Sometimes the life we live is not completely our own. My life, for example, is simply too full of moments
when my own personal experience, in addition to being my own, is so
representative of just about everyone’s
experience of the Human Condition, that I become, even if merely for the blink
of an eye, Everyman.
Dream a Little Dream
of Me. The other morning my wife informed me that I, yet again, woke her up
in the middle of the night with another of my dream-world lectures. Now I am obviously
dead
asleep at the time and have to trust my wife that she is in fact telling me
the truth, but apparently I hold forth as only a sleeping philosopher can—on
the damnedest subjects. So my wife, with a giggle, was telling me that on this
particular middle-of-the-night my theme was “Wielding his sword,” in which I
was discoursing on some Epic Hero, as is my wont, but then the point of my
oration (so I am assured, anyway) was that this hero’s “sword” was not really
his sword, but rather a metaphor for the hero “wielding” some other, more
untoward, object of incision.
Even
afterwards, as I read this paragraph aloud to her, she reminded me in a very
sniggering and distinctly ungracious tone, that she had told me the story
truly, and that the sword was not a sword at all, but some interestingly comparable
human body-part apparently gone berserk.
So this is
a reflection about piggyback worlds; worlds that contain a surplus of realities
none of which are ever exactly what they seem; worlds within worlds, or more
precisely, worlds in which every other world carries along with it, inseparably
and almost indistinguishably, still
more other worlds – piggyback worlds. Like the Story told by his wife to the
dreamer, who dreamed unawares the Story of an Epic Hero holding a sword which
may also have been a sword, but which was certainly perceived by the Dreamer (and
giggling wife) to be something rather more. Intruding realities from piggyback
worlds are always somewhat vague, their boundaries fluid and unclear; and
sometimes these essences of a piggyback sort will be less, but most of the time
they will be more than they seem. The piggyback nature of our Worlds is nicely
reflected in the classic onion metaphor where, peeling back layer after interminable
thin layer of enfolding skins of meaning, we discover a rather small and not
terribly tasty “tendril-like” root hiding at the core.
“Being” Invisible.
There are many things that I do in the world. I do the things that a teacher
does, a husband, a dog-owner, a philosophical blogger, a hardy olive-tree
planter, an untalented house painter, a laborer, a traveler—all of which are
noun descriptors of a verbalizing sort being used appositionally, which is to
say that they point back to the subject/individual in the midst of some function.
The verbalizing nouns may then also be strengthened afterwards by adding any
number of adjectives, depending on how much obfuscation is desired.
These
verbalizing nouns describe, in fact and in deed, how I am performing my life;
but they also collectively beg the question as to whether there is any “tendril-like”
“being” invisibly stashed underneath all these actions… some true and authentic
“I” that has integrity and inherent worth apart from these myriad life-actions.
How are we to interpret or understand the individual body-being who is acting
out the functions of living? Some philosophers, like Heraclitus,
clearly think that the individual, as such, is not a “thing” separable from its
acting; indeed, the individual self has no distinct or unique being apart from its performance of it-self. Therefore,
Heraclitus famously writes, “What
we do habitually is who we are or who we become.” What- or who-ever I think
I am is inseparable from what I do, an observation that has, in
Heraclitus’ eyes, almost as much importance metaphysically as ethically. This
observation about individual authenticity,
of course, will resurge many centuries later to become the “tendril-like” root out
of which the tree of modern existential thought will spring.
As I think
of all the things I “am,” what I come up with are the typical interpretive anthropological categories
of sex, gender, race, religion, color, etc., etc., etc. (remember to pronounce
this like Yule
Brenner in the King and I just
for the fun of it!), which are really not “me,” but rather piggyback groups
that normalize qualities of all who are such-as-me. On this view I “am” by
analogy.
Alternatively,
as I think of all the things I “am,” I peel back an almost infinite number of layers
of all the things I can be or become as a result of my actions. Through my
actions I can position my-doing-“self” in a variety of narrative categories or Archetypes,
as Hero, Anti-hero, Villain, Rascal, or Savior. In this case I “am”
allegorically.
“Me” by
analogy or “me” by allegory – in either case Heraclitus called it correctly:
“me” equals the sum of all the piggyback versions of me-interpreted and
me-doing or me-having-done.
The Acts of Living.
What a philosopher Shakespeare was… and a phenomenologist of Heraclitean
persuasion to boot! Remember Jaques in As
You Like It, (Act 2, Scene
7) who translates Heraclitus’ vision of man into theatrical terms:
“All
the world's a stage,
And all the men and women merely players:
They have their exits and their entrances;
And one man in his time plays many parts,
His acts being seven ages.”
And all the men and women merely players:
They have their exits and their entrances;
And one man in his time plays many parts,
His acts being seven ages.”
Theater (or film or literature) is a wonderful analogy for
the piggyback nature both of Human Understanding and of the Human Condition. In
the best of cases, the analogy is informative precisely because theatrical
re-presentation tends to blur the lines between the layers of our onion-worlds
as easily as it blurs the lines between genres, and it seldom makes any
pretense of finding some “tendril-like” essence at the center.
The winner
of the Golden Bear at this year’s Berlin International Film Festival was the
Italian film, Cesar Must Die (Cesare deve morire). What makes this film so challenging, which is
also precisely what makes it so very interesting, is that it seems deliberately
to confuse the “edges” between metaphor, allegory, social philosophy, cinema, and
straightforward theatre. This film, which used real (and some formerly real dangerous)
prison convicts as the actors, can be construed to be a meta-type applied-reworking
of Shakespeare’s Julius Cesar; or to
be a docu-drama, although in a radio interview aired on France Inter’s Cosmopolitaine (Sunday, 21 October 2012) the director brothers
denied this interpretation. Likewise, Cesar
Must Die can also be considered an updating of Shakespeare’s piece, i.e., a
recasting of the Julius Cesar narrative in the modern arena for modern viewers;
or, again, as a statement about social politics and the penal system. So what
are we members of the audience actually supposed to do with this narrative? How
are we intended by the directors to interpret this Story, and is there only one
interpretation, or even a best interpretation? Are we supposed to seek some
kind of meaningful application to our lives through this narrative, or to
become informed on issues of social justice and redemption? Or are we simply to
let the visual event wash over us as “entertainment,” with no more thought or value
than we might attribute to a Mozart divertimento?
This brings
us to one of the very interesting problems associated with theatrical devices,
like metaphor, in marketing and advertising, where the goal is to get the
dollars out of our pockets and into someone else’s bank accounts. Oh, the
dangers of irony on this stage of our world, which becomes even more pocked
should advertisers
become “playful” with the already blurry lines between motivated information,
i.e., information with an agenda, and deliberate dis- or misinformation.
Sometimes the life we are living is not fully our own. The
edges of all of our lives, and the identity of the various personae we
play in the course of those lives, are not clear and distinct essences, as a Descartes
might have said, but rather are full of blurred lines and abandoned layers of onion
peels. Heraclitus gives the preferential reading on the question of our human authenticity:
ours is more of a fire-sort of reality. It is inevitable, then, that the roles
we play will cross over the boundaries of tragedy and comedy, farce and drama,
and that all of our lives will be plagued by interpretations and
misinterpretations, hearings and mis-hearings, takings and mis-takings, errors
and corrections.
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