| A Review of: A Terrible Love of War by Gwen NowakA Terrible Love of War is James Hillman's last testament. In four
charged chapters Hillman guides his reader on an excursion into the
dark underworld of the soul to shed light on what he claims has
never been seen before-the bunkers of the dark god of war, the dark
god who rules the world, the warring world, the everyday world where
war is now, has always been and, unless this ubiquitous force is
decommissioned, will always be.
Hence the title of chapter one: "War is Normal". But
admittedly war is not an acceptable normal given its horror, the
pathologies of bloodletting, scorched earth, shell shock [PTSD].
If normal', we hope that war is the old normal, and that a new
normal is possible. And we hope that internationally renowned
psychologist James Hillman will show us the way out, a way beyond
our terrible love of war.' In this book Hillman puts to work his
theories of the soul [Suicide and the Soul 1964] and his new approach
to psychotherapy [Re-Visioning Psychology 1975] to addressing the
phenomenon of war. When presenting his qualifications to be an
authoritative "Analyst of War" he highlights his personal
credential-"his thin red line of calling", his astrological
sign as a "child of Mars", his destiny ordained by Mars,
the god that Christianity thought it had left behind.
Founder of Archetypal Psychology, Hillman is thus prepared to lead
us into "war's deepest mind", to that place in our inmost
depths where the individual psyche is embedded in the collective.
Hillman urges us past the conventional explanations of the sources
of psychic dysfunction associated with our personal histories [birth
trauma, bad parents etc.] to reach the basic layer of the mind, the
transpersonal realm of myth, poetry, the home of the gods. As our
guide in this psychic underworld, he offers a package of readings,
relevant reflections on the nature of war by military generals,
philosophers, writers like Twain and Tolstoy. He tells us that if
we are to tame the beast that is war, ours must be a work of
imagination, a full engagement with the ubiquitous god of war, the
god of many names-Mars, Ares, Indra, Thor, the "Inhuman"
as the divinity who "rages, strikes death, stirs panic, driving
individual humans mad and collective societies blind."
By the time we reach chapter two titled "War is Inhuman"
we know that inhuman' is more than a descriptive epithet pointing
to the obvious-those wild butchering brutalities of war savaging
both the land and the children of the land. And we are forced to
recognize the terrible destabilizing irony that it is humans whose
behaviour is inhuman. How so? Hillman tells us to look and look
again at where he has shepherded us-into the realm of the gods whose
life is autonomous, as war seems to be autonomous. He points out
that the search for secular models as analogues to account for the
universal self-replicating aspect of war fall short; the fullest
explanation is that war is an archetypal impulse, an emanation of
a god, namely Ares [Greek] Mars [Roman]. And Hillman reveals this
god as an "enemy of life", as evidenced by one universal
atrocity persistent in war, the act of rape. So much so that in
Hillman's view rape "becomes a cover word for all of war's
brutal conquests, a word for war itself."
But then Hillman suggests that he can take us deeper, deeper even
than the gods of war. He asks: "Could the land want war?"
We might wonder how the land that we can see could be deeper than
the collective unconscious that we can't see. So we listen as Hillman
posits a mythic power to the earth, Mother Earth [alternatively
"the gods of the land"] requiring blood sacrifice before
she will accept the people of the land as her children. Hillman's
example is the American Civil War, its fury and devastation, the
blood of the colonists' sons soaking the earth before the earth
would release her bounty. Alternatively, or perhaps in parallel,
when the earth is fed war's blood, "its blood soul remembers,
addicted, insatiably needing more." Hillman points out that
our rational debates about persons, politics, economics and gender-our
day-world analysis of immediate causes of inhuman slaughter-are
irrelevant given that we are but playthings of inhuman forces working
from behind, or rather below, the scene.
And then Hillman invites us into the next chamber, his third chapter:
"War is Sublime". We are again in the Hall of Hades but
this time Mars is not alone. He is with his paramour Venus. And we
learn that it is this concord between Venus and Mars [Aphrodite and
Ares] Love and War, which generates the feeling of the sublime,
that "stunning concatenation of the baleful and the beautiful,"
the great exaltation expressed by so many combatants in the midst
of spectacular destruction. Psychopompos Hillman is honest here.
He acknowledges that his guided descent into the irrational, into
the madness of war "seeks what war achieves: destabilize,
desubjectivize, destroy"-both writer and reader. It seems
natural to wonder, if the writer himself is destabilized by this
journey, should we continue with him as guide?
But we are already enchanted with his reflections. And we are infused
with the hope that he will ultimately show us a way out of our
terrible love of war by taking us more deeply into it than we have
ever gone before. So we are intrigued when he flashes before our
eyes the contradictory aspects of Venus/Aphrodite, her own passion
for war revealed, according to Hillman, in war's most sublime aspects
but also her influence on the aesthetics of war, as manifested in
the myriad protocols and ritual excesses of military culture. Hillman
asks if such embellishments of war are a "seductive deceit of
Venus" or alternatively her attempt to put an Aphroditic halter
on mad dog Mars? This leads him to explore the notion that aesthetic
culture itself might be what is needed to pull mad dog Mars back
from the brink. It is natural then to wonder if Venus/Aphrodite
could bring some deeper understanding to the horror of war rape and
genital mutilation. But Hillman seems to have abandoned this issue
even though he has proclaimed it central to any understanding of
war.
Whereas he began his presentation with sweeping universal, even
cosmological analysis of war, including reference to ancient Greek
philosopher Heraclitus' dictum that "War is the father of all
things", Hillman ultimately narrows his focus to the United
States and Christendom. It is the USA that he accuses of a withdrawal
from culture and an adherence to a fundamentalist belief system
that simplistically divides the cosmos into "for" and
"against", good and evil, Christ and Antichrist. He does
not mention the fact that neither the high culture of Germany, nor
Nazism's rigid military protocols and sacred rituals did anything
to impede her aggression against her European neighbours or her
fierce enactment of a final solution' against the Jews. At this
point Hillman segues into his fourth chapter, "Religion is
War", with a speculation which morphs into a dogmatic conclusion
in one sentence: "Culture which could possibly leash the
violence of war with a love of equal strength is so blocked by the
American ways of belief that we must conclude that war's sinister
godfather and secret sharer in the spoils is religion [my
emphases]." We are justified in wondering if our guide will
reveal a connection between the two secrets of war he claims to
expose: rape as the secret heart of war's desire and religion the
secret sharer in the spoils.
But no. Hillman does not think to imagine that the rages of Mars/Ares
might be a gender issue, or that the Mars/Ares relationship with
Venus/Aphrodite needs to be imagined more fully. But he does set
his sights on religion, on Christianity specifically, to expose it
as an impostor, or at least as wilfully unconscious of the fact
that Mars is actually the unseen god who has invaded and now energizes
the Christian cult. "Other wars with other-named gods among
other peoples are no less terrible, but ours is ours." Hillman
focuses on American Christianity as the blind instrument of Mars/Ares
marching us inexorably forward towards the dark promise prophesied
in the last book of the Christian Bible, the book of Revelation.
That promise is Armageddon-the mythic conflagration about to be
historicized unless the Christian West can wake up. He closes with
a reference to Yeats' great prophetic poem "The Second
Coming" with its bleak prediction that "The darkness will
fall again." But he does not draw attention to Yeats' striking
image of "the Beast slouching toward Bethlehem to be born"
even though such a mythic Beast calls to mind the fictive figure
of the Inhuman that he draws for his reader in chapter two. It
occurs to this reader that such a beast has actually been seen by
Lieutenant-General Romeo Dallaire: "When I think about the
consequences of the Rwandan genocide, I think first of all of those
who died an agonizing death from machete wounds inside the hundreds
of sweltering churches, chapels and missions where they'd gone to
seek God's protection and ended instead in the arms of Lucifer"
[Shake Hands with the Devil: The failure of humanity in Rwanda].
At the outset of reading A Terrible Love of War I wondered if James
Hillman would provide answers to humanity's most pressing questions
about war, questions like those articulated by Margaret MacMillan
at the conclusion of her award winning book Paris 1919: Six months
that changed the world: "How can the irrational passions of
nationalism or religion be contained before they do more damage?
How can we outlaw war?" Or more poignantly, the agonized
questions written in the visitors' comments book by a teenage girl
at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington: "Is this
planet doomed? Is everyone mean? What will happen? Is everybody
evil? Can we at least stop fighting each other? Who knows all the
answers to my questions? Who knows" [Erna Paris in Long Shadows:
Truth, Lies and History].
Does Hillman answer these fundamental questions? Will the light
Hillman uses to scan our psychic underworld be sufficient to generate
new energy for waging peace? Perhaps, but only if we can find a way
to go beyond Hillman's own dark conclusion. In the end we are left
with the most disturbing question of all: does the closing lament
of Hillman's last testament actually expose hope as a fundamental
delusion? Is his "Reveille" really "Taps" for
humanity?
|