
https://www.ucpress.edu/books/atmospheric-knowledge/paper
Birgit Abels and Patrick Eisenlohr on their book, Atmospheric Knowledge
https://www.ucpress.edu/books/atmospheric-knowledge/paper
Timothy Cooper: The book is a meeting between two scholars on volumetric and motional forms of attachment to the world. Not only is it highly original in form and content, but this is also a book of great eloquence. Like a good album, this is a book that achieves its full impact when read as a whole. I think this impact comes from a sense of poetic juxtaposition between your different fieldsites, and the fun of the relay baton being passed from chapter to chapter. Compared to other fields, co-authorship is a rare thing in anthropology. I’d love to hear more about how this collaboration took shape.
Patrick Eisenlohr: Thank you for this great opening question, it is a pleasure for us to talk to you! Both Indian Ocean and the Pacific worlds are constituted and sustained by movement in several ways. As an anthropological-cultural musicological team we have collaborated on the sonic, sonic motion and the theme of transoceanic connections for years. The dominant approach to emotional attachments in and through sound is treating them as largely akin to discursive formations, often directly linking them to specific identities and politics. We have been looking for alternatives that take the sonic more seriously as a modality of knowledge in its own right that cannot be exhausted by such discursively elaborated identities and politics. This brought us to sonic events as felt-bodily motion with their vague meaningfulness that cannot easily be pinned down. That said, in our book it is obvious who of us is taking the lead voice at which points, depending on the sites and kind of events. And yes, for us it is wonderful and enriching to have this dual perspective on all these settings and our method which, aiming to do justice to the sonic, at the same time is also theory and epistemology.
Timothy Cooper: One of the many ways of reading this rich book is as an intellectual history of atmospheres, particularly as it emerged out of German neo-phenomenology in the late twentieth-century. Why do you think atmosphere became an object of philosophical concern at this place and time when it did?
Birgit Abels: The core Hermann Schmitz’s work was published between 1964 and 1980: his System of Philosophy, which positions the felt body and felt-bodily experience central to human experience. With it, Schmitz continued a tradition that had perhaps not been entirely obscure, but certainly not mainstream either in any way. He did attract a small circle of like-minded scholars but remained an intellectual maverick throughout his lifetime. He basically rejected the entire European philosophical tradition after approximately 400 BC — with Plato, everything went wrong, if you’d asked Schmitz. And so, Schmitz’s project was in many ways an undoing of European philosophy and a re-appreciation of human experientiality of the world. His demeanor as an academic was similarly aloof: he had little love for the academic circus he, as a university professor, was bound to be a part of. He systematically wrote against everything the European university stood for, and he didn’t seem to mind his outsider status too much. Perhaps Schmitzian atmospherology really was some kind of sheet lightning for the academic discipline of Philosophy: a sharp reminder that one could think about the world very differently, and that perhaps, one should!
But why in the second half of the twentieth century? In some ways, Schmitz was avantgarde. Here was an old white man who critiqued aspects European ontologies and very certainly also the presumed authority of European thinking before Postcolonial Studies, Sensory Studies, and Indigenous Studies took the bull by its horns. Mind you, he never cared to engage in conversation with these debates when they emerged, he’d just continue doing his thing. In other ways, he really was quite the opposite of avantgarde, for instance in his project to reach back to the crossroads immediately after the Pre-Socratics where in his mind, European philosophy simply took the wrong turn. It’s hard to say why this stubborn intellectual, unfazed by the academic game of peer recognition and driven by a good number of arguably brilliant ideas as he was, appeared on the stage of 20th-century philosophy exactly when he did. But he did leave an imprint on it. And some of his ideas, after a considerable period of gestation, now seem to be more instructive than they were when Schmitz was alive.
Timothy Cooper: Another way of reading this book is as an invitation to look to the performing arts for an alternative epistemology with which to treat atmosphere as a condition of knowing. Could you say more about how you see the modes of sonic performance studied compare? In what ways do you think your various sets of interlocutors might see these modes of performance as commensurate?
Birgit Abels: We indeed argue that the performing arts harbor a kind of processual knowledge that invites a distinctly atmospheric type of relating to the world, of finding both connections and ruptures with our various environments – be they physical, social, cultural, or historical in nature. This is not a factual type of knowledge, we’d rather describe it as knowledge-as-discovery. In this discovery, the felt body is key in navigating sound and physical motion (manifesting as music and dance, respectively): it picks up the energetic flow of atmospheres. This ability to experience and respond to atmospheric suggestions of motion is part of a kind of epistemic literacy that has long been overlooked in both music studies and cultural anthropology. It’s interesting, therefore, to look at different modes of sonic performance and put them in perspective, especially since the underlying ontologies of sound and structured movement can be vastly different. And yet, thinking through them as atmospheres reveals strikingly similar dynamics – regarding their felt-bodily efficacy, their affective potential, and the genre-specific atmospheric literacy they require, to name just a few of many. Our interlocutors might not see the specific musical situations as comparable in terms of their structures, acoustic parameters, or cultural history; neither would we. But in many conversations during our research, they articulated a sense of distinctly sonic affectivity they viewed as key. Mind you, this is not a pseudo-universalist idea of some magical quality that is inherent to music; rather, it is, certainly in the case of South Pacific music epistemologies, practical knowledge, derived from lived experience, of a given chant’s innate capacity to transform social and spiritual environments.
Timothy Cooper: When I think of atmospheres in relation to media technologies and environments, I think of the German media theorist Friedrich Kittler’s memorable opening to Film, gramophone, typewriter: “Media determine our situation [Medien bestimmen unsere Lage].” This idea that media studies is the study of conditions for being inspired much recent materialist and environment scholarship on media and its infrastructures, as well as work that considers elemental forms like waves and oceans as media. Your Atmospheric Knowledge shares some of the same themes and concerns, similarly foregrounding mediatic conditions—examining how material substrates and elemental forms of mediation shape and are shaped by social contexts, and produce uneven, differentiated effects. In the study of atmosphere do you see any use in distinguishing between conditions and contexts, and if so, is atmosphere a condition or a context of mediation?
Patrick Eisenlohr: Mediation depends on a distinction between that which is mediated and a knowing entity that interacts with that which is mediated. In our book, we highlight the role of atmospheres, including sonic ones, in hailing and bringing about the differentiation of felt-bodies from a surrounding milieu. That is, atmospheres play a role in producing such a distinction. At the same time, atmospheres furnish a kind of prior and primary environmental knowledge that manifests at the level of felt-bodies (as distinct from physical bodies). But this is only possible if there is something to begin with, namely felt-bodies (as different from a disembodied cogito as subject), that is sufficiently differentiated from a milieu so that the latter becomes environment. Seen from this perspective, atmosphere is definitely condition and not context of mediation. Atmospheres can, however, be plural and shifting, so in a somatic encounter with a new kind of atmosphere this atmosphere then also appears as a new and different context of mediating environmental knowledge. On Kittler—I have always admired him as a brilliant and disruptive thinker. But his radical technical materialism with a bellicist slant was famously dismissive of humans, their subjectivities and bodies. Kittler could also not have cared less about socio-cultural difference. In contrast, our approach is very interested in humans. It is grounded in a phenomenology of the felt-body as underqualified and open, subject to downstream specification and differentiation in many different directions, thereby getting closer to that which anthropologists and musicologists usually write about. At the same time, taking the human subject as felt-body also makes our deep kinship and interconnectedness with other nonhuman animals blatantly obvious, think about our felt-bodily ways of interacting with companion mammals, for example. Embodiment exceeds humanity, and such interspecies interactions also often revolve around atmospheric suggestions of motion.
Timothy Cooper: In the book’s handling of the temporal character of atmospheres in relation to the Shi‘i material, atmospheres attain a political impact as containers of possibility and potential. Yet they are closely tethered to a Muslim eschatology beyond the human horizon. In the Pacific cases, ancestral oceanic presences exceed human perception yet actively mediate navigation and orientation. Can you say more about what kinds of mediation might resist or exceed atmospheric knowing?
Patrick Eisenlohr: Yes, in my research I have been fascinated by the parallels between the emphasis on the temporality of latency in Shi‘i eschatology and ritual practice and latency as the temporality of the atmospheric. After all, in the latter we are not so much dealing with motion, but the suggestion of motion. But you are right, the former is part of a divine order beyond the human horizon, while the latter is centered on a phenomenology of the felt-body that does not rule out the divine but is also intelligible without it. Taylor’s immanent frame certainly comes to mind here. There is a gap between realizing that divine cosmology exceeds a felt-body perspective, and the sum of anthropological studies of religion in the last 25 years according to which religion is about mediations that necessarily address felt-bodies in order to make the divine sensible and knowable. This latter perspective of embodiment is even shared by those who reject the notion of religion and find the notion of mediation too Protestant. There are certainly kinds of mediation that are not atmospheric knowing, think about the propositional aspects of speech acts, for example. But I cannot think of mediations that are not also atmospherically embedded and conditioned. To continue the example, spoken utterances are also always vocal and sonic events, and a pre-reflective sensing of sonic quality and motion is often the initial and micro-temporally prior way in which speech acts are apprehended. Atmospheres are always and already there.








