Atmosphere, Mood, Stimmung: On a Hidden Potential of Literature
By Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht and Erik Butler
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What are the various atmospheres or moods that the reading of literary works can trigger? Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht has long argued that the function of literature is not so much to describe, or to re-present, as to make present. Here, he goes one step further, exploring the substance and reality of language as a material component of the world—impalpable hints, tones, and airs that, as much as they may be elusive, are no less matters of actual fact.
Reading, we discover, is an experiencing of specific moods and atmospheres, or Stimmung. These moods are on a continuum akin to a musical scale. They present themselves as nuances that challenge our powers of discernment and description, as well as language's potential to capture them. Perhaps the best we can do is to point in their direction. Conveying personal encounters with poetry, song, painting, and the novel, this book thus gestures toward the intangible and in the process, constitutes a bold defense of the subjective experience of the arts.
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Atmosphere, Mood, Stimmung - Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht
English translation ©2012 by the Board of Trustees of the Leland Stanford Junior University. All rights reserved.
Atmosphere, Mood, Stimmung was originally published in German in 2011 under the title Stimmungen lesen ©2011, Carl Hanser Verlag.
No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system without the prior written permission of Stanford University Press.
Printed in the United States of America on acid-free, archival-quality paper
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Gumbrecht, Hans Ulrich, author.
[Stimmungen lesen. English]
Atmosphere, mood, Stimmung : on a hidden potential of literature / Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht ; translated by Erik Butler.
pages cm.
"Originally published in German in 2011 under the title Stimmungen lesen ©2011, Carl Hanser Verlag."
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN 978-0-8047-8121-3 (cloth : alk. paper) —
ISBN 978-0-8047-8122-0 (pbk. : alk. paper)
ISBN 978-0-8047-8345-3 (e-book)
1. Mood (Psychology) in literature. 2. Literature, Modern—History and criticism—Theory, etc. I. Butler, Erik, translator. II. Title.
PN56.M57G8613 2012
809'93353—dc23
2011052151
Typeset at Stanford University Press in 10.5/15 Adobe Garamond
ATMOSPHERE, MOOD, STIMMUNG
On a Hidden Potential of Literature
Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht
Translated by Erik Butler
Stanford University Press
Stanford, California
CONTENTS
Copyright
Title Page
Reading for Stimmung: How to Think About the Reality of Literature Today
MOMENTS
Fleeting Joys in the Songs of Walther von der Vogelweide
The Precarious Existence of the Pícaro
Multiple Layers of the World in Shakespeare’s Sonnets
Amorous Melancholy in the Novellas of María de Zayas
Bad Weather and a Loud Voice: Diderot’s Le Neveu de Rameau
Harmony and Rupture in the Light of Caspar David Friedrich
The Weight of Thomas Mann’s Venice
Beautiful Sadness in Joaquim Machado de Assis’s Last Novel
The Freedom of Janis Joplin’s Voice
SITUATIONS
The Iconoclastic Energy of Surrealism
Tragic Sense of Life
Deconstruction, Asceticism, and Self-Pity
Acknowledgments
Bibliographical References
READING FOR STIMMUNG
How to Think About the Reality of Literature Today
1
Over the last ten years, a mood of uncertainty has befallen academic engagements with literature—or literary science,
as it is called in German. In quick succession and with varying levels of intellectual productivity, a series of theoretical paradigms dominated literary studies in the second half of the twentieth century. New Criticism yielded to Structuralism, and Structuralism to Marxism. Marxism and Structuralism gave way to Deconstruction and New Historicism. Deconstruction and New Historicism were then replaced by Cultural Studies and Identity Studies. An almost rhythmic change of the basic assumptions about literary interpretation became the norm. Since the beginning of the early nineties, however, no new theory of literature has posed a real intellectual or institutional challenge. This does not mean that there has been a lack of interesting publications, too few thinkers who command respect, or a dearth of debates. On the contrary: now that the constant pressure to revise one’s epistemology has relaxed, many scholars have found more time than ever—and also more inspiration—to concentrate on the literatures of different epochs and examine the complex historical realities that gave them their full resonance. It is no accident that we have witnessed a return to the most canonized and classical literary works. Now, without sacrificing academic honor, one can finally admit to reading them for their own sake.
Space has been freed for new inquiry. This is all the more remarkable for having long belonged to figures who were so imposing that most of their contemporaries had to declare themselves either adherents or opponents of their ideas. The fact that such illustrious personages are no longer to be found is both a symptom of, and a reason for, the change that has taken place. Literary studies cannot possibly remain the same after the loss of scholars with the distinction and intellectual vitality of Erich Auerbach, Kenneth Burke, Paul de Man, Jacques Derrida, LucienGoldmann, Wolfgang Iser, Claude Lévi-Strauss, Wolfgang Preisendanz, Richard Rorty, Edward Said, and Raymond Williams.
Today, after manifold departures, reorganizations, and metamorphoses (which, as a rule, have not been motivated by any explicit program or project), we find ourselves facing marked—indeed, seemingly irreconcilable, mutually exclusive—differences between two basic assumptions concerning the ontology of literature. (Needless to say, the actual intellectual landscape is more complicated, but I believe its structure begins with one basic divide.) By ontology of literature,
I mean fundamental stances about how literary texts—as material facts and worlds of meaning—relate to realities outside of works themselves.
On the one hand stands Deconstruction. Despite insistent claims of innovation, Deconstruction has always belonged to the linguistic turn
of philosophy. This has meant—and, for its adherents, it continues to mean—that contact between language and reality outside of language cannot occur; at any rate, suggestions to the contrary are viewed as naïve and dismissed with contempt. More than any other, Derrida’s friend de Man posited—as if it were a matter of fact—that all functions of literature and modes of encountering texts, as allegories of reading,
demonstrate how language does not refer to the world at all, ever.
On the other hand, there is Cultural Studies. Cultural Studies shares, at least in part, the methodological (it might be better to say: ideological) assumptions of Marxism, which it considers its precursor and point of departure. As opposed to Deconstruction, Cultural Studies—as it emerged in Great Britain and was transformed into Kulturwissenschaften in Germany (without much change)—has never been skeptical about literature’s connection with extra-linguistic realities. If anything, researchers in this field have so thoroughly fused their trust in the validity of quantitative and empirical research with a certain carefree attitude toward epistemology that the modest philosophical results of this convergence make Deconstruction and its rejection of reference seem almost appealing, at least in philosophical terms.
I believe that literary studies, as a site where intellectual forces combine, risks stagnation for as long as it remains stuck between these two positions, whose contrasts and tensions can cancel each other out. To overcome such dangers—which have already materialized in part—we need third positions.
The German word Stimmung (which is very difficult to translate) gives form to the third position
I would like to advocate. In analogy to the notion of reading for the plot
that Peter Brooks set forth some years ago, I would like to propose that interpreters and historians of literature read with Stimmung in mind. I recommend this approach not least of all because this is the orientation of a great number of non-professional readers (who are not—and, of course, need not be—aware of the fact).
2
To gain awareness and appreciation of the different significations and shades of meaning that Stimmung conjures up, it is useful to look at the various clusters of words that translate the term into other languages. English offers mood
and climate.
Mood
stands for an inner feeling so private it cannot be precisely circumscribed. Climate,
on the other hand, refers to something objective that surrounds people and exercises a physical influence. Only in German does the word connect with Stimme and stimmen. The first means voice,
and the second to tune an instrument
; by extension, stimmen also means to be correct.
As the tuning of an instrument suggests, specific moods and atmospheres are experienced on a continuum, like musical scales. They present themselves to us as nuances that challenge our powers of discernment and description, as well as the potential of language to capture them.
I am most interested in the component of meaning that connects Stimmung with music and the hearing of sounds. As is well known, we do not hear with our inner and outer ear alone. Hearing is a complex form of behavior that involves the entire body. Skin and haptic modalities of perception play an important role. Every tone we perceive is, of course, a form of physical reality (if an invisible one) that happens
to our body and, at the same time, surrounds
it. Another dimension of reality that happens to our bodies in a similar way and surrounds them is the weather. For this very reason, references to music and weather often occur when literary texts make moods and atmospheres present or begin to reflect upon them. Being affected by sound or weather, while among the easiest and least obtrusive forms of experience, is, physically, a concrete encounter (in the literal sense of en-countering: meeting up) with our physical environment.
Toni Morrison once described the phenomenon with the apt paradox of being touched as if from inside.
She was interested, I imagine, in an experience familiar to everyone: that atmospheres and moods, as the slightest of encounters between our bodies and material surroundings, also affect our psyche; however, we are unable to explain the causality (or, in everyday life, control its workings). One cannot claim to understand this dynamic, much less account for it fully. However, this circumstance is no reason not to draw attention to it and describe its many variants.
3
It might appear, at first glance, as if music and weather merely provided metaphors for what we call the tone,
atmosphere,
or, indeed, the Stimmung of a text. My point, however, is the fact that such tones, atmospheres, and Stimmungen never exist wholly independent of the material components of works—above all, their prosody. Therefore, texts affect the inner feelings
of readers in the way that weather and music do. This is the reason I believe that the dimension of Stimmung discloses a new perspective on—and possibility for—the ontology of literature.
For in the opposition between Deconstruction and Cultural Studies, which I have mentioned, both sides make claims about the ontology of texts in terms of the paradigm of representation.
Texts are supposed to represent
extra-linguistic reality (or, alternately, they are supposed to want
to do so, even though this is impossible). The main difference between Deconstruction and Cultural Studies concerns the rejection—or affirmation—of texts’ capacity to connect with something else. In contrast, an ontology of literature that relies on concepts derived from the sphere of Stimmung does not place the paradigm of representation front-and-center. "Reading for Stimmung" always means paying attention to the textual dimension of the forms that envelop us and our bodies as a physical reality—something that can catalyze inner feelings without matters of representation necessarily being involved. Otherwise, it would be unthinkable for the recitation of a lyrical text or the delivery of a prose work with a pronounced rhythmical component to reach and affect even readers who do not understand the language in question. Indeed, a special affinity exists between performance and Stimmung.
Without exception, all elements comprising texts can contribute to the production of atmospheres and moods, and this means that works rich in Stimmung need not be primarily—and certainly not exclusively—descriptive in nature. To be sure, a relationship exists between certain forms of narration and particular atmospheres (for instance, the convergence between an elegiac mood and the structure of Machado de Assis’s Memorial de Aires, which one of the chapters discusses). The canon of world literature offers many examples of narrative prose we may associate, without hesitation, with Stimmung. Consider Thomas Mann’s Death in Venice. I cannot imagine a reader familiar with this text who was at all surprised that Aschenbach and Tadzio never become a couple, or that Aschenbach’s existence—at the latest, from the time he reaches Venice—is a being-unto-death. Rather, it is the evocation of a certain fin-de-siècle decadence in all its complexity—all the nuances, smells, colors, sounds, and, above all, dramatic changes of weather—that has made this work so celebrated. In other words (and stated more philosophically—at least from the perspective of Nietzscheand Heidegger): the fascinating