Dialectical Despair
Dialectical Despair
ISSN 0084-9537
No. 20 Article 18
Number 1 (2015)
Recommended Citation
Hansen, Catherine. "Dialectical Despair: Gherasim Luca, Gellu Naum, and the Hazards of a Non-Oedipal Life." Dada/Surrealism 20
(2015): n. pag. Web.
At some point in the year 1945 in Bucharest, the Romanian surrealists Gherasim
Luca and Gellu Naum had a quarrel. It was certainly one of many: by this time,
the Romanian surrealist group had been active for several years, was in the middle
of a prolific publishing streak, and had already seen certain fault-lines deepen
between its members. Since their formation as a group they had had little to no
communication with Paris or with the wartime surrealist exiles in New York,
Breton included. Their last message, as Naum put it, from Breton was the poem
Pleine Marge, and the last major document of surrealist thought of which they
could have been aware was Breton and Trotskys 1938 Pour un art
rvolutionnaire indpendant, which positioned itself not only for a proletarian
revolution but against a growing totalitarian current in the USSR. In Romania, in
the meantime, the Romanian Communist Party backed by Stalin was gradually
increasing its political and economic power, as well as its power of censorship.
This particular dispute centered around the following question: in a society
based on division, oppression, and inequality, is love really possible?
This had little to do with whether, in the existing state of things, human beings
could meet, court, or make love. Two individuals could of course fall in love, get
married, and lead a comfortable and happy life one in which, as Luca puts it,
they execut cteva sute de micri senzuale i sentimentale care le fixeaz
limitele (Inventatorul 27) execute the few hundred sensual and sentimental
motions that define their limits (Inventor 27). 1
1 In citations from Inventatorul iubirii I rely both on Julian and Laura Semilians translation
and on my own translations. Citations from Inventor are from the Semilians version.
What Naum, Luca, and the other group members wondered was whether love
is a transformative force that anticipates the free human community for which the
surrealist revolution longs and strives, or whether love, entangled within an
existing system of power and possession, is already sapped at the root. Could love
break free of these few hundred motions, of the ready-made structures of human
relation available to it? The stakes of this problem were high, for it opened upon a
series of larger, more general questions: can we act to change the foundations of
society if we ourselves are fatally meshed within it? Can we speak in criticism of
this society if the latter creates the very conditions of possibility for our utterances?
Is a position of true critique, of true exception, even possible? And if not, what
then?
The funny thing, though, about Luca and Naums difficult dispute is that they
both give the same answer, and for similar reasons, to its central question: yes and
no. Upon closer look, there is actually very little to distinguish their positions in
the matter. They both make clear, in one way or another, that they stake everything
on the possibility that a revolutionary life, and that love as a state of exception, can
be realized in the here and now, in the very teeth of the present order. But they
both also have their doubts. Both often recount moments of terrible despair, of
total loss of confidence in their cause. The heart of the matter, actually, is not the
question itself but the fact that each accuses the other of wallowing in this very
despair and of turning and fleeing the obstacle of the existing social system
and its pervasive power. Even Naums harsh critique of Lucas non-oedipal
theory of love and voluptuously revolutionary living, for example, ultimately
resolves into a principled objection to what, to Naum, appear to be episodes of
bleak hopelessness, without answer or egress, which punctuate Lucas non-
oedipal works. As in the popular image of a somnambulist on a tightrope who
keeps his balance only so long as he stays asleep, the two describe a narrow,
delicate path to be walked between an inescapable world that is and an impossible
world to come one that is very vulnerable to failures of faith. 2 No matter how
mad the love, no matter how revolutionary the life, there are moments when they
wake and nearly fall.
Inventatorul iubirii is the title of the full volume and also the title of its first section. All in-text
citations of Inventatorul or Inventor refer to the full volume and not necessarily to the first
section, though the text occasionally refers specifically to individual sections. (It should be
noted that Lucas own later French version of Inventatorul iubirii differs in many respects
from the Romanian original.)
2 In his Second Manifesto of Surrealism, Breton describes Surrealism as this tiny footbridge
over the abyss, one that must always remain without handrails (Manifestoes 146).
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the more fully elaborated in the immediate post-war era. It would be useful then,
before discussing their dispute in detail, to set forth some of the major
characteristics and reference points of Lucas approach, having it stand in for both.
Luca had been drawing the outlines of a non-oedipal alter ego for some time before
1945, when he unleashed a group of texts all rooted within his developing theory.
This was the year that Inventatorul iubirii (The Inventor of Love) was published,
along with Un lup vzut printro lup (A Wolf Seen Through a Loupe) and in French,
Le Vampire passif (The Passive Vampire). A few of the short and long texts that
appear within these volumes were drafted much earlier, or recycled from works
that would never see print. These essays, theoretical tracts, and prose poems treat
Oedipus as a convergence of familial and socio-cultural power and oppression.
For the most part they do not engage in detail with the Oedipus complex in its
Freudian elaboration, but abstract from Freuds work certain clear positions of
attack.
Lucas Oedipus stands first of all for memory, for the past in its determination
of the present, and for the irremediable and complementary facts of birth and
death. It is the trauma of birth as well as the fear of death that accompanies it.
Oedipus also stands for castration, which for Luca includes everything that
reduces an experiential or perceptual content to a fixed identity or significance. To
reduce for example, as psychoanalysis does, the manifest and concrete images of
a dream to a few well-worn symbols and latent patterns, a few traumatic
memories, is an act of castration.
Oedipus is a repressive, censoring power residing not only in social categories
and familial structures but also in the very biological make-up of the human. Its
world is not only one of ready-made love affairs, of fatal complexes, of limits
but also of women and men (Inventor 19). In Inventatorul iubirii Luca writes,
Detest acest fiu natural al lui Oedip, ursc i refuz biologia lui fix (Inventatorul
14) I detest this natural son of Oedipus, I hate and refuse his fixed biology. In an
exhibition catalog composed with fellow group-member D. Trost, Luca writes that
their comportment vis--vis the exterior world is one of a refus de regarder
comme une ralit objective laxiomatique condition humaine, mme sous ses
aspects apparement immuables (Graphies colores) refusal to regard the axiomatic
human condition as an objective reality, even under its apparently immutable
aspects. 3 The axiomatic human condition is the oedipal condition; it is everything
accompanying a January 1945 exhibition at Sala Brezoianu in Bucharest in which only Luca
and Trost participated. An additional note on refusal: Luca exclusively uses the formulation
non-oedipal rather than anti-oedipal, the formulation more familiar perhaps to readers
of Deleuze and Guattari. On occasion in this essay I do use the term anti-oedipal, having
anti stand in for simple negation as opposed to dialectical negation, a distinction discussed
in detail below.
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that hinders the free and transformative expression of love, down to the gendered
body itself.
The struggle against Oedipus is not only a personal but also a political matter,
for Oedipus is what undermines any attempt at revolutionary change. Luca writes
for example that a married proletarian, or one who admires his father, will fail in
his revolutionary efforts because he carries the microbe of the family within his
blood. And because all of society teems with such microbes, it is nearly impossible
not to become infected in some way: ones efforts to escape Oedipus are, for the
most part, oedipal. This is what Luca calls the vicious circle. The imagination itself
is pinioned by a biologia crispat a omului (Inventatorul 24) cramped human
biology, and even dreams may not be enough, since they are withered by the
programmatic smallness of waking life, and thus impoverished can no longer
enrich it. It is not simply that all revolutionary impulses will fall in one way or
another into oedipal triangulations or hierarchies, but that they have already fallen,
just as love, despite itself, is already its own oedipal parody.
It is because the vicious circle operates so effectively that there is no sense in
asking whether one should first change life and then transform the world, or
the other way around. 4 As far as Luca is concerned this is a misleading chicken-
and-egg problem. Instead one must act diffusely, simultaneously within life and
world: liberarea omului o vd strns legat de simultaneitatea soluiilor i s nu
mi se spun c trebue fcut mai nti revoluia social i numai dup aceia o vom
face pe aceia moral, etc. . . . (Inventatorul 24) I see the liberation of man
inexorably connected to the simultaneity of all solutions, and please dont tell me
that the social revolution must be accomplished first and only then the moral one,
etc. . . . (Inventor 25). What this simultaneity implies is that among the most
variate aspiraiuni revoluionare . . . trebue s-i fac loc chiar cele mai deprtate
ca felul de a ne pieptna, de a sruta, de a privi (Inventatorul 24) disparate
revolutionary aspirations . . . we must make room for the most diverse, such as the
manner in which we comb our hair, kiss one another, gaze at each other (Inventor
26). 5 And for Luca, the name of this diffuse, daily, and liberated means of being is
non-Oedipus.
The non-oedipal position is, however, one that refuses names first of all. In
passing moments, certainly, non-Oedipus experiments with various labels, or
gives himself over entirely to the states of being and modes of behavior associated
with them, but they dont stick. Lucas non-Oedipus will often speak the word I,
4 For these phrases I am thinking of the conclusion of Bretons 1935 Speech to the Congress of
Writers: Transform the world, Marx said; change life, Rimbaud said. These two
watchwords are one for us (Manifestoes 241).
5 See also Breton, in the Second Manifesto of Surrealism: I am in fact awaiting, not my day,
but, if I may use the term, our day, the day when all of us will recognize one another by this
sign, that we do not swing our arms when we walk the way the others do have you noticed,
even those of us most in a hurry? (137).
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Nothing about him is natural. There is no image of the human or even of the
biological human body to which he conforms. Instead certain objects, organs,
functions, or capabilities graft themselves upon him briefly, then dissolve to be
replaced by others. He walks the streets wearing on his back a pipe organ whose
keys are pressed by vultures and bats, or wearing lungs pinned to his chest like a
medal, or wearing a third eye on his forehead. 6 Luca might have found more than
one precedent (though, as he declares, he will accept no precedents or
predecessors) for this performative freedom of the first person pronoun. In
Lautramonts Les Chants de Maldoror, for example, the presiding voice declares:
Sur ma nuque, comme sur un fumier, pousse un norme champignon, aux
pdoncules ombellifres. . . . Mes pieds ont pris racine dans le sol et composent . . .
une sorte de vgtation vivace . . . qui ne drive pas encore de la plante, et qui nest
plus de la chair (uvres 151-52) From my nape, as from a dungheap, sprouts an
enormous toadstool with umbelliferous peduncles. . . . My feet have taken root in
6 These examples are taken from Un lup vzut printro lup (A Wolf Seen Through a Loupe),
which was published separately from Inventatorul iubirii. In the Semilians translation,
Inventatorul and Un lup appear in a single volume; passages from Lup are cited as Inventor.
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the soil forming a sort of perennial vegetation not quite plant-life though no
longer flesh (Maldoror 142). What was once his (or its) body is home to toads,
chameleons, hedgehogs, and jellyfish who have come to replace the organs and
parts. The self-transformations of non-Oedipus also recall the personages
described by the Romanian writer Urmuz, a powerful inspiration to the Romanian
avant-garde of the twenties, thirties, and beyond. These figures are composed of
bits of clothing and debris, sewer gratings, sideburns, piano lids, and dead insects,
and drip with oil and soot, like sordid bionic suburbanites.
But Lucas non-Oedipus is more fluid and more permeable, always releasing
and receiving flows, charges, breaths, and subtle magnetisms. His is a
phenomenology of arousal; everything happens on the plane of excitation and
erotic anticipation. What occurs on this plane is not only fully real but is an open
door toward other potential realities. In Le Vampire passif he writes:
I eat, breathe, drink, think, reject, dress myself and move aphrodisiacally.
I keep every cell of my being in a state of permanent excitation, excited
and exciting at the same time, the zones traversing my being are genital
and pregenital, erotic and criminal. . . . (Passive Vampire 89) 7
He roams the streets preying upon everyone and everything in the world and
being preyed upon in turn, exquisitely sensitive to all premonitions, solicitations,
impressions and coded messages. He is like a more than ordinarily lucid
sleepwalker: everything he encounters enters his dream and is transformed by it.
But sometimes, Luca-as-non-Oedipus loses his balance. And when he does,
memory, identity and common sense rush, like the ground, to meet him. Or rather,
as he recounts it, he falls away from the enchanted non-oedipal circle that had
made him immune from such things, and the delirious, amphibious world in
which he moves sharpens into focus as simple pain: a ceaseless physical
oppression within my chest, as if someone were taking bites from it. What he
feels in such moments is:
7 With Lucas les zones qui traversent mon tre one cannot help but think of certain
passages from Deleuze and Guattaris Anti-Oedipus, for example the following: The breasts
on [Judge Schrebers] naked torso are neither delirious nor hallucinatory phenomena: they
designate, first of all, a band of intensity, a zone of intensity on his body without organs. The
body without organs is an egg: it is crisscrossed with axes and thresholds, with latitudes and
longitudes and geodesic lines, traversed by gradients marking the transitions and the
becomings, the destinations of the subject developing along these particular vectors (19).
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8 The Romanian word banderol can refer to either a small pennant or streamer, a band of
paper surrounding a wrapped package or a new book, or an armband or brassard used to
indicate military rank, political affiliation, or physical disability.
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same point: that it is possible to recognize the truth of this affirmation without
making oneself helpless before it. It is Luca, he says, who is afraid to confront it
directly and flees into non-oedipal sophistries and solipsisms. Again, the actual
content of the non-oedipal project, similar in so many respects to Naums own
experimentations, does not seem to be at issue.
In Gellu Naums Zenobia, published in 1985 but working in some ways as a
summation of his life and thought as a surrealist, a person named Gellu
encounters a woman, both uncanny and innocent, who like a medium is sensitive
to and can occasionally manipulate the worlds dark and invisible lines of force.
Together the two live through the power of their disponibilitate: their availability,
receptivity, openness, in the sense in which Breton uses the word disponibilit in
LAmour fou. 9 Theirs is a world of serenity and of mysterious certitudes; they play
upon the strings of chance and cultivate special states (stri) that straddle inner
and outer, subjective and objective domains. Like Luca-as-non-Oedipus, Gellu
stands to the side of the certainties and categories of social life. As he shouts at a
nice young woman from the Department of Classical Philology at the University
of Bucharest, nu m amesteca n nici o tagm, nu uita . . . s nu-mi pui etichete,
m sufoc, dac rostesc un nume din crile nenorocite pe care mi le aduci mi i
gseti o etichet; . . . s tii c nu triesc pentru i contra, ca n capcana voastr . . .
S tii c eu snt n afar (Zenobia 1985, 108-109) dont put me in any category
whatsoever . . . dont put labels on me, Ill suffocate, if I utter a name from those
miserable books that youre bringing me, youll immediately find a label for me
. . . remember that I dont live pro and con, like in your trap. . . . Remember that I
am outside (Zenobia 1995, 78). But just as for Luca, there is another side to this coin.
In Zenobia it is called revana: the retaliation, the requital. It is what happens when
a state, or a confidence, or a vision has been too powerful like a rip current
flowing back seaward. Naum describes it as a void, a panic, a spiritual catalepsy,
or rather a divorce between my consciousness and my factual existence where
each plane seemed capable of literally pulverizing any temptation to escape from
their common game. The nature of this revansa general is abruptly to take and
occupy the place of the poetic miracle in the world (Zenobia 1995, 119-120).
An early example of this experience is when Gellu and Zenobia are
wintering in a tiny hole in a concrete dam in a swamp:
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I was angry, I didnt have the least confidence in myself, in all I had seen,
I felt like crying, I felt like telling Zenobia: Cant you see how miserable
I am, in this darkness and mud? Where is the worlds love, where is your
love? Cant you see that the smelly plastic youre wearing is cold, and
you dont even love me, if you did you would do something to help me
get over my fit of reason and distrust, you would rescue me from this
hollow, and we too would live, like human beings, next to a warm
radiator, we would ride the elevator, or we would go into a bright store,
I would buy myself Irish tobacco for my pipe, not like this, in poverty,
with my broken boots and my wet and frozen socks, cant you see? . . . I
touched my forehead soiled with dirt and I felt like dying. . . . (Zenobia
1995, 18-19)
Zenobia, who herself hovers somewhere between phantasm and flesh, at first
fails to speak words of comfort to him. Though she so often weaves around him a
protective aura, even she is sometimes vulnerable to his doubts. In one later
episode, for example, Gellu muses: Dac la nceput muncile ei silnice, ntr-un
sordid atelier de decoraiuni . . . mi se preau menite s acopere o via prea
strlucitoare, acum vedeam n ele un fel de resemnare (Zenobia 1985, 128-129) if,
at first, her hard labors in a sordid novelty shop . . . seemed meant to cover too
brilliant a life, now I saw in them a sort of resignation (Zenobia 1995, 92). But when
Zenobia finally breaks her silence, she tells him to calm down. You were between
circles, she says, on the edges, in the void, its all over now.
In those moments when Gellu and Zenobia find themselves in opposition, it is
because of his transient departure from the circles; in experiences like the one in
their winter burrow, he has fallen outside or between these circles. The two
spend a great deal of their time connected, quite literally, at the shoulder, but
outside the circle they are no longer so. In Inventatorul iubirii and elsewhere,
Luca speaks of a medium-lover who is also, upon occasion, attached to his
shoulder. 10 This lover allows herself to be frantically consumed by the flames of
the magic circle within which the nefarious acts of my thought processes unfold.
Mediumistically moved from afar, she creates and sends to him objects which
are cu desvrire insesizabile dac nu sunt privite dinuntrul acestui cerc,
10 See for example in Un lup vzut printro lup: the woman I seek is close by my shoulder
(Lup 7), or I raise you upon my shoulder. . . . (Lup 12). (Inventor 69, 71).
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to the original state of things, to the original common ownership, but the
institution of a far higher and more developed form of possession in common
(Engels 135). The negation of negation is not a return but a sublation; and it is no
sophistical contortion of thought, but a general law, like a physical law of motion,
that presides over everything from barley seeds to calculus to the upheavals of
history, by which every determinate state contains the embryo of what will
succeed or abolish it.
This is not to say, however, that just any kind of abolishing or negating works
in this way. Someone might point out for example that I negate the sentence, the
rose is a rose, when I say: the rose is not a rose; and what do I get if I then negate
the negation and say, but after all the rose is a rose? (Engels 136). Nothing much,
to be sure. It would be, Engels adds, painfully infantile to do so. Negation in
dialectics is not simply saying no and then saying yes again or, for that matter,
declaring something null or destroying it. One must:
[T]his negation of negation can lead nowhere except to the false position
of the simplistic negation of the landscape, of nature, of biological love,
of the complexes, of poetry, all in their most common sense, the sense
against which G.L.T. is still at war. 13
Naum also calls Andr Breton to his assistance in the matter. Inventatorii
banderolei is strongly informed and guided by Bretons Second Manifeste du
surralisme (1930), going so far as to adopt its militant, irascible tone. This second
manifesto is, among other things, an apologia for a decisive surrealist turn to the
social and to a questioning of the social regime under which we live, I mean of
the acceptance or the nonacceptance of this regime (139). Here Breton proclaims
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Since there should be nothing, in other words, that limits the negation of
negation to a spiraling but bilateral movement between points A and B, however
dialectical this movement may be, Breton would like to relay the rose through as
many letters of the alphabet as possible before returning it transformed to the
garden.
As far, however, as Luca and Trost are concerned in their 1945 critical
manifesto Dialectics of the Dialectic, one might as well not return the rose to the
garden at all. Here the two argue that surrealism should never at any moment rest
upon its laurels or roses, or fall into any habits and patterns. Surrealism cannot
remain in a continually revolutionary state unless it practices a permanent
negation of negation; it must exist in continual opposition to the whole world and
to itself and immediately trample underfoot any discovery or desire which
does not lead to a new discovery or desire, in a chain of constant invention. There
is never any return: Ces tats de ngation qui senchanent concrtement,
absurdement et dialectiquement lun lautre, nous font rejeter le pass dans son
entier (Dialectique 16) each state of negation, linked one to another in a concrete,
absurd and dialectical way, causes us to reject the past in its entirety (Dialectics
35-36). What for Luca and Trost is a ferocious engine of destruction and invention
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seems, despite Naums accusations, to have little to do with Engels rose, blinking
in and out of existence.
What, then, of the idea that all of Lucas insurrectional energy, his non-oedipal
refusal of fixed biology and ready-made love, is no more than a simple negation,
a matter of empty wishful thinking? For this is what Naum would like his readers
to believe, and this he feels is the source of Lucas despair. It would be like the
despair of a child who wishes his parents didnt exist and keeps finding that, in
fact, despite everything, they do. The rose is not a rose, is a rose, is not a rose: an
alternation of simple negation and simple despair. It is not my goal primarily to
show that Naum is wrong about Luca that, at least here, he has sorely
misunderstood him, whether deliberately or not. What I would like to show is how
Naums argument about negation returns decisively to the question of love
outlined above.
It does no good for the child to negate his parents, or for a revolutionary,
positioning himself as anti-oedipal, to negate the order of things, because in both
cases the two are connected. The child exists because his parents do and is a
product of their parenting, just as what is anti-Oedipus is a product of its oedipal
society. What is wrong with Lucas project, as Naum understands it, is that Luca
doesnt see this connection: he sees the individual and the social, the personal and
the historical, as two separate and immiscible spheres in confrontation, most often
to the detriment of the first. In such an arrangement, the most this isolated
individual can do is either accept the terms offered to him, or turn away with an
indignant no, or one that alternates between the no of private fantasy and the
no of despair.
But this situation is exactly the danger against which Luca consciously
struggles. To accept without question, he writes, that the biological rhythms of
humans may differ from the rhythm of historical liberation would force us to
manifestly recognize our powerlessness before the oedipal obstacle, would
make of the revolution a mere wish-fulfillment fantasy and would place an
impenetrable theoretical barrier between desire and its realization (Inventor 64). To
act upon the supposition that life rhythms and historical rhythms are out of sync
by positioning oneself as powerless would make a revolution only of the mind,
the imaginary and utopian mirror-image of an intractable reality, and would
demote desire to the status of a compensatory daydream. The real problem,
actually, is that they are in sync. It is not, he makes clear, that we are not in some
sense powerless. It is not that desire meets no obstacles to its realization. But the
key insight is that anti-Oedipus and oedipal society, 14 desire and its obstacles,
14 Breton calls it bourgeois society: a certain man, who sees himself as a revolutionary,
would like to convince us that love is impossible in a bourgeois society; some other pretends
to devote himself to a cause more jealous than love itself; the truth is that almost no one has
the courage to affront with open eyes the bright daylight of love in which the obsessive ideas
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imply each other. Lucas formulation of the vicious circle in which love, for
example, cannot act as a transformational force because its resources are no more
than those made available to it in the society against which it sets itself is already
a recognition of this connection and bears witness to its profundity. While a desire
that merely wishes the erasure of its obstacle takes the stance of simple negation,
the vicious circle holds the place of a negation of this negation, showing how this
first simple negation contains its own collapse. The danger, as Luca puts it, of
falling into a formal and logical despair is the danger of a simple negation in
which this fact is not recognized. To suffer from this formal and logical despair
is to helplessly wish that the obstacle didnt exist without realizing that one is part
and product of it.
If simple negation is precisely this helpless gesture or wish, then the negation
of negation is the realization, on the part of the one performing this gesture, that
he also negates himself in doing so. If society has to start all over again, so does
he.
Everything, writes Luca, must be reinvented, even oneself. In this way what
was once an obstacle is now an endless field of potential action. If simple despair
is a result of simple negation, then from the negation of negation follows dialectical
despair, which understands this first despair as part of the very structure of the
vicious circle, and which takes as its object this new field of action.
Something of this approach appears in Bretons Second Manifesto, which along
with LAmour fou deeply affected the work of the Romanian surrealist group as a
whole. Without despair, he writes and not despair as paralysis or resignation but
despair as a cry of revolt and insubordination it is impossible truly to believe in
the gleam of light that Surrealism seeks to detect deep within us (Manifestoes
126). Surrealist despair neither fully accepts nor fully rejects the state of things
which provokes this cry of revolt:
of salvation and the damnation of the spirit blend and merge, for the supreme edification of
man. Whoever fails to remain in this respect in a state of expectation and perfect receptivity,
how, I ask, can he speak humanly? (Manifestoes 180).
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Dada/Surrealism No. 20 (2015)
path which is, a path which we can show and help people to follow, one
can arrive at what people claimed was not . . . how do you expect us to
show any tenderness, even to be tolerant, toward an apparatus of social
conservation, of whatever sort it may be? That would be the only
madness truly unacceptable on our part. Everything remains to be done,
every means must be worth trying, in order to lay waste to the ideas of
family, country, religion. (Manifestoes 127-28)
There are at least two options that follow the initial cry of revolt. The first is to
start walking in the other direction, away from the obstacle, on the path of what
is not. This would be the path of simple negation and simple despair. The other
is, after the cry of revolt, to turn not away from but decisively back toward what
is, both rejecting and following its path. If in the first negation desire and revolt
appear as fantasies operating in parallel and in counterposition to what is, in the
second negation the negation of negation they place themselves back within
the world. Or rather, they recognize that they are already there. If the inter-
implication of revolt against society and society itself, of anti-Oedipus and
Oedipus, is what makes the vicious circle so formidable, this is also what might
disarm it. For if there is such a connection, such an inter-implication, then desire
does not stand somewhere in the sidelines crying out its opposition, but is already
in the game, right at the very heart of present reality. This is what Luca is saying
when he writes that realizarea relativ-absolut a dorinelor n mijlocul societii
contemporane surprins la grania propriilor ei contradicii, e singura care ne pune n
contact cu societatea fr clase (Inventatorul 115) the relative-absolute realization
of desire in the middle of contemporary society, surprised at the border of its own
contradictions, is the only means to get in contact with the classless society.
(Inventor 64). This takes place through a perpetual breach into the exterior
world. 15
Nothing at all, says Luca, love included, is possible be it breathing, using a
fork, smiling, or dreaming. There is no power of love that could stand separate
from the world and act, just as to abstract a fork from this world would make it
meaningless. 16 Nothing can take place in its fullness, for absolutely everything is
caught up in the same vicious circle. But this is not a cause for despair. It is not
15 He is saying, as Deleuze and Guattari might put it, that if desire produces, its product is
real. If desire is productive, it can be productive only in the real world and can produce only
reality (26).
16 Instead, Luca makes the fork a point of extraordinary and direct contact: I touch a fork
and unleash an entire network of possibilities, a very complicated machine [main] is set in
motion as if the fork were a factory of questions, of impulses and spectres, a door opens
inside it leading toward a hallway. . . . He goes on to speak of the strictly forbidden
entrance of that set of dentures, the back-door exit of the window or the service door entrance
of the stones, look, all the possibilities of doing exactly the opposite of everything that
imposes itself upon us (Inventor 98-99). Translation slightly modified.
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Dada/Surrealism No. 20 (2015)
love versus the world but love in the world that simultaneously rejects and follows
the path of what is. Lucas (and Naums) amorous revolutionaries, like
somnambulists, dream the revolution as they walk down the crowded streets of
the real. For Luca it is by dispernd disperarea despairing [his] despair,
accepting that nothing can be done and still doing, thus finding an escape from
the ferocious teeth of negation that he manages an unhoped-for capture and
devouring of the real (Inventatorul 116; Inventor 65). He believes that where there
is a command there is a defiance; where there is a determination there is a
negation; and where there is a prison there is an exit.
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