Review of:
Slavoj Zizek, The Ticklish Subject: The Absent Centre of Political
Ontology. London: Verso, 1999.
- The Ticklish Subject is a recent work by Slovene
philosopher, social theorist, and Lacanian psychoanalyst Slavoj Zizek, who
has produced books at the pace of more than one per year since the 1989
publication of his first book in English, The Sublime Object of
Ideology. As in his previous books, Zizek intermixes
psychoanalysis, nineteenth-century German philosophy, political theory, and
popular culture. With The Ticklish Subject, Zizek endeavors
to bring together three of his main concerns: Lacanian psychoanalysis,
the question of subjectivity, and the possibilities for a Leftist politics
in today's late-capitalist, postmodern world. He sets out to provide a
"systematic exposition of the foundations of his theory" (to quote the
book's cover), in order to address the relation between Lacanian theory,
subjectivity, and politics. Thus, The Ticklish Subject
purports to be a Lacanian theory of politics and the political--in short,
a theory of political subjectivity.
- The book is divided into three parts, each of which
addresses one of three important formulations of subjectivity: the German
Idealist subject, the political subject of French post-Althusserian
political philosophy, and the deconstructionist and multi-spectral subject
theorized by Judith Butler. In each of the book's three main parts, Zizek
starts from a critical reading of Martin Heidegger's, Alain Badiou's, and
Judith Butler's respective critiques of the traditional Cartesian notion
of the subject.
- As an alternative to the Cartesian subject and to the
three critiques of the Cartesian subject, Zizek proposes a Lacanian
notion of subjectivity. To explain what this involves, we can start by
looking at the notion of the decision and at the distinctions Zizek makes
between the "ontological" and the "ontic." Whereas the ontic refers to
what is--that is, to a positive being--the ontological refers to the
conditions of possibility and limits of what is. With the ontic we ask
what is; with the ontological we ask how it is possible that it can be.
Zizek believes that no ontic content or being can be derived from an
ontological form. In other words, there is no concrete ontic content that
can be the positive expression of being as such--that is, of the
ontological order. In this sense, the ontological relates to the ontic in
the same way as form relates to content. What Zizek wants to stress here
is that it is not possible to find a concrete community that expresses
the structure of community as such. So, for instance, he criticizes
Heidegger's assertion that the National Socialist State is the concrete
expression of the structure of community and social being as such.
Heidegger's fault lies in the fact that he tries to establish a necessary
connection between the ontological (the structure of social being as
such) and a particular ontic being (the National Socialist State). We may
be able to deconstruct community to show the conditions of possibility of
community, but we cannot find the particular community that best
expresses these conditions of possibility. Zizek develops this argument
as a critique of Heidegger. The problem with Heidegger is that on one
hand he insists on the distinction between the ontological and the ontic,
but on the other hand he ends up looking for the particular ontic
community that would realize the "essence" of the ontological structure
of society as such, that is, for the ontic of the ontological.
- Zizek insists that there is an insurmountable gap
between the ontological and the ontic, and that we are not able to move
directly from one to the other. In other words, it is not possible to
proceed directly from a formal argument to a particular substantial
argument, from form to content. The question then becomes how the gap
between them is filled or bridged. Here we encounter Zizek's notion of
the decision, which fills the gap between the ontological and the ontic.
The decision cannot be grounded in any ontological structure, but this
does not mean that you cannot give grounds for the decisions you make.
What it means is that the decision can only be grounded in ontic
structures, which are never universal. The decision can be grounded in a
system of thought--a culture, an ideology, a logic, and so on--but no
system can be universal and fully coherent. Thus, ultimately there is no
final and "secure" ground for the decision. It is for this reason that
Zizek can assert that the decision filling the gap between the
ontological and the ontic is "mad" in Kierkegaard's sense of being
ultimately ungrounded. The decision is a leap of faith, so to speak.
- We can now understand Zizek's Lacanian notion of the
subject. In Lacanian theory, the subject is situated in the lack that we
find in any symbolic structure and in the decision or act attempting to
fill this lack. Here we can understand the lack analogously to the gap
between the ontological and the ontic. Any symbolic structure--from
mathematics to ideology--is constituted by a lack, something that escapes
the symbolic structure and that it cannot explain. Thus, the lack denotes
an incompleteness of the symbolic structure. The symbolic structures
surrounding us and on which we rely for our social interaction are
lacking something, and this lack is constitutive of social life and of
any community. This makes social life a fragile enterprise because it
does not have a secure foundation. The subject can then try to "fill in"
this gap or to hide it. This is, for instance, the case when a
constitutive insecurity is presented as contingent, when we are told that
we merely have to get rid of a particular group of people, a particular
environmental risk and so on in order to (re-)establish a perfect
harmony. This is one aspect of what Zizek calls ideology. However, every
attempt to get rid of the constitutive lack and fragility is ultimately
futile, precisely because it is never possible to close the gap between
the ontological and the ontic. The subject--and political
subjectivity--is situated at the point where the filling of the lack
would take place. Hence, the subject is itself constituted by a lack. The
subject never succeeds in filling out the lack of the symbolic structures
or the gap between the ontological and the ontic. The subject is never
fully constituted; rather, the subject is these constant but
always futile attempts at constituting the subject.
- We have seen how Zizek conceives of the subject. It is
from this conception of the subject that he criticizes conceptions of
subjectivity by Kant, Heidegger, and Butler in each of the three main
parts of The Ticklish Subject. Rather than provide a detailed
analysis of each of these particular critiques, I will address the
ethico-political conclusions Zizek draws in order to evaluate the value of
the book. The question Zizek poses is whether we can argue for a
particular Leftist politics given the conclusions he has made about
political subjectivity. In this regard, the term "the authentic act" is
central. The authentic act is an act--or, we could say, a
decision--relating to itself in a special way. The authentic act
acknowledges that ultimately it cannot be grounded. That is, the authentic
act acknowledges that there can be no total, universal, and coherent
symbolic system that can justify and support the act. Obviously the act
can be supported by and justified within a cultural or ideological
symbolic system. However, this system cannot be complete and coherent.
There is something that escapes it; in other words, there is a lack. As
opposed to what Zizek calls a "pseudo-act," the authentic act acknowledges
this fact and does not seek to cover it up. Zizek then believes that he
can distinguish the Nazism of the 1930s and the 1940s as a pseudo-act, and
the 1917 Communist Revolution in Russia as an authentic act. Whereas the
former sought to (re-)establish a positive and "full" totality, according
to Zizek, the latter acknowledged that it could never establish a complete
totality and therefore had to be repeated infinitely as an act. The latter
is said to rely on the idea of a constant revolution. Thus, an authentic
act acknowledges that it cannot be deduced from and reduced to any total
and coherent symbolic structure. The authentic act is anti-totalitarian.
Hence, we can say that the authentic act and an authentic politics
"suspend" the symbolic structures through which we understand the world
and on which we rely when we act in the world. This amounts to saying that
the authentic act and an authentic politics put into question the
structures that are otherwise taken as given, natural, and universal.
- It is in this light that we must view Zizek's critique
of capitalism and of the theories of multiculturalism and risk society.
According to Zizek, the world is capitalist today, and therefore politics
must relate to the capitalist structures underlying contemporary life.
This is not the case with the theories and the politics of postmodernism,
multiculturalism, and risk society, however. These theories do not
question the fundamental structures of contemporary society. Instead, they
focus on what are merely the consequences of the development of
contemporary capitalism: namely particularized cultural identities and
environmental risks. In fact, environmental risks are generated by
capitalism, and capitalism is able to exist and to globalize itself
precisely by hiding itself behind cultural and national particularities.
Thus, a Leftist anti-capitalist politics cannot merely recognize and
affirm cultural diversity and target environmental risks. Rather, a
Leftist politics should question the very structures underlying these
phenomena. In this way, Zizek believes that it is possible to argue for a
Leftist anti-essentialist political position that avoids reproducing
existing structures and is not nihilistic, but is able to improve social
conditions.
- In The Ticklish Subject, Zizek provides a
powerful articulation of political subjectivity, and I highly recommend
the book. This said, however, I do have several reservations about the
central argument of the book. Although there is a red thread running
through it, the book does not provide the "systematic exposition"
promised by its cover. In addition, I am troubled by the ambiguous scope
and lack of internal consistency of Zizek's theoretical argument. As we
have seen, Zizek makes two central points in The Ticklish
Subject. First, he insists on a distinction between the ontological
and the ontic, and on the impossibility of deriving an ethics and a
politics from a formal political ontology, for instance, from a Lacanian
ontology of political subjectivity. Secondly, he attempts to argue for a
Lacanian ethics and/or a Leftist ethico-political position. This is,
indeed, a very interesting project and an important philosophical
enterprise, given the ongoing political paralysis and postmodern nihilism
of the Left today. However, Zizek's position raises several problems.
First, the status of Zizek's notion of the subject is unclear. Is it an
argument with universal applicability, or an argument about contemporary
Western societies? Is Zizek's notion of the subject a purely formal
(structural) notion, or is it only applicable to postmodern Western
subjectivities?
- More importantly, there is the problem of bridging the
gap between Zizek's formal Lacanian argument and his ethico-political
arguments. This is not a critique of Zizek's ethico-political position,
but of the way he argues for it. Zizek uses large parts of the book to
stress the constitutive gap between the ontological and the ontic.
However, when he engages with ethico-political arguments, an ambiguity
appears. It is not clear what his Lacanian ethics and politics imply,
since Zizek appears to argue for three different and mutually exclusive
positions in The Ticklish Subject. The first position is that
it is not possible to derive an ethics and a politics from the Lacanian
argument about subjectivity. This follows from his insistence on the gap
between the ontological and the ontic. The second position is that there
is a certain Lacanian ethics, namely an ethics of disruption and
suspension. This is an ethics that does not attempt to erect a new
comprehensive system telling us how to live the Good Life, but rather
attempts to open up possibilities for disrupting any existing system. In
relation to this position, the problem is whether this is not already a
particular positivization of a formal argument about subjectivity, a
positivization that does not acknowledge the irreducible gap between the
ontological and the ontic. Finally, Zizek seems to argue not only for
concrete ethical and political positions, but also that these positions
are the correct expression of the ontology of the subject. This, of
course, runs counter to the argument he makes about the irreducibility of
the gap between the ontological and the ontic. Zizek's Lacanian argument
is precisely that it is not possible to bridge the gap between a formal
argument and a concrete position. In short, Zizek tries to do things with
Lacanian theory that--according to his own arguments--it cannot do.
- These critical remarks notwithstanding, The
Ticklish Subject is a book that should be read by anyone
interested in political subjectivity.
Department of Government
University of Essex
lathom@essex.ac.uk
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