Thoughts On Deleuze, Spinoza, and The Cinema
Thoughts On Deleuze, Spinoza, and The Cinema
Thoughts On Deleuze, Spinoza, and The Cinema
Roger Dawkins
In this paper I will analyse a sequence from Werner Herzog’s film The Enigma
Of Kaspar Hauser. In this sequence the film’s protagonist, Kaspar, has what
appears to be a profound vision. Such a moment will be explored as the instance
of a certain mode of thinking, and what I hope to put forward in this paper, from a
semiotic point of view, is the possibility of the passage, revealed by this particular
sequence, towards the highest kind of thought in the cinema.
In other words, I am hoping to use Herzog’s film as a way of tracing a modern
image of thought in the cinema. As opposed to the classical mode of thought, a modern
image would be the kind of thinking Gilles Deleuze describes as non-representational
in nature. Bearing this opposition in mind, the vision sequence is particularly important
because it testifies to the tension within thinking to go either way: for one either to be
constrained within the doxa of representation or moved by the violence of the faculties.
Narratively speaking, we will see that with the apparent ambiguity of the vision (in
terms of its relation to the film as a whole), the sequence is all too easily written
off according to some kind of ideological significance: the delirium of a madman, a
hallucination, an epiphany, a spiritual awakening or a prophetic foreshadowing. What
I want to suggest though, based on Deleuze, is that the vision is a process of meaning
creation, an act of thinking in-itself where the absolute power of thought is motivated
through the creation of Ideas rather than the recollection of concepts.
Finally though, I want to cast these ideas within the context of what I see to be
Benedict De Spinoza’s influence on Deleuze. This is because I have interpreted
Spinoza’s philosophy of univocal substance to be the driving force behind Deleuze’s
cinematic project. With this in mind then, and in terms of Deleuze’s equation of the
image with matter, an idea of non-representation will be described in terms of a certain
relation between images and the realization of what Spinoza would call essence or
an “adequate” knowledge of substance. By posing a notion of thought in this
way, I hope not only to suggest the potential of the cinema, but to explicate this
potential by synthesising certain aspects of Deleuze’s cinema philosophy, therefore
at the same time outlining an overarching theory of Deleuze’s semiotic project as
a pragmatics of force.
Herzog’s film in a lot of ways concerns itself with the typical issues that could be
grouped together under the theme of what I will call an ‘assimilation’ narrative. The
Enigma is about the appearance of a young man, Kaspar, who after spending the better
part of his life locked up in a cellar, turns up in Nuremberg in 1828 barely able to speak
and walk. He is clutching a note written by his captor, addressed to the local general of
the army, expressing the wish that he become a soldier. Thrust into society, what unfolds
is a story in which Kaspar is forced to learn the language, customs and movements of
a culture, and like other similar narratives (for example, a protagonist may blunder in a
foreign culture or even suffer amnesia), this film brings into play questions of what
is innate and what is learned. From this, the relationship between ideas of being
and the social arise in terms of the salience of the social in shaping our thoughts.
Of concern for this paper then is the adequacy of language as a mode of expression
and understanding.
With Kaspar’s assimilation comes his attempt to learn the bodily configurations
everybody else takes for granted; for instance composing himself in order to walk,
speak, eat and write. In a scene in which Kaspar is taught by a child how to eat from
a bowl and drink from a cup, we see Kaspar’s initiation into a notion of language
as a conceptual tool of representation and recollection. Like a child who’s linguistic
gestation has been radically accelerated, Kaspar, with great difficulty, learns this is
‘beer’, this is ‘soup’, this is my ‘arm’, ‘eye’, ‘mouth’… Chastised repeatedly, we see his
frustration as he fails to recollect some words, a frustration continually made noticeable
throughout the film by the strained pace of his voice and the pensive way he punctuates
his sentences with the clamped thumb and forefinger of his right hand.
Also within this learning process or assimilation, an element of fear appears with
Kaspar’s confrontation by something he cannot think, with something that lies outside
the boundaries inscribed by this simple thought process. On one occasion, having
immobilized a chicken by placing it upside down on the ground with a chalk line drawn
from its head, we watch while a group of young hoodlums laugh hysterically at Kaspar
who hides in the corner of his room. Here, Kaspar can recognize a chicken, but his
thought process is upturned when the actions of the chicken do not correspond to the
recollection he has made. On the other hand though, and in another sense of what it
means to think and act, this upheaval of Kaspar’s thought process is positive, forcing
him into a new, more motivated, and inevitably more creative mode of thinking. Here
Deleuze would say that Kaspar is made active by the uncertainty of his thoughts, a
power of experience novel for an ‘assimilated’ subject.
Kaspar is an interesting character because of these moments where he thinks what
Difference and Repetition would describe as the unthinkable. The Enigma is riddled
with moments where a violence disrupts the continuity of Kaspar’s ability to think in a
straightforward way. By ‘straightforward’ I mean what Deleuze calls the classical image
Combustion
When asked to ‘perform’ at a society gathering, Kaspar answers that there is nothing
inside him to express. However, it’s not that there’s nothing there, rather what’s
there refuses to be expressed in the language of music: there is no form of content
willing to be subordinated to yet another socialized form of expression. Instead,
inside Kaspar—beneath the gazes that define him—is ‘only life’, “beating out a
dark cosmic rhythm.” Such is an allusion to Kaspar’s essence, that component
immanent to all bodies and matter, the realization of which reveals the clarity of
thought I’m describing.
Kaspar’s words flow from his death-bed into this sequence as his narration progresses.
Neither beginning or end, Kaspar’s vision describes the deeper level that fuels the
story. As such, the vision makes a realization of essence possible, and to return to my
interpretation of Deleuze’s account of Spinoza, this is the same essence which underlies
all things in different degrees of positive difference. It is an understanding of this
essence or deeper level which fuels knowledge based on its inadequate or adequate
realization. This level of essence is not achieved through a progression, or what Deleuze
and Guattari call a “spiritual evolution,” but is immanent to all bodies and matter.
Essence is all around, “it constitutes the prehuman soup immersing us. Our hands and
faces are immersed in it:” the edges of our body are always touching it.
This is a potential always there, with matter and bodies. Furthermore, it is also a
potential in cinema if one bears in mind that an image is moving matter: it is a movement
image before it is a signifier with the addition of movement. Therefore this potential
depends on a rethinking of movement in the cinema. It depends on an understanding
of things in terms of their essence, and from a semiotic point of view, depends on an
understanding of linguistics as only one variability of an image’s significance. And so
in the cinema it depends on a relationship between images that is not subordinated to
ideology. To be more specific, for Deleuze this depends on a disruption of the continuity
of images, and in terms of Herzog’s film, an ambiguous relation between Kaspar
and the vision sequence. The possibility is always there for an image to be a pure
image of matter, a pure instance of itself in movement, or as Deleuze would suggest
in Cinema 2, a pure image of time.
With this in mind, the tension between representational thought and non-
representational thought is extra relevant in Herzog’s film because of the novelty of
the vision sequence. In other words, within the film as a whole, this sequence is a kind
of anomaly in what is otherwise quite a straightforwardly linear narrative. And so,
although I am not refuting the possibility of non-representational thought with this
sequence, we must return to Deleuze and consider the significance of this sequence as an
anomaly in the film. In short, as a peculiarity in the film, how strong is the sequence’s
representational determination as a vision, hallucination or dream?
Deleuze addresses the effects of this distinction between the vision and the rest
of the film when he writes of The Enigma in Cinema 1 that the image is “partially”
opened up through “vast hallucinatory visions of flight, ascent or passage.” From this,
and bearing in mind the absolute potential of non-representational thought, Deleuze is
suggesting this sequence as limiting because of its status as an anomaly. As a seemingly
Roger Dawkins
University of New South Wales
Paper presented at the Annual Conference of the Australian Society for Continental
Philosophy, November 22-24, 2000, at the University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia.