"So progress in the way life is organized cannot be limited to technical progress in external equipment, cannot be confined to an increase in the quantity of tools.
"It will also be a qualitative process: the individual [...] will cease being 'private' by becoming at the same time more social, more human--and more individual" (248).
Lefebvre proposes a dialectical progress in which humans become simultaneously more objective (as in more social and more realized as part of a social, material world of human objects) and more subjective (more conscious and reflective). The protagonist of Waltz with Bashir. undertakes just such a dialectical journey. A friend's recurring nightmares resulting from the trauma of participating in Israel's war against Lebanon spur the protagonist to try to recover his own memories of combat.
At first he is totally dissociated from his own memories. He knows he was there for the massacre at the Shatila refugee camp, but he can't remember what he saw or what he did. His own absence of memories and nightmares is at first a sort of confirmation of his own innocence--if he's not haunted by the memories, then he must not have participated in anything too terrible. But fellow veterans insist that he was there during the massacre, and eventually he seeks out memories that will force him to be aware and conscious of his own actions during an atrocity. He will no longer be alienated from his own experience, or from his own relationship with violence and the perpetrators of violence. It is a terrifying and painful journey. It is a necessary journey. The result is objective and subjective growth--he is no longer just an individual guy separate from a social whole, and he is no longer split from his own awareness and memory.
The audience, too, participates in objective and subjective growth, in particular during the final scene, which consists of several minutes of archived footage of survivors of the massacre confronting the destruction and murder of their families and community. Then the film ends, abruptly, without returning to its animated characters, without commenting upon the footage or editorializing our experience of it. The final voice is the one in our own head, reacting, responding, reflecting. And this voice isn't private and removed--rather, we become more aware of our shared participation and responsibility. The memory that is recovered is not just the protagonist's, but a collective one.
Two other quotes from Lefebvre that are interesting to me:
"The method of Marx and Engels consists precisely in a search for the link which exists between what men think, desire, say and believe for themselves and what they are, what they do" (145).
"life is lagging behind what is possible" (230).
- Esme
Sunday, February 22, 2009
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