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Really the End of Culture?

chronicle · Saturday, July 13th, 1996 · 4 min read

Ever since my schooldays I have been sympathetic to the proposition that great art is no longer conceivable, that we are reaching the  end of culture . This is perhaps the simplest way of defining  postmodernity . But until recently I assumed that the energies that had fueled  high culture  would be diverted into an increasingly vital  popular culture . Although the cultural sphere would no longer be the locus of the most profound discoveries concerning the human–this being reserved for  Generative Anthropology –it would continue to be productive of new forms. I wonder now if this attitude does not make too much of the distinction between high and low. There is indeed a difference: high culture problematizes the  ritual legacy of sacrifice  that popular culture simply adapts to its resentful ends. But this adaptation too is an  anthropological hypothesis , and when such hypotheses become irrelevant, the source of their creativity is cut off. At the end of what our schoolbooks call the  1900s , we seem to be witnessing an across-the-board decline in cultural creativity. Could this be the real  end of culture ? The most vital of the popular arts is  music , and the most profound influence on American popular music has long been the  Black minority . But as my fellow cultural pessimist  Lewis Weinberg  pointed out to me recently, this music has largely stagnated over the past decade in its obsession with  hip-hop . This mode eliminates the reconciling forces of melody and harmony–music proper–in favor of the driving energy of  rhythm , the paroxystic expression of  minority resentment . Our other musical forms–pop, jazz, rock, punk–are reduced to quotations from the past. This provides a model of popular culture reduced to ritualistic lowest terms: the  purgation of passions  by  visceral repetition . Proust or Porn? Marcel Proust ‘s 3000-page novel is of all narratives the most profoundly concerned with transcending the repetitious structure of narrative itself. The repetition of a tiny detail of experience such as the taste of the famous  petite madeleine  reveals the self’s lost unity. Desire is one, Proust tells us, but only a lifetime of desire can teach that to us. A la recherche du temps perdu  suggests a model of the esthetic where the purgation of desire is deferred as long as possible. In contrast is the  porno film , where the narrative is reduced to a quasi-ritualized sequence of sexual acts in fifteen-minute sequences. The marketplace gives evidence that this repetitious action is effective in stimulating and purging desire. Nor does the existence of thousands of such films prevent new ones from being shot; even minimal unpredictability attracts our desire. If high culture found its culmination in the work of Proust and his contemporaries in  high modernism , today the porno film seems an increasingly appropriate model for culture in general. Both  minimalist music  and  rap  share its ritualistic emphasis on sameness rather than variance. So does the  genre fiction  that increasingly dominates the literary market. (The evolution of  cinema  in the direction of  virtual reality suggests a new direction for culture that I’ll discuss in a later column.) The cultural has come full circle from ritual origins through secularization to a  secularized version of ritual  in which the sacred is assimilated to a physical process. The Western conception of  incarnate divinity  is challenged by a Hindu-Buddhist emphasis on the  practices of self-purgation . The  porno model  does not imply the death of culture. On the contrary, by linking culture directly to its roots in desire, it explains why culture endures beyond its “end.” In high culture, desire is a source of knowledge; but the biblical expression “carnal knowledge” reminds us that sexuality provides a minimalist epistemology of its own. But this model is more problematic than first appears. Pornography is  shameful , not because it is sinful in the eyes of our religious traditions, but because it is just a bit  ridiculous . Expressions like  faire la bête à deux dos  mock the return to animality that sexual relations require. But that desire, seen from without, is  always  ridiculous is the central principle of  the comic . A culture that no longer troubles to hide its purgative function is thus supremely open to  comedy . Just as we need culture to purge our desires, we need comedy to affirm that we are not dupes of the cultural stereotypes to which we submit ourselves. The more our “serious” culture approximates the porno model, the more intense its comic antithesis becomes. Is it a coincidence that Saturday night cable fare seems almost equally divided between  soft-core pornography  and  satire –which is often directed at the pornography? Cultural irony  is powerful only when it takes not itself but  its victims  seriously. Otherwise it becomes like the  nouveau roman , whose narrative uncertainties are finally less disturbing than  boring . There is no static position from which to look down with contempt upon the futile repetitiousness of desire. Far better if  postmodern self-referentiality  can make us  laugh . We are condemned to take our desires seriously, but not so seriously as to prevent us from laughing at our seriousness. And the laughing is generally far more entertaining than what it mocks. So perhaps we haven’t reached the  end of culture  after all. Enjoy this column? Yes No Δ

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