by Trevor
Laurence Jockims
Posted Thursday, May 24, 2012 5:57 PM
God In Pain:
Inversions of Apocalypse
Slavoj Žižek,
Boris Gunjevic (authors)
Seven Stories
Press
http://highbrowmagazine.com/1185-acclaimed-intellectual-slavoj-zizek-waxes-philosophical-about-god
Slavoj Žižek
has earned himself a reputation as something of a philosophical wild man, an
epithet derived at least as much from the way he inhabits a room as it is from
the content of his books. When I heard him speak, a few years back at a lecture
he gave during the Sarajevo Film Festival, he was in true oracular form, a kind
of mangy apostle of sharp, caustic philosophical insight. The threadbare brown
T-shirt he wore—for those of the correct age, think early Seattle
grunge—darkened steadily with rings of sweat that moved out in widening
crescents from each armpit, eventually meeting in the middle. His hair was
fully adrift. Eyes wild. Arms swinging beneath an enormous screen that
projected clips of the films he was “reading” — themselves a delightful mix,
running through classic Hitchcock, Stalinist propaganda films, They Live (starring
Rowdy Roddy Piper), Schindler’s List, andJurassic Park. About
those final two Žižek memorably, and rightly, quipped: Schindler’s
List is a remake of Jurassic Park. . And Jurassic Park is
the better film.
The four of
us who saw the lecture went out afterwards for coffee. We were divided over
what we’d heard in pretty much the way critics remain divided about Žižek. One
of us thought he was brilliant, one of us wasn’t so sure, one thought he was a
total huckster, the other just enjoyed the show. The next day my friend
who hadn’t been sure (a journalist in Sarajevo), was assigned to interview
Žižek. He arrived at 10 a.m. at Žižek’s hotel, as instructed. Žižek emerged in
the courtyard wearing the same brown T-shirt, sat down rapidly, and declared
that he had very little time, really just a minute or two. Two-and-a-half hours
later, my friend’s recorder long since dead, Žižek was soaked in sweat,
swinging his arms, still filling my friend’s ear.
Following
this session, my not-sure-about- Žižek friend was now my very-sure-about- Žižek
friend.
In reading
Zizek’s new book, God in Pain: Inversions of Apocalypse, written with
Boris Gunjevic, I feel like I get close to the euphoria my friend witnessed
while talking to—well, really, listening to— Žižek up close. The book is
written in a very direct manner, and if Žižek can sometimes suffer from being a
paradoxicalist, he (usually) means what he says. In God in Pain he is
also able to say what he means (usually).
The crux of
the book is a good one, and although tempting to see it as a corrective to
Hitchens and Dawkins-esque writings on atheism, the latter group is so
thoroughly outweighed by the sheer force of Žižek’s brain—I’m reminded of a
comment made by another politician when Žižek ran for the presidency of
Slovenia: Look, we all know you’re the smartest one in the room—that the
comparison is sort of pointless. Still, Žižek is running in the same
milieu, and his response to the wild rush of atheism, especially in the more
privileged regions of the West, is to say, Not so fast:
“If, once
upon a time, we publicly pretended to believe while privately we were skeptics
or even engaged in obscene mocking of our public beliefs, today we publicly
tend to profess out skeptical, hedonistic, relaxed attitude while we privately
remain haunted by beliefs and severe prohibitions.”
For Žižek,
the fundamentalist and the cynic both drink from the same well. It’s a
compelling argument, and Žižek is particularly apt in discussing a timely issue
without falling into t clichés: He has no interest in any so-called war on
religion (from either “side), and he has no interest in the virtues
or vices of atheism (again, from either “side”). What he is interested in
doing—and this is more or less Žižek’s bread and butter as a thinker—is to
think clearlythrough a topic that is so pervasively thought about and
discussed as to be nearly unthought. Said another way, everyone is able to take
a position on the God question; Žižek isn’t so much interested in taking a
position as he is in pointing out what the positions are — and aren’t.
The entire
book might be reduced to Žižek’s reading of the aphorism, (mistakenly) first
attributed to Doestoevsky by Sartre, that “If God is dead, everything is
permitted.” Žižek works with this phrase, turning it into the opposite
assertion Lacan saw in it — If God is dead, everything is prohibited.” This,
argues Žižek, is the real dilemma faced by the death of God.
As is the
usual case in Žižek and, really, most insightful thinkers, not only are the
widely accepted positions wrong — they’re actual veils preventing any
possibility of insight. Morality, for instance, has nothing to do with the loss
of God. God never made anyone good. (But that’s too easy, and it isn’t really
Žižek’s point). At best, under God the good stay good. (Also, too easy). The
bad also stay bad. (Too easy, still).
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