Friday, May 29, 2020
Lyotards idea of the Sublime - Literature Essay Samples
In seeking to define the post-modern moment in his essay ââ¬ËAnswering the Question: What Is Postmodernism?ââ¬â¢, Lyotard uses and extends the Kantian theme of the sublime to serve as an entry point to conceptualize the ââ¬Ëunrepresentableââ¬â¢, that which is considered a standard feature of Postmodernism. The ââ¬Ëunrepresentableââ¬â¢ along with ââ¬Ëexperimentationââ¬â¢ is contrasted with the demand for unification backed by Realism in a period of slackening; even the conception of the sublime under Modernism and Postmodernism undergo certain changes. This essay will attempt to examine how Lyotardââ¬â¢s essay, with its emphasis on the sublime, panders out to qualify the nature of Postmodernism, if such an exercise be feasible at all. Moreover, the essay will try to capture the transitions that occur in the means of representations and the resulting changes in their societal positioning (and relevance). Any investigation into the Lyotardian understanding of the sublime will have to begin with the list of issues voiced against experimentation in the artistic world. As Lyotard terms it, it is a ââ¬Ëperiod of slackeningââ¬â¢, where ââ¬Ëthe call for order, for identity and for securityââ¬â¢ is growing stronger; it is being propounded that the intellectuals should be coerced to follow a ââ¬Ëcommon way of speaking, that of the historiansââ¬â¢. The reason is quite simple; for many intellectuals (Lyotard primarily quotes Habermas), the splintering of culture and its separation from life has been a problematic move, since it has only left the experts to engage with the ââ¬Ëindependent specialitiesââ¬â¢. Art in its multiple forms has been alienated from the public, and so, it is imperative to ââ¬Ëreturnââ¬â¢ it to the public. In order to do so, Habermas suggests that arts and the experiences they provide should ââ¬Ëbridge the gap between cognitive, ethical and political discoursesââ¬â¢ and open up the way to a ââ¬Ëunity of experienceââ¬â¢. Here, the transition being sought is from the splintered discourses of the neoconservatives to the project of achieving a ââ¬Ëunity of experienceââ¬â¢; the latter is an attempt to resume the Enlightenment project of knowledge and liberation. For Habermas, there is perhaps no need to abandon the project of liberation but recreate a ââ¬Ënew liberatory possibilityââ¬â¢ by the fusion of the three rationalities (cognitive, ethical, and political). However, Lyotard questions the possibility of the unity of experience that Habermas suggests; for Modernity had proved that such unity cannot be possibly brought about. Any art that seeks such unity is then a part of the Realist tradition, which has brought about the demands for ââ¬Ëorder, unity and securityââ¬â¢. Realism had sought to communicate (ââ¬Ëfind a publicââ¬â¢) which was itself a farcical exercise, since it didnââ¬â¢t take into account the capitalist effect on human experience. Capitalism had enabled the ââ¬Ëderealisation of familiar objects, social roles and institutionsââ¬â¢ so much so that realistic representations were far away from reality; they only existed to evoke nostalgia and create occasions for mockery to run amok. For Lyotard, even the basic role of Realism is questionable, for if it is to ââ¬Ëcapture realityââ¬â¢, photography can be more ââ¬Å"realisticâ⬠than a painting and so, be a challenge to the latter. However, it is not so. The role of Realism is quite different from what it is perceived as; for it is not merely to reflect reality per se. It is a carefully crafted movement where art is modified and presented as reality in a non-volatile ethos and where the audience is coerced into a non-questioning space. Such mass conformism isnââ¬â¢t a desirable state of being; Lyotard would rather than art questions the very rules on which it is based on (received from its predecessors). Similarly, if art were to questions Realism per se, it would require something as simple (and complex) and the Kantian sublime, which helps destabilize and defamiliarize the realistic(real). One of the disturbing features of Realism is that it cements the real for the audience, where there is hardly any room for further questioning. Similarly, even eclecticism isnââ¬â¢t quite different from Realism and so, has to be discarded though it has been thought of as a feature of Postmodernism. Rather, the sublime works as the key to the problems of Realism and enables us to question it. Lyotard borrows the idea of the sublime from Kant and further its definition for his own purposes. The aesthetic of the sublime validates the form in which modern art (and the avant-garde) exist; it helps qualify ââ¬Ëexperimentationââ¬â¢ and the ââ¬Ëunrepresentableââ¬â¢ as essentials features of the postmodern. To begin with Kantââ¬â¢s philosophical concept of the sublime, it is the mixed feeling of pleasure and pain that is experienced by any individual in face of situations termed ââ¬Ëgrandââ¬â¢ or of considerably great magnitude; it is to be contrasted with the idea of beauty, which is related to the form of the objects. On the contrary, the sublime is boundless and formless; it causes pain since it is frustrating to realise the limited capability of our faculties to grasp the sublime object. One also derives pleasure from the attempt made. With this, Lyotard ties together all these qualities of the sublime to term it the ââ¬Ëunrepresentableââ¬â¢ in terms of its duality and how it opens up new possibilities of thought. Even the newer form of representation through art isnââ¬â¢t unproblematic, for ââ¬Å"how the representation worksâ⬠changes as we move from the Modern to the Postmodern. Art of the Modern did present the ââ¬Ëunpresentableââ¬â¢, as by painting a white square on a white background. But it was presenting it negatively as it tried to avoid figuration or representation. It only enables its audience to ââ¬Ëseeââ¬â¢ by ââ¬Ëmaking it impossible to seeââ¬â¢; there is always a nostalgia attached to it. Postmodern art, on the other hand, looks forward and celebrates what the unpresentable has to offer; it traces its roots from Modernism but constantly questions it. The Modern had ââ¬Ëallowed the unpresentable to be put forward only as the missing contents; but the form, because of its recognizable consistency, continues to offer to the reader or viewer matter for solace and pleasure.ââ¬â¢ On the contrary, the Postmodern ââ¬Ëputs forward the unpresentable in p resentation itselfââ¬â¢ which imparts a stronger sense of the unpresentable. If so, the way the Postmodern invokes its sublime is the way ahead to ââ¬Ëwage a war on totalityââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëbe witnesses to the unpresentableââ¬â¢. Moving away from Art as a communication medium, Lyotard seeks to use the sublime to question pre-existing structures of Realism and to make way for newer ways of thinking. The sublime thus helps validate the form in which modern art (and the avant-garde) exist; it helps qualify ââ¬Ëexperimentationââ¬â¢ and the ââ¬Ëunrepresentableââ¬â¢ as essentials features of the Postmodern. Works Cited à · Lyotard, Answering the Question: What Is Postmodernism? (Translated by Regis Durand) à · 20th WCP: Lyotard on the Kantian Sublime. 20th WCP: Lyotard on the Kantian Sublime. N.p., n.d. Web. 15 Feb. 2017
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.