Lacan, Jacques - Television, (1987) 40 October 6
Lacan, Jacques - Television, (1987) 40 October 6
Lacan, Jacques - Television, (1987) 40 October 6
I.
2. The expression Lacan uses is ala cantonade, which, to reinforce the pun on his
own name, he had allowed the transcription of his Xlth seminar to read as, a la can
tonade. See The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psycho-Analysis, ed. Jacques-Alain
Miller, trans. Alan Sheridan, New York , Norton, 1978 , p. 208 .
8 OCTOBER
II.
- It's still a fact that one comes to you, the psychoanalyst, in order,
3. Lalangue, as one word (without an article or with the article soldered onto the
substantive; instead of la langue): general equivocation, universal babble, or "Babe
Ionian."
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within this world that you reduce to fantasy, to get better. The cure- is
that also a fantasy?
- Prove that that is actually what Freud says, and all he says.
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4. The title Lacan gave to his 1972-73 seminar-his XXIst-was "Les non-dupes
errent"(the non-dupes err), a homophonic play on les noms du pere (the names of the fa
ther), which was the title he had announced ten years earlier for what was to become
in 1963, his last seminar at Sainte-Anne. A seminar of only one meeting, its tran
script is published on pp. 8 1 -95.
5. Jouis-sens, homonym of jouissance.
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III.
-But you yourself are excluded from that which makes for social
bonds between analysts, aren't you . . .
IV.
- For the twenty years that you have been putting forward your
phrase- the unconscious is structured like a language6- what is said in
opposition to you, in various forms, is: ((Those are merely words, words,
words.And what do you do with anything that doesn't get mixed up with
words? What of psychic energy, or affect, or the drives?"
- You are now imitating the gestures with which one puts
on the appearance of an heir in the PIPAAD.
Because , as you know, at least in the Paris PIPAAD , the
only elements of sustenance come from my teaching. It filters
through from everywhere; it's a draft , which becomes a bliz
zard when it blows too strongly. So you revive the old gestures,
you get warm by snuggling-together and calling that a Con
gress.
Because I'm not just thumbing my nose today for the fun
of it , pulling out the PIPAAD story to make people laugh at
the TV. It's the way Freud purposely conceived of the organiza
tion to which he bequeathed this analytic discourse. He knew
that it would be a hard test; the experience of his first followers
had already been edifying in that regard.
6. This phrase first appeared in Lacan's Report to the Rome Congress of 1953,
"The Function and Field of Speech and Language in Psychoanalysis." See Ecrits,
trans. Alan Sheridan, New York, Norton, 1977, pp. 30- 1 13.
22 OCTOBER
12. The plumage is Heidegger's. See his "Letter on Humanism, " Basic Writings,
ed. David Farrell Kress , New York, Harper & Row , 1977, p. 204, "Only from this
dwelling 'has' he 'language' as the home that preserves the ecstatic for his essence";
or, p . 239, "Language is at once the house of Being and the home of human beings."
28 OCTOBER
...the r.iffect is its not finding dwelling-room, at least not to its taste. This we
discord, . .. call moroseness , or equally , moodiness. Is this a sin , a grain of
madness, or a true touch of the real?
You see that with regard to affect they would have done
better, the PIPAAD , if that's the tune they wanted to play , to
use my old fiddle. That would have got them farther than
standing around gaping.
13. Lacan's 1964 seminar, his Xlth, The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psycho-Analy
sis, which was also the first to be given after his leaving Sainte-Anne, had been pub
lished by J. -A. Miller in early 1973, a few months before the Television interview.
14 . "Ecole" is not to be confused with "my Ecole" (see pp . 96-105 below), which is
the Ecole Freudienne. Here it refers to the Ecole Normale Superieure (also E. N. S.
or, metonymically, "Rue d'Ulm") which, following Lacan's departure from Sainte
Anne, housed his seminar (from then on institutionally sponsored by the Ecole
Pratique des Hautes Etudes). At about the time of Television, difficulties with Robert
Flaceliere, Director of the E. N. S., obliged Lacan to find yet another dwelling for
his seminar, this time in the Law School buildings (see Lacan's letter to Le monde,
pp. 1 14- 1 15). In 1964, J . -A. Miller was a student at the Ecole Normale.
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v.
- There's a rumor afoot: if we have such bad sex, it's because sex is
suppressed, and that's the fault, in the first place, of the family, and in
the second, of society, and especially of capitalism. This requires an
answer.
dished over his brat playing with his wee-wee : "We'll cut it off,
no kidding, if you do it again. "
Naturally enough , however , it occurred to him , to Freud ,
to start with that for the experiment - as understood through
the terms of definition of analytic discourse. Let's say that as he
progressed there , he leaned more toward the idea that repres-
Primary repression sian was primary. That , on the whole , is what tipped the scales
toward the second topography. The greediness by which he
characterizes the superego is structural , not an effect of civili
zation, but "discontent (symptom) in civilization. "
So that's why we have to reexamine the test case , taking as
a starting point the fact that it is repression that produces sup
pression. Why couldn't the family, society itself, be creations
built from repression? They're nothing less. That , however,
may be because the unconscious ex-sists , is motivated by the
structure , that is , by language. Freud is so far from excluding
this solution that it's in order to come to some decision on it
that he works so hard on the case of the Wolf Man , a man who
ends up in rather bad shape. Still it would seem that this fail
ure , failure of the case , is relatively unimportant when com
pared with his success : that of establishing the real within the
facts.
If this real remains enigmatic , must we attribute this to
the analytic discourse , itself an institution? To get to the bot
tom of sexuality , we have no recourse other than the project of
science , sexology being still only a project in which , as Freud
insists , he has every confidence. A confidence that he admits is
gratuitous , which says a lot about his ethics.
under the same sign that it constitutes for the theory of num
bers , namely mathematically.
It is not without reason, then , that it takes support in the
name of trans-ference.
In order to rouse people around me , I articulate this
transference with "the subject supposed to know. " This con
tains an explication, an unfolding of what the name only dimly
pins down. Namely : that through the transference the subj ect
is attributed to the knowledge that gives him his consistency as
subj ect of the unconscious , and it is that which is transferred
onto the analyst, namely, this knowledge inasmuch as it does
not think, or calculate , or judge , but carries with it nonetheless
the work-effect.
This new path is worth whatever it's worth, but it's as if I
were whistling in the . . . no , worse : as if I were scaring them
out of their wits.
Sancta PIPAADic simplicitas:16 they don't dare. They dare
not follow where that leads.
It's not as if l don't turn myself inside-out! I declaim , "No
one authorizes the analyst but himself. " I institute "the pass" in
my Ecole, namely the examination of what decides an analy
sand to assert himself as analyst - forcing no one through it. It
hasn't been heard outside yet, I admit , but here inside we're
busy with it, and as for my Ecole , I haven't had it that long.
It is not that I'm hoping that outside of here the
transference will cease being viewed as a return-to-sender.
That is the attribute of the patient, a singularity that touches
us only in that it demands our prudence , in evaluating it, first ,
even more than in handling it. In the former we can adj ust to
it, but in the latter who knows where we'd be going?
What I do know is that the analytic discourse cannot be
sustained by one person only. It is my good fortune to have fol The transfinite of
discourse
lowers. Thus the discourse has a chance.
It's not that I value the craving for order we find in this
offspring, expressed when he says , "Personally (sic) I loathe
anarchy. " The definition of order, as soon as there is the least
little bit , is that you don't have to crave it, since there it is : es
tablished.
The fact that it already happened somewhere is our good
fortune , a fortune good for nothing more than demonstrating
that things are going badly there for liberty even in its sketchi
est form. That's simply capitalism set straight. Back to zero ,
then , for the issue of sex ! since anyway capitalism , that was its
starting point : getting rid of sex.
You've given in to leftism, but not, so far as I know, to
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- Isn't that Just the recognition that one must expect nothing from
psychoanalysis so far as learning how to make love goes? So that, under
standably, hopes are directed toward sexology.
17. Four years after the May '68 student riots, leftism was still quite strong among
intellectuals. During his stay at the Rue d'Uim, J A Miller was one of the founders
.
-
.
- You don� oppose the young, ti'ght-li'pped, as you put it. Certai'nly
not, since you fired on them one day at Vincennes wi'th, "What you, as
revolutionaries, aspi're to is a Master. You wi'll have one. "19 Frankly,
you are discouraging the young.
18. An amalgam of"God" [Dieu] and"what's said" [dire]. The marginal note "Th-s
ayology" is a rendering of Lacan's "Dieu est dire. "
19. See "Impromptu at Vincennes," pp. 1 16- 127.
20. Both "end-of-coming/enjoying" and "excess-of-coming/enjoying."
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in any other way, how can one hope that the empty forms of
humanhysterianism [humanitairerie] disguising our extortions
can continue to last?
Even if God , thus newly strengthened , should end up ex
sisting, this bodes nothing better than a return of his baneful
past.
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VI.
- Three questions summarize for Kant (see the Canon of the First
Critique) what he calls '�he interest of our reason": "What can I know?
What ought I to do? What may I hope for?" Aformula which, as
you yourself are not unaware, is derived from medieval exegesis, specifi
cally from Agostino de Dacie. Luther cites it in order to criticize it.
Here's the task I am setting you: reply to this in your own turn, or find a
way of putting it differently.
Well , after all , I'll spill my gut about the analytic dis
course's response to the incongruity of the question : what can I
know? Reply :
...because "a-priori " nothing in any case that doesn't have the structure of
is the language, . .
.
[tu -e -a -toi - meme] ; 22 if there was ever a time to use lalangue - al
ways amenable to my mind to be my ene-me [ m'est amie d'etre
mie(enne) ].
For after all friendship , or rather Aristotle's cptX.£a (Aris
totle , whom I esteem no less for parting with him) , is really the
point where this spectacle of love shifts into the conjugation of
22 . The whole paragraph involves puns related to the destructive nature of love as
narcissistic identification, and expressed in the homonymy in French of tu [you J and
tue [kill), generating the following variations : tu es rrwi [you are me] ; tuer [to kill] ; a tu
et a toi [we say tu to each other]. At the end of the paragraph the mie (enne) should be
heard as mi-haine.
Television 43
True , you will still face the problem of calibrating this ob
ject with the matheme that Science - .Fhysics , the sole science
that ex-sists as yet - has found in the use of number and dem
onstration. But how could a better fit be found for it than this
obj ect I've mentioned , if it be the very product of this matheme
whose site is related to the structure , as long as the latter be
language [!'en-gage], the language pawned [!'en-gage] to the mute
by the unconscious?
To be convincing about that , do we have to go back to
what's already set out in the Meno, namely that the particular
has access to truth?
It's by coordinating the paths traced by a discourse , that
(although it may proceed merely from the one to the one - that
is, from the particular) something new can be conceived , and
is able to be transmitted as incontestably by this discourse as is
the numerical matheme.
This requires only that somewhere the sexual relation
cease not being written , that contingency be established (so to Love
speak) , so as to make headway on that which will later be com
pleted by demonstrating such a relation to be impossible , that
is by instituting it in the real.
The possibility of that's befalling us can be anticipated ,
through recourse to the axiomatic : a logic of the contingent for
which we are prepared by that which the matheme - or the
mathematician as determined by it - senses as necessary : to
allow oneself a free-fall from any recourse to evidence.
44 OCTOBER
We'll go on, then , starting off from the Other , the radical
Other, evoked by the nonrelation embodied by sex - for any
one who can perceive that One occurs , perhaps , only through
the experience of the (a)sexed.
For us the Other is as entitled as the One to generate a
subj ect out of an axiom. Hence , here is what the experiment
suggests : first , that women cannot escape the kind of negation
that Aristotle discards for the reason that it would apply to the
universal ; namely, they are the not-all , JLTJ 7ravres . As if by
VX • <I>X protecting the universal from its negation , Aristotle didn't
simply render it futile : the dictus de omni et nullo guarantees no
ex-sistence , as he himself demonstrates , when attributing this
ex-sistence to the particular, but without - in the strong sense
of the term - accounting for it , that is to say, giving a full ac
count : the unconscious.
It follows that a woman - since we cannot speak of more
than one - a woman only encounters Man [L'homme] in psy
chosis.
Let's state the axiom , not that Man [L'homme] doesn't ex
sist , which is the case for Woman [La femme], but that a
woman forbids Him for herself, not because He would be the
S ( � ) Other , but because "there is no Other of the Other, " as I put it.
Hence the universal of what women desire is sheer mad
ness : all women are mad , they say. That's precisely why they
are not-all , that is to say not-at-all-mad-about-the-whole
[Jolles-du -tout] ; accommodating rather: to the point where there
is no limit to the concessions made by any woman for a man :
of her body , her soul , her possessions.
Powerless with respect to her fantasies which are less easy
for her to control.
Rather, she is a party to the perversion which is , I main
($ 0 ) a tain , Man's [L'homme]. Which leads her into the familiar mas
querade that is not just the lie of which some ingrates , them
selves clinging to the role of Man [L'homme], accuse her. Rather,
she prepares herself on-the-off-chance , so that her inner fan
tasy of Man [L'homme] will find its hour of truth. That's not ex-
Television 45
- Your dig's a good one. But ifyou've not denied yourself this exer
cise - and it is, indeed, that of an academician - it's because you're titil
lated by it, too. And I'll prove it to you, since you'll reply to the third
question.
this formal you , it's to you that I reply , hope for whatever you
want.
I just want you to know that more than once I've seen
hope - what they call bright new tomorrows - drive people I've
valued as much as I value you to kill themselves , period.
And why not? Suicide is the only act that can succeed
without misfiring. If no one knows anything about it , that's be
cause it stems from the will not to know. Montherlant again ,
to whom , without Claude , I wouldn't have given a thought.
So that Kant's question may have meaning, I'm going to
transform it into : from where do you hope? You'd then want to
know what analytic discourse can promise you , since for me it's
already all sewn up.
Psychoanalysis would allow you , of course , the hope of re Do you want to know
nothing of the fate the
fining and clarifying the unconscious of which you're the sub unconscious prepares
ject. But everyone knows that I don't encourage anyone into it , you?
anyone whose desire is not resolute.
Furthermore - and I am sorry to refer to some ill-bred
you's - I think the analytic discourse should be withheld from
the rabble : surely that is what's behind Freud's so-called crite
rion of culture. Ethical criteria are unfortunately no more re
liable. They , in any case , may be judged by other discourses ,
and if I dare to pronounce that analysis should be withheld
from the rabble , it's because it renders them dumb - certainly
an improvement , but without hope , to go back to your term.
Anyway , the analytic discourse excludes the you who's
not already in transference , since it exposes this relation to the
subject supposed to know - which is a symptomatic manifesta
tion of the unconscious.
For this I'd require as well the demonstration of a gift of
the same kind as is used to screen one's entry into mathematics ,
if such a gift existed ; it's a fact , however, that since no matheme
other than those I've formulated seems to have been produced
by this discourse , there's still no testing for the gift.
48 OCTOBER
VII.
- Now let's see you, please, titillate the truth which Boileau ver
sifies as follows: "What is well conceived can be clearly stated." Your
style, etcetera.
25. After the publication of Boileau's misogynistic satire against women, an anec
dote circulated about his presumed impotence caused by his having been bitten on
the genitals by either a gander or a turkey, when he was a child (making the theore
tician of French classical poetry in to a negative Leda). The efforts of Dr. Gendron,
from Montpellier's faculty of medicine, were deployed in vain .
50 OCTOBER
26. The verse reads, "Dans l'art dangereux de rimer et d'ecrire, l II n'est point de degre du
mediocre au pire." [In the dangerous art of writing and rhyming/There's no degree of
difference between the mediocre and the worst.)