and again to the edge of the abyss. As we have noted, this psychocultural volatility, this attraction to nihilism and apocalyptic violence, are constituent parts of the tradition in which Steiner locates himself. They are preeminent modernist qualities, but they enter the modernist matrix partly through Jewish messianic channels.
|
These tendencies are compounded by the brute fact of the Holocaust, and Steiner's special sense not of mere guilt (as is the case for American Jewry) but also of an uncanny near miss, since he was born and brought up in France and did not reach the United States until 1940. Having thus been saved, this brilliant heir of secular European Judaism would naturally be attracted to a mode of thought "which did not see history as the progressive unfolding of the rational, which was attuned to the poverty of experience which the Enlightenment left in its wake, and which accepted the possibility of apocalypse." 24 But from a slightly different perspective, Nazism and the Holocaust present, in Steiner's thought, an occasion, huge and monstrous, through which a largely repressed messianic sensibility can test itself, can come to know its faith and its doubts. It is only through such testing, even against the greatest inhumanities, that the humanistic spirit can justify its devotion to the ideal of culture. This becomes clear in the final paragraph of Real Presences, which draws upon both Christian and Jewish messianic motifs to produce the hushed anticipation of tikkun:
|
| | But ours is the long day's journey of the Saturday. Between suffering, aloneness, unutterable waste on the one hand and the dream of liberation, of rebirth on the other. In the face of the torture of a child, of the death of love which is Friday, even the greatest art and poetry are almost helpless. In the Utopia of the Sunday, the aesthetic will, presumably, no longer have logic or necessity. The apprehensions and figurations in the play of metaphysical imagining, in the poem and the music, which tell of pain and of hope, of the flesh which is said to taste of ash and of the spirit which is said to have the savour of fire, are always Sabbatarian. They have risen out of an immensity of waiting which is that of man. Without them, how could we be patient? 25
|
Here as elsewhere in the tradition, messianic thought is not only apocalyptic but utopian and restorative as well: it looks forward to an end and fulfillment of history, a world made anew, which is
|
|