The Neutral:
Session of March 25, 19781
Roland Barthes
(Chair of Literary Semiology, Collège de France, Paris,
deceased)
Text established and annotated by Eric Marty
(Professor
of Contemporary French Literature, University of Paris VII,
France)
Translated by Rosalind E. Krauss
(Meyer Shapiro Professor of Modern Art and Theory, Columbia
University, New York, USA).
and
Denis Hollier
(Professor of French Literature, New York University, USA).
Supplement IV
During the week,
some observations were sent to me, documents were submitted
to me: a very beautiful page by Henry Miller on Parisian
gray: "this immense world of grey which I knew in Paris ...
" (Quiet Days in Clichy) (Carole Hoveler);2
a poem by the Brazilian poet Manoel Bandeira, translated on
the spot by the person who gave it to me: a poem that plays
with adjectives applicable to a young lady, Cecilia (Ligia
... Leite?)3
= all this tied in a very pertinent way to the figures
"Color" and "Adjective." The letters, as well, prolong some
of the figures, or even the supplements: taking up certain
themes again: the present participle as active adjective,
aporia, painting in grisaille, the monochrome. As for
anorexia as a mode of the "desire for nothing," cf. below,
the "Arrogance" figure. I won't address these new
observations because they deal with figures already treated,
and I don't want to slow down the flow of the ,new figures
too much. But I thank all those who have written to me:
letters, texts, and poems →4
today then, only two supplements, one false and one true.
1.
False: a figure
that was suggested but which I will not treat: the Voice →
Relation, of the voice and the neutral: obvious, even
insistent, and even topical. However, not a figure, and this
École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales:5
theme for which I never stopped announdng a clarification
that was never truly delivered: wavering theme: seems very
important, but one always puts off a real treatment of it →
category of the "false good subject" (Merleau-Ponty and
clothing) → voice = "object" that resists: sparks off
adjectives (soft, startling, white, neutral, etc., voice)
but nothing more. The "good subject": perhaps to
interrogate, not the voice, but the resistances that prevent
one from speaking of this "objet petit a"6
in a way that satisfies, that fulfills the intellectual
desire (desire for exhaustiveness, lure of exhaustiveness) →
perhaps the false "good subject" is the subject whose
referent one desires and which for that reason falls prey to
the lure of desire → "good subject": dynamic (or even)
mechanic of the “mirage”: one beleives to have caught it, it
moves further away, and this to infinity: thus with the
“voice”, and perhaps with all subjects that relate to the
“body”.
2.
[Mythologies, 81]7
In a letter that contains many other things, someone
connects the Neutral with what I wrote in a depreciating
(“demystifying", as we used to say at the time) manner with
regard to "neither-nor" criticism: my target then was these
journalistic pieces that set two parties or two attitudes
back-to-back in order better to make themselves the
arbiter: the example, taken from L'Express of the time, was
a profession of faith concerning literary criticism –
announcing the kind that the magazine, which was just being
launched (± I955), was intending to practice: criticism
should be "neither a parlor game nor a municipal service"
(= neither reactionary nor communist, neither gratuitous
nor political). I then went on to characterize this type of
argument as a petit-bourgeois feature (ideology of the
balanced account, of the scale for which the subject makes
himself the "beam," the fair tool).8
→ Now, the Neutral has all the appearance of being a form of
neither-norism (neti-neti, says a Buddhist doctrine I've
cited, highlighting its resemblance with negative theology);
thus in I956 I discredit neither-norism and in I978 I
(seemingly) aim at eulogizing the Neutral. What's going on?
Contradiction? For once, I will not drift but "reply," that
is, take sides concerning the connection of neither-norism
and the Neutral.
Notice
first of all: I could very well not do so, without formally
contradicting the Neutral.
a. I could take on
the contradiction as such → function of the Neutral: to
remain indifferent in front of the "trap": to accept to
contradict oneself without flinching:
in order, (1)
silently to refuse the maché,9
the Law of verbal combat, of jousting instituted centuries
ago in the West; (2) to allow the possibility of another
logic to resonate, another world of discourse.
b. I could, and it
is, by the way, what I am doing, recognize that in me there
are "petit-bourgeois" elements: in my tastes, in my
discourse are petit-bourgeois features (without going into
the discussion of this cursed denomination here).
(1) These features
are not clandestine (even if I don't myself know all of
them): the Roland Barthes exposes them knowingly on many
occasions10
(2) In my discourse, there probably are "neither-norish"
[niniques] features: sometimes, collapse of the Neutral into
an even-handed refusal, an easy refuge in the context of a
certain liberal discourse such as ours, and that is often
due to weariness (truly to assume the I don't know position
requires energy, freshness).
However, that's not the direction I will take to answer. I
will say: the Neutral is connected with neither-norism and
nevertheless is absolutely different from it. I will try to
be brief in explaining how this dialectic operates:
resembling (making one think of) and different, even
contrary:
I.
neither-norism: nothing radical in it, a mere social (even,
in our context, professional) tactic: self-serving
expression of a political position = rhetoric (persuasion)
of this position → rhetoric of the neither-nor wavering:
(myth of the scale, instrument of measure [justesse]): but
the neither-norish wavering leaves a remainder: underneath
the neither-nor rhetoric, there ends up being a choice →
great media provider of the neither-nor rhetoric: Le Monde:
perpetually weighing pros and cons; but what Le Monde keeps
swinging is not the monstrance, it's the ruler: a blow to
the right side requires a blow to the left and vice versa =
rhetoric of the Sadian schoolmaster: to punish the two sides
and thus to double the pleasure → a remainder = pleasure; in
Le Monde as well there, is a remainder: an impression of
center left (see Fauvet's op-eds)11
→ small research conducted with American students (long
ago): article on the university: features for/features
against → in the end, there was one more feature on one side
→ one sees the mythology: great "impartial" newspaper but
nevertheless great moral figure of the judge: the judge in
the service of a cause: it's the very status of the judge:
impartial and partisan (what I am indicting here is not a
specific option but a rhetoric) ≠ the Neutral (I will be
more brief) is not "social" but lyrical, existential: it is
good for nothing, and certainly not for advocating a
position, an identity: it has no rhetoric; the neither-nor
speaks the discourse of the master: it knows, it judges ≠
the Neutral doesn't know (all this moreover should be put in
the conditional, since we don't know if the Neutral can be
used in a subject position) → one could say, to take up the
Nietzschean categories once more: neither-norism is
reactive-affirmative ≠ the Neutral is active-negative.
2. And
now the resemblance: in one sense, it's an awesome
resemblance, simultaneously hideous and ridiculous:
neither-norism as the farcical copy of the Neutral: (a)
Struck long ago and still obsessed by Marx's idea (I believe
in the I8th Brumaire): in History, the great things come
back in the form of a "farce":12
French Revolution and Louis-Napoleon. → The Neutral would
appear here under the farcical mask (grandiloquent, nobly
liberal) of neither-norism. (b) Alas, one must go further:
what we love with the choicest, the most rare, the most
delicate, the most tender love, what in us asks to be put
beyond comparison, we would discover it at one point,
abruptly, by chance, under the ostentatious form of a public
farce; it's the most painful turn the amorous path can take;
the discovery, even fleeting, quickly erased, in the beloved
one of something that belongs to the order of the grimace:
neither-nor: the grimace of the Neutral. A memory: I who
loved Brecht and especially Mother Courage, a play that has
endlessly nourished me13
– perhaps because it was the first one I saw – how wounded I
felt by Vitez's Mother Courage: true farce, truly farcical
copy of the Mother Courage I loved.
The Active of the
Neutral
1. Active
Let's recall the
fragment of Pasolini's poem already cited twice: "'What can
be said in your favor {à votre actif}? ... ' ... 'Me?
A desperate vitality.''' It's in that sense that one must
understand "active" {actif}: what does the Neutral have in
its favor {à son actif}? Or: what is this desperate
vitality that the Neutral has in its favor {a son actif}?
With, resonating in the word: the Nietzschean music.
One
could say also: the virtues of the Neutral. "Virtus"?
Reference to vir, not so much as male (no machismo of the
Neutral!) but in order to baffle the too easy image of the
Neutral as space of indifferent sterility → this would be:
the active, productive features of the Neutral: that which,
being outside glory (outside good reputation), is
nonetheless thought-out, deliberate, assumed.
We saw
"Images of the Neutral" (March I8): depreciative images
coming from opinion, bad images → here, we would have: good
images, coming not from the world but from some isolated
"thoughts" (Tao-Blanchot) and above all from images in
myself: my own imaginary of the Neutral → I add: having
often admitted it already, I leave aside the aporia implied
in not advertising the Neutral, in depriving it of images,
in not qualifying it {ne pas l'adjectiver}, not
dogmatizing about it, and nonetheless recognizing a good
image, some virtues in it, and making it desired.
2. Features
As always, within
the figure, method of the "features": brief imagces,
glimmerings, the list of which is neither logically
conducted nor exhaustive, thus: glimmerings,
"negative-active" flashes (participating in the desire for
Neutral):
a. A-correction =
Abstention from Correcting
I mean: the
Neutral, the subject in the Neutral, abstains from taking
on the task of "correcting" the work of others; for example:
he doesn't want or doesn't know how to make others work, how
to have one "rework" a manuscript → "I spent my life not
making others rework" → it's "selfish"? No doubt, for the
Neutral doesn't care to fit our image of altruism, of duty.
However, think: (1) the density of dogmatism inherent in all
correction; the amount of appropriation (substituting
myself for the other): under the cover of "correcting," I
turn the other, who did the work, into a mere proxy for my
own values; (2) East, calligraphy: the master doesn't
correct, ... he achieves silently in front of the student
what the student must little by little achieve alone.
b. Contamination =
Indifference to Being Contaminated
Intellectual
world: seems to be ruled by a very strong fear of
ideological contamination. For example: the New
Philosophers {Nouveaux philosophes} → myself: too
Pyrrhonian to know if my position is one of adherence or of
refusal. But what is hard to bear: at the height of their
fashion (spring '77): feeling of pack of hounds, of quarry,
of the kill among intellectuals against the New
Philosophers14:
manic protests in order to dissociate oneself from them, to
stay uncontaminated. → "As for myself, I am not one of them"
→ "to be one of," homosexual taboo (Proust). Subject in the
Neutral: would not fear contaminations.
c. No Ranking
The Neutral
challenges the principle – or even simply the verbal reflex
(since it might be nothing more than that) – of hierarchical
ranking, of the honor roll: verbal mania, off-handed, that
makes one affirm by a slight of syntax (it's easy to speak)
(here again we are dealing with the arrogance of language)
that such or such object, such or such person is the first
among all (cf. Cortot: "first, or greatest pianist of the
century")15
– and, even worse, the inflation that consists of turning
"the first" into "the only" → thus, I am told, Lacan,
quoting someone else, said in a seminar: "Today in France,
the Ecole Freudienne is the only place of research"16
→ my mental "body" recoils in the face of such
"affirmations" (even if I myself can let slip similar ones)
→ but I take advantage of this "movement" to reflect: in
fact, the Neutral might reside in this nuance (this
shimmer): it denies uniqueness but recognizes the
incomparable: the unique is shocking precisely in that it
implies a comparison, a crushing under quantity; it implies
singularity, even originality, which is to say
competitiveness, agonistic values ≠ Incomparable =
difference, diaphorology.
d. Relation to the
Present
[Kakuzo, 44]
Neutral: would look for a right relation to the present,
attentive and not arrogant. Recall that Taoism = art of
being in the world: deals with the present.17
Perhaps it would settle within the nuance (the shimmer) that
separates the "present" from the "modern" (in the
sloganeering sense of the phrase: "let us be modern"
[Vico, Michelet,
421] {"soyons modernes"}); without forgetting Vico's
remark that the present, "the indivisible point of the
present,"18
is difficult to grasp even for a philosopher.
e. Banality
The Neutral would
consist in entrusting ourselves to the banality that is
within us → or even more simply in recognizing this
banality. This banality (I already suggested it when I said
that the great sufferings (i.e., mournings) are bound to be
processed through the stereotypes of mankind ) – this
banality is experienced and assumed in the contact with
death: one never thinks anything about death but banal
thoughts. → The Neutral would be the very movement, not
doctrinal, not made explicit, and above all not theological
that veers toward a certain thought of death as banal,
because in death, what is exorbitant, is its banal quality.
f. Weakness
The word is
improper. I choose it out of a certain affinity between the
notion I. am trying to express and the saying from the
Gospel "my strength is in my weakness," but I understand it,
however, more in the Taoist sense, which is to say outside
all kind of transcendence: the Tao man, in fact, tones down his [Kakuzo, 46-47]
personal state in order to immerse himself in the obscurity
of others: "He is 'reluctant, as one crosses a stream in
winter; hesitating, as one who fears the neighborhood;
respectful, like a guest; trembling, like ice that is about
to melt; unassuming, like a piece of wood not yet carved;
vacant, like a valley; formless, like troubled waters."'19
→ The extraordinary audacity of this Neutral (≠ arrogance)
comes perhaps from the unexpected beauty of the metaphors?
Would the Neutral depend on the metaphor?
g. Strength
Obviously it's not
a matter of a strength of the first power (arrogant). An
example
[Kakuzo, 46] of it
would be that Zen-inspired art, jiujitsu (= art of
flexibility)20:
art of defending oneself without weapons: rules much less
strict than those of judo. Principle: "to draw out and
exhaust the enemy's strength by non-resistance, vacuum < ...
>"21
→ banal theme. I don't mean to say that the Neutral is a
tactical way of pursuing advantage, victory, but that the
neutral subject might be able to be the witness of the
effects of his strength.
h. Restraint
= That goes
without saying, if I may say so. As well, I primarily want
to underscore the Zen rule of bodily restraint. Rule laid
down by an actor (and that is important, because it
articulates the issue with the problem of hysterical [Zeami, 75]
behaviors): Zeami (beginning fifteenth century), actor and
author of No and of a marvelous treatise of theatrical
doctrine → Zeami's rule: "When you feel ten in your heart,
express seven in your movements."22
For example: the actor should restrain a gesture (extending
or withdrawing the hand) "to a lesser extent than his own
emotions suggest"23;
the body is made to work with more reserve than the mind24
→ absolute paradox for us, where actors often work, at least
traditionally, in the more rather than the less → the
Neutral would be the generalized dwelling of the less, of
reserve, of the mind's advance over the body. → Perhaps that
is what it means to be in tune {la justesse}: cf.
Casals's word, profound and technically so true: rhythm is
all in the delay25
→ to oppose here, as Indian drug [Castaneda, 7] users do:
datura: acquisition of a power;≠ peyote, knowledge of
the "right way of living" (wisdom).26
i. Stupidity
[Tao, Grenier, 30]
It's obviously a Tao "virtue": "The sage whose virtue is
accomplished loves to display in his
face and on his exterior the appearance of stupidity"27
→ in Tao ethics, in order not to attract attention, avoid
noticeability, refrain from clinging to a good image (or,
more trivially, avoid being considered by others).
1. One
evening in Cannes, on the Croisette, at night, I was
walking probably in a heavy way (very valorized or
devalorized theme: heavy/light gait: gait of the gods: "Even
when she walks she seems to dance!");28
two young women in the distance made fun of me and between
themselves parodied my gait laughingly → far from being
humiliated by it, I experienced a sharp feeling of
jubilation, for I knew something they didn't: my internal
lightness: I was in relation to them in the not-so-much
mode, therefore in a "stronger” position than they.
2. One
could imagine a rule (≠ law) of the Neutral: it would
consist in finding a way to disseminate intelligent stuff,
as though between the lines (cf. the monochrome) of a flat,
dumb (verbal) fabric.
3. The Chinese
Portrait
We will sketch the
following: to subject this party game on the Neutral. You
know the rule: to guess who has been chosen by the group by
means of the objects to which he is compared: "If he were
... what would he be?" Notice:
1. Logically: play
on the relation of genus to species: if this were a novel, a
country, a color → thus a process of inclusion, of
normalization, of comparison, and of slight difference. →
Besides, interesting game to analyze: since, in general,
one doesn't find the answer by perceiving a similarity, an
affinity, but through an association of ideas. If Napoleon:
a literary character? – "Scapin" (Michelet)29:
you won't find it; but if a country: "Corsica": you will →
That means: "the decoding occurs along the metonymic path,
not along the paradigmatic one: the story is more "easy"
than the metaphor.
2. Similarly, for
the Neutral, it would be easy to find metonymic answers: if
it were a country ?-Switzerland (this would be false, by the
way, because it isn't certain that Switzerland is neutral
and because, moreover, it has nothing to do with the
Neutral we're speaking of). However, the most interesting
answers would be metaphor.
2. Similarly, for
the Neutral, it would be easy to find metonymic answers: if
it were a country ? – Switzerland (this would be false, by
the way, because it isn’t certain that Switzerland is
Neutral and because, moreover, it has nothing to do with the
Neutral we’re speaking of). However, the most interesting
answers would be methaphoric: for, while it is difficult to
speak of the Neutral definitionally (that would mean to
conceptualize, to dogmatize), it is possible, admissible, to
speak of it metaphorically.
Thus,
let start the game:
[Gide, 141, 107]
– A car part? –
"a tire that deflates," Gide.30
– A sportsman? – Gide: "I am like someone who skates on an
ice that cracks".31
– A type of food? – I would say (but it is personal): rice:
neither bland nor savory, neither tight nor diluted, neither
colored nor colorless.
– An animal? – I would say: a donkey (the Nietzschean
animal), such as it is described by Leon Bloy when he
describes his daughter Veronique (by means of an implicit
Chinese portrait) (L’Invendable): "It's the splendor
of the spider web in the country dew, when the sun rises,
it's the far-off moaning of the goat that is being
slaughtered on a peaceful farm in the middle of apple trees
in bloom, next to an Eastertime meadow, it's the infinitely
sad and sweet velvet of donkey eyes".32
– Now: a fabric? – Velvet.
– A type of writing? – Suspense: I will disclose it on June 3, Unless you
yourselves have already answered.
Of course, the further one goes, the less one is satisfied by
the crude categories represented by the "genuses." Therefore
one needs, to close the
[Blanchot, Conversation, 305] figure, the almost unassailable subtlety of
Blanchot's suggestion: "The Neutral: that which carries
difference even to the point of indifference. More
precisely, that which does not leave indifference to its
definitive equalization".33
Ideospheres
Ideosphere:
word I forge out of ideology: the linguistic system of an
ideology, with this caveat from the outset that makes the
definition already inexact: in my view, ideology, no matter
which, is and is only language: it's a discourse, a type of
discourse.
One could imagine other neologisms: doxosphere: linguistic
sphere of the doxa. Or again, since it concerns discourses
of faith: pisteosphere34;
or again sociolect ("writing" in Writing Degree
Zero). Or even, more simply: logosphere: which would
recall that for man language is a true biological ambience,
the one within which and through which he lives, the one
that surrounds him.
One should be able, in fact, to define "ideologies" through
their language, itself structurally defined, when possible,
by typical features of discursivity, and it's only later
that one would look for correspondences between these types
of discourse and specific socio-political determinations →
in a given world, one would unfailingly discover several
coexisting ideospheres, each one intelligible to the other
but not communicating.
Thus (provisionally, since these are nothing more than
research notes): ideosphere: strong discursive,
nonidiolectal system (able to be imitated, to be spoken by a
large number of individuals without their knowing it),
"sociolect" that stems from cultural root languages (for
example: Marx, Freud): at the same time, gregarious and
nonanonymous (rather: eponymous). → Problem of the
"logothetes”.35
1. Features
I indicate several, general (in my opinion) features present in any
ideosphere:
a. Consistency
To explain the consistency of the ideosphere, we will use a concept and a
[Bachelard, 93 Dialectic of Duration] metaphor borrowed, via
Bachelard, from Dupréel, Théorie de la consolidation
(Brussels, I931) → Whenever something is made, two
successive steps: example of the crate: (1) At first, it is
the hands of the maker that hold against each other the
pieces of wood that he is going to nail. (2) Once the nails
are hammered in, the crate holds together all by itself (cf.
the mold and the molded object) → cohesion of the elements
secured first by an external cause; then they succeed in
consisting, in sustaining themselves by a cause become
interior → whence the formula: "inside constructed from
outside" (≠ expansion of a substance).36
In fact, this is the way the ideosphere functions. Moment I:
the pieces are placed and held together by the language of
the logothete (Marx, Freud): that already resembles a system
(the way the crate held by the worker's hands already
resembles a crate) = moment of the illusion of system =
maya37:
magnificent, savory, consumable moment: the pleasure of
producing a system without the dogmatism of the inherited,
implemented system, of the ready-made crate, which is a
product → self-evident that the subject in the Neutral (≠
neutral subject) intensely consumes the moment I (he loves
"to read" Marx, Freud) ≠ Moment II: moment when the crate,
the linguistic system is on the verge of taking (cf.
mayonnaise): moment of the alibi, of the good conscience:
the ideosphere took, it runs by itself, from within: it's an
autonomous product of circulation, an independent energetic
(periodic attempts by creators to rediscover, to restart
moment I: such are the "returns to" [to Freud, to Marx]).
Generalizing the theory of the consolidated, Dupréel says:
"The external order of interests has been replaced by the
internal order of conscience".38
I would correct, thinking about the ideospheres: "The
external order of creation, of production, has been replaced
by the internal order of good conscience, of faith."
b. The lever
I said (in particular in Cerisy)39:
strong linguistic systems (ideospheres) use figures of
system = tropes of reasoning that allow one to counter an
objection or a reservation by incorporating it into the
system, by coding it in the terms of the system: venality of
the psychoanalytical cure: doesn't belong to an external
system (market economy) but to the psychoanalytic
ideosphere: coded as necessary to the cure. Cf. Christian
discourse: "thou wouldst not seek Me, if thou hadst not
found Me,"40
etc. → The opponent, the objector or the spectator always
ends up being trapped, loser → compare the type of strength
of the ideospheres to the strength of chewing gum: one wants
to get rid of the wad, one puts it somewhere, throws it away,
it comes back, stuck to the hand, to the sole of the shoe.
The ideosphere recycles you in spite of yourself, because it
establishes itself as a total space of language within
which it assigns you a place. Or, better, each ideosphere: a
system of (linguistic) forces with no external lever to
detach oneself from it.
c. Mania
In terms of "subject": it is not a question of being "for" or "against"
the "ideas" conveyed, or proposed; or "handled" by an
ideosphere but of evaluating one's degree of nearness or
distance in relation to the glue (the cohesion) of this
linguistic system → if one doesn't constitute oneself as a
speaker of this system (but only as a listener, however
fascinated, or even as a user by spurts) → the ideosphere:
seen, felt (in the others who are entirely within) like a
state (of mind), like a pathos. Whence the
assimilation (in no way derisory) of the subject carried by
an ideosphere to a subject in the grip of drugs or of a
mania and from whom I [Baudelaire, 19] feel separated. Cf. the man who has taken H as
seen by the one who has not taken any: Baudelaire: "Your
playfulness and bursts of laughter <your manias, your
"ideospheric" linguistictics> seem the ultimate in
foolishness to anyone who is not in the same condition as
you"41
→ position of otherness → turnstile of the [Bloy,
L’Invendable, 219] ideospheres that one can't stop: Léon
Bloy, immersed in the "fundamentalist" ideosphere (thus who
should strike me as "crazy"), says imperturbably about.the
separation of church and state (republican idiolect):
"Tomorrow we could find ourselves faced with a case of
universal possession".42
→ Ideospheres have a phantasmagoric dimension (except for
the insider) → the ideosphere (perceived as such) rejoins in
fact what Bacon calls the idols or phantoms (= for him,
sources of error, causes that hinder the reception of truth
into the mind; for us, to the contrary, they would be
"consistencies of truth" or, if one prefers: [Bacon,
Organum, book 7] "convictions"). Bacon = four types of
idols (or phantoms): (1) Idols of the tribe (of the race) =
errors shared by all men. (2) Idols of the grotto (of the
den): errors particular to each intelligence (derive from
tastes) (→ idiolects). (3) Idols of the market (errors
coming from the use of language). (4) Idols of the theater =
errors coming from the false systems of the philosophers (=
fables, plays): these would be our ideospheres.43
2. Ideosphere and
Power (to sacrifice to fashion)
1. Relation between the ideosphere (between language) and
power (singular: political, stately, national) → one or two
hasty remarks (because so vast a theme that in reality it
would require dealing with the whole category of politics):
a. The ideosphere tends to establish itself as a doxa, which
is to say as a "discourse" (a particular system of
language), which is experienced by its users as a universal,
natural discourse, one that goes without saying, whose
typicality remains unperceived, whose every "exterior" is
demoted to the status of marginality, of deviance:
discourse-law that isn't perceived as law. This, which I
present in a negative, critical, disapproving way, can to
the contrary be presented [Maistre, 152] in a triumphant manner: Joseph de Maistre: "All known
nations have been happy and powerful to the degree that they
have faithfully obeyed this national mind, which is nothing
other than the destruction of individual dogmas and the
absolute and general rule of national dogmas, that is to
say, useful prejudices".44
= One can't say it better: fits perfectly, in particular,
with Soviet ideosphere, lived (from within) as “national
mind”, “destruction of individual dogmas", "rule of national
dogmas", "sum of useful prejudices": outside the ideosphere
= "criminal" or "crazy" languages: sued! This suits "strong"
States well; but in the "liberal" States" there is a more
diffuse ideosphere, on which the power feeds and behind
[Maistre, 60] which it protects itself: but outside which it
is not, even itself, allowed to "wander": Maistre (once
again): "Rulers can exact effective and durable obedience
only when supported by opinion, which; they cannot
themselves determine".45
Example: a nation with a false calendar that no one dares to
change. "You see that there are some subjects, much less
essential than war <Maistre has just shown that war is
"natural">, on which authority feels that it must not let
itself be compromised"46
→ Well seen, and in fact deserving more, study, since
political science has not (yet) taken charge of linguistic
questions (relations between discourse and power: politics
fancies itself free of language; of all the "disciplines,"
it is even, probably, the one that denies, that represses
the object-language the most): ideosphere (discourse of the
doxa): a kind of regulatory, homeostatic device,
which keeps power between optimal poles: power can't cross
the boundaries, the norms of the public ideosphere, without
danger (to itself).
b. The ideosphere of a power (accepted, assimilated,
integrated = the expression of its ideology) has an effect
of gearing up, of relaying: it's like a
[Maistre, 209] wheel that transmits and maintains power → Maistre:"One
can claim, as a general thesis, that no ruler is strong
enough to govern several million men, unless he is helped by
religion or by slavery, or by one and the other".47
For Maistre, partisan of a strong power, that means that
power should feel free to use religion and slavery for its
own sake. We no longer use such categories, at least such
words, but if religion counts as an ideosphere, Maistre's
remark is right: no power will ever be strong enough unless
it nurtured by a strong language, a linguistic system that
in some way takes over for it. Ideosphere: Glucksmann
(perhaps following Solzhenitsyn): gearing-down function of
ideology, of ideosphere: Stalin: by himself nothing much,
"the evilness of a petty police officer"48
+ gift for mobilizing an ideosphere, Marxism → "idea", as a
frozen form of language, "formula," multiplies the crimes of
power: crime is vulgarized, multiplied → Michelet spoke
(Sorcière) of "Satan multiplied and vulgarised”.49
2. One should confront the concept of ideosphere, the reality of such or
such an ideosphere, with violence. Unfortunately, there are
many types of violence: violence of the law, of rights, of
the State; violence of the organizations that respond to it
insofar as they are themselves organized; violence of
unionized strikes; organized violence but whose
organization remains clandestine, illegal; so-called “wild
violence” (the general strike according to Walter Benjamin).50
To be just noticed here, it seems to me: the explicit
presence of an "ideosphere" dampens the effect (the image)
of violence: violence of the State: doesn't stand out
because heavily verbalized, surrounded by a vast,
uninterrupted ideology ; violence of terrorism: strikes
deeply because very sparsely verbalized: the terrorist
ideosphere is barely explicit: one doesn't really know in
which ideosphere the act of violence is articulated.
Terrorism doesn't talk → impression of madness, of horror.
3. Sincerity
Ideosphere: circle, system of sentences-ideas, of phrased ideas, of
formulaic arguments, of formulae → therefore, it's an
essentially reproducible and/or repeatable linguistic
object → hence some very important phenomena of mimicry:
Mimicry (of a given ideosphere) can be conscious, deliberate,
either by Machiavellianism at the level of the State or by
careful conformism at the level of individuals when an
ideosphere is associated with power.
But there is also an unconscious mimicry: the ideosphere
being inextricably tied to a faith → very formula of
intolerances: Catholic ideosphere during the Middle Ages,
Lutheran ideosphere (Luther intolerant: he believed in the
devil, etc.) (I am sticking to the past) → ideosphere thus
has a link (to be studied) with faith (language of
gregarious faith ≠ idiolectal faith of the mystic) and even
with good faith: it is possible that on the basis of their
ideosphere Soviet people believe in good faith, sincerely,
what seems monstrous to us, that to oppose the regime is a
mental illness, the symptom of a pathological anomaly, thus
belonging to psychiatric hospitals it's perhaps one of the
dramas of the contemporary world, where strong ideospheres
coexist (or less powerful, less strong): that it ultimately
runs on good faith, on sincerity (therefore on intolerance);
the contemporary world as the exact opposite of
Machiavellianism: whence the current forms of violence →
Machiavellianism as progress? → In any case, in this mosaic
of ideospheres, there is no place for a realm of neutral
language that socially could only be the field of a
pluralistic dust of idiolects, of singular languages. (See
for yourself, among your relations, your interlocutors,
where you live: do you live in an ideosphere or in a kind of
complex symphony of incomparable languages?)
4. Perpetuity
Ideosphere = a system of language that is functioning, i.e., that has
the power to last: the duration of a system doesn't prove
its "truth" but precisely its "endurance," which is to say,
the quality of its functioning, the performance of its
language as engine → one must pay attention to the power of
the durable or (I'd rather say) of the indefatigable.
1. Within the ideosphere, the indefatigable language, the
indefatigability of language, its infinite perpetuation
somehow stands for the very hardness of power: it's the
inexorable: the language that "runs," that one can't "pray."
Don't forget that in Latin (even if it is just an
etymological coincidence that I overinterpret): dicto:
repetitive = to repeat, to say in insisting, and to
prescribe, to [Blanchot, Conversation, 75] order → dictator → beautiful citation
of Blanchot on the terrifying perpetuation of language as a
properly fascist ordeal: "Someone who speaks without pause.
(Let us recall Hitler's terrible monologues.) And every head
of State participates in the same violence of this
dictare, the repetition of an imperious monologue, when
he enjoys the power of being the only one to speak and,
rejoicing in possession of his high solitary word, imposes
it without restraint as a superior and supreme speech upon
others".51
2. Extending the concept of ideosphere, one could say that
each subject has his own = idiosphere: the linguistic
system never stops speaking inside his head. This
inexhaustible aspect of language impresses me: it is, coming
from man, something like a perpetual adoration of language.
→ Two notations, one serious, the other comical: [Tao,
Grenier, 23]
a. Tao: "Why do we have to distinguish entities by means of words that
express nothing but subjective and imaginary views? If you
start naming and counting, you will never stop, the series
of subjective views being infinite",52
a view that within myself I find profoundly true: there is a
weariness of the language, and, like all weariness, it is
endless: language as a kind of hard labor.
[Sophistes, 59]
b. Funny Greek expression: there was égcheirogastor:
who feeds himself with his own arms → Aristophanes (Birds,
v. I694): "there is in Phanè <...> a busy nation of workers
of the tongue: égglattogastor"53
(it is about the sycophants, those who uncover the figs, who
denounce the thieves of figs). Dantesque feeling that we are
all language workers and that even our inner language
ceaselessly feeds off a permanent state of denunciation of
the others, of the other, of ourselves, in short: of error →
the human subject as implacable record keeper → the
perpetuation of language would thus coincide with what the
German romantics called the demonic character of
life {Nachtseite der Natur).54
Boehmian theme of the hidden, obscure life, perpetual
movement with neither brake nor goal, life that runs after
itself, eats away at itself, devours and flees [Boehme, 200] itself; upset life, life of endless, unenlightened
despair = quaal: "atrocious torment that is at the
bottom of being and of life".55
3. Out of quaal comes the deliverance through Nirvana
(Schopenhauer)56
→ this feeling of a driven langage is infallibly
coupled with that of a suspension of
[Blanchot, xxiii] language. Such a suspension (if seriously fantasized)
is suicidal (cf. Nirvana): Blanchot:
How had he come to
will the interruption of discourse? And not the legitimate
pause, the one permitting the give and take of conversation,
the benevolent, intelligent pause, not that beautifully
poised waiting with which two interlocutors, from one shore
to another, measure their right to communicate. No, not
that, and no more so the austere silence, the tacit speech
of visible things, the reserve of those invisible. What he
had wanted was entirely different, a cold interruption, the
rupture of the circle. And at once this had happened: the
heart ceasing to beat, the eternal speaking drive stopping.57
→ The interruption of language: big theme, big mystical request:
mysticism oscillating between "positing" language (naming):
cataphasis, and lifting it, suspending it: apophasis.58
(All my life long, I've been living this back-and-forth:
caught up between the exaltation of language [pleasure
taken in its drive] [ → whence: my writing, my speaking are
glued to my social being, since I publish and I teach] and
the desire, the great desire for a respite from language,
for a suspension, an exemption).
Roland Barthes
was one of the most influential critics and philosophers of
the twentieth century. His works include Mythologies,
S/Z, A Lover’s Discourse, and Camera Lucida.
Many echos of Barthes thought occur in the writings of
Baudrillard. On Barthes writing Baudrillard has said: He “is
someone to whom I felt very close, such a similarity of
position that a number of things he did I might have done
myself, well, without wishing to compare my writing to his”.59
Endnotes
1
The Neutral: Lecture Course at the College de France
(1977-1978)
by Roland Barthes. Text established, annotated, and
presented by Thomas Clerc under the direction of
Eric Marty; translated by Rosalind E. Krauss and
Denis Hollier. New York: Columbia University Press,
2005. Reprinted here with permission is the sixth
session. IJBS expresses our sincere gratitude to
Columbia University Press for this reprint. See:
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/cup
Marty has retained the symbols used by Barthes. For
example, those used to condense a logical
construction [→ ≠ ]. Marty has also remained
faithful to the classical philological style of
endnoting and we have reproduced these here. Marty’s
endnotes are also extremely insightful and serve to
fill in gaps contemporary readers may not be aware.
The “Supplement” or Barthes reflections on comments
or letters he has received on the previous lecture
during the week, appears at the beginning of the
lecture in italics.
2
“I was thinking of this imense world of gray which I
knew in Paris...” opening sentence of Henry Miller.
Quiet Days in Clichy (1956; reprint, New York:
Grove, 1987).
3
The poem is “Improvisio”, by Manoel Bandeira. It’s
opening lines are: “Cecilia, es liberrima e exacta /
como a concha./ Mas a concha e excessiva materia / E
o materia mata”. (Poesia e prosa [Rio de Janeiro :
Editora Nova, Aguilar SA, 1993], p. 275.
4
For the meaning of this symbol [ → ] (see
endnote 1).
5
One of the sections for Barthes seminar for
1973-1974 was devoted to the “socio-semiological
analysisof the human voice” (Oeuvres Complètes,
3:55-56. One of his unused cards mentions Edouard
Garde, La Voix, Que-sais-je ? no. 627 (Paris:
Presses Universities de France, 1960); Roland
Barthes Bequest/IMEC Archives. During the
discussions at the Cerisy conference, Barthes would
say: “I don’t know my voice” (Prétexte: Roland
Barthes. College de Cerisy, Ed. Antoine Compagnon
[Paris: Union Générale d’Edition, 10/18, 1978], p.
251; (See also endnote 39).
6
See André Green, “L’Objet (a) de Lacan: Sa loquique
et la théorie freudienne”, Cahiers pour l’analyse,
no. 3 (1966).
7
Editors note:
Marty’s establishment of the text leaves room for
Barthes’ margin notes at the left, I have placed
these in square parentheses “ [ ] “ as in this
instance. In the original text they appear on their
own in a separate left margin.
8
Roland Barthes, “Neither-Nor Criticism”, in
Mythologies, Translated by Annette Lavers (New
York: Hill and Wang, 1977) p. 81 Oeuvres
Complètes, I :161.
9
Maché: “combat”. See Roland Barthes “The Image”
(1978) in The Rustle of Language, Translatred
by Richard Howard (New York: Hil land Wang, 1986)
pp.350-358: Oeuvres Complètes, 3:870.
10
See “Partitif – Partitive”, in Roland Barthes,
Roland Barthes, Translated by Richard Howard
(Berkeley, University of California Press, 1977), p.
144, Oeuvres Complètes, 3:205.
11
Jacques Fauvet, editor-in-chief of Le Monde
from 1969 to 1982.
12
Hegel remarks somewhere that all facts and
personages of great importance in world
history occur, as it were, twice. He forgot to add:
“the first time as tragedy, the second as farce”
(opening sentence of Marx’s Eighteenth Brumaire of
Louis Bonaparte [1852], New York: International
Publishers, 1963. p. 15).
13
Barthes first saw Brecht’s Mother Courage and her
Children: Achronicle of the Thirty Year’s War
(1939) in 1955, performed in Paris by the Berliner
Ensemble (see “Mother Courage Blind”, in Critical
Essays, Translated by Richard Howard (Evanston
Illinois : Northwestern University Press, 1972) pp.
33-36The French director Antoine Vitez staged it at
the Théâtre des Amandiers in Nanterre in January
1973.
14
The New Philosophers : a group of then young French
philosophers (Alain Finkielkraut, André Glucksmann,
Bernard-Henri Lévy, etc.) who put first on their
agenda the denunciation of Soviet and Soviet-like
totalitarianism, as well as the defence of the
dissidents. In a preparatory notecard, Barhtes
writes that “everybody attacks them ” (Roland
Barthes Bequest/IMEC Archives).
15
See page 48 of the text (Session of March 11,
1978) for more on Cortot: Roland Barthes. The
Neutral: Lecture Course at the College de France
(1977-1978) by Roland Barthes. Text established,
annotated, and presented by Thomas Clerc under the
direction of Eric Marty; translated by Rosalind E.
Krauss and Denis Hollier. New York: Columbia
University Press, 2005:48.
16
The École Freudienne de Paris, the
psychological society Lacan founded in 1964, after
his break with the International Psychoanalytical
Association and its official French representative,
the Société Française de psychanalyse. Lacan was
going to dissolve the École Freudienne in 1980
(Elizabeth Roudinesco, Jacques Lacan and Co,
Translated by Jeffrey Machlman [Chicago, University
of Chicago Press, 1990], p. 373 ff.).
17
“The cheif contribution of Taoism to Asiatic life
has been in the realm of aesthetics. Chinese
historians have always spoken of Taoism as ‘the art
of being in the world’, for it deals with the
present – ourselves” (Kakuzo, The Book of Tao,
p. 44).
18
“The indivisible pointof the present, so hard to
understand, even for philosophers” (Barthes quotes
Michelet’s 1827 translation of Princples de la
philosophie de l’histoire, traduits de la scienza
nuova, by the Itlaian Philosopher Giambattista
Vic, republished in Jules Michelet, Oeuvres
Complètes, ed. Paul Viallaneix [Paris,
Flammarion, 1971], I:486).
19
Okakura Kakuzo, The Book of Tea (1906,
reprint, Rutland, Vt.: Tuttle, 1956), pp. 46-47.
20
“Jiu-Jitsu, the Japanese art of self defense,
owes its name to a passage in the Taoteiking” (Ibid.,
p. 46).
21
Ibid.
Editor’s note:
Marty uses the angle brackets < > to mark Barthes
own interventions into the text.
22
Zeami, On the Art of the No Drama: The
Major Treatises of Zeami, translated by J.
Thomas River and Yamazaki Masakazu (Princeton, N.J.
Princeton University Press, 1984), p. 75.
23
Ibid., 75. Zeami’s French editor, René
Sieffert, adds a footnote: “This principle defines
the stylization of the gesture proper to the No”
(Zeami, La Tradition Secrète du No, Ed. René
Sieffert [Paris: Gallimard-UNESCO, 1960], p. 115.
24
“In terms of general stage deportment, no matter how
slight a bodily action, if the motion is more
restrained than the emotion behind it, the emotion
will become the Substance and the movements of the
body its Function, thus moving the audience”
(Kakuzo, The Book of Tea, p. 75). (See
endnote 19).
25
Barthes already cited this saying of the
Spanish cellist Pablo Casals in Roland Barthes, p.
157; Oeuvres Complètes,
3:215. (See endnote 10).
26
Carlos Castaneda, The Teachings of Don Juan: A
Yaqui Way of Knowledge (Berkeley: University of
California Press, 1968), p. 7.
27
Lao-tzu, quoted in Jean Grenier, L’Esprit du Tao
(Paris: Flammarion, 1973), p. 30.
28
Charles Baudelaire, Les Fleurs du Mal,
Translated by Richard Howard (Boston: Godine, 1982),
poem 28, p. 33.
29
In the posthumous XIXe siècle section
of his Histoire de France, Michelet comments on the
portrait of Napoleon that M. de Pradt gave in
L’Ambassade à Varsovie: de Pradt, he writes, was
“the first to show, to make one understand the
unbelievable contradictions, the clashing contrasts
of this character. What Vigny, Mario Proth, would
later express by means of the word that would become
so successful: comediante, tragediante, de
Pradt expressed it with a risqué but true word:
Jupiter Scapin” (Historie du XIXe Siècle, in
Ouevres Complètes, Edited by Paul Viallaneix
[Paris: Flammarion, 1982], 21:638. Scapin: the main
character of Molière’s farce, Les Fourberies de
Scapin.
30
See page 16 of the original text:
(Session of
February 18, 1978) for more on Cortot: Roland
Barthes. The Neutral: Lecture Course at the
College de France (1977-1978) by Roland Barthes.
Text established, annotated, and presented by Thomas
Clerc under the direction of Eric Marty; translated
by Rosalind E. Krauss and Denis Hollier. New York:
Columbia University Press, 2005:16.
31
Maria Van Rysselberghe, 1945-1991, vol. 4 of
Les Cahiers de la Petite Dame: Notes pour
l’histoire authentique d’ André Gide
(1918-1951), Cahiers André Gide no. 7 (Paris:
Gallimard, 1977), p. 107 (September 30, 1948).
32
Léon Bloy, L’Invendable (1904-1907),
vol. 2 of Journal (Paris: Murcure de France,
1958), p. 315 (October 1905).
33
Maurice Blanchot, The Infinite
Conversation, translated by Susan Hanson
(Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1993),
p. 305.
34
Pistis: confidence in the other,
faith.
35
Barthes’s neologism for the “founders of
language” (see Roland Barthes,
Sade/Fourier/Loyola, translated by Richard
Miller [New York: Hill and Wang, 1976], p. 3,
Oeuvres Complètes, 2:1041.
36
“This is clearer still in the moulding
process; the duality of time in this process is
marked by the duality of the mould and the object
that is moulded. Before the cement is poured in, the
object’s parts are already placed in the correct
order, but the force maintaining this order is
external to them, it is the solidity of the mould”
(Gaston Bachelard, The Dialectics of Duration,
translated by Mary McAllester Jones [Manchester,
U.K.: Clinamen, 1950], p. 93). These two examples
(the crate and the mould), are quoted from Eugène
Dupréel’s Théorie de la consolidation: Esquisse
d’une théorie de la vie d’inspiration sociologique
(Brussels, 1932), p. 11, devoted to what Dupréel
calls the “consolidés de succession”.
37
“The establishment of the sign, i.e.,
classification (maya)” (Roland Barthes,
The Empire of Signs, translated by Richard
Howard [New York: Hill and Wang, 1982], p. 74;
Oeuvres Complètes, 2:797; idem, The Pleasure
of the Text, translated by Annette Lavers and
Colin Smith [New York: Hill and Wang, 1973], p. 27;
Oeuvres Complètes, 2:1508; “maya,
classification of Names (of faults)” (idem, A
Lover’s Discourse, translated by Richard Howard
[New York: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 1978], p.357;
Oeuvres Complètes, 3:494). “Classification is
precisely Maya” (Alan W. Watts, The Way of
Zen [New York: Pantheon, 1957], p. 39).
38
Quoted in Bachelard, The Dialectic of
Duration, p. 94. (See endnote 36).
39
The conference on and around Barthes
organized by Antoine Compagnon at Cerisy-la-
Salle from June 22 to 29, 1977 (see Prétexte:
Roland Barthes). That’s where Barthes read “The
Image” (see The Rustle of Language, p. 353;
Oeuvres Complètes, 3:870); (See also endnote 9).
40
Pascal, fragment 552 (Brunschvicg) (“Mystery
of Jesus”), in Pensées, translated by W. F.
Trotter (London: Dent, New York: Dutton, 1949), p.
149.
41
Charles Baudelaire, Artificial Paradise,
translated by Ellen Fox [New York: Herder and
Herder, 1971], p. 19.
42
Bloy, Journal, 2:359. (See endnote
32).
43
Bacon, Novum Organum, book I, aphorisms
38-62, in The Advancement of Learning and Novum
Organum, edited by James Edward Creighton (New
York: Colonial, 1900), p. 319 ff.).
44
Joseph de Maistre, “ Study on Sovereignty”, in
The Works of Joseph de Maistre, translated and
edited by Jack Lively (New York: Macmillan, 1956),
p. 108.
45
Idem, Les Soirées de Saint Petersbourg, seventh
dialogue, in The Works of Joseph DeMaistre,
p. 245. (See Ibid.)
46
Idem, Quatre chaptaires sur las Russie, in Textes
choisis et présentés par E. M. Cioran
(Monaco, Rocher, 1957), p. 60.
48
André Glucksmann, La Cuisinière et le mangeur
d’hommes : Essai sur l’Etat, le marxisme, les camps
de concentration (Paris: Seuil, 1975). Glucksmann
was one of the “New Philosophers” Barthes mentioned
earlier.
49
Title of chapter 13 of Jules Michelt’s Satanism
and Witchcraft: A Study in Medieval Superstition,
translated by A. R. Allinson (New York: Citadel,
1946), p. 119. See Barthes, “La Sorcière”, in
Critical Essays, translated by Richard Howard
(Evanston Ill.: Northwestern University Press,
1972), pp. 103-115.
50
On one of his notecards, Barthes refers to Benjamin,
for whom, as he puts it, violence starts “there
where a foundation (or maintenance) of law is at
stake: the State, the political general strike”. See
Walter Benjamin, “Critique of Violence", translated
by Edmund Jephcott, in 1913-1926, vol. I of
Selected Writings, edited by Marcus Bullock and
Michael W. Jennings (Cambridge : Harvard University
Press, 1996), pp. 236-252).
51
Blanchot, The Infinite Conversation, p. 75.
(See endnote 33).
52
Chang-tzu, quoted in Grenier, p. 23 (See endnote
27).
53
Aristophanes, The Birds, in The Peace, The
Birds, The Frogs, translated by Benjamin Bickley
Rogers (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1924),
vv. 1694-1696. A footnote of the tranlator comments
on the word égglottogastor: “A parody on
encheirogastor, men who fill their bellies by
the labour of their hands” (i.e., craftsmen).
54
Nachseitte der Natur: German, “the nocturnal
side of nature”. Alexander Koyré. La Philosophie
de Jacob Boehme [1929; reprint, Paris: Vrin,
1979], p. 200 n. 2).
56
See Artur Schopenhauer, “On The Doctrine of the
Denial of the Will-to-Live”, Chapter 48 of The
World as Will and Representation, translated by
E. F. J. Payne (New York: Dover, 1966), 3 :427-428.
57
Blanchot, The Infinite Conversation, p.
xxiii. (See endnote 33).
58
“Affirmation” and “negation”: these words belong to
the lexicon of negative theology about which Barthes
spoke earlier. See p. 17 of Session of February 18,
1978: Roland Barthes. The Neutral: Lecture
Course at the College de France (1977-1978) by
Roland Barthes. Text established, annotated, and
presented by Thomas Clerc under the direction of
Eric Marty; translated by Rosalind E. Krauss and
Denis Hollier. New York: Columbia University Press,
2005:17.
59
Jean Baudrillard. Mike Gane (Editor). Baudrillard
Live, Selected Interviews. London: Routledge,
1993:204.