Claire Colebrook - The Haunted Flesh
Claire Colebrook - The Haunted Flesh
Claire Colebrook - The Haunted Flesh
Claire
Bray
Colebrook
(onsiderthe
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Is thought phallocentric?
In this section, we explore the assumptions that have provided the conceptual base of the postpsychoanalytic discourse of what we discuss here as
"corporealfeminism"-- a discourse offering a radicalanti-Cartesianrevaluation of the material conditions that undermine the articulationof the cogito, representation, and the sexed body. We base our analysis of the problem of "writing the body" on the vast amount of feminist literature that
has followed from Irigaray'smajor work Speculumof the Other Woman
(1985). The theorists discussed here, including Butler, Grosz, Braidotti,
and Gatens, have all responded to Irigaraydifferently.Furthermore, their
ways of thinking through the implications of Irigaray'stheory of sexually
different bodies have also varied. While recognizing the significant strategic achievements gained through the project of embodied sexual difference, we aim to raise the possibility of another problem. As long as
corporeality,materiality,and authentic sexual difference are understood as
radically anterior to thought, or negated by representation, feminist critique will only be a reaction against dualism. By questioning the idea that
representation is a "break"with the fullness of reality,or that the body is,
to use Butler's terminology, a "constitutive outside" (1993), we suggest
that feminism rethink its antirepresentationalism.The body is not, we argue, a necessary outside produced by the limiting violence of representation. We therefore contest one of the widely held claims of current feminist
theory: the idea that identification, representation, or body image is a negation, exclusion, or repression of a prior and full real and that the maternal feminine is the figure of this excluded "outside" (Braidotti 1991, 268;
Butler 1993, 39; Brennan 1996, 98). But we also contest the concomitant
claim in "popular"feminism that images, stereotypes, and representations
of women's bodies have imposed inauthentic forms of gender identity and
thus robbed women of their autonomy (Koval 1986; Wolf 1990).
One of the most contentious and widespread examples of the problem
of representation has been the debate over eating disorders and body image. Our intervention in this debate, ratherthan offering another explanation of the relation between representation and the pathological body,
seeks to think the body beyond the problem of representation.That is, the
body is not a prior fullness, anteriority,or plenitude that is subsequently
identified and organized through restricting representations. Representations are not negations imposed on otherwise fluid bodies. Body images
are not stereotypes that produce human beings as complicit subjects. On
the contrary,images, representations, and significations (as well as bodies)
are aspects of ongoing practicesof negotiation, reformation, and encounter. Neither the body nor the feminine can be located as the innocent other
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extends and radicalizesLacan'stheory of the unrepresentable, or noumenal, characterof the maternal body. Lacan explicitly refers to the mother as the thing in
itself (Lacan 1992, 106). And, for Lacan, "Das Ding is that which I will call the beyond-ofthe-signified" (54).
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to signification is an effect of signification, then the mimetic or representational status of language, which claims that signs follow bodies as their
necessary mirrors, is not mimetic at all. On the contrary,it is productive,
constitutive, one might even argueperformative,inasmuch as this signifying
act delimits and contours the body that it then claims to find prior to any
and all signification" (1993, 30).
If the opposition between sex and gender retains an implicit mind/body
dualism then this is because it has sustained a naively empiricist or biological notion of sex. Refining the sex/gender distinction, these discursive accounts argue that the body of nature or biology is also thoroughly located
within discourse and that the appeal to a prediscursive "sex" is enabled
only by discourse. Accordingly, the attempt is made to "free"gender from
sex- to see gender not as a cultural overlay of sex but as that which produces "sex" as a discursive given (Butler 1993, 22). Gender is not, then,
the social construction of "sex"; "sex" is yet one more discursive effect.
Taking their lead from Michel Foucault'snotion of power and discourse as
productive, these accounts reject any prediscursive"exteriority"or "given"
that is subsequently represented. In Teresade Lauretis'swords, "Gender is
not something to be represented but is always already a representation"
(1987, 24).
At the same time, such "discursive"accounts have also taken on board
the feminist critique of the disembodied subject. Like the "strong"Irigarayan corporeal arguments, these accounts draw heavily on Lacan. Here,
though, the "originary"maternal body is seen as an ex post facto effect of
signification. The maternal body as the primary ground that is lost in the
acquisition of language is always alreadya fantasized object. Its prelinguistic status is itself an effect of the signifier.The most sophisticated attempt
to rethink the body as materialwhile at the same time not accepting either
sexual difference or the body as a brute "given" is articulatedby Butler in
BodiesThatMatter (1993). She argues that although discourse cannot be
said to exhaust materiality,materiality cannot be located as a simple exterior or pure outside to discourse. While Butler asserts the presence of a
certain "exteriority,"this materiality or exteriority is only an effect of discourse (53). And although discourse, or the signifier, is material, the very
materialityof the signifier is also produced only through signification. Extending this argument to the question of the body, Butler argues that corporeality may not be discursive--its very bodiliness or meaning is presented as prediscursive--but this status as prediscursive is an effect of
discourse (30). Butler's account exemplifies the problem of the body in
feminist theory. Any positing of the body as a brute given would lead back
to biological determinism. But if the body were entirely a representational
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effect it is not clear how one could avoid seeing the subject as an ideal
projection or sign. It is precisely this strict division between representation
and materiality that, we argue, not only sustains a Cartesian dualism in
feminist theory but also has brought debates over specific issues (such as
eating disorders) to an impasse. In the concretization of this problem (in
feminist debates over body image) there is both an appeal to some body
that would be more than a representationaltype and a sense that the body
is inescapably representational. However, if the body is considered not as
an "outside" to representation, nor as the site or sign of an excluded feminine, then the practicalproblems of feminist ethics will not be determined
in advance under the rubric of the status of representation. Eating disorders, for example, might not possess a single relation to representation,
nor could they be exhaustively accounted for through some general theory
of signification and its relation to the signified. Representation is one factor
among others in ethical problems of the body; it neither determines nor
saturates the field. The body is a negotiation with images, but it is also a
negotiation with pleasures, pains, other bodies, space, visibility, and medical practice; no single event in this field can act as a general ground for
determining the status of the body.
The value of Butler's account lies in its refusal to subsume the body
entirely beneath discourse, signification, or meaning, at the same time as
this recognized corporeal "exteriority"is acknowledged as being a discursive effect. Butler'sintense discursive critique, in its denial of any prediscursive matter, is clearly and explicitly indebted to Foucault. But by arguing
that matter, while not purely prediscursive, is still other than discursive,
Butler sustains an opposition between discourse and some "outside"
(1993, 35). This is precisely the question she directs to Foucault: "Does
Foucault's effort to work the notions of discourse and materialitythrough
one another fail to account for not only what is excludedfrom the economies of discursiveintelligibility that he describes, but what has to beexcluded
for those economies to function as self-sustaining systems?"(35). For Butler, discourse cannot include the outside; exteriority may be known or thematized through discourse but is not itself discursive. It is this boundary
between signification and the constitutive outside that has produced the
feminine as a sexed and prerepresentational materiality: "the feminine
exceeds its figuration ... [and] this unthematizability constitutes the feminine as the impossible yet necessary foundation of what can be thematized
and figured" (1993, 41).
This opposition between representation and exteriority is enabled by
seeing discourse as language and signification (or representation) that
always refers to some nondiscursive exterior. To a certain extent, then,
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still to posit that materiality,and that materialityso posited will retain that
positing as its constitutive condition" (1993, 67-68).
While matter or corporeality may only ever be produced as a discursive
effect, Butler still wants to hold on to an outside to discourse - albeit one
that can only be experienced discursively. Butler rejects the "ontological"
claim made by feminists like Braidotti-the idea that sexual difference is
not discursive but produces certain discursive positions (Butler, 59). And
Butler's account would also be less committed to the constitutive and specific corporeality that Gatens and Lloyd have suggested might produce
ways of thinking. But while Butler wants to avoid appeals to a prediscursive sexual difference, she does want to claim that corporeality or the materiality of the body may have an effect in the production of subjectivity:
"That referent, that abiding function of the world, is to persist as the horizon and the 'that which' which makes its demand in and to language"
(1993, 69). In this sense her work might be set alongside Grosz's Volatile
Bodies(1994b), a book that sees the body and mind relation as a complex
interweaving of both "outside" and "inside."Like Butler, Grosz rejects any
"inside out" approach, where the body would be a projection of mind, at
the same time as she problematizes an "outside in" approach, where the
body as object would determine a way of thinking. While Butler sees the
characterof the body as the consequence of performativity (in which its
way of being is made meaningful), Grosz sees the body according to the
metaphor of the Mobius strip- a dynamically interacting interior and exterior that turn into each other (209). Grosz by no means wants to see
the body as a discursive production; her "inside out" argument suggests
that bodies are also constitutive of the ways in which experience is constituted. However, what these quite different accounts share is the complication of dualism. For Butler, discourse and materiality cannot simply be
opposed but are mutually constitutive. For Grosz, corporealityis explained
through an amalgam of "outside in" and "inside out" approaches such
that the mind and body are inseparable.4But, we would argue, as long as
representation is seen as a negation of corporeality, dualism can only ever
be complicated and never overcome.
4
Grosz's recent work on Deleuze and space opens the possibility for a move beyond the
problem of the "interior"subject and its constitution in relation to an exteriority. In Space,
Timeand Perversion(1995), Grosz argues that Deleuze's work suggests that a retracingof the
interior/exterior boundary will demonstrate the fluidity, malleability, and dynamism of the
boundary (131). If such boundaries are open to reconfiguration it follows that representation's "other"will be continually refigured, reformed, and renegotiated. It is this direction in
Deleuze's work, signaled by Grosz, that our conclusion explores in order to challenge the
idea of representation as constitutive negation.
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with an awareness that the articulation of this question might be understood as phallocentric that we now ask, Is representation phallocentric?It
is important to ask this question again and to keep asking it, because the
reiteration of its answer- yes, representationsare phallocentric and disembodied-has become a fundamental thesis that closes the opening up of
further questions.
One way of opening up this question is to ask what the implications
and costs of such 'a thesis are. What is the status of women's body image
when the entire domain of representations is argued to be phallocentric?
What are the implications of arguing that women's body images are castrated? Or, we might ask another, simple, pedestrian, rather stubborn,
slightly stupid question: If all representations are phallocentric, if thought
is disembodied, how do women read and think?At what cost is the entire
edifice of representation coded as phallocentric?In asking these questions
we must first address the various ways they have been answered within
corporeal feminism. In questioning these answers we hope to open up a
space in which further questions and further answers might be circulated.
To addressthis question it is necessaryto take a detour, to turn to an exemplary instance of (dis)embodiment used throughout corporeal feminism,
that of the anorexic. We turn to this example because it occurs with surprising regularityin corporeal feminist arguments about body image and representation, matter and form.
Exemplary body/images:
Anorexia
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ratherthan simply reproducing them-selves according to men's representation of women" (195,204). It follows, then, that women need more gynocentric representationsif women are to escape a (potentially lethal) phallocentric body image. At stake is a radicaltransformationof the phallocentric
morphology of knowledge itself and the establishment of a feminine aesthetics that is capableof adequatelyand autonomously representingfemale
morphology. The dangers of the phallic Imaginary and the need for a representational revolution are no better exemplified than in the case of the
anorexic.
Grosz, for example, argues that anorexia is an attempt to actualize an
idealized body image that is incorporated by the subject from phallocentric
representationsof thin femininity. Dismissing what she perceives to be two
popular etiological explanations of anorexia as an ego or dieting disorder,
Grosz argues that "anorexia can, like the phantom limb, be a kind of
mourning for a pre-Oedipal (i.e., precastrated)body and a corporeal connection to the mother that women in patriarchyare required to abandon"
(1994b, 40). Grosz continues by arguing that anorexia should be interpreted as a renunciation of patriarchalideals of femininity and not as an
excessively compliant performance of them. There are several moves occurring here. To begin with, the idea that women's body images are determined by a precastrated/castratedmatrix and that women in general are
coerced into relinquishing a sympathetic connection to a maternal body
image reiterates a largely unchallenged Freudianism.8Second, the use of
the pathology of anorexiaas a synecdoche for female consciousness in general propagates a notion of an ahistorical psyche; this psychic theory presumably accounts not only for all anorexics but also for all women
subjected to patriarchy.Finally, to argue that women who practice selfstarvation are either compliant with, or revolting against, patriarchalbody
images is to posit a causal and unproblematic connection between cultural
images and corporeality,representation and the body.
For the moment we wish to focus on this last point for, as we shall
argue, it informs a popular interpretive trend within corporeal feminism.
The understanding that (phallocentric) representationsof women's bodies
direct the formation of women's body images is a common but rarelycontested assumption within both corporeal feminism and popular culture.
The domain of representation-mass culture, the history of literature,science, and so on-is seen to be caused or produced by an unconscious
8 The notion of the maternal as a
representationaloutside depends on an assumption of
the Oedipal genesis of the subject. It is this Freudianism that, in various ways, sustains the
theory of sexual difference in Irigaray,Braidotti, Brennan, and Diprose.
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See, e.g., Chernin 1981, 1989; Lawrence 1984; Orbach 1986; Bruch 1988.
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or internalization. For Orbach, the false body does not provide the subject
with a stable identity but rather a "malleable,""fluid," "manipulable,"
"physicalplasticity."In many ways this definition of the "falsebody" corresponds to recent feminist uses of the Lacanian Imaginary (such as Grosz's
VolatileBodies (1994b) or Teresa Brennan's "Essence against Identity"
(1996), both of which focus on the central importance of body image and
identification). Both the idea of the "false body" and the phallic Imaginary
suggest that women may have a particularpropensity for developing an
inauthentic body image because external phallocentric representations of
the female body are internalized to produce inauthentic representationsof
women's bodies.
However, this understanding of body image relies on the idea that the
subject mindlessly incorporates representations.JaniceRadway has argued
against the use of derogatory alimentarymetaphors to explain the complex
act of reading in "Reading Is Not Eating" (1986). Radway's critique is
opposed to the standardpsychoanalytictheories of reading such as that of
James Strachey who, in "Some Unconscious Factors in Reading," argues
that a "coprophagic tendency lies at the root of all reading" (1930, 329).
Strachey's psychoanalytic interpretation (while ostensibly anti-Cartesian
insofar as it foregrounds the subject's embodied response to representations) nevertheless reduces criticalthinking to a mere repression and sublimation of the imagined nightmares of an infant's corporeal desires. The
reduction of the critical abilities of adults to that of infants assumes that
consciousness is merely the expression of an elementary (and alimentary)
sensuality. Furthermore, not only does the frequent use of the female anorexic as the paradigm case of representational consumption feminize a
reading/viewing practice figured as pathologically passive, but the implicit
denigration of this passive consumption sustains a Cartesiananxiety about
the corruption of mind by an alien matter. Simultaneously, feminism has
endorsed a sense of the inadequacy of sensuous apprehension (in its critique of representation) at the same time as it sees a disembodied thought
or reason as perniciously masculine. It may well be that the supposed apocalyptic breakbetween a rational Cartesianismand a postmodern materialist
feminism remains caught within a theory of consciousness as a negation of
the material and representation as a negation of the body.
Consequently, the ludic valorization of thinking-through-the-body,
while ostensibly a challenge to what is perceived to be a pervasive
all-encompassing Cartesianmind/body duality, runs the risk of advocating
a reductive sensuous "embodied" relation to representations.This sensualist theory of representation (where women's images would no longer
be given from outside but generated from within) is based on the very
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images, things are themselves images, because images aren't in our brain.
The brain'sjust one image among others. Images are constantly acting and reacting on each
other, producing and consuming. There's no difference at all between images, things, and
motion" (Deleuze 1995, 42).
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that lies in seeing the body as a repressed effect. If the body is a site of
production of positive forces and creative differences then this opens a
question of the body's ethics. How we evaluate these modes of creating
difference cannot be resolved by appealing to a single opposition (ethical/
aesthetic vs. moral/representational).If we do accept that difference is positive, that there is no privileged exteriority and that ethics is a continual
task, then the question of sexual difference need no longer be seen as primary. We would therefore disagree with Grosz's use of Deleuze to argue
for the universality of binary sexual difference: "The bifurcation of sexed
bodies ... is, in my opinion, an irreducible cultural universal" (1994b,
160). The analysisof particularproblems, such as anorexia, beneath a general rubricof sexual difference might be opened up in two directions. First,
such specific ethical problems ought not to be read as synecdoches for female subjectivity in general. The first part of our article has shown the
debilitating consequences of arguments that pathologize femininity and
that explain pathologies by referring to a general malaise of sexual difference. Second, practices like anorexia might be best analyzed according to
the power relations within which they occur: not as further examples of
representationalviolence but according to the practicesof cure, definition,
regulation, and contestation that surround them.
Instead of recruiting anorexia as an example of women's alienation in
general, it is perhaps more productive to examine the specific archaeology
of the discourse of anorexia nervosa in order to ask what prevailing theories of anorexia do and how they intersect with (and also produce) practices of "anorexic behaviour."Ludwig Binswanger's famous "The Case of
Ellen West" (1958) demonstrates the need for an engagement with "anorexia"that remains alert to the specific location of bodily practices.
A contemporary of Freud's, Binswanger developed a form of Heideggerean psychiatrythat influenced such luminaries as R. D. Laing and Foucault. If Freud's"Dora"has emerged as central to the representationof the
sexual politics of hysteria, we would argue that Binswanger's "Ellen"
should be acknowledged as a formative investigation into the sexual politics of eating disorders. In brief, Binswanger'scase describesthe life history,
self-starvation, and eventual suicide of a Jewish woman. Drawing on the
work of Gaston Bachelard, Binswanger proposes an anthropology of the
imaginary in which the elements of air, earth, water, and fire compose
the materialityof "Ellen's"imaginary."Ellen's"fear of being fat is seen to
stem from a desire to escape imprisonment in the "tomb-world" (earth) of
her body, while her desire to be thin is an attempt to ascend to the "ethereal
world" (air) of the intellect. As later interpretedby Bordo (1992), "Ellen's"
perceived desire to escape her body is typical of an internalized phallocen-
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very numerical self-concern that may be the enabling and productive practice of a certain form of contemporary self-production. The "deviancy"of
anorexic production through practicesof metabolism, weighing, counting,
and mathematization would be a discursive event that occurs within a general discursivenetwork concerned with analysis,regulation, and normalization. The anorexic body could be seen as an intensity occurring within a
positive field of production. This field would not be an isolated object for
analysis (the anorexic) but an event connected to other events (this practice, with this effect, with this practice, with this connection, with this
body, with this sign, etc.).
Accordingly, a Deleuzean model of "anorexia"might approach these
practices (such as calorie counting, weighing, measuring) as articulations
of a machinic assemblage, as a series of intensities, flows, and speeds.14 To
see dietetic regimen as a form of positive self-production might enable a
thinking of the body in terms of the connections it makes, the intensities
of its actions, and the dynamism of its practices. Given the metaphoric
presence of the thermodynamic model within Deleuzean theory and the
intimate connections between the discourse of thermodynamics and metabolism, it might be that such a reading is especially applicableto dietetic
regimens and their practices, for there are significant correspondences between these models and the practices of calorie counting and measuring
the metabolism of the body. However, such practices are not just specific
to contemporary articulationsof anorexia but are part of a wider measurement of the body via dietetic regimens in general. An archaeology of this
contemporary grammar might "begin" with the discourse of thermodynamics (flows, intensities, equilibrium, atrophy) and its connection to metabolism. To do such an archaeology would not be to discover finally,once
and for all, the cause of anorexia (or any other human comportment). If
it is the case that the "normalized" contemporary body is organized according to a discourse of metabolics, energy, and measurable force, then
the anorexic body might operate as a critical short-circuiting of contemporary practices of self-monitoring through quantification. Furthermore, by
advocating that contemporary theory rethink life in terms of thermodynamics, Deleuze's work does more than react against dominant representational forces; it takes hold of those forces and makes the images of machine, intensity, system, and connection operate differently.The model of
thermodynamics likens the self neither to a language (where there is some
14 In
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