Zusammenfassung der Ressource
How do Adorno and Horkheimer see the
Odyssey as an allegory of the Enlightenment?
- Adorno & Horkheimer's view of The Englightenment
- Never succeeded,
slipped back into
'Immaturity' through
cultural media
brainwashing/our
instrumental
reasoning
- "The Enlightenment successfully battled the mythological world in which it found itself, but, say Horkheimer and
Adorno, it reverted to myth"[Bowman P8] - i.e. a new myth arose after the defeating the old one due to the
conformist tendencies of instrumental reason
- A+H are 'Western Marxists', and so would consider capitalist
system to be the root of problems i.e. why we use instrumental
reasoning
- "Myth changes into Enlightenment which
reverts to Myth" [Bowman P8]
- This is a large part of the reason why A+H
chose the Odyssey, they see Odysseus as
the early bourgeois prototype who
believes he has conquered literal myth,
but despite escaping the myth of his
voyage he returns to the myth of his life at
home (Ithaca is not
Enlightened/autonomus)
- So this is to say that in the same way that Odysseus believed he was
freeing himself from myth, he was actually returning to another,
albeit more subtle one. This is the same situation A+H believe we
find ourselves in today.
- "When he, inexorable, returns home, the inexorable
force he commands itself triumphs as the judge and
avenger of the legacy of the powers from which he
escaped" (Dialectic, 48)
- "The identity of the self is so much a function of the
unidentical, of dissociated, unarticulated myths, that
it must derive itself from those myths" (Dialectic, 48)
- Odysseus, upon returning home, dissociates
himself from the myths in which he lives!
- "But the account given of them there, the unity
wrested from the diffuse sagas, is also a
description of the retreat of the individual from
mythic powers" (Dialectic, 46)
- Odysseus is retreating from the
world of mythology, trying to escape
the brutal oppression of the gods
- "The opposition of enlightenment to myth is
expressed in the opposition of the surviving
individual ego to multifarious fate" (Dialectic, 46)
- 'Culture Industry' - The
Enlightenment as mass deception
- We believe we are free and 'mature' but this is an illusion (albeit more inconspicuous than it was before)
- the 'industry' says it provides
for people's needs, but these
needs are determined by the
industry!! not the people. [Harris 7]
- This illusion of choice and freedom makes
us just as subsurvient as we we were
before 'The Englightenment'
- Instrumental Reason
- "The Enlightenment created new social arrangements, but in time
they became as ossified as the old ones because of the conformist
tendencies of instrumental reason" [Bowman p8]
- Instrumental reason leads us back to immaturity, (inevitable cycle?)
- The capacity to select appropriate means to our ends, whatever they happen to be (i.e. to use
reason as an instrument to guide us in attaining our ends
- As opposed to objective reason - concerned with the 'ends' themselves, asking whether
out ends are rational, whether they express our deepest needs and desires, out longing
for freedom. [Bowman p6] - tells us what our ends should be, what the world should be.
- A+H believe that objective reason was undermined by the enlightenmnent, whereas it
should be used to conversely advance the cause of enlightenment (find quote, CH 1 of
Dialectic)
- The goal of enlightenment is to 'conquer' nature (which subjects us to disease, death,
etc), which is the same goal as myth (to understand/conquer nature)
- Evidence that the Enlightenment is just another myth?
- A+H believe our ends are imposed on us from without
- Frankfurt
School
- Influences from Marx,
Nietsche, Hegel, Kant
and Freud
- Therefore Kant on Enlightenment is very
relevant! (a lot there about Odysseus as
'enlightened man', or perhaps not so enlightened
- 'Western Marxists', were against what the Russians were
doing so classed themselves as a different kind of Marxist. [Bowman p3]
- This is probably why A+H's approach to E was implicitly
anti-capitalist (anti-culture), i.e. Marxist
- Teleological Influences [Lewis p24]
- WWII
- The would naturally resent the Enlightenment because of the
holocaust (what it has done to us)
- Dialectic "suffered from at atmosphere of gloom"
because of this situation [Bowman p6]
- "The Enlightenment must examine itself" (Dialectic, XV)
- Odyssey as an Allegory for
the Enlightenment
- Sirens Episode
- Odysseus as modern man
- Believes he is conquering 'immaturity' (as Kant would call it)
- "Though he is powerless, no part of the sea remains
unknown to him, and so his powerlessness also indicates
that the mighty powers will be put down" (Dialectic, 46)
- Odysseus is on a quest to become
enlightened, and seemingly against the odds
(despite prophecy, but Polyphemus does
curse him with death) he makes it home.
- "
- His combat with nature
- "Odysseus loses himself in order to find himself; the
estrangement from nature that he brings about is realized
in the process of the abandonment to nature he contends
with in each adventure" (Dialectic, 48)
- Everything on page 47!
- “The adventures of Odysseus are all dangerous temptations removing the self
from its logical course.” (Adorno and Horkheimer, Dialectic of Enlightenment, p.
47). How do Adorno and Horkheimer see the Sirens episode in Book 12 of the
Odyssey as an allegory of the Enlightenment? What, in your opinion, does their
reading of the Sirens episode tell us about the Enlightenment?