Review of:
Tim Dean, Beyond Sexuality. Chicago: U of Chicago P, 2000.
Charles Shepherdson, Vital Signs: Nature, Culture,
Psychoanalysis. New York: Routledge, 2000.
- In an interview familiar to English readers, "The Confession of
the Flesh," there is a terse exchange between Michel Foucault and
Jacques-Alain Miller over the former's history of sexuality. Miller
doggedly insists that "There isn't a history of sexuality in the way that
there is a history of bread" (213). Foucault replies by likening the
history of sexuality to that of madness, and the interview takes a
different turn.[1] It is a pity that
Miller and Foucault should have allowed this particular point to drop, for
it reveals the central conflict between psychoanalysis and the historicism
exemplified by Foucault: psychoanalysis, specifically its Lacanian
inflections, contends that historicism misrecognizes sexuality by turning
it into an effect of discourse.[2] This
conflict has wide-ranging repercussions, touching on fundamental
questions of identity, sexuality, power, representation, and the nature of
history and historical change.
- The year 2000 saw the publication of eagerly awaited
collections by two of the most invigorating and provocative writers on
psychoanalysis and historicism: Tim Dean's Beyond Sexuality
and Charles Shepherdson's Vital Signs: Nature, Culture,
Psychoanalysis. Dean and Shepherdson begin their books with
statements of the same goal: to recapture the "theoretical specificity of
Lacanian theory" in the face of an Anglo-American reception that has
tended either to assimilate psychoanalysis with Foucault or to dismiss it
as either essentialist and ahistorical, on the one hand, or as reducing
everything to language, on the other (Shepherdson 8; for similar
statements from Dean see 8, 15, and 22). One great merit of Beyond
Sexuality and Vital Signs is the way they move debates
over sexuality and identity beyond facile, sterile arguments between
essentialism and constructionism--an opposition, Shepherdson points out,
that plays out in postmodern clothes the nineteenth-century, and thus
basically pre-Freudian, opposition between Geisteswissenschaften
and Naturewissenschaften (15, 183).
- Dean and Shepherdson start from the same place: the
Lacanian proposition, derived from Freud, that sexuality represents a
failure of identity constitutes the sharpest insight of
psychoanalysis, one with ramifications that are still far from being
understood. The Lacanian argument is profoundly antipsychological and
anti-commonsensical, as Dean observes: "human sexuality involves persons
only contingently.... We misconstrue sexuality's functioning when we begin
our analysis of it from the point of view of men and women, rather than
from the perspective of language and its effects" (18). Shepherdson
explains that, because Freud's theory of sexuality binds the drives to
representation, psychoanalysis fundamentally conceives of a sexuality
constitutively opposed to nature, reproduction, or any other
telos. In Dean's lovely expression, "Language and the body are
permanently out of synch, though not always in the same way" (59).
- In addition to this attention to sexuality's failure, the
two books share other emphases, such as clarifying the differences between
the Imaginary and the Symbolic (including between the image and the word),
and most notably a sustained engagement with Catherine Millot's work on
transsexuality.[3] As a consequence of
their attempt to bring psychoanalysis into sharper relief, both writers
are also somewhat polemical, digging through the reception history of
Lacanian psychoanalysis and what is usually called French feminism in order
to demonstrate how and why certain concepts have been obscured--or simply
not understood. Despite their common interest in clarifying the
theoretical stakes of Lacanian psychoanalysis, Dean and Shepherdson also
have significantly divergent interests and methods. Dean's Beyond
Sexuality offers a radical rethinking of sexuality on impersonalist
grounds, revealing the value of Lacan's conception of the objet
a to queer theory--and, splendidly, the extent to which the objet
a deserves to supplant the phallus in Lacanian theory. Dean
eloquently demonstrates the vitality of heterodox--or, perhaps more
precisely, of original, non-acolytic--readings of Lacan, as well as the
crucial importance of Lacanian analysis for social phenomena such as
safe-sex education. Shepherdson's disentangling of the three elements of
his subtitle--nature, culture, psychoanalysis--works to defamiliarize
French feminists such as Irigaray, Kristeva, Lemoine-Luccioni, and Millot.
In fact, reading Vital Signs leads to an astonishing
conclusion: we have never understood how to read these writers,
and an extensive rereading will have to begin.
- Readers of Postmodern Culture may recognize
"History and The Real: Foucault with Lacan," Shepherdson's fifth chapter,
since a version of it appeared here previously. The precision and
expositional grace of Shepherdson's prose
will thus already be familiar. Vital Signs is revelatory,
with every chapter overturning commonplaces of the American
misunderstanding of French psychoanalysis. A partial list of his main
claims will suggest the importance of this project: "sexual difference is
neither 'sex' nor 'gender'" (2); the body is neither natural nor cultural,
in anything like the normal understanding of those terms; for Lacan, the
mother only emerges in the Symbolic order; psychoanalysis distinguishes
women from mothers, and both from the fantasy of a pre-Oedipal mother;
for psychoanalysis, "human sexuality is inevitably historical"
(99), and so forth. In addition to these far-reaching theoretical
questions, Shepherdson also provides lucid accounts of Lacan's Schema
R--which clearly indicates the crucial importance of the mother for the
Symbolic order--and of the shift from the Oedipus myth to the myth of the
primal horde, the Freudian basis for Lacan's arguments about
jouissance after Seminar 7.
- To briefly clarify some of these claims, I shall try to
follow
Shepherdson's argument about sexuality and history, the thread connecting
the chapters in his book. He begins with the Freudian distinction
between "instinct" (Instinkt) and "drive" (Trieb). The
first consequence of this distinction is that sexuality is irrevocably
disconnected from reproduction and the natural. In fact, "one cannot
properly speak of an 'originally natural' sexuality that would (later) be
distorted by external and therefore merely accidental deformation by the
particular conventions of a given culture--the analysis of the sexual
drive should lead us to speak of its original emergence as unnatural, as
intrinsically constituted through an organization that is beyond the
'law' governing the organism alone" (34). It is because the drive is not
natural--that is, because there is a gap between instinct and drive--that
sexuality can have a history. Actually, this can be put more
dramatically: insofar as it interrupts the biological determinants of the
body, human sexuality simply is history. The Symbolic order is
thus the threshold of history.
- The cultural studies equation of Lacan's concept of the
Symbolic order with actually existing institutions in a particular society
has thoroughly confused this point.[4]
For Lacan, the Symbolic order is, in effect, the law underpinning culture
itself; in other words, it is the condition necessary to allow social
institutions to exist at all. To continue
to use the example of sexuality, it is the introduction of the
Symbolic--here, the order of representation--into a biological,
instinctual understanding of sexuality that allows the varieties of human
sexuality to come into being. Once these sexualities
have begun to emerge, the historicist thesis becomes more
appropriate, but it is always a second-order understanding. As
Shepherdson comments, historicism and psychoanalysis address fundamentally
different questions. Historicism can help us understand "the
contingent, historically constituted forms of life," while
psychoanalysis focuses on the "inevitable dimension of sexually
marked embodiment" (88).[5]
- By providing an account of how the biological organism
becomes "the body," psychoanalysis refuses the opposition between nature
and culture that has governed discourse on sexuality since the nineteenth
century. It is therefore highly comic to find this opposition being used
to dismiss psychoanalysis--both as endorsing biology over culture
(essentialism) and as focusing too relentlessly on the signifier
(constructivism). The first two chapters of Vital Signs
address themselves to this irony, seeking to uncover in Irigaray,
Kristeva, and others a psychoanalytic argument about embodiment and
history that has literally been ignored in the course of their
Anglo-American reception. For example, "everyone knows" that Kristeva
distinguishes between the (feminine) semiotic and the (masculine) Symbolic.
Both hostile and sympathetic critics often begin their responses to
Kristeva with this point. However, Shepherdson demonstrates that
gendering the semiotic/Symbolic distinction misses Kristeva's point
entirely:
Such an account presupposes a commonsense account of sexual
difference; thereby circumventing the questions psychoanalysis is seeking
to address, namely, the question of how sexual difference in the human
animal is subject to representation rather than being naturally given.
Thus, the semiotic is not automatically a domain of maternal or feminine
identity, but a domain in which sexual difference is not yet established,
and consequently it cannot be gendered without returning to a
pregiven sexual difference (based on common sense and anatomy) that
avoids the very question Kristeva's categories seek to address. (61)
The reception of French feminism is, for Shepherdson, simply one
egregious instance of the general misunderstanding of
psychoanalysis's interrogation of sexuality.
- Shepherdson's reading of "Stabat Mater" demonstrates the
limitations of our current understanding of Kristeva. In his view,
Kristeva emphasizes the importance of maternal desire to the Symbolic
order. In other words, not only is it not the case that women and
mothers are relegated to the Imaginary, it is also not the case that the
move to the Symbolic is predicated on the father. Shepherdson's reading
depends on two related points. First, there is no sexual difference
without the Symbolic order. As a result, whenever we speak of the
"Imaginary mother," we are dealing with a fantasy of maternity that is
already the product of the Symbolic: The Imaginary mother is "the archaic
maternal image,... a phallic figure that cannot be understood
in terms of sexual difference" (61). Second, the advent of the Symbolic
order is not first heralded by the child's recognition of the father, as
so many literal-minded readers of Lacan claim. Instead, the child is
confronted with the astonishing fact that the "mother" (which, as I've
just said, cannot be conceptualized with reference to sexual difference)
wants something beyond the child. By incarnating desire for the child in
this way, Shepherdson poetically writes, the "symbolic mother thus
performs a second birth, a symbolic labor, which escorts the child out of
the organic night, out of the imaginary world of blood and milk, out of
the oceanic world of primary narcissism, and into the world of speech,
where desire can be articulated" (69). The fundamental lesson of
Vital Signs is this: by paying attention to the theoretical
specificity of psychoanalysis, we can discover a perspective on sexuality
far richer than any available alternative. The refusal of psychoanalysis
to yield pride of place to either nature or culture gestures towards a
turbulent field of trauma, fantasy, and the excesses of symbolization and
language. The work of understanding this field, Shepherdson tantalizingly
suggests, has yet to begin.
- If Vital Signs shows how we have never fully
understood psychoanalysis, Dean's Beyond Sexuality
demonstrates that psychoanalytic theorists have not always understood just
how rich a resource they had. Subsequently, in addition to coinciding with
Shepherdson's argument about sexuality and history, Dean also advances a
powerful new inflection of the theory of sexuality, arguing on ethical
grounds for an impersonalist theory of desire, one that would recognize
that psychically we have sex not with others but with the Other. The
thesis of Beyond Sexuality is that the theory of the
objet a, object-cause of desire, represents the key insight of
Lacanian psychoanalysis, and the theory emphasizing the phallus is a kind
of retrograde legacy: "Lacan's most profound ideological and affective
convictions sometimes run counter to his most brilliant critical and
analytical insights" (12).[6] If we
understand the objet a to provide the conceptual core of
sexuality, then we can understand that "one would be defined by one's
sexuality no more than by any other contingent feature, because erotic
desire would have been fully disarticulated from personhood" (21).
Beyond Sexuality also shows that taking psychoanalysis
seriously means neither self-importance nor obsequious deference to Freud
or Lacan. Dean's prose is both clear and witty, and he has a genius for
the well-placed one-liner with significant conceptual implications. At one
point, he sums up his de-emphasis of the phallus: "It is not so much that
the phallus is really a penis--or, in Judith Butler's reading, a dildo--as
it is a giant red herring" (13-14). And elsewhere, he splendidly revises
the familiar Lacanian maxim about transference and the "subject supposed
to know": "he whom I suppose to know how to enjoy, I hate" (127).
Beyond Sexuality is an important intervention in both
psychoanalytic thought and queer theory, and deserves a wide audience.
- In this space I cannot address all of Dean's claims, but
I will instead try to explain why Dean prefers the objet a over the
phallus, and what allows him to do so. In the chapter entitled "How to
Read Lacan," Dean provides a schematic periodization of Lacan, producing a
series of Lacans both overlapping and discontinuous--a Lacan of the
Imaginary, one of the Symbolic, one of the Real, and one of the
sinthome, Lacan's final reconceptualization of the symptom. By
doing so, Dean avoids both the pitfall of over-contextualizing Lacan
(which would reduce his concepts into epiphenomena of his life and times,
an approach exemplified for Dean by David Macey and Mikkel Borch-Jacobsen)
and that of overly narrativizing Lacan's thought (thus producing a
"conversion
narrative characteristic of ego formations" [37]; Dean finds this approach
in Zizek's well-known emphasis on Seminar 7 as the birth of the Real in
Lacan). Viewed in the context of Lacan's career as a whole, Dean claims,
the phallus should be seen as a "provisional concept because so many of
its functions are taken over by other concepts, in particular that of
object a, which has no a priori relation to gender and, indeed,
may be represented by objects gendered masculine, feminine, or neuter"
(45). The ground for this argument is Lacan's tendency to talk about the
image of the penis as a metaphor for the phallus, leading Dean to infer
that what's being proposed is an analogy. As a consequence, "when we
insist on invoking the concept of the phallus to talk about desire, we're
effectively mistaking the scaffolding for the building" (46-47).
- Dean emphasizes the Lacan of the Real because his
discussions of the Real drive Lacan to reconsider the status of the
objet a. As soon as the Real becomes a separate conceptual
register, we can see that the differences between "reality" and "fantasy"
no longer hold: "Lacan suggests that fantasy and desire don't concern
imagined, hallucinatory objects as distinct from actually existing
objects. Rather, objects of fantasy (objects a) are forever
lost--even from the visual projections of the imagination--thanks to their
cutting away from the subject that they thereby bring into being" (57).[7] The last clause emphasizes the role of
the objet a as object-cause of desire: it is both the thing
desired and the source of desire--that is, it elicits the desire that then
becomes attached to it. As Dean points out, the "cut that produces object
and subject both is not a border separation, a more or less culturally
regulated division between domains or acceptable objects of desire.
Instead, this is an internal cut, one that constitutively ensures the
separation of subject and object by making the subject's reality and its
desire depend on the object's never coming into view, never entering the
field of reality or of imaginary relations" (58). An immediate
consequence of this view is that any attempt to connect sexuality with
identity is thereby associated with the ego, and thus with the normative
enemy of desire.
- Dean lays out the stakes of allowing the ego to take over
desire in "Transcending Gender," a chapter demonstrating the limitations
of gender theory's frequent celebration of drag and transsexuality as
exemplifications of the social construction of gender. From a
psychoanalytic point of view, drag has a somewhat different implication.
To the extent that the successful performance of drag is often associated
with "scrupulously accurate mimesis" (69), it thus stresses the normative
implications of gender identity: "theories of mimesis or imitation
represent the wrong approach to gender altogether, because formulating
questions of gender and sexuality in terms of the mimetic or imitative
generation of reality effects restricts vital political questions to the
arena of ego identifications" (71). Rather than subvert the reigning
paradigms of sexual difference, then, gender performance theory
surprisingly reinforces them: sexuality is an affair of the ego, and the
vicissitudes of unconscious desire can be deprecated as distasteful or
politically objectionable.
- Against this view psychoanalysis makes an astonishing
claim: "the unconscious has no knowledge of sexual difference" (86). This
point continually slips from view in discussions of psychoanalysis.
However, it is the conceptual basis for Dean's project: "Lacan maintains
that there is no signifier for sexual difference in the unconscious.
Hence the phallus cannot be a signifier of sexual
difference; instead, it counts as a signifier of the total effects of the
signified--that is, of meaning. If there is no signifier for sexual
difference in the unconscious, then as far as the unconscious is concerned
heterosexuality does not exist.... Sexual difference does not
organize or determine sexual desire" (86-87).[8] Our tendency to read sexual difference and sexuality
in terms of each other, and to read sexual difference in terms of men and
women, corresponds to a pre-Freudian, psychologistic understanding of
sexuality. Worse, it endorses an identification of sexuality with the
ego, with normative, idealizing results (229).
- In "Lacan Meets Queer Theory," Dean explores the
possibility of a genuinely non-normative sexuality, one built
around objets a rather than personhood and identitarian claims.
The chapter engages such diverse thinkers as Foucault, Freud, Lacan,
Deleuze and Guattari, Michael Warner, and Guy Hocquenghem in order to
sustain a conversation between antinormative strains in queer theory and
psychoanalysis. The fundamental congruence that Dean observes among these
writers is an emphasis on depersonalization, the recognition that
sex--whether alone or in the presence of others--is a relationship with an
object and with the Other. The confusion of one's object-choice with a
person, or a kind of people, "entails a kind of sublimation, an idealizing
consolidation of the object.... Erotic desire for another person itself
depends on some sort of sublimation--rather than sublimation standing as
the alternative to interpersonal desire" (268). In the age of AIDS, Dean
asks us to see that depersonalizing desire could be a way of saving lives.
If taking another person as a sexual object is a form of sublimation,
then perhaps other forms of sublimation could equally well serve as
gateways to jouissance. Understanding sexuality (as well as all
relations with others) as impersonal clarifies that "jouissance
remains irreducible to sex, since although the Other has your
jouissance, it has no genitalia" (171).
- Beyond Sexuality and Vital
Signs are provocative, even polemical, books; their tone may be
misconstrued--or, perhaps more exactly, their tone may invite a
particularly unproductive mode of "wild analysis." For example, both
writers use "psychoanalysis" to refer exclusively to the subset of
psychoanalytic theory associated with French Freud: mostly Lacan, but
also Bersani, Laplanche, Irigaray, Kristeva, and Millot. This is not, as
is commonly asserted, a manifestation of Lacanian arrogance. Instead, it
is a consequence of striving to keep in focus aspects of psychoanalysis
that always threaten to fade from view. This fading happens in two
directions. First, both the unconscious and the psychoanalytic subject
have at best evanescent "existences," generally understandable only as
instances of failure. As Dean
in particular emphasizes, this "fading" of psychoanalytic specificity is
present in Freud and Lacan, as well. Second, the reception of French
psychoanalysis has tended to read it as a politically dubious species of
poststructuralism. In certain chapters--some of the finest of both books
(in Dean, "Bodies That Mutter"; in Shepherdson, "Hysteria and the Question
of Woman"), the argument about theoretical specificity requires an
extended demonstration of what is actually in Lacan, and what is a
confusion in the reception of Lacan. Another way of putting this is to
say that the target of Dean's and Shepherdson's argument is rarely the
theorist under consideration so much as it is the academic tendency to
rely on intermediaries rather than engaging with Lacan's work. Dean and
Shepherdson argue that this reliance produces Imaginary misreadings of
Lacan that are far more normative than anything in psychoanalysis (for an
especially graceful articulation of this view, see Dean 13-17).
- It is surely not a coincidence that Dean's and
Shepherdson's academic training is grounded in poetry (Dean 25 and
Shepherdson 9, 187), suggesting the peremptory benefits of close reading,
even for, say, a discussion of the epistemological virtues of gloryhole
sex (Dean 274). First, Beyond Sexuality
and Vital Signs share a commitment to exegetical patience,
sticking to the nuances of the texts they consider. Second, they are
both able to locate in Lacan's style an "incitement to further thinking"
(Dean 25). The merit of the two books, from this perspective, is their
capacity for enduring the peculiar disorientation induced by Lacanian
thought, a disorientation that eventually becomes productive rather than
disabling. Beyond Sexuality and Vital Signs
provide
admirable models of reading, convincingly demonstrating the conceptual
impoverishment induced by the Anglo-American reception of Lacan. In
particular, Dean and Shepherdson offer unusually sophisticated accounts of
the paradoxical normativity that can emerge from the reigning paradigms
of historicism, gender performance theory, and queer theory. They call us
to a re-reading of writers we may never have fully understood--a massive
endeavor, the merit of which, Shepherdson concludes, is that
"psychoanalysis has a future" (185).
School of Literature, Communication, and Culture
Georgia Institute of Technology
jason.jones@lcc.gatech.edu
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Notes
1. Shepherdson makes a similar point:
"we cannot treat embodiment as though it were simply one more human
institution, another convention invented (in the course of time) by human
beings, like agriculture or atomic weapons" (88). There is a comical side
to the exchange between Miller and Foucault, as well. Miller points out a
connection between Foucault's work and the Lacanian "axiom" that "there is
no sexual relation." Foucault's reply: "I didn't know there was this
axiom" (213). The inexistence of the sexual relation is, as even casual
readers of Lacan will be aware, one of the principal leitmotifs of his
seminars, on par with "the unconscious is structured like a language," and
"desire is the desire of the other." For an exemplary account of the
relationship between Foucault and Lacan around this question, see Lane,
"Experience"; for more comprehensive efforts to engage Foucault with
Lacan, see Lane, Burdens (12-30) and Copjec (especially
1-26).
2. For the rationales behind identifying
Foucault's style of thought "historicist," see Copjec (1-14), Dean (2-10),
Lane, Burdens (12-30), and Shepherdson (1-15, 157).
Shepherdson frames the argument with characteristic precision: the carving
of the body by the drives in Freudian theory indicates "why there can be
such a thing as a 'history of sexuality,' for it suggests that human
existence is not so decisively bound to the mechanisms of instinct, the
force of evolution, and the singular telos of reproduction. And yet, this
very capacity to have a history... should not lead us to conclude that
'sexuality,' or indeed the phenomenon of embodiment, is simply a
'discursive product,' the contingent construction of a particular culture
or a given historical moment" (7).
3. This congruence is registered by Dean
(66).
4. As Shepherdson has written elsewhere,
assimilating the Symbolic order to the social-historical context
identifies Lacan's concept "with the very structures [it] was elaborated
to contest" ("On Fate" 283). See also Vital (45-54).
5. This is why, as Dean points out,
it is a mistake to claim (following Judith Butler) that Lacanian
psychoanalysis has a melancholy attitude towards lost jouissance
(85n37; 199-202). As should now be clear, such a stance would be
historicist, not psychoanalytic.
6. Dean is following lines of thought
developed by Arnold Davidson and Teresa de Lauretis.
7. Dean develops this argument through a
wonderfully clear discussion of the differences between Lacan's seminar on
psychosis and the ecrit "On a Question Preliminary to Any
Possible Treatment of Psychosis," which is ostensibly a summary of the
seminar (56-58 and 100-03). He observes that the seminar focuses on the
famous axiom that "what is foreclosed in the Symbolic returns in the
Real," a formula that for all its prominence in the seminar does not
appear in the ecrit. The ecrit, by contrast, focuses on
the foreclosure of the Name-of-the-Father, an idea that is implicit
in the parts of the seminar being summarized.
8. For a fuller discussion of the common
ground between queer theory and psychoanalysis, see Dean and Lane.
Works Cited
Copjec, Joan. Read My Desire: Lacan Against the Historicists.
Cambridge: MIT P, 1994.
Dean, Tim, and Christopher Lane. "Homosexuality and Psychoanalysis: An
Introduction." Homosexuality and Psychoanalysis. Ed.
Tim Dean and Christopher Lane. Chicago: U of Chicago P, 2001. 3-42.
Foucault, Michel. "The Confession of the Flesh." Power/Knowledge:
Selected Interviews & Other Writings, 1972-1977. Ed. Colin Gordon.
New York: Pantheon Books, 1980. 194-228.
Lane, Christopher. The Burdens of Intimacy: Psychoanalysis and
Victorian Masculinity. Chicago: U of Chicago P, 1999.
---. "The Experience of the Outside: Foucault and Psychoanalysis."
Lacan in America. Ed. Jean-Michel Rabaté. New York:
Other P, 2000. 309-47.
Shepherdson, Charles. "History and The Real: Foucault with Lacan."
Postmodern Culture 5.2 (1995): 65 pars. <http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/pmc/v005/5.2shepherdson.html
and </text-only/issue.195/shepherd.195>.
---. "On Fate: Psychoanalysis and the Desire to Know." Dialectic
and Narrative. Ed. Thomas R. Flynn and Dalia Judovitz. Albany: SUNY
P, 1993. 271-302.
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