Revisiting Solaris: Encountering Otherness and the Limits of Representation

(2021)
Special issue (Stanisław Lem)

Abstract

One of the core themes of Stanisław Lem’s 1961 novel Solaris is the encounter with radical otherness. The ocean planet being studied by scientists form earth is usually interpreted as a representation of radical otherness, which eludes human efforts of understanding. In this paper we argue that in Solaris Lem attempts to show not merely that the ocean is unknowable, but that the unknowability is itself impossible to adequately conceptualise and represent. However, we further argue that this impossibility is the subject of an experience in which the presence of otherness is made available. We focus on the images of chaos which Kelvin discovers on Solaris to show that Lem presents the epistemic situation of the main protagonist as radically unstable. Contrary to most interpretations, however, we argue that the discursive narration in the novel engages with the presence of otherness only superficially. Rather, we suggest that the encounter with otherness is shown as something that manifests itself in bodily emotions, and is, therefore, only possible to convey non-discursively. The fear and dread inspired by the vastness and strangeness of the ocean are always presented by appeal to sensuality and bodily experience. These emotive reactions to encounters with otherness subvert its conceptual representations. We suggest that in this way Lem attempts to convey what cannot be discursively described, or even depicted. He presents radical otherness as something impossible to represent conceptually but offers a vision of the possibility of an encounter with otherness through bodily emotions. On this interpretation Solaris is not only a novel about the encounter with otherness, but also about the very possibility of representing such an encounter.


Keywords:
alien; encounter; experience; limits of knowledge; liminality; otherness; representation; self
Author biographies

Monika Anna Slawkowska-Rode

Monika Slawkowska-Rode graduated from the Faculty of Polish Studies at the University of Warsaw. She is a professional proofreader and editor. Her research interests include science fiction literature, in particular the work of Stanislaw Lem, and the Alien film saga, as well as Karol Irzykowski, and the relationship between literature and philosophy. She also writes childrens literature.

Mikolaj Slawkowski-Rode

Faculty of Philosophy, University of Warsaw Blackfriars Hall, University of Oxford

Dr Mikołaj Sławkowski-Rode is Assistant Professor in the Department for Philosophy of Culture at the Faculty of Philosophy, University of Warsaw as well as Research Fellow, and tutor in Philosophy at Blackfriars Hall, University of Oxford. He is also an Associate of the Ian Ramsey Centre for Science and Religion at the University of Oxford, where he is a member of a team working on a 3,5M John Templeton Foundation Grant "New Horizons for Science and Religion in Central and Eastern Europe". Dr Sławkowski-Rode is also a founding member of the Humane Philosophy Society and organizer of the Humane Philosophy Project (www.humanephilosophy.com).
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