Existentialist Primer
Existentialist Primer
Existentialist Primer
For some years I fought the word by irritably looking the other way whenever I
stumbled across it, hoping that like Dadaism and some of the other “isms” of
the French avant garde it would go away if I ignored it. But existentialism was
apparently more than the picture it evoked of uncombed beards, smoky
basement cafes, and French beatniks regaling one another between sips of
absinthe with brilliant variations on the theme of despair. It turned out to be of
major importance to literature and the arts, to philosophy and theology, and of
increasing importance to the social sciences. To learn more about it, I read
several of the self-styled introductions to the subject, with the baffled sensation
of a man who reads a critical introduction to a novel only to find that he must
read the novel before he can understand the introduction. Therefore, I should
like to provide here something most discussions of existentialism take for
granted, a simple statement of its basic characteristics. This is a reckless thing
to do because there are several kinds of existentialism and what one says of one
kind may not be true of another, but there is an area of agreement, and it is
this common ground that I should like to set forth here. We should not run
into trouble so long as we understand from the outset that the six major themes
outlined below will apply in varying degrees to particular existentialists. A
reader should be able to go from here to the existentialists themselves, to the
more specialized critiques of them, or be able to recognize an existentialist
theme or coloration in literature when he sees it.
A word first about the kinds of existentialism. Like transcendentalism of the
last century, there are almost as many varieties of this ism as there are
individual writers to whom the word is applied (not all of them claim it). But
without being facetious we might group them into two main kinds, the ungodly
and the godly. To take the ungodly or atheistic first, we would list as the chief
spokesmen among many others Jean-Paul Sartre, Albert Camus, and Simone
de Beauvoir. Several of this important group of French writers had rigorous
and significant experience in the Resistance during the Nazi occupation of
France in World War II. Out of the despair which came with the collapse of
their nation during those terrible years they found unexpected strength in the
single indomitable human spirit, which even under severe torture could
maintain the spirit of resistance, the unextinguishable ability to say “No.” Form
the irreducible core in the human spirit, they erected after the war a philosophy
which was a twentieth-century variation of the philosophy of Descartes. But
instead of saying “I think, therefore I am,” they said “I can say No, therefore I
exist.” As we shall presently see, the use of the word “exist” is of prime
significance. This group is chiefly responsible for giving existentialism its
status in the popular mind as a literary-philosophical cult.
Of the godly or theistic existentialists we should mention first a mid-
nineteenth-century Danish writer, Soren Kierkegaard; two contemporary
French Roman Catholics, Gabriel Marcel and Jacques Maritain; two Protestant
theologians, Paul Tillich and Nicholas Berdyaev: and Martin Buber, an
important contemporary Jewish theologian. Taken together, their writings
constitute one of the most significant developments in modern theology.
A Primer of Existentialism
There was no God in the sky, no God in myself, no conviction in myself that I had
the power to believe in a God, and so I merely knelt in the dust in silence and no
words came to my lips.
but also inexorable. Most disturbing of all is the young man’s aloneness, the
impermeable membrane of estrangement which surrounds him and prevents
anyone else from penetrating to his experience of life or sympathizing with it.
The fourth king of alienation, man’s estrangement from his own true self,
especially as his nature is distorted by an exaltation of reason, is another theme
having an extensive history as a major part of the Romantic revolt. Of the many
writers who treat the theme, Hawthorne comes particularly close to the
emphasis of contemporary existentialists. His Ethan Brand, Dr. Rappaccini,
and Roger Chillingworth are a recurrent figure who represents the dislocation in
human nature which results when an overdeveloped or misapplied intellect
severs “the magnetic chain of human sympathy”. Hawthorne is thoroughly
existential in his concern for the sanctity of the individual human soul, as well
as in his preoccupation with sin and the dark side of human nature, which
must be seen in part as his attempt to build back some fullness to the flattened
image of man bequeathed to him by the Enlightenment. Whitman was truing to
do this when he added flesh and bone and a sexual nature to the spiritualized
image of man he inherited from Emerson, though his image remains diffused
and attenuated by the same cosmic optimism. Many of the nineteenth-century
depictions of man represent him as a figure of power or of potential power,
sometimes daimonic, like Melville’s Ahab, but after World War I the power is
gone; man is not merely distorted or truncated, he is hollow, powerless,
faceless. At the time when his command over natural forces seems to be
unlimited, man is pictured as weak, ridden with nameless dread. This brings
us to another of the major themes of existentialism.
4. “FEAR AND TREMBLING,” ANXIETY. At Stockholm when he accepted the Nobel
Prize, William Faulkner said that “Our tragedy today is a general and universal
physical fear so long sustained by now that we can even bear it. There are no
longer problems of the spirit. There is only one question: When will I be blown
up?” The optimistic vision of the Enlightenment which saw man, through
reason and its extensions in science, conquering all nature and solving all
social and political problems in a continuous upward spiral of Progress, cracked
open like a melon on the rock of World War I. The theories which held such
high hopes died in that sickening and unimaginable butchery. Here was a
concrete fact of human nature and society which the theories could not contain.
The Great Depression and World War II deepened the sense of dismay which
the loss of these ideals brought, but only with the atomic bomb did this become
an unbearable terror, a threat of instant annihilation which confronted all men,
even those most insulated by the thick crust of material goods and services.
Now the most unthinking person could sense that each advance in mechanical
technique carried not only a chromium and plush promise of comfort but a
threat as well.
Sartre, following Kierkegaard, speaks of another kind of anxiety which
oppresses modern man – “the anguish of Abraham” – the necessity which is laid
upon him to make moral choices on his own responsibility. A military officer in
wartime knows the agony of choice which forces him to sacrifice part of his
army to preserve the rest, as does a man in high political office, who must make
decisions affecting the lives of millions. The existentialists claim that each of us
must make moral decisions in our own lives which involve the same anguish.
Kierkegaard finds that this necessity is one thing which makes each life unique,
which makes it impossible to speculate or generalize about human life, because
A Primer of Existentialism
hunger they seek to assuage with alcohol, sex, and violence in an aimless
progression from bar to bed to bull-ring. It goes without saying that much of
the despair and pessimism in other contemporary authors springs from a
similar sense of the void in modern life.
6. FREEDOM. Sooner or later, as a theme that includes all the others, the
existentialist writings bear upon freedom. The themes we have outlined above
describe either some loss of man’s freedom or some threat to it, and all
existentialists of whatever sort are concerned to enlarge the range of human
freedom.
For the avowed atheists like Sartre freedom means human autonomy. In a
purposeless universe man is condemned to freedom because he is the only
creature who is “self-surpassing,” who can become something other than he is.
Precisely because there is no God to give purpose to the universe, each man
must accept individual responsibility for his own becoming, a burden made
heavier by the fact that in choosing for himself he chooses for all men “the
image of man as he ought to be.” A man is the sum total of the acts that make
up his life – no more, no less – and though the coward has made himself
cowardly, it is always possible for him to change and make himself heroic. In
Sartre’s novel, The Age of Reason, one of the least likable of the characters,
almost overwhelmed by despair and self-disgust at his homosexual tendencies,
is on the point of solving his problem by mutilating himself with a razor when in
an effort of will he throws the instrument down, and we are given to understand
that from this moment he will have mastery over his aberrant drive. Thus in
the daily course of ordinary life must men shape their becoming in Sartre’s
world.
The religious existentialists interpret man’s freedom differently. They use
much the same language as Sartre, develop the same themes concerning the
predicament of man, but always include God as a radical factor. They stress
the man of faith rather than the man of will. They interpret man’s existential
condition as a state of alienation from his essential nature which is God-like,
the problem of his life being to heal the chasm between the two, that is, to find
salvation. The mystery and ambiguity of man’s existence they attribute to his
being the intersection of two realms. “Man bears within himself,” writes
Berdyaev, “the image which is both the image of man and the image of God, and
is the image of man as far as the image of God is actualized.” Tillich describes
salvation as “the act in which the cleavage between the essential being and the
existential situation is overcome.” Freedom here, as for Sartre, involves an
acceptance of responsibility for choice and a commitment to one’s choice. This
is the meaning of faith, a faith like Abraham’s, the commitment which is an
agonizing sacrifice of one’s own desire and will and dearest treasure to God’s
will.
A final word. Just as one should not expect to find in a particular writer all
of the characteristics of existentialism as we have described them, he should
also be aware that some of the most striking expressions of existentialism in
literature and the arts come to us by indirection, often through symbols or
through innovations in conventional form. Take the preoccupation of
contemporary writers with time. In The Sound and the Fury, Faulkner both
collapses and expands normal clock time, or by juxtapositions of past and
present blurs time into a single amorphous pool. He does this by using various
forms of “stream of consciousness” or other techniques which see life in terms
A Primer of Existentialism