02.barsky 11/10/04 12:09 PM Page 183 Robert F.Barsky “You Cannot Transform the History of Ideas Into a Comic Strip”: An Interview with Marc Angenot I spoke with Marc Angenot during a visit he made to the University of Western On- tario, Canada, in .The interview lasted almost two hours, and has been edited for clarity. —Robert Barsky Robert Barsky: Your work has not been engaged by the community of literary and historical scholars in the United States. There have been the usual intellectual fads, and concomitant intellectual roadblocks along the way, but for some reason your work, your approach, hasn’t quite entered the debate. Why is this? Marc Angenot: There have been a number of ongoing fads for conti- nental French-speaking thinkers, philosophers, and theoreticians, but to a certain degree all these fads seem worn out, or are vanishing away. I don’t mind much. It’s very hard to find out how and when and why in a given intellectual milieu some kind of thinking or paradigm be- comes fashionable or suddenly looks interesting to a group of people. We must assume that the component of misunderstanding is usually much more important than the actual relevance of what is being un- derstood.When there are different sets of expectations, different issues, and different stakes, there is clearly a better chance for one to be mis- understood. So I really don’t mind much. I’m not too interested in creative misunderstandings. RB: Is one of the obstacles to understanding the overall corpus of your work the fact that you are primarily a historian who teaches in a lit- erature department? Or does the problem extend elsewhere, since your work in history is deeply informed by discourse analysis and dis- course theory? One way or the other, your work doesn’t fit easily into any of the traditional disciplines as the university defines them. MA: I am only one of many.Most of my work has dealt with French, or at least continental, material, so it may not look as relevant as all- encompassing global theories. But there is nothing unusual in this; most of the time, people who become known are either senile or al- ready dead. In the French-speaking realm, the most important The Yale Journal of Criticism, volume , number (): 183–197 © by Yale University and The Johns Hopkins University Press robert f. barsky 02.barsky 11/10/04 12:09 PM Page 184 thoughts of the twentieth century were actually digested, and became widespread, twenty to forty years after the death of their author. The process takes a long time, despite the myth one encounters in the me- dia, that there exists an instantaneous diffusion of ideas. Normally it would take forty to fifty years. Let’s work out a theory: If one’s think- ing is easily understood it’s because it is just a variant of what every- body expects; it is not very significant or original, but swallowable, palatable. In that case, you stand a chance of being acclaimed without much resistance. But if there is something that is unavoidably a bit dif- ficult and only relevant for people who have already made an effort to think in this framework, then it is perfectly reasonable to expect that it will take at least one generation for it to be understood by the people who need it, who are able to do something with it. RB: Does what you’ve just said correspond to your approach to socio- criticism, where you talk about literature “coming afterwards,”speak- ing after other discourses have had their say? In the article that follows this interview, you distinguish between literary texts that speak to contemporary concerns in familiar ways and those which are more challenging, less familiar. According to your conception, the latter type has a greater chance of enduring. Is that a possible corollary? MA: Yes. Either a given thought that looks revolutionary or original is, in fact, made out of recycled or worn-out paradigms, so it works easily in the short term and then just fades away, or what you are do- ing relates to a specific community of scholars and is invested with a certain effort. In the latter case, it will take fifteen to twenty years for a small group of people to see what you are doing. I’m not even ex- pecting that. There is an existential angle to the suggestion that there is some kind of pleasure to be expected from being an acclaimed in- tellectual. The way intellectuals work does not normally operate this way. Individuals have their own fair share of vanity. But we all know where life is leading us. That’s not the issue. I seldom meet anyone I respect who, like a politician, works in order to gain popular acclaim. It’s not that they would dislike it, but dealing with intellectual issues is quite a different endeavor. It entails loneliness, certainly,and not pop- ularity.That’s the way it is. Since we do this kind of work while be- ing more or less protected from police inquiries, and getting a pay- check every fortnight, we can say we are just operating according to our role in society.That’s the way it should be. RB: The other obstacle to understanding your work is the sheer am- bition of the intellectual task you pursue.There are very few theorists who have attempted to talk about all domains of discursive work, as you have in your inquiries about “grand narratives,” or in your work on the year , and there are very few historians who are willing to the yale journal of criticism 02.barsky 11/10/04 12:09 PM Page 185 engage the theoretical or philosophical issues that are so central to your perspective. That kind of ambition is challenging not only for you, but for those people who wish to study in your framework.Your social discourse theory, for example, places a huge burden of respon- sibility upon us, demanding nothing less than our engaging the whole social discourse paradigm prior to studying the discursive action that happens within it.This work is monumental. I wonder how that plays both in your work and in its reception. MA: You start in life with a set of unanswered questions. And in a naive way, you expect that at some given moment you will find the right answers. But of course, it is an endless process.The generation of people who started university in the sixties began with a great num- ber of relatively new and unanswered questions about culture, ideolo- gies, aesthetic value, the interface between societal values and aesthetic ones, and so on. We experimented with different paradigms. I tried not to disregard this set of issues in favor of comfortable answers.With my social discourse theory I tried to explore the basic contentions about ideology. For instance, how does a society try to produce val- ues? And for what kind of so-called interests? It took me ten years to write four or five books on the social discourse of in France. What I’m doing right now is another way of asking myself the same set of questions in response to the same set of problems. It’s not in my temperament to become a specialist in any given theoretical paradigm. My work on social discourse led me to try to understand what modernity was all about. What is central to modernity is a new way of dealing with evil. That’s what I’m working with now, new ways of dealing with evil as determined by so-called “wrong” social organiza- tions.You find an axiomatics of social evil, replace it with its contrary, and work out a brave new world based on different axiomatics. But it is just a different axiomatic. I’m dealing with evil and its cures.We live in a society where we know that evil still exists, but we are not sure there is a cure for it. It’s either back to the premodern metaphysical stance about human nature, or not. An epistemology from the starting point is the unknowable, the idea that the world is just a scandal. Not in the eyes of the rightful, like in the religions, where you can over- come the scandals of the world. There is a hidden providence that takes care of the basic scandal, which is the success of the wicked and the misery of the righteous. I don’t believe we think in order to make the world we are supposed to study clearer and more consistent; we think in order to hide in the basic scandal of the empirical world and our inability to tackle it. I am in the midst of changing my approach. That’s true. Whatever I have done at any given stage of my intellec- tual career has opened up onto a new set of issues that seem to de- mand an overall reworking of my questioning. robert f. barsky 02.barsky 11/10/04 12:09 PM Page 186 RB: Is there not some strong consistency, even despite this evolution? The questions you posed early in your career, about the relationship be- tween the center and the margins, the utterance and the entirety, seem to lead to the questions you are posing now, and there is, in my opin- ion, a red thread that runs from studies of paraliterature and science fiction through social discourse theory and the grand narratives. MA: That is not for me to answer.
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