âCombining the stability of architecture, the fluidity of water, and the vitality of plant life, the root is a kind of supermetaphor that subsumes the others,â Christy Wampole writes. It is âsnakelike, slithering in the depthsâ.
She recalls, but firmly sets aside, Lord Palmerstonâs warning that âhalf the wrong conclusions at which mankind arrives are reached by the abuse of metaphorsâ, in order to commence her own headlong rush into such theorising. After all, metaphors and analogies are powerful precisely because of their flexibility and adaptability.
Yet she acknowledges just how slippery this particular metaphor is by noting that the habit of supposing that the root is older than the rest of the plant is actually misguided â the two grow and develop together. She notes too that the master of deconstruction, Jacques Derrida, explicitly condemns the root metaphor, saying that it is rather âa concealment of the originâ. Where Martin Heidegger and Edmund Husserl sought to ârerootâ philosophy, Derrida sought to uproot it altogether, Wampole enthuses. Yet Derrida too was âvery much a product of the phallogocentric system he critiquesâ. He fails to condemn roots as male images, conservative reactionary forces. Root-seeking is based on the idea that the past was better, that origins were purer.
Wampole arrives instead at rhizomes as the progressive, non-hierarchical, feminist, solution â although she allows that even after âruminating long and hardâ she is still not sure what a rhizome is. She is left with the worry that âthe botanical metaphor Iâve followed throughout the book with assurance has dissolved in the hands of Deleuze and Guattariâ, with their dramatic plea: âMake rhizomes, not roots, never plant! Donât sow, grow offshoots! Donât be one or multiple, be multiplicities!â
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Ignoring that advice, Wampole continually narrows down the area of study in ways that seem arbitrary. She insists that it was in France and Germany âmore than anywhere elseâ that cultural debates âorganized themselves around the problems of roots and radicalityâ, and she then further concentrates on France owing to âthe plain fact that I am a specialist in twentieth and twenty-first century French and Francophone literatureâ. As a result, Sartreâs dendrophobia â fear of trees â looms large here. Pity him! Because, for Wampole, ânearly every major philosophical breakthrough in twentieth-century Continental thought confronted the problem of rootedness explicitlyâ, becoming organised around âtropes of rootedness, groundedness, implantation, transplantation, and eradicationâ. She also says that the late 19th and early 20th centuries witnessed an obsessive search for origins, yet clearly the search has been pretty timeless.
Acknowledging that it would be impossible âand unavailingâ to catalogue all the uses of the root metaphor in 21st-century poetry, she has a good go anyway, with four poets few will have heard of. In the process we are urged to deconstruct the double âXâ in Paul Celanâs poem Radix, Matrix: âX marks the spot, that place in the ground where the person and race originated.â Another poem she considers uses lots of hyphens, which is revealing, she assures us, because this is also the symbol for ânegation, lessening, lowering and extinctionâ. Yet another reminds Wampole that the word ârootâ also means âpenisâ â as in radix virilis. No wonder Derrida saw in all this an emblematic circumcision.
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Martin Cohen is editor of The Philosopher and author, most recently, of Paradigm Shift: How Expert Opinions Keep Changing on Life, the Universe and Everything (2015).
Rootedness: The Ramifications of a Metaphor
By Christy Wampole
University of Chicago Press, 288pp, ÂŁ31.50
ISBN 9780226317656
Published 6 May 2016
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