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A river runs through it: Daniel Birnbaum on The Ister.


RIVERS HAVE no poetic power anymore, German filmmaker Hans-Jurgen Syberberg tells us in David Barison and Daniel Ross's 2004 documentary The Ister (now available on video). They have lost their mythic resonance and become part of the "machine" of "daily life." These days, Syberberg asserts, nobody would create a major work of art about a river, the way Richard Wagner or Friedrich Holderlin did. Syberberg's musings appear at the very conclusion of Barison and Ross's three-hour philosophical voyage. The film traces the Danube's full course, from the Black Sea all the way to its source in southern Germany The term Southern Germany (German: Süddeutschland) is used to describe a region in the south of Germany. The exact area defined by the term is not constant, but it usually includes Bavaria, Baden-Württemberg, and the southern part of Hesse. . Part rhapsodic rhap·sod·ic   also rhap·sod·i·cal
adj.
1. Of, resembling, or characteristic of a rhapsody.

2. Immoderately impassioned or enthusiastic; ecstatic.
 journey replete with moments of great beauty, part tedious educational program rife with digressions on politics and history, it is not the great work of art that would prove Syberberg wrong. But it is certainly an original undertaking: a cinematic collage that turns on Holderlin's epic "river hymn." The Ister (from "Istros," the ancient Greek Noun 1. Ancient Greek - the Greek language prior to the Roman Empire
Greek, Hellenic, Hellenic language - the Hellenic branch of the Indo-European family of languages
 term for the Danube), and, more pointedly, on Martin Heidegger's famous reading of it.

In Heideggerian thought, great poetry does not merely locate or interpret truth--it produces truth, bringing new verities into the world. "A properly unique beginning thus lies in whatever is said poetically," said Heidegger in a series of lectures on Holderlin delivered at Freiburg University in 1942. For Heidegger, the beginning that Holderlin's poetry points toward is also an end--the end of Western "metaphysics" and its progressive forgetfulness Forgetfulness
See also Carelessness.

Absent-Minded Beggar, The

ballad of forgetful soldiers who fought in the Boer War. [Br. Lit.: “The Absent-Minded Beg-gars” in Payton, 3]

absent-minded professor
 of Being, initiated by Plato and reaching its completion in technological modernity. What Holderlin offers, then, is a glimpse of a world at once ancient and yet to come, in which Being as an unmediated Adj. 1. unmediated - having no intervening persons, agents, conditions; "in direct sunlight"; "in direct contact with the voters"; "direct exposure to the disease"; "a direct link"; "the direct cause of the accident"; "direct vote"
direct
 process of "presencing" may yet be attained. This is a world far from the Freiburg of 1942, or so it would seem to us--but perhaps not to Heidegger, who joined the National Socialist party Many political parties in various contexts have referred to themselves as National Socialist parties. Because there is no clear definition of national socialism, the term has been used to mean very different things.  in 1933 (and became rector of the university the same year).

In addition to Syberberg, three leading French philosophers--Philippe Lacoue-Labarthe, Jean-Luc Nancy, and Bernard Stiegler Bernard Stiegler (born April 1, 1952) is a French philosopher and Director of the Department of Cultural Development at the Centre Georges-Pompidou. Influences and themes , all of whom have studied Heidegger's philosophy and confronted his politics--help Barison and Ross navigate their serpentine geographical and conceptual course. Excerpts from interviews with these four men are interspersed with shots of riverscapes--some sublime and bucolic, some postindustrial post·in·dus·tri·al  
adj.
Of or relating to a period in the development of an economy or nation in which the relative importance of manufacturing lessens and that of services, information, and research grows.

Adj. 1.
 and polluted--and points of interest along the route: residents of Vokovar, Croatia, marching in remembrance of the Serb's 1991 attack on their city; May Day celebrations in Hungary; Walhalla, King Ludwig I's monument to Germanic greatness: the empty, debris-strewn lecture hall at Freiburg. Intertitles proffer To offer or tender, as, the production of a document and offer of the same in evidence.


proffer v. to offer evidence in a trial.
 quotes from Heidegger and Holderlin and short histories of the various locales.

Stiegler, Nancy, and Lacoue-Labarthe discourse on matters political, metaphysical, mythological, poetic, technological, and ecological, intermittently returning to Heidegger and the intractable fact of his Nazi affiliation. In one sequence in the Mauthausen concentration camp near Linz, Lacoue-Labar the quotes the most scandalous of Heidegger's postwar remarks: "Agriculture is now a motorized mo·tor·ize  
tr.v. mo·tor·ized, mo·tor·iz·ing, mo·tor·iz·es
1. To equip with a motor.

2. To supply with motor-driven vehicles.

3. To provide with automobiles.
 food industry, the same thing in its essence as the production of corpses in the gas chambers and the extermination extermination

mass killing of animals or other pests. Implies complete destruction of the species or other group.
 camps, the same thing as blockades and the reduction of countries to famine, the same thing as the manufacture of hydrogen bombs." "I don't want to stupidly accuse Heidegger of having been a Nazi," Lacoue-Labar the says, as if that would be too vulgar--an odd statement, since Heidegger was a Nazi. We know that for a fact, though we have yet to answer the great question: How could such a major philosophical mind be attracted to this kind of nationalist ideology? The film does not purport to solve the conundrum, but it does raise the interesting hypothesis that Heidegger's delusions had to do with an understanding of the German nation and its language that was, in fact, metaphysical. Heideggerian thinking has its own geography, as does the poetic universe of Holderlin, and these territories overlap: As Lacoue-Labar the points out, the history of the West for both of them was primarily a Greek-German affair. In such an imaginary universe, a river springing up in the Black Forest is not just a waterway but a mysterious metaphysical power: "What that one does, that river / No one knows."

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Perhaps this accounts for the fact that it is not until we reach the Black Forest--real Heidegger country--and Syberberg appears, dressed in white like a latter-day Kurtz, that things get truly exciting. The creator of the magnum opus Hitler: A Film from Germany (1977) dilates on the "new Germany," which he calls a "weak and friendly" place. Something has been lost, he suggests: The glory of Germany, the most spiritual of nations, is gone; gone is Holderlin, gone is Heidegger. If you live in this weak, friendly nation, as I do, you're especially susceptible to artists like Syberberg--artists who open the door to a world we thought no longer existed, a world of myths and heroic poetry. Syberberg's art has always tapped into these archaic energies, although on the surface it critiques the irrationalism ir·ra·tion·al·ism  
n.
1. Irrational thought, expression, or behavior; irrationality.

2. Belief in feeling, instinct, or other nonrational forces rather than reason.


irrationalism
1.
 such energies produce when unleashed. His dangerously attractive soliloquy soliloquy, the speech by a character in a literary composition, usually a play, delivered while the speaker is either alone addressing the audience directly or the other actors are silent.  seems a necessary finale, reminding us that The Ister's true subject is not the physical river but the metaphysical geography that has been evoked by poets and thinkers to devastating dev·as·tate  
tr.v. dev·as·tat·ed, dev·as·tat·ing, dev·as·tates
1. To lay waste; destroy.

2. To overwhelm; confound; stun: was devastated by the rude remark.
 and barbaric effect. Although Syberberg is fully aware of this, he can't help playing with fire. He is a mild and sophisticated man, someone I would love to get to know. Behind him, the forest whispers: "The horror, the horror."

Daniel Birnbaum is a contributing editor of Artforum.
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Author:Birnbaum, Daniel
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Critical Essay
Geographic Code:4EUGE
Date:Jun 22, 2005
Words:910
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