FEAR AND TREMBLING REPETITION

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Transcription:

FEAR AND TREMBLING REPETITION by S0ren Kierkegaard Edited and Translated with Introduction and Notes by Howard V. Hong and Edna H. Hong PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESS PRINCETON, NEW JERSEY

I Copyrighl ~ 1983 by Howard V. HOIIll Publisllfd by Pri,IC"o" Ulliversily Prm, 41 William Slr<et, PrillwoII, New Jersey In Ihe United Kingdom: Prillwoll Ulliversily Press, C"ildford, S"rrey All Rights Reserved Ubrary of COllgr<ss Catalogillg ill P"blicalioll DOlo will be folmd all the last prillted page of this book Preparalion of Ihis vol"me has been made possible ill pari by a gram from Ihe Translations Program of Ihe National Endou'",mt for lite Humanilies. Clothbou"d ediliolls of Princeroll University Press books are printed m1 acid-fiee paper} and binding materials are chosell for strellglh and d"rabi/ity. Paperb",ks, while satifaclory Jor persollal co/lections, are '101 I"ually s"itable for library rebilldin.~. Primed ill the U",'led Slates of America by Pri..cetoll U"iversily Press I Priucclotl I New jersey

84 Fear and Trembling m 133 way l'teqll'te'telu and avuyvwqlol\; carambolere [converge], as well as what he writes about the single and the double recognition, I cannot deal with here, even if tempted by its interiority and its quiet absorption, especially tempting to one who for a long time has been weary of the superficial omniscience of the survey writers. A broader comment may have its place here. In Greek tragedy, the hiddenness (and as a result of it the recognition) is an epic remnant based on a fate in which the dramatic action vanishes and in which it has its dark, mysterious source. Because of this, a Greek tragedy has an effect similar to that of a marble statue, which lacks the potency of the eye. Greek tragedy is blind. Therefore it takes a certain abstraction if one is to be influenced by it properly. A son murders his father,6 but not until later does he learn that it was his father. A sister is going to sacrifice her brother 7 but realizes it at the crucial moment. Our rtiflecting age is not very concerned with this kind of tragedy. Modern drama 8 has abandoned destiny, has dramatically emancipated itself, is sighted, gazes inward into itself, absorbs destiny in its dramatic consciousness. Hiddenness and disclosure, then, are the hero's free act, for which he is responsible. Recognition and hiddenness are also an essential element of modern drama. It would belabor the point to give examples. I am sufficiently courteous to assume that everyone in our age--which is so esthetically voluptuous, so potent and inflamed, that it conceives just as easily as the partridge that, according to Aristotle,9 needs only to hear the cock's voice or its flight over her head-i assume that everyone who merely hears the word "hiddenness" will easily be able to shake a dozen novels and comedies out of his sleeve. I can therefore be brief and promptly suggest a rather broad observation. 10 If anyone in playing the hiding game, and thereby providing the piece with dramatic yeast, hides some nonsense, we get a comedy; but if he is related to the idea, he may come close to being a tragic hero. To cite just one example of the comic: a man puts on makeup and wears a wig. The same man is eager to make a hit with the fair sex and is sure of success

88 Fear and Trembling I\[ 136 incidence; ethics demanded disclosure and found its' fulfillment in the tragic hero. Despite the rigorousness with which ethics demands disclosure, it cannot be denied that secrecy and silence make a man great simply because they are qualifications of inwardness. When Amor leaves Psyche, he says to her: You will bear a child who will be divine if you remain silent but will be human if you betray the secret. IS The tragic hero, who is the favorite of ethics, is the purely human; him I can understand, and all his undertakings are out in the open. If I go further, I always run up against the paradox, the divine and the demonic, for silence is both. Silence is the demon's trap, and the more that is silenced, the more terrible the demon, but silence is also divinity's mutual understanding with the single individual. Before proceeding to the story of Abraham, I shall summon a pair of poetic individualities. With the power of dialectics, I shall hold them at the apex, and by disciplining them with despair, I may prevent them from standing still, so that in their anxiety they may possibly be able to bring something or other to light.".. These movements and positions' presumably may still become subjects for esthetic treatment, but to what extent faith and the whole life of faith can be that, I leave undecided here. Inasmuch, however, as it is always a joy for me to thank anyone to whom lowe something, I shall only thank Lessing for the several hints about a Christian drama found in his Hamburgische Dramaturgie. 17 But he fixed his eyes on the purely divine side of this life (the consummate victory), and therefore he had doubts; perhaps he would have formed another judgment if he had been more aware of the purely human side. (Theologia viatorum [theology of wayfarers].)" What he says is undeniably very brief, somewhat evasive, but since I am always very happy when I can find an opportunity to include Lessing, I promptly do so. Lessing was not only one of the most comprehensive minds Germany has had, he not only displayed an extremely rare precision in his knowledge, which enables one to rely on him and his autopsies without fear of being taken in by loose, undocumented quotations, half-understood phrases picked up in unreliable compendiums, or of being disoriented by a stupid trumpeting of something new that the ancients have presented far better-but Lessing also had a most uncommon gift of explaining what he himself had understood. With that he stopped; in our day people go further and explain more than they themselves have understood.