Lacanian Psychoanalysis
Lacanian Psychoanalysis
The transition section of the essay moves attention, again from the
conscious self, which has always been regarded as the primary self, to
the unconscious, as the “kernel of our being.” Lacan reverses the
.Cartesian statement,”I think, therefore, I am,” as “I am, where I think
not” (i.e. true selfhood is in the unconscious), thereby challenging the
Western philosophical consciousness.
For Lacan, the ego emerges at this moment of alienation and fascination
with one’s own image. The ego is both formed by and takes its form from
the organizing and constituting properties of the image. Lacan insists
that the ego is based on an illusory image of the wholeness and mastery
(as the child in the mirror stage cannot wholly gain mastery and control
over its body, in spite of its sense of bodily anatomy and in that sense
still fragmented) and it is the function of the ego to maintain this illusion
of coherence and mastery. The function of the ego is, in other words,
one of mis-recognition (meconnaissance) of refusing to accept the truth
of fragmentation and alienation.
As the sense of original unity and coherence in the mirror phase is an
illusion, there is a fundamental disharmony regarding the ego. The ego
is essentially a terrain of conflict and discord, a site of continual struggle.
What Lacan refers to as a “lack of being” (which is considered as a
cause of desire and is manipulated well by consumer capitalism) is the
ontological gap (a notion critiqued by Deleuze and Guattari in their Anti
Oedipus: Capitalism and Schizophrenia) or the primary loss at the very
core of our subjectivity.
The mirror stage played a crucial role in the dissemination of Lacanian
ideas in film and cultural studies (formations proposed by Jean Louis
Baudry, Christian Metz, Laura Mulvey‘s concept of male gaze etc.).
At the “symbolic stage” (based, on which, Kristeva formulated her
concept of the “semiotic”), the child enters the language system,
concerned with lack and separation, since language names what is not
present and substitutes a linguistic sign for it. Within the language, the
“subject” (employed by Louis Althusser, in Ideology and Ideological State
Apparatuses and developed later by Pierre Macherey and Slavoj Zizek)
vainly tries to represent itself. The subject is an effect of the signifier put
into language. This stage also marks the beginning of socialization, with
its prohibitions and restraints, associated with the figure of the father
(patriarchy), who disrupts the narcissistic balance between the child and
the mother.
Thus the phallus in Lacanian theory is not merely the male genital organ,
but a privileged signifier (displaced by Judith Butler by the
coinage lesbian phallus in Bodies That Matter) as it inaugurates the
process of signification. The phallus operates in all the three Lacanian
registers –the imaginary, the symbolic and the real.
in terms of the literary polarization between the realist and the anti-realist
symbolic realm would have to be seen as the one found in realist
literature, a world of patriarchal order and logic. By contrast, the anti-
realist gestures represents the realm of the imaginary, a world in which
language gestures beyond itself, beyond logic and text , rather in the
way that language often does. The contrast between the imaginary and
the symbolic can be seen as analogous to that between poetry and
prose. The Lacanian outlook will involve a preference for the kind of
literary text in which there are constant eruptions of the imaginary into
the symbolic, as in the kind of ‘metafiction’ or ‘magic realism’ in which
the novel undercuts and queries its own realism.
A fine example of this kind of work can be seen in the novels of BS.
Johnson, a British writer, whose constant textual inventiveness takes the
form, of moments when the characters cross-question the author.