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Could Friedrich
Nietzsche
have married Jane Austen?
While counterfactual history is a serious
enterprise, I think that it's the most fun when done light-heartedly.
But there is a serious point here.
In their different ways, Austen and Nietzsche were
both obsessed with manners and breeding, and women who met Nietzsche
found him to be pleasant, courtly and reserved, rather like the
Darcy type favored by Austen in her novels. (Documentation from Gilman's Conversations with Nietzsche
is posted below.) However, unlike Darcy, Nietzsche had little
money, which in itself would have made him a bad match -- to say
nothing about the rather unpleasant attitudes toward women expressed in
Nietzsche's books.
In my opinion, a less-tightly-wound Nietzsche
would still have been a great philosopher and writer, but without the
megalomaniac edge. On the other hand, we wouldn't want to lose
Austen's novels, which is what probably would have happened if she
had married a British proto-Nietzsche.
(Originally
published at Adam Kotsko's
The Weblog.)
Awhile back I wrote
a piece arguing that
the supposed sexual repression of Christendom grew from the financial
obstacles standing in the way of respectable marriage, which in turn can
be traced to the efforts of ambitious families to maintain or raise their
statuses via favorable marriages (i.e., marriages which bring wealth into
the family). I gave special attention to St. Augustine, Nietzsche,
Thoreau, and Rimbaud, all of whom came from marginal families who hoped
that their sons’ education in the classics would allow them to enhance the
family status – at the cost of deferring marriage for a decade or more.
These four authors combined a high degree of alienation with the
extraordinary eloquence derived from their intensive literary educations,
and as a result, their dissident points of view were better expressed than
the more mainstream points of view of other contemporary authors who were
luckier, lazier, and happier. (Only St. Augustine seemed aware of the
problem as such, though it can easily be seen in the biographies of the
others.)
Nietzsche was the
most brilliant German classicist of his generation and became a full
professor younger than anyone ever had before. His family was completely
respectable, but his mother was widowed and far from wealthy, and since
academics were not well paid he was not especially marriageable –
certainly not after his retirement with a disability. His relationships
with women were few and unsuccessful, apparently being limited to
infatuations with the wives of friends and a conjectured encounter with a
prostitute. On the other hand, women who met him testified that he was
courtly and pleasant and by no means unattractive – “not like a
professor”, as one explained. (See Conversations with Nietzsche,
ed. Gilman.) Nietzsche is often enough treated as a sexless object of
ridicule, but I am willing to argue that his sexual problems were mostly
situational.
Nietzsche was
always a good boy, and during the bourgeois XIXc, especially in Lutheran
Germany, the demands on good boys were enormous: hard work, educational
and professional success, good manners, deference to superiors, chaste and
decent behavior, and adherence to an ethicized (Kantian) version of
Lutheran modernist orthodoxy which emphasized Duty. Nietzsche rejected
part, but not all of these demands -- primarily in religion and the ethics
-- but actually lived an essentially conventional life. What he retained
from his heritage was an emphasis on distinction, refinement, superiority,
and self-improvement: the superman may be regarded as an intensified
replacement for the already absurdly-high Lutheran standard which had been
imposed on him from birth. Instead of making life easier and more fun,
Nietzsche chose to make it more difficult: he was in thrall to The
Seriousness.
Nietzsche rejected
the bourgeois work ethic in favor of a more heroic aristocratic ideal, and
he rejected Lutheran moralism for a freer, more aristocratic way of life.
The traditional aristocrat was not answerable to anyone, and while moderns
tend to misrepresent aristocrats as effete and sissified, the traditional
aristocracy consisted of elegant but brutal military specialists with
strong hedonistic and erotic tendencies. However, actual aristocracies did
not conform to Nietzsche’s ideals, nor would Nietzsche’s marital prospects
have been much better in a less bourgeois society.
Let me, perhaps
capriciously, take Jane Austen’s Sense and Sensibility (1811) as a
case study in the actual life of an aristocracy. Austen’s book describes
the lifeboat ethics of the children of the English gentry, many of whom
were doomed by demographics to downward mobility. Elegant, pious propriety
masked the use of every means necessary to destroy rivals for favorable
marriages and inheritances – rivals who were usually very near kin. In
Austen’s book the people tend to be epiphenomenal, with the real players
being the titles to parcels of landed property.
The class systems
which made culture and refinement possible by concentrating wealth also
produced cultured people of uncertain status who had to be ejected and
forgotten, while at the same time dooming most of its members to
conventional and not terribly happy marriages. A good marriage partner had
to be of good family with an adequate income, belong to the right sect and
political faction, be reasonably well-bred and personable, and belong to
approximately the same social circle (which seemingly required being
“cousins or something like it”.) Any personal requirements imposed by the
individual partners would further restrict the pool of eligibles, though
often marriages were arranged in complete disregard for the desires of the
nominal principals of the ceremony.
Furthermore, the
aristocrats in Austen’s book, who are typical of aristocrats everywhere,
were not supermen or anything like supermen. They did not aspire to
self-overcoming, but were perfectly happy to occupy themselves with
hunting, whist, hot toddies, dances, flirtation, and seduction. While
Nietzsche envied the amoral ease and grace of the aristocracy, as a
self-confessed decadent (i.e., as a bourgeois Lutheran) he could not hope
to attain it, especially insofar as it was linked with stupidity and
laziness. Instead, he invented a new rigorist, strenuous ideal, even more
difficult than the conventional life he had been born into. Nietzsche was
a hyper-bourgeois hyper-Lutheran.
But the big
question is this: if Nietzsche had been an Austen character, could he have
married one of Austen's Dashwood sisters? I think that the answer is
“maybe -- but probably not.” In his favor is Jane Austen’s own bias toward
reserved, dignified suitors. When
she concocted improbably happy endings for her books, Austen made sure
that the “nice guy” got the girl -- whereas she forced the dashing,
impulsive seducer to slink offstage in disgrace. Now, according to the
testimony in Gilman’s book, Nietzsche was tolerably like the characters
Austen favored, and during his younger days he probably even had the
ardent sincerity Marianne (the “sensibility” sister) demanded. At the same
time, however, both sisters expected what we would call
an upper class income (1000 to 2000 pounds), and Nietzsche probably would
have been out of luck for that reason.
It’s wrong, of
course, to identify a character in a novel with the novel’s author. At the
same time, there’s nothing wrong with asking whether any of the characters
in a novel would have been capable of writing it. Of the characters in
Sense and Sensibility, Elinor is obviously the only one who could have
written a book of this type (though her sister Marianne might have written
something a bit smarmier). And of the two sisters, she is the one who
gravitated naturally toward courtly, reserved gentlemen of Nietzsche's
type. Since Jane Austen never married, it’s reasonable to develop the
question a bit further. If Nietzsche (with a bit more income) had married
Jane Austen, would the marriage have worked out?
Alas, one fears
that it wouldn't have. Austen was hardly the kind of feminist Nietzsche
feared so intensely, but one doubts that he could have been a supportive
husband for any woman of talent. The marriage probably would have been
good for Nietzsche, however, at Austen's expense, and perhaps a married
Nietzsche would have been little less tightly wound, and might thus have
written equally-penetrating, but less intensely alienated works . But as
we have seen (Western civilization being what it is) such an outcome was
in reality utterly out of the question.
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FIRST PERSON REPORTS ON NIETZSCHE:
Here are some contemporary
descriptions of Nietzsche, more than half by women. Let the reader judge
whether he's a Darcy. I think that these descriptions do lay to rest the
common belief that Nietzsche was a pitiful, neurotic bookworm with
delusions of grandeur -- three of the authors specifically note that he
didn't seem like a typical German professor academic. (From
Conversations with Nietzsche, ed. Sander Gilman, Oxford, 1987.)
Sebastian Hausman
(p. 139): "This is absolutely
not the impression I had got on meeting Nietzsche; on the contrary, I
found him extraordinarily fresh and lively....
(p. 140) "[he] spoke with
me in such a friendly, amiable manner [that] he gave me the impression
that at the bottom of his soul he must have been an unusually kind and
loving person."
Meta von Salis-Marschlins (p.
159):
"Even the first impression was
comparable with no other. The strangeness and un-Germanness of his face
matched his anassuming behavior, which gave no clue to his being a
German professor. A strong self-confidence made any posturing
superfluous."
Helen Zimmern (p. 167):
"[One] immediately became aware
of being in the presence of a man who was completely conscious of his
value......"
"Not only was there no sign of
insanity detectable in him, but he was not even eccentric...."
(p. 168):
"I also know what Nietzsche
wrote about women. But according to my experiences I can only say that
Nietzsche was always of the most perfect gentilezza...."
Adolf Ruthardt (p. 183):
Nietzsche's external appearance
made an extremely agreeable impression on me. Above middle height,
slender, well-formed, with erect but not stiff stance, his gestures
harmonious, calm, and sparing..... [this] allowed him so little to
resemble the type of a German scholar that he called to mind a Southern
French nobleman or an Italian or Spanish higher officer in civilian
clothes,"
Marie von Bradke (p. 190):
"The man walking there, I noted
clearly, had an artist's eyes and bore high, lonesome, unique thoughts
into his experience of nature's beauty. When one saw the great, strong,
well-dressed figure with the full, rosy face and the mustache, hastening
along so, one would have taken him for a Junker [landed nobility]
rather than a scholar or an artist."
APPENDIX:
How
much was 2000 pounds a year in 1800 in today's dollars? Answers vary
widely, but the annual subsistence income for a laborer, for example seems
to have been in the low double figures.
http://www.j-bradford-delong.net/movable_type/2003_archives/002730.html
http://www.westegg.com/inflation/
http://www.eh.net/hmit/
REFERENCES:
Hexter, J. H., "The
Education of the Aristocracy in the
Renaissance," Journal of Modern History, XXII (1950), 1-20; also in
Reappraisals in History,
Harper, 1963. (Actually, some aristocrats were educated -- just not
Austen's .)
Foucault, Michel,
The History of Sexuality, 3 vols., Vintage, from 1995. (The
disciplining of the elite.)
Shapin, Steve, A Social History
of Truth, Chicago, 1994. (The pleasure of the aristocrat).
I am emersonj at gmail dot com.
Original materials copyright John J
Emerson
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