Popular Culture Review Vol. 15, No. 2 | Page 58

54 Popular Culture Review body to be the ground for all perception, and in that I also take the sensuous life of the body to be at the heart of thought (a position that allowed Merleau-Ponty to eliminate the dichotomy between mind and body in his work Phenomenology o f Perception^^). In what follows, however, I depart some distance from Merleau-Pontian phenomenology, and move instead toward the theoretical position on the sensing body articulated by Michel Serres in his 1998 work Les Cinq Sens {The Five Senses)}^ In this work in particular, and in earlier works that precede it in general, Serres takes his point of departure from Merleau-Pontian and Heideggerian phenomenology. Serres finds the work of these theoreticians repellent, almost revolting, for what he takes to be their “bodilessness.”^^ Serres takes offence at Merleau-Pontian phenomenology in particular; because, he says, it consists of “lots of phenomenology and no sensation.”^^ Serres is of this mind because he believes Merleau-Ponty to have taken for phenomena to be explored not the experience of the body in the world at all, but instead the language that describes the experiences of bodily sensation. Indeed, Merleau-Ponty’s Phenomenology o f Perception opens with these words: “At the outset of the study of perception, we find in language the notion of sensation”^® (my emphasis). It may well seem as though Serres’s accusations are unfounded; this was certainly my own impression when I read Les Cinq Sens for the first time. However, when one closely inspects Merleau-Ponty’s descriptions of the senses, one is forced to at least consider being less dismissive of Serres’s words. When Merleau-Ponty describes sensual life in all of his phenomenological work, he does so with reference to a kind of zone of indeterminacy in that he honours the idea that in attending carefully to one sensual phenomenon, other sensual phenomena escape close attention. In order to describe this one sense, MerleauPonty must render it still in that he must remove it from a lived context in which it is much more usually and inextricably intertwined with all of the other senses. He does this for the benefit of language; the sense is held still, out of its more usually intertwined place, so that it can be clearly described. This is what Serres means when he says that Merleau-Pontian phenomenology is conducted entirely “via language.”^^ The major difference between Merleau-Pontian phenomenology and Serresian renderings of the body in the world, then, pivots on Serres’s recognition of the habitually multisensual life of the body. Multisensuality in Performance Hearing, in effect, as Serres insists, is a naked faculty, a sense waiting for a project. In rehearsals, hear ing certainly has a project: to hear tiny component noises in routine musical conversation, component parts that render musical conversation nonsensical. But in performance, hearing has a different kind of project, in which it is deafened—by itself Connor describes this hearing as “autistic acoustics,” suggesting that during performances band members do