Bernard-Henri Lévy

Bernard-Henri Lévy

Posted: July 1, 2009 03:49 PM

The Three Stations of the Cross in Michael Jackson's Calvary

digg Share this on Facebook Huffpost - stumble reddit del.ico.us RSS

First station of the cross: things. The holy horror of things. An entire apparatus of masks, breastplates, umbrellas, nomadic objects, an entire bubble at once suffocating and over-oxygenated, cloistered and overexposed, operating like a greenhouse and preserving him from the great contamination of things. Not only, as has been said, was it viruses, germs, and bacteria. But life itself as a germ. The living as a bacterium. Matter, objects, and the very air he breathed as soon as he ventured beyond his dear Neverland became a source of infection, pestilence, a macabre obsession -- a school for cadavers. The dandies were like that. I mean the great dandies. The founders of the tradition. Jules Barbey d'Aurevilly. Beau Brummel. Wilde and his Dorian Gray. Red heels to dance on top of a world of vapors and humors. Makeup and artifices to escape the De Profudis of a definitively parasitic abyss. Not to mention Baudelaire who based the principle of his aesthetic, his ethics, and his politics on his disgust with nature and its monstrous proliferations. Michael Jackson was their heir. Michael Jackson, with his vinyl, latex, his mausoleum of a house, his prophylactic terrors and also of course his entrechats of a dance genius, besieged by light on every side, was the last of these great dandies. Add the morbid care that he apparently gave to his body. The hyperbaric chamber where he tirelessly prepared himself for some kind of funereal ritual. He didn't die from a drug overdose; he died because of his desire not only to invent a vaccine against life, but also to want to inoculate himself with it.

Second station: others. Others, truly. No longer things, but humans. Their contact. Their malignant and repugnant proximity. The very presence of others, of their odor, their instantly searching gaze, experienced as an offense, a threat, the source and cause of all violence -- and from which he was only protected by the smoked lenses of his glasses. Hell? Yes, hell. A Sartrean Jackson this time. Or even a Cathar. A Jackson not the least of whose paradoxes was the moment he wrote "We Are the World," the moment where, in other words, he popularizes what must be called the contemporary humanitarian while viewing humanity as a fiasco, men as cankers and their company as a necessary evil, an obligatory compromise, a degrading accommodation that an artist can only begrudgingly make. This reincarnation of Peter Pan sincerely thought, for example, that children were made without anyone touching. This incomplete adult feeds the mad dream -- and, in a certain way, fulfilled it -- of having his own sons without contact, and almost without a mother. This misanthrope, this mutant, was one of the last modern humans to believe -- and to live -- the ancient theorems of the inconvenience of being born. Generation, corruption... Desire without concupiscence... Which, at the very least, shows the absurdity of the witch trials conducted against him the last ten years of his life which were like an endless persecution. Michael Jackson did not want to be a child; he wanted to be a saint. Or an angel. And angels, as we know, don't have a sex. Or only have one in the imagination of the perverted who project onto them their own fantasies.

And finally: himself. His own body and his own face, seen as even greater threats, sites of every danger, the intimate yet merciless enemy that would take a lifetime to subdue or annihilate. There again the singular adventure of Michael Jackson is misread; the mad metamorphosis that he impressed on his face and the repeated plastic surgeries that he inflicted on himself over the course of his life are utterly misunderstood if reduced to a matter of pigmentology -- race, anti-race, self-hate, malaise, unease in his own skin, this reason or that. Look at his photos. Look at this epidermis essentially becoming whiter and whiter, almost like living limestone. Notice this nose reduced to almost nothing, these lips eaten away from the inside, these narrowed cheekbones like those of a Jivaro mask or a Giacometti rendering. Look closely at these dwindled features, this shrinking skin, these eyes that only seem to sit in his skull like a ring on a skeleton's finger. Consider this reduction -- a philosopher would say this epochè -- of a face reduced to its simplest inexpression, having become its own double. Isn't the face the very signature of the human? Its truth? The way that it exhibits and expresses itself? The sign of everyone's singularity, of their priceless uniqueness? Of course. It is always that, a face. And that's why this third chapter, this way of torturing, mortifying, profaning, and ultimately of erasing his own face should be read as the last station of a long and terrible Calvary. Because, having reached that stage, when you have decided to escape the reign of things, and to leave the ranks of humans, and then to become a human without a face, you don't really have too many choices left. Either you reinvent what is considered human, become truly trans-human, and create a genetically modified organism, a GMO. Or you die.

Translated from French by Sara Phenix.

 
Comments
140
Pending Comments
0
iPhone App Promo

Want to reply to a comment? Hint: Click "Reply" at the bottom of the comment; after being approved your comment will appear directly underneath the comment you replied to

View Comments:
Page: « First ‹ Previous 1 2 3 4 5 (5 pages total)
photo

Wow, a very different and insightful perspective.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:25 PM on 07/01/2009
- renatam I'm a Fan of renatam 86 fans permalink

Different because the author has no clue as to what/who Michael Jackson was/is - beyond a subject of curiosity from someone who has no clue and/or empathy for his humanity (mutant?) - and, clearly no respect for his talent.

Mr. Levy has no understanding of the AA experience whatsoever­...nor does he understand American racism. He confines his views on the subject to those of his people - in France, Europe and elsewhere.

I would welcome an analysis and deconstruction by Mr. Levy of the kinds of humans who would enslave and/or relocate millions of fellow human beings (mutants?) to foreign shores, commoditizing their bodies and using their livelong labor as currency.

You will NEVER see that analysis..­.nor have those who conduct themselves in this manner as "mutants." Mr. Levy is very selective.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:23 PM on 07/01/2009
- Steamboater I'm a Fan of Steamboater 176 fans permalink
photo

Another race card thrown in where it doesn't belong. Try using your head this time instead of those senors that pop up whenever someone makes an inciteful post about ONE black man.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:59 PM on 07/01/2009
- flamflurm I'm a Fan of flamflurm 50 fans permalink
photo

LMAO

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:59 PM on 07/01/2009
photo

no doubt.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:09 PM on 07/01/2009
- renatam I'm a Fan of renatam 86 fans permalink

Yes. It was meant to make this genius a laughingstock. Thank you for appreciating how cleverly Mr. Levy deconstructed a human being of ENORMOUS TALENT, who will be remembered for the joy he brought millions worldwide - long after he is dust, along w/his pithy commentary mocking anyone/everyone who is not a mirror image of himself.

Thank goodness these types are mercifully finding themselves - and their supercillious, pithiness - marginalized.

Yes we can!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:26 PM on 07/01/2009
- Steamboater I'm a Fan of Steamboater 176 fans permalink
photo

Levi wasn't criticizing Jackson's talent or contribution to music. Read the article again.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:00 PM on 07/01/2009
Page: « First ‹ Previous 1 2 3 4 5 (5 pages total)
Comments are closed for this entry

 You must be logged in to comment. Log in  or connect with 

Connect