Towards a Philosophy of Rhythm: Nietzsche’s Conflicting Rhythms

IF 0.6 0 LITERARY THEORY & CRITICISM
H. Eldridge
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First, the precise site of rhythm remains opaque: rhythms occur in, affect, and are produced by all of bodies, cultures, and universals (whether metaphysical or species-physiological). What is the relation between species-wide characteristic, individual body, cultural context, and the history of art making in the experience of rhythm? Second, rhythm is simultaneously a phenomenon of fixed, organizing form and one of dynamic, changing flow. How can rhythm encompass both the measurement of regular recurrences across time and the organizing of temporal phenomena as they unfold? In this article, I draw on Emile Benveniste and Henri Meschonnic to elucidate these quandaries or conflicts before turning to Friedrich Nietzsche’s work on rhythm. I argue that Nietzsche’s work with rhythm provides a historically situated model for how we might continue to take the questions and conflicts within rhythm seriously, rather than privileging an abstract and universally applicable theory of rhythm. This model is especially crucial for our own historical moment, when cultural-political emphasis on science and technology at the expense of aesthetics devalues all insights not presented in the form of countable data points or empirically testable facts. Nietzsche is, of course, one of the great critics of positivist-scientistic epistemologies, part of a long tradition questioning the naturalness of natural-scientific paradigms and alerting us to the metaphors at play even in the ›hard sciences‹. I use rhythm as one paradigmatic place to resist the importation of scientistic thought into discussions of language, literature, and culture. I show how Nietzsche’s writings on rhythm prove illuminating for contemporary understandings of rhythm because the tensions in his work are shaped by the quandaries inherent to rhythm that I have used Benveniste and Meschonnic to elaborate, namely the question of rhythm’s site as individual, cultural, or universal, and the conflict between rhythm as form and as flow. The question of the site of rhythm appears in Nietzsche’s discussions of Greek and Latin meters both in his philological works, in his aphorisms, and in his letters: on the one hand, he argues that Greek and Latin metrical and rhythmic resources are irrevocably lost to modern cultures (indicating that rhythm is a product of culture), while on the other, he emphasizes the impact of rhythm on the body and offers advice for replicating Ancient metrical and rhythmic techniques (suggesting that rhythm is based on physiological universals). And the conflict between flow and form appears as Nietzsche praises both the productive constraint created by large-scale, architectonic, or macro-formal rhythms and the freedom from such constraint enabled by small-scale, leitmotiv-based, or micro-formal rhythms. The conflicts in Nietzsche’s work between the loss and recovery of Ancient rhythms and between rhythm as small scale freedom vs. large scale constraint thus represent one particular unfolding of the dilemmas for rhythmical theory worked out by Benveniste and Meschonnic. The various modern disciplines engaged with rhythm will answer different sets of these questions in different ways. Most practitioners of, e. g., evolutionary aesthetics, neuroaesthetics, or cognitive poetics would no doubt contend that they are using the tools of the natural sciences to investigate long-standing humanistic inquiries. Nietzsche, as a critic of his own era’s scientific positivism who allows tensions inherent in these questions to remain open in his own work, is an ideal interlocutor with whom to ask whether even the adoption of these tools ends up placing excessive faith in natural-scientific paradigms and undercutting other—affective, bodily, metaphorical, poetic, etc.—ways of knowing, as I demonstrate briefly in the examples of evolutionary aesthetics and generative metrics. Because Nietzsche leaves open the conflicts over rhythm’s site and its qualities as form or flow, he can use individual bodily experience to make physiological arguments about the effects of rhythm on culture and vice versa: Nietzsche takes his bodily response to be an index of cultural values inherent to rhythmical practices. The particular values that Nietzsche critiques shift across his career—early on he condemns German musical and poetic rhythms for being too rigid, while later he sees them as pathologically heightening affect and emotion. In both cases, detrimental rhythmic practices lead to detrimental bodily practices and to the degeneration of culture, while rhythmic practices work as a bodily and cultural corrective. In his critiques of German forms and praises of Greek forms, and in the moments in which he brings them together, Nietzsche thus asserts the complex interrelation of culture, body, and history.","PeriodicalId":42872,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Literary Theory","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.6000,"publicationDate":"2018-03-26","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1515/jlt-2018-0009","citationCount":"2","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Literary Theory","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1515/jlt-2018-0009","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"LITERARY THEORY & CRITICISM","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 2

Abstract

Abstract In recent years, theories of rhythm have been proposed by a number of different disciplines, including historical poetics, generative metrics, cognitive literary studies, and evolutionary aesthetics. The wide range of fields indicates the transdisciplinary nature of rhythm as a phenomenon, as well as its complexity, highlighting the degree to which many of the central questions surrounding rhythm remain extraordinarily difficult even to state in terms that can traverse the disciplinary boundaries effortlessly transgressed by rhythm as a phenomenon. In particular, any theory of rhythm, whether in music, dance, sociology, or language, must grapple with two quandaries. First, the precise site of rhythm remains opaque: rhythms occur in, affect, and are produced by all of bodies, cultures, and universals (whether metaphysical or species-physiological). What is the relation between species-wide characteristic, individual body, cultural context, and the history of art making in the experience of rhythm? Second, rhythm is simultaneously a phenomenon of fixed, organizing form and one of dynamic, changing flow. How can rhythm encompass both the measurement of regular recurrences across time and the organizing of temporal phenomena as they unfold? In this article, I draw on Emile Benveniste and Henri Meschonnic to elucidate these quandaries or conflicts before turning to Friedrich Nietzsche’s work on rhythm. I argue that Nietzsche’s work with rhythm provides a historically situated model for how we might continue to take the questions and conflicts within rhythm seriously, rather than privileging an abstract and universally applicable theory of rhythm. This model is especially crucial for our own historical moment, when cultural-political emphasis on science and technology at the expense of aesthetics devalues all insights not presented in the form of countable data points or empirically testable facts. Nietzsche is, of course, one of the great critics of positivist-scientistic epistemologies, part of a long tradition questioning the naturalness of natural-scientific paradigms and alerting us to the metaphors at play even in the ›hard sciences‹. I use rhythm as one paradigmatic place to resist the importation of scientistic thought into discussions of language, literature, and culture. I show how Nietzsche’s writings on rhythm prove illuminating for contemporary understandings of rhythm because the tensions in his work are shaped by the quandaries inherent to rhythm that I have used Benveniste and Meschonnic to elaborate, namely the question of rhythm’s site as individual, cultural, or universal, and the conflict between rhythm as form and as flow. The question of the site of rhythm appears in Nietzsche’s discussions of Greek and Latin meters both in his philological works, in his aphorisms, and in his letters: on the one hand, he argues that Greek and Latin metrical and rhythmic resources are irrevocably lost to modern cultures (indicating that rhythm is a product of culture), while on the other, he emphasizes the impact of rhythm on the body and offers advice for replicating Ancient metrical and rhythmic techniques (suggesting that rhythm is based on physiological universals). And the conflict between flow and form appears as Nietzsche praises both the productive constraint created by large-scale, architectonic, or macro-formal rhythms and the freedom from such constraint enabled by small-scale, leitmotiv-based, or micro-formal rhythms. The conflicts in Nietzsche’s work between the loss and recovery of Ancient rhythms and between rhythm as small scale freedom vs. large scale constraint thus represent one particular unfolding of the dilemmas for rhythmical theory worked out by Benveniste and Meschonnic. The various modern disciplines engaged with rhythm will answer different sets of these questions in different ways. Most practitioners of, e. g., evolutionary aesthetics, neuroaesthetics, or cognitive poetics would no doubt contend that they are using the tools of the natural sciences to investigate long-standing humanistic inquiries. Nietzsche, as a critic of his own era’s scientific positivism who allows tensions inherent in these questions to remain open in his own work, is an ideal interlocutor with whom to ask whether even the adoption of these tools ends up placing excessive faith in natural-scientific paradigms and undercutting other—affective, bodily, metaphorical, poetic, etc.—ways of knowing, as I demonstrate briefly in the examples of evolutionary aesthetics and generative metrics. Because Nietzsche leaves open the conflicts over rhythm’s site and its qualities as form or flow, he can use individual bodily experience to make physiological arguments about the effects of rhythm on culture and vice versa: Nietzsche takes his bodily response to be an index of cultural values inherent to rhythmical practices. The particular values that Nietzsche critiques shift across his career—early on he condemns German musical and poetic rhythms for being too rigid, while later he sees them as pathologically heightening affect and emotion. In both cases, detrimental rhythmic practices lead to detrimental bodily practices and to the degeneration of culture, while rhythmic practices work as a bodily and cultural corrective. In his critiques of German forms and praises of Greek forms, and in the moments in which he brings them together, Nietzsche thus asserts the complex interrelation of culture, body, and history.
走向节奏哲学:尼采的矛盾节奏
近年来,历史诗学、生成度量学、认知文学研究和进化美学等不同学科都提出了节奏理论。广泛的领域表明节奏作为一种现象的跨学科性质,以及它的复杂性,突出了围绕节奏的许多核心问题仍然非常困难的程度,甚至可以毫不费力地跨越学科界限来陈述节奏作为一种现象。特别是,任何关于节奏的理论,无论是音乐、舞蹈、社会学还是语言,都必须努力应对两个困境。首先,节奏的确切位置仍然不清楚:节奏发生、影响并由所有身体、文化和共相(无论是形而上学的还是物种生理的)产生。在节奏体验中,物种特征、个体身体、文化背景和艺术史之间的关系是什么?第二,节奏既是一种固定的、有组织的形式现象,又是一种动态的、变化的流动现象。节奏如何能同时包含对时间上的规则重复的测量和对时间现象展开时的组织?在本文中,在转向弗里德里希·尼采关于节奏的研究之前,我将引用埃米尔·本文尼斯特和亨利·梅舍尼克来阐明这些困境或冲突。我认为尼采关于节奏的研究提供了一个历史模型,让我们可以继续认真对待节奏中的问题和冲突,而不是赋予一个抽象的,普遍适用的节奏理论特权。这个模型对于我们自己的历史时刻尤其重要,当文化政治以牺牲美学为代价强调科学和技术时,贬低了所有以可计数的数据点或经验可检验的事实形式呈现的见解。当然,尼采是实证科学认识论的伟大批评家之一,他是质疑自然科学范式的自然性的悠久传统的一部分,并提醒我们即使在硬科学中也要注意隐喻的作用。我用节奏作为一个范例来抵制把科学主义思想引入语言、文学和文化的讨论中。我展示了尼采关于节奏的著作如何证明对当代对节奏的理解是有启发性的,因为他作品中的紧张关系是由节奏固有的困境塑造的,我用Benveniste和Meschonnic来阐述,也就是节奏的位置问题,作为个人的,文化的,或普遍的,以及节奏作为形式和流动之间的冲突。节奏的位置问题出现在尼采对希腊和拉丁韵律的讨论中在他的语言学著作中,在他的格言中,在他的信件中一方面,他认为希腊和拉丁的韵律和节奏资源不可挽回地失去了现代文化(表明节奏是文化的产物),而另一方面,他强调节奏对身体的影响,并提出了复制古代韵律和节奏技术的建议(表明节奏是基于生理共性)。流动和形式之间的冲突出现在尼采对大规模,架构性,或宏观形式节奏所产生的生产约束和小规模,基于动机的,或微观形式节奏所带来的自由的赞扬中。尼采作品中的冲突,古代节奏的丧失与恢复,以及小尺度自由与大尺度约束之间的冲突,代表了Benveniste和Meschonnic提出的节奏理论困境的一种特殊展开。研究节奏的各种现代学科将以不同的方式回答这些问题的不同集合。大多数的实践者,例如。,进化美学,神经美学,或认知诗学无疑会争辩说,他们正在使用自然科学的工具来调查长期存在的人文主义问题。尼采,作为他自己时代的科学实证主义的批评家,他允许这些问题中固有的紧张关系在他自己的作品中保持开放,是一个理想的对话者,他会问,即使采用这些工具,是否最终会对自然科学范式产生过度的信心,并削弱其他——情感的、身体的、隐喻的、诗歌的等等——认识的方式,正如我在进化美学和生成度量的例子中简要展示的那样。因为尼采对节奏的位置及其形式或流动的性质的冲突保持开放,他可以使用个人的身体经验来对节奏对文化的影响进行生理论证,反之亦然:尼采将他的身体反应作为节奏实践固有的文化价值的指标。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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Journal of Literary Theory
Journal of Literary Theory LITERARY THEORY & CRITICISM-
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