Friday, August 8, 2014

Laughable Loves by Kundera

Nobody Will Laugh 

"We pass through the present with our eyes blindfolded. We are permitted merely to sense and guess at what we are actually experiencing. Only later when the cloth is untied can we glance at the past and find out what we have experienced and what meaning it has."


"I lived like an eccentric who thinks that he lives unobserved behind a high wall, while all the time one detail escapes him: The wall is made of transparent glass."

And then your whole world collapses.

"All at once I understood that it had only been my illusion that we ourselves saddle events and control their course; the truth is that they aren't our stories at all, that they are foisted on us from somewhere outside; that in no way do they represent us; that we are not to blame for the strange paths they follow; that they are themselves directed from who knows where by who knows what strange forces."

If that is true, it is very convenient.

The Golden Apple of Eternal Desire 

"When you believe in something literally, through your faith you'll turn it into something absurd."

I didn't think about this before, that too much faith doesn't make things more real, but actually- the opposite.

"And because Martin is the knight obsessed by Necessity, he has transformed his love affairs into the harmlessness of the Game, without knowing it; so he continues to put his whole inflamed soul into them."

This is is a very comic story about the concept of the pursuit of a goal without wanting to achieve the goal itself. Like Kundera wrote, it was all "harmless" just because it was a Game, and therefore it could continue. If it was all too real, the fun would be taken out of it. That is why they feasted on the "idea" of what would happen, and not on the result (which never did happen). Like he said, "Will I stop playing the game just because it is futile?" Not at all. And in the end, the game wasn't about the women they conquered, but about the relationship they had with each other: Mark and the narrator. It was rather a play with each other, passing the ball back and forth. The women were the variable, while they were the constants.

The Hitchhiking Game

"In solitude it was possible for her to get the greatest enjoyment from the presence of the man she loved. If his presence had been continuous, it would have kept on disappearing. Only when she was alone was she able to hold on to it."

"Fiction was suddenly making an assault on real life. The young man was moving away from himself and from the implacable straight road, from which he had never strayed until now."

The power of fiction!

"[...]in fact, she smiled at the thought of how nice it was that today she was this other woman, this irresponsible, indecent other woman, one of those women of whom she was so jealous"

Maybe there is freedom in being someone else, and not having to deal with your real self and your insecurities...Interesting what the man thought, that we are in fact who we long to be all along. "Wasn't she becoming herself only through the game? Wasn't she freeing herself through the game? No, sitting opposite him was not a strange woman in his girl's body; it was his girl, herself, no one
else."

"[...] it had always seemed that the girl had reality only within the bounds of fidelity and purity, and that beyond these bounds it simply didn't exist; beyond these bounds she would cease to be herself, as water ceases to be water beyond the boiling point."

But isn't it unfair to attribute these concepts to a human being, and make them exist within these limits? Because then, the person begins to want to break these boundaries, precisely because they are so important for the relationship. For example, the girl knows that he loves her because she is pure, and that is why she is playing this game of the seductress- because she wants to be herself and cease to be a concept.

"It was as if he were looking at two images through the same lens, at two images superimposed one on the other with one showing through the other. These two images showing through each other were telling him that everything was in the girl, that her soul was terrifyingly amorphous, that it held faithfulness and unfaithfulness, treachery and innocence, flirta-tiousness and chastity. This disorderly jumble seemed disgusting to him, like the variety to be found in a pile of garbage."

Everything was within her- the bad and the good. And both had at the equal potential to show themselves.


---
What if they had never played this role? Then these "selves" within them would have never come out and expressed themselves, although they so much wanted to. They would have led a normal life, him worshipping her purity, and she staying pure while being insecure all the time. I think it is a good release, and sooner or later it would have come out in a different form. If not, she would have cheated on him with someone else, just so that she could prove to him (maybe she would be mad at him) that she was not chained to PURITY.

Symposium

"It is impossible to shake your tenacious desire to be flesh and nothing but flesh. Your breasts know how to rub against a man standing five meters away from you. My head is already spinning from those eternal gyrations your untiring butt describes when you walk. Go to the devil, get away from me! Those boobs of yours are ubiquitous—like God!" 


Her boobs are ubiquitous (omnipresent). That's great. 

"Perhaps I want to resist necessity. To trip up causality. To throw off the dismal predictability of the world's course by means of the free will of caprice."

"A man is responsible for his ignorance. Ignorance is a fault." 

---- 
Kunder mentions the relationship between George Sand and Frederic Chopin and about how she was a virgin for 7 years while living with him. I didn't even know this! 
This is what she says in a letter to a friend: 

"For a long time now the disease which gnaws at the body and soul of this poor creature has been the death of me, and I see him fading away without ever having been able to do him any good, since it is his anxious, jealous and touching affection for me which is the main cause of his misery. For the last seven years I have lived like a virgin with him and other men. I have grown old before my time, but even so it cost me no effort or sacrifice, for I was so weary of passions and hopeless distEusionments. If ever a woman on this earth should have inspired him with absolute confidence I was that woman and he has never understood it. I am well aware that plenty of people accuse me, some of having exhausted him by the violence of my physical passion, others of having driven him to despair by my wild outbursts. I think you know the real state of affairs. He complains that I have killed him by refusing my consent, while I was absolutely certain that I should kill him if I acted otherwise. " 

Kunder goes on to include:
"[...] she is so petrified by the anguish of love that she cannot make love with him. Elisabet,
can't you imagine that you could love someone so terribly that just because of it you couldn't go to bed with him?" 

Just as George Sand "while I was absolutely certain that I should kill him if I acted otherwise. " 


George Sand and Frederic Chopin painted by Eugene Delacroix 
----

"But note this well, my dear Elisabet, love is connected far more loosely with what you
 so incessantly think about than it might seem." 

"A leak in nature is a religious ceremony, by means of which we promise the earth that in the end we'll return to it entirely." :)

"Look at me! I'm alive, at least! I'm not dying! For the time being I'm still alive! I'm alive!" and with these words her backside was no longer a backside, but grief itself, splendidly formed grief dancing around the room."

Don Juan and the Great Collector:
"Don Juan was a master, while the collector is a slave. Don Juan arrogantly transgressed
conventions and laws. The Great Collector only obediently, by the sweat of his brow, complies with conventions and the law, because collecting has become good manners, good form, and almost an obligation."

"What is the ugliness of a face compared with an emotion in whose greatness the absolute itself is mirrored?"

How egoistic of him to think that she tried to kill herself because of him- he is fully convinced that he was the reason. And now- come to think of it- why couldn't he love her? If she loves him? Because it strokes his ego and that's what he's truly after, especially after being rejected by the woman doctor. How wonderfully Kunder makes fun of Flajsman: "Flajsman sat gaping at Elisabet, because he hadn't expected such nobility: Elisabet didn't want to burden him with remorse, she didn't want to burden him with her love, and therefore she was renouncing it!" and "I think a man and a woman love each other all the more when they don't live together and when they know about each other only that they exist, and when they are grateful to each other for the fact that they exist and that they know they exist. And that alone is enough for their happiness. I thank you, dear Elisabet, I thank you for existing." Ha what a joke!

Beautiful and it ends with Flajsman having his "chest swell" with love for the woman doctor. How wittingly he portrayed the fickle poet! Nothing is noble and nothing is sacred for him if it doesn't feed his self-love.

"She absolutely escaped his imagination."

"Obviously he was experiencing that very short period (the paradisiac period) when the imagination is not yet satiated by experience, has not become routine, knows little, and knows how to do little, so that the unimaginable still exists; and should the unimaginable become reality (without the mediation of the imaginable, without that narrow bridge of images), a man will be seized by panic and vertigo."

Sometimes we are not ready for reality.

"This immediately struck her as a new corroboration of her conviction that the worth of a human being lies in the ability to extend oneself, to go outside oneself, to exist in and for other people."

"[...] if he then became disgusted with her and destroyed her monument in his thoughts, it made no difference because her monument was outside her, just as his thoughts and memory were outside her, and everything that was outside her made no difference."

We just have to put our ideas and monuments outside of ourselves in another person, so that they could never be changed or tarnished- no matter what happens to us.

So what are the reasons for their sleeping together? For him- she meant his past, what he had missed and the fact that things didn't change. If only he could have her, then he could have his past back again. For him it meant everything because all he saw in himself is that he was aging "the bald spot". For her- it meant a rebellion against her son, her as an invidiual. She did something she was forbidden to do, and broke the life she was condemned to live. She needed to be free from this martyrdom, which she herself explained to the man (as well as trying to explain to herself- to rationalize). And so, they needed each other, to fulfill each other's dreams to escape their own present disappointments. In this way, they could pretend to go back to the past, even for a second (they both knew they were going to be disgusted), just so they can live in the present.

" [...] while I, my dear friend, just as I am, naked, torn out of a legend, am going to vanish against the background of an implacably garish landscape and before the eyes of derisive, living youth."

"Vodka stinks of the Russian soul."

"You must understand that the pleasures of the body left only to its silence are tiresomely similar. In this silence one woman becomes like another and all of them are forgotten in all the others. And surely we throw ourselves into erotic pleasures above all in order to remember them. So that their luminous points will connect our youth with our old age by means of a shining ribbon! So that they will preserve our memory in an eternal flame!And take it from me, my friend, only a word uttered at this most ordinary of moments is capable of illuminating it in such a way that it remains unforgettable. They say of me that I'm a collector of women. In reality I'm far more a collector of words. Believe me, you'll never forget yesterday evening, and you'll be happy about that all your life!"

The power of words on memory. 

"Now, however, the unpremeditated snare of false news had caused a split in the coherence of her being, and it seemed to Eduard that her ideas were in fact only a veneer on her destiny, and her destiny only a veneer on her body; he saw her as an accidental conjunction of a body, ideas, and a life's course, an inorganic structure, arbitrary and unstable. He visualized Alice (who was breathing deeply on his shoulder), and he saw her body separately from her ideas, he liked this body, its ideas seemed ridiculous to him, and this body and its ideas formed no unity; he saw her as an ink line spreading on a blotter: without contours, without shape." 

He stopped respecting her because she forsook her principles for him. 

"If you told him the whole truth and nothing but thev truth, only what you really thought, you would enter into a serious conversation with a madman you yourself would become mad. And it is the same way with the world that surrounds us. If I obstinately told the truth to its face, it would mean that I was taking it seriously. And to take seriously something so unserious means to lose all one's own seriousness. I have to lie, if I don't want to take madmen seriously and become a madman myself."

About telling the truth. 

" [...] and suddenly it seemed to him that, in fact, all the people he had met in this town were only ink lines spreading on a blotter, beings with interchangeable attitudes, beings without firm substance; but what was worse, what was far worse (it struck him next), was that he himself was only a shadow of all these shadow-characters;" 

"[...] for even malicious imitation remains imitation, even a shadow that mocks remains a shadow, a secondary thing, derivative and wretched."

"GOD IS ESSENCE ITSELF" 

"And that is why Eduard longs for God, for God alone is relieved of the distracting obligation of appearing and can merely be; for he alone constitutes (he alone, unique and nonexistent) the essential antithesis of this world, which is all the more existent for being unessential.

 
--
Kundera has such a healthy sense of humor. I very much enjoyed these stories.












Sunday, August 3, 2014

Impromptu




"I'm a coward, of course. I can never simply boot my lovers down the stairs." 

"You promised to love me." 
"I didn't promise to succeed." 

"Leave her alone! She's going off to write about us. It's time for her nightly regurgitation. 20 pages. The only reason she needs you or me or anybody is to provide characters for her ghastly novels!" 


"Darling, I want to be on your conscience. You destroyed my youth. You buried my springtime in shadows." 


"The horse is a critic!" 

"Someone's got to show you how to breathe!"


----- 


I don't agree with the criticism against her novels, that they are worthless because she just did it for money. I first read her novels without knowing anything about her life- and they truly touched me. The heroins in her novels are cold, and yet they have something deep and good inside. They do not have any more energy to live life and to enjoy it, and yet they want to. 


I view her as an inspiration. As a liberated woman, and above all as a crazy writer.

Sunday, July 20, 2014

Life is Everywhere by Kundera

"At first this thought only flickered in his head, but now that he had been made aware of his inner originality, he didn't allow the thought to escape (as he had allowed so
many other thoughts to escape previously) but immediately seized it, observed it, examined it from all sides." 

"Aren't we living in a world where headless men only desire decapitated women? Isn't a realistic vision of the world the emptiest of illusions ?"

"His distaste for himself remained down below; down below he had felt his palms become sweaty with fear and his breath speed up; but here, up high in the poem, he was above his paltryness; the keyhole episode and his cowardice were merely a trampoline above which he was now soaring; he was no longer subordinate to his experience, his experience was subordinate to what he had written." 

"For him sleep is not the opposite of life; for him, sleep is life, and life is a dream. He goes from dream to dream as if he were going from one life to another."

"[...] and for the moment the hands existed alone, by themselves; they were miraculous hands in an empty space; hands between two adventures, between two lives; hands unspoiled by a body or a head." 

"He would look at himself in the mirror for a long time, desperately struggling in the immense space between ape and Rilke." 

"Mama immediately recognized that voice; she saw her son's face with her lost lover's voice coming out of it; she saw a face that didn't belong to her; she heard a voice that didn't belong to her; her son stood before her like the image of a double repudiation; that seemed intolerable to her."  

When the mother realizes that the boy is not her own anymore.  

"But Arthur Rimbaud ran away again and again; he ran with a collar fastened to his neck, writing his poems as he ran."

"[…] when he is old a man is no longer obliged to care about his group's opinions, about the public, and about the future. He is alone with approaching death, and death has neither eyes nor ears, he has no need to please death; he can do and say what he pleases."

"In an immature young man, the yearning long persists for the safety and unity of the universe that he alone completely filled inside his mother, and he is anxious about (or angered by) the relativized adult world in which he is now engulfed like a droplet in an ocean of otherness." 

To go back into the womb.  


"How delightful it would be to forget what it is that dries up the sap of our brief lives so as to enslave them to its useless work, how beautiful it would be to forget History!"

"History does not make its way only on the dramatic peaks of our lives but also soaks into everyday life like dirty water; it enters our story in the guise of underwear." 

I like part 6 a lot- how beautiful it is. It is an interlude- a scene- which existed only for a moment. A scene which actually is of no importance- and that is what makes it beautiful. In a way- the redhead and the 40 year old man, exist apart from the story with the poet (the egoist). They have a different life apart from the novel itself. "In this novel, too, this sixth part has been only a quiet interlude in which a stranger suddenly lights the lamp of kindness. Let us keep looking at it a few moments more, that gentle lamp, that kindly light, before the novel's cottage vanishes from our sight."

All the poets are one and they exist at the same time in essence. 

"[...] water is the exterminating element of those who have been led astray in their own selves, in their love, in their feelings, in their madness, in their mirrors and their whirlwinds;" 

Kundera resurrects the scene of Lermontov's death through the poet, I love how he merges what happened in real life with his story. One moment he is talking about the Jaromil, and the next he transfers the names to Lermontov and Martynov. (taken from online)

"He joined the town’s social life, meeting one of his old acquaintances, fellow army officer Nikolay Martynov. Although the two men were seemingly on good terms, Martynov soon became a target of Lermontov’s sharp wit and caustic jokes.
One proved to be a joke too many and Martynov challenged Lermontov to a duel. It left Martynov unharmed – but was fatal for Lermontov. He was killed on the spot on the evening of July 27, 1941, at the foot of Mashuk Mountain. He was just 26." 

Kundera even comments on his comparison, where Jaromil is kicked instead of shot: "O my Bohemia, how easily you transform the glory of a pistol shot into the buffoonery of a kick in the pants!" How witty! And yet he goes even further and gives us what we want, a scene just as it happened. But in the end it doesn't matter: "Tell us, Lermontov! Merely the stage props? A pistol or a kick in the pants? Merely the scenery History imposes on a human adventure?" It's scenery, it's not real. The detail is interesting as well, Jaromil gets shot but the Lermontov in him falls to the ground.


"And yet, should we laugh at Jaromil because he is merely a parody of Lermontov? Should we laugh at the painter because he imitated Andre Breton with his leather coat and his German shepherd? Was Andre Breton not himself an imitation of something noble he wished to resemble? Is not parody the eternal destiny of man?"


But what does he mean to say about Xavier? Was it a different part of him making love to the filmmaker? And who was he out on the balcony, the Lermontov part of him?

I am entranced by the way he switches scenes, from Lermontov to Jaromil to Xavier... 

And therefore, Jaromil ends with this last confession: ""Actually, I never really liked any woman," he says. "Only you, Mama. You're the most beautiful of all." And that is why Jaromil died a death of water instead of fire: because the water was actually his mother- comforting him from all the suffering he has had- mainly from his own egoism. 

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
This was a difficult book for me to read because I can very much relate to this young "poet" for he is a person which I know in my own life. We all have our Jaromil's, even though he is not a poet (in reality). 
Yes, the everlasting "maternal power". I think that his egoism was her own fault, I blame her for all of his faults because she indulged him too much. She overstepped her motherly role, especially when she started confiding in him about her personal problems. She needed him because she was forced into a love-less marriage, and when she understood that- she gave her all to her son, the only thing she had left. That is why she was so overprotective of him when he found other "women" in his life, because she was afraid of losing him. 
Kunder is right to call Jaromil "foolish" because in fact, he didn't understand what impact he had on people, he was always focused on himself and what he believes, and his poetry. In fact, he got most of his inspiration when he made someone live solely for himself, such as the redhead when she was crying (or when he hit her) because she was crying for him. I think in a way, he needed someone to live for him, just like his mother needed Jaromil to live for her. And maybe that is why he loved his poetry so much, because he had power over words, and he desperately needed power. 
Was there anything GOOD about him? I don't really know... he was true to his beliefs, and I admire that. But in the end, he was only faithful to his mother, even though he tried to break out and show his independence, but in the end, it was inevitable that he would come back to her. I think he really was good to his mother, because she was the only one which could dominate him (emotionally) and I think he needed that.


Sorry if I am being too cruel- maybe because at this point in my life, I am biased concerning this particular situation. 

Kundera writes beautifully, and I have always been searching for a "contemporary" writer to resurrect these concepts which have long been dead, and to play with essences that are immortal, such as in this case, Lermontov, the foolish poet. 



One last question: what is the significance of Xavier? Was Xavier better than Jaromil? Was he perhaps the man Jaromil  wished to be but couldn't because he was tied down to his mother? Even Kundera says: 
“Freedom does not begin where parents are rejected or buried, but where they do not exist:
Where man is brought into the world without knowing by whom.
Where man is brought into the world by an egg thrown into a forest.
Where man is spat out on the ground by the sky and puts his feet on the world without feeling gratitude.)”  
Xavier had the power to be whatever or whomever he wished, because he had no history. And history holds us back. Again, I want to repeat my favorite quote of this work: 


"How delightful it would be to forget what it is that dries up the sap of our brief lives so as to enslave them to its useless work, how beautiful it would be to forget History!"