The Parallel Campaign I

open-reading-group at o-r-g.com open-reading-group at o-r-g.com
Wed Mar 12 19:13:14 EDT 2008


ON THE NATURE OF THE PARALLEL CAMPAIGN

The joke here, of course, is on General Stumm: the librarian is just doing
his job. It's also funny, though in a different way, that the General
guards the Campaign's mission like a military secret -- after all, the
goal of the Campaign is not only to find an idea that will promote human
unity, but to publicize it. For Stumm to be guarded is certainly in his
nature, but it goes beyond that: Stumm, whose name in German means "mute,"
doesn't quite want to admit to the librarian that he has no idea what he's
looking for. The dialogue that follows springs from this attempt to dance
around saying the unsayable:

'Oh, all sorts of things,' I said, as if he were prying into state
secrets; I was playing for time.

'I only meant what subject or what author,' he asked, 'Is it military
history?'

'Oh no,' I said, 'more on the lines of the history of peace.'

'History as such? Or current pacifist literature?' No, I said, it wasn't
that simple. 'Might there be, for instance, something like a compendium of
all the great humanitarian ideas or anything like that?' You remember how
much research I've already got my people to do along those lines. He
didn't say a word. 'Or a book on realizing the most important aims of
all?' I say to him.

'Something in theological ethics?' he suggests.

This exchange of self-definition between the librarian and Stumm serves,
in a way, as a microcosm of the Parallel Campaign's entire purpose, both
in the world of The Man without Qualities and as part of Musil's outlook
on the nature of writing. Thomas Sebastian, a Musil scholar, explains in
his book The Intersection of Science and Literature in Robert Musil's The
Man without Qualities that "The [Parallel] Campaign is shown to originally
exist only in the form of a vague idea manifesting itself first in loose
verbal associations, then in a circular letter, and finally in a press
release. It is thus an allegory of what one can do with words. The
campaign only exists because people start to speak about it. From the
start then, the novel's main plot has the peculiar qualities of being
merely the possibility of becoming a plot; it has the potential of a plot
because it is spoken about and written about. Accordingly, the novel's own
progress depends in a peculiar way on the creation of a story that relates
to how stories are made." This revelation, as Coetzee, Gass, and Musil
himself might all suggest, is tied to the unideological ideology of
essayism: in writing around the knowledge we seek, we discover it.

--

DEXTER SINISTER WILL OCCUPY THE COMMANDER'S ROOM AT THE 7TH REGIMENT
ARMORY EVERY DAY FROM 4 MARCH TO 23 MARCH 2008 RELEASING A SERIES OF
PARALLEL TEXTS THROUGH MULTIPLE CHANNELS OF DISTRIBUTION WHICH REFLECT ON
THE 2008 WHITNEY BIENNIAL.

MORE INFORMATION IS AVAILABLE ON THE TRUE MIRROR WEBSITE:
http://www.sinisterdexter.org/


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