Cut of the Real: Subjectivity in Poststructuralist Philosophy
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Following François Laruelle's nonstandard philosophy and the work of Judith Butler, Drucilla Cornell, Luce Irigaray, and Rosi Braidotti, Katerina Kolozova reclaims the relevance of categories traditionally rendered "unthinkable" by postmodern feminist philosophies, such as "the real," "the one," "the limit," and "finality," critically repositioning poststructuralist feminist philosophy and gender/queer studies.
Poststructuralist (feminist) theory sees the subject as a purely linguistic category, as always already multiple, as always already nonfixed and fluctuating, as limitless discursivity, and as constitutively detached from the instance of the real. This reconceptualization is based on the exclusion of and dichotomous opposition to notions of the real, the one (unity and continuity), and the stable. Postructuralist philosophy engenders new forms of universalisms for global debate and action, expressed in a language the world can understand. It also liberates theory from ideological paralysis, recasting the real as an immediately experienced human condition determined by gender, race, and social and economic circumstance.
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Cut of the Real - Katerina Kolozova
Cut
of the
Real
INSURRECTIONS:
Critical Studies in Religion, Politics, and Culture
INSURRECTIONS:
Critical Studies in Religion, Politics, and Culture
Slavoj Žižek, Clayton Crockett, Creston Davis, Jeffrey W. Robbins, Editors
The intersection of religion, politics, and culture is one of the most discussed areas in theory today. It also has the deepest and most wide-ranging impact on the world. Insurrections: Critical Studies in Religion, Politics, and Culture will bring the tools of philosophy and critical theory to the political implications of the religious turn. The series will address a range of religious traditions and political viewpoints in the United States, Europe, and other parts of the world. Without advocating any specific religious or theological stance, the series aims nonetheless to be faithful to the radical emancipatory potential of religion.
For a list of titles in this series, see Series List.
Cut
of the
Real
SUBJECTIVITY IN POSTSTRUCTURALIST PHILOSOPHY
Katerina Kolozova
FOREWORD BY FRANÇOIS LARUELLE
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY PRESS NEW YORK
Columbia University Press
Publishers Since 1893
New York Chichester, West Sussex
cup.columbia.edu
Copyright © 2014 Columbia University Press
All rights reserved
E-ISBN 978-0-231-53643-1
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Kolozova, Katerina.
Cut of the real : subjectivity in poststructuralist philosophy / Katerina Kolozova.
pages cm — (Insurrections: critical studies in religion, politics, and culture)
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-0-231-16610-2 (cloth : alk. paper) — ISBN 978-0-231-53643-1 (e-book)
1. Poststructuralism. 2. Feminist theory. 3. Realism. 4. Gender. 5. Laruelle, François. I. Title.
B841.4.K65 2014
199’.4976—dc23 2013021560
A Columbia University Press E-book.
CUP would be pleased to hear about your reading experience with this e-book at [email protected].
Cover image: © plainpicture/C&P
Cover design: Lisa Hamm
References to websites (URLs) were accurate at the time of writing.
Neither the author nor Columbia University Press is responsible for
URLs that may have expired or changed since the manuscript was prepared.
To my father
CONTENTS
Foreword: Gender Fiction by François Laruelle
Acknowledgments
INTRODUCTION
1 ON THE ONE AND ON THE MULTIPLE
Philosophical Dualism: The Unitary and the Nonunitary Subject—a Question of Either-Or
The Question of (Subject’s or Self’s) Continuity: A Possible Location of Oneness for the Subject or for the I
2 ON THE REALANDTHE IMAGINED
The Dichotomy of Sex and Gender and Some of Its Metaphysical
Implications
The Impasses of the Duality of the Real and Fiction: The Aporetique(s)
Two Ways of Dealing with an Aporetic Dead End: Deleuze and Laruelle
Where Does the Reality Lie?: Fantasies of the Locus of the Real
The Real Reaffirmed (Unilaterally)
3 ON THE LIMIT AND THE LIMITLESS
The Ban of the Limit
Lacanian Excursion
Laruellian Recursion
The Real as Limit and the Thought
4 THE REAL TRANSCENDING ITSELF (THROUGH LOVE)
Fidelity,
the Radical,
and the Fidelity to the Radical
Solitude radicale
Love at the Heart of Radical Solitude
To Be Loved in One’s Own Radical Solitude
The Question of Universalism Revisited: The Universal as Radically Solitary Position
A Post Scriptum: Post Mortem (To My Father)
5 THE REAL IN THE IDENTITY
Thinking in Fidelity to the Real (Behind the Identity)
Who Is the Sufferer: The Stranger or the Real?
Relaying the Real to the Estranged Human
The World
Glossary
Notes
Bibliography
Index
FOREWORD: GENDER FICTION
FRANÇOIS LARUELLE
TRANSLATED BY ANTHONY PAUL SMITH
THE REINTRODUCTION of gender (an old notion from biology and the natural sciences) into the margins of sexuality has functioned as a redistribution of givens and interests; it has opened up [libéré] the field of thought at the same time as it has introduced confusions and polemics into it. Gender has become the new scene [lieu], the new enclosure [enceinte] that is necessary to think, and the problematic that is possible to work through once again. Katerina Kolozova boldly takes her place in gender studies
with a look toward what I call non-philosophy. Her work is all the more interesting to me because non-philosophy’s first and final word concerns the human as generic,
which I oppose to the metaphysical and even to the philosophical; we will come to understand why. I would like to suggest, for her line of thought and my own at the same time, the schema of a non-standard
conception, not of the sexes, but of genders insofar as they include, extend beyond, and run through the classical distributions of sexuality. The metasexual dimension of gender is affirmed here; one may even want to say non-
sexual if the usage of non-
were well understood as a partial negation of what is dominant and harassing there, in a word, what is sufficient
in theories of sexuality. Let us assume that psychoanalysis (without saying anything about sexology and its related disciplines) is guided by a Principle of Sexual Sufficiency (PSS), one of the modes (the dominant one though there are others) of which is heterosexual sufficiency. Here sufficiency
is not a psychological and moral concept; these are an effect, and they are hardly ontological. Rather, this is the critical thesis (the dualysis) that every notion of a philosophical spirit is surreptitiously assumed sufficient for itself and for the real that is being thought. For this the philosophical spirit is redoubled or reflected in itself, forming a double with itself, assertion, and reassertion; in this way the philosophical assures itself of itself against the hazards [hasards] of the real. So we must admit that the philosophy of sex and even psychoanalysis are the blending-together of reflected or amphibological notions that do not manage to determine their object precisely (even its indeterminate character) but which believe that they can. Within these conditions, which are its own, gender risks remaining a universal generality, an Idea, an imaginary center, even and especially when gender is divided by sexual difference or sexual duality folded in on itself, whether straight or bent or oblique. This is today’s theoretical slogan, which replaces the sexual-whole
[tout-sexuelle] and which can bring together different practices but not give the science of sexuality a concept that is a bit more rigorous and human. Too much idealism, too much materialism and empiricism: to be completely frank, a bad indeterminacy where the concept is itself without rigor and is believed for all that to be even better for getting to the real of sex.
How can the PSS be cut down except by a new practice of gender, which would abandon its conditions for existence, the doublets, and its general structure of division. This would be necessary to be able to speak of a generic science of the sexes, of their genericness as humans (and therefore its extension to nature). Man is not a sexual animal,
to parody an old definition, but a generic animal and maybe even gender par excellence insofar as man is an animal. It may be that this inversion will be interesting if it is no longer interpreted under philosophy’s norms. It is under this condition that the generic no longer forms whatever predicate but rather nature = X,
that humans are sexed and can just maintain
sexual nonrelations. There are no generic relations but rather another organization of the phenomena of sexuality. In other words, sexed gender
will be the final element, autonomy, or completion of sexuality. A non-standard conception, which is a truly generic conception of gender
itself, which recognizes the mark of the real, would arrange the givens in this way. Avoiding thinking either in positivist terms about sex (anatomy, physiology, sociology) or within the horizon of the empty Idea of gender is necessary. We need to add to it another, more rigorous method than the philosophical one, but without denying it. The method will be pulled from the quantum model, a protoquantum lightened and reduced to the most fundamental principles of quantum theory. Sexed gender is a special duality by virtue of its quantum nature; it has the structure of a complementarity of gender and sex but it is unilateral or nonreversible. The all-powerful sex does not determine an abstract man
(PSS); rather, it is the inverse and yet otherwise than inverse; humans as generic or lived desire determine and even underdetermine
sexuality. Genders
only exist insofar as the two aspects are inseparable through the force of gender and separable from the perspective of sex, which must in its omnipotence be made low or underdetermined.
We will treat these genders as variables or properties of generic humanity. This inserts them into a matrix like the kind Heisenberg developed but which is adapted to human sexual materiality. As quantum, it only arranges the variables that are materially [matérialement] sexed (lived), and so they are indexed in an algebraic way, they and their products, by an imaginary or complex number. The matrix first implies conjugating these two variables and drawing two inverse products, but its quantum destination equally implies that these variables (the sexed genders
) are all vectors: they are the phenomena of vectoriality and no longer the phenomena of things or events in themselves or things that are macroscopic.
It is essential here to abandon the sex-thing (the organ or object, as well as the symbolic object like the phallus or object-image) and to think a sex-vector, a human and dynamic vectoriality rather than a macrosexuality.
Beyond the classical duality of sex and gender, sexed genericness passes through several phases or assumes properties that draw out the major lines of a possible science of lovers.
(1) Sexed genders, in whatever manner that they exist, are like those a prioris that filter and inform sexual experience; they are linearly superposable, which means that a man and a woman add their lived desires [vécues de désir] algebraically as imaginary and are not identified by them. The desires or lived experiences of sex superpose themselves in the wave of a unique desire that can superpose with itself another desire; nothing excludes itself here; everything penetrates itself once each time. Desire is an insurrectional impulse [élan] within desire, an ontovectorial push that joins bodies, seeming to complete itself each time but without shutting down or closing upon itself.¹ Desire is ascen-dental
from end to end and not transcendental
; it does not exceed or overcome a transcendent being in the manner of a transition [passage], a leap or becoming between two instances or two multiplicities (as in Deleuze), but it is crossed through as if by a tunnel effect.
(2) But moreover, the bodies or organs that bear sexuation do not absolutely or completely vanish in the desiring flux without reconstituting even more a full body corresponding to desire. The bodies or organs are worn and made, guided and transformed by this drive when they are cast as a body in itself within the wave of desire that seizes it immediately. The desiring transformation of bodies signifies their loss of sufficiency or return to itself, the abandoning of their specular structure of doublets, which makes their closure macroscopic, a transformation that marks their fall into insurrectional immanence and opens up desire. Regarding the bodies institutionally individuated by philosophy, they lose their united and closed form and their autonomy, even that of the organs. They deconstitute themselves as if through a quantum and sexual deconstruction rather than through a textual one. Desire is only an undulatory phenomenon when it borrows the quantum logic
of the quarter or the square root of -1. So it is less molecular or less a partial object than a quarterial object
; perhaps this is a way of understanding Deleuze’s n-sexes. If there is a material and formal genesis of the waves of desire, then it is not the Idea (of Deleuze and Badiou) through which the divided subject-bodies engender themselves through metaphysical deduction or even a topological one. They are algebraically reduced to the state of a quarter or a half of their anterior unity, losing their locality and forming an entanglement that is the real content of primary narcissism. Bodies floating without the heroism of lovers, before calling for the closure of jouissance and the return of institutional harassment.
(3) The desiring flux, as undulatory, is not cut up
by the bodies that it passes through; modernity and postmodernity have misused the cut and the multiplicity of cuts, using them as if they were openings [premières]. On the other hand, the flux is not commutable with the particles that it passes through. Just as the sexed genders or vectors that constitute it do not overlap each other, they are not commutable; we are not exchanging one desire against another or against pleasure—they are superposed. Though perhaps jouissance exchanges desire against pleasure.
(4) Sexed genders are evidently not themselves individuals but form a formalism known as material and not materialist. They are algebraically structured according to a regime of idempotence; neither analytic nor synthetic, their logic has nothing of the formal void, and moreover they are weaved within the neuter materiality of a void, itself non-sexual, of sexual desire. This second-degree formalism has as a metasexual
function (meaning human in the last instance) resolving the antinomies of the philosophical interpretations of form and matter, or more exactly those of the logico-formal and materialism.
(5) Two sexed genders, if they can superpose themselves and form a new, well-defined entity, are not predicates or properties that both refer to the same object or direct it so as to exhaust its definition; the order of their intervention modifies their destination; they are not predicates that can be said about the same and unique object, of man in general defined by an essence or a dominant predicate. An indetermination is admitted here of the generic real, the definitive abandoning of determinism and realism or what remains with the current dualities of sex and gender.
(6) We have delayed as long as possible the arrival of sexual difference (in the classical sense) on the scene, but it covers and colors—or colors over
[encolore]—the overall generic apparatus that we have first constructed for man-in-person independently of its sexual specificity. Sexual difference, with its modalities, ties, crossings, seems to dissolve in the genericness of desire but finds itself transformed, at least within bodies. Properly speaking, the sexuation of gender is a trait that is not secondary but at the very least is complementary to genericness or included within it under the form of the becoming of bodies. What intrinsically makes the generic human specific, along with its protoquantum rules (superposition, noncommutability, entanglement, or nonlocality), must be defined and modulated by the inevitable sexual language-bodies that a theory must finally adopt; it is impossible to remain within an asexual formalism even if such a formalism is the condition for the emancipation of the sexes. Is there a feminine use of superposition or a masculine one for entanglement, meaning a sexuation of quantum algebra itself? Is the use of these rules, if they are put into play with regard to sexual phenomena, already, for example, feminine-oriented or masculine-oriented according to the kind of individual and philosophical subject that serves as the material for the production of a particle? The solution will consist in recognizing that sexuality is generic-oriented or human-oriented through its essence and for all that it is even already fading [déclinante] from its dominant position, but there are different ways to knock it off its pedestal. If we take into account its bodily supplement, then the Human-in-person, even if it is sexually indifferent to a certain extent, is still only indifferent radically so, not absolutely. If sexuation does not directly codetermine Man-in-person, it is still an occasion and motivation. The debasement of PSS is only possible in two conjugated ways, principally through the desiring underdetermination of sexual sufficiency in general, and occasionally through the original sexuality of the philosophical
subject that acts. Finally, generic human desire and sexuation are not commutative; they form a unilateral complimentarity within which the first underdetermines or underempowers the second, which fades [décline] from its dominant position which is for us within psychoanalysis. But that fading is specified and motivated according to the sex.
(7) Finally, it becomes possible for the determination of the queer,² which seems to sit awkwardly with the classical sexual distributions, to be reappropriated, provided that it is inserted into the generic matrix and its conceptual and effective levels are changed. Sexed genders are affected by the imaginary number that is the condition for vectorality, the matrix itself, or the knowledge of generic matrix that is entirely [globalement] indexed on one such number, somehow inclined by the generic humanity that we have called the fading or disempowering of sexual sufficiency, which is not its negation and no longer a simple subtraction but its transformation. What is the relation with the queer? This final concept is related, or often interpreted as related, to that of transversality (as in Deleuze, Guattari, and Foucault), destined to collide with the Cartesian rectangular coordinates of philosophical space and to trace the complex sexual becomings there. But, as complex and hazardous as they are, they retain a final frame of reference in the simultaneous duality of the sexual genders’ frame of reference; they are perhaps becomings that are infinite or unlimited but predictable and able to be discerned, in some sense philosophically calculable. Transversality
provides us with a supplementary nuance to trans-cendence,
the version or tending
[verse] (the operation of tending [verser]) that at the same time carries out a trans-
cendence, a transition or leap that tends to go from one instance to another, so as to flow past.
Now what we have called the inclination or slope, which is assured algebraically, carries out a certain dis-inclining
[dé-clin] of sufficient or corpuscular sex. This is even a version or an act of tending toward or even a transition, but one that is not reabsorbed in itself, that is not closed upon itself and an ad quem instance or an object in itself. It is a vector; it has a departure point, a transition point in which it provisionally completes itself, but not an arrival point where it would shut itself away. This is a new concept for the queer, no longer Deleuze’s n-sexes for a sexuality of the full body
that is virtually infinite, but a sexual complementarity, a gender unilaterally sexed within every identifiable sex, a transfinite or vectorial queer. It seems possible to us in this way to extract the nuance of the queer from its traditional philosophical context—to remove it from that frame and bring it back to a humane or generic level.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I WOULD like to thank my editor Creston Davis for convincing me to rewrite an old manuscript and resuscitate it into a new book we called the Cut of the Real.
It is thanks to his encouragement that this book stands before us now. I owe my deepest gratitude to François Laruelle for his friendship and for his support of my work through our