Par-delà la Poésie

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    Par-del la posie: Blinding Immanence and theSystem:

    Poetry and the Unknown in Georges Bataille'sCritique of Hegel and Kojve

    1. Hegelian reflections in fun-house mirrors.

    The echoes of Alexandre Kojve's voice, delivering his famed lectures on

    Hegel at the Sorbonne, from 1933 to 1939, are still with us, like a ringing in the

    ear. Likewise, Jean Hyppolite's translation of Hegel's Phnomenologie des

    Geistes, published in 1939, is still readily available; only in recent years have

    new translations appeared. Moreover, both Kojve's Introduction la Lecture

    de Hegel and Hyppolite's Gense et structure de la Phnomlogie de l'esprit de

    Hegel, published merely a year apart,1 remain among the most influential

    interpretations of Hegel, not only in France, but the world over. It would be an

    interesting and time-consuming endeavor to articulate a full genealogy of their

    influence; however, such an effort is beyond the scope of this essay.Nevertheless, the broad diffusion and popularization of their respective

    readings have distorted the philosopher G.W.F. Hegel and his thought to a point

    beyond recognition. Unrecognizable, now, the distorted Geistof Hegel haunts

    contemporary thought as a spectral image cast through one of these lenses.

    Moreover, Kojve's rather sensationalistic reading, which projected the

    development of spirit in the Phnomenologie onto the screen of History, has

    been so powerful that the seductive power of his reading has had such

    dramatic effects as to restart the 'locomotive of history.'

    The influence of these two interpretations of Hegel has played a larger

    role in the history of contemporary philosophy; both Kojve and Hyppolite

    1 Kojve's lectures were collected/transcribed by Raymond Queneau and were published in asecond edition, including Kojve's annotations, in 1947; Hyppolite's Gnse was published in1946.

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    introduced elements of Heideggerian phenomenology into their readings of

    Hegel's Phnomenologie. Both constructed historical readings of the

    Phnomenologie most directly from Kojve's predecessor at the Sorbonne, his

    fellow migr Alexandre Koyr, as well as the contributors to his journal,

    Recherches Philosophiques. What is most important here is the turn toward

    phenomenology, in its contemporary incarnation, and the surreptitious

    introduction of the Heideggerian conception of language as the 'intelligibility of

    being-in-the-world... expressed in discourse. The totality of significations of

    intelligibility is put into words.'2 This influence is attested to in Kojve's lectures

    by the overtly Heideggerian terminology he used when speaking of language;

    for instance, in his infamous, protracted footnote regarding the 'end of history,'

    in which he writes 'The definitive annihilation of Manproperly so-called also

    means the definitive disappearance of human Discourse (Logos) in the strict

    sense... there would no longer be any [discursive] understanding of the World

    and of the self.'3 Hyppolite's interpretation of Hegel's concept of language is

    relatively more faithful to his text, but is also inflected with the idea of

    Discourse in Heidegger. For instance, he writes, 'The function of language is

    precisely to say the I, to make the I itself a universal. Thus, language is a

    moment of the spirit; it is the logos, the middle term of intelligences... That

    universal self-consciousness which results from the alienation of the specific

    self is precisely what is to be realized. And language alone can realize it.'4 Thus,

    in both trajectories, language is inextricably bound up with intelligibility, the

    meaningful world, individuality and mediate understanding.

    Among the auditors of Kojve's lectures, Georges Bataille was, by all

    2 Martin Heidegger, Being and Time, Trans. Joan Stambaugh, Albany, SUNY Press, 1996. 34,

    p. 151.3 Alexandre Kojve, Introduction to the Reading of Hegel, Trans. James H. Nichols, Jr. Ed. Allan

    Bloom, Ithaca, Cornell University Press, 1980. p. 160n. Hereafter, IRH.4 Hyppolite, Genesis and Structure, p. 403.

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    accounts, among the most consistently in attendance. Although Bataille

    maintained a close friendship with Kojve, he was hardly the uncritical Kojvian

    that he has frequently been charged with having been.5 Such arguments

    neglect first of all the issues Bataille raised in a letter written to Kojve, a mere

    two days after the latter's lecture of December 4th 1937. Furthermore, the

    assertion that Bataille 'considered himself a Kojvian as much as a

    Nietzschean and perhaps more,'6 is problematic in light of the position from

    which Bataille critiques Hegel, and even more so in light of a series of

    'Propositions,' written at some point prior to 1952, which speak for themselves:

    '1. Circular thought is the only plausible thought. To be of one's own time is

    quite simply to be a stooge. 2. But circular thought must begin not from a

    proposition but from the ignorance that precedes it, and it culminates in non-

    knowledge as well. 3. All mystical positions are shortened circles, therefore the

    movements of non-knowledge are intellectually short. 4. My position is the

    one that is opposed to Hegel-Kojve as 2 and to 3 as Hegel.'7 He thus

    indicates that his understanding of Hegel was not one of a doctrinaire Kojvian,

    but rather that of one who had come to read Hegel closely through the

    mediation of Kojve. It is my intent, in the present essay, to elucidate the

    central role assigned to language and poetry in Bataille's criticism of Hegel. It

    will be seen that Bataille was ultimately most critical of Hegel's actual position

    on language, and that the central axis of his critique of both Hegel and Kojve

    is their reliance upon the mediations of discursive language and closure of the

    system of knowledge. Moreover, consideration of the Science of Logic will

    5 This assertion is made, for instance, in Allan Stoekl, 'Recognition in Madame Edwarda', inBataille: Writing the Sacred, Ed. Carolyn Bailey Gill, London, Routledge, 1995, pp. 77-90.

    6 Stoekl, 'Recognition in Madame Edwarda', p. 77.7 Georges Bataille, 'Aphorisms for the System', The Unfinished System of Non-Knowledge,

    Trans. Michelle Kendall and Stuart Kendall, Minneapolis, University of Minnesota Press, 2001.p. 167. Hereafter: US.

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    ultimately shed light on Bataille's particularly courageous challenge to Hegel's

    system courageous, for the outcome is known in advance.

    2. Bataille's Game: Ungraspable Reality.

    Across the cover of the first edition ofL'Exprience Intrieure (Gallimard,

    1943), there appeared a band bearing the words:par-del la posie, or, in

    another language, beyond poetry.8 These words, along with those printed upon

    an insert in the 1943 edition (OC-V 422/IE 169),indicate a privileged position

    occupied by poetry in Bataille's thought, despite the fact noted by his

    biographer, Michel Surya; that prior to the publication ofL'Exprience

    Intrieure, 'Bataille had never had recourse to poetry (except as a teenager,

    none of which was published: of all the genres he took stock of, poetry

    remained the one he neglected. Not only did he neglect it, he violently opposed

    it.'9 This is to say that Bataille's writings on poetry and, by the same token,

    literature, above all do not take their object as uncritically given, and neither

    does he valorize poetry and literature, tout court, but rather a particular use of

    language manifest in specific situations. Above all and from the beginning,

    Bataille's perspective closes off the possibility of making poetry or literature

    into transcendent, distinct objects of study; instead, they are given the

    privileged capacity to bring forth the indistinct, the unknown and the immanent

    by means of language. This, perhaps, may be that which is indicated by the

    phrasepar-del la posie: that poetry and literature are privileged insofar as

    they point beyond mere language, a beyond which is not to be awaited, but

    rather to be experienced in the blinding flash of a moment

    8 Georges Bataille, InnerExperience, Trans. Leslie Anne Boldt, Albany: SUNY Press, 1988, p.83. Hereafter: IE. Georges Bataille, Oeuvres Compltes V: La Some athologique, 1, Paris,Editions Gallimard, 1973, pg. 422. Hereafter: OC-V. Both Bataille's Oeuvres Compltes and

    English translations, where they exist, shall be cited throughout. Where an Englishtranslation does not exist, translations are mine.

    9 Michel Surya, Georges Bataille: An Intellectual Biography, Trans. Krzysztof Fijalkowski andMichael Richardson (New York and London, Verso, 2002, pg 322

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    It is uncertain how one might situate the passage that follows the phrase

    par-del la posie in terms ofL'Exprience Intrieure and numerous other

    theoretical and literary pieces, written during the nineteen-forties. There is a

    quite marked shift in Bataille's thought, of which L'Exprience Intrieure was

    the first expression that was published under his own name. For this and other

    reasons, we may read these words printed on this insert and those inscribed on

    the band of the volume, as more than mere ornamentation. The text of the

    insert begins as follows:

    We are perhaps the wound, the sickness of nature.

    It would be necessary for us in this case and moreover possible,'easy' - to turn the wound into a celebration, a strength of the sickness. Thepoetry in which the most blood would be lost would be the most forceful. Thesaddest dawn would announce the joy of day.

    Poetry would be the sign announcing the greatest ruptures. (OC-V 422/IE169)

    In the original manuscript ofLe Coupable, we find nearly identical lines,

    crossed out,dated January 24th, 1943, concluding the penultimate chapter of

    the book, La Chance (OC-V 554). Furthermore, the word blessure used in the

    same sentence as 'nature' directs our attention to Bataille's letter to Kojve of

    December 6th, 1937, which is reproduced in an edited form as an appendix to

    Le Coupable.10 It is thus not at all surprising that the text of the insert

    concludes with a meditation on Hegel:

    Beyond (Au-del) all knowledge there is non-knowledge and he who would

    become absorbed within the thought that beyond his knowledge he knowsnothing even were he to have Hegel's inexorable lucidity within he would nolonger be Hegel, but a painful tooth in Hegel's mouth. Would a sick tooth alone be

    missing from the great philosopher?(OC-V422-3/IE 169)

    He thus begins with the open wound in nature that we are, following Kojve's

    reading of Hegel; in which the negativity of desire is at once a manque d'tre, a

    loss of being, a wound in nature, but at the same time expresses itself in action

    10 Georges Bataille, Guilty, Trans. Bruce Boone, Venice & San Francisco, The Lapis Press, 1988.pp. 123-125. Hereafter: G. Georges Bataille, OC-V, pp. 369-371 & 562-565. The uneditedletter can be found in Georges Bataille, Choix de Lettres, Ed. Michel Surya, Paris, EditionsGallimard, 1997. pp. 131-136.

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    through the negation of given nature.This is a poetics announcing a rupture,

    but what rupture? It is the final paragraph that designates that beyond into

    which poetry irrupts: the non-knowledge that is beyond knowledge, beyond

    Hegel. It seems, therefore, that this obscure passage attaches not to

    L'Exprience Intrieure as an isolated work, but to the phrasepar-del la

    posie, itself, and as such brings into play other texts that were to appear

    under the aegis of this phrase,11 in particular, Le Coupable and La Haine de la

    Posie (re-published in 1962 under the new title L'Impossible).

    This is to say that the beyond to which poetry points is the unknown, that

    which is excluded in and expelled by Hegel's system. The reference to Hegel

    designates that this unknown is not some knowable phenomenon that could,

    with time, become known and expressed in the discourse of the Wise Man at

    the end of history. It is rather that which lies beyond the limits of discursive

    existence, which Michel Foucault writes, 'follows from the actual penetration of

    philosophical experience in language and the discovery that the experience of

    the limit... is realized in language and in the movement where it says what

    cannot be said.'12 To put it briefly, the poetry of which Bataille writes does not,

    and cannot, submit to formal definition or description. One might approximate

    by saying that it is nothing but the self-transgression of language aiming to say

    that which is irreducible to discourse. This would be correct, but reductive

    nonetheless. According to Bataille there is, rather, a radical heterogeneity

    between the reality and language, but at the same time, between the world

    and language there is a covert complicity: language, even literary or poetic

    language, is, in the first instance structured such that every 'existence is linked11 In notes associated with the manuscript ofMthode de Mditation, from 1945-6, we find one

    of Bataille's earliest plans for the republication of a number of his writings under the generaltitle Par-del la posie. (OC-V, 459-60)

    12 Michel Foucault, 'A Preface to Transgression' in Language Counter-Memory, Practice, Ed.Donald F. Bouchard, Ithaca, Cornell University Press, 1977, p. 51. Hereafter PT.

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    to language. Each person imagines, and therefore knows of his existence with

    the help of words. Words come to him in his head loaded with the multitude of

    human or non-human existences with respect to which his private existence

    exists. Being is mediated in him through words, which can only arbitrarily give

    themselves to 'autonomous being' and only profoundly as 'being in relation

    to'(OC-V 99).

    Such a role is not explicitly assigned to language in the Phnomenologie,

    but rather more so in Hegel's Science of Logic, wherein he writes

    Now the middle term whereby these extremes are concluded into a unity isfirst the implicit nature of both, the whole Concept that holds both withinitself... [second] ...since in their concrete existence they stand confrontingeach other, their absolute unity is also a still formal element having anexistence distinct from them the element... in which they enter into externalcommunity with each other... the middle term is only the abstract neutrality,the possibility of those extremes... In the material world water fulfills thefunction of this medium; in the spiritual world, so far as the analogue of sucha relation has a place there, the sign in general, and more precisely language,is to be regarded as fulfilling that function. (SL 1583)13

    But in the same movement, according to Bataille, words 'are themselves

    reduced to the state of evasions [of experience]; such is the work of discourse

    in us. And this difficulty is expressed in this way: the word silence is still a

    sound, to speak is in itself to imagine knowing; and to no longer know, it would

    be necessary to no longer speak'(OC-V 25/IE 13). To speak the word silence

    is to break it, and thus with experience; we avoid the unsettling effects of

    actual experience through language and thought.

    3. The Law of Language

    Before it becomes possible to properly discuss the poetic use of

    language, we must examine the concept of language at work, and in a larger

    context. As has already been mentioned, language is inextricably bound up

    with the world to such a degree that they are to a large extent structurally13 Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, The Science of Logic, Trans. A.V. Miller, New Jersey, The

    Humanities Press.

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    homologous. Bataille writes: 'Words we use them, we make use of them the

    instruments of useful acts. We could in no way have anything of the human

    about us if language had to be entirely servile within us. Neither can we do

    without the efficacious relations which words introduce between men and

    things'(OC-V 156/IE 135). Language thus mediates existence, but it does so in

    a specific modality: language is in the first instance used for instrumental ends,

    as an accessory to, or substitute for action. Thus language is fundamentally

    structured by its subordination to instrumental action and which orients

    language toward projects. Of this Bataille writes:

    Action is utterly dependent upon project... discursive thought is itself engagedin the mode of existence of project. Discursive thought... takes place withinhim beginning with his projects, on the level of reflection upon projects.Project... is a way of being in paradoxical time: it is the putting off of existenceto a later point.(OC-V 59/IE 46)

    Thus language is given structure and form by virtue of our engagement

    in the everyday world of action and projects. Insofar as we have situated

    Bataille's theory in terms of Hegel, the term Action ought to evoke the term

    Negation, by virtue of Hegel's definition of action as the negation of given

    being. Such negating action is the mediation that gives rise to language as

    such, and which according to Hegel results in 'language as the existence of

    Spirit. Language is self-consciousness existing for others, self-consciousness

    which as such is immediatelypresent, and as this self-consciousness is

    universal... It perceives itself just as it is perceived by others, and the

    perceiving is just existence which has become a self'' (PS 652).14 Which is to

    say that insofar as language mediates our existence, and language is

    structured by instrumental action, such linguistic existence dispossesses us of

    everything irreducible to language and which is not in service of some deferred

    14 Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, The Phenomenology of Spirit, Trans. A. V. Miller, New York,Oxford, 1977.

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    goal. Moreover, the thrust of Hegel's text is that by means of such language

    self-consciousness for selfand for others is unified in the universal I.

    We must continue a bit further into Hegel's text, for the paragraph that

    follows sheds light upon the linguistic calcification of the self:

    The content which language has here acquired is no longer the perverted, andperverting and distracted, self of the world of culture... [it] is law and simplecommand, and complaint ... Language, however, only emerges as the middleterm, mediating between independent and acknowledged self-consciousnesses; and the existent self is immediately universalacknowledgment... The content of the language of conscience is the self thatknows itself as essential being.... Universal self-consciousness is free from thespecific action that merely is... and this is made actual in language. (PS 653)

    This is to say that language as the law of action ceases to require action on the

    part of the self, but instead, action has already been aufgehoben into

    language. Thus language becomes the language of law; the law of language,

    which then constitutes universal self-consciousness by virtue of its having been

    interposed, as a middle term, between independent and acknowledged self-

    consciousness. Further, it was not at all by chance that the preceding citations

    are situated within the Phnomenologie immediately preceding the transition

    from Spirit to Religion, for Bataille writes 'Morality only touches this system [the

    empire] at the border where law is integrated. And the connection of one and

    the other is the middle term by which one goes from the empire to the outside,

    from the outside to the empire.'15 To cite Hegel once again, 'Order, which is the

    merely external determinateness of objects, has passed over into the

    determination that is immanent and objective; this is Law'(SL 1572).

    Language is thus submitted to the law of mediation, which is the law of

    useful action and the acquisition of knowledge. This is to say that language has

    always already internalized the structures of action, project and deferral.

    However, Bataille's entire theoretical apparatus is predicated upon the15 Georges Bataille, Theory of Religion, Trans. Robert Hurley, New York, Zone Books, 1989, p.

    68.

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    transgression of this law, in order to recover that which is lost in discursive

    existence. What is lost? Bataille writes that 'there subsists in us a silent,

    elusive, ungraspable part... We can only attain it or have it at our disposal on

    certain terms. They are the vague inner movements, which depend on no

    object and have no intent.' It is these interior states, not exterior objects, to

    which discursive thought is so woefully inadequate. Discursive thought, he

    continues, through a 'language which, with respect to the others, has the sky,

    the room, to which it can refer and which directs attention towards what it

    grasps is dispossessed, can say nothing, is limited to stealing these states

    from attention'(OC-V 26-7 /IE 14). Thus, at another point he writes 'If we live

    under the law of language without contesting it, these states are within us as if

    they didn't exist. But if we run up against this law, we can in passing fix our

    awareness upon one of them and, quieting discourse within us, linger over the

    surprise which it provides us'(OC-V 27/IE 14-5).

    But neither running up against the law nor bringing these states to

    attention is at all the same thing as contesting the law. But what would such a

    contestation be? Foucault notes that the term 'contestation' had been defined

    by Maurice Blanchot, Bataille's life-long friend, following whom Foucault gives

    the following definition:

    Contestation does not imply a generalized negativity, but an affirmation thataffirms nothing, a radical break of transitivity. ...contestation is the act whichcarries them all to their limits and... to the Limit where an ontological decisionachieves its end; to contest is to proceed until one reaches the empty corewhere being achieves its limit and where the limit defines being. (PT 36)

    What then would constitute a contestation of the law of language, of discursive

    thought? Bataille fully recognizes that if language serves as such a middle

    term, and 'each person imagines, and therefore knows of his existence with the

    help of words'(OC-V 99/IE 84), then it is not through a negation or abolition of

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    language that the law may be contested. The truth is that there is no way out.

    We have only language with which to contest language, and contestation itself

    becomes a project:

    The way out? It suffices that I look for it: I fall back again, inert, pitiful: the wayout from project, from the will for a way out! For project is the prison fromwhich I wish to escape (project, discursive experience): I formed the project toescape from project! And I know that it suffices to break discourse in me; fromthat moment on, ecstasy is there, from which only discourse distances me the ecstasy which discursive thought betrays by proposing it as a way out,and betrays by proposing it as absence of a way out. (OC-V 73/IE 59)

    And it is only experience that can ground such a contestation. For Bataille

    writes, 'words designate poorly what the human being experiences'(OC-V 50/IE

    38), and yet it is impossible to designate otherwise except with words. There

    must therefore be, if experience is to be communicable, a use of language able

    to articulate experience without effacing it in submission to the laws of

    discursive language. Bringing inner experience to language can only take place

    in the form of a project, but the expression of such experience that defies the

    ordinary use of words carries language to a limit. The key, here, seems to be a

    matter of turning project against itself, turning language against itself, for he

    writes: 'Nevertheless inner experience is project, no matter what. It is such

    man being entirely so through language which, in essence, with the exception

    of its poetic perversion, is project. But project is no longer in this case that,

    positive, of salvation, but that, negative, of abolishing the power of words,

    hence of project'(OC-V 35/IE 23). After the necessary discussion, we will again

    return to this poetic perversion of language.

    4. Middle Terms: Hegelian Language

    The unsettling images and middle termsto which poetic emotion has recoursetouch us easily. If poetry introduces the strange, it does so by means of thefamiliar. The poetic is the familiar dissolving into the strange, and ourselveswith it. It never dispossesses us entirely, for the words, the images (oncedissolved) are charged with emotions already experienced, attached toobjects which link them to the known.(OC-V 17/IE 3)

    Par-del la posie: we begin to get a sense for what this phrase signifies.

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    The beyond to which poetry impels us is the unknown expanses of interior

    experience that are closed off by discursive language and thought. And yet: if

    contestation means to carry its object to its limits, to the Limit, if poetry is not

    to fall into the mere formalism and aesthetics of 'poetic facility, diffuse style,

    verbal project, ostentation and the fall into the worst: commonness,

    literature... the same old rut'(OC-V 63/IE 49), it can only do so by first carrying

    the law of language to its limit, and this means overcoming Hegel by his own

    means. That is, Bataille must expose that 'there is in understanding a blind

    spot... [for] the nature of understanding demands that the blind spot within it

    be more meaningful than understanding itself,' which is, Bataille continues,

    that 'even within the closed completed circle (unceasing) non-knowledge is the

    end and knowledge the means. To the extent that it takes itself to be an end, it

    sinks into the blind spot. But poetry, laughter, ecstasy are not the means for

    other things. In the 'system,' poetry, laughter and ecstasy are nothing'(OC-V

    130/IE 110-1). This is to say that if, with Bataille, we argue that the Hegelian

    system always returns to the non-knowledge of sense-certainty, knowledge and

    language serve as means to that end, and are only secondarily mistaken for

    ends in themselves. They have always already been mere middle terms,

    bridging the gap between one form of non-knowledge and another.

    This phrase, middle term, begs further explication. It appears only

    intermittently in Bataille's texts and yet seems to occupy a central position with

    regard to the possibility of non-discursive language and thought. The phrase

    appeared in a similar context at least twice in Hegel's Phenomenology; once as

    already cited 'Language, however, only emerges as the middle term, mediating

    between independent and acknowledged self-consciousnesses; and the

    existent self is immediately universal acknowledgment;' and again, in an

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    earlier stage, in that of culture, once again providing order for language and

    thought: 'unity is broken up into two... sides... the unity appears as a middle

    term, which is excluded and distinct from the separated, actual existence of the

    sides; it has, therefore, itself an actual objective existence distinct from its

    sides, and has reality for them'(PS 509). These middle terms thus function to

    establish a linguistic order and, moreover, a linguistic order that isand more

    real, absolute and universal than its operands in their prior, disordered state.

    In 1437-8 of Hegel's Science of Logic, we find middle terms explicitly

    defined in a manner similar to Hegel's predecessors: they are defined as the

    mediate term of the logical syllogism, i.e. in this very rudimentary example, A

    -> B -> C, B serves as the middle term. Hegel, however, goes on to claim that

    'everything rational is a syllogism... [and] if reason is supposed to be the

    cognition that knows about God, freedom, right and duty, the infinite,

    unconditioned, supersensuous... the first question still remains, what it is in all

    these objects that makes them rational'(SL 1437). Regardless of our position

    regarding the premises of this argument, it is instructive to follow Hegel's line

    of thought into the next section. Here Hegel continues to write that 'the

    essential feature of the syllogism is the unity of the extremes, the middle term

    which unites them, and the ground which supports them... The expression

    middle term is taken from spatial representation and contributes its share to

    the stopping short at the mutual externality of the terms'(SL 1438). More

    generally speaking, for Hegel, middle terms constitute the unity of the

    particular and the universal, and hence, Bataille is indeed correct to speak, as

    he does, of God, Language and Reason as exemplars of middle terms, for, from

    the standpoint of the believer, they serve to establish an enduring unity of the

    individual and the universal.

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    It does not suffice to explicate the Hegelian definition, but, we must also

    pass by way of Alexandre Kojve's reading of Hegel to gain the full sense of

    Bataille's usage, for Bataille's conception of discourse presupposes that the

    following has been achieved.

    If man is truly and fully satisfied by what is... he himself ceases really tochange. The only desire which he can still have if he is a philosopher isthe desire to understand what is and what he is, and to reveal it throughdiscourse. Therefore Man... is definitively satisfied by the adequatedescription of the real in its totality which is given by the Science of the WiseMan... (IRH 192)

    Consequently, the middle terms have become fully realized insofar as absolute

    knowledge has been achieved, and would then mediate and give order to

    experience itself. This is so because, with the achievement of Absolute

    Knowledge, the unity of opposites becomes self-evident.

    In Bataille's version, middle terms are the means by which man attempts

    to bring order to the seething chaos that existence is, and in order to establish

    and guarantee selfhood, coherence, and autonomy. He writes with unusual

    clarity in a fragment appended to the second edition ofLe Coupable: 'human

    existence relies on a middle term... For when we grasp ourselves... we perceive

    our confusion and the deep dependence in which a confused nature holds us.

    Hence the necessity to relate to ideal middle terms, such as God or

    reason.', which are 'middle terms in this sense that each is related to

    confusion of some kind and to a graspable order inside the confusion'(OC-V

    376/G 129). Thus middle terms are so because they transform the confusion of

    existence into discursive order. Thus, it is no surprise that Bataille continues to

    write 'Reason is language opposing general forms and common measures to

    things, or at least to a confused nature; it is language opposing logical order to

    chance' (OC-V 378/G 131).The result, however, is ambiguous because

    confusion and chance cannot be completely removed from human existence,

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    even through the linguistic mediations of Reason and God. It is thus no surprise

    to read what follows:

    Man has doubled real things and himself with words that evoke them andsignify them and outlive the disappearance of the things signified. Put intoplay in this way, these words themselves make up an ordered realm, adding,to precisely translated reality, pure evocations of unreal qualities, unrealbeings... For the formless consciousness of things and oneself there issubstituted reflective thought, in which consciousness has replaced thingswith words. But at the same time that consciousness was enriched, words calling to mind both unreal and real beings took the place of the sensibleworld.(OC-V 378/G 131)

    But before the increase of autonomy resulting from this substitution of

    language for reality can exert any emancipatory power, 'man is led by

    language to situate this autonomy in a (logical and unreal) middle term, but if

    he gives reality to this unreality becoming it himself (incarnating it) the

    middle term he utilizes becomes in turn nature itself'(OC-V 380, G 133). As

    soon as middle terms double reality with words, emancipatory possibilities are

    put into play, yet the nature of language itself leads us to believe that all words

    have such reality that they supersede the sensible world itself. This includes

    the middle terms themselves they are included as the condition of possibility

    for linguistic reality as such. It is also important to note that in the same

    fragment, Hegel is frequently referenced, and in one particular instance

    explicitly challenges Kojve's reading. 'The identification of Hegelian reason

    with man is precarious and equivocal'(OC-V 380/G 132), and continues to argue

    that this identification would only be possible if Kojve's reading of Hegel was

    correct, and states that, of this he would only 'retain the basics' that is, a

    certain logic of the middle term.

    In Twilight of the Idols, Nietzsche wrote: 'I am afraid we are not yet rid of

    God because we still have faith in grammar.'16 And it is evident that the middle

    terms we have been discussing, God, Reason, etc. came to be believed

    16 Friedrich Nietzsche, Twilight of the Idols in The Viking Portable Nietzsche, Trans. by WalterKaufmann, pg 483

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    because they provide a grammar that purports to be equally applicable to

    language and to the world. Following Paul De Man, under the sway of such

    middle terms, 'grammar stands in the service of logic which, in turn allows for

    the passage to the knowledge of the world... the continuity between theory and

    phenomenalism is asserted and preserved by the system itself.'17 But, he

    continues to say that this grammatical organization of both language and world

    'leaves a residue of indetermination that has to be, but cannot be, resolved by

    grammatical means.'18 The residue of indetermination here is specifically the

    imaginative capacity granted by the linguistic reduplication of the world. If not

    for the fact that these middle terms operate solely in the interest of creating

    order out of confusion, the capacity to signify non-existent entities would

    readily undo the grammatical illusion of an ordered world. There is, also, as it

    were, another role played by middle terms, to which we will return shortly.

    At this juncture, two paths diverge when we attempt to throw off the

    tyranny of reason and language over experience. We will briefly discuss the

    first of these, which constitutes a temporary restoration of a lost immanence

    with the world by means of sheer negation: this would be L'Exprience

    Intrieure and the negative knowledge it attains. We will then proceed to

    discuss the second, wherein the perversion of language in poetic and literary

    language serves as an initial rupture that points beyond language, and back to

    the world itself. This second path will also illuminate the means by which

    Bataille turns the middle term of language, in its poetic form, against Hegel,

    illustrating how the moment of rupture in poetry can also be the rupture of the

    closed system.

    In the first case, Bataille begins with the statement that 'ipse and the17 Paul De Man, The Resistance to Theory, Minneapolis, University of Minnesota Press, 1986. p.

    14.18 Ibid, pg 15

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    whole stand opposed, while the I and God are like beings'(OC-V 134/IE 116).

    Bataille's term ipse refers to that part of the self that exists before the

    constitution of the I by the mediation of discursive reason, while the whole

    indicates the totality of being, also prior to the operations of discursive reason.

    Ipse and the whole are therefore heterogeneous, ipse exists as if alien to the

    world. Moreover, ipse only becomes I and convinced of an ordered world by

    virtue of the middle terms God or Reason.19 In this instance, it is possible in

    silence for 'ipse and the whole together slip away from the clutches of

    discursive intelligence (which enslaves); the middle terms alone are

    assimilable,' subsequently, ipse can renounce reason, 'casting the middle

    terms into darkness, in a single and abrupt renunciation of itself, attain the

    irrationality of the whole (in this case knowledge is still mediation between

    me and the world but negative: it is the rejection of knowledge, night, the

    annihilation of all middle terms, which constitute this negative mediation)'(OC-

    V 134-5/IE 115).

    This is the means by which ipse approaches the extreme limit, as

    'existence successively strips itself of its middle terms: of that which originates

    in discourse'(OC-V 135/IE 116). But what happens here? Without Reason, God,

    or any middle term, this experience is mute and results in anguish. At this

    point, ipse gains definitive non-knowledge of the whole and loses him/herself.

    But in doing so, ipse has fallen short of contestation ipse simply negates and

    does not bring anything with it to the Limit: ipse's experience is devoid of

    content. Thus the subtitle to this section ofL'Exprience Intrieure is aptly

    given: Tale of a Partly-Failed Experience.

    19 A fragment appearing in the appendix to Le Coupable makes the equivalence of God andReason absolutely clear: Christianity is only a crystallization of language... If you assumeman and language as doubling the real world with another world... then Christianity isnecessary. (OC-V 382/G 134)

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    5. Beyond Poetry: A Sacrifice Beyond Words

    Par-del la posie: beyond poetry: sacrifice; and beyond sacrifice? I

    repeat Bataille's claim that 'the poetry in which the most blood would be lost

    would be the most forceful.' And to this question, the response: to whose blood

    does this refer? It has been noted that the phrase 'writing in blood' evokes

    Nietzsche, and nothing could be closer to the mark. The section ofL'Exprience

    Intrieure in which poetry is discussed at great length bears the simple title

    Nietzsche, and in which, Bataille thematizes this going beyond of poetry in

    terms of sacrifice, beginning with a citation, in its entirety, of an aphorism fromBeyond Good and Evil. This highlights the importance of the phrase, par-del la

    posie,for,if one consults the French text it bears a striking resemblance to

    title of the French translation of Nietzsche's book: Par del la bien et le mal.

    However, at this point, we must proceed according to a certain measure of

    method. We begin with that which lends poetry its power.

    The citation with which the preceding section opened, however, asserts

    that poetry too must have recourse to middle terms if it is to be a means by

    which the bonds of discourse might be loosened. Let it not be mistaken: neither

    poetry nor literary language are panaceas for our discursive entrapment: they

    are modalities of linguistic expression, but are neither thought nor experience.

    Moreover, once written, poetry and literature lose much of their disruptive

    force and become assimilated canonized. However, it is of particular interest

    that poetry, not only has recourse to middle terms, but also constitutes and

    operates as a middle term: in L'Impossible we find Bataille's most brazen

    assertion regarding this: 'Poetry reveals a power of the unknown. But the

    unknown is only an insignificant void if it is not the object of a desire. Poetry is

    a middle term, it conceals the known within the unknown: it is the unknown

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    painted in blinding colors, in the image of a sun'(OC-III 222/IE 163).

    What can this signify? Does this not mean that poetry masquerades as a

    radical force, but is in reality only conservative? The answer must be

    provisionally be in the negative: for, poetry has power insofar as 'It never

    dispossesses us entirely, for the words, the images (once dissolved) are

    charged with emotions already experienced, attached to objects which link

    them to the known'(OC-V 17/IE 5). And insofar as poetry is a middle term, it

    does not entirely detach words from discourse; by the same token, poetry can

    touch us readily, and can make use of what we referred to as the emancipatory

    power of language: the capacity of language to signify both real and unreal

    beings, which marks a double aspect and allows it to avoid total reduction to

    instrumentality. Furthermore, in relation to this ambiguity, Bataille writes in

    L'Impossible : 'Poetry was simply a detour: through it I escaped the world of

    discourse, which had become the natural world for me; with poetry I entered a

    kind of grave where the infinity of the possible was born from the death of the

    logical world'(OC-III 222/TI 163). Which is to say that poetry can, rather than

    domesticate the unknown into knowledge, instead it permits the unknown to

    slip unnoticed into language, and, once it has gone beyond poetry and slipped

    into the 'discursive real,'20 it can proceed to blind reason and incinerate logic.

    It is not by chance that the brief passages recently discussed were drawn

    from the final pages ofL'Impossible, the first edition of which was to be among

    the volumes intended to be republished under the title ofPar-del la posie,

    and are on pages immediately preceded by a page bearing only the words 'tre

    Oreste' (OC-III, 215 / TI 155). They become particularly important in light of a

    brief passage from L'Exprience Intrieure, in which Bataille writes: 'in the face

    20 'Post-Scriptum 1953' (US 205)

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    of this time which undoes us, which can only undo what we want to

    consolidate, we ourselves have the recourse of carrying a heart to be

    devoured. Orestes or Phedra, who have been ravaged, are to poetry what the

    victim is to sacrifice'(OC-V 169/IE146). Such mythical references seem to bear

    some significance within Bataille's theoretical texts, for in the introduction to

    the 1954 editions of both Le Coupable and L'Exprience Intrieure, he writes:

    'To introduce the first edition ofLe Coupable, I wrote these words, whose

    meaning related to an impression I had in 1942 - that I lived in the world like a

    stranger... Someone who called himselfDianus wrote these notes and died. He

    (ironically?) thought of himself as guilty. The collection appearing under this

    name is a completed work'(OC-V 239/G 5). The myths of Orestes and Dianus

    thus have something to tell us about poetry and reality: that is, in the first

    instance, we might now read 'with poetry I entered a kind of grave where the

    infinity of the possible was born from the death of the logical world'(OC-223/IE

    164), as indicating that the total collapse of one's world is both the prerequisite

    and consequence of writing. In the second instance, ought we not read

    Dianus's death as a sacrifice completing the effect of having experienced the

    impossible, having gone to the limits of the possible, to the effect of completing

    his words with the silence of death? Moreover, after his death, in Dianus, it is

    Pre A. who speaks, and whose voice and character slowly merges with that of

    the dead Dianus thus, in L'Orestie neither D. nor A. speak, for the wound has

    closed with 'une reconstitution l'auteur'(OC-III 511).

    Furthermore, it is within the pages ofL'Impossible that the mythological

    double signification of the name Dianus finds full expression, for his death

    expresses but one myth of Dianus, the king of the woods, high priest of Diana.

    The other, however, does not carry an element of sacrifice along with it, for

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    Bataille explains in a preface or introduction to Le Coupable that was never

    used, that the name Dianus is another name for Janus.21 It is then scarcely

    surprising that L'Impossible constitutes a performance of the simultaneously

    double and unitary, and in this context, it is relatively easy to understand how

    poetry can at once be a middle term, like all language, and at the same time

    introduce the chaos of the unknown into speech.

    We are thus faced again with the questions of language: in what sort of

    theoretical framework can Bataille at once exalt and denigrate the literary and

    poetic uses of language, and moreover, if beyond designates the limit

    between exaltation and denigration, how is this manifest in particular literary

    or poetic manifestations and not others. The following passage from

    L'Exprience Intrieure speaks most clearly to this problematic:

    What one doesn't grasp: that, literature being nothing if it isn't poetry, poetrybeing the opposite of its name, literary language expression of hiddendesires, of obscure life is the perversion of language even a bit more thaneroticism is the perversion of sexual function. (OC-V 173/IE 150)

    Let us read this closely. The person designated by the indefinite one in the

    first sentence is the writer, himself, in his sacrifice of himself or of poetry. Next,

    we read that, literature is nothing if it is not poetry, which on its face would

    indicate outright that literature is always poetry, however, given Hegel's

    influence, the signification of the word nothing can hardly be taken at face

    value. Now, if poetry is then the opposite of its name

    (frompoiesis), then

    poetry is not creative, but rather destructive; then, if literary language is a

    greater perversion of language than the perversion of sex in eroticism, but also

    expressive of hidden desires, of obscure life, its perversity is structurally

    homologous. Thus the perversion of language in literary language is evidently

    that it does violence upon itself, sacrifices itself and its world. And this is the

    21 Referring to the publication of L'Amit in April 1940, he later wrote: 'Le nom choisi commepseudonyme est celui d'un grand dieu latin, de Janus ou Dianus, qui rpondait alors l'atmosphre religieuse mais paradoxale o je vivais.' (OC-VI 369)

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    terror, of being left with nothing more to say and with no means to say

    anything, is moreover, also the terror occasioned by the desire to sacrifice

    oneself!

    Now this is perfectly consonant with what we have already said. Here we

    may pause to note that our provisional definition of literary language as

    language that does violence upon itself and, which does not stop with

    language, might be sufficient to rupture the closure of Hegel's system from

    within. For, if literary language turns back upon itself and sacrifices itself, while

    in the same movement, it smuggles the unknown in the back door of the real,

    does this not violate Kojve's proof by circularity?

    If Hegel's thought cannot be surpassed by thought, and if it does not surpassthe given real but is content to describe it (for it knows and says that it issatisfied by what is), no ideal or real negation of the given is any longer possible.The real, then, will remain eternally identical to itself... A complete and correctdescription of this real will therefore be universally and eternally valid.... Now, thecircularity of the Hegelian description proves that it is complete and hence correct: foran erroneous or incomplete description, which stopped at a lacuna or ended in animpasse, would never come back upon itself. (IRH 194)

    Would this not create an impasse, one which would never let the system come

    back upon itself? Especially insofar as the impasse grows upon the soil of

    existence itself. It remains true, however, that no real or ideal negation of the

    given is entailed here. It is rather that it is the unknown real that intrudes first

    into discourse, and then beyond. And this intrusion is perpetual, for Bataille

    writes, explicitly disputing Kojve: 'Desire, poetry, laughter, unceasingly causelife to slip... from the known to the unknown. Existence in the end discloses the

    blind spot of understanding and right away becomes completely absorbed in it.

    It could not be otherwise unless a possibility for rest were to present itself at a

    certain point'(OC-V 130/IE 111).

    In short time, we shall return to complete Bataille's critique of Hegel. But

    let us first answer the question raised at the beginning of this section, which

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    aims to address those enigmatic words with which we began. In whose blood is

    the most forceful poetry written? This time we should place the emphasis on

    the syntagm, 'the most blood would be lost. From our previous discussion, it is

    quite evident that a true poet, in Bataille's eyes, sheds either his own blood or

    the blood of his poetry. However, we have left sequential time out of joint and

    have neglected yet to present Bataille's simple definition of poetry, that is, as

    the sacrifice in which words are victims... we tear words from their [servile]

    links in a delirium'(OC-V 156/IE 135). Then we are given a concrete example: of

    what happens when words are torn from servility and 'enter into a poem, they

    do so detached from interested concerns. For as many times as the words

    butter, horse are put to practical ends, the use which poetry makes of them

    liberates human life from these ends'(OC-V 156/IE 135). Moreover, this

    detachment from discourse grants words the facility to express the

    nonexistent, a facility drawn from the very nature of discursive reason as a

    middle term; only this time, poetry redresses the abuse of language that is

    discourse. Consequently, the unreal order of reason dissolves for a time into

    the reality of the poem, which merely expresses some unknown, but real,

    possibility. He continues: 'No doubt I have barely enunciated the words when

    the familiar images... present themselves, but they are solicited only in order to

    die. In which sensepoetry is sacrifice, but of the most accessible sort. For if the

    use or abuse of words, to which the operations of words oblige us, takes place

    on the ideal, unreal level of language, the same is true of the sacrifice of words

    which is poetry'(OC-V 157/IE 136).

    In a movement that parallels the movement of the quoted Nietzsche

    aphorism, this is but the first rung of poetic cruelty, a sacrifice of words, 'the

    path followed at all times by man's desire to redress the abuse which he makes

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    of language, it takes place, as I said, on the same level. Or on those parallel

    of expression'(OC-V 170/IE 147). At this point, the sacrifice only operates on the

    level of language and does not yet extend beyond poetry, it does not change

    us yet, we are not yet in play. However, poetry remains a crucial moment.

    Without it, poetry and literature would remain an idle privilege and an

    accumulated and accumulating mass of knowledge. In a sense, were poetry not

    to proceed further, in contrast to Adorno, 'It may [not] have been wrong to say

    that after Auschwitz you could no longer write poems.'22 We are fortunate that

    there is more power to the sacrifice of words than mere absurdities. Reaching

    this first rung, one is impelled to go further, because: 'Among various

    sacrifices, poetry is the only one whose fire we can maintain, renew... What is

    essential is that on its own, the desire for poetry renders our misery intolerable:

    certain that the sacrifice of objects is powerless to truly liberate us, we often

    experience the necessity for going further, right to the sacrifice of the subject.

    Which of itself can be of no consequence, but if the subject succumbs, it lifts

    the weight of eagerness its life escapes avarice. The one who sacrifices, the

    poet, having unceasingly to bring ruin into the ungraspable world of words,

    grows quickly tired of enriching a literary treasure..'(OC-V 172/IE 149)

    Thus, by means of a 'feverish contestation of poetry'(OC-V 158/IE 137) we

    ascend to the second rung of poetic cruelty, of which we have already spoken,

    in brief, with regard to those mythical figures whom Bataille evokes. Now the

    writer will spill his blood in the name of poetry, 'by virtue of the misery of the

    sacrifice (in this respect the same is true of poetry as of any sacrifice

    whatsoever), it causes a slipping from impotent sacrifice of objects to that of

    the subject. What Rimbaud sacrificed is not only poetry as object but the poet

    22 Theodor Adorno, Negative Dialectics, Translated by E.B. Ashton, New York: Continuum Press,1999, pg. 362

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    as subject'(OC-V 454-5/IE 208). A movement is thereby completed, for Bataille

    notes: 'the strangest thing about this movement ... is that it contains the

    secret of poetry. Poetry is only a havoc-which restores. It gives to time, which

    eats away, that which a dull vanity removes from it; it dissipates the false

    pretenses of an ordered world'(OC-V 170/IE 147).

    We thus return to our point of departure, except that the unknown has

    been invested with desire, through successive sacrifice, which invests a power

    in the middle term of poetry to once again shine forth as 'the unknown painted

    in blinding colors, in the image of a sun.' At this point, the pinnacle of poetry

    and therefore literature, the writer or poet is dissolved, whether literally or

    figuratively, into anonymity, freeing language from a referential bond that is

    beyond the mere signification of words. The secret of poetry comes to light

    after the personal relevance of the communicated experience is dissolved. With

    words and images freed from reference and the logic of creation, the erstwhile

    poet stands at the brink of ascending to the final rung of poetic cruelty.

    Unsatisfied by the 'way [that] poetry adds to the determined effusion... the

    particular faculty of disordered images to annihilate the ensemble of signs that

    is the sphere of activity'(US 93),the poet, then, enters a state of

    desoeuvrement. If, then, the middle terms of discourse (Reason, God) have

    been used to abuse the world in the same way as they have been used to

    abuse language and ourselves, one further sacrifice is required: 'The supreme

    abuse which man ultimately made of his reason requires a last sacrifice:

    reason, intelligibility, the ground itself upon which he stands man must reject

    them, in him God must die; this is the depth of terror, the extreme limit where

    he succumbs'(OC-V 155/IE 134). Thus, they must be sacrificed as one by the

    poet with nothing left to say or do. They must be sacrificed, not in the name of

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    nothingness (as it was in Nietzsche's aphorism), but in the name of the

    unknown, death and silence.

    This sacrifice, of course, can only come to pass after the (provisional) end

    of the history that has made it necessary. With the illusions of a discursively

    ordered world, it is both Reason/God and the artificially closed Hegelian system

    that must be put to death. What differentiates this third, highest sacrifice from

    the previous two, is that the sacrifice does not spare the one who performs the

    sacrifice, who is 'in the anguish before an incomplete world, incompletable and

    forever unintelligible, which destroys him, tears him apart'(OC-V 179/ IE 153).23

    Just before this point Bataille again cites Nietzsche: this time, it is the tale

    of the madman from The Gay Science.The poet who has managed to sacrifice

    reason itself has nothing left to do or say.

    The sacrifice of reason is to all appearances imaginary it has neither abloody conclusion, nor anything analogous to that. It differs nevertheless frompoetry in that it is total...(OC-V 170/IE 155)

    The poet has thereby overcome the opposition between ipse and world, insofaras the separation effected by the middle terms in discourse is overcome in a

    total sacrifice: a sacrifice that began with poetry and went far beyond poetry.

    The poet has gone beyond Reason, and this is the truepar-del la posie, for

    even if this sequence of sacrifices collapses into insignificance, and, for one

    moment, poetry and literary language have overcome Reason. They have

    overcome reason by doing violence to language, by acknowledging poetry as

    not the creativepoeisis of a knowing subject, but rather the transgressive

    movement by which language 'continually breaks down at the center of its

    space, exposing in his nakedness, in the inertia of ecstasy, a visible and

    insistent subject who had tried to keep language at arms length, but who now

    23 In notes connected to On Nietzsche, in volume 6 of Bataille's Oeuvres Compltes, we findsimilar language used to describe the impact of Kojve's lectures on Hegel: 'le cours deKojve m'a rompu, broy, tu dix fois.' Oeuvres Compltes Volume VI, Paris, EditionsGallimard, 1973, p. 416.

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    finds himself thrown by it, exhausted, upon the sands of that which he can no

    longer say'(PT 39).

    What is it that can no longer be said? It is the two words I and God,

    for Reason is no longer there to guarantee the order of things. Moreover,

    Bataille writes of the consequences of the final sacrifice, beyond poetry:

    If one proceeds right to the end, one must efface oneself, undergo solitude,suffer severely from it, must renounce be recognized: to be as though absent,insane over this, to undergo things without will and without hope, to beelsewhere... I publish it knowing it in advance to be misread... Its agitationmust end, must remain hidden, or almost hidden... without honor. It and I wecan only sink to that point in non-sense. Thought ruins and its destruction isincommunicable to the crowd it addresses itself to the least weak. (OC-V171/IE 155)

    Assuming that he truly proceeded to the end, it does not now seem

    extravagant that Bataille claimed in his 1937 letter to Kojve: 'I think of my life

    or better yet, its abortive condition, the open wound that my life is as itself

    constituting a refutation of Hegel's closed system'(OC-V 369/G 123). For in this

    letter, after having renounced the recognition of others, he writes of himself

    that 'when the man of 'unemployed negativity' doesn't find in the art work an

    answer to the question he himself is, he can only become the man of

    recognized negativity. He has grasped that he is no longer employable. But

    since this need can't be deluded indefinitely by the deceptions of art, at one

    point or another it will be recognized for what it is: negativity without content

    (OC-V 371/G 125).

    Beyond all knowledge there is non-knowledge and he who would becomeabsorbed in the thought that beyond his knowledge he knows nothing evenwere he to have within him Hegel's inexorable lucidity would no longer beHegel, but a painful tooth in Hegel's mouth. Would a sick tooth alone bemissing from the great philosopher? (OC-V 422/IE 169)

    It is not only the reflexive violence done upon language by itself that

    breaches the closure of the system, but the reverberations of poetry beyond

    poetry break the middle terms, which served to guarantee the system's

    circularity and to ensuring the completion of knowledge. It is when the blood of

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    words, of the subject, and finally of Reason itself have at last been drained,

    that poetry announces the rupture of the system from within that ends its

    ceaseless circulation. Having touched upon the impossible, Bataille recognized

    himself first as unemployed negativity and then as negativity without

    content. Thus, like the unemployed poet whose final sacrifice is that of

    Reason, Bataille's negativity without content transforms language and

    discursive thought into 'the servant of experience... [and] Non-knowledge

    attained, absolute knowledge is no longer anything but one knowledge among

    others'(OC-V 69/IE 55).

    'I fail, no matter what I write, in this, that I should be linking the infinite

    insane richness of possibles to the precision of meaning. To this fruitless

    task I am compelled happily?'(OC-V 51/ IE 38) Poetic language does not

    'work,' but makes work grind to a halt. All this demonstrates the ephemeral

    power of language to go beyond itself and expose that which is beyond

    knowledge, those experiences that defy reason. Moreover, poetry, insofar as it

    goes beyond mere belles lettres, displays the Janus-face of all reality and

    language. And although rupture seems only possible in brief moments, there is

    yet a reason to write, for discourse always needs to be interrupted by

    experience, experience that is communicable only in words, which have to be

    continually torn from discourse, 'even more than this is that other, the reader,

    who loves me and who already forgets me (kills me), without whose present

    insistence I could do nothing, would have no inner experience. Not that in

    moments of violence of misfortune I don't forget him, as he himself forgets

    me but I tolerate in me the action of project in that it is a link with this

    obscure othersharing my anguish, my torment, desiring my torment as much

    as I desire his.' (OC-V 76/IE 61)

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    la fin, it may be said, provisionally, that Bataille's reading of Hegel was

    anything but a regurgitation of Kojvian themes, but was, instead, a long and

    sustained meditation on language that cannot be subsumed by the discourse

    of the Sage. As early as L'Exprience Intrieure, Bataille had already

    outstripped his teacher in his confrontation with Hegel, and yet he retained

    certain derivative concepts, albeit in highly modified forms. However, on issues

    of language, and the centrality of middle terms,24 he could not have gone

    further from his master. His struggle with the bonds of language led him...

    ...Par-del la posie: to the forgetting of poetry.

    24 See (SL 1569-1572) on the central individual/body as middle term this aspect of