Confronting Evil: The Psychology of Secularization in Modern French Literature
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Confronting Evil - Scott M. Powers
CONFRONTING EVIL
Purdue Studies in Romance Literatures
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CONFRONTING EVIL
The Psychology of Secularization
in Modern French Literature
Scott M. Powers
Purdue University Press
West Lafayette, Indiana
Copyright ©2016 by Purdue University. All rights reserved.
The paper used in this book meets the minimum requirements of American National Standard for Information Sciences—Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI Z39.48-1992.
Printed in the United States of America
Template for interior design by Anita Noble; template for cover by Heidi Branham.
Cover photo:
The Gates of Hell
1880–1900
Auguste Rodin, France, 1840–1917
Bronze 1985.86
Iris & B. Gerald Cantor Center for Visual Arts at Stanford University; Gift of the B. Gerald Cantor Collection
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Powers, Scott M., author.
Title: Confronting Evil : the psychology of secularization in modern French literature / Scott M. Powers.
Description: West Lafayette, Indiana : Purdue University Press, [2016] | Series: Purdue studies in Romance literatures ; 66 | Includes bibliographical references and index.
Identifiers: LCCN 2015035809| ISBN 9781557537416 (pbk. : alk. paper) | ISBN 9781612494524 (epdf) | ISBN 9781612494531 (epub)
Subjects: LCSH: French literature--20th century--History and criticism. | French literature--21st century--History and criticism. | Evil in literature. | Ethics in literature. | Secularization--France.
Classification: LCC PQ307.E87 P69 2016 | DDC 840.9/353--dc23 LC record available at http://lccn.loc.gov/2015035809
For Alex
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter One
Writing against Theodicy: Secularization in Baudelaire’s Poetry and Critical Essays
Chapter Two
The Mourning of God and the Ironies of Secularization in Baudelaire’s Le Spleen de Paris
Chapter Three
Sublimation and Conversion in Zola and Huysmans
Chapter Four
The Staging of Doubt: Zola and Huysmans on Lourdes
Chapter Five
Religious and Secular Conversions: Transformations in Céline’s Medical Perspective on Evil
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgments
I could not have completed this study without the generous support of mentors, colleagues, friends, and family at various stages of its development. As this project began several years ago as a doctoral dissertation, I thank Madeleine Dobie for her assiduous guidance, and for its critical readers, including Hilary Malawer, Felicia McCarren, Vaheed Ramazani, and Jean-Marie Gleize. I remain indebted to Miguel Benasayag who, in granting me multiple interviews, afforded me the unique opportunity to probe further the philosophy with which this work is very much in conversation. I am grateful both to the Malawer family for welcoming me into their home and to Tulane University for granting me a year-long fellowship at École Normale Supérieure de Lyon, where I was able to make great strides in both the research and the writing stages.
In a second, post-graduate stage, invaluable conversations with Vaheed Ramazani assisted me in reorienting my study of secularization by situating it within a psychological framework. An invitation to participate in the 2009 Fleurs du Mal seminar at the National Humanities Center, led by Jonathan Culler, gave me new insight into poetry on evil. The University of Mary Washington has been a pivotal player in providing numerous opportunities for me to advance in the project, including the Jepson Fellowship, a sabbatical, several research grants, and the book’s subvention.
Some materials in this book first appeared in another form in other publications. I would like to thank the editors of the University of Nebraska Press for allowing me to use my article that first appeared in one of their journals. Chapter 1 is a modified and supplemented version of Writing against Theodicy: Reflections on the Co-existence of God and Evil in Baudelaire’s Poetry and Critical Essays,
Nineteenth Century French Studies 39.1 & 2 (2010): 77–98. It is reproduced with permission from the University of Nebraska Press. Copyright Nineteenth Century French Studies 2010. I am also thankful to the editors of Inter-disciplinary.Net and Dalhousie French Studies for allowing me to republish parts of my articles. Parts of Chapter 4 first appeared in a different form as The Cross-Pressures of Secularization and the Lourdes Phenomenon in Zola and Huysmans,
Uneasy Humanity: Perpetual Wrestling with Evil, ed. Colette Balmain and Nanette Norris (Oxford: Inter-disciplinary.Net Press, 2009), 79–86. Parts of Chapter 5 were adapted from my article that first appeared as Evil and Medicine: Interpreting Céline’s Diagnostic Narratives,
Dalhousie French Studies 67 (2004): 63–74.
Chapters of the book’s final form have benefited from diligent readers who have generously given their time, including Joseph Acquisto, Brooke Di Lauro, Bill Hartland, Denis Provencher, and two anonymous reviewers for Purdue Studies in Romance Literatures. I especially thank Susan Y. Clawson and the editorial staff at PSRL for making this publication possible.
Finally, to those who have made this project worthwhile, I would like to give special thanks: my students at the University of Mary Washington, and in particular Cameron Doucette, Emily Enterline, and Lisa Grimes, who shared my passion for the writers and themes treated in this book; my family, for their loving support and encouragement at every step of the way; my mother, for instilling in me the passion for learning; and Alex, for his inspiring love and devotion and to whom this book is dedicated.
Introduction
A study of the many challenges posed by the modern literary text must include a serious consideration of the psychological dimensions of secularization. A broad understanding exists that the modernization of Western societies largely entails the retreat of religion from social institutions and from the individual’s perception of the world. This idea has contributed to the development of secularization studies in recent years.¹ However, this emerging discipline has yet to elaborate a psychology that can substantially benefit the hermeneutics of modern literature. Through the critical analysis of works by nineteenth- and twentieth-century French writers, this book aims precisely to uncover a psychology of secularization
at the core of modernity.
For the notion of the psychology of secularization to be meaningful, we must demarcate it as distinct in some fundamental way from the mindset of believers who interpret current events and personal life developments within the framework of God’s plan. Correspondingly, as secularization
connotes a process, its psychology should also be differentiated from that of the putative fixity of the secular mind,
which is generally discussed as a consciousness firmly grounded in a materialist way of perceiving the world, and characterized by what philosopher Charles Taylor describes as self-sufficient humanism (18).
Over the past century, much has been written on both the religious and secular minds. The pioneer work of Auguste Comte, Emile Durkheim, Sigmund Freud, and Carl Jung, followed by the contributions of Rudolf Otto, Paul Tillich, and Peter Berger, forged a veritable psychology of religion that has become greatly enhanced in recent years by myriad studies often attempting to explain the nature of the religious mindset through the lens of the disciplines of anthropology, sociology, and evolutionary biology. Unlike the psychology of religion, that of the secular mind has not traditionally drawn attention to itself. This is due in part to the problematic conjecture among the scientific community that the thought processes of nonbelievers simply constituted normal psychology.
Nonetheless, scholars have studied influential theorists from the French philosophes to Karl Marx as examples of secular minds (or humanists) who subtract notions of the divine from human values or concerns.² In contrast, little effort has yet been made to elucidate a psychology of secularization, conceived not as a fixed understanding of the world but rather as an aggregate of psychological forces in flux between the epistemological certainties or reflexes of believers and those of nonbelievers. Neither religious nor secular, the psychology of secularization draws its substance from both.
Although there is reason to believe and I will argue that the religious and secular mindsets share a lot in common, I shall begin by accepting the general assumption of fundamental differences that make speaking of a religious
or a secular
way of thinking meaningful. Theorists commonly define the religious mindset as governed by belief in the supernatural, and in the sacredness of life because it is the visible manifestation of a spiritual realm that endows it with meaning. As Peter Berger has described it in The Sacred Canopy, religion ‘locates’ human phenomena within a cosmic frame of reference. […] God becomes the most reliable and ultimately significant other
(35, 38). The secular mind, on the other hand, as Robert Coles explains, yield[s] to or seek[s] outright the profane: ideas and values and habits and interests [have] their origin in our earthly lives, our day-to-day desires, worries, frustrations, resentments
(11). Drawing from Max Weber, Charles Taylor describes the religious mind as the perception of an enchanted
world governed by a host of spiritual forces continually coming into contact with it. A porous,
vulnerable self feels intimately connected to—even defined by—the cosmos. On the contrary, for the thoroughly secular consciousness, the world is disenchanted
(Taylor 27),³ the spirit realm recedes, and the ego becomes the primary locus of thoughts, feelings, and intent. The individual is largely self-reflexive, buffered
from the environment, and confident in its own powers of moral ordering.
Accordingly, secularity is coterminous with the rise of exclusive humanism in which all things are explained without reference to a deity (Taylor 18–19).⁴
I propose here a third type of psychology as a distinguishing attribute of the modern era, one that, in contrast to notions of the religious
and secular
mindsets, appears to be characteristically fluid. As the term secularization denotes a process rather than a relatively fixed state of being, at the level of the individual it imposes its own dynamics that can roughly be described as unstable because it is continually refashioned by the interpenetration of opposing religious and secular forces. Within this psychology, the self is caught in constant negotiation with rivaling frames of mind, and therefore incessantly labors to ground itself in one worldview. It reacts to its own abiding skepticism of one or both systems of thought by attempting to take sides.
However, because the ego remains forever interpellated by conflicting ideological forces, it fails to convince itself of the truth of one or the other.
The perspective on secularization underlying this study recognizes that religion has gradually lost much of its force in social interaction and individual consciousness in Western Europe. At the same time, it acknowledges that religion has never ceased to exert influence, and that in all likelihood it will continue to exist alongside, and transform in response to, secularity. In recent decades, a group of revisionist scholars including Jürgen Habermas, Peter Berger, David Martin, Charles Taylor, Grace Davie, and Danièle Hervieu-Léger have rethought secularization as an enduring, perhaps never fully completed, process. Whereas traditionally, secularization theorists construed history as the gradual and definitive abandonment of our metaphysical illusions, contemporary scholars have progressively contested this linear conception of secularization as a one-way street.⁵ In considering the survival of religious thought and institutions in modern and post-modern societies, Berger observes in The Desecularization of the World that we do not in fact live in a secularized
world (2). Correspondingly, Taylor attests that in the secular age,
secularity continues to be challenged by a lasting religious construal. In this vein, secularity is never fully achieved and self-sufficient, but constantly reshapes itself through a dialectical relationship with enduring religious thought. To clarify, I do not mean to dismiss the notion of the secular mind; for practical purposes we can consider many influential philosophers and writers since at least the nineteenth century, as well as a non-negligible percentage of populations in Western societies today, as thoroughly secular. However, the writings of an increasing number of scholars begin to point in the direction of this study’s hypothesis that the modern period’s dominant psychology reveals a dynamics of fluctuation put into play by the divergent forces of secularization. Over the past two centuries, religion by no means disappears in Western Europe, but is nonetheless constantly challenged by, and in turn poses its own challenges to, secularity. A discussion of the psychology of secularization would therefore prove to be apposite for a study of the modern consciousness.
This book focuses primarily on French literature from the second half of the nineteenth century until World War II. Whereas the characteristics of the psychology of secularization outlined in the chapters that follow also apply to works from other time periods by writers of a variety of Western cultures, I believe that for historical reasons modern France presents us with some of the most vivid examples. To be sure, secularization has been taking place for several centuries. For thinkers such as Max Weber and Walter Benjamin, since as far back as medieval times capitalism has played a fundamental role in the demystification of our perception of the world.⁶ And yet, as Owen Chadwick argues in The Secularization of the European Mind in the Nineteenth Century, in Western Europe secularization as a fundamental transformation of the way in which a society at large apprehends the world developed only quite recently. Although the Enlightenment gave birth to many secularizing ideas, it wasn’t until the following century that principles of intellectual inquiry and an altogether new understanding of the individual’s place in the universe were either outwardly embraced or imperceptibly internalized by large swaths of populations.⁷ During the nineteenth century, societies became willing to jettison notions which hitherto were conceived as necessary to [their] very existence
(11).
In many respects, late modern France stands as a textbook example of the type of secularization that revisionists describe, in which society witnessed a significant waning of religious influence and sentiment even as religion itself endured in challenging the dominant trend of secularization. If we refer to the original meaning of secularization as the expropriation of church property by the state,
we can unequivocally describe nineteenth-century France as a time of great secularization (Pecora 13). Under the Third Republic especially, the enactment of a series of laws aimed to eradicate the Church’s role in the public sphere. The laïcisation of the public school system, abolition of the parochial character of cemeteries, suppression of the obligatory repos dominical,
legalization of divorce, and definitive separation of Church and State in 1905, effected a period of dechristianization,
which, as historians Gérard Cholvy and Yves-Marie Hilaire aver, amounted to religion’s marginalization in all aspects of French society and its relegation to private affairs (172).
Despite the aggressive trend of secularization in France’s fin de siècle, the Church continued to exert her influence in profound ways. Late nineteenth-century French society exemplifies the great paradox of secularization as the interplay of [both] secularizing and counter-secularizing forces.
⁸ Indeed, the nation’s move toward a secular state met with a no-less-significant spiritual renewal that translated into a marked increase in baptisms, church attendance, and national pilgrimages, changed the face of the country’s city centers with the construction of new churches and grandiose basilicas, and was reinforced by the conversion of famous writers and intellectuals to the Catholic faith. The erection of twenty-four new churches in Paris alone, the building of the Paris and Lyon basilicas, the flourishing of national shrines such as Lourdes that attracted ever greater numbers of French and European pilgrims, the proliferation of Catholic publications and workers’ unions, and the birth of the reactionary political movement Action française that advocated the restoration of Roman Catholicism as the state religion overtly indicated what Cholvy and Hilaire have regarded as the spiritual rebirth of a nation (120). In this book, I examine writers of nineteenth- and early twentieth-century France as various case studies of a modern psychology, born in the interstices of the rivaling cultural trends of religion and secularism.
The Religious Other of the Modern Text
One of my aims is to explore reasons why, from a psychological perspective, religiosity persists in modern literary texts otherwise praised for their high secularity. An investigation into the enduring place of religious sentiment in the later writings of Charles Baudelaire—hailed by scholars beginning with Walter Benjamin as the modern poet of the nineteenth century—will prove particularly enlightening.⁹ Baudelaire’s prose poems present striking illustrations of the process of secularization. In forsaking the Catholic mysticism of Les Fleurs du Mal, Le Spleen de Paris unfurls a highly secularized vision of the individual grounded in material reality. And yet, despite an overarching linear movement in Baudelaire’s poetry from mystical correspondences to a poetics of daily experience, there emerge in numerous prose poems many circular movements, even recoils, indicative of on-going investment in notions of the divine.
If secularization entails the historical retreat of God from human affairs, the ego would seem naturally to experience secularization as loss. Consequently, the dramatization of secularization in literature would involve acts of mourning. Not unlike our grieving for a recently deceased loved one, the passing of the deity, as implied by Nietzsche’s death of God
and characterized by the transition from belief to unbelief, would logically involve a grieving period. Following Freud’s theory on mourning, I will argue that grieving subsumes a psychology in which the ego enters into an ambivalent and enduring relationship with the deceased
divine. From this perspective, I can regard both secularization and the modernity of writing as the performance of mourning. In Le Spleen de Paris, secularization indeed manifests itself as loss, as the title of the prose poem Perte d’auréole
intimates, and is dramatized as grieving throughout the collection. The Baudelairean experience of secularity involves the loss of faith in the hidden correspondences of transcendence between the visible and the invisible that had once endowed the cosmos with meaning and beauty. In fact, the experience of loss proves so overwhelming that it begins to materialize as the site of trauma. The secularizing project in Le Spleen de Paris to deconstruct mystical lyricism manifests as the impossibility of full relinquishment of the divine ideal; the self never entirely detaches itself from the lost object that is the enchanted world. Such is the lesson of Laquelle est la vraie?,
in which the poet cannot take leave of the grave of his beloved Bénédicta
—the personification of a poetry founded on spiritual correspondences—and of Les Vocations,
in which the narrator’s childhood self keeps his eyes fixed on the site of God’s disappearance behind the clouds.
Many of secularization’s paradoxes are inextricably intertwined with the seemingly contradictory act of mourning. In Mourning and Melancholia,
Freud described mourning as oppositional
because the ego is torn between yearning for the idealized lost object of cathexis and recognizing the reality of its definitive absence (244). In other words, the self remains psychically invested in that which it has lost, even as it seeks healing. Paradoxical though it seems, Freud asserted that this continued attachment to the cherished object is what in fact affords true healing. By figuring secularization in terms of the psychoanalytic portrayal of mourning, we can begin to appreciate the various movements toward and away from religion in Le Spleen de Paris as rooted in the psychological complexities of secularization.
Much like in Baudelaire’s poetics of grieving, in Zola’s fiction the crucial function of sublimation helps account for the psyche’s enduring attraction to the religious. Following the linear theory of secularization, naturalism purports to unveil the reality of the human condition by simultaneously divesting us of our metaphysical illusions and shining the light of truth on our brute state of being. This holds the potential of translating into a nihilistic literary vision of an unredeemingly materialist, disenchanted world that reduces the individual to biological drives. But Zola’s readers especially are well aware that religious notions are not simply subtracted.
The experimental method, meant to be strictly physiological in scope, ironically retains the theological notions of evil and divine retribution. In fact, Zola’s narratives recuperate qualities of the enchanted world in which, through a curious mystification of the body, moral evil is punished and good prevails. The resurgence of God-like figures in Thérèse Raquin and the Rougon-Macquart volumes often appears to be largely prereflective, and can be explained psychologically as a subconscious wish fulfillment for a hidden universal order. From this perspective, Jacques Lacan’s revision of Nietzsche’s famous proclamation, which asserts that God is not dead but rather unconscious,
will prove pertinent.
In Zola’s fiction, recurring religious motifs and the notion of the unconscious God can be especially understood in the context of sublimation. In The Powers of Horror, Julia Kristeva describes sublimation, in fact, as a survival mechanism in which the ego keeps the abject—that which threatens the self’s integrity and sense of an ordered universe—under control. Sublimation is especially important for an unbelieving writer such as Zola, whose potential to feel threatened by a godless world of chaos—indeed the very one that he seeks to transcribe—is so formidable. However, it is religion, as Kristeva argues, that constitutes the ultimate sublimation, for it aims primarily to purify the self by separating sin, taboo, and transgression from God and the sense of sanctification. Her understanding of the sublime draws from both Kant’s and Freud’s treatment of the notion. According to Kant, we experience the sublime in our apprehension of nature. The self’s inability to immediately intuit the infinity of an overwhelming natural object creates a negative pleasure in which the self is both drawn to and repelled by it. Above all, the self perceives the daunting object as an abyss that threatens its integrity. But this failure of the imagination is subsequently countervailed by the pleasure derived from reason’s concomitant assertion of the concept of infinity. As a result of the mind’s successful resistance to an annihilating presence, the shaping of moral integrity (and in essence the self’s reaffirmation) constitutes the sublime experience. In other words, reason converts a negative affect into a positive one as it derives pleasure through its assertion of infinity and a deeper appreciation of one’s being. For Kant then, as Vaheed Ramazani has aptly summarized, the sublime constitutes a mixture of two contradictory feelings—an initial affect of pain, anxiety, melancholy or terror
that gives rise to compensatory energies such as exultation or rapture
(94). In fact, what may seem to be the sublime’s untimely emergence in philosophy during a period of great secularization of thought served the purpose of rescuing the skeptical ego from the negative affects triggered by the apprehension of what many had begun to perceive as a godless universe. As Taylor explains, whereas the reasoning individual was becoming increasingly self-absorbed, Kant’s formulation of the sublime responded to our need to aspire beyond ourselves, to put us in touch with something grander (335–44).
Freud gives psychoanalytical depth to the sublime experience in forging a theory of sublimation as the most productive of defense mechanisms that redirects libidinal drives toward socially beneficial achievements. As the direct satisfaction of the libido can be deleterious to society, Freud describes sublimation as assuring civilization by protecting the self against nature, namely, the self’s own unruly instincts. As Clayton Crockett explains, the Kantian sublime passes into the Freudian unconscious, and reappears, most explicitly and powerfully, in the sense of the uncanny that disturbs conscious thinking from inside
(35). From a psychoanalytic perspective, the act of sublimation serves to protect the subject from anxiety. For the unbeliever, this negative affect accompanies the apprehension of a godless world of chaos, violence, and destruction, and is often phenomenally conveyed through one’s own bodily drives. Put briefly, in their discussion of sublimity both Freud and Kant uncover a psychic transmutation of those disturbing, threatening affects that the ego perceives as originating either from outside or within the self into positive pleasure. Along these lines, Neil Hertz has precisely described a recurrent phenomenon in literature as the sublime turn,
that is to say a movement of disintegration and figurative reconstitution
(14). What is precisely at stake in much of modern literature is nothing less than what Ramazani describes as the formation of a transcendent subject from and against psychic defeat
(94).
Sublimation in fictional writing accounts for seeming inconsistencies in—and in fact succors the process of—secularization. Throughout Zola’s opus, sublimation has the effect of imparting a numinous dimension to a secularizing perception of our human condition, thereby serving as a compensatory mechanism to offset the negative affects of anxiety and terror that accompany the confrontation with a godless universe. We will look at how literary mechanisms of sublimation in Zola’s narratives respond to the disarming affects of destructive bodily drives and to the overwhelming void at the heart of the nonbeliever’s universe by transmuting them into forms of transcendence that borrow from religious traditions. This would corroborate Ramazani’s description of the sublime as positing "an essence lying beyond the phenomenal world, filling in gaps with
metaphysical presence" (124).
The modern writer’s ambivalent relationship with the religious can also be explained through historical contextualization. France’s fin de siècle was a time when the opposing belief systems associated with Catholicism and naturalism presented formidable challenges to each other. The uniqueness of this time period as traversed by equally dominant worldviews made it difficult to write from within a system of thought without simultaneously feeling threatened by, and perhaps even strangely attracted to, the other ideology. Taylor’s evaluation of prominent moments in the history of Western thought as profoundly marked by the fragilization
of belief systems helps us to understand the complexity of late nineteenth-century French literary texts. In societies transformed by the mutual fragilization of opposing belief systems, citizens feel more cross-pressured
than assured. Taylor evokes as an illustration William James’s notion of the open space,
in which the ego feels itself being pulled in opposite directions by rival frames of mind. Accordingly, as Taylor explains, religion remains ineradicably on the horizon of areligion; and vice versa
(592). The competing ideologies that constitute—and the powerful cross-pressures that traverse—the secular age, make it nearly impossible to hold an unwavering conviction in a single ideology. Faith is inevitably accompanied by doubt.
A careful examination of Lourdes will, I believe, reveal Zola’s treatment of religion not solely as superstition or the object of ridicule, but also as a threatening force because of its genuine appeal. Once the novel is placed in its historical context of the violent clashes between Church and State, the religious other
can begin to be understood as possessing a considerable allure and, consequently, as posing an existential threat for secularity. In this case, what Zola encounters as particularly troubling and that consequently draws his undivided attention is the Lourdes phenomenon. The shrine’s attraction of ever greater numbers of pilgrims defied the writer’s concept of history as the gradual abandonment of religious sentiment. Furthermore, its claims of faith healings challenged unbelief in God as well as the abilities of medical science to cure. At times, precisely because of the strong appeal of the other side,
the naturalist narrative acquired attributes habitually associated with mystical writings.
By considering the possibility that writers pulled by cross-pressures feel drawn to the opposing camp, it is possible to anticipate that they demonstrate a tendency to deviate from their own interpretation of the world. Whether deliberately or subconsciously, they may entertain the possibility of the other.
Even if only momentarily, the ideologue’s text can exhibit fissures that allow it to stretch beyond the parameters of its system of thought. In the case of secular narratives, this involves envisioning the possibility of the supernatural that translates into a highly uncharacteristic dabbling
in the mystical. More specifically, I will look at how narrative forms of Zola’s Lourdes break with traditional narrative modes to imagine the existence of forces ignored by science. To take one example, the abundant use of what Dorrit Cohn has labeled consonant psychonarration, in which the narrator uncharacteristically assumes the perspective of the faithful, serves as a vehicle for experimentation with religious belief. An unequivocally mystical rendition of the shrine itself presents another curious aspect of the novel worthy of investigation. If we consider Lourdes alongside the author’s remarks describing his own visit to Lourdes, which he expressed in terms of marvel and rapture, and which betray a keen if unconscious attraction to the religious other, then we can begin to account for many of the seeming inconsistencies embedded in the novel that Zola considered his most complex.
Secularization as Ironic
The richness of modern texts lies in their multidimensionality. The depth of a Baudelairean or a Zolian narrative involves counter-movements of recoil alongside an overarching linearity, in which a secularizing project continually reinvests in notions of the sacred. Once I have begun to account for the resurgence of the religious in modern literature, I will then attempt to identify yet another textual movement, a psychic backlash that seeks ways to contain the religious. In light of the secularizing scope of Le Spleen de Paris and Les Rougon-Macquart, a survival of the religious would threaten their very foundation, were it not immediately quarantined.
For Baudelaire, irony serves this very purpose. In Le Spleen de Paris, the religious proves vulnerable to ironic negation. Scholars such as Leo Bersani have observed the importance of irony in the collection as a process of alienating self-identification
(123). Drawing from this understanding of Baudelairean irony, we will consider the self-mockery in the prose poems as a counter force to the otherwise overwhelming task of grieving. In Le Spleen de Paris, irony works to alleviate the anxiety of loss that accompanies the ongoing process of mourning God.
We can better understand the relationship between mourning and the irony of self-mockery if we bear in mind the narcissistic nature of the ego’s relationship to its various loved objects. For Freud, our libidinal investments are essentially narcissistic. The self-love that characterizes the earliest stages of the infant’s psychic development eventually transforms into object-love. In redirecting its libido outward, the ego proceeds to construct a self-image conditioned by an outside world of others. In this transformation, narcissism continues to dominate the self’s relationship to objects. For Baudelaire, the loss of God, of a romantic Ideal, of the metaphysical premises of lyric poetry, is ultimately experienced as a loss of a part of the self, of the romantic/lyric/mystic self-object. Consequently, irony manifests as a vital psychic reaction, a mode of distancing the self from