darkish corridors in hospitals, castles or hotels.10 But it is also the architectural structure of the topos or place itself that accounts for its emotional ambivalence. Usually, corridors, as the ones in the “Convergence,” are windowless, relatively narrow and confined spaces of transition or passageways. There are corners, turning into other obscure corridors. The spatial restriction may cause something like a psychosomatic “constriction” or an existential angst. The confining walls are, of course, lined with usually closed doors, which may also have an ambivalent emotional effect. Since you do not know what takes place behind those closed doors (which could open at any unexpected moment), a certain eeriness may arise. Doors, on the other hand, also refer to positive expectations and possibilities; they may be both passages into an abysmal future or they may open up a new wealth of choices and freedom. DeLillo draws on the topos but gives it a Kafkaesque turn. The corridors or “halls” Jeff must walk consist of “[b]lank walls, no windows, doors widely spaced, all doors shut.” He feels an “uneasy presence” and tries, without much success, to locate himself “within the place.” In another hall he finds himself “all alone,” his body “shrinking into the long expanse.” (Z 259) The walls are “shades of green,” the doors with “slivers of the spectrum.” (Z 10) But what he finds really unsettling is that there is actually nothing behind most of the doors: “The halls were pure design, the doors simply one element in the overarching scheme […] it met the standards of unlikelihood, or daring dumb luck.” (Z 23) Although he was supposed not to knock he cannot resist (in spite of the cameras). Six doors remain shut, from the seventh a man appears, telling him: “They are all the wrong door.” (Z 25) Later on, obviously on another level, he checks again on “ten or eleven” doors, none opens. He realizes that they are also painted in “various pastels,” each slightly different from the other (a further one is “sky-dyed” (Z 234)) and arrives at a discomforting conclusion: “This was art that belongs to the afterlife. It was art that accompanies last things, simple, dreamlike and delirious. You’re dead, it said.” (Z 119) The halls and doors can be read allegorically, reminiscent of the choice of caskets or doors in the traditional fairy tale. Jeff is reminded of a Zero K 143 “children’s story.” (Z 235) They are about chance, the vicissitudes of existence or, in other words, contingency. You may be of Fate’s or Fortuna’s choice, or, more likely, not; perhaps one is among the chosen, but more probably among the doomed. Fortune offers possibilities but will not necessarily make them come true. The “Convergence,” physically by way of its sky-dyed or green and blue pastel corridors, purports to offer unlimited freedom, the unbound freedom of possibilities at large, through immortality. But for the transitional passenger (and solvent patient-tobe), the doors or passageways into eternal life do not necessarily open. The doors may and are expected to open, which is their very purpose and immanent possibility, but they do not necessarily open. It is contingent on those who decide upon the very possibility of possibilities; only they can eventually master contingency and fateful existence. The hopeful passenger, generally disposed to fear, angst and uncertainty in a “risk society,” is shown quite plainly that the anticipated salvation becomes only a necessity if one submits to their techno-eschatological imperative. Only the “Convergence” can offer the definite entrance and the prospect of deliverance. Architecture and Sculpture Immortalists and all kinds of transhumanists want to cut off human development from nature, genetics and evolution, that is, the given actuality that hitherto proved uncontrollable and not at one’s disposal. The fundamental rational is to prevail over the “complexities” of temporality. Classical aesthetics can be seen as (a more subtle) ideological precursor of that desire. William Butler Yeats, one of the many modernists haunted by death and obsessed with esoteric and aesthetic ideas of immortality,11 wanted the Byzantine work of art to break the “Bitter furies of complexity.” “Once out of nature,” he declared, “I shall never take/My bodily form from any natural thing.” In fact, his ideal was a self-contained and self-referential work of art beyond the “fury” and “complexity” of modernity and the contingent transience of natural becoming and passing: “Monuments of its own magnificence.” Yeats’s “form” that “sits upon a golden bough”12 resembles, as we shall see, very much the corpses in the freezing plants of the “Convergence.” However, Yeats’s “Golden Bird,” as Keats’s “Grecian Urn,” is at the same time marked by a troubling ambivalence; they are and remain always also “still,” lifeless and frozen, as the frozen bodies in their cases. In spite of themselves, they carry a tinge of memento mori, imbued, as they are, with a premonition of death. The “Convergence” moves along that prescribed path and combines (“converges”) aesthetics with technology and rhetoric. Against the world of ekstasis, in which, as in the videos, everything is on the move to desperately (and unsuccessfully) escape the Flood, the Armageddon Fire and suffocation, the Convergence sets an Apollonian world of atemporality 144 Zero K and stasis. Their clients, having been exposed to the bewildering end-time scenarios, both natural and political, should be well-disposed to this eschatological alternative. The secluded facility is designed as a Gesamtkunstwerk. Its overall architecture fits well with its interior particulars, with the dominant discourse (especially when it concerns death and technology) along with the appearance, the voicing and sound, the look and feel of the stored dead. When Jeff first arrives, he beholds something like a “city to be discovered for a future time, self-contained, well-preserved, nameless […]. These were buildings in hiding, agoraphobically sealed […] hushed and somber […] designed to fold into themselves.” (Z 4–5) The aesthetics of the structure focuses on form, avoiding as much as possible references to contents of previous circumstances. It is a “model,” Jeff observes on his second visit, “of shape and form […] set securely nowhere.” (Z 229) The place is detached to the degree that even in the present it comes across like a sacred archeological site, withdrawn and cloistered away from the temporal world. Ross, referring to his soon-to-be cryopreserved second wife Artis (the former archeologist and land artist), makes the connection between art and death explicit. He demands “respect” for the place: “a form of earth art, land art […] [d]efined by stillness, both human and environmental. A little tomblike as well.” And he reverses Gen. 3:19 (“unto dust shalt thou return”) adequately: “Return to the earth, emerge from the earth.” (Z 10)13 In the Old Testament, the original words are, of course, spoken by God to Adam and Eve, after they have eaten the forbidden fruit. The consequence was knowledge, including the knowledge about human mortality. Ross and his kind are driven by the concomitant hope of becoming godlike, and, thereby, to make the time of the world one’s own time. The tellingly named Artis has internalized the “Convergence” aesthetics to the core. In one sense, she says, she is “leaving,” (Z 50) but in another sense, she is “[s]taying and waiting. The only thing that’s not ephemeral is the art. It’s not made for an audience. It’s made simply to be here. It’s here, it’s fixed, it’s part of the foundation, set in stone.” (Z 51) Here art is not a social fact; it is self-contained in the sense that it needs no “audience” or interpretation. Whereas traditional art, “purposeless” as it may or may not be, attains its communicative significance precisely from its self-containment, the “Convergence” foregoes the free play of the recipient’s mind and soul (Kant’s “freies Spiel der Gemütskräfte”). It has stripped off art’s meaningful relationality in a totalitarian manner. Aesthetic openness is susceptible, after all, to contingency. In order to not be “ephemeral,” the “Convergence” must be like a self-referentially closed system, representing performatively what it does and means; its message is “foreverness.” Closure and determinacy are to supplant free receptivity and indeterminacy. The classical ideology of art, especially sculpture, is to foreshadow an eschatology of worldlessness. Here, art, in its ideological doubleness, is Zero K 145 not only to euphemize and lure into a state beyond earthly life, it also serves as a medium to instill fear of life. Life is to be bodily felt as lifetoward-death. This ambiguity of death in life or life in death permeates throughout the cryonic institute. Cryopreservation consists, after all, in first killing a person or nearly killing a person, and then keeping the person, at least for the time being, in a state of abiosis. Fear of life is to encourage the acceptance of cryonic torpor. An, albeit trivial, variation on this form of art is quite plainly shown to Jeff when he first walks the disconcerting corridors. He turns the corner and unexpectedly comes upon a “recess” in the wall, which holds, “rooted to the floor,” a “torso, a thing fixed in space […] a Mannequin, naked, hairless, without facial features.” On the one hand, the female statue displays – at least for Jeff – some erotic appeal. He is tempted to touch its breasts, he notices with some astonishment. Its posture, on the other hand, signals “self-defense” and “withdrawal,” one foot in a rearward movement, away from the consternating outside of the hall to the promising inside. Jeff is struck by “the stillness of the figure” and “the empty face.” (Z 24–5) The strategic (or manipulative) function of the figure, an (inverted) vanitas figure, is obvious. It is unsettling and exerts some erotic appeal. Its facelessness points to depersonalization and anonymity, its fixation and stillness to timelessness. Devoid of its profane features, it is ready to enter the passage to the realm of the (un-)dead. Here Rilke’s famous line from the Duino Elegies comes literally true: “For beauty is nothing but the beginning of terror.” In one of the lecture rooms, an oversized skull is on display, the eyes “rimmed with jewels,” the teeth silver-colored. Its skullcap is shaped like a “golden flock” of “many tiny birds.” (Z 63) Even though this is probably the only piece of art brought from outside, “the skull seemed right at home.” (Z 68) An “imposing” piece of postmortem art, it presents an unlikely combination of Damien Hirst’s “For the love of God” and Yeats’s Byzantium birds – a postmodern-archaic version of the early modern memento mori and the symbolism of artistic immortality in modernism: the sensation of the fear of death linked with the diamond hope of being “reborn,” as Artis puts it, into a brilliantly lit “deeper and truer reality,” in which “ever after” everything appears “in its fullness, a holy object.” (Z 47) A peculiar memento mori still life that virtually embodies all the ambivalence of “Convergence” is located in an entirely homogeneous room, the walls, floor and ceiling of which are made of smooth white marble. The bare monochrome site first appears to Jeff as the “stone cold” work of art itself, until he becomes aware of a small, seated and living “figure in stillness” dressed in white, one arm raised to the neck, eyes closed. He cannot make out his or her sex, and only assume that she is young. It becomes clear that the icy and grand space was solely designed for this deindividualized figure, which is striking through its conspicuous inconspicuousness. The plain, yet breathing artwork defies all meaning 146 Zero K for Jeff: “Meaning was exhausted in the figure itself, the sight itself.” The “empty method” of the transrational artifice once again comes down to a certain aisthetic attraction along with cognitive consternation by refusing any extraneous reference, signifying nothing. This is, of course, not uncharacteristic for (modern) art, but given the overall context and purpose of the “Convergence,” it must leave the recipient dumbfounded and emptied out. (Z 148–9) In such a place, the refusal of meaning (the relation to world and history) can easily amount to an existential abyss. The work of art (any artwork) conceals itself to some degree, yet it can unfold itself only through a free interplay between “concealment” and “unconcealment,” to use the terms of Heidegger. Here there is the mere alternative of life-in-death or death-in-life; there is no knowledge or truth. The emptiness of the living sculpture becomes more distinct in contradistinction to the children with special needs in a New York school where Emma teaches and which Jeff comes to visit. Infirm or handicapped as the boys and girls are, he perceives “lively and engaged” kids, “trying to absorb a sense of the lives that were in the act of happening.” (Z 189) One girl in particular engages his attention. She has “a natural blush on her face, an intent look,” is occupied with a jigsaw puzzle, but needs regular and irregular support. She cannot take a step without attacks of fear: “Some days are better than others,” Emma explains. He surely has the “Convergence” in mind when he tells himself: “She was not a metaphor.” The very imperfection, the existential openness and simple acceptance of being-there constitute a lived opposite to the cryonics institution. Contingency here is a matter of fact. Jeff, however, scarred by the early leaving of his father and, very likely, the experience of the “Convergence,” cannot be led back “into the life itself.” (Z 190) He leaves early, yet the narrator repeats the heterogeneous temporality that determines existence proper: “Play a game, make a list, draw a dog, tell a story, take a step. Some days are better than others.” (Z 191) Heidegger and the Cryonic Transhumanists: “Man Alone Exists” Heidegger as Antithesis: Existentialism The novel’s most memorable and distinctive encounter with art is also set in New York. Jeffrey and Emma are out in the city with Stak, who, in some unresolved adolescent crisis, refuses to go to school and appears to be in want of some care and encouragement. One of Jeff’s attempts to that effect is, astonishingly enough, through a Heidegger quotation: “Man alone exists. Rocks are, but they do not exist. Trees are, but they do not exist. Horses are, but they do not exist.” (Z 213) The statement (which he continues a little later with “God is, but he does not exist.”) had only “very recently” come back to Jeff on occasion of a large interior rock sculpture in a New York art gallery, in which the boulder occupies Zero K 147 an entire floor. Yet the context in which the anaphoric sentences turn up is actually not related to art.14 Heidegger’s “Introduction” is concerned with “man,” as the being “which is in the mode of existence.”15 It serves as an explanatory note to Was ist Metaphysik (“What is Metaphysics”) as well as Sein und Zeit (“Being and Time”). The overall subject is the fundamentally metaphysical state of human beings, their exposedness to and within being, care, and being-toward-death. Thus, the note does not actually serve to illuminate the subsequent visit to the rock, which, as a work of art, has a fundamentally other ontological status as the rock in the quotation. However, in a novel which raises the most fundamental questions about our being, mortality and immortality, the reference should also be taken in Heidegger’s existential sense. The more so since “rock,” “stone” or “slab” and their semantic connotations are paramount to the self-concept of the “Convergence,” which takes itself as “a foundation set in stone.” It is appropriate then to deal first with the quote, independently of the “rock” as art, and return to it later. Heidegger’s existentialist-phenomenological philosophy, as it emerges from his statement, could indeed serve as an absolute counterdraft to the transhumanist ideology of the cryonicists. As opposed to the latter, his analysis of being-there starts out from the premise that there are facts in the world that are not only given and always already “there,” but also tantamount to what it means to be human. Jeff, who studied Heidegger in school, is aware of the implications of the philosopher’s analysis of being-there. On a trip through New York, he reminds himself and Emma of the modern “Forgetfulness” of “Dasein.” He realizes that it is “the minor matters that define us” (Heidegger’s “life-world,” “present-tohand” or “ready-to-hand” things), but complains that “It’s the things we forget about that tell us who we are.” (Z 172)16 In a marked contrast to this, the cryonic and other projects to cancel death or willfully manipulate the genome (and therefore birth or natality) would come down to no less than the radical cancellation of what “Dasein” and Being has hitherto constituted. To sign over one’s mortality to the cryonics would be a definite case of “inauthenticity” (“Uneigentlichkeit”). “Existentiality,” Heidegger argues, is “intrinsically (“wesenhaft”) determined by facticity.”17 That is, we are thrown into a world which is always already there; one can only and must respond to its ontic constitution. The way we do it is existential. What, then, does Heidegger want to say by “Man alone exists?” And what does Jeff want to tell Stak? It obviously means that humans, humans exclusively, are not only in a position to go reflexively beyond themselves, they are also ever “held out” and exposed to being-there in, and in relation to, a given situation. On account of this, their “Being-in-the-World,” “Dasein” is bound to make choices. “Dasein” exists, “stands forth,” in and through the possibility of itself, to be itself or not to be itself. And since choices will always concern the future (implicating “opportunity 148 Zero K costs,” as economists have it), “Dasein” is always ahead of itself.18 We project ourselves into the future and conceive of ourselves anticipatorily. Yet any decision involves a non-decision, and guilt in an existential (not moral) sense. In a contingent world “Dasein” is always in a state of angst and care, permanently taking care of itself, its environment and others. And since “Dasein” (or the modern individual) also wants to make a choice of its own (with not always determinable results) rather than an another-directed, inauthentic and misguided one (eluding the chatter of “man”), “Dasein” is called to responsibility and decisiveness. But this decisiveness (“Entschlossenheit,” vb.: “entschliessen”) attains its existential concern and impact only by virtue of its temporality and finiteness. “Dasein” assesses and considers its lifespan from birth to death, disclosing (opening up, “erschliessen”) its life – options of its being-there – in a new and rounded or wholesome way. Death then becomes the outstandingly final possibility against which decisions are made. One, therefore, considers one’s life and the existential choices one makes in view of the absolute boundary drawn by death, which will not be someone else’s death, but one’s very individual death. “Death is the most individual (“eigenste”) possibility of Dasein.”19 Thereby it summons resoluteness. While death and, for that matter, contingency may be at the root of Heidegger’s philosophy, the “Convergence” is all about the promise to do away with it. The huge disparity between Heidegger’s thought and the inauthentic chatter (“Gerede”) of the technocrats, whose feasibility fantasies comprise not only the “thoroughgoing calculability of objects,” but “Dasein” as a whole, finds a telling expression in one of the Stenmarks’ statements: “Death is a tough habit to break.” (Z 73) Characteristically, he sees it, not as an ontic fact, but as “habit” that can be managed: “We want to stretch the boundaries of what it means to be human – stretch and then surpass.” (Z 71)20 Yet, there is one person in the novel, Stak, who may be in accordance with Heidegger’s, certainly ambivalent,21 existentialism. Stak’s fate marks a highly ironic and ambiguous aspect of the novel, since his radicalization, decision and death are not at all a development that can be morally endorsed or approved of – even if it forms the most clear-cut alternative life script or “projection” to the “Forevermore”-scheme of the “Convergence.” But, as we have already noted, DeLillo’s novels never lend themselves to simple binary value-oppositions. Stak is a rather mature 14-year-old boy who was “found” and adopted by Emma in a Ukrainian children’s home at the age of five. Stak prefers the open, resents subways and crowds and appears to reject, as Jeff surmises, “all things we were supposed to tolerate as a way of maintaining our shaky hold on common order.” (Z 173) Stak, moreover, displays a special attentiveness to his environment. He listens to the street noise with closed eyes so that it becomes his sound, scrupulously counts the pigeons, records weather Zero K 149 data, assiduously learns jujitsu and maintains and cares for the historical memory of his home, “matching his strong personal recollections of abandonment with the collective memory of old crimes, the famines engineered by Stalin that killed millions of Ukrainians.” (Z 187) A kind of frantic revolutionary, he bets on the time frame, number of victims, etc. of terrorist attacks. The bet, Jeff comments, “makes the event more likely,” a “force,” Emma adds, “that changes history.” (Z 194) Eventually, Stak opts out of school and even stops speaking, “ignores faces” and disappears. Zero K comprises two climactic scenes, one with almost no action (Artis’s solipsistic brain in a pod, to which we will return later) and one (involving Stak) with action in excess, transmitted in a realistic video footage on one of the screens in a “Convergence” hall. The video shows the war in the east of Ukraine, a self-defense group fighting the Russiansupported secessionists. Jeff recognizes Stak in a wrecked car, wearing a headband, yet no helmet. The boy fires but is himself exposed to rapid rifle fire. He is hit and wanders “out into the open, without his rifle,” he is repeatedly hit again and “goes to his knees […] shot and bleeding, stain spreading across his chest, young man, eyes shut, surpassingly real.” (Z 263) The “kid,” Jeff thinks, “became a country of one.” (264) Not long before Jeff must witness Stak’s death he had attended one of the talks in the “Convergence,” which stresses once again the basic difference to Stak’s state of mind: “You [i.e. the ‘Convergence’ residents] are completely outside the narrative of what we refer to as history. There are no horizons here.” (K 237) Stak, on the other hand, is the character in the novel who actively chooses and exposes himself to his historical “Dasein,” however dubious it may be. He has returned to his very own historical being, the history of his fateful country Ukraine and grasped the possibility of “Dasein.” In his resolution he becomes utterly authentic, leaving behind the calculating drabness of “man,” or “shaky hold on common order.” Opening up his horizon, he comes into his own, he cares, anticipates and runs ahead toward death. He has made an existential (“existentiell”) choice and therefore history possible. As opposed to the closed and enclosing “Convergence” he prefers the open, the “unconcealment of being.”22 Stak, notabene, does not represent a preferable alternative to the “Convergence.” Don DeLillo’s Jeff tells himself quite clearly that Heidegger had “maintained a firm fellowship with Nazi principles and ideologies. History everywhere, in black notebooks, and even the most innocent words, tree, horse, rock, gone dark in the process.” (Z 214) Indeed, historical decisionism has served very well to legitimize criminal wars and send millions of men and women to perdition. Stak’s historical heritage, on the other hand, his displacement and his early neglect, may have been crucial for his radicalization, but his decision to act is also due to the experience of the rock as art. 150 Zero K The Rock as Art The rock sculpture poses a problem both against the background of Jeff’s quotes and Heidegger’s critical phenomenology of art. If we take a first look at his thinking about art (in The Origin of the Work of Art), the rock appears out of place. Heidegger still understood a work of art in the Greek sense of poiein or poiesis (“to make”).23 DeLillo’s rock has not been given an artistic form, but, like some objet trouvé (if raw and unworked), it was found by an artist and placed within a particular space, “entrissen” or wrested forth from the “earth,” to use Heidegger’s diction. This artistic act alone (at least in modernism) amounts to a poietic or transformative act. What matters is that Heidegger not only helps to understand the work, his language is quite appropriate to stress again the difference to the “Convergence” ideology, the more so since Heidegger minimizes and deconstructs the part of the artist or maker.24 While in the “Convergence” the makers have taken on a megalomaniac, god-like position, in Heidegger the maker becomes a medial subject to the materiality of being, which is the crucial point. While Heidegger wants to return to and do justice to (the insuperability of) the “the thingness of the thing,”25 the “Convergence” technocrats think they can prevail over it. The latter want to penetrate and instrumentalize nature, Heidegger wants to make clear that nature ever precedes and will eventually defy scientific classification. The first are geared towards a life that “is no longer in transit,” (Z 123) for the latter transit (change, boundaries, eventualities and necessities) is paramount to life. The “Convergence” people aim at a scientific logic and pure language “that will not shrink from whatever forms of objective truth we have never before experienced.” (Z 130) For Heidegger “objective truth” is one of the most detrimental self-deceptions of the Western World. The medium of art, interestingly enough, enables us to re-recognize that notion. As opposed to the Western metaphysics of presence (of which the “Convergence” might be the practical spearhead), Heidegger puts emphasis on the pragmatic-processual, ever-changing and perspectival character of our understanding of the world.26 Since understanding is a dynamic act, it is not only dependent on and necessarily grounded in beings (without which they would be “empty”), one being may well place “itself in front of another being […],” it may present “itself as other than it is.”27 What reveals itself to us is simultaneously grounded in something that denies revealing. Perception is ever prone to misperception as well as misinterpretation; we cannot take stock of beings in their entire relationality. Beings then may come forth as unconcealment and likewise as concealment, which may yet conceal and dissemble itself. If there was no simulation (“Verstellen”), “we could not make mistakes or act mistakenly in regard to beings; we could not go astray and transgress, and especially could not overreach ourselves.”28 Misunderstanding is intrinsically intertwined with and dependent on Zero K 151 understanding, understanding on and with misunderstanding. Without that deceptive grounding, decision-making would not be possible: “Every decision […] bases itself on something not mastered, something concealed, confusing; else it would never be a decision.”29 Therefore, Heidegger can pointedly say: “Truth, in its essence, is un-truth.” Truth or understanding is in a continuous dialectical strife with their opposite, un-truth (not falsehood, or fake news, to be sure): “Concealing denial is intended to denote that opposition in the essence of truth which subsists between clearing and concealing.” Heidegger puts this mutually dependent and intrinsically intertwined relation between concealment and unconcealment as an “original” or “primal” strife between “earth” and “world” – which is paradigmatically acted out in the work of art. The present continuous is again crucial: “Setting up a world and setting forth the earth, the work is the instigation [“Bestreitung”] of the strife in which the unconcealment of beings as a whole, or truth, is won.”30 Truth comes to happen in the processual mode of this strife between understanding and its failure, which the work of art enacts and acts out. It establishes a world – a spatial continuum and comprehensible context of its own – only insofar as it brings to pass at the same time its own overdetermined or underdetermined materiality (i.e., earth), which exceeds conceptual meaning. “The work moves the earth itself into the open region of the world” and likewise “sets itself back into it,”31 instigating the never-ending interplay between the effable and ineffable, the definable and indefinable. The “earth,” or materiality of being, which is brought forth and at the same time concealed by the work of art, shatters every attempt to penetrate it. It causes every merely calculating importunity upon it to turn into destruction. This destruction may herald itself under the appearance of mastery and of progress in the form of the technical-scientific objectivation of nature, but this mastery nevertheless remains an impotence of will.32 The technical-scientific self-empowerment of the “Convergence” agents, and this is no idle speculation, will turn out an “impotence of will,” since it is bound to fail to definitely penetrate each and every human or nonhuman material at their disposal. They may “exist,” but are made up, after all, solely by material themselves.33 The fact that rock and stone form a recurrent leitmotif in Zero K is an important (surely intentional) coincidence. The different modes in which rock or stone are used and regarded in the “Convergence” and the New York Gallery sheds a light on the opposing worldviews. In ontological terms, the rock as a work of art is not a thing. Unlike a thing, the rock is not just “present-at-hand” and reducible to mere concepts and properties. The rock that forms the work of art is, moreover, distinguished from 152 Zero K the work material that is used to fabricate tools, “equipment” or “Zeug”: Equipment, as opposed to art “is determined by usefulness and serviceability,” it “takes into its service that of which it consists: the matter. In fabricating equipment – e.g., an axe – stone is used, and used up. It disappears into usefulness. The material is all the better and more suitable the less it resists vanishing in the equipmental being of the equipment.” Its “reliability” is crucial. In the work of art, on the other hand (in this case, a rock), no “trace of a work material”34 is left. In the “Convergence” everything is under the caveat of utilization “present at hand.” Heidegger would have appreciated DeLillo’s “interior rock sculpture” (Z 214) in the New York gallery. The “unhoned” (Z 216) boulder, precisely because it has not been worked upon, lets “the earth,” non-objective as it is, all the more “be an earth.”35 Through its displacement, the rock opens up a singular and primordial world of its very own. It “worlds,” and is (literally) earth; it displays nothing but – and at the same time an impenetrably multifaceted – “solid surface, its crags, snags, spurs and pits.” (Z 216) Don DeLillo’s use of language here is revealing. In his ekphrastic description of the rock, his prose takes on a mimetic effect.36 At the beginning of the half-sentence, we have the dark vowel “o” ascending (from deep down to the surface) to the high-pitched vowel “i,” which frames the alliterative repetition of the dark, fricative “s”-consonant. They, again, frame vowels in one-syllable words. The internal vowel assonance of the “i”s, “u”s and “a”s adds to the poetic effect. The “earth” is rising into the open of the “world.” The alliterative fricatives may evoke the frictions of chthonic rock formations, the sound of the “earth” underground. The fricative “crags, snags, spurs and pits” may suggest the geological degradation and abrasion through climate in the course of world time. This may or may not be, but as in any work of art, the materiality of literary language carries a sensuously meaningful surplus, which is yet semantically inexhaustible. “Solid” is derived from the Latin solidus: “firm, whole, undivided, entire”; it is related to the word “soli,” “single,” “of, on one’s own”: a solitary rock or “solitaire.” The word “snag” can also mean “rift” (compatible to Heidegger’s “Riss”) as well as some hidden obstacle one may stumble across; a “spur” can be a small ledge as well as a spike or trace. A “pit” can be a hole, a fighting space (in which one pits against something or someone), a trap in which one gets caught (as in Edgar Allen Poe’s story) or even a scar. The common semantic field of these words suggests resistance, unruliness and ruggedness. And they may still point to the ravages of time, the overall transience and perishableness that catches up – even with rocks. Jeff, consequently, “struggles” to characterize “a chunk of material that belongs to nature, shaped by forces such as erosion, flowing water, blowing sand, falling rain.” As this material thing “belongs to nature,” it remains ultimately indeterminable. Yet it nevertheless comes forth to manifest itself significantly in the “clearing” of the gallery, unfolding the Zero K 153 immanent intertwining of “earth” (“concealment”) and “world” (“unconcealment” or semantic orientation in the world). It evokes and brings to bear the world of its natural history, its geographical-genetic evolution and makes its earthy origin visible only to simultaneously conceal it. Transformed into an urban space (Z 216), beyond equipmental utility and purpose, it refers back to its phenomenological suchness. The interplay (“Gegenwendigkeit,” opposition) of cognitive disclosure and material opacity or “self-secluding”37 takes place in a space cleared from expediency and serviceability. It is the resistance and dialectic relationality of its phenomenal sensuousness and techno-scientific impenetrability that brings truth to bear. Heidegger refers to the stone material of a Greek temple, but this may just as well apply to the New York boulder and, by implication, to the “Convergence” ideology. It is worth quoting at length: A stone presses downward and manifests its heaviness. But while this heaviness exerts an opposing pressure upon us it denies us any penetration into it. If we attempt such a penetration by breaking open the rock, it still does not display in its fragments anything inward that has been opened up. The stone has instantly withdrawn again into the same dull pressure and bulk of its fragments. If we try to lay hold of the stone’s heaviness in another way, by placing the stone on a balance, we merely bring the heaviness into a form of a calculated weight. This perhaps very precise determination of the stone remains a number, but the weight’s burden has escaped us. Color shines and wants only to shine. When we analyze it in rational terms by measuring its wavelengths, it is gone. It shows itself only when it remains undisclosed and unexplained.38 When Jeff asks Stak to “[d]efine rock,” the latter betrays an astonishingly mature conceptual intelligence. Not without irony, he comes up, as a matter of course, with “official” descriptive placeholders or substitutes that remain external or superficial to the work of art: “Officially let’s say a rock is a large hard mass of mineral substance lying on the ground or embedded in the soil.” (Z 216) Yet this objectifying definition is at once undermined when he enters into a different relation (a “joined form of object and observer,” Z 215) with the exhibit, addressing the rock as a person and subject in its own right: “Stak talked to the rock. He told it that we were looking at it. He referred to us as three members of the species H. sapiens. He said that the rock would outlive us all, probably outlive the species itself.” (Z 216–7) It attains, after all, communicative and performative properties. Sure, the addressees of his statement may be primarily the nearby Jeff and Emma. But it is also clear that the rock, along with its analytical definitory significance, unfolds a sensuous attraction (a random stone in the fields usually does not), a relational-spatial momentousness and an existential meaning. In comparison to the “living 154 Zero K sculpture” in the “Convergence,” we see a remarkable ontological inversion. The smooth and undifferentiated exhibit, although somehow human, “is,” but does not “exist”; the rock does. Thus Stak, to a degree, disproves the afore statement. The otherwise “elusive” boy cannot help touching the rock and performs an act of understanding, which is contingent on the being of this very rock.39 It forms a unique specimen; the “Convergence” scheme consists in deindividualization. The rock engenders resonance, which according to the German sociologist Hartmut Rosa comprises three steps: touch or affectation, responsivity, and transformation.40 The latter also holds for Stak. The entire space or relationality between time and motion is altered: “The huge gallery area, nearly bare, and the one prominent object on display lent a significance to the simplest movement, man or woman, dog or cat.” (Z 217) One of the most crucial sentences in the novel, though – derived, nota bene, from a rock – is Stak’s verdict about its temporal relation to the “species H. sapiens”: The “rock would outlive us all, probably outlive the species itself.” (Z 216) This is no conceptional truth to be proved right or wrong, it emerges rather out of Stak’s tactile engagement with the rock. The crags, striations and furrows of the material boulder in their opposing strife or confrontation with the “knowledge” or “understanding” of the “Homo sapiens” (who considers rocks as “things” or “equipment”) bring to bear truth. In itself, Stak’s sentence is surely banal. Yet the remark, made by a 14-year-old boy, has not only grown out of the close experience with a work of art. The wider context is American society and the “Convergence,” which repress or are about to eliminate death and finitude, forgetful as they are of being. The intuitive perception of an erosive and slowly eroding stone by a boy makes the reader realize that the earth, in its “earthiness,” points to a ground that ever precedes us. It is beyond us and not at our disposal. While geological classification and objectification remain exterior to any rock as art, in this particular work, in its relationality with Stak (and strife with the categorizing “world”), “the happening of truth41 is at work,” art being “the setting-into-work of truth” as “unconcealment.”42 The narrative context suggests that the rock may well have an existential or “transformational” effect on Stak. Two days after the visit to the gallery, Emma tells Jeff in despair that “he embraced me and left.” (Z 219) Stak left, as we know, to join a volunteer self-defense group in Ukraine to fight against Russian-backed secessionists. He becomes, as Jeff says, “a country of one” (Z 264) – and is shot dead. We do not know for sure how far the rock has prompted Stak’s fatal decision. He had long been troubled by the historical suppression and atrocities the Russians had inflicted upon the Ukrainians. (See Z 187) He had also withdrawn from his ­foster parents. Yet the encounter with sculpture is very likely to have been the ultimate momentum to act. The transfiguration of the huge space of the gallery, along with the people inside, attached a new and other Zero K 155 significance to them. The phenomenological-spatial resonance has clearly a deeper effect than discursive consideration, however rhetorically clever it may be.43 Whereas the claustrophobic “Convergence” galleries and spaces exert a constricting and oppressive impact, the rock gallery resonates lastingly in a liberating and reassuring way.44 According to Heidegger, “in the midst of beings, art breaks open an open place, in whose openness everything is other than usual.” Even more than that, it “thrusts up the awesome and at the same time thrusts down the ordinary and what we believe to be such.”45 What cannot be said of Jeff, is surely true for Stak. Jeff seeks the ordinary, Stak abandons it, or “thrusts” it “down.” For Stak, the rock, very much like Heidegger’s Greek Temple, does not “fade away into the indefinite.” The temple “gathers around itself the unity of those paths and relations in which birth and death, disaster and blessing […] acquire the shape of destiny for human being.” For the Ukrainian boy, the work of art may signify a “beginning” and “call” to enter “history,” which is the transporting of people into its appointed task as entry into that people’s endowment.”46 The truth of the stony work of art “is thrown toward the coming preservers,”47 who Stak felt he had to be a part of. Stak, by realizing transitoriness, the ultimate death of the human species and the end of history at large, does what Heidegger has suggested.48 He takes upon himself the historical responsibility to act – as turgid, politically and even morally wrong as this may sound. Art as Untruth Whereas the resistant rock, “taken out of nature,” resonating through space, geological and historical time,49 can be said to set up a “clearing” and “truth,” the “Convergence,” inauthentic as it is, displays trompe l'oeils, mannequins and pods with vitrified corpses as art or, conversely, art as encased corpses. Before Jeff continues his nightmarish journey through the “Convergence,” he sees off his father. Ross, shaved and stripped of everything “individual,” fades away into corporeal “anonymity.” But even though “all the normal responses” are “dimming down,” he is still able to murmur, quite tellingly, “gesso on linen.” (Z 251) Gesso is traditionally used as an oily or acrylic priming coat to prepare a canvas for further application of paint, inscription, etc. It will adhere more lastingly. There is, of course, some irony here. But Ross’s sub-liminal metaphoric association shows pointedly how successful (self-)delusion through art as ideology can be even if it aestheticizes death. Jeff is actually not moved by the absurd spectacle. Right after that, he is led to a room which feigns an overcoming of spatial restriction. “All four walls” of the room “were covered with a continuous painted image of the room itself.” (Z 252) The room, to increase the expansive effect, is furnished sparsely with “three objects of 156 Zero K spatial extent,” chairs and a small table. Thereby, the place is to open up and multiply indefinitely through diminishing perspectivity. We know this gimmickry from baroque pleasances or the optical-trick drawings of M.C. Escher; they are at the most a form of decorative art, skillful as it may be. Art that is not in the service of ideology transcends itself, its location and physical being-there, by resonating on, in the reflection of the audience, temporally in the ambience and beyond. Here, similar to the corridors, the visitor is duped into the illusion of endless extension – a sensuous foretaste of the world to come. But the multidimensionality of the painted walls is, in terms of aesthetics (as experience), only onedimensional. The “Convergence” idea of “forevermore” is illustrated only in an obtrusive and blatant manner. The mural plus the (surely intentionally scant) installation does not affect the visitor, nor does it effect some transformation. It elicits at most some “phenomenology,” to which, Jeff thinks, he “wasn’t equal.” (Z 252) The shallow artifice undermines its own high-blown message. On another earlier occasion of his “random” walks, Jeff comes across another artificial setting, a “walled garden,” which, prima facie, purports to be some amenity. It leads, however, as it turns out, to an annexed crypt. The arrangement is again in accordance with the overall scheme to please and to frighten by rekindling the “angst” of death and perishing. The walled garden seems like a fully fledged English garden, but “[N]one of this was natural,” a breeze leaves the trees and hedges completely “unruffled.” (Z 122) The whole equipment has “museum quality,” yet is fabricated of “plastic or fiberglass.” The mock garden is open to the sky and one might have grown real plants, but that would not go together with the ideology of a space beyond earthly contingency. The garden must be exempt of all resonance, affectation and responsivity; ambiguity and doubt must be foreclosed. It is Ben Ezra’s “post-apocalyptic garden.” (125) He is seated like a “still figure” under a tall oak on a bench that resembles a “church pew.” Ben Ezra, already in a transfixed mood of otherworldliness, reiterates the binary dichotomy of the apocalyptic state of the world and an eschatology free of the “flatlines” of history and time. (Z 130) His insistence on an entirely determinate and unequivocal language, devoid of all figurative speech,50 does in fact betray a basically hostile and instrumental relationship to art along with an anxiety of difference and the incalculable liminal. This linguistic attitude is, in accordance with its aesthetics, anti-cultural in principle. For Heidegger, and many other modernists, it is precisely the indeterminacy, ambiguity and uncatchable overdetermination of art/poetry which, by creating new lanes (“Bahnen”) and relations between propositions/utterances and ideas/concepts, will engender new understandings of the world. Art or poetry by virtue of their signifiers mark an event through which everything may alter. The new “clearing” will, however, remain indeterminate and (and due to its very temporality) Zero K 157 subject to “différance”51 itself, thus ultimately revealing to us the finitude of our mind and, by implication, of our being. At the basis of our cognitions, there is always something else of which we remain ignorant in the process of cognition.52 Our knowledge is limited, so is our existence. It is quite in line with this thinking when Jeff replies to Ben Ezra’s cognitive megalomania: “‘[…] it’s also true that what we don’t know is what makes us human. And there’s no end to not knowing.’ […] ‘And no end to not living forever.’ […] ‘If someone or something has no beginning, then I can believe that he, she or it has no end. But if you’re born or hatched or sprouted, then your days are already numbered.’” (Z 131) In response to this hardly refutable deconstruction of the “forevermore” ideology, Ben Ezra can only resort to (an albeit beautiful piece of) psychology, Sir Thomas Browne’s observations on “melancholy” which seizes “man” faced with “the end of his nature.” (Z 131) When Ben Ezra sets out to fantasize esoterically about the “world hum,” (Z 132) Jeff leaves the sermonizer behind to encounter in the gated section of the garden what he takes to be “sentinels.” They turn out to be featureless mannequins, naked and sexless, firmly rooted figures in a willed “stillness.” Jeff is intimidated and frightened by the partly incomplete, plastic “strong dumbstruck objects” that seem to belong “here.” Apparently, they are to pose as guardians and, by the same token, beckon the yet undecided visitor into an underground crypt of “cracked gray stone.” The crypt or, rather, “catacomb” is stacked with numerous other mannequins in niches. Mannequins, we should remember, form a leitmotif of the novel, to bring out the binary division the “Convergence” ideology is based on. The two women in “Chadors. Or burquas” at the entrance of the complex are mannequins, meant to offer the “first glimpse of art.” (Z 52) They make a good contrast to the immaculately naked bodies in pods. The underground bodies here display “features, all worn down, eroded […] ruined faces […] shriveled hands.” They appear “mummified, desiccated.” When he moves on he is dazzled by a “floating white light”: Here were figures submerged in a pit, mannequins in convoluted mass, naked, arms jutting, heads horribly twisted, bare skulls, an entanglement of tumbled forms with jointed limbs and bodies, neutered humans, men and women stripped of identity, faces blank except for one unpigmented figure, albino, staring at me, pink eyes flashing. (Z 134) 158 Zero K Except for the pods in themselves, this is probably the most malicious, insidious and manipulative ars mortem installation in the “Convergence.” Jeff, dumbstruck, overwhelmed, daunted, asks himself why these plastic mannequins have a deeper effect than the display of real corpses embalmed in century-old churches or charnel houses. He offers a tentative answer himself: they bring “a faint yearning to the scene, the illusion of humanoid aspiration.” (Z 134) In Ian McEwan’s recent novel Machines Like Me, the protagonist time and again rationalizes that his humanoid robot is made of “plastic or some such,” but often enough he cannot help approaching James like a human being: “struggling between what I knew and what I felt.”53 Actually, from early on we tend to sense our environment according to habitualized morphological schemata (such as the “small child pattern”). Fiction wouldn’t work if it could not undermine temporarily our disbelief and if we were not disposed to suspend it for a while. The “Convergence” exploits this propensity. Mannequins are linked to models which are to promote an (beauty) ideal one should aspire to. For almost a century, commercial stores have furnished their shop windows to promote their sales. The stark contrast this (likely) association creates to the rotting and degenerate mannequins in the catacomb accounts for the forceful impact on Jeff. Underground crypts also carry, of course, a vast cultural memory. They are reminiscent of Hades, of gloomy vaults to which the cursed are condemned, Dante’s hell, and the many crypts beneath Western Cathedrals, which fantasy literature loves to employ. However, these sites or fictions have been embedded into cultural practices, memorial and iconographic narratives (Orpheus, Beatrice). They are supposed to compensate for the irredeemable, console for the “departure” of the deceased and to commemorate. The “Convergence” installation, on the other hand, falsely plays with memory to trigger a subconscious emotional reaction and fill the visitor with terror. Aesthetically speaking, it leaves no space for a reflexive and processual reenactment of the exhibit. Instead, it instrumentalizes and overpowers emotionally only to sell its purpose of cryonics. The aesthetics of repulsion, decay and decline is to ­promote – ex negativo – the aesthetics of immortality. Yet if art is “not ephemeral,” the plastic “Convergence” art of perishableness (if it is art) will somehow also remain and thus undercut its own premises. Thus, it gives itself away as an epitome of totalitarian untruth and betrayal. Art in Pods This becomes all the more apparent when, on occasion of Artis’s cryopreservation, Jeff and Ross are led to a gallery in which the already cryopreserved bodies are neatly stored and encased in pods side by side: “bodies set in assigned positions.” (146) They are, as Jeff realizes, “humans as mannequins” (as opposed to the mannequins as humans), therefore, Zero K 159 the artistic fulfillment in and of the “Convergence.” The earlier plastic mannequins exuded the contingency of uncontrollable temporality; here the dead appear to be fully under control. Jeff tries to relate to the standing corpses; he wants to see beauty in them, individuality and uniqueness and, although muted, something that suggests “nonetheless the mingled astonishment of our lives, here, on earth.” Jeff fails, the “stilled figures” – torsos – refuse any resonance; instead, he recognizes “[m]annequined lives.” (Z 146) The “utilitarian,” Jeff astutely notes, is drifting into the “totalitarian.” During Jeff’s second visit to the “Convergence” – Ross, after two years in a dither, has finally decided to join Artis – he is led along a mural with a math equation54 to the “cryostorage section.” Once again, he is deeply disturbed: “There were rows of human bodies in gleaming pods […] long columns of naked men and women in frozen suspension […] uniformly positioned, eyes closed […] no sign of excess flesh.” But rather than “lives to think about,” he sees “pure spectacle, a single entity” in the filed exhibition: “It was a form of visionary art, it was body art with broad implications.” (Z 256) If this is a form of visionary art, one must add, it can only be in compliance with the visions of the above mentioned “totalitarian.” The exposed bodies are bereft of all personhood and character, brought entirely into line, shaven and trimmed into smooth homogeneity. Eyes closed and appropriately illuminated they are diminished to mere skin surface. The spectacle is reminiscent of the German Gunther von Hagens’s “Körperwelten” (“Body Worlds”) exhibition.55 Von Hagens stuffs the emptied-out bodies with liquid plastic (“plastination”), adds some formaldehyde and puts them on display in various poses in galleries all over Europe and the American continent. He presents the bodies openeyed (the eyeballs are artificially fixed) with “plastinated” and puffed-up muscles in action (some do sports, play chess, others make love). The German “Prof. Death” feigns dead people vaguely based on classical Greek statues as mobile, alive and fit. This probably accounts for the sensational effect and the commercial success of the show. The “Convergence” staff also of course makes up and grooms their dead, turning them likewise into preparation artifacts. Yet their exhibits are meant to be inwardly focused and motionless, no longer engaged in world activities. Jeff appropriately associates the artifacts with pre-classical (Etruscan) and “prehistoric” ages. Clearly, art in history (evidently since Romanticism) bears the mark of its own contingency, the strife between what can be contained cognitively, and what cannot. In ethical terms, both the animated and the stilled presentations are highly dubious, lacking, as they do, all decent piety. The dead – no matter if they had consented during their lifetime – are bereft and deprived of dignity and respect. They cannot defend themselves against the voyeurism of the onlooker. The way the cryonicised are showcased and blazoned ignores their fundamental right to express shame and their need for 160 Zero K protection. They are also metaphorically naked. Earlier on Jeff envisions their utilization “as mainstays in the art market of the future” (Z 232) very much in the manner antique cars are shown off. When Jeff thinks he owes his father the “duty to feel a twinge of awe and gratitude” in front of the encasings, he does so indeed – yet not for the deceased, but only for the underlying motivation and scheme: “Here was science awash in irrepressible fantasy. I could not stifle my admiration.” (Z 257) In aesthetic terms, the sensitive viewer is kept from engaging in an atmospheric or auratic exchange with the bodies as art. They are literally encased. Their purpose is to be used as mere means to commercial and ideological ends. Subordinated to something extraneous to them, these figures of art debunk themselves as art, enacting, as they do, nothing but concealment or “untruth.” One of the generally accepted basic criteria for good art is the way the “preserver” treats the material he or she uses. It is to take on some (processual) life of its own, it is brought forth to come into its own right. Aesthetically speaking, the New York rock exists, the pod bodies, although human, are only, but do not exist. Artis and Ross are given a special room of their own: “stone-walled” and discreetly illuminated by “faint light.” (Z 257) One of the “streamlined cases” holds Artis (the other is not yet occupied.) More aestheticized than the other bodies, hers seems “lit from within […], erect, on her toes, shaved head tilted upward.” Yet although “an idealized human,” it is, as Jeff notes, “also Artis.” Jeff, first unsure about the degree of reality, is now completely taken in by this particular display: “It was a beautiful sight. It was the human body as a model of creation. […] And it was Artis, here, alone, who carried the themes of this entire complex into some measure of respect.” Artis, he asserts, “belonged here,” Ross, currently in the process of falling “into anonymity,” does “not.” (Z 258) Jeff, who was emotionally close to his stepmother, is aware, of course, what, during his first visit, she had said about her way of seeing things and art in general.56 Apparently, her (highly stylized) posture in the pod matches (in Jeff’s eyes) very much her previous sense of what beauty and perception (aisthetics) are or could be like. If Jeff feels there is some correspondence or likeness between her stylized (representation, posture) appearance postmortem and her previous aesthetics, he should be surely justified in granting a certain “measure of respect” to the “Convergence.” Artis’s aesthetics in life may be best characterized, after all, as “transfiguration of the commonplace” on the basis of visual aestheticism.57 She reveled in the memory of a “drop of water,” its unfolding and shapechanging, which had come back “only” to her. (Z 19) At times she saw, or believed she saw, a “radiance in things.” (Z 46) She firmly thinks she will be reborn into a “truer reality. Lines of brilliant light” (Z 47) and “enter another dimension. […] For ever more. […] So beautiful.” (Z 53) If one’s aesthetic perception of the world is reduced to such a worldless, mere subjective impressionism, then it may indeed aspire to “transcendence,” Zero K 161 as Jeff calls it (Z 47–8), “not made for an audience.” (Z 51) This does not only go together well with the convergence idea of art, Artis, in this manner, is well prepared for cryonics. In line with the strategy of depersonalization, Artis has come to regard herself as a kind of simulation or transfigured “artificiality”: “I feel artificially myself. I’m someone who’s supposed to be me.” (Z 52) Naturally, Jeff will remain the only “witness” (Z 258) to Artis’s transcendence. This might be or might have been sufficient for the ethereal Artis and perhaps for Jeff, but the rest of the world will only see a well-lit and made-up mannequin. And what is more, she, as a person, will have no share in it. Her senses are blotted out and her “brain” is only “geared to function at some damped level of identity.” (Z 258) DeLillo acts out this “damped level” in one of the most formidable and arresting poetic texts of contemporary prose. It divides part one and part two of the novel and consists of a monologue within her brain, which is sometimes accompanied by a third, independent, voice whose origin is not quite clear. It may be another voice in her brain as in a multiple or schizophrenic personality, or simply Jeff’s comment on another narrative level. In any case, there is no communicative exchange between the voices. DeLillo’s narrative trick is to possibly attribute the monologue to Jeff’s imagination at the end of the novel: I […] try to imagine, against my firm belief, that she is able to experience a minimal consciousness.” (Z 272) If her subjective impressionism was already a form of solipsism, the turn inward is now complete. Her brain is isolated from her body and all possible sensory input: But am I who I was. […] What I don’t know is right here with me but how do I make myself know it. Am I someone or is it just the words themselves that make me think I’m someone. Are the words themselves all there is. Am I just the words. Where am I. What is a place. I know the feeling of somewhere but I don’t know where it is. I can feel time. I am all time. But I don’t know what this means. Here and now. This is who I am but only this. I think I am someone. What does it mean to be who I am. Does she need third person. [The other voice (in italics) speaks without a question mark.] (Z 157–62) This ridicules the nanorobot fantasies of the “Convergence” technocrats to absurdity.58 The “residue” of “Woman’s body in a pod” (Z 160, 162) 162 Zero K cannot even be considered a person anymore, if this means (as in, e.g., John Locke) having a continuous consciousness of what and where one was yesterday, of what one is today, and (probably or possibly) will be tomorrow. Artis still possesses some residual “self,” an “I think,” but this is disembodied, lacking all reference to exterior otherness, and therefore unable to “accompany” any “representations” (Kant) whatsoever. There is some spurious self-awareness left to her, but she cannot connect with environmental objects to verify herself, make them and thereby herself real and feasible. It seems as if only an inner sense of time (“I am all time”) has remained with her, without, however, the epistemologically necessary correlate of space. The sense of time which she feels “everywhere,” not knowing “what it is,” is due only to the (albeit limited register of) words she can still employ. Words are successive and sequential, they pass, so does time. Thus, she represents a condensed caricature of the “Convergence.” She persists in absolute seclusion and isolation, limited to a linguistic temporality, a voice, without space and world – “forevermore.” In this abstract confinement, there is no change, alterity, history, contingency or “You.” The succeeding chapters are set in the narrative counterworld of New York, “back in history now,” (Z 167) with chance meetings, unexpected occurrences (including terrorist attacks) and the incalculable diversity of “[e]very living breathing genotype” that may enter a cab. (Z 170) Here is nothing of the claustrophilia that dominates the “Convergence.” Jeff and Emma leave their apartments, and so do “the runners, idlers, softball players, the parents pushing strollers, the palpable relief of being in unmetered space for a time, a scattered crowd safe in our very scatter, people free to look at each other, to notice, admire, envy, wonder at.” (Z 196) This depiction of urban life marks already a vivid alternative to the still lives in the steppe of Kazakhstan. Yet a more remarkable socio-cognitive contrast to Artis’s stinted self-perception is offered when DeLillo portrays Jeff and Emma in an intimate situation in front of a mirror. (Mirrors have served, as we know, since early modern times, as metaphors for, sometimes deceptive, self-reflection and self-knowledge.) They both look for a few seconds and Jeff understands that it is “a telling moment.” (Z 207) He recognizes a “smart woman,” who, “not interested in prettiness,” embodies “a kind of undividedness.” In fact, he sees two people that “exist”: “We are seeing each other as never before, two sets of eyes, the meandering man […]. [T]he woman […] watching a dancer splice the air […]. Here we are, all this and more […].” Rather than a despairing quest for one’s personhood, this is its very confirmation – if only in a mirror and only for once. They perceive themselves in relation to one another and toward their lifeworld. Likewise, the respective partner, dress, environment is to or toward them, this is also why they are “here.” They notice “things that Zero K 163 normally escape the enquiring eye, a single searching look, so much to see, each of us looking at both of us,” acknowledging themselves in a mutual reflection of themselves. After a while, they have to “shake” off, phenomenologically speaking, all those intentional contents, in order to focus on going to a ballet into “unsparing space.” (Z 208) Artis, on the other hand, is exclusively the “same words all the time,” (Z 157) locked into the tiny linguistic mirroring of a few calmed down neurons. One must add, though, that DeLillo undercuts a possible idealized reading of the mirror image immediately on the next page. Jeff is dressing up for an interview for a job he does not really want. Standing in front of the bathroom mirror, he recalls his father Ross, who, somehow plausible for a megalomaniac, had denied the mirror inversion of left and right. Jeff “had to concentrate hard to convince” himself “that this was not the case.” (Z 209) One’s image (particularly for a job interview) is obviously always also the image of the other, or what the other purportedly requires. Moment of Moments: The Affirmation of Life Don DeLillo completes a number of his novels (White Noise, Underworld, The Body Artist, Cosmopolis) with moments of perceptive intensity, which come as a surprise suddenly and unexpectedly. Even if we call these experiences “epiphany,” they differ in a number of decisive aspects from their modernist or pre-modernist versions. In DeLillo, there is no theological, metaphysical or anti-historical subcurrent, nor are his epiphanies primarily anchored in a subjective self from which they arise to be absolutely different from, to override or even negate, empirical space and time.59 DeLillo, son of Italian immigrants, surely has a proclivity for Catholicism (as it becomes obvious in Underworld), but in his epiphanic states of exception there is no miraculous revelation of a divine light. Its secular variety, the temporal otherness, the “lightning flash” (W.B. Yeats) it seems to induce, has been celebrated by Nietzsche, Joyce or Walter Benjamin as a redemptive and even messianic rupture. The exceptional suddenness was to suspend the continuum of causal-chronological or circular history. The postmodern DeLillo is aware of the aporetic structure of these projections. If they become manifest only in the subjective imagination of a person, they are, as is this person, still contingent on time and space. It keeps on being his or her image of redemption in which his or her alternative history appears. Don DeLillo’s epiphanies are, by contrast, embedded in a narrative context and they are physically explicable to a degree. In Zero K, the striking event happens in Manhattan; the occasion is a profane bus ride from west to east. It is, as the narrator explains, due to a “natural phenomenon,” whereby “the sun’s rays align with the local street grid.” (Z 273) It occurs, nevertheless, by chance, on account of an extraordinary and singular coincidence, and it comes upon Jeff quite abruptly in midday, his “mind blank.” Spellbound and even struck with awe, Jeff notices “a glow, a tide of light.” Within seconds, “the streets were 164 Zero K charged with the day’s dying light and the bus seemed the carrier of this radiant moment.” Unlike the traditional, subjective epiphany, the “luminous apparition” in Zero K is also witnessed by the response of a second person (or second-order perspective) on the scene. This lends not only more credence to the effect, it reinforces it. Jeff is startled by a human wail; he swerves and beholds “a boy on his feet […] pointing and wailing at the flaring sun.” More than by the event itself, he is now moved by the bouncing boy’s “urgent cries” of “wonder”: They “were unceasing and also exhilarating, they were prelinguistic grunts.” The “macrocephalic” boy seems mentally handicapped, but this is a thought Jeff hates, not least as he finds “these howls of awe […] far more suitable than words.” Even if the experience is beyond language, its linguistic representation (through DeLillo’s Jeff) is still impressive enough: The full solar disk, bleeding into the streets, lighting up the towers to either side of us, and I told myself that the boy was not seeing the sky collapse upon us but was finding the purest astonishment in the intimate touch of earth and sun. The reference to apocalypse is already indicative of the fact that the boy’s “purest astonishment” must be seen against the predictions and mindset of the “Convergence” along with Jeff’s father Ross’s (“everybody wants to own the end of the world”). Indeed, this little chapter forms an appropriate and humanist conclusion to a narrative that portrays a dystopian projection. It enables us to see the technocratic world in a sharper and clearer light. The “Convergence” aims at putting man under the sway of the “Ge-stell,” or “enframing,” turning him or her into a “Ge-stelltes” or “enframed.” It reveals the world, human beings included, as “standing reserve” (“Bestand,” or stockpile) for technology,60 whose only purpose is to master temporal and physical deficiency for the sake of technical perfection and immortality. (Heidegger’s terminology could be – literally – applied to the processes and pods in the “Convergence”). The New York epiphany, on the one hand, is beyond purposive rationality (Max Weber) and the scientific “will to power.” It thereby confirms human subordination to and dependency on the pre-given and, by implication, the possibility of the miraculous – and freedom. And precisely because its occurrence is not at one’s disposability, revealing spontaneously an extraordinary beauty, it becomes the pure source of elation and transformation. A natural and a cultural phenomenon converge unwittingly to illuminate the life-world. More than the temporal structure of the epiphanic moment of moments, it is the boy who proves the “Convergence” transhumanists wrong. One should mention here that, owing to the medical progress of blood tests, embryos with trisomy or Zika, likely to develop macrocephaly, are increasingly aborted. According to the standards of technically advanced societies, Zero K 165 the boy is deficient and imperfect, with a limited life expectancy. But it is, of all people, the handicapped person only who is able to respond “suitably” to the beauty of a miracle without bias or apocalyptic apprehension. While the “Convergence” intends to introduce an unequivocal language of mathematical precision, the boy shows his unfettered enthusiasm through “prelinguistic grunts.” With this he not only testifies to the possibility of truth, the “unconcealment of being,” he confirms life as life. Jeff does not need “heaven’s light.” He has “the boy’s cries of wonder.” (Z 274) Notes 1 Robert C.W. Ettinger, The Prospect of Immortality (New York: Doubleday, 1962), 13, There is a reproduction of his pioneering book on https://www. cryonics.org/images/uploads/misc/Prospect_Book.pdf (accessed: 16 January 2019). 2 http://www.benbest.com/cryonics/cryonics.html. Ben Best is the former president (2003–2012) of the Cryonics Institute, the second largest institution of its kind. 3 A reconstitution of the body (cum brain) via cloning does not provide an alternative as this will also preclude the recreation of the personality and identity of the person in question. Even if most of the now fatal diseases may be cured in the foreseeable future, it should be difficult to restructure decomposed body cells along with their specific information, nanotechnology and DNA information notwithstanding. 4 In fact, there is not much talk about the technical course of the cryonic procedures in the novel. For Don DeLillo, it was clearly of subordinate interest to cultural and psychological questions. In an interview, given to Peter Boxall, Don DeLillo explained that he did only “limited research” and did not “know what recent advances may have been made.” Katherine Da Cunha Lewin and Kiron Ward, ed., Don DeLillo (London/New York: Bloomsbury Academic, 2019), Pos 3560. 5 In keeping with their ideology, people in the “Convergence” do not introduce themselves. 6 In the above-mentioned interview with Boxall, DeLillo does not in principle oppose “the science and technology of life extension.” (Pos. 3547) 7 Since death is immeasurable, there can never be done enough against its “terror.” 8 See Blumenberg, 1986, 72,78. 9 Cf. ibid., 75 and above (Ch.2). 10 See also the seminal work by Roger Luckhurst, Corridors: Passages of Modernity (London: Reaktion Books, 2019). 11 At the time Yeats wrote his poems, in Russia in the 1920s the technological immortality movement “Cosmism” was already active. See Julieta Aranda, et.al., eds., Art without Death: Conversions on Russian Cosmism (Berlin: Sternberg Press, 2017), esp. 41–46 and passim. 12 Yeats, Collected Poems, 1985, 281, 218, 217, 218. 13 A little later, Jeff remembers the origin from his catholic youth, another narrative counterpoint (see p. 15: “I wanted the stain [of ash ritually spread on his forehead by a priest on Ash Wednesday] to last for days and weeks.” 14 The original quote can be found in Martin Heidegger, “Einleitung zu ‘Was ist Metaphysik?’ (1949),” in Wegmarken, ed. Friedrich-Wilhelm von Herrmann (Frankfurt am Main: Klostermann, 1976), 374. 166 Zero K 15 Heidegger 1949, 375. 16 Cf. also Jeff’s (albeit ambiguous) retortion to Emma’s question whether this is a “philosophical statement”: “Traffic jams are a philosophical statement. I want to take your hand and wedge it in my crotch. That’s a philosophical statement.” (Z 172–3). 17 Martin Heidegger, Sein und Zeit (Tübingen: Niemeyer, 2001, 19271), 192. Here, and in the following, it is my translation. “The fundamental ontological characters of this being-in-the- world (“dieses Seienden”) are Existentiality, Facticity and Fallenness” (“Verfallensein”), (Ibid., 191). One might add “Befindlichkeit,” or the way one finds oneself together with one’s mood or state of mind and thereby affected “Verstehen,” (Ibid., 142). Heidegger’s “Existenziale” would, of course, also pertain in a society in which death could be put off and “Dasein” prolonged for centuries. Temporality is a priori and even the cosmos will perish. 18 Heidegger, Sein und Zeit, 2001, 12, 191. 19 Ibid., 263. 20 I do not have the space to confront Heidegger’s ontology with that of the “Convergence.” But the diametral opposition becomes already obvious in the concept of temporality. The “Convergence” is not only ahistorical; they want to force the future into the present, that is, make it thoroughly pre-calculable. (Z 128) Heidegger’s “Existenzial” of “Care,” indeed, his entire analytics of being-there, would then be obsolete. 21 Heidegger’s predisposition for Nazism, especially after the revealing publication of the “Schwarze Hefte,” is well-documented. 22 Stak may well embody “das Innestehen in der Offenheit des Seins, das Austragen des Innestehens (Sorge) und das Ausdauern im Äußersten (Sein zum Tode) […] als das volle Wesen der Existenz.” (Heidegger, 1949, 374; or: “the standing within (halting in) the unconcealment of being, the bearing (acting out) of the standing within (care) and the perseverance in (to) the utmost (being-toward-death) […] as the full essence of existence,” my translation). 23 I have used the Reclam edition: Martin Heidegger, Der Ursprung des Kunstwerkes (Stuttgart: Philipp Reclam, 1988, 19601). The English translation can be found in Martin Heidegger, Basic Writings, ed. David Farrell Krell (London: Harper Perennial, 2008): “The Origin of the Work of Art,” 139– 212, here: 154. 24 “In great art […] the artist remains inconsequential as compared with the work, almost like a passageway […].” (166) 25 Heidegger, “Dingheit des Dinges,” 2008, 151; 1960, 17. 26 “[…] the open place in the midst of being, the clearing, is never a rigid stage with a permanently raised curtain on which the play of beings runs its course. […] The unconcealment of beings – this is never a merely existent state, but a happening. Unconcealment (truth) is neither an attribute of matters in the sense of beings, nor one of propositions.” (179) 27 Heidegger, “The Origin of the Work of Art,” 2008, 179; Der Ursprung des Kunstwerkes, 1960, 52. 28 Ibid. 29 Ibid., 2008,180; 1960, 54. 30 Ibid.,2008, 180; 1960, 53–4. 31 Ibid., 172. 32 Ibid. 33 Heidegger’s sentence will certainly please, what has been dubbed “New Materialism” or “Object-Oriented Ontology.” Zero K 167 34 Ibid., 2008, 171,161, 173; 1960, 43. 35 Ibid., 172. When leaving the place where the rock is displayed, Jeff wonders again about Heidegger’s sentence “Rocks are, but they do not exist.” The experience of it as a work of art has made him doubt the ontological status asserted in the quote. He now sees it as a subject “that blended well with our black-and-white descent.” (218) Rocks, that is, may well take on a different ontic status – as art. 36 Mimesis is, of course, the artistic way to accommodate the materiality of the thingness. In The Body Artist, DeLillo employs similar means of linguistic assimilation to what he describes. 37 Heidegger, “The Origin of the Work of Art,” 2008, 172–3. 38 Ibid., 2008, 172; 1960, 42–43. 39 “We [were] simply observing the joined form of object and observer – the elusive boy who rarely attaches himself to something solid. Of course, he reached across the taped border and managed to touch the rock, barely.” Z 215 40 See Rosa 2019, passim. 41 To be sure, this truth, if it is true, is derived from something that is also finite. Truth is finite, or “untruth,” our understanding is finite. 42 Heidegger, “The Origin of the Work of Art,” 2008, 183, 196; Der Ursprung des Kunstwerkes, 1960, 57, 74; 2008, 196; 1960, 74; 2008, 200; 1960, 77 43 A very impressive, if a little overdramatic, Heideggerian interpretation of sculpture is offered by Andrew J. Mitchell. See, e.g., his comment on Heidegger’s remark on the sculpture “Vogelschrei” by Bernhard Heiliger: “Sculpture changes the space around it. Its entrances and invitations change the density and thickness of things. Sculpture changes the texture of the space around it as each work eddies forth turbulences into the smoothness of the world. Sculptures push at the space that runs through us. Sculptures touch us for this reason; they pull us out of ourselves as well. The sculpture in place disrupts the homogeneity of space and the encapsulation of the subject. It tugs both of these at once and testifies to our belonging to world. Heiliger’s sculptures attest to the fact that we do not belong to this world for long. It wears us down and erodes us. We die of our relations. Our death is nothing we possess, but it is not for that reason nowhere to be found. It is right here in front of us, but behind us, too, and all around. We meet it every day and in every relation of this world.” Andrew J. Mitchell, Heidegger Among the Sculptors (Stanford: Stanford UP, 2010), 56. 44 Jeff has repeatedly visited the gallery; he imagines “the thing always here, undocumented” and leaves “objects as they are.” (Z 218) 45 Heidegger,“The Origin of the Work of Art,“ 2008, 197; Der Ursprung des Kunstwerkes, 1960, 74. 46 Ibid., 2008, 167; 1960, 37; 2008, 202; 1960, 79. 47 Ibid., 2008, 200; 1960, 77. 48 It should be noted, though, that Heidegger addressed a culturally and historically very different audience in the 1930s. 49 If not necessarily to the advantage of those involved. 50 “No similes, metaphors, analogies. A language that will not shrink from whatever forms of objective truth we have never before experienced.” (Z 130) 51 Derrida’s ontological term for Heidegger’s indissoluble “rift.” 52 See Andrea Kern’s illuminating interpretation of “The Origin of the Work of Art,” in Heidegger-Handbuch: Leben – Werk – Wirkung, ed. Dieter Thomä (Stuttgart: Metzler, 2013),133–43, esp. 143. 53 Ian McEwan, Machines Like Me (London: Jonathan Cape, 2019), 9. 168 Zero K 54 Another symptom for the objectification of human life: “Could the equation on the plaque be a scientific expression of what happens to as single body when the forces of death and life join”?, Jeff wonders. 55 See https://koerperwelten.de/plastination/gunther-von-hagens/ 56 “I remained, eyes closed, thinking, remembering. Artis and her story of counting drops of water on a shower curtain.” (Z 258) 57 In Heideggerian terms, the former earth artist is exclusively dedicated to the “earth,” which (without the “strife” with the “world”) does not permit any knowledge or “truth.” 58 “First you will undergo a biomedical redaction, only a few ours from now. The brain-edit. In time you will re-encounter yourself. Memory, identity, self, on another level. This is the main thrust of our nanotechnology.” (Z 238) Ross is “instructed” here by a woman, Jeff calls “Zara.” 59 James Joyce’s verdict is canonical: “the esthetic image is first luminously apprehended as self-bounded and self-contained upon the immeasurable background of space or time which is not it.” James Joyce, Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man (New York: Viking, 1964), 212. 60 Heidegger would have found in the “Convergence” the fulfillment of his worst fears. See his “The Question Concerning Technology,” repr. in Basic Writings, ed. David Farrell Krell (London: Harper Perennial, 2008), 307–41, here in particular 329. See also Martin Heidegger, Der Satz vom Grund (Tübingen: Günther Neske, 1957), 198. 9 The Silence and the Death of Civilization The End of “Being-in-the-World” In all the novels we have dealt with here (even in Falling Man), time moves on slower or faster and we can imagine life to somehow go on (even in White Noise or Cosmopolis). In The Silence, we have reached a stage in our civilizing process at which time appears to stop for good. This does not yet mean the physical death of humanity, but the end of human “Dasein” or “Being-in-the-World.” Humans get caught up in an individual time loop that forgoes any meaningful relationship with the other. In contrast to the romantic cliché that life without technology would mean a return to an unalienated and authentic existence, the novel points to the inexorable interpenetration of human beings, media and technology. Technology coordinates, evidently in Cosmopolis, our temporal being, along with the coexistence with others. Its absence or failure in the digital age may now mean that we cease to “be in the mode of existence” if we take language and communicative rationality as the necessary requirements of “existence.” Human life goes on in the mere mode of “rocks, trees, horses, or angels.”1 Humans have transmuted into functions of technology; without the latter, they end up babbling in their individual bubbles. What is more, in the case of a blackout, the modern subject does not comprehend the nature of the failure. The multicausality and interconnectedness of hazards and dreads in the modern “risk society” he or she is exposed to leads to suppression and discursive misunderstandings – rather than to reflexivity.2 On account of the multiplicity of screens people are hooked to, there is no common language to allow for a meaningful processing and coping with the perilous undercurrents of modern civilization that suddenly became manifest. An Electricity Failure In DeLillo’s sparsest novel to date, it is an electricity failure that marks the end of a civilized world. The scenario is realistic. In the past decades, the power grid has been closely connected with the internet, which in itself DOI: 10.4324/9781003289937-9 170 The Silence and the Death of Civilization operates on electricity. The interconnectedness made the production and supply of electricity more efficient, but increasingly vulnerable to extensive blackouts. Marc Elsberg, in his well-researched bestseller Blackout: Tomorrow Will Be Too Late,3 delineates a disastrous, even apocalyptic picture of the consequences of a prolonged collapse of the European power grid.4 Among these are fatal traffic accidents (traffic lights fail), the food chain is interrupted (refrigerators stop working), in hospitals the patients die (surgeries or dialyses cannot be carried out, the diesel for the emergency generators runs out after some days), there is looting and violence in the streets, people are trapped in escalators, and nuclear meltdowns, along with fallouts, occur.5 Marc Elsberg’s popular thriller is in keeping with the genre. The suspected former hacker Piero Manzano eventually manages to escape from a messed-up prison, identify the real terrorist hackers and restore the system. Up to that point “[t]he death toll soars.” (Jacket text.) Yet, the likelihood of such a disaster is underscored by a BBC documentary from 2019, which mentions numerous incidents, as e.g., the results of a five-day power outage in Venezuela in 2019: “[A]n estimated 26 people had died in the country’s hospitals.”6 Don DeLillo has bestowed on us many, partly large-scale sceneries of disaster and apocalypse, notably in White Noise, Underworld, Zero K, (restrainedly) in Falling Man and previously in End Zone, The Names, or Mao II. In The Silence, the “death toll” is looming, yet one can only guess about the possible severity of the outage. As to the causes, an ominous extradiegetic narrator tells us at the beginning of the second part that “unknown groups or agencies” are manipulating and incapacitating the “launch codes” of all “nuclear weapons.” The disruption of “power grids” (S 77) might have been either the collateral damage of or the means to the sabotage. However, DeLillo is not interested in the spectacular circumstances, which is left to his five characters’ vague speculations and our evident knowledge, thanks to BBC and books such as Elsberg’s. DeLillo focuses on the socio-cultural and communicative responses of (to be sure, exemplary7) individuals who are faced with the outbreak of a catastrophe (which in fact has already been covertly there) and, more so, with the amputation of their communicative prostheses. The Endgame The Beckettian chamber drama, more a novella than a novel, is confined to one evening in 2022. In a bourgeois Manhattan apartment, the building inspector Max Stenner, his wife Diana Lucas, a former physics professor, and her sometime student Martin Dekker, now a teacher, deeply, if incoherently, steeped in Einstein, are set to watch the Super Bowl. They are also expecting two friends, still on a flight from Paris to Newark, Jim Kripps, a claims adjuster, and his wife Tessa Berens, a poet. Before their plane crashes, the reader learns about the conditioning and determination The Silence and the Death of Civilization 171 of perception and memory through technology and media. Jim is captivated by the screen overhead, which constantly informs about “[a]ltitude, air temperature, speed, time of arrival” as well as on the “Heure à Paris, Heure à London.” (S 3) As he keeps on reciting aloud the data into the interior of the plane, the scene takes on something of a farce. On 17 pages, he reiterates the slightly changing numbers roughly 13 times, which is already indicative of his mental relatedness to and dependence on the display and the machinery. Caught in the hermetic or monad-like space of a technical apparatus, he cannot help enunciating meaningless information (without communicative value) and reaffirming his own being-there by that very enunciation. He pronounces only the first letter C. (of Celsius), addressing Tessa to complete the word. Tessa is afraid of forgetting and has gone into the habit of making notes in her little book. She does not “sneak a look” at her “phone” (S 6) and is very pleased to also retrieve “Mr. Fahrenheit’s first name” from her deep memory, “out of nowhere.” However, of a common mnemonic knowledge “almost nothing” is “left,” the narrator notes. Cultural memory has been stored to a degree on easily accessible hard drives that individual mnemonic spaces have become redundant (which surely has led to a much stronger technological dependency).8 Likewise, it may become much more a matter of curiosity and distraction: “When a missing fact emerges without digital assistance, each person announces it to the other while looking off into a remote distance, the otherworld of what was known and lost.“ (S 14–5) The “otherworld” is not least the sphere of inspiration, the unexpected and surprise. Yet if one relies on given storages, the corresponding algorithms will cast a pall on the “otherworld.” Google has always already precalculated what you want anyway. As Google decides about your knowledge beforehand, so do other technological environments. Thus, the couple’s conversation within the context of airline travel is “a function of some automated process.” Their thoughts and words are “predetermined,” (S 14) and they do what they are supposed to do. (S 15) The technological dispositif makes people want to do what they are to do. No wonder that everything they talk about (“stale air”) is forgotten as soon as the “plane sets down.” (S 7) And even finally, when the plane crashes and the screen goes “blank,” Jim’s consciousness is still that of the medium. Similarly to Oswald in Libra and the Highway Killer in Underworld, he anticipates the media coverage, imagining every passenger watching “Channel 4” reporting on their crashed airplane. (S 17) Yet whereas Oswald or the Highway Killer may continue to feed on their media representation, in The Silence all screens will simultaneously go blank; people are cut off and denied further pictures. In their Manhattan apartment, Max, Diane and Martin are waiting for the Super Bowl LVI to begin, the “superscreen” still bright. Max is tensely fixated upon it, digging his fingers into his flesh “primate style.” He is a 172 The Silence and the Death of Civilization bettor who has invested a large sum. Until the kickoff, they have to watch and keep on watching “streams of commercials,” talking en passant about how to watch and what to eat. Martin is introduced as “a man lost in his compulsive study of Einstein’s 1912 Manuscript on the Special Theory of Relativity.” (S 23) His sometimes “trance”-like obsession with time and space is owing to the desire to understand an increasing nonsimultaneity in late modernity. This Martin shares with Cosmopolis’s Eric Packer, who moreover, wanted to press temporality. Before the actual match starts, “something” happens, that is, the screen goes defunct, and so do the phones and laptops. (S 25–6) So far communication in the room was led and held together by the expected broadcast. With the breakdown of the common technical frame (Heidegger’s “Gestell”), ontological bewilderment and uncertainty set in, and hence conspiracy theories, the fragmentation of communication and a further loss of reality, de-realization. The boundaries between a humorous attitude and serious fears blur. Martin proposes a “selective internet apocalypse” by the Chinese. “It is extraterrestrial,” Diana remarks (S 27), “a communications screwup,” (S 30) Max adds. “A systems failure. Also a sunspot,” Max was told by neighbors he now notices and meets as such for the first and probably last time. (S 34) Diane receives no response when she asks, with some astonishing foreknowledge, whether this was “the casual embrace that marks the fall of world civilization.” (S 35) In the meantime, Martin fills the otherwise communicative vacuum with Einstein, the phrases he voices, though, have no (contextual) value: “Space and time. Spacetime.” (S 29) The abstract reference is, of course, Einstein’s refutation of absolute space and time and his observation of the inexorable interwovenness of the latter with the first in a fourth “spacetime continuum,” or simply put, your time depends, is relative to, the perceived body in motion. In the given situation, suchlike momentous remarks come down to empty speech. For the nerd alone, who tends “to fall into a pale trance,” (S 23) it might be helpful to cope with the – intuitive lifeworld – relativization of time and space in modernity due to media and locomotion. If time can no longer be synchronized, or brought into a relation with a chronometer, it gets out of joint. What remains for reassurance is to align one’s motion with that of another moving object or subject. When the surviving Jim and Tessa and other casualties are taken to a hospital in a bus, the driver no longer responds to urging questions in diverse languages; instead, he slows down, “keeping pace” with a jogger, a woman “moving at a steady pace in the lane reserved for bicycles.” Rather than increasing speed, he remains “clearly determined to stay aligned with the runner.” (S 39–40) When later on, Tessa and Jim are walking from the clinic to the apartment they are looking out for the “encouraging” jogger (who also stays in Jim’s mind, S 108), only to come across a homeless man who in his turn begins to “imitate their movements.” (S 63) Mimesis The Silence and the Death of Civilization 173 (along with keeping on running or walking, S 40, 63) appears to be the residual orientation aid left if technological time is gone. Back in the apartment, the effects of the blackout prevail. It turns out that the communicative dumbness which is so obvious now has long governed the social life of the protagonists. Max mutters “Jesus” (surely not religiously), does not respond to his wife’s attempts at some (although rather insubstantial) exchange and continues to stare “into the blank screen.” As with a fetish, he tries to magically “induce an image to appear” on the screen. (S 43) And then Max’s voice mimics not only the emphatic comments of the sports broadcaster, he also impersonates the voices of the crowd, and even reproduces the commercials; all this, notably, in the right temporal succession of the game. The texts, “emerging from a broadcast level deep in his unconscious mind,” (S 46) take on an authenticity that he appears to merge into the spectacle, he simulates: ‘De-fense, De-fense, D-fense.’ [Crowd] ‘These teams are evenly matched more or less.’ […] [Broadcaster] ‘Wireless the way you want it. Soothes and moisturizes. […]’ [Or:] ‘Sometimes I wish I was human […], so I could taste this flavorful prune juice.’ [Commercials, S 46–8, italics in original] This pastiche is strongly satirical. The wish to be “human,” the soothing “wireless,” or syntactic shreds, such as “Super Bowl Fifty-Six. Our National Death Wish,” can be read as bitingly ironical comments on the blackout. But Max’s “stunning” perfection makes also clear that his mind (“beyond distraction,” S 48) has long been infused and predetermined by the format. His mind is that of the medium, a simulacrum of the super bowl simulacrum. Diane, in the meantime, presumes his impulses to originate in “Deep Space” or some “transrational warp that belongs to Martin’s time frame.” (S 48) This pseudo-scientific babble, along with vacuous monologues, is to dominate the rest of the evening. As to the (inconsequential) side effects of a pill: “Could be constipation […] diarrhea […] the feeling that others can hear your thoughts […],” (S 49) or: “food will go hard or soft or warm or cold whatever,” (S 66) or: “Thaumatology, ontology, eschatology, epistemology […],” (S n68) or: “Umbrella’d ambuscade.” (S 69) The loss of meaning is salient, absurdity has taken over. Martin’s fixation on Einstein and the 1912 manuscript (a facsimile he always carries with him) is governed by freaky rapture (“The event horizon. The atomic clocks.” S 30) rather than scientific interest. His quotations from Einstein or Marx (see S 95) are not only patched incoherently together, they are also misquoted (such as the assumed prediction that World War IV will “be fought with sticks and stones,” Motto and S 114). “The beautiful and airy concepts of space and time” (S 28) cannot be found in the Collected 174 The Silence and the Death of Civilization Einstein Papers.9 Einstein, along with Heisenberg and Gödel, has been serving Martin as a prop to hold on to a young man who is otherwise without qualities and identity. The physically precise terms “Relativity, uncertainty, incompleteness” (S 29) may well be applicable to his sociopsychological state. He does not recognize himself in a mirror, nor in the eye of the other people who, he thinks, never look at him. (S 51–2) The vented signifiers are empty and float around without signifieds, let alone referents. Hooked to TV, smartphone, “Alexa,” tablet, etc., homo digitalis is exposed to a constant and increasing stream of info bits and pieces, which do not even pretend to accord with reality.10 In a world of simulacra, an always relative semblance of mutual understanding and ontological reassurance is constructed by the media and technology. In case of their absence, all ontological and epistemological certainties will cease. In the 1990s of the past century, the German sociologist Niklas Luhmann famously claimed: “What we know about our society, in fact, the world we live in, we only know through mass media.”11 There is no social interaction unless it has been mediated by technology. This is more true when body and smartphone coalesce. “What happens to people,” a worried narrator12 asks, “who live inside their phones?” (S 52, see also 82) Before, people were “staring into their phones, morning, noon, night […], consumed by the devices.” But this is over, “everything,” the various screens, that have produced our self and sense of time, are “down down down.” (S 99, see also 80) People do not know anymore who they are: “How do we know who we are?” (S 61), the receptionist at the clinic asks. In DeLillo’s present-day society, a general shutdown of screens amounts to the general closure of human sense perception: “What remains for us to see, hear, feel?” (S 80) Intuitions remain blind, thoughts remain empty, self-reference without external reference remains blank and meaningless. The decapitated Artis in her pod in Zero K presents the striking, if extreme, endpoint of the deprivation of perception. The further consequences of the withdrawal of technology are a sense of de-realization, fear and paranoia and, eventually, mere self-talk, complete self-isolation, social death, and silence. Reality is created by “sensemaking.” It emerges, according to Luhmann, when inconsistencies are resolved, which may result from the participation of remembrance in the operation of the [psychic] system. The resolution may be reached, for example, by the construction of space and time as dimensions with various places, in which different perceptions or memories may be localized without coming into conflict with one another.13 However, in the absence of media and of memory (on account of media), the consistent construction of space and time and the corresponding localization of perceptions and memory are no longer possible. In The The Silence and the Death of Civilization 175 Silence, “events” appear to drastically “shift.” (S 60) A sense of unreality gains the upper hand. Martin, the relativity theorist, gets to the heart of it: “Are we living in a makeshift reality? Have I already said this? A future that isn’t supposed to take form just yet?” (S 67) Since perception, time and memory can no longer be brought in line, the construction of simultaneity and a mutually shared presence no longer works. For Martin and Diane, a fundamental estrangement with their environment takes place. What used to be self-evident is no longer so. Tessa worries whether she lives in some “living breathing fantasy,” wondering if time has “leaped forward” or even “collapsed.” (S 87) Max thinks they are “being zombified […] bird-brained,” does not know in which day or month he is and rightly expects his “expiration date” to be imminent. (S 84) Even or precisely because of its external referentiality, communicative prolificacy and illusionary status, the world as a secondary or simulated reality has long or always been there as a given condition.14 In the absence of “eidola” or simulacra, it surfaces ex negativo. Martin, therefore, exclaims that it is “[a]rtificial intelligence that betrays who we are and how we live and think.” (S 68) Tessa wonders if “our normal experience” is “simply being stilled […]. Are we witnessing […] [a] kind of virtual reality?” (S 113) Ironically, now that the media background noise is “stilled,” homo medialis suspects that he or she may be living in a “virtual reality.” Yet, The Silence is far from being only a novel about the status (or failure) of reality in an advanced digital age. It is much more a book about the social pathologies (and about social death), which the breakdown of a communicatively binding and virtually reaffirming technology reveal. These are pathologies, though, which technology and media have first and foremost given rise to. Among the many pertinent sociological analyses that have appeared in the past decades, three are particularly notable: Ulrich Beck’s Risk Society, Heinz Bude’s Society of Fear and Andreas Reckwitz’s Society of Singularities.15 Because of globalization and modernization, society sees itself increasingly confronted with all types of social, ecological and technological threats (Risk Society was written after Chernobyl). They sink into the daily consciousness and determine public and private discourse. A pertinent instance (at the time of the novel’s publication) was the Covid-19 virus, which for a while had replaced climate change. Yet the normatively postulated and actual “reflexivity” in the political and, more so, civil sphere, which Beck observed, was not as momentous as he would have liked it. It fundamentally depends on the efficiency of technology and media themselves, that is, on external referentiality. Heinz Bude sees “Angst” not only as an effect of possible technological disaster or terrorism but as the prevailing mood in late capitalist neoliberal societies, in which even well-off middle-class people are permanently absorbed by the fear of social decline, the financial market, big data and cyber-attacks. The growing complexity, the loss 176 The Silence and the Death of Civilization of common sense, and the distribution of vague, fake or incorrect news renders, one might add, the late modern media world more vulnerable to malfunctions and disorder. This mélange has given rise to forms of pathological dread, which renders people helpless, confused and accessible to extremist or populist tribunes. All this has also contributed to what the sociologist Andreas Reckwitz has dubbed “singularization.” The reasons leading to an advanced individualization and atomization of society are diverse. They range from social differentiation to flexibilization to (“custom-made”) commodification, but this individual dissociation is likewise due to latent fear, given the intransparency and incomprehensibility of technological late modernity. People retreat into the seclusion or isolation of internet bubbles and the seeming security of the private and individual areas of life behind drawn curtains. The result is the loss of a common language, speechlessness, and anonymity. When Max, the building inspector, leaves the apartment early after the “communications screwup,” he wants to find out whether other inhabitants of the building are also affected. Only a few open their doors and he is met with caginess; he tries to talk to them, evidently for the very first time: They saw and heard what we saw and heard. We stood in the hallway becoming neighbors for the first time. Men, women, nodding our heads. Did you introduce yourselves? [Diane asks] We nodded our heads. (S 34) The sociological findings are arrestingly exemplified in the novel. Yet in a Heideggerian sense, the characters’ condition may be even fundamentally worse, bare existential angst comes to the fore. Devoid of all media distractions, “fallen” “man” cannot cling to “man” (put another way, “entertainment industry”) anymore, he or she is therefore thrown back onto their mere being-there. Their “being,” that is, their being-toward-death was always “concealed” to them. Enunciations of diffuse fears and paranoia are released into the apartment space without repercussion: “People in the grip of serious threat.” (S 65) This premonition – no media of self-understanding are available – produces in “Part Two” of the book strings of exclamations denoting most diverse phenomena mostly unconnected to the present blackout: “Cyberattacks, digital intrusions, biological aggressions. Anthrax, smallpox, pathogens. […] Are the oceans rising rapidly?” (S 77) Discursive coherence is gone. The more or less unmotivated and arbitrary concatenation of risks and fears shows that one no longer deals rationally or “reflexively” (Beck) with the welter of tribulations. The almost incantatory dropping of fear-laden terms takes on farcical dimensions. Bewilderment gains ground: “Germs, genes, spores, powders.” (S 81) The Silence and the Death of Civilization 177 “We’re being zombified.” (S 84) “Cryptocurrencies.” (S 85) The party loses itself in ejections of apocalyptic scenarios: “[…] foul air. Landslides, tsunamis […] skies blotted out by pollution. […] virus, plague […] the face masks.” (S 88, see also 94 for “microplastics”) Obviously, DeLillo did not want to explicitly mention the Corona crisis in 2020–21. Tessa’s attempts at a poem result in one line: “In a tumbling void.” (S 96) In this twilight state of “relativity, uncertainty, incompleteness,” the boundaries between simulation and reality are still blurred: “The end-of-the world movie.” (S 104, see also 113) The confinement to self-reference (or first-order reality) leads to a senseless dependence on and foregrounding of language, which in circling loops revolves around itself. Words lose their communicative referentiality; signifieds become gratuitous. Even if language at best still serves some idiosyncratic and expressive impulse, it has lost its performative (or illocutionary) function: ‘Data breaches,’ he says. ‘Cryptocurrencies.’ He [Martin] speaks this last term looking directly at Diane. Cryptocurrencies. She builds the word in her mind, unhyphenated. […] She says, ‘Cryptocurrencies.’ […] ‘Crypto,’ she says, pausing, keeping her eyes on Martin. ‘Currencies.’ (S 85–6) When Jim wakes up, he hears Tessa say something. He understands nothing, realizing “it is simply fake, a dead language, a dialect, an idiolect (whatever that is) or something else completely.” As if echoing Heidegger’s famous dictum about language as the “house of Being,”16 his subsequent question remains unanswered: “‘Home,’ he says finally. ‘Where is that?’” (S 97) Along with technology, the people in the apartment have lost the language which tied them together. Communication amounts to nothing more than “babbling” self-talk. (S 71, 82, 87) Between these empty speeches, there are periods of silences; they do not “look at each other.” (S 68) The protagonists turn out to be “singular” monads, indeed, mysterious to one another, “each individual so naturally encased.” (S 73) The other does not know what he or she “means by this.” (S 84) The mutual lack of understanding increases (S 88): “[Y]ou don’t want to know.” (S 101) They question their identities: “[W]e are still people, the human slivers of a civilization,” (S 90) and feel compelled to tell “themselves that they’re still alive.” Jim must listen to himself “breathe” and check whether he is “still there.” (S 102) Martin fantasizes about the German word “Freitod” and translates it with “free death,” distorting the sense (again). The novel ends with monologues by five speakers, “speaking into the 178 The Silence and the Death of Civilization carpet” a “kind of splintered Haitian Creole,” with Martin immersed “in his nowhere stare.” (S106, 112, 114) No one intends or expects the other to remember or understand. (S 111, 115) Max has ceased to listen; he does not understand a thing, and “stares into the blank screen.” (S 116) If it is language that bestows on humans a home and “Being,” then humans in Don DeLillo’s novel are not only profoundly homeless, they are bound to die a metaphysical, a social and eventually a physical death. The Silence is much more than a disaster novel17; it is a piece of deep cultural pessimism. Notes 1 Martin Heidegger means self-consciousness here, yet the later philosopher could surely have agreed with language as being existentially indispensable. The quote is from “Einleitung zu: ‘Was ist Metaphysik?’,” (1976, 19491), 374. 2 The increasing global exposition to risk forces, according to Ulrich Beck (and similarly Anthony Giddens), a “reflexive modernity,” but may also prompt the undermining of the technological reason of modernity. See Ulrich Beck, Risk Society: Towards a New Modernity (London: Sage, 1992), passim. 3 The German version appeared in 2012, the English in 2017 (London: Penguin). The book was published in 15 languages and sold more than 1.6 million copies. 4 See especially “Day 10,” 625 ff. 5 Elsberg, 631, 641. 6 https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20191023-what-would-happen-in-anapocalyptic-blackout 7 One of DeLillo’s achievements is, almost needless to say, that the general, the contemporary political and technological situation, is always also present and reflected in his protagonists. 8 One must contend, though, that this criticism has been current since Plato; writing and books fulfill the same function as digital stores. 9 https://einsteinpapers.press.princeton.edu/vol4-trans/15 10 Sure, Thomas of Aquinas’s “veritas est adaequatio rei et intellectus” is philosophically no longer up-to-date. Yet, we still rely normatively on referentiality and on the logic consistency of comprehensible and reasoned statements. 11 Niklas Luhmann, Die Realität der Massenmedien (Opladen: Westdeutscher Verlag, 1996), 9. (Here and in the following my translation.) The German original: “Was wir über unsere Gesellschaft, ja über die Welt, in der wir leben, wissen, wissen wir durch die Massenmedien.” 12 As so often in Don DeLillo, focalizer and extradigetic narrator cannot be clearly distinguished. I take the voice that is not unequivocally related and not set apart by inverted commas to be the collective voice of the late modern technological subject. 13 Luhmann 1996, 19. 14 I do not have to go into the various theories from Plato to Baudrillard. Even the question whether the world we refer to is real or a simulation has not been sufficiently answered. Among those who plead for a simulation, the question whether this is an ontological, epistemological, anthropological, only a media effect, or even a priori or transcendentally given effect, is still very much an open one. The Silence and the Death of Civilization 179 15 Ulrich Beck, Risk Society (see above). Heinz Bude, Society of Fear (Cambridge: Polity Press, 2018). Andreas Reckwitz: The Society of Singularities (Cambridge: Polity Press, 2020). 16 Cf. Martin Heidegger, “Letter on Humanism,” in Basic Writings, ed. David Farrell Krell (London: Harper Perennial, 2008), 217: “Language is the house of Being. In its home man dwells.” 17 Incidentally, at one point in the novel, the streets fill up with confused and rioting crowds, “a streaming mass,” into which Max walks. (S 99) Yet they naturally offer no means of “terror management.” In the end, the crowds are “dispersed. Streets empty.” (S 115) 10 Epilog Don DeLillo’s novels are outstanding “linguistic works of art.” His “lyrical” and “beautiful” sentences have often been rightly praised. But more importantly (in terms of a long-term impact), he has been concerned with the socio-cultural and existential conflicts of his time. His novels tell us about these from various and multiple perspectives in, to be sure, concrete situatedness, reflexive and exemplary voices. The task of the critic is to spell out and discursively bring forth the cultural and conceptual implications of those social, psychological and existential dislocations. In doing so, critics usually place the suggestive narratives in theoretical frameworks. They then cannot do otherwise but refer to overarching historical ideas, phenomena or symptoms, which may add up to strong and far-reaching socio-cultural theses. It is, however, the meager job of the critic to reduce and transform the semantically rich and nuanced multidimensionality of the narrative text (from which I have deliberately amply quoted) into the thin one-dimensionality of the conceptional and analytic discourse applying a few guiding principles. This necessarily implies the problem of all studies in the history of ideas or culture and, for that matter, literature, namely a certain generalization and abstraction that goes beyond the letter of the work of art. I am well aware that any generalization must provoke the occasional objection “yes, but,” and another interpretative point of view. Not only the humanities, though, have to live with deviating and relative perspectives. However, I take it that my theoretical interpretations (derivations, diversions and elaborations) are plausibly mirrored in and supported by Don DeLillo’s narratives and vice versa. Don DeLillo is deeply read and steeped in Western philosophy, cultural theory or the sciences, as his many references to Heidegger or Einstein, for example, show. His work has left traces, clues and references of far-reaching existential consequences. I hope I have been able to shed a light on some of them. DOI: 10.4324/9781003289937-10 Index Page numbers followed by ‘n’ refer to notes numbers. Adorno, Theodor W., Negative Dialectics 21–2 aesthetics 20, 39, 43, 59, 124, 136, 140–60; aisthetics 112, 141, 160 alienation 67, 75, 76, 82, 93, 102, 125; monetary 87, 88; physical 91; temporal 83–6 apparition 26, 27, 50, 51, 59, 164; see also epiphany apocalypse 24, 31–40, 102, 137, 140, 164, 170; catastrophe 3, 50, 141, 170; end time 8, 138, 141, 144; eschatology 24, 137, 140, 156; teleology 133; teleological time 19, 129–30 Aranda, Julieta 165n11 ‘arrivant’ (Derrida) 63, 67 art: abstract expressionism 79–81; architecture 141, 143–4; ars mortem (installation) 158; indeterminacy (ambiguity, overdetermination) of 106, 156; memento mori 2, 68, 143–5; performance 56–66, 67–70, 107–9; sculpture 140, 143–6, 150–4; still life 68, 105–7, 145 Baudler, Georg 90 Baudrillard, Jean 91 Beck, Ulrich, Risk Society 45, 175–6 Becker, Ernest 21 Benjamin, Walter, Charles Baudelaire 15; German Tragic Drama 71, 71n28 Bizzini, Caparole Silvia 117n2 Blumenberg, Hans, Lebenszeit und Weltzeit 24, 77, 139–40 Body Artist, The 7–10, 19, 32, 51, 56–72, 73, 102, 120 ‘bomb, the’ 31, 35–40 boredom 44, 60; dreariness 44, 59; ennui 68; horror vacui 68; taedium vitae 60; tedium 42, 44, 57 Boxall, Peter 25, 40, 57, 27n2, 28n7, 29n26, 30n37, 52n11, 70n1, 70n2, 117n3, 118n14, 165n4 Browne, Thomas 157 Bude, Heinz, Society of Fear 175 Butler, Judith 71n28 Caillois, Roger 121–4, 131; see also mimicry capital: accumulation of 9, 73–5, 78, 90, 93; capitalism (financial) 9, 14, 73–5, 76, 83–5, 88, 94; economic growth 74, 90; see also money Chamisso, Adelbert 91 claustrophilia 162 Coetzee, J.M., The Master of Petersburg 7, 61 commodities 5, 12–4, 26, 45–6; commodification 18, 75 communication 17, 172–7; empty speech 177; language 23, 58, 86, 87, 103, 137, 150–2, 156, 169, 176–8 consumerism, consumption 34, 45, 51; affluent society (Galbraith) 14, 47 182 Index contingency 31, 35, 50, 137–8, 143, 146, 148, 156, 159 corridors (hallways) 140–3, 145 Cosmopolis 5, 6, 19, 73–101, 105, 120, 163, 169, 172 Cowart, David 134n27 crowds 21–3, 31, 34, 41, 44, 141, 148 cryonics (cryonicists) 3, 135–6, 138; cryobiologists 135; cryopreservation (cryoconservation) 145, 158 death: (ontological) ambiguity of 145; culture of 2, 9; cult of 115; defenses, distal and proximal 4, 8, 38; dying 2, 10n2, 23, 48–50, 78–80, 115–6; fear of 2–4, 7–10, 12–27, 31–2, 50, 51, 77, 81, 145; finitude 6, 18, 84, 139, 154, 157; images of 42, 103, 104; immortalism, 3–5, 47, 75–6, 82, 90, 97, 116, 136–40, 143, 158; inconceivability of 7–8, 16–7; killing 22–5, 48–9, 80, 90, 128; life-in-death (death-in-life) 61, 91, 146; memento mori 2, 68, 143–5; mortality 2–6, 14, 18, 43, 45–7, 93–6, 105–6, 144, 147; negativity 40, 94; ontology of 7, 69; paradox of 16, 61, 64, 69; sublation of 66; see also Solomon et. al. de-individuation 78–80; depersonalization 67, 122, 132, 145, 161; disintegration 12, 92, 93–5, 132; see also ekstasis de-realization 172, 174 Derrida, Jacques 63–4; différance 157 deterrence (cold war) 38 deus absconditus 114 Di Prete, Laura 71n9 disembodiment 78, 81 Einstein, Albert 171–4, 180 ekphrasis 108 ekstasis 5, 143; intensity 5, 8, 38 electric failure (blackout) 169–70, 173 Eliot, T.S. 134n35 Elsberg, Marc, Blackout 170 End Zone 1, 170 ‘entertainment industry’ 21, 176 Enzensberger, Hans Magnus 32 epiphany 50, 59, 70, 97–8, 163–5; epiphanic moment 10, 27, 126, 164; moment of moments 51, 163–5; see also apparition Epicurus 19 Ettinger, Robert C.W. The Prospect of Immortality 135 Euripides, The Bacchae 94 existentialism 146–9 Falling Man 9–10, 68, 102–19, 169, 170 fear: angst 46, 142–3, 148, 156, 175–6; paranoia 174,176 Foxe, John, Acts and Monuments 116 Friedrich, Caspar David 35 Freud, Sigmund 5, 76, 121–3, 66, 69, 74, 118n20 Fukuyama, Francis 6 Gander, Catherine, 133n2 Garrigós, Cristina 74, 98n3 Geble, Peter 133n13 Gesamtkunstwerk 136, 144 Google 83, 171 Gordon, Douglas, 24 Hour Psycho 120 Greenspan, Alan 74 Hagens, Gunther von 159 Hall, John R., Apocalypse 52n3 Han, Byung-Chul 90 Heidegger, Martin 38, 44, 82, 83, 106, 116, 146–55, 150–55, 177–8; being-in-the-world,169; being-there (‘Da-sein’) 80, 84; care (“Sorge”) 107; concealment, unconcealment 146, 150–53; decisiveness (“Entschlossenheit”) 38, 148; equipment (“Zeug”) 106, 152, 154, 156; fallenness (“Verfallenheit”) 44, 83; thrownness (“Geworfenheit”) 112 Hirst, Damien 145 Hitler, Adolf 13, 20–4, 48, 77 homo digitalis 174 Horkheimer, Max (with Th. W. Adorno), Dialectics of Enlightenment 98n8, 134n18 hysteron proteron 83 Index 183 indeterminacy (literary) 127, 156 International Monetary Fund (IMF) 77–8 “In the Ruins of the Future” (DeLillo) 117n1 Jaspers, Karl 107, 118n10 Joyce, James 163, 168n59 Jünger, Ernst 116 Jungk, Robert 36 Kauffman, Linda 114, 118n11 Kavanagh, Matt 98n2, 100n44 Keats, John 61, 143 Kern, Andrea 167n52 Kosellek, Reinhard 33 Kübler-Ross, Elisabeth 118n20 Kurzweil, Ray 20, 77 mourning 4–5, 59–69, 107, 112–5, 117, 118n20; Commemoration 114; ethos of 59, 65; grief 61–6, 69, 103–4, 112–3; remembrance 110, 114–5; responsive memory 109, 118n20; prosopopoeia 113 Nagel, Thomas 17, 29n15 naming 65, 137 Nietzsche, Friedrich 41, 79, 94, 129, 163 nothingness 5, 7, 44, 45, 67, 127 Nozick, Robert 29n17 O’Donnell, Patrick 53n26, 54n53 Oppenheimer, Robert 36, 37 Osteen, Mark 71n9, 71n24, 98n2 Lacan, Jacques 121–3 Libra (DeLillo) 49, 82, 171 Luckhurst, Roger 165n10 Luhmann, Niklas 174 Lynch, David 13 Patterson, James T. 34 phlegm (mucus) 132, 33 Pöhlmann, Sascha 119n21 Point Omega 91, 102, 107, 112, 120–34 pop (culture) 43–5 mannequins 155–8, 159 Mao II (DeLillo) 41, 170 martyrdom 115–7 material, materiality 79–80, 91, 93, 97, 106, 150–2 McEwan, Ian, Machines Like Me 158 McKinney, Ronan 117n2, 117n6, 118n9, 118n11 media 33–4, 48–50, 60, 82, 84, 87, 108, 122, 128, 140, 169, 176 memory 39–40, 42, 47, 59, 86, 104, 107, 109–11, 112–5, 125, 138, 158, 171–4; cultural memory 47, 158, 171 metaphysics of presence 150 Meyers, Mark 133n8 mimesis 112, 124, 172; mimicry 121–25; see also Caillois Mishima, Yukio 116 Mishra, Pankaj 3 Mitchell, Andrew, J. 167n43 money 74–5, 87–92, 93, 111; exchange value 14, 88–90, 97; see also capitalism Morandi, Giorgio 68, 105–7, 109, 111 Rachel, James, Elements of Moral Philosophy 18, 29n16 reader-response theory 81, 99n17 Reckwitz, Andreas 175–6 resonance 42, 70, 85, 100n29, 123, 154, 155 revelation 31, 51, 59, 115, 163; see also epiphany Rilke, Rainer Maria 27, 145 ‘Risk Society’ (Beck) 45, 54n48, 136, 143, 169, 175, 178n2 Rosa, Hartmut 82, 99n25, 100n29, 100n30, 154 Roth, Philip, Nemesis 52n9 salvation 10, 14, 27, 35, 90, 97, 138, 143; redemption 15, 31, 34, 48, 69, 97, 128, 140, 163 Sandel, Michael, J. 99n9 Schaub, Thomas Hill 53n26 Schopenhauer, Arthur 5, 40, 79, 129 Schuster, Marc 29n26 Shonkwiler, Alison 98n2 Silence, The 6, 169–79 Simmel, Georg 129 Solomon et. al., The Worm at the Core 3; ‘terror management’ 184 Index 3–5, 19, 21, 31, 44, 48, 51, 59, 68–70, 72, 93, 112, 115 stick figure 62, 69 sublime 22, 27, 31, 35–9 Taureck, Bernhard H.F. 6, 11n11, 12, 16 technology 14, 19, 33, 36–8, 74, 82, 84, 135–8, 140, 164, 168n58, 168n60, 169–77 Teilhard de Chardin, The Phenomenon of Man 130–1, 134n28 terrorism 3, 8, 130, 175; terrorists (Jihadists) 55n56, 102–3, 113, 115, 117 ‘Texas Highway Killer’ 48–9 time, temporality 8, 24, 29, 32, 34, 37, 39, 41–6, 50, 56–60, 61–3, 67–70, 73, 76, 77, 83–7, 88, 90, 102, 109–10, 120, 121, 124, 125, 129, 137–8, 139–41, 143, 144, 146, 148, 156, 159–62, 169, 172–3, 174, 175; acceleration 9, 25, 73, 84–7, 99n25, 120; apocalyptic 6, 31; geological 6, 121, 124, 133, 155; historical 12, 44, 155; life-time, world-time 24, 37, 77, 84, 139–40; messianic 6, 163; narration of 56, 57; salvific 34, 137, 140; sense of 61–2, 124, 129, 162, 174; sequential-linear (linearsequential) 59, 60, 62, 67, 68, 73; simultaneity of the non-simultaneous 50, 82; spatial continuum 68, 70, 73, 151; spatialization of 58–9; teleological 6, 19, 53n36, 88, 129–30; time-toward-death 44; transience 6, 15, 32, 42, 46, 59, 68, 106, 131, 143, 152; see also Heidegger transhumanism, transhumanist 77, 82, 137, 143, 164 Trauerspiel (Benjamin) 67–70 trauma, traumatic 9, 102, 104, 117n2, 110; post-traumatic stress disorder 4, 8 traveling 8, 44, 76 Trentman, Frank 28n4 trisomy 164–5 truth, untruth 146, 150–55, 158, 160, 165 Underworld 12, 14, 19, 24, 31–55, 82, 91, 97–8, 105, 138, 163, 170–1 United States, the 10n6, 33–5, 115, 130, 136; American society 12, 154; cold war 32–40, 42, 47; post-war period 33, 43, 44, 47 Varsava, Jerry A., 98n1, 98n2 Veggian, Henry 70n1 Vondung, Klaus, Apokalypse 31, 52n2 waste 4, 15, 16, 39–40, 42, 45–8 White Noise 12–30, 31, 32, 35, 45–6, 77, 91, 98, 139, 163, 169, 170 Yeats, William Butler 33, 61, 93, 143, 163, 165n11 Zero K 19, 91, 98, 105, 134n32, 135–68, 170, 174