Witnessing and Waiting in Walt Whitman’s Democratic Arts of Attention
Abstract
:1. Introduction
For Silverman, the world itself is densely interwoven in a field of public flesh in which we are richly enfolded, and democracy is the political form that acknowledges this condition.1Each of us is connected through similarities that are neither of our making or our choosing to countless other beings. We cannot extricate ourselves from these relationships, because there is no such thing as an individual; the smallest unit of Being is two interlocking terms… Analogy runs through everything-that-is like a shuttle through a loom, weaving its threads into the All… Since analogy prevents similar things from collapsing into, and disparate things from going their separate ways, it is ontologically democratizing.
2. Witness and Wait
Here, Whitman oscillates between inside and outside in broad, swift movements, insinuating the thinnest of membranes dividing the two. First, he notices the feeling of anatomical processes developing in his bodily interior: his beating heart, and the passage of blood and air through his lungs. Then, Whitman pivots to what is happening outside in his environment, which he apprehends through the smell of leaves, hay, and the “dark-color’d sea rocks.” In the final statement, Whitman weaves inside and outside dialectically together by noticing the sound of words as they pass from his throat of flesh into the “eddies of the wind.”My respiration and inspiration, the beating of my heart, thepassing of blood and air through my lungs,The sniff of green leaves and dry leaves, and of the shore anddark-color’d sea rocks, and hay in the barn,The sound of the belch’d words of my voice loos’d to the eddies ofthe wind…
The stanza opens with one of the earliest self-descriptions of “Song of Myself”. Who Whitman “is” stands “apart” from the forces that “pull” and “haul” at him, indicating a measure of subjective autonomy. Whitman is moved toward sympathetic openness toward others (“compassionating”), while at other times he remains unmoved, fixed, anchored in himself (“complacent” and “idle”). He shuttles back and forth between these two poles by inhabiting a kinetic state of pendular motion, swaying between ecstatic openness and centripetal inwardness.Apart from the pulling and hauling stands what I am,Stands amused, complacent, compassionating, idle, unitary,Looks down, is erect, or bends an arm on an impalpablecertain rest,Looking with side-curved head curious what will come next,Both in and out of the game and watching and wondering at it.Backward I see in my old days where I sweated through the fog withLinguists and contenders,I have no mockings or arguments, I witness and wait.
Whitman “will do nothing but listen,” intimating respite. However, this “nothing” involves a dynamic responsiveness to the rich expression of emergent forms taking shape in his environment. He lists what he notices: an avian choir, the bustling of swaying wheat, the human activity of cooking around a fire, people talking, and above all else, all of these sounds mixing together in a fusional acoustic assemblage that is “combined, fused, or following.” Whitman rounds out the stanza by noticing not the singularity of the sounds themselves, so much as their blending, running together, and “following.” By developing an attentiveness to the way these sounds run together—not to the way the “clack of sticks” sound, for instance, but to the way the clacking contributes toward a sounding out together with other sounds—Whitman begins to notice hearing itself; that is to say, attention itself becomes an object of attention.Now I will do nothing but listen,To accrue what I hear into this song, to let sounds contributetoward it.I hear bravuras of birds, bustle of growing wheat, gossip of flames,clack of sticks cooking my meals,I hear the sound I love, the sound of the human voice,I hear all sounds running together, combined, fused orFollowing.
His “shell” is porous. By this point in “Song of Myself,” being “both in and out of the game” has placed Whitman in the position of being just barely divided from what he senses, and yet Whitman insists on the division, thus resisting chiasmatic interpretations that stress absolute reversibility, such as can be found, for instance, in the work of Maurice Merleau-Ponty. Though the objects he perceives are led from his sensory apparatus “harmlessly through” his body, it is clear that their trace remains spectrally “inside” him because the experience of listening fills him so fully:Mine is no callous shell,I have instant conductors all over me whether I pass or stoop,They seize every object and lead it harmlessly through me,
Whitman hears the soundings that pervade his surroundings as though they were musical creations (“a grand opera”). The sounds pour into him, and he is “filled” up by their “chorus.” This sense of being filled up—of being full of the sounds that do not merely surround or pass through, but also summon up and permeate Whitman—exemplifies the effect witnessing and waiting has when one notices not only perceivable objects, but also the sensory organs (“instant conductors”) that provide the conditions of possibility for feeling immanent with such objects in the first place.I hear the chorus, it is a grand opera,Ah, this indeed is music—this suits me.A tenor large and fresh as the creation fills me,The orbic flex of his mouth is pouring and filling me full.
For Whitman, touch is powerfully disruptive. It is transporting, in the sense that through touch he moves, travels out, and broadens his perspectival locus. Scarcely an exercise in self-shattering, Whitman may be “hardly different” from what he touches, but the event of touch puts him in a position of guardedness, one that returns him to his subjective mooring. As pleasurable as touch can be (“I merely stir, press, feel with my fingers, and am happy”), the self-expansion it induces prompts a defensive reaction: “To touch my person to someone else’s is about as much as I/can stand;” and again: “You villain touch! What are you doing? My breath is tight in its/throat,/Uncleanch your floodgates, you are too much for me.”9Is this then touch? quivering me to a new identity,Flames and ether making a rush for my veins,Treacherous tip of me reaching and crowding to help them,My flesh and blood playing out lightning to strike what ishardly different from myself.
Even if his touch will eventually place him in a guarded position, Whitman’s defenses (“sentries”) are initially let down, leaving him vulnerable, as he has become exposed to the pressure of the too-muchness associated with touch. Whitman describes his defenses (“They”) as converging at a headland, a coastal landform shaped around a sheer drop that extends out into a body of water. Interestingly, now, his defenses are doing the witnessing, and he has become the object of what they witness (“they come … to witness and assist against me”). It is as if, after undergoing the complex circuit of experience associated with touch, Whitman winds up witnessing his own defenses witnessing him. This puts him in an uncanny position where he is both himself, and yet somehow simultaneously not. Through witnessing what is “hardly different” from himself, Whitman has been made vulnerable to the constitutive too-muchness associated with his being both “quivered away,” and yet he has become anchored to himself through the lightning strike of sudden unsettlement. The result is a self-witnessing that mirrors the meta-noticing of Section 26. This self-reflexivity, owing to his defense against too-muchness, has become a source of agency for his engagement with it.The sentries desert every other part of me,They have left me helpless to a red marauder,They all come to the headland to witness and assist against me.
Bennett’s reading of Whitmanian judgment elides moralizing and suspends normative condemnation and instead prioritizes a “radically ecumenical kind of praise” that is aligned with a “sympathy-strung cosmos.”12The poet who judges not as the judge judges becomes as magnanimous and generous as the sun, as accepting of the things he encounters as Nature is of him … When the poet looks out on the world, he sees not fixed entities or ‘dots,’ but an eternity of fibers stretched out over time. This is not a landscape of individuals but of pulsating threads that are always interacting, tangling, joining, and snapping off. The poet’s very self is also one of those durational threads: no longer aspiring to become a sovereign agent or even an exclusively organic entity, the poet calls forth the various potentials of his body a quivering, transversing beam of light.
3. Democracy as Affiliative Cleaving
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
1 | Other scholars for whom this vision of relationality, entanglement, and democratic dispossession resonates include, for example, Denise Riley, The Words of Selves: Identification, Solidarity, Irony (Palo Alto: Stanford University Press, 2000); Ewa Ziarek, An Ethics of Dissensus: Postmodernity, Feminism, and the Politics of Radical Democracy (Palo Alto, CA: Stanford University Press, 2001); Alan Keenan, Democracy in Question (Stanford University Press, 2003); Jean-Luc Nancy, The Truth of Democracy (New York: Fordham University Press, 2010); Athena Athanasiou, et al., Dispossession: The Performative in the Political (Cambridge, UK: Polity, 2013); Judith Butler, Notes Toward a Performative Theory of Assembly (Harvard University Press, 2015); and Adriana Cavarerro, Surging Democracy: Notes on Hannah Arendt’s Political Thought (Palo Alto, CA: Stanford University Press, 2021). |
2 | For a wonderful example of the florescence of interest in Whitman amongst political theorists in general see, for instance, the excellent collection of essays in Seery (2011). For accounts of his import for democratic theory see, in particular, the chapters by George Kateb, Jason Frank, Michel Shapiro, Martha Nussbaum, Terrell Carver, Jack Turner, Morton Schoolman, and Kennan Ferguson. For a discussion of Jane Bennett’s reading of Whitman, whose influential work has contributed invaluably to this literature, see below. |
3 | In this regard one may contrast my reading with others that focus on Whitman’s stoic relationship to death. Jack Turner, for instance, emphasizes the extent to which Whitman “sought to allay readers’ mortal anxiety by intimating the self’s material immortality” (Turner, in Seery 2011, p. 273). Though Turner is no doubt correct, on my reading Whitman contributes to democratic thought less on the basis of a poetics of death (self-loss), and more in terms of an affirmation of life—and the procreant urge of the world—which, as will be seen, places emphasis on affiliative cleaving rather than “coolness in the face of death.” |
4 | All references to “Song of Myself”are taken from the “death-bed” edition, which, given the introduction of sections, offers convenient citation. |
5 | Grossman turns to part 5 of “Song of Myself” where Whitman writes, “I believe in you my soul, the other I am not abase itself to you/And you must not be abased to the other.” For Grossman, this line comprises a “rewriting of hierarchies—soul/body, collective/individual, nation/state—as equalities, and the rewriting as identities of conventional dualities, above all the self and the other, is the task of the ‘translator,’ whose goal is union as the fraternalization of the community” (Grossman 1982, p. 194). |
6 | In his generous reading of “Before the Law,” James Martel argues against this interpretation by indicating that waiting in vain may not itself always be in vain. Kafka’s character may wait in vain, in the sense that he never gets what he nominally wants and waits for, but he also comes to recognize that what he was waiting for has, in a sense, already arrived. Martel draws on this moment of realization in the parable and applies it more broadly to democratic politics: “More accurately, we find that the democratic practices that we seek are in fact already here; our act of waiting is what has made those practices possible in the first place, but it is not until we realize that we wait in vain that they may finally become legible to us.” |
7 | George Kateb argues that “[Whitman’s] work urges each of us to back to a solitary relation with something unconceptualizable—perhaps the sheer fact of existence, of one’s being and the being of anything else even and especially when ‘cheaper, easier, nearer.’ What makes this solitude democratic—a democratic transcendence of democratic culture—is the, as it were, philosophical self-respect …that democracy encourages in each person and that Whitman’s work tries so profoundly and so desperately to make convincing” (Kateb, in Seery 2011, p. 44). For Kateb, democratic culture, in its Whitmanian vein, is a political experience in, as Whitman himself once put it, “communing with the unutterable.” However, for Kateb, this connection to the mystical beyond is framed as a solitary relation. This reading underestimates the affiliative side of cleaving in Whitman. It is true, in my reading, that Whitman underscores one’s independent relationality to the Unknown, but this independence is always already what foregrounds human connectedness, which in turn confounds any vision of possessive individualism. |
8 | I borrow this phrasing from Bloom (1987, p. 161). |
9 | For a wonderful discussion of Whitman’s poetics of touch, see Doty (2020). For fascinating conversations on the phenomenology of touch generally, see for instance, Vasseleu (1998); Derrida (2005); Nancy (2008). On the politics of this phenomenology, see especially Manning (2006). For Manning, a “politics of touch implies a spiraling politics in-creation, an eternal return to the unknowable. A politics of touch is the affirmation that we must make space and time for politics, where this space and time can exceed the current state (of affairs). Politics of touch are tactical discursive tactics of the unknowable” (Manning 2006, p. 15). On the ethics of embodied touch in the Occidental tradition, see especially Ross (1998). For an exploration of the relationship between skin and touch, see for instance MacKendrick (2004). |
10 | As Hagood notes, “On the one hand, Whitman positions the individual as the predominant vehicle and measuring stick of perception, judgment, and value. At the same time, he promotes fluidity, boundlessness, and connectedness characterized by ideals of democratic social equality” (p. 25). |
11 | Jason Frank argues that “Whitman embraced the erotics and anonymity of everyday urban encounters as the basis for envisioning—and poetically disseminating—new and less identitarian forms of political attachment” (Frank 2011, in Seery 2011, p. 157). Indeed, as William James once quipped of Whitman, “Whitman felt the human crowd as rapturously as Wordsworth felt the mountains.” Though I agree with Frank that Whitman expresses forms of sociality that emphasize chance, experience, and perhaps also affect, I argue that the emphasis on anonymity underplays the importance of intimacy in Whitman. By contrast, framing Whitman’s democratic arts of attention in terms of “cleaving things asunder” has the benefit of capturing both the distance (anonymity) and the simultaneous intimacy (proximity) on display in Whitman’s writing. |
12 | In this regard Bennett’s reading can be put into conversation with Martha Nussbaum’s understanding of sympathy in Whitman’s poetry. Nussbaum emphasizes the notion that, for Whitman, sympathy is not “facile,” but can rather be compared to Lincoln’s sympathy: “a sympathy with teeth, coupled with a prophetic call for this-worldly justice. Seeing eternity in men and women entails working for a society that treats every one of them as an end, and none as a mere tool for the ends of others” (Nussbaum in Seery 2011, p. 100). |
13 | According to Euripedes, the oarsmen “striking and sweeping the silver surface of the sea according to the pace of the piper’s song, the dolphins cresting and diving to the same flashing meter, as though in fraternal salute” (Scarry 1999, p. 72). |
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Hirsch, A.K. Witnessing and Waiting in Walt Whitman’s Democratic Arts of Attention. Humanities 2021, 10, 85. https://doi.org/10.3390/h10030085
Hirsch AK. Witnessing and Waiting in Walt Whitman’s Democratic Arts of Attention. Humanities. 2021; 10(3):85. https://doi.org/10.3390/h10030085
Chicago/Turabian StyleHirsch, Alexander Keller. 2021. "Witnessing and Waiting in Walt Whitman’s Democratic Arts of Attention" Humanities 10, no. 3: 85. https://doi.org/10.3390/h10030085
APA StyleHirsch, A. K. (2021). Witnessing and Waiting in Walt Whitman’s Democratic Arts of Attention. Humanities, 10(3), 85. https://doi.org/10.3390/h10030085