The Hysterical Male
The Hysterical Male
The Hysterical Male
new feminist
MALE
theory
CultureTexts
Arthur
and Marilouise
Kroker
General Editors
by Arthur
and Marilouise
Kroker
Seduction
Jean Baudrillard
Panic Encyclopedia
Arthur
Kroker, Marilouise
by John Fekete
1
/
Body Invaders
edited and introduced
Kroker
Cook
THEHYSTERICALMALE
new femiqist
theory
1991New World
Perspectives
Printed in Canada
ISBN O-3 12-05297-9 paper
Library
of Congress
Cataloging-in-Publication
Data
women,
murdered
be-
North
(detail)
The Hysterical
Arthur
and Marilouise
ix
Kroker
Sacrificial Sex
1 Three Sisters: Pure Virtue, Pure Sin
and Pure Nonsense
Elke Town (photography
2
3
by David Hlynsky)
13
Big Jugs
Jennifer
Bloomer
A Ghost Story
28
Avery Gordon
49
Charles Noble
Mirror of Seduction
5
57
Carole Spitzack
Blondes
69
Teresa Podlesney
93
Angela Miles
,8
132
Phallus of Malice
9
149
Chris Tysh
10 Feminist Ejaculatiqx
155
Shannon Bell
170
Berkeley Kaite
12 My First Confession
187
Stephen Pfohl
188
13 Simulations
Andrew
Haase
Daddys No
14 The Phallic Mother: Platonic Meta-physics
of Lacans Imaginary
Lorraine
212
Gauthier
235
Charles Levin
253
Diane Rubenstein
Contributors
268
Acknowledgments
271
Marc de Guerre
KROKER
xi
Clitoris
KROKER
xiii
postmodern
body as a war machine, about, that is, the indefinite
combination
of speed and politics into a new form of dromocracy,
maybe thats because as a privileged participant in the mutant sex he can
understand so well the dialectic of lack and deterrence. Male sexual
discharge as also a kind of deferral of knowledge of absence which, first
having its basis in the penis as a mutant clitoris, expands rapidly into a
universal political logic of revenge-taking.
The New Sacred Object
Why is the image of the erect penis now privileged as a cathected
object for political prohibition?
A new drive towards male puritanism in Which the Madonna image
does a gender flip? No longer woman as sacred vessel, but the erect
penis as a probibited object of the gaze. A sacramentalized penis which
can fall under a great visual prohibition
because it is now the sacred
object. Perhaps a last domain of innocence for anxious men, desperate
about all of the gains made by movements for sexual liberation. And so,
the erect penis is encoded with all the liturgical trappings of a sacred
vessel: the ideological probibition
of the gaze, an unseen object of
veneration, an erectile domain of semiotic innocence. The erect penis,
therefore, as a key agent in a new discourse of semiosex which can be
so fundamentalist
in its cultural prohibitions because it screens out the
reality of a culture which is all about a ruthless patriarchal politics of back
to the penis. Political injunctions against images of the erect penis,
therefore, as also about the repression of denial.
But, of course, the question remains: You can cover it-up, but will it go
away? If the erect penis can be so semiotically innocent, that is because
a great political reversal is now taking place. The erect penis can acquire
a cultural discourse of innocence in direct and intense relation to the new
material reality of a penile power which, under the impact of a decaying
neo-conservativism
moving from the political to the cultural sphere, is all
about predatory power against women and children. Is the new penis
censorship just a camouflage, then, for a new fundamentalist
cultural
politics based on a new order of phallocentric
domination:
violence
against women, the sexual abuse of children, a whole sexual politics
based on the libidinal economy of abuse value? The new sexual censorship, therefore, recapitulates the historical traditions of puritanical
movements: the cultural reality of a sacred object as a displaced sign for
a material reality based on sexual abuse. Consequently, the discourse of
the erect penis as a sacred object is central to the newly resurgent
ideology of the hysterical male.
xiv
The theorisations in this book are written under the sign of the failing
penis as the emblematic mark of postmodem subjectivity. They originate
in that-shadowland
where the real material penis disappears into the
ideology of the phallus, and where the privileged figure of the masculine
throws off its Freudian burden of repression, becoming what it always
secretly coveted-fully
hystericized subjectivity. That fateful point where
the specular coherence of unitary male subjectivity shatters, and what
remains is but the violent residues of the death of the old male cock.
Crash male subjectivity, and crash male bodies too, as the hysterical sign
of the fatal breakdown of the symbolic order of the unitary male subject.
The Hysterical Male: new feminist theory is a thematically focussed
exploration of feminism in the 1990s. Initiated as a companion text to
Body Invaders, TheHystericalMale traces out the logic of imminent reversibility in received patriarchal discourses in psychoanalysis,
art,
theory and culture. Here, under the sign of male hysteric&ion,
critical
feminist theorists track the next stage of gender politics. From the
theoretical fallout from Daddys No (refusing the psychoanalytics of the
Lacanian symbolic) and Phallus of Malice (where the image of the
ejaculating woman substitutes for the disappearing penis) to the Mirror
of Seduction (where women, too, are doubled in an endless regression
of mirrored identities) and Sacr$icialSex(where
feminism is encoded in
a labyrinth of seductive images), The HystericaZ Male nominates new
feminist theory in light of the inverted world of the male hysteric. What
results is an intense, provocative and creative theorisation of feminism
under the failing sign of male hystericization-the
death of the privileged
ideology of the unitary male subject.
I
-BSACRIFICIAL
SEX
1
-!THE THREE SISTERSOF TANYA MARS
Elke Town
Photography
by David
Hlynsky
EXE TOW
ante pieces by artists, Marss work takes its structural cues from theatre,
visual art and literature, but its ideological cues, true to. Marss own
investigation of womens power, have their roots in feminism. Becoming
progressively more complex in staging and casting from work to work,
each work unfolds through a. series of interconnected
tableaux that
incorporate
projected textual quotes and images, props, costumes,
music and a cast of broadly drawn characters representing everything
from Zeus, atomic subparticles and the Tree of Knowledge in Pure Sin
to Freud and Jung and the Mad Hatter and the White Rabbit in Pure
Nonsense.
Marss scripts abound in borrowed quotes and references from sauces
as disparate as Greek mythology, the Bible, Sophocles, Shakespeare,
Freud, Elizabeth Is own poetry, Mae.Wests unbeatable one-liners and
mountains of 60s psychobabble. Thisliberal borrowing amplifies the
characters and provides a cultural subtext, a subversive, humourous
climate in which nothing is sacred and no myth or text is so irrefutable
that it cannot be scrutinized,
toyed with and overturned.
In Pure
Nonsense, for example, after Freud and Jung have performed hypnotic
hocus-pocus on Alice and put her into a trance, a projected text reads:
Woman has done for psychoanalysis what the frog has done for biology.
Performance art demands the presence of the artist as performer and
indeed Mars is the central character in each work: she plays the lead role
and dresses for the part (in costumes designed and made by Elinor Rose
Galbraith). But Marss performances are more than dressing up and her
dresses are more than costumes. Mars is both a visual object and a
performer. As an object, she is Elizabeth, Mae orAlice, a spectacularized
representation
that symbolizes who and what women are and how they
got that way. As a performer, Mars identifies with and merges with each
of her representations.
In doing so, she combines her personal concerns
as an artist with the politics of representation.
Each of Marss performances is an inhabitation,
a, critical and comic
. feminist narrative about womens power, whether it exists in a kingdom,
on a movie set or in Wonderland. By taking a character from history, film
and fiction, Mars explores personal and social relations both as products
of the social and political imagination and as producers and reflections of
it. Mars fits herself into the dresses of women who, in the case of
Elizabeth I and Mae West, created themselves and their circumstances,
and in the case of Alice, challenged the existing order. For each, there
was a price for power: Elizabeth, the Virgin Queen, was denied more
earthly pleasures; Mae West was replaced by more malleable cinematic
icons who held their tongues;,and Alice Liddell was, after all, only the
subject of Carrolls imagination and the object of his desire:
In rewriting the histories of her three characters and placing them.at
the centre of debate, Mars has constructed a trilogy that reads like the
origins of the female species.
ELKE TOWN
Pure Virtue
I am and not, I freeze and yet am
burned, since from myselJ my other
self; I turn.
Elizabeth 1
,Elizabeth 1, the Virgin Queen, splendid in dress
and mind, contemplates virginity, power, sex and
death. She recommends .means whereby chastity
may be maintained and, if necessary, the loss of it
disguised; she entertains the lords of war, religion
and commerce for a picnic lunch a la Manets Dejeunersur
Zherbe; she complains of mens desire for
power in the state and in her bedroom; and finally, in
the metaphorical shadow of the names of other
women from history, fairy tales, fiction and film,
Anne Boleyn, Sleeping Beauty, Marilyn -MonroeMars/Elizabeth symbolically sacrifices herself and
calls out for her mother.
ELKE TOWN
Pure Sin
Itisntwhatldo,
buthowIdo
it. Itisnt
what I say, but how I say it, and how I
look when I do it and say it.
Mae West.
Mae West, as herself and as a variety of mythological heroines-Lilith, Pandora, Hecate-confronts the
Longstanding myths of women as the source of original sin in history, religion, and philosophy. As she
swaggers shamelessly into the recreation void and
the Garden of Eden, Mae shakes off this blame and
repossesses her body and sexuality, redirecting the
blame to the men who were its source. With her oneliners she acknowledges and condones mens lust
and gives them a glimpse of what life could be like
without their shame or their will to gain power and
possession.
10
EXE
TOWN
Pure Nonsense
Whylhardlyknow,
sir. Infact, Ihardly
remember anything at all. Indeed I dont
even know where I left mypenis.
Alice to Jung
Alice investigates the social and psychic construction of sexual difference and challenges the essentialist. myth that anatomy is destiny. When Alice
discovers that she doesnt have a penis, Freud tells
her that she has lost it. Alice searches for the
privileged signifier in a world where the confusion
and riddles of Carrolls Wonderland merge with the
psychoanalytic theories of Freud and Jung. True to all
fairy tales, Pure Nonsense has a happy ending: whats
lost is found. When the musical game You put your
left foot (arm, head, psyche, etc.) in gets to penis,
Alice lifts her dress to discover that she indeed does
have a penis-in the form of a giant, permanently
erect, strap-on dildo.
Photo:
David
Hlynsky
Installation:
Art in Ruins
Hannah
Vowles/Glyn
Banks
3L
----
BIG JUGS
Jennifer Bloomer
14
JENNIFER BLOOMER
was hacked up
architecture)?
The primitive
mansions, a firm,
is the house of
presence in this
of classical
She transforms, she acts: the old culture will soon be the
new. She is mixed up in dirty things; she has no cleanliness
phobia-the
proper housecleaning attacks that hysterics
sometimes suffer. She handles filth, manipulates wastes,
buries placentas, and burns the cauls of new born babies
for luck. She makes partial objects useful, puts them back
in circulation-properly.
En UOikZ dUprOp?X?!
What a fme
mess!3
Julia Kristeva has written:
As capitalist society is being economically and politically
choked to death, discourse is wearing thin and heading for
collapse at a more rapid rate than ever before. Philosophical finds, various modes of teaching, scientific or aesthetic formalisms follow one upon another, compete, and
disappear without leaving either a convinced audience or
noteworthy
disciples. Didacticism, rhetoric, dogmatism
of any kind, in any field whatsoever, no longer command
attention. They have survived, and perhaps will continue
to survive, in modified form, throughout Academia. Only
one language grows more and more contemporary:
the
equivalent, beyond a span of thirty years, of the language
of Finnegans Wake.4
Broadcast throughout
the text of Finnegans Wake are thousands of
seedy little ts, those bits of letter written, devoured, excreted, and
pecked by the hen. They are little micturition
sounds, tiny trabeation
signs. To make those posts on beams properly classical, let us add the
prescibed third part: the T becomes an I. The I, the ego, the I beam, the
gaze, the image fixer, the instrument of fetish. When I was a child in
church, I was told that the great golden I embroidered on the altar cloth
stood for INIU. I wondered why the church didnt spell its Henry with
an H. Hen &the
hen laughs. Ha ha ha ha-the sound of H is pure
expiration:
laughter, sighing, and the way we breathe when we are
giving birth to our children. BODY LANGUAGE. The sound of H is more
than mere pronunciation
of three marks on a page-two parallels, one
bridge. It is a mark itself of invisible flows.
THE HYSTERIC
iMALE
15
I6
JENNIFER BLOOMER
17
of the architecture/state
apparatus, it is all these categories. It is political
and collective and moving.
Barnacles, engulfings, underminings, intrusions: Minor Architecture.9
Collective, anonymous, authorless, scratched on the city and the landscape, they are hatched not birthed. (They are illegitimate-without
father.) Bastard Constructions.
In matriarchal societies, there is no
concept of legitimacy. One is legitimate by virtue of existence. No-one
knows a single father; all males are the nurturing fathers of all children.
Children are born of the mother; they are legitimate by virtue of having
made the passage from inside to out.
Wee peepsO appear locally upon the landscape of The Gaze. Wee
peeps: we peeks, small chickens (chicks), brief glances, a hint of
impropriety-micturition
in public. Tattoos upon the symbolic order.
They are the lens that we need the loan of.. . to see as much as the hen
saw. Like minor literature, or the little girls on Tintorellis stair in YYhe
Trial, or the twenty-eight little girl shadows of Isabelle, or the rainbow
girls in Finnegans Wake. Tattoos. T-t-ts.
This battering babe1 allower the door and sideposts:
the hatchery,
the place of babes and babble, both allows and lowers the supporting
structure of the entrance to the House.
A biddy architecture
(a surd and absurdf3 architecture):
Around
midnight, Atlanta, Georgia. Moving along Techwood Drive, the access
road running parallel to Interstate 75-85, and accessing the House of Ted
Turner. On the right: plantation image, tasteful, white sign with Chippendale frame-The Turner Broadcasting System. On the left: parallax
view of trees silhouetted
against the glow of the here submerged
interstate highway and, beyond, the city lights. Glimpsed among the
trees: small constructions
of sticks and draped membranes through
which the lights osmose-so strange that you might be hallucinating.
Against the membranes, blocking the glow with jarringly recognizable
blackness: human figures here and there, existing for the moment
between the lines.
Part Two: Jugs
In Florida, as perhaps in other places, we are situated upon a most
peculiar landscape. We stand upon a ground not of rock resting upon
rock, but of the merest slice of solidity barely breaking the surface of the
surrounding
sea. Furthermore,
the ground beneath our feet is not
reliable, not the solid architecture of stone piled upon stone, carrying its
loading in the proper compressive fashion, that we like our ground to be:
It is in fact an architecture.of holes and crypts, filling and emptying with
fluids, an architecture
delineated by suction and secretion, of solids,
fluids, and gases, in such a complex and everchanging configuration that
to pin it down with a word seems illogical. But it is named by a word:
18
JENNIFER BLOOMER
THE HYSTERICAL
iWILE
19
at a Jug
Aesthetic: Stick em out just a little more. Yeah, now pull your tummy
in all the way and let it out just a tad. Lied and separated from the wall,
the things appear twice their actual size and- full and round as if to
bursting. Yeah. Now really push em up, hold your breath, keep your
chin down and give me the look. Give it to me, baby, give it to me, yeah,
yeah. Terrific! Click!
Scientific: Now, youve got to get the whole thing up on the plate. Itll
feel a little cold, but itll be over in a minute. The glass plate descends,
pressing down, pressing, pressing the thing out to a horrifying, unrecog-
20
JENNIFER BLOOMER
nizable state: thin and flat, a broad, hideous slice of solidity crisscrossed
with shocking blue lines. Yes, thats it. Now hold your breath. Good!
Click!
Well now thats done: and Im glad its over.n32
What is the secret that the firm, erect, sticking out thing holds? Unused,
it is a frontier, where no man has gone before. What is the secret that lies
beneath the power of this image, this object? What most desired and
most feared thing is masked behind the desire to be the first, or the
biggest? What does (M)other lack?
What is the secret that oozes from the box? Deleuze and Guattari:
The secret must sneak, insert, or introduce itself into the
arena of public forms; it must pressure them and prod
known subjects into action .. . [Slomething
must ooze
from the box, something will be perceived through the
box or in the half-opened box.33
Corporate architecture is a certain return ,of the repressed.
In Thomas Pynchons novel K , a novel whose entire four hundred and
sixty-three pages are devoted to a search for a figure which seems to be
a woman, perhaps the mother of the protagonist, who exists only in
traces and hints. V herself is masked by a seemingly infinite constellation
. of guises, forming the fetish construction that is the novel itself. Through
the text there walks a figure known as the Bad Priest. Walks until, at a
certain point of intersection,
he falls down and falls apart, revealing
himself to be a beautiful young woman who is in turn revealed, by the
children and the imagination of the narrator who dismantle her body, as
a machinic assemblage of objects: glittering stones and precious metals,
clocks, balloons, and lovely silks. The Bad. Priest is a fetish construction
mirroring the novel. As Alice Jardine has pointed out, it is an assemblage
of the dead objects that have helped hold together the narrative thus
far.34 The Bad Priest and V are reconstituted objects of desire, constructions of what is most desired and most feared. They are a rewriting of the
urge to the aesthetic. (You will recall that Aesthetics begins with the
assemblage of the most beautiful, most perfect (and malleable, modestly
compliant) woman by cutting the most desirable parts off many women
and gathering them to make one woman-thing.)
Like Pandora, whose
box was not a box, but a jar, or jug. When the Bad Priest falls, the children
cry, Its a lady, and then: She comes apart.35 Into [a] heap of broken
images.36
Its a Lady. Consider the Statue of Liberty, a fetish construction:
she
is a thing placed on a pedestal-to
lift and separate, to put on display.
She is a spectacle. She is the hyper-reification
of Lute Irigarays goldplated (in this case, copper-clad) woman: womans body covered with
commodities (make-up, fashion, capital, gold).
THE HYSTERICALMALE
21
22
JENNIFER
BLOOMER
When, on October 5 [17891, the market women discovered there was no bread in Paris, six thousand of them
marched the twelve miles to Versailles to protest to the
king personally. He promised to help them, and they
marched triumphantly
back to Paris with the royal family
.in tow.39
The itinerary that led to this, choice isgermane to an understanding of
the project. Continuing
along our line of the gift as generator, we
selected nine sites on the body of woman/Liberty
that are conventionally
construed as (partial) objects of desire: eyes, lips, breasts, vulva, etc.
These nine sites were made to correspond to nine sites of revolutionary
points of intensity around the city of Paris through an operation involving
sight lines, focal points, and the lens (a glassy instrument
and the
mechanical
apparatus of the objectifying gaze). We then made nine
incisions upon the body of the Statue of Liberty, slicing through each of
the nine sites to produce a generating section. The irony of the similarity
of our operation to those of slasher films and pornography
was not lost
upon us. The commentary
of our work upon the recent work of
contemporary
architects whose work is tethered to the aura of mutilated and murdered women, we hope is not lost upon you. The nine
sections were then to produce nine objects, to form a constellation of
partial objects which, in their assemblage, would form a certain gift to
the French. As is the way with well-laid plans, for a host of reasons
including both fatigue and the powerful correspondence
of the section
through the eye and the site at the Palace at Versailles upon which it fell,
we diverged from our original intentions and chose to operate only upon
the eye and the march of the six thousand market women upon Versailles. The eye of the woman bears with it, after all, the potential to
return the gaze; to returnnot merely in asense of the conventional female
aquiescence in sexual discourse, but also to re-turn, to deflect the power
of the malegaze through a re-turn of the repressed, through the exorbitance of the female gaze. There is then in the project something of
a reversal of the mechanics of the fascinus, a phallus-shaped amulet for
warding off the evil eye of the fascinating woman. The evil eye, and to
whom it belongs, is called into question.
It is the unseen in the body which is critical here. The sectioning of the
statue is an act of incision and release. The incision marks the temporal
and geographical point at which the image.of the body gives way to the
possibilities of the body. It becomes a gift of another kind, an insidious
gift, with unseen agents hiding within, like the Trojan Horse. This hollow
vessel, this monument, this gift to the state, holds within it the potential
of undermining the state, In the Trojan Horse, the body masks the body
politic. The Trojan Horse is a viral architecture: a sleek protein coat with
invasive content.
The incision marking the initiation of generation is repeated as an
incising inscription.
A slash three hundred meters long and a meter
23
24
JENNIFER BLOOMER
intersection, the place where the secret is both enfolded and released. X
is the doubled perspective on two canals intersecting in a mirror. It is a
vanishingpoint.
To X is to delete, cancel, or obliterate with a series of
xs. ,142 X marks the (blind) spot(s) of history. Cross your heart-and
hope to die and stick your fmger in your eye. X is a cartoon convention
marking lidless eyesI blinded by a surprise or blow to the head. As
Catherine Ingraham has pointed out, the crisscross of heavy mascara
marks eyes which do not seen-eyes which do not look beyond the look.
X is a mark of non-identity,
a non-identifying
signature, like that of a
person who is identified by the name of her father which, in a mirroring,
is replaced by the name of her husband. Yet X is a chiasmus, signifying
the alchemical androgyne- blind, throbbing between two lives.. .44 X is
the mark of Xantippe, who dumped a pot of piss on the.head of her
husband, Socrates. X is a kiss, both a patronising45 and a nurturing
gesture. A puckering, a sucking, an undulating architecture of solids,
liquids, and gases.
A reverse fascinus, warding off the evil eye represented by the eye of
the one-eyed trouser snake of Joyce, the Cyclopean eye of power
invested in the Palace-the project is a defetishizing move; inviting the
(male) body, refusing the power structure of the phallus that represses
, and corrupts the male body, and displaying the profound return of the
repressed of the female body through an obscuring, a darkening, of the
image, and a display of the generative-the
jug is not athing, but a magical
machine-an
interwoven system of apparatuses, a text.
I
And Schreck would say: Look.at him, Fanny. So Fanny
would take off her blindfold and give him a beaming smile.
. Then Madame Schreck would say: I said, look at him,.
Fanny. At which shed pull up her shift.
For, where she should have had nipples, she had eyes.
Then Madame Schreck would say: Look at him properly,
Fanny. Then those two other eyes of hers would open.
They were a shepherds blue, same as the eyes in her head;
not big, but very bright.
I asked her once, what did she see with those mammillary
eyes, and she says: Why, same as with the top ones but
lower down.46
THE HY.STERICAl
ilL4.G
2.5
Notes
1.
This is the expanded (or augmented) text of a lecture called Jugs that I gave for the
Body/Space/Machine
Symposium held at the University of Florida in March 1989. The
expanded version, called Big Jugs, was delivered as a lecture at Princeton University
in October 1989. A substantial portion of the implant comes from a paper, Architecture, Writing, The Body, delivered in the session, Forecasting the Direction of
Architectural Theory, at the Annual Meeting of the Association of Collegiate Schools of
Architecture in Miami 1987.
2.
3.
H&?ne Cfxous and Catherine Clbment, Fe Newly Born Woman, trans. Betsy Wing,
,(Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1986 [1975]), p. 167. The translator points
out that the phrase En vofh dupropre!
(the English equivalent of which is What a
fine mess!) is used in the text in places where that which is considered appropriate
is called into question.
4.
5.
6.
7.
ed. Leon
Woman and
Modernity,
(Ithaca: Cornell
See Jean-Jacques Lecercle; Phflosophy Through the Looking Glass: Language, Nonsense, Desire (London: Hutchinson and Co., 1985). Lecercle locates d&ire: Dtilire,
. then, is at the frontier between two languages, the embodiment of the contradiction
between them. Abstract language is systematic; it transcends the individual speaker,
separated from any physical or material origin, it is an instrument of control, mastered
by a regulating subject. Material language, on the other hand, is unsystematic, a series
of noises, private to individual speakers, not meant to promote communication, and
therefore self-contradictory, impossible like all private languages. . . . Language which
has reverted to its origin in the human body, where the primary order reigns. (pp. 44
45).
8.
9.
The term minor architecture is both properly deduced from architectural historians
conventional use of the term major architecture to refer to canonical buildings in the
history of architecture, and is illegitimately appropriated from Gilles Deleuzes and Felix
Guattaris concept of minor literature. See Deleuze and Guattari, Kafia: Toward a
Minor Literature, trans. Dana Polan, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1986
[1975]).
Mindrliteratureiswriting
that takeson theconventionsofamajorlanguageand
subverts
it from the inside. Deleuzes and Guattaris subject is the work of Franz Kafka, a Jew
writing in German in Prague in the early part of this century. Minor literature possesses
26
JENNIFER BLOOMER
three dominant characteristics: 1.It is that which a minority constructs within a major
language, lnvolvlng a deterrltorlalization
of that language. Deleuze and Guattari compare Prague German to American Black English. 2. Minor literatures are intensely
political: [I]ts cramped space forces each individual intrigue to connect immediately
to politics. The individual concern thus becomes all the more necessary, indispensable,
magnified because a whole other story is vibrating within it (p. 17). 3. Minor literatures
are collective assemblages; everything in them takes on a collective value.
Deleuze and Guattari describe two paths of deterritorialization.
One is to artificially
enrich [the language], to swell it up through all the resources of symbolism, of oneirism,
of esoteric sense, of a hidden signifier (p. 19). This is a Joycean approach. The other is
to take on the poverty of a language and take it further, to the point of sobriety (p. 19).
This is Kafkas approach. Deleuze and Guattari then reject the Joycean as a kind of closet
reterrltorialization
which breaks from the people, and go all the way with Kafka.
In transferring such a concept to architecture, already much more intensely materially
simple andwith more complex relationships to the people and to pragmatics, I believe
it necessary to hang onto both possibilities, shuttling between them. Thii may begin to
delineate a klnd of line of scrimmage between making architectural objects and writing
architectonic texts. What a minor architecture would be is a collection of practices that
follow these conditions.
of Arthur
Gordon
and
Pym,
OtherPoems,
for example.
(New
York: Hareourt,
Ibid., p. 171.
Thought,
THE HYSTEiK
26.
MALE
27
Ibid.
27. Ibid.
28. Ibid., p. 180.
29. Ibid., p. 182.
30. Ibid.
31. This phrase refers to the well-known chapter from Le Corbusiers Vers we architecture
and to Catherine Ingrahams critique of it in The Burdens of Linearity, a paper
presented at the Chicago Institute for Architecture and Urbanism (Skidmore, Owings
and Merrill Foundation) Work@ Session on Contemporary Architectural Theory,
September 19SB, aswellas to its more transparent referent, the eye ofpowerwhich
sees
only that which it chooses to see.
32. Eliot, p. 39.
33. Deleuze and Guattad, A Thousand Plateaus (Capi&ism
and Schizophrenia),tnns.
Brian Massumi, (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1987 [1980]), p. 287.
34. Jardine, p. 251.
35. Thomas Pynchon, K (1963), (New York: Bantam Books, 1981), pp. 320-321.
36. Eliot, p. 30.
37. Lute Irigaray, Speculum of the Other Woman, trans. Gillian C. Gill, (Ithaca: Cornell
University Press, I985 [1974]), p. 114.
38. These are the words of Aldo Rossi, whose obsession with the idea of architecture as
vessel is well-known and well-documented.
See A Scientific Autobiography,
trans.
Lawrence Venuti, (Cambridge, Mass.: M.I.T. Press, 1981).
39. Marilyn French, Beyond P&T:
Books, 1985), p. 191.
40. Many readers will recognize
Geography of thelmagination,
an iniluential teacher to me.
On
Morals,
Heritage Dictionary.
[T]he importance
of psychoanalysis is precisely the way
that it throws into crisis the dichotomy
on which the
appeal to the reality of the event clearly rests. Perhaps for
women
it is of particular
importance
that we find a
language which allows us to recognise our part in intolerable structures-but
in a way which renders us neither the
pure victims nor the sole agents of our distress.
THE HYSTERIC
MALE
29
Get Them
at the Start!
30
AVERY GORDON
rounded by her father and brothers shielding her face from the camera.
Its possible she just didnt want her picture taken. After all, she was
supposed to be there: in a letter to Freud at the end of August 1911, Jung
had listed her name Fri. Dr. Spielrein (!) as part of the feminine
element representing Zurich.* In a diary entry written almost a year
before the conference, Spielrein wrote: In my imagination I already saw
my friend l-Jung] in love with her, I saw her sitting next to me at
psychiatric congresses, she-proud and contented as wife and mother, I
a poor psychopath who has a host of desires and can realize none of
them; renouncing love, my soul rent with pain.9
A woman was supposed to be someplace, but she never arrived. The
Weimar Congress, organized by Jung and opening on 11 [sic] September
19 11 was supposed to include Sabina Spielrein among its participants, as
Jung himself informed Freud; but we know from a calm and lengthy letter
written by Jung to Sabina that she had found a psychosomatic pretext for
not going to Weimar.O A woman was supposed to be someplace, but
only a pretext was woven and delivered.
Here is her narrative, seductively displayed on the outer body of the
book, an advertisement for a fascinating story, a story of fascinations:
Here is the fascinating
stoy of Sabina Spielrein, a young Russian
woman brought to Jungspsychiatric
clinic in Zurich to be cured of a
serious nervous disorder. Once cured of her ilness, Spielrein falls
deepIy in love with her analyst. Despite his attraction
to her, Jung
chooses to break off the relationship
when it threatens to cause a
scandal. Spielrein then confides in Freud, Jungs mentor andfather
figure, and he becomes confessor to them both. Through SpieLreins
dia y and letters, published in paperback for the first time, the reader
is presented with a rare glimpse into the essence of psychoanalytic
work and into the lives of its keyfigures.
The advertisement does not
mention that Spielrein wrote about the death drive ten years before
Freud published his seminal work on the death instinct, Beyond The
Pleasure Principle ,I2 nor does it mention the fact that Sabina Spielrein
is not in the photograph of the participants at the Weimar Congress taken
in the year she fmished her dissertation.
Make Your
Points
by Ordering
Events
THE HKSTERKXL
MALE
31
the human
aspect-the
32
AVERY GORDON
collecting of data and empirical evidence, statistical research, linguistic analyses, for example-is
nearly always
carried out to the accompaniment
of its traditional humanism. The scientific [sociologist] works day to day in a
disciplinary field which is beset by questions of epistemology and interpretation
and by concomitant philosophical
questions about the relation between observer and observed, about the,constitution
of ideologies and methodologies, and so on.15
I am also working within a field beset with these questions and at least
three others which multiply the fields and borders which situate the
woman writing in and out of a sociology falling somewhere between the
human and the scientific. The first question is: What constitutes the
social field in which the sociologist negotiates (or does not) between
whats hard and whats human? The sociologist is not only beset by
questions of epistemology
and interpretation,
and by questions of
ideology and methodology,
but is also beset by the founding desire of the
discipline-to
describe and analyze social reality. The problematization
of this desire is not only a function of being upset over epistemological
questions, but must be, for the sociologist, connected to questions about
the nature of social reality itself. Here, the social field includes, but is not
limited to academic discourses. The second question asks: Who is in this
field? This question, as a shorthand, must stand for the complications
of
difference and power relations .which such an asking and answering
gives notice to, and is related to the third question. How, when we ask
who, when, and where, does the field change dramatically?
It began with a question: what method have you adopted for your
research? Ormore precisely, why do you use literary fictions as the data
for your research and teaching and name this mode of knowledge
production sociology, rather than, say, literary criticism? It began with a
question demanding to know the implications
of understanding
the
ethnography within an epistemology of the truth as partial, as an artifact
of the ritual mode of producing an understanding, a truth, the real. They
wanted to know what it meant to understand the real as an effect (as
something produced) and as an affective relation (as not simply rational
and conscious). They wanted to know how the real could be a powerful
fiction which we do not experience as fictional, but as true. They were
concerned about the implications of understanding
social relations as
artifactual because entrance into this epistemological
place blurs the
institutional, disciplinary, and political boundaries that-separate the real
from the fictive without in any way diminishing
the powerful self
evidency of real fictions. I6 How can we tell the difference, they asked,
between science and literature, between sociology and literary criticism,
between the symbolic, the imaginary, and the real? How can we tell the
difference between one story and an(others), a fundamental question of
THE HYSTERIC
MALE
33
34
AVERY GORDON
THE HYSTERICAL
MALI?
35
Along circuitous paths, we enter into and exit out of our accounts,
which are also willy-nilly, shot through with power relations and personal cross-purposes. If we do not inhabit a clearly defined critical space
free of [the] traces of complicity,
what would it mean to acknowledge
ourselves as being in our accounts, to foreground those repressed marks,
the contradictory,
autobiographical
moments which must be circumscribed in order to produce the adequate version? (I flaunt the impropriety of the gesture here in Spielreins name, although her story is not
simply an allegory of my own). Perhaps the key methodological
question
is not: what method have you adopted for this research+but
what paths
have been disavowed, left behind, covered over and remain unseen. In
what fields does field work occur?
To a Definite
Climax
36
AVERY GORDON
Weimar Conference, and of her paper on the death drive written ten
years before Freuds seminal study was published, Freud had this to
say: u... her destructive drive is not much to my liking, because I believe
it is personally conditioned. She seems abnormally ambivalent.28 Jung,
after having written to Spielrein to say that her study was extraordinarily intelligent and contain[ed]
excellent ideas, wrote to Freud: One
must say: desinat inpiscem muliwformosa superne [What at the top
is a lovely woman ends below in a fish. . .] . . .She has.. .fallen flat in this
paper because it is not thorough enough...Besides
that her @aper is
heavily over-weighted with her own complexes.29 Unlike Sabina I made
it to the conference, but barely-the detours almost led me too far astray.
Why the detour through this psychoanalysis, a feminist, albeit white
and intellectual psychoanalysis,
in which some things are trying to
escape their institutional borders? A simple answer first. I am engaged in
re-searching women within the academic institution,
our place and
displacements within these confines. The ethnographic
scene of my research is the scene I am in, a scene in which I look not through a window,
a sociological metaphor for the probability of adequate recognition, but
into a mirror, a psychoanalytic
metaphor for misrecognition
as the
possibility of any recognition at a11.30As I try to write the contours of this
landscape in North America at the present time, as I try to write from the
impossible place of attempting to demonstrate the elusive historicopolitico-economico-sexual
determinations31
of our readings and writings, it is precisely the difficulty of articulating what produces stories
such as Spielreins (a story overdetermined
by being in psychoanalysis)
which leads me to a scene where storytelling is problematized.
In order
to write within a question concerning exclusions and invisibilities-a
dead woman was not at a conference at which she was supposed to berequires a methodology
that is attentive to what can not be seen, but is
powerfully real; attentive to what appears dead, but is powerfully alive;
attentive to what appears to be in the past, but is powerfully present; and
also requires attending to just who the subject of analysis is. To the extent
that a feminist psychoanalysis is concerned with exploring and transforming scenes in which these binary oppositions (visible/invisible,
real/
imaginary, dead/alive, past/present) are experienced as bothfluid arid
maddening, it may have some lessons for those of us who are also
undertaking analysis which we think is of a different kind.
A brief digression on two psychoanalytic words which render the real,
as the empirically given, problematic, two words around which much
more could and should be said, two words which should not be taken as
necessarily the most important ones. The first is the unconscious.
In setting itself the task of making the discourse of the unconscious speak through consciousness, psychoanalysis
is advancing in the direction of that fundamental
region
[or field] in which the relations of representation...come
into play. Whereas all the human sciences advance to-
37
38
AVERY GORDON
THE HYSTERICAL
MALE
39
and overdeterminations,
that the real is just (but not only) a powerful and
fascinating story.
Academically, the term field refers simply to some relatively circumscribed and abstract area of study. However, that particular sense gives
no indication of how scholars operationally relate to their field; that is,
how they study it. When we add the term research, [or work, as in field
work] , . . .this adds a locative property. [It tells us that a researcher is in a
field or fields.]. . . . The field researcher understands that his field-whatever its substance-is continuous with other fields and bound up with
them in various ways. 40 If the fields that are bound up and Continuous
with, the fields that overdetermine,
any analytic encounter are not just
other academic fields, but the social, economic, historical, political, and
sexual fields in which as researchers we field what often appear to be
academic questions, then the real story is always a negotiated interruption. Traversing fields, the story must emerge out of the field of forces
which really attract and distract the story-teller.
A woman was on her way to a conference with an abstract and a
promise but then she got distracted by a photograph and had to take a
detour which led her to follow the traces of a woman ghost. The woman
had to traverse fields in order to speak. The speaking was essential to her
well-being, but it became harder and harder to keep track of the story. But
she kept trying to remember that it involved death (a dead woman),
desire (a photograph),
and the law (a language trying to speak).
To the extent that psychoanalysis is organized along a dyadic modelsfieaker/listener,
patient/analyst,
student/teacher,
its heterosexual and
patriarchal structure marks the limits of its field at this time.41 The most
significant event in Spielreins young life yas that whatever happened
during her treatment by Jung at the Burgholzli.. .call it treatment, seduction, transference, love, mutual daydreams, delusions or whatever...it
cured her. True, Spielrein paid a very high price in unhappiness,
confusion, and disillusion for the particular way in which she got cured,
but then...42 A limit is marked also by a story which understands
transfer(ence),
from one stage to the next, from one wish to the next,
as a cure.43
Nevertheless, Bruno Bettelheims comments, which attempt to complicate the process of locating the source of the violence in Sabina
Spielreins story solely in the empirically verifiable actions of a powerful
man, are significant. They are important because they echo Jacqueline
Roses concern that for women it is of particular importance that we
find a language which allows us to recognise our part in intolerable structures-but in a way which renders us neither the pure victims nor the sole
agents of our distress. 44Feminism, particularly American feminism, has
desired and needed an unequivocal accusation of the rea1,4s an empirical safety net,. access to what really happened in order to politically
challenge the powerful mechanisms which structure our exclusions,
pains, pleasures, and violences. Maybe this is because there was/is no
40
AVERY GORDON
room within the academic institution for staging the kinds of rememberings the (pyscho)analytic
situation allows; for analytically inhabiting a
really shifting reality. But there too the hope was that in opening up those
strategically repressed markings again, a transfer(ing), a transformation would occur. And this repetition the @sycho)analysis accomplishes
by situating a story of the present as a complex staging of a past
remembered
and forgotten, but only as a memory of the present. A
memory is never simply repeated within analysis because there was
never a memory as a thing to remember in the first place. The
repetition is always a repetition-asdisplacement.
But because psychoanalysis recognized, but could not inhabit the
space of the transference-counter-transference
institutionally, womens
stories remained the seductive object of a writing, an analysis of secret
symmetries based on a model privileging symmetry as the possible
condition for mastery in the non-recognition
of the other.46 Despite the
lack of or overabundance of womanmodels
imagined in North America,
psychoanalysis seems to open up the question of a dimension of reality
all the more important for the subject because it goes way beyond
anything that can, or needs to be, attested as fact. When reality
[becomes] nothing more than what can be empirically established as the
case, =* the case studies we can write become (the sometimes) brutal
fictions of established empires.
The focus within psychoanalysis on questions of desire, power, fantasy, memory, helps me to understand why I am haunted by a woman
ghost; why the memory of her absence in a photo (which is both a real
memory and an analytic staging) makes me attentive to the systematic
exclusions produced by the assumptions and practices of a normalized
social science. These normal methods fundamentally foreclose issues of
power and gender because they foreclose the recognition of the exclusions, the sacrifices, required to tell a story as the singularly real one. At
least Freud problematizes any statement of method that would begin,
putatively, I choose because...48
Yet the social scientist assumes that the analyst(me)/ethnographer
is
in a different field than her subjects and that with good intentions and
methods, an object of analysis can become a non-violated subject of
analysis, can speak her truth outside of the framing and narrativization,
outside of the transferential intersubjectivity
of the. research process,
outside of writing, of ritually enacting a story. But what if the material
conditions and limits of our reading and writing, the elusive historicopolitico-economico-sexual
determinants, necessitate that the ethnographer, the sociologist, the psychoanalyst, must write the theoretically
impossible historical biography of that very self that is no more than an
effect of a structural resistance of irreducible heterogeneity.49 This is a
tortuous language for trying to ask the question: in what fields does the
ethnographer/sociologist
write, because a subjectivity neither simply
achieved, nor complete, a subjectivity leaving something in excess, is
41
Out to a Completion
Dear Sabina:
Im uneasy about using your story, or the story of the places you were
between as a pretext for speaking to the men (or to the women, for that
matter) about methodology;
about needing or seeming to need a dead
woman to enliven matters, to make them have some material force.
Subjects repose in the archives, always inconsolable, never having the
right to speak. 77zey are, of course, spoken about-rumours
of this reach
them, but the materiality
of their contents isforgotten.s3 Is this why you
have come back to haunt me because rumors of your re-covet-y have
reached you? I found you by accident in a book which positions your
diary and letters as evidence of your decisive influence on IJung] and
on the development
of his system; your contributions,
of greatest
significance, [to] the Freudian system and the startling new light [your
42
AVERY GORDON
dissertation entitled The Psychological Content of a Case of Schizophrenia :... The former schizophrenic patient had by then become a
student of schizophrenia, a doctor treating mental disturbances, an
original thinker who developed ideas that later became of greatest
significance in the Freudian system.55A young woman patient falls in
love with her doctor. A doctor falls in love with his young woman patient.
The history of psychoanalysis is changed.Perhaps as feminists we should
be grateful for such a story, a story at least acknowledging
that in the retelling of an untold story an institution
is changed by a love affair
involving a great man and a young woman.
But what if this is just a ghost story marking the itinerary of one
womans desire for a womarrghost,
marking a desire to raise the dead. I
dont want to listen to any more of your stories; they have no logic. They
scramble me up. You lie with stories. You wont tell me a story and then
say, This is a true story, or This is just a story. I cant tell the
difference.... I cant tell whats real and what you made UP?~~Its what
the story opens up thats important. When a woman ghost is haunting a
story about intellectual story-telling, whats important is not to be afraid.
Dear Sabina:
Im writing to you again now. It seemed appropriate to pause for a
moment and indicate the framing of your resurrection. Im sure you will
be interested in that part too, especially if these rumors reach you, just
as the rumors of Jungs betrayal reached out for you. Do you think that
the recovery of you may be just another cover up, another refusal of an
alternative to scientific containment? Im still stuck in the problem of
acknowledging
a truth of psychoanalysis, your field: that a dead woman
(you) is alive for me haunting a story Im, trying to tell about intellectual
story-telling.
This is- a methodological
problem, a political problem involving the
ethics of navigating the stagings57 of womens stories, our pains, our
desires. It seems that-Im faced with a terrible and sometimes terrifying
choice. On the one hand, I cant pretend that Sabina Spielrein, aproper
name signifying a story of exchanges, could come alive as a fully
constituted subject .capable of speaking a truth uncontaminated
by the
narratives of patriarchal desire. What is not recoverable is a woman not
confined by an exchange narrative, a value harboring desires forbidden
43
and foreboding,
linking two men; a woman who really wasnt in the
middle of a great drama. And, Im cautious about being complicit in the
construction
of another white utopian feminist subject. At the same
time, I dont want to make you disappear twice. (Certain analyses,
which describe flatly the statements of their patient, make them
disappear twice: a first time because their speech is inscribed in another
discourse and a second time because their words-cries, their wordssufferings have become subduable and subdued under the analysts
Valium-pen.58) But I must confess to you Sabina that it is precisely the
love affair, the story of a woman whose body and body of work was
inscribed by the bodies of men who wrote books inspired by fractured
women, that haunts me. The heterosexual theater that staged your story
repeats itself into my present and it is a hope that the repetition of this
story, a repetition with a difference made possible by the work of many
feminists, may make possible our taking the necessary risk of demonstrating [just how ] theory is necessarily undermined-as
it is operatedby practice.59
Which
at Rest
44
AtiRY
GORDON
Notes
1.
JacqueIine Rose, Sexubl~ry fn the Ffeld of Vision, (London: Vetso, 1987), p. 14.
2.
Jean Baudriiiard, Amerfca, trans. Chris Turner, (London: Verso, 1988), p. 85.
3.
Luisa VaIenzueia, He Who Searches, (Iliinois: DaIkey Archive Press, 1977). p. 116.
4.
These headings/subtitles form a narrative of their own and are borrowed from Trinh T.
Mix&-has essay, Gtahdmas Story in Blasted Alkgorfes, ed. Brian WaIlis, (New York
and Cambridge: The New Museum of Contemporary Art and The MIT Press, 1987). p.
26. Grandmas Story canalso be found InMinh-has new book, Woman, Native, Other:
WrfffngPosfcoZonfuIftyandFemfnfsm,
(Bloomington: IndianaUniversity Press, 1989).
5.
1983).
6.
The history of psychoanalysis and the hIstory of womens relation to the institution of
psychoanalysis is inextricably bound up with the development and use of photography
and the socaRed documentary Image. Jean-Martin Charcot, whose pioneering work on
hysteria at the Saip&ri&e cRnic in Paris, produced the three-volume Iconogruphfe
photographfqk
de la Su@?tri&e, a photographic-classificatory
scheme of female hys
teria. But, as for the truth, I am absolutely only the photographer; I register what I see.
Quoted in EIaine Showalter, The Female Makzdy. Women, Madness and Englfsh
Culture 1830-1980,(NewYork:PantheonBooks,
1985),p. 151.CharcotsearlysNdies
and public lectures
on female hysteria were, of course, elaborately staged and
theatricalized, documenting more than the signs of hysteria. As Showalter points out,
Women were not simply photographed once, but again and again, so that they became
used to the camera and to the special staNs they received asphotogenfc subjects (p.
152, emphasis mine). Posed, stylized and seductive, the hysterical Image could have
severe consequences. During the period when [Augustine, a young girl who entered
the hospitaI in 18751 was being repeatedly photographed, she developed a curious
hysterical symptom: she began to- see everything in black and white (p. 154). Freud
studied with Charcot from October 1885 to February 1886, but the replacement of the
, visual spectacle with the talking cure marks the transition (through Josef Breuer and
Anna 0) to psychoanalysis proper. BothCathetine Clement in ne Weary Sqns of Freud
and JacqueIine Rose analyze the contradictory implications .of the shift from the
centraIity of the visual and the spectacular to the oral and the interior. Roses argument
Is most apt here: [Freud] questioned the visible evidence of the disease-the idea that
you could know a hysteric by looking at her body.... [B]y penetrating behind the visible
symptoms of disorder and asking what it was that the symptom was trying to say.. .Freud
could uncover...unconscious
desires and motives.... Freuds challenge to the visible, to
the empirically selfevident, to the blindness of the seeing eye...can give us the
strongest sense of the force of the unconscious as a concept against a fully social
classification relying on empirical evidence as its ratIonale. In Jacqueline Rose, Femininity and its Discontents, FemfnistReuiew, 14 (1983): 16. Roses Important argument
that p.sychoanaIysIs challenges empiricist forms of reasoning is key to understanding
forms of subordination which are not and cannot be made fully visible, and for my
particular problem: how to research from within a photograph where a woman is
seemingly not-there.
7.
Aldo Carotenuto, A Secret Symmetry: Sabfna Spielrein Between Jung and Freud, trans.
Amo Pomerans, John Shepley, Krishna Winston, with a commentary by Bruno Bettelheim, (New York: Pantheon Books, 1984). The book contains Spielreins diary from
19091912, her letters to Jung written between 1911-1918, and her letters to Freud and
his to her. Almost all this material Is fragmentary. Although Carotenuto makes reference
in his extended analysis of these documents to Jungs letters to Spiehein, permIssion by
Jungs famiIy to pubIish them was not granted.
THEWYSTERICAI:
8.
9.
Carotenuto, p. 29.
MALE
45
TowardsFictionasOblique
Discourse, YufeFrenchStudies
,59 (1980),
14. See James Clifford and George Marcus, eds. Writing Culture: The Politics and Poetics
OfEthnography,
(Berkeley: University of California Press, 1986); James Clifford, 7ize
Predicament of Culture:lOth Century Ethnography, LiteratureandArt.,
(Cambridge:
Harvard University Press, 1988); George Marcus and Michael Fischer, Anthropology as
Cultural Critique: An Experimentaal Moment in the Human Sciences, (Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 1986); Richard Harvey Brown, SocieQ as Texf: Essays on
Rhetoric, Reason and Reality, (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1987). See also,
Patricia Clot@, Understanding Subjugation: The Relation of Theory and Ethnography,
Studies in Symbolic Interaction, 7, Part A (1986); and Michel de Certeau, The Writing
of History, trans. Tom Conley, (New York: Columbia University Press, 1988).
15. Paul Smith, Dkerning
p. 83.
16. The issue here is not whether real events or experiences exist and can be reported.
The fact that every object is constituted asan object of discourse has nothing to do with
whether there is a world external to thought, or with the realism/idealism opposition.
An earthquake or the falling of a brick is an event that certainly exists.... What is denied
is not that such objects exist externally to thought, but the rather different assertion that
they would constitute themselves as objects outside any discursive condition of emergence, Emesto Iaclau and Chantal Mouffe quoted in Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, In
Other Workis:Essays in CulturalPoetics, (New York: Methuen, 1987) p. 242. As Spivak
elaborates, This understanding...does not entail ignoring what it is that sentences
report or tell. It is the precondition for the analysis of how the what is made.... Not even
the simplest reporting or telling can avoid these maneuvers. Foucault asks us to
remember that what is reported or told is also reported or told and thus entails a
positioning of the subject. Further, that anyone dealing with a report or a tale...can and
must occupy a certain I-slot in these dealings.... That history [or sociology] deals with
real events [facts] and literature with imagined ones [fictions] may now be seen as a
difference in degree rather than in kind.... What is called history [sociology] will always
seem more real to us than what is called literature. Our very uses of the two separate
words guarantees that. This difference cannot be exhaustively systematized (p. 243).
What interests me is the relationship between the I-slot and what Roland Barthes called
the effect of the real; I am concerned with the implications of acknowledging that
history/fact may not always seem more real to us and with the difficulty of
demonstrating that both the investigating subject (or analyst) and her subject (of
analysis) are involved in negotiating and producing a real story.
17. The play here is on the subversion of the common-sense connotations of these words
at work in Lacanian psychoanalytic discourse. See Chapter 3 of Ellie Ragland-Sullivan,
Jacques Lucun and the Phflosophy ofPsychoanalysts, (Urbana: University of Illinois
Press, 1987). pp. 130-195 for a discussionof Lacans three orders and how they displace
our more common understanding of the Imaginary as the order of the imagination, the
46
AVERY GORDON
Symbolic as the order of symbolism, and the Real as the order of reality, objectivity, or
the empirical.
18. Lute Irigaray, This Sex Which Is Not One, trans. Catherine Potter with Carolyn Burke.
(Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1985) p. 150.
19. Ibid.
20. Spivak, p. 15.
21. Clifford, The Predicament
of Culture, p. 25.
22. The quotation is from Cary Nelson, Men, Feminism: The Materiality of Discourse, Men
in Feminism, ed. Alice Jardine and Paul Smith, (New York: Methuen, 1987) p. 155. I
discuss some aspects of these issues in my essay,Masqueradiig in the Postmodem,
Cross Currents Recent Trends in Humanities Research, ed. E. Ann Kaplan and Michael
Sprinker, (London: Verso, 1990).
23. Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, Draupadi by Mahasveta Devi, in Elizabeth Abel, ed.,
Writing and SexualDifference,
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1981), pp. 2623. Spivaks preface and translation are also included in In Other Worfd, pp. 179-196.
24. The question of why the turn to psychoanalysis now has important strategic implications for feminist politics. According to Laura Kipnis, This recourse to psychoanalysis
(which provides no theory of social transformation and historically offers no evidence
of political efficacy) in both Marxist and feminist theory seems to take place at a
particular theoretical juncture: one marked primarily by the experience of political
catastrophe and defeat. The political appropriation of psychoanalysis appears to signal,
then, a lack-of a mass movement or of successful counterhegemonic
strategies. The
disastrous absorption of the European working-class movements into fascism, the
decline of the political fortunes of feminism (outside the university) from those
boisterous years when it seemed on the verge of becoming a mass movement, these are
the events that have preceded the respective detours through the psychoanalytic.... The
political use-value of psychoanalytic theory would...seem to be its updated account of
the organization or etiology of consent to patriarchal or capitalist orders, Feminism:
The Political Conscience of Postmodernism? in Universal Abandon? The Politics of
Postmodernism, ed. Andrew Ross, (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1988),
pp. 150-l. This is not the place to respond to Klpniss often insightful analysis, and her
central concern-the implicit valorization of a modernist avant-garde aesthetic and the
denigration of the popular cultutal and real world politics which she sees as issuing
from the psychoanalytic turn and its focus on interiorization. (In the larger work of
which this essay forms a part, I take up Kipnis argument about the real world and real
world politics.) However, I would argue that the focus on consent is not only legitimate,
but necessary, in the context of these defeats. Moreover, a feminist or Marxist politics
which cannot address the very complicated ways in which people are mobilized or
cathected to change both themselves and the social relations of power in which they are
subjects and towhich they are subjectedwill remain defeated. It has been in this context
that certain features of psychoanalytic theory have been seen as providing insights into
the possibility of a political practice beyond ideology-critique.
25. Irigaray; p. 125.
26. Irigaray, p. 145; Catherine Clement, The Lives and Legends of Jacques Lacan, trans.
Arthur Goldhammer, (New York ColumbiaUniversity Press, 1983); Catherine Clement,
The Weary Sons of Freud, trans. Nicole Ball, (London: Versa, 1987); Helene Cixous and
Catherine Clement, The Newly Born Woman, trans. Betsy Wing, (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1986).
27. Irigaray, p. 145.
THE HXSTERIC.
MALE
47
28.
Carotenuto, p. 146.
29.
Ibid, p. 183.
30.
Jacques Lacan, The Mirror Stage as Formative of the Function of the I, in &crits: A
Selection, trans. Alan Sheridan, (New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 1977).
31.
Spivak, p. 15.
32.
Mlchel Foucault, The Order of 7?zings, (New York: Vintage Books, 1973), p. 374.
33.
Ibid, p. 375.
34.
Ibid.
35.
Rose, Femininity
36.
37.
38.
39.
40.
p: 19.
Cliffs: Prentice-
41. The focus here on the heterosexual implications of the psychoanalytic couple should
not detract from the equally problematic class and race-bound assumptions of psycho
analytic theory and practice. What 1 would consider a historically-informed
socialpsychoanalytic approach informs my reading of memory in Toni Morrisons novel
Beloved in my dissertation, Ghostly Memories: FeministRituals
of Writing the Social
Text; Homi Bhabhas essay on mimicry also comes to mind here, Of Mimicry and Man:
The Ambivalence of Colonial Discourse, October 28, (Spring 1984):125-33.
42.
Carotenuto, p. xxxviii.
43.
44.
Rose, p. 14.
45.
Ibid, p. 12.
46.
Irigaray, p. 128.
47.
Rose, p. 13.
48.
Gayatri Chakavorty Spivak, The Rani of Sirmur: An Essay in,Reading the Archives,
History and Theory, 24,3 (1984): 257.
49.
50.
48
AVERY GORDON
impasse is not unlike the desire for the abyss or infnite regression for which deconstruction must perpetually account. I do, of course, declare myself bound by that desire. The
difference between Rose and myself here is that what she feels is a right to be claimed,
I am obliged to recognize as a bind to be watched. I suspect that Roses (or my?) political
and rhetorical purpose here is to push feminism to make the initial move Spivaks
position already implies: that is, to claim a bind which can then be watched, not
normajized.
p. xvi.
55. Ibid.
56. Maxine Hong Kingston, The Woman Warrior: Memoirs of a Girlhoof
quoted in Minh-ha, p. 3.
57. This phrase was shared with me by Jackie Orr who is also working
in her writing on the gendered history of panic.
58. Robin, p. 235.
-59.
60. Minh-ha, p. 7.
61. Leslie Marmon S&o, Ceremony, quoted in Minh-ha,,p. 18.
Among Ghosts,
with
this
question
4
-BBEHIND MASTER MIND UP ON TIME
MISPRISONERS ONCE ESCAPE LITERATURE*
Charles Noble
asymmetrical signs
a) Always lying to lower his head to get the good stuff into his brain,
poeia-turned;
politically horny, pretextually
self-de-disabused,
with a bit of fun before ya get tucked under spermatic Ezra Pound
over perfectly spinny control, of his words, and, admittedly, after
his prostatectomy:
theyve made me into a cunt
b) The bellies have it! W.H. Auden, witness, at the police line-up. The
missing crime? Sexual competition.
#l : infant terribly erect,
belied.
#2: pregnant women
#3: the beer belly
(after the show #3 nurses his synecdoche, replays, etc.
(will the real Mackenzie King Brothers
stand up, sit calm?
c) Mailer, of the infamous PENis conference, has with Tough Guys
Dont Dance (Nice Girls Dont .. . infinite equation) finally renot-man-ized his Big Bang existentialism, married the self-parody
hed roled over anyway, a kind of James (Junk) Bond issue hed
floated, stealing back-the mis-taken identity-as limply totalitarian
Hysterical title, positively, setting the two.one, quite a little number (not Jobs daughter,
Eye-shadow), a job that wont quit.
50
CHARLES NOBLE
or simply blasted?-onto
Sam taking another half-life-to weed(s)?
d) Fifty year reunion of the Normal School teacher training-my
mother cleaning out the closet of Playboy magazines up to the
early 70s (ma+zr trouble?) for expected visitors. Heavy, glossy
mags burning poorly. Individual attention to the pages of naked
tit in the burn brabarrel. Closet gazes hang down-Mcluhans
clothes: ?barrel-of laughs or displaying the emperors buy-us-as
or Noahs
arch rival
revival
reviral
holy-grammared
ribbed-rockship
proofoflacktic-ed
off
& regaled by the indented hull
a new pair-o-graFF(e) (s) (in fact floods)
typo
All displays of virality, feminine
hoho: & bottle it!
In the dregs of the closet mother finds stash of oldletters from
aunts in Scotland, and one from her mother. Sits down, reads with
relish and emotion. Closet redressed! Roxunne come out in the
Milky Way. Light reading. Holy cow! Lifting off the parody-raised,
moebius, loop-sided roof projection.
Fractured, fractal allegory, signed disasymboled immanence.mascara-rading,/mascowting
out-putting
out!-little
Klee-shade fires
of creation. Rocky theatre in the asymmetrical shied-away nose is
as big as your . . . pause, laughs from the set up chorus of ludic
matrons but no comeback comet Yeti in Nelson, A.D. flush with
the last scene where-ing the honestly untouchingdown movie
/
the howlful breasts like pillows
from the mouth of the wolf1 naif other-wise
,
well
/ -spoken
Rousseau-piped-up
Roxanne really nowhere too, dissolved
into the name-saken movie about projection thoughtfully
antiabsorptively
screening the audience out-onto
the street again
following the nose extended to the play in plain as your background noise ,held-over nightly till the Zongueur dawng Brecht
face
/
key-oaty,
51
52
CHARLES NOBLE
The first man grabbed the tail
and the circus dragged on
into the night of its death.
The first man on the one horse open
was splitting
Retro Fit
THE HYSTERICAL
Of The Operation
MALE
53
54
ChXRLES NOBLE
Wearing a new shirt into
a plush mens wear shop
cool walnut panelling
back from the clean cement
the soft leather shiny shoes
pivot on. Addressing the thin
men hung on the racks. Like
a field marshal. Finding
a fortune cookie in the dark
platonic pocket.
Outsided a sports stadium
high white wall
lots of lawn in the afternoon
sun, lazy and hurting with some
energy. Play with the buffalo
for a while.
Going with your belly
ballooned out of your navel
in the back of the half-ton
bouncing to dinner
with the spare tire
over the fields eating dust.
II
BMIRROR
OF SEDUCTION
Photo:
Critical
Art Ensemble
5
-BTHE CONFESSION MIRROR:
PLASTIC IMAGES FOR SURGERY
Carole Spitzack
Introduction
The lucrative business of cosmetic or plastic surgery presents an
intriguing site for the deployment of contemporary power relations. l The
highly material illness of physical/aesthetic
imperfection
is cured
through complex and overlapping mechanisms of confession and surveillance. A patient confesses inadequacy to a physician-confessor
who
sees and evaluates; in the confessional process, the patient is supplanted
with the eye/I of the physician who functions together with the discourses of desire and consumerism.
As Michel Foucault tells us in The Eye of Power, the evaluative gaze
within institutional practices achieves its effects not because it emanates
from an all-powerful individual, but because the gaze is housed in an
apparatus of hierarchical power relations.* In this complex play of
supports, Foucault writes, the summit and the lower elements of the
hierarchy stand in a relationship of mutual support and conditioning,
a
mutual hold (power as a mutual and indefinite bk&mail).3As
in the
case of Benthams panopticon, power functions optimally when those
who are imprisoned come to guard their own actions, to embrace the
logic of surveillance in which they are caught and by which they are
defined. P&ion officials and convicts are equally trapped within the
institutional gaze.
58
CAROLE SPITZACK
THE HKSTERICAL
MXLE
59
60
CAROLE
SPITZACK
Surgeon
firmly in
I inspect
THE HYSTERICAL
iK4LE
6I
62
GIROILI! SPITZACK
THE HYSTERICALMALE
63
me. Can I be both at once, I ask jokingly. She smiles and says nothing,
answering my question. We remain in the small room until the Polaroid
photos are developed. Upon seeing the results, she remarks, Darkcolors
dont look very good in these pictures . . . they tend to drain you. You
doesnt necessarily mean me, I think. Yet, as I look down at my gray
sweater and black trousers, I recall that a sales clerk once said I should not
wear dark colors because they are unfeminine, and it occurs to me that
the receptionists
observation does refer to me.16 Looking slightly annoyed with my questionable taste, a bit sympathetic actually, she ushers
me to a third room.
The next room is an absolute study in contrasts, a symphony of imagery
placed so carefully that it looks, and may be, haphazard. Signs of medical
authority are plentiful. Enlarged, framed medical degrees cover one wall,
along with awards for recognized excellence in the practice of cosmetic
surgery and magazine reviews outlined in silver. A second wall consists
of floor-to-ceiling
bookshelves, making me slightly uneasy. Doctors are
supposed to know these things, the technical secrets of their profession.
They should not, in mid-surgery, have to consult the written word, the
doctrine. But in an odd way, the secrets are demystified, no longer
frightening,
when placed so clearly in my visual field. Adding to the
demystification
is another video machine;. this one showing actual
surgical procedures. A staff of happy professionals surrounding a relaxed
patient, the needles and knives almost beside the point, fading into the
background, into the skin, the body. The patient appears happy about the
prospect of her own effacement.
My eyes shift back to the bookcase, scanning a row of intimidating and
impressive titles, mostly having to do with the reconstruction
of body
parts-eyes, nose, breasts, thighs, chin, stomach, neck, ears. Suddenly I
see other kinds of expertise, The Psychology of Body Image, Beauty
Through Zhe Ages, telling me that my potential judge is schooled in the
ways of mind and culture as well as physiology. To underscore cultural
and political acuity, an eye for historical shifts, there before me are also
the biographies of Henry Kissinger and Gerald Ford, among others.
Covering a third wall and much of the table space are magazines of many
varieties. Playboy and Penthouseto BetterHomesand Gardens;mother
and whore, wife and mistress in the same room, confronting one another.
As Elizabeth Janeway observes, the images of virgin and whore, entrapped in each female body, serve to fragment a woman and perpetuate
a seemingly self-imposed mistrust of her body: Female a priori knowledge, then, cannot be taken as valid by the female selfwho is required by
the laws of otherness to live as a displaced person not only in mans world
but also within herself. Here, in the physicians office, the mistrust
works to encourage confession and consumption
because the male
physician, the other, is both knowlegable and centered, i. e., he,
unlike the fragmented female patient, is in a position to render an a priori
judgment.
64
CAROL!? SPATACK
THE HYSTERICAL
MALE
65
66
CAROL5 SPIZACK
67
1.
2.
Michel Foucault,
York: Pantheon
Ibid.,
ed. by Colin
Gordon,
New
p. 159.
Although
men are
marketing
strategies
women,
strategies
for men, surgeries
from the so-called
also consumers
of cosmetic
surgery,
albeit to a much lesser extent, the
designed
for male and female consumers
vary tremendously.
For
center on a correlation
between
surface beauty and self-knowledge;
function
to provide
competitive
advantages,
but are quite removed
pleasures
of becoming
a fantasy-ideal
based on appearance
alone.
Michel
Hurly,
The History
of Sexuality,
Vol. I: An Introduction,
Vintage Books,
1980, pp. 102-104.
Foucault,
New York:
Rosalind
Coward,
Female
York: Grove Press, 1985,
Desires:
How
pp. 19-84.
they
are Sought,
Bough4
trans.
by Robert
and Packaged,
New
68
CAROLE
SPIiZACK
7.
Ibid., p. 21.
8.
Mary Daly, Gyn-Ecology: The Met-a-Ethics of Radical Feminism, Boston: Beacon Press,
1978.
9.
see, Michel
Femininf~,NewYorkFawcettColumbineBooks,
13. Although it is arguable that cosmetic surgery is still restricted by economic circumstances, the shift in emphasis from elite to ordinary is significant as a power issue. The
shift implies easy availability; hence the rationale of I cannot afford it is discounted as
psychological blockage.
14. SusanGriffin,PomographyandSilence:Cu~turesRevengeAgainstNature,
Harper Colophon Books, 1982, p, 37.
NewYork
15. The before/after imagery is seductive because it contrasts the real and the ideal. For an
extended discussion of this phenomenon see, Carole Spitzack, Confession and Signification: The Systematic Inscription of Body Consciousness, TheJournal of Medicine
and Philosophy, 12 (1987), 357-369.
16. For a discussion of the internalization
17. Elizabeth Janeway, Who is Sylvia?: On the Loss of Sexual Paradigms in Women: Sex
and Sexuality, ed. by Catharine R. Stimpson and Ethel Spector Person, Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 1980; p. 6.
18. Brownmiller,
p. 15.
6
-BBLONDES
Teresa
Blonde in Black (The) 1903
Blonde Beast (The) 1923
Blonde Saint 1926
Blonde or Brunette 1927
Blonde For a Night (A) 1928
Blonde Crazy I931
Blonde Venus 1932
Blonde Captive (The) 1932
Blonde Bombshell (The) 1933
Blonde Dynamite 1937
Blonde Trouble 1937
Blonde Cheat 1938
Blonde For A Day I94?
Blonde Inspiration 1941
Blonde From Singapore 1941
Blonde Comet (The) 1941
Blonde and Groom 1943
Blond Fever 1944
Blonde From Brooklyn 1945
Blonde Ransom 1945
Blonde
Blonde
Blonde
Blonde
Blonde
Blonde
Blonde
Blonde
Savage I947
Ice 1948
Dynamite 1950
Bandit (The) 1950
Bait 1956
Blackmailer 1957
in Bondage 1957
Sinner 1957
Podlesney
They are nearly always blonde;
before the Fifties there was no
Blonde Fever, the Love Goddesses
had gone all across the spectrum
from dark blondes like Dietrich
to redheads like Hayworth to
brunettes like Gardner. Blondes
were so unheralded that both
Harlow and Turner took advantage
of black and white film to play
explosive redheads; in the
opening moments of the late
Thirties Ninotchka, the
narrative talks of the good old
days when sirens were brunettes,
not things on police cars. But for
the crumbling man, blonde is
essential-blonde, like a
little girl! Shirley Temple with
sex appendages! * 1
Blonde Alibi 1946
Its time . .. that the blonde glamor
girl dropped her modern offhand
manner and assumed the seductive
ways of the traditional charmer.
Blondes today are sexy and
exciting. But we should go further
than that. We should be dangerous
characters.2
I
,
70 TERESAPODLXSNEY
JeanHarlow-MarilynMonroe-DorothyMalone~Mami~VanDoren
VeronicaLake-GraceKelly-BrigitteBardot-J~dieFostertSandraDee
KimNovak-MaeWest-LanaTurner-CaroleLombard-BettyGrable-DianaDors-ConnieStevens-AnitaEkberg-ElkeSommer-JayneMansfield-JulieChristie-JeanSeberg-TuesdayWeld-TiplpiHedren-
ShelleyWinters-BarbaraPayton-IngerStevens-CaroleLandis-CarrollBaker-LeeRemick-FrancesFarmer-GoldieeanneEagels
MarleneDietrich-JudyHolliday-AngieDickinson-E
iksedgwick
MarionDavies-ThelmaTodd-CarolLynley-VirnaLisie ingerRogers
ZsaZsaGabor-JanetLeigh-SueLyon-IngridBergman-ConstanceTowers-DorisDay-PhyllisDiller-ShirleyTemple-Eva~arieSaintJoeyHeatherton-JeanWallace-KimBasingeF-No-rth-Madonna
1; .:
*+
72
TERESA PODLESNj?Y
is best glimpsed
through
the symptoms
73
it
on Jan. 30, 1925, in Chicago...It wasnt until the mid5Os,more than a decadeafter her film debut, that she
began to emerge as afine dramatic actress,projecting
an erotic blend of strength and vulnerability. a
Actress.Born VeraJayne Palmer, Apr.
19, 1933, Bryn Mawr, Pa. d. 1967. Bosomy sexpot of
Hollywoodfllms of the 50s and GOs...She...repeated
the
role [of/ a breathless, dizzy blonde a la Marilyn
Monroe...in most of her...fibns. But repetition didnt
seem to induce improvement no matter how many
times sheplayed the same role...9
MansfieldJayne.
Winters,
74
TERESAPODLESNEY
of difference:
Dorothy:.
THE HYSTERICALMALE
75
Marilyn:
Shelley:
women. I9
How much do we know about women? 2o
1953
Dr. A.C Kinseys report, Sexual.Behavior in the Human Female
English translation of Simone de Beauvoirs The SecondSex
The first edition of Pkzybqy magazine
I was once told that there was a possibility of excess. Once
upon a time, there was uncontainability.
(Certain movements, certain images.) Certain promises could not be
restricted by the filmic frame. (A look-no, a glance.)21 Is
the gaze male? 22 Once, there was meaning outside of
language, there was the notion that certain images (you
know I mean images of women) were able to signify much
more than narrative conventionwould
allow. (The camera
moves.) The reason for this excess of/in signification?
Perhaps the condition of unrepresentability
of womens
desire within the hegemonic and patriarchal structure of
cinematic codes. More likely, this excess can be attrib
uted to the mental habit of translating women into metaphor.23 (Someone lied.) I realize that excess of meaning
really means overdetermination.
Every possibility of the
image of a woman on film to signify something other than
male desire (or male fear, same thing)24 has always already
76
TEh!ESAPODL??.SNEY
been accounted for. Playing the futures market in images.
Certain promises can not be restricted by the filmic framethat is, until the camera moves.
77
The Actors Studio had given actors a chance to explore their emotions
in a new technique of preparing for a role. This technique, the Method,
called for greater concentration
by an actor in order to enable him to
draw on inner experiences, private moments, to create a natural
response to situations constructed within a script. Ifan actor could feel
the role, acknowledge those traits in the scripted character that the actor
shared, if he could become the character, his performance could be so
much more believable because it would be so much more rea1.32 The
world began to take notice. Within a few years,. . .the termspctors Studio
and the Method would be bandied about as many came to consider the
workshop and the acting technique to bethe theatrical phenomenon
of
the fifties.33 UIn the public mind.. .Marlon Brando and James Dean.. .were
the quintessential Method actors-intense,
instinctive, rebellious.34
MascuNnism started with the Method. The Method Actor looked at the
Sex Doll and thought her empty and unworthy; he turned to the mirror
and the other man. 35
Desirability
is the quality that women in the fijIYes were urged to
attain in order to make men (and thereby themselves) happy.[W]hat
constitutes desirability in women...is a set of implied character traits,
but before it is that it is abo a zSocial$osition, for the desirable woman
is a white woman. The typical pLaymate is white, -and most often
blonde... 36
Why Blonde?
Several discourses that (en)gender the blonde phenomenon locate and
play themselves out in the biography of Kim Novak. Kim is the last
complete construction of the studio system (Jayne Mansfield being the
last incomplete
construction),
the final image of Woman created by
Harry Cohn before he died. Cohn actually advertised his stars as creations, proud of the fact that he manufactured
Rim to replace Rita
Hayworth and compete with Marilyn Monroe. Two of the films that
Novak stars in are films precisely about the construction of a woman in
another womans image, inspired by the (necrophilic)
desires of a man
(Wrtfgo, dir. Alfred Hitchcock, 1958 and The Legend of Lylah Glare, dir.
Robert Aldrich, 1968. In Kiss Me StupiG dir. Billy Wilder, 1964, Kim
plays a B-girl who imitates a mans wife, at his suggestion.). Rim states
frequently that she never wanted to be an actress, a job that the other
blondes in this essay fought actively for. Kim Novaks whole story is one
of being done-to, not against her will, but because she had none. Her
story allows entrance into another story that would seem to be excluded
from discussion by the very nature of the (blonde) body under analysis:
Rim is the first big Hollywood blonde to become.involved
in an interracial scandal-a
romance with Sammy Davis, Jr.-, a scandal that
addresses directly Richard Dyers notion of the blonde as, first and
foremost, a white woman.
78
TERESAPODLESNEY
It was in someones best interest to create the bottle
blonde Hyperwoman as paradigmatic ideal. Who were the
people she could never be?
Be all that you can be. Which means nothing. Cheated and
mistreated. Big fucking deal. Aftershave on your collar told
a tale on you. Social climbers. Eurotrash. Expensive leather
shoes from London. And here I am, guilty of it all because
I wantto bleach my hair so hell be interested in me again.
It wont work. We both know it wont. Two weeks later1
go through his stuff looking for clues. I fmd a copy of@ack
Beaver and Lesbian Lust.
The first time I bleach my hair it is.spring. Two dayslater,
it is Easter weekend. I am wearing an Easter bonnet. I step
off the bus and into the crowd. Recognizing me through
the process of elimination, mom smiles Catholically, revealing/reveling
in years of suffering. Why did you do
that? When I was in high school, only a certain kind of girl
bleached her hair.
cameraman).NotonlywasJeanHarlowoneofMonroesidoki;Monroe
had her hairperoxided by Harlows beautician.38
Kim:
As with...Jean Harlow, something in Kims nature caused her to embrace thefilm camera with a soulful abandon...39
Shelley:
THE HYSTERICAL
&ALE
79
80
TERESAPODLESNEY
box-o&e
star, is a replaceable commodity. Stars merely wear the hype
of the one and only to market in order to mask the similarity of their
functions. It comes as no surprise that fifties America, a time of the
glorification
of the mass produced object (Keep up with the Joness!
You can have one just like theirs!), a time of WonderBread
and
subliminal advertising, 46 should also be a time that revels in/reveals a
preference for replaceable babes on screen.* But, why blonde?**
We were smoking cigarettes and talking about blondes,
plaid perfume on my breath. I mean Ive been drinking
scotch.49 True confessions. I am telling why I bleached
my hair. Whyd you bleach yours?
Invoking the name and image of Marilyn Monroe, both Richard Dyer
and Angela Carter attempt to theorize the blonde phenomenon.50 Richard
Dyer begins with the notion that the ultimate embodiment
of the
desirable woman is above all a white woman, and not just white but
, blonde, the most unambiguously
white you can get...Blondeness,
especially platinum (peroxide)
blondeness, is the ultimate sign of whiteness.sl For Dyer, the blonde works because she is racially unambiguous (p. 44), able to signify in her petrified state the most prized
.possession of white patriarchy. (p. 44) If the blonde is the ,most prized
possession of white men, it follows that, in white patriarchal discourse,
she would be theenvy of all other races. (p. 43)
pink-
Fhat doesit saj about racialpurity that the bestblondes have all been
brunettes (Harlow, Monroe, Bardot)? I think it says that we are not as
white as we think. I think it says that Pure is a Bore. s4
Angela. Carter picks up on the. connection
between chastity and
blondeness in her analysis of the blonde phenomenon,
yet her reading
differs from Dyers in that the race of the blonde is considered as a given,
i.e:, it is not considered at all. Rather, Carter reads the chaste blonde
through Sades story of Justine .ss Carter argues that, because a womans
success in Hollywood is first and foremost about sex, but a womans
success in American society is first and foremost about virtue, a tension
THE HYSTERICALX4X.E
81
arises in the fifties. The cultural product of this tension was the Good
Bad Girl, the blonde, buxom and unfortunate sorority of Saint Justine,
whose most notable martyr is Marilyn Monroe.s6 Carters analogous
analysis is severely limited, though poetic. She asserts that [t]he identity
of the blonde was .the most commercially viable one available. But why
blonde? Certainly this commercial viability is part of the blonde phenomenon, not the cause of it. The argument continues to wander afield
as Carter maintains that, if she voluntarily took up blondehood,
she
alwa s voluntarily took upon herself the entire apparatus of the orphan
(p. 6 1. Ag am
. off the mark, Carter speaks of the blondes physical
fragility -u Her fragility is almost the conscious disguise of masochism.. . ))
(p. 65). While Justine is indeed a frail, masochistic orphan, I suggest that
none of the blondes in this essay conform to this image, at least, not on
film or in the Hollywood press. It is only as we read about their private
lives that we read how fucked up, lonely, and miserable all the blondes
really were. Each of the blondes in my story has her own, pathetic,
lonely, please-take-care-of-me
story.
When the roots start to show, you can easily see that shes no natural
blonde. Mind you, not that she ever thought she was fooling anyone.
Just like the girl next door, shed say. Just like.
1
Blond is hot-so say the hair-color hotshots east and west.Hotter than
its beensinceMonroeandBardot. Thereason?Haircolor hasfollowed
fashions lead into a more.glamorous era, and blond has never been
easier to attain or more natural-looking. It allsoundsgood but some
basic home truths have to befaced before the decision to change hair
color is made...lhe good news is that there is a world of difference
between the maintenance necessay yesterday and today. First, colorists had to learn that coloring hair all one color (giving birth to the
term bottled blond) resulted in only artificial looks and theperennial
problem of dark-root grow-out. Eventually they learned to color hair
strand by strand, often at oblique angles,intermingling new color with
original, resulting in more natural-looking hair that could also grow
out more naturally.s57
Blonde is.hot. Hotter than its been since Monroe and Bardot. The
reason? Any woman who has chosen to bleach her hair blonde at any
time, in any place, since the fifties has willfully/willingly
written herself
into the image matrix created with and inscribed upon the memory of
those blondes in their precorpse state (death comes so horribly, tragically, to the blonde, yet fulfiis and continues the process of her signification), augmenting, with her look, an accretion of meaning that of
necessity reflects/refers to the perfect post-WWII product, that ultimate
sign of US global primacy, the bottle-blonde Hyperwoman. Hair color has
followed fashions lead into a more glamorous era. Could this more
glamorous era have anything to do with a widespread backlash against
82
TERESAPODLESNEY
feminism, a post-feminist
call for girls to. be girls? (Remember postWWII US and the propaganda drive to get women out of the factories and
back into high heels.) Hair color has followed fashions lead. Why is
fashions lead away from exotic parts of the world-recently-conquered in fashions search for global beauty, i.e., ethnic types, i.e.,
dark haired, dark eyed and dark skinned models-and back to a celebmtion of the land of blonde, blue-eyed girls-nextdoor?S*
One shouldnt look to the discourse of fashion to include women of
colors other than white, unless. it is a discourse that was created to
specifically sell or sell to these women. The chemical technologies (and
the language) that have made bleached blonde hair more naturallooking were, obviously not developed for African- or Latin-American
women, whose desire for blonde hair is many things, but rarely a search
for natural color. Yet due to the improved bleaching systems, it is just
these women who now have access to truly blonde hair-older systems
were only capable of lifting their hair to a reddish-orange
color.S9
[Bllond has never been easier to attain, and it is for this reason that
fashion proscribes strict rules against unnatural
hair color while it
continues to hype the blonde. Paradoxically then, the blondes who are
the center of media attention are still the white women who choose
bottle blonde. The blondest of these blondes-and with forty years of the
blonde phenomenon=informing
her every move, the blondest blonde
ever-is Madonna.
I wanted to get my hair really white, as white as Edie, but
I am poor and cant afford to have a pro dye it for me so I
do it myself, so I leave the bleach on for six hours. I get into
the shower to rinse the bleach out of my hair and the hair,
short, is slimy; like seaweed. It is also falling out. A chill
runs through my body as I, fascinated, keep lifting my
hands to my head, running my hands through my hair,
rinsing my hands under the water. The hair is clogging the
d&in. At last it or I stop, get out of the tub. I am missing a
patch of hair in the front of my head, but the hair thats left
is white.
THE HYSTERICALMALE
83
Not since you could count Kim Novaks by the dozen has there been
.such a spate of women unabashedly imitating the style of a star. I
remember with some amusement the wanna-bes of the mid-eightiesadolescent girls slipping deliriously into bustiers, crop-tops, crucifixes
and mousse, as oblivious to their status as simulacra as Baudrillards
Napoleons (Its a nice style. Its different. Nobody else does it.).62
Theoreticians
of popular culture, furating upon the droves of teens
rushing to purchase a look, needed to somehow figure how and what
Madonna signified-amoral
vixen [or] post-feminist libertarian?63 The
semiology of fashion had made style fodder for theoretical journals and
TVs cultureexperts
as well as the trades; forgetting what Sally had
known about the signifiers of media success thirty years prior, academics
acted like ad-women and -men, conspiring with Madonnas publicists to
construct the enigma. &i Fans, being fans, tend to ingest any and every bit
of information they can about their idol, and the discourse of cultural
studies blended with newspaper- and fanzine-speak into one big information pool. Having heard that they embrace Madonnas style because they
never had the nerve to rebel themselves,65 or because she showed
them that it is okay to flaunt femininity-contra
the lesson that feminists
had been teaching for the last two decades-, and suddenly being in the
center of media (and family) curiosity and attention, asked, finally, why
they like the things they like, the pre- and adolescent wanna-bes began
to de/in -scribe their desire in the terms they had gleaned from the media.
These articulations of desire, constructed from and for the media but rendered natural-the
real feelings of this frequently-silenced
but recentlyrecuperated group-served
as a base for more investigation
into Madonna-as-signifier-of-historical-importance,
quotations used to legitimize
the tautological
methodology
of this type of cultural studies. That
annoying ode to naivete, Out of the mouths of babes:, becomes in this
instance a relatively simple, safe and marketable way to answer the eternal question, What do women want?.&
84
TERESA PODLESNEY
THE HYSTERKAL
illALl?
85
1.
2.
Kim Novak, quoted by Stanley Handman for WEEKEND Magazine (vol. 7 no. 20.1957)
p. 18.
3.
Toni Morrison, TheBZuestEye (New York: Washington Square Press, 1970) pp. 97-98.
This text is part of a work in progress, known in certain circles as The Blondes Project.
I would not have been able to offer up this fragment of analysis without the critical
readerly support offered by Avery Gordon, Andrew Haase, Sandra Joshel and Art Simon.
4.
Dissection because, of course, we have to get inside of a thing to fully and completely
understand it. Although this (scientific) notion seems to conflict with the thesis acknowledged in note 19, a thesis that implies that, as a woman, my understanding, that
is, the connection between perception of a thing and complete comprehension of its
significance, is instantaneous and is in no way dependent on protracted contemplation.
Unfortunately, the meaning that is immediately apparent to me, the meaning that I
receive in the blink of an eye, cannot be disseminated asrapidly and thus requires that
I enter into protracted contemplation (that is, engage in an epistemology that is alien to
(New
York:
86
TERESA PODLESNEY
my nature),
5.
Film work also, but not only, considered in the manner of Christian Metz in The
Imaginary Sfgnifier
(Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1982) as analogous to
Freuds conception of dream work.
6.
,USELLE, vol. V, no. 10 (June 1990), p. 4 (Go Blond, by Mary Ellen Banashek).
7.
Ibid., p. 174.
8.
9.
Katz, p. 773.
(New
The Lust
and
15. PeteMartin,
pp. 17-18.
WiUActing
Bodies:
SpoflMarflyn
Film
Stars
Temptation
Socfety
Monroe?(NewYork:
(New
of Chist.
York: St. Martins Press,
Pocket Books, Inc., 1957)
16. Max Amow to Harry Cohn on the occasion of Kim Novaks second screen test.
Quoted by James Haspiel, Kim Novak: Yesterdays Superstar. Films in Review, vol. 29
#2, Feb. 1978, p 76.
17. These films will have to speak for themselves; in this fragment there is no place for a
discussion of them.
18. For me, of course, not allowed to be my mother, who, by the way, doesnot have blonde
hair now, but did as a child, but, of course; always conscious of the working of the
unconscious desire not to acknowledge her as Other, but as abad obje& and therefore
my self [see Melanie Klein, A Contribution to the Psychogenesis of Manic-Depressive
States, in The Selected Mefanfe Kfefn, edited by Juliet Mitchell (New York: The Free
t
Press, 1986), pp. 116145.1 .
19. Joan Biviere, Womanliness as a Masquerade, reprinted in Formations
Victor Burgin et al, eds., (New York: Methuen, 1986), p. 42.
of Fantasy,
20. Question posed on the cover of LOOK magazine as a caption to the cover photo of Kim
Novaks face and bare shoulders as she apparently Lies in bed looking out at the viewer
(31 May 1955).
21. A mere glance is enough for her to see the difference right away, ,and, it must be
admitted, its significance too. What is it, then, that she notices so quickly? Sarah
Kofman, ihe Enigma of Woman:
Woman
in Freuds
Writings,
translated by Catherine
Porter (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1985) p. 171. The quote within the quote is
fromSigmundFreud,
Femininity, 1932. Kofmanssourceis theGermanversionof
Gesammelte
Werke,
18 volumes (Frankfurt and London, 1952-1968) which Kofman
translates into French herself because the existing French translation is quite dreadful
(p. 14). This reference is to the connection between perception and knowledge; in this
(female) case, immediate
knowledge, with respect to the controvesy over Freuds
theory of female castration.
07
22. The gaze ls not necessarily male (literally), but to win and activate the gaze, given our
language and the structure oftheunconscious, is to be in the masculine position. E. Ann
Kaplan, Is The Gaze Male?, inPo2uws of Desire: ZbePoZitfcs of Sexuality, AM Snltow,
Christine Stansell; and Sharon Thompson, eds. (New York: Monthly Review Press,
19831, p. 319.
23. Rosi Braidotti, as quoted by Teresa de Lauretls in Technologtes of Gender (Bloomington:
Indiana University Press, 1987), p. 24.
24. [T] he horror Inspired by Medusas head is always accompanied by a sudden stiffening
(Starrwerden), which signifies erection...Womans genital organs arouse an inseparable
blend of horror and pleasure; they at once awaken and appease castration anxiety.
Kofman, p. 85.
25. Hollywood
26. Boyd Martins Show Talk, a syndicated column printed ln Z7ze Courier;rournal
of
Louisville, Kentucky, 1 March, 1959. Thls particular column ls titled, Now Take Jayne
Mansfield: Shes an outstanding example of processing, the Hollywood technique for
developing stars.
27. Actress Hildegard Knefs reflections on Marilyn Monroe, quoted by Anthony Summers
in Goddess: the Secret Lives of Marilyn Monroe (New York: Onyx, 1986) p. 57.
28. Kim Novak: Yesterdays Superstar, p. 76.
\
29. Shelley Winters, quoted by Maurice Zolotow in his article, A New Shelley Winters?,
The American Weekly, 12 February, 1956, p. 6.
30. By referring to the other half of the screen, I do not mean to imply the actual co-stars
of any given film. This term was suggested to me by Sandra Joshel as a way to talk about
the iconic construction of radical difference necessitated by the gendered image
discourse of the fifties. Because I was seeing the blonde as the female component of
thls image discourse without asking the question Who does this image necessarily
reflect?, Sandra suggested that I look at the other half of the screen. Who were the most
famous male actors of tbls period, and how were they constructed?
31. The Actors Studio served as trahting ground for many women as well, but Method
actresses were the unglamorous antitheses of the blondes; these women worked at their
acting, while the blondes just had to be. Shelley Winters and Marilyn Monroe both
trained at the Studio, after they became invested in acting as a craft Winters actually
dumped her blonde sexpot image after her time with Kazan and Strasberg, staying away
from Hollywood for almost four years and doing serious work, to excellent reviews,
on Broadway. Monroe, however, was unable to live outside of the blonde phenomenon,
even as she struggled to be taken seriously. She exemplified the impossibility of a blonde
being anything but a blonde, ln spite of the spate of biographers who insisted that she
possessed more intelligence than she was given credit for.
32. The use of real emotion to create a Bctional character within the 2-D spectacle of the
cinema is a paradox that ties in to the same problems of fixing identity referred to in the
discussion of processing blondes. Thank you to Art Simon for emphasizing the
importance of a fixable (in the sense of controllable, nameable) identity in US society of
the fifties. Art has also contributed many other crucial comments to thls fragment;
among them, the importance of the blond as a function of r&se-en-sctine, and the
invisible question referred to ln note 48.
33.
The Actors StudiotA Players Place, by David Garfield (New York Collier Books, 1984)
p. 115. For the purposes of my essay, I refer to the Method with the generalizing
tendencies of the 1950s media and popular opinion, because the use of the term with
88
TERESA PODLESNEY
those overtones of cultic significance it developed during the early f&es originated
outside the Studio (Gartield, p. 168). A discussion of Method acting is; of course, not
as simple as that, and for those readers concerned with a richer description of the
Method and its history, Garfields book will prove quite helpful.
34. Garfield, p. 155. While these actors (and others) may have been hyped as real and
natural by the (hetero) press, gay men constructed of these images an iconography of
a different sort (see Kenneth Angers Scorpio Rising[1964] for an illustration).
35. Burchlll, p. 175.
36. Dyer, 1986, p. 42.
37. Clipping dating from 5657; no further source information
available.
40. Anonymous
clipping
Novak:
Reluctunt
Goddess
(New
Press,
dated 1950.
22.
43. JoeHyams, EverybodysCopyingKlm,THISlPE~magazine,October12,1958,p.
In 1958, Kim Novak simulated herself simulating another woman who was simulating
yet another woman, the original, in Hitchcocks Vertigo.
.
44. Ibid., p. 23.
45. When the real is no longer what it used to be, nostalgia assumes its full meaning.
Baudrillard, Simulations,
p. 12.
46.
47.
Finally this Is very democratic. What more could the freeworld offer than the ability to
become the ideal through buying a bottle. In this context, nonconformity
is clearly
willful. If Im not blonde, then Im clearly a communist. This comment, offered to me
by David James, continues the observations on the hysterical theater of identity that was
fifties US society. The absurdity of these positlonlngs-bottle
blonde as ideal woman,
simulacra as ideal US citizens--is replaced by something more Eke terrorwhen we realize
with what force the validity of these positionlngs is still being manufactured.
48. The notion of history seems to come too easy in this analysis. If Why blonde? is the
question that most visibly motlvates this analysis, the invisible question is Why the
fifties?. This fragment of an analysis cannot adequately tell the story of all areas from
which the blonde phenomenon creates the possibility of signhication. All it can do is
suggest which stories there are to be told.
49. Lyric from Under the Big Black Sun, sung by Exene Cervenka, music by Cervenka and
John Doe. From the album of the same name by the band X (01982, Elektra/Asyhtm
Records, Los Angeles, CA).
THE HYSTERICAL
AGILE
89
50. Dyer, Chapter One ofHeavenly Bodies; Carter, Z7zeSadeian Woman and the Ideology
of Pornography (New York: Pantheon Books, 1978).
51. Dyer, Heavenly Bodies, pp. 4243. All further page references to follow ln the text.
52.
Morrison, p. 20.
53.
And indeed there ls more. Richard Dyerwrltes an essay for Screen magazine: The Last
Special Issue on Race? (vol. 29 no. 4 Autumn 1988). Dyers essay is entitled White.
Throughout the essay, Dyer has been accumulating evidence in favor of his thesis that,
through the history of American film, black characters are put into the service of
representing life (lust, sensuality, emotion, nonrational behavior) within the confines
of a rlgld, bourgeois, Reasoncenteredframe.
If blacks have more life thanwhites, then
it must follow that whites have more death than blacks. @. 59) At the end of the essay
he returns to his thoughts on Marilyn Monroe. In my essay, this fragment of an analysis,
there ls no room to tell a story of how death could possibly fit into the blonde
phenomenon, but there is room to say that there ls a story.
54.
Burchill, p. 103.
55.
Sade tells two stories of two sisters, Justine and Juliette, children ofthe bourgeoisie, who
are left to fend for themselves at the beginning of their adolescence when their father
dies and leaves them penniless. Juliette chooses to make her way in the world any way
she can, and in a Sadeian world, this amounts to whoring, killing and stealhag. Justine,
by way of subtle contrast, clings to the lessons she learned as a good bourgeois girl. She
refuses to cheat, steal, and lle, but above all else, she refuses to sacrifice her vlrglnlty. As
a Sadeian woman, Justines purity ls viewed as the cause of her misfortunes, and she
ls punished for some 300 pages for her stubborn (and ridiculous) adherence to her
Chrlstian teachings.
56.
57.
William
58.
Ben Wattenbetg of the American Enterprise Institute sees [the US] as the unipower
that has vanquished all other contenders. Under a doctrine he calls neo-manifest
desthxuianism he would spread [the USs] unique culture to benighted comers of the
globe via the aggressive marketing of movies and the franchising of U.S. university
centers abroad. n What, Us Worry?, editorial in TheNation , May 21, 1990, p. 692.
Geist,
59. Finally this ls very democratic. What could more could the freeworld
ability to become ideal through buying a bottle. See note 47.
60. Madonna, as quoted in the Los Angeles Times ,2 March 1990 (Thoroughly
Madonna, by Barbara Foley, page El).
61.
Thoroughly
Modem
62. Jean Anne Difranko, the 1985 winner of Macys (a New York department store that
devoted a whole boutique to the Boy Toy style) Madonna Look-Alike Contest.
63.
entertainment
64. Cited earlier in this text, Sally says, Ill know Ive arrived when I see a woman with the
same hair color as mine (note 44).
65. Madonnarama,
p. 40.
90
TERESA PODLESNEY
of the discourse of post-structuralism to enable me to even begin to think about
mumbUng something about my desires as a woman, if I cant teII you why I want to be
Madonna, why should a twelve-year-old be assumed to have the answer?
70. Witness the blond Madonna on the cover of Aprils Vanity Fair, and the simultaneously
raven-tressed Madonna on the cover of Cosmopolitan.
71.
Madonnarama,
7i.
Kevin Sessums, White Heat, Vanity his, vol. 53 no. 4, April 1990, p. 148.
~~39-40.
_______.~
p-*11--.^.----
Until
It Bled
--
SALLY
H~YWOO~ '
love'ssweetharvest
7
-ICONFESSIONS OF A HARLEQUIN READER:
ROMANCE AND THE MYTH OF MALE MOTHERS
Angela Miles
Like most women, I think, I have read one or two Harlequins over the
years when nothing else was available. All I saw, at first, were sexist,
predictable, often poorly written stories with boorish heros and embarrassingly childish heroines. They have a rigid formula which, unlike
many other aspects, has remained unchanged over the years. In fact, the
guide sheet for aspiring authors warns that the plot must not interfere
with the romance and asks them to make their manuscript approximately (!) 188 pages in length. As one romance writer succinctly put it:
In the Roman rose the plot is always the same: attraction followed by
repulsion; despair at the heros indifference; jealousy; reconciliation
on
the last page. That means the last page, literally. Never earlier.
Imagine my surprise when I first found myself actually enjoying a
Harlequin. It was one summer when I stayed at a friends cottage and it
rained for days and days. I lay on a comfortable sofa, beside a warm wood
stove and read what was available. The third Harlequin was a very
different read from the first, and I found myself enjoying it. Once the
pattern was familiar (it is so predictable that its clear by the third book),
it becomes interesting to see how each author works variations on a
theme; however, there is much more involved.
Knowing the Harlequin formula made reading the books an emotional
experience in a way that I didnt begin to understand until much later. In
this paper I will argue that the enormous emotional power of Harlequin
reading, and the romance fantasy in general, can be explained by the fact
that the hero is in fact a mother figure for the reader/woman.
When a
reader knows the Harlequin formula she can identify the hero figure
94
ANGELA MILES
95
woman, heterosexual, or lesbian who does not know, if only from her
teenage years, the attraction of the knight in shining armor who will take
over her life, give it meaning and take care of all her troubles for ever
after.
Yet the fact that the appeal of romance is at least recognized, if not
shared by most women including feminists even when it is marginal to
their lives and self-image, is not used as a resource by feminist analysts of
Harlequins. This departure from one of the basic tenets of feminist
research has, I think, weakened much feminist analysis of Harlequins.
Not surprisingly feminists find deeply negative messages in these
books. The plots often seem to legitimize general male boorishness and
lack of respect for women, to reinforce the sexual double standard, and
to infantilize women who are usually younger, more innocent, lower in
status, less well established, less sure of themselves, and more vulnerable
than the hero. They tend to perpetuate the myth of womens powerlessness and necessary dependence on men. Their central presumption
(with a few notable recent exceptions) is that contentment and meaning
in life not only can but must be found in love and marriage.
Feminist critics have noted that these messages betray complexities
of life and approve and confirm the present structure of society,z they
reinforce the prevailing cultural code [that] pleasure for women is
men, and they are not radical critiques of capitalist patriarchy.* All of
which is true but unidimensional,
for these critics focus on what
Harlequins do for capitalist and patriarchal ruling groups without addressing the equally important and more interesting question of what
they do for women. For women not only choose to buy millions of these
books, but have a large and direct input into their shape and content
through Harlequin reader panels, survey research, and newsletters.5 The
popularity of Harlequin Romances is as much womens creation as it is
Harlequin Enterprises. In order to understand this we need to know not
just how their explicit messages serve the system or what the words of
the books say, but what they become for the women who read them (or,
as some would say, construct the experience as readers)!
Some feminists have recently begun to treat the woman reader as an
active subject and ask this question, but even they tend to treat her as
someone completely different from themselves. Janice Radway, for
instance, was among the first feminist writers on popular romance to
accord the woman reader an active role in the process. On the basis of
important original research, including indepth interviews with readers,
she criticizes other feminists for reading Harlequins as simply oppressive
myths. But she does so in terms that emphasize the separation rather than
connection between researcher and researched, arguing that we should
not presume our own reading [is] a legitimate rendering of the meaning
of the genre for those who usually read it.6 She describes the process of
interpretation
as: Trying to render the complex significance of events
and behaviours as they are experienced by members of a culture for
96
ANGELA MILES
others not in or of that culture.7 She also presents her findings as the
product of an interrogation of one cultural system by another carried out
through the interaction of ethnographer and informant.*
There is no doubt that interpretation
is necessary and that there are
truths to be discovered that (we) readers have not articulated. There is
also little doubt that the language of a scholarly paper or dissertation is
not the same as that of Harlequins or of (we) Harlequin readers; but it is
a foreign or second language for women researchers also, however
proficient we may be in it. We should be sure that our method does not
deny us the use of our first and shared language as women, even when
we use the second as well. For this shared language and culture is a
resource we bring as women to our analysis of women, and romance is
an area of our culture that must raise important personal questions for us
as feminists, which, in turn, lends itselfwell to an interrogation from our
own lives.,
My experience as a feminist and Harlequin reader starkly raised the
question What do they offer me? I began reading Harlequins before
they were even slightly influenced by the values of the womens movement (see below), and as a feminist I often found their message/story
offensive. I had to suspend or censor these judgement/feelings
in order
to enjoy the book. The fact that I could do this suggested that there was
another level of meaning for me; something less explicit that appealed to
me and presumably to other readers; something that could help to
explain why this simple and threadbare formula should so attract
women, and how women, who know it to be false, can lose themselves
in it; in other words, something that could begin to answer the question
What is the myth of romance for women?
The Hero as Nurturer
One thing that.1 saw very quickIy as I pondered this was that the hero
in Harlequin Romances may be supercilious, arrogant, and patronizing
but he is also and above all independent and self-sufficient. This point is
often made in detailed contrast to the other man who is a common
feature of Harlequins. These other men are weak, childish, dependent,
sullen, and needy. They whine and pout and constantly demand attention and mothering from the heroine:
Sullenly he pushed her hand away. Briefly Kelly was
reminded of a little boy who had been thwarted in a game
(Kellys Man, Rosemary Carter, HP362: 5).
This wasnt the Roger she knew-this man was a stranger,
a petulant spoilt boy. Her own anger rising, she said the
unforgivable thing. She said, Roger darling, do grow up!
(A Very Special Man, Marjorie Lefty, 2282: 11).
97
explicit:
The first night ever he had stayed [at her apartment] Gavin
had flaked out, with Elizabeth tucking him in like a baby.
It even occurred to her then, that a large part of her
affection for him was maternal. In many ways Gavin was
a huge child, and he would probably require a lot of
mothering.
I cant do it! She said aloud in piteous
resignation. (And she breaks off the engagement. Broken
Rhapsody, Margaret Way, HP549: 102.)
The implicit
explicitly:
contrast between
98
ANGELA MILES
Romances
99
Infantilization,
and Resistance
All this is true but it does not explain the undeniably negative and
unpleasant behaviour of the hero which is often also a prominent theme.
He can be domineering,
patronizing, dismissive, arrogant, unpredictable, highhanded, bossy, incommunicative,
bullying, aggressive, and he
even occasionally uses force. There is also the even more unpleasant
infantilization
of the heroine. She often finds herself needing help, and
she often reacts to the hero in silly and childish ways. Why is that an
apparently necessary part of the formula?
When I first began to read Harlequins I couldnt understand the
foolishness of it all. Both hero and heroine behave in unbelievably
ridiculous ways, misunderstand each other all the time, and do things
that in any other context would jeopardize any respect, and therefore
concern, the reader might have. I thought I had solved the problem when
I realized that it was quite a feat to keep two people who are meant to be
together, who are deeply and madly in love, apart for 188 pages. The
authors must have to resort to boorishness on the part of the hero and
100
ANGELA MILES
silliness on the part of the heroine to do this. But this is not the full
explanation.
Ann Snitowl and others read the heros bullying and the heroines
THE HYSTERICAL
Emotional
MALE
10 1
Power
102
ANGELA MILES
demanding
ambivalence of our relationship
with an unpredictable,
tender, threatening, all-powerful mother.
True Love, as an unconditional
love which comes unsought and
unearned without the heroine actively seeking it and regardless of what
she does to antagonize the hero, is like our dream of mother-love. The
heros nurturing and domineering behaviour, two aspects of the childhood experience of mothering,
are presented as two constant and
interacting themes, often evoked with symbols of mother, and child in
scenes which echo mother/child
images, and involve explicit references
to the male as caretaker/mother
and the female as a motherless child.
The heroine is usually an orphan or someone who has been neglected
as a child. Margaret Jensen, in a survey of 200 Harlequins, found that at
least one-third of the heroines are orphans.9 Most of the others only have
a father or an uncaring and selfish mother or stepmother.
The few
heroines who have an intact family are thousands of miles away from
them.
My mother died when I was two, a road accident, Elyn
said briefly, her smile fading (DesertFZower,Dana James,
2632: 22).
My mother died when I was three, . . . I cant remember
her (The Trodden Paths, Jacqueline Gilbert, 2492: 79).
Her parents had died within weeks of each other after a car
crash and she was virtually alone in the world (The Rainbow Days, Jean S. MacLeod, 1719: 5).
Nicole had never been envious of anyone in her life, not
even the girls whose lives held the one thing lacking in her
own: a mother (Walk in the Shadows, Jayne Bowling,
HP247: 19).
Her mother had died shortly after Stacey was born leaving
her globe-trotting husband with the unfamiliar and frightening task ofraising their child (No QuarterAsked, Violet
Winspear, HP124: 6).
Often they long for the mothering
THE HYSTERKAL
ikL4LE
103
She sat there for a long time, wishing desperately that she
had someone to turn to for advice, to confide in, but there
had been no one, not since her mother had died, and she
suddenly felt as lonely now as she had done in those first
terrible months of grief (Summer Fire,, Sally Wentworth,
HP456).
Tears filled her eyes as she tried to fight off the knowledge
that all this beauty and security could have been hers. She
could have grown up here, she could have swung in that
swing that hung from the lower limb of the silver birch by
the gate, as a baby she could have sat in the lovingly
preserved high-chair in the living-room. . . . she could have
called this wonderful place her home (Man of the High
Country, Mary Moore, 2349: 64).
Hence, of course the charges that Harlequin Romances deliberately
infant&e
the heroine to reinforce the sexist message that women are
childlike, vulnerable, and dependent. This is a damaging message that is
no doubt conveyed by the books, but it does not explain why a childlike
heroine is an unfailing feature of the Harlequin formulazo and why it is
appealing to women.
In fact, the emotional power of the Harlequin experience requires
that the reader regress to childhood in order to relive the vicissitudes of
the intense fear and love relationship with the mother. The heroine of a
IIarlequin usually does not know until the last page that the hero loves
her. The other 187 pages take the heroine and reader for an emotional
roller coaster ride focused intensely on:
l
the heroines losing fight against inevitable unconditional love for and
dependence on the hero/mother;
l
her deep ambivalence toward the her/mother
with sharp swings
between love and hate, admiration, and resentment;
l
the thrilling highs when she is noticed and nurtured by the hero/
mother;
l
the terrible loss when she is not, and fears of loss and separation from
him/her;
l
the searing pain and jealousy of her sibling rivalry with a woman
whom she thinks is preferred by the hero/mother;
l
the constant and intense desire for comfort and security through loss
of self and fusion with the her/mother;
l
the final ecstatic fulfillment of that wish.
All these components of the Harlequin formula are essential parts of
the myth/fantasy of fusion with the mother. The emotional power of the
tussles and antagonisms, tenderness and rivalry, closeness and distance
of the protagonists come from the readers reliving of the conflicted
mother/child
relationship in the secure knowledge of its eventual resolution.
104
ANGELA MILES
For some, the addictive aspect of this reading may come because it
provides only a false resolution. The resolution/fusion
is always left to the
last page of the book because it is the aim of the reading process,21 but the
comfort is tantalizingly
brief, gone as soon as the book is closed.
Continued release/comfort
can only be gained by picking up another
book.**
Certain types of activities, commonly shared by mother and child,
appear frequently enough in different Harlequins to earn the status of
themes. The hero and heroine shop for clothes for the heroine together;
he comforts her when she has bad dreams; he scolds her for risking
illness; he tucks her into bed and gives her medicine; he leads her by the
hand; restrains her physicallyfrom
running away, having tantrums and
so on. The heros maternal role is glaringly obvious in pervasive nurturing
scenes like those cited earlier and below:
[H]e leaned over to see that her door was safely locked
133).
It was exquisite relief when they sighted tents and Luke
would swing her up into his arms and carry her to the
camp fire, propping her round with blankets and sleeping
bags for comfort (Tiger Sky, Ruth E. Iver, 2244: 115).
There, there my love. Its all right. Just a dream. And the
arms lost their feeling of constriction
as a gentle hand
brushed the hair from Vernas sweat soaked brow (The
Sugar Dragon, Victoria Gorden, p. 138).
Jason. . . . took her into his arms, as gently as if shed been
a scared child. She clung to him, all the pent-up emotions
and tensions of the day breaking in a storm ofweeping. He
held her closely, stroking her head soothingly without
speaking(MoorZandMagic, ElizabethAshton, 1741: 155).
Later in the dark hours, reliving her ordeal she cried out his
name. He was beside her in a flash. She dreamed she was
lying in his arms, and when morning came, she found her
dream was real (The Little Imposter, Lilian Peake, HP206
190).
THE HYiSTEZKAL
MALL? 105
infantilizing
interac-
106
ANGELA MILES
Antonio exploded into anger. You have the impudence
to call me stubborn, and yet you refuse to take the quickest
and most comfortable way, even though you are soaked to
your skin! Mudre miu, Francesca, I shall soon lose my
temper with you if you do not behave.
Francesca glared at him indignantly and would have objected, but he reached for her left hand and almost crushed
her fingers with the hard strong pressure of his. Then
giving her a slight shake as he drew her alongside him he
started for the village, giving her little option but to go too,
and making very little allowance for her shorter stride as
she squelched along in her wet shoes (Traders Cay,
Rebecca Stratton, 2376: 132).
He took a step which brought him close and he stood over
her, tall and lean and formidable. Are you going to do as
youre told? he enquired softly. I mean what I say, Teri,
Ill dump you in that bath, clothes and all unless you obey
me (Enchanted Dawn, Anne Hampton, HPl32: 83).
He turned to stoop and drop a light kiss on the forlorn little
mouth, and said abruptly Is that tooth bothering you? A
little bit, she evaded his searching glance . . . . Youd
better make an appointment
to have it seen to straight
away, he said firmly. Do that this morning. Yes Jason,
she nodded (Mirandas Marriage, Margery Hilton, HQ 1742:
116).
Dont interrupt
Now drop your
an order! With
door decisively
123);
All right
be angry
but in the
him (Kiss
The hero/mother
is portrayed from the child/heroines
point of view
as unpredictable
and threatening. the heroines anger, resentment and
dislike vie with love for the upper hand. She wants her separate identity
and her connection to the mother/hero.
The heroines emotions encompass the ebb and flow of this love/hate, trust/distrust,
calm/storm, desire
for and fear of separation:
He held out his other hand to her. She went to him and
took it almost drowning in the flood of contradictory
emotion he aroused in her-resentment,
love, challenge,
passion-and longing for the giving of his hand to mean
more than it did, his fingers the merest light touch upon
hers in a clasp which was only guiding her up the stairs
(Pact Without Desire, Jane Arbor, 2297: 103).
Charleswas alwaysunpredictable.
She stole a quickglance
at his face. In the dim light from the .dashboard it was
anything but reassuring. Where had the tender lover of last
night gone to? Judy sighed as she tried to remember all the
wonderful words he had poured into her ears not twenty-
.108
ANGELA MIXES
four hours ago. It might just have been a dream (Spread
Your Wings, Ruth Clemence, 1193: 74).
Never before had she been as aware of a man as she was of
him: of his animal strength and the sheer physical magnificence of bone and muscle; of his sharp intelligence that
one moment could wound and the next Could warm (Man
in a Million, Roberta Leigh, HP127: 123).
ks always when they were alone together she had this
feeling of completeness, of utter content, as though nothing in the world could hurt her-except
himself (ConnelZys Castle, Gloria Bevan, 1809).
She recognized with astonishment that she could openly
defy Luke, yell at him and let herself go, yet turn to him in
need as if she had known him all her life (Tiger Sky, Rose
Elver, 2244: 59).
Tania Modleski has also noticed the heroines ambivalehce, particularly anger and rebellion toward the hero in the Harlequin formula. She
argues that the heroines revolt is a fantasy outlet for female resentment,
and that the life-threatening
accidents which dog the heroine in another
fured component
of the formula, are the logical extensions of this
resentment
in the fantasy of ultimate revenge .through self-destruction.23
More commonly than not, Harlequin heroines suffer life threatening
accidents. They are carried away by the tide, stranded in the desert, hit
by falling rocks, cut by sharp knives, run over by cars-all of which serve
to show how precious the women really are. Modleski calls these events
the heroines! disappearing act and argues that they are the only safe
way to channel the heroines (and readers) anger and frustration. It is
true that the wish to harm the other by harm to the self is the fantasy of
the powerless against the powerful. Interestingly, however, the original
and primal experience of this fantasy is, for us all, in relation to our
mother: Shell be sorry she treated me like that when she finds Im not
here tomorrow;
If I died tonight shed be in agony of grief; or If she
thought I were dying shed realise that she loves me.
1
Also, in this particular fantasy, power is not sought solely for revenge
but also to be loved, to be treasured, and to feel ones worth to the otherhero/mother.
It is no coincidence that the accidents in Harlequins, as in
our childhood fantasies, lead to tenderness and nurturing and often, if
not always, to avowals of love. The heroines accident sometimes makes
the hero aware of his love for her. It always and primarily gives her and
the reader an occasion to revel in that love, concern, and care. The reader
can regress to her powerful childhood needs and luxuriate in the wish
fulfillment of childish fantasies:
109
110
ANGELA MILES
deep blue eyes closed. He was strong, the strongest man
she had ever known, and she owed him her life (Blue
Lotus, Margaret Way, 2328: 25).
Here one almost expects the hero to begin breast feeding the heroine.
A rival for the heros love is another constant in the romance formula.
Ninety-eight percent of the Harlequins that Margaret Jensen surveyed
had a female rival for the heros love.25 In earlier Harlequins, these are a
whole species of extremely beautiful, manipulative women who pretend to be all heart and warmth to men but dont bother to hide their
coldness; indifference,
and cunning from other women. Your quintessential male-identified
woman:
How clever of you, smiled Miss McGrath, and turned to
the two men. It would always be that way Rachel knew
instinctively. For Fiona McGrath was what is known as a
mans woman (77ze Other Linding Girl, Mary Burchell,
1431: 81).
Rosemary
. . . Quiet
and secret
despising
ChaZenge,
243).
to be pleasant
111
and there was nothing she could do (TXzeMan on the Peak, Katerina
Britt, 2305: 139-140). Forwe readers know all the time that, whether the
heroine or even the hero knoti it or not, the hero is, or very soon will be,
madly in love with the heroine: His gaze went past the glittering figure
[of the rival] to the girl in a simple flame colored dress who stood in the
shadows (l?ze Hills of Maketu, Gloria Bevan, 1309: 164). This, of
course, gives tremendous power to the heroine which a number of
analysts have pointed out is pleasurable in itself to women in a maledominated society. As Margaret Atwood has said:
Harlequins are about doing the best you can under the
circumstances which are not dandy. Harlequins are about
Beauty and the Beast. Harlequins are about lion taming: if
you cant be a lion yourself you can at least domesticate
one. . . . Harlequins are, among other things, how-to books
on the fantasy level, for women who experience daily
their own lack of p0wer.n
The tall, strong, commanding
male learns that he needs the heroine
although not, of course, in the same way as the weak, dependent other.
man who leans on her. The hero will never do anything to harm the
heroine and he will do everything he can to make her happy because he
loves her. Not unvaryingly,
but often enough to be noteworthy,
the
heroines new sense of power over the hero is noted explicitly:
I will give it all up, if you wish; he told her with such
simple sincerity she felt ashamed of her lingering doubts
....
He, the most arrogant of the Valdivias, was allowing her to
choose his destiny, placing his life, his future and his
happiness in her hands (Valley of Paradise, Margaret
Rome, pp. 187-188).
And when you said youd come with me, down here to
find Fleur-to find Philips, I wasnt sure why you were
coming, and it took all the strength of will I possessed to
say Id bring you with me, knowing I might have to beg you
to come back with me.
Youd have begged? Her voice shook with the turbulent
emotions that shook her like a physical shock, and Clary
looked down at her with such fierceness in his eyes that
she had to believe he meant it.
Id have begged, he said hoarsely, if1 had to, to get you
back! (The House of Kingdom, Lucy Gillen, 2026: 187.)
Janet Patterson has argued that, through the heros love, the heroine/
reader gains access to the male world in the only way open to her.28 Tania
112
ANGELA MILES
Modleski and others have also noted the satisfaction for women in
vicariously winning power over the male dominator.29 This is no doubt
true but its not the whole truth.
The Harlequin world is a female world, not a male world. There is no
male world in a Harlequin. The heros world is one of beautiful furniture,
comfortable beds, magnificent views, delicious and plentiful food, and
fine weather; not competition,
business, or public power. He, of course,
has considerable power and stature in the public world but that is not
what he represents in the Harlequins. What the heroine gains access to
through him is beauty, ease, and luxury-creature
comforts and, above
all, security and a home for ever and ever. Her concern is not to impress
the hero or to use him in her career. And she is appreciative of womens
skills and activities, and supportive of other women who support her in
return, and whose woman-identification
may be explicitly contrasted to
the male identification
of the heroines rival who uses and betrays
women in her pursuit of the hero.
.The heroine, for one reason or another, usually lives in the heros
beautiful and luxurious home. This, of course, provides lots of opportunity for contretemps, misunderstanding,
tension, mutual awareness, and
excitement.
It also dramatizes the homelessness of the heroine who
unfailingly finds herself strongly, even violently attached to this place.
The pain of having to leave his home often rivals the pain of losing the
hero. The heroine will be totally lost and without a place in the world.
The heros home is her only home, she must be there; it is this home the
hero represents, not the male world.
From being a despotic employer he had become the
man she loved, and loved without hope of requitement.
Nor had she dreamed that Carne would come to be like
a second home. She loved every stick and stone of the old
grey house and its terraced garden, and to leave it and its
owner was proving a wrench that seemed to tear her in
two (Moorland
Magic, Elizabeth Ashton, 1741: 162163).
The power the heroine wins through love is also power with a
difference. [S]he had the strange sensation of a switch of power, as
though she were in command (Mirandas Marriage, Margery Hilton,
1752) but she does not choose to command. Hers is not the power to do
anything, but the power to abandon herself without risk; to lose herself
in another, without any fear that she will be hurt or will suffer. It is the
necessary condition for her fusion with the hero/mother
and for a truly
Uhappy and unconfbcted ending. She can become one with another and
yet have her every wish granted. Paradoxically, the heroine/reader
glories in her power because it enables her to luxuriate in a passivity thaf
is anything but masochistic.
113
Ann Douglas+ and others have also written about romances as womens
pornography
and this approach has been widely influential
among
feminists. Despite the undoubted insights that some of these analyses
have to offer, however, there is a deep flaw in an analytical approach
which defines womens experience in terms of mens, even in its
difference. Avery important and hard-won tenet of feminist research and
theory is that womens experience must be seen and defined in its own
terms and not simply in comparison/contrast
to mens This is forgotten
here, as it is all too frequently elsewhere, and the resulting insights are
limited by the distortion of focus-a distortion which is immediately
114
ANGELA MILES.
115
116
ANGELA MILES
They walked slowly back to where Helen had left her
beach robe. Picking it up Leon held it for her to put on and
then, turning her round, he began to fasten the buttons .
. . . Hold your chin up. Helen obeyed, blinking rapidly at
him as the sun became hurtful to her eyes. His hands
touched her throat, he shook his head slightly and gave her
an almost tender smile, Id kiss you if we werent being
watched, he said, and then, more briskly, Come, child,
its time for tea (Gatesof SteeZ,Ann Hampson, HPl: 100).
Strength and tenderness, harshness and gentleness, control and indulgence are erotic in themselves, echoes of the early contradictory
experience of the mother:
Suzanne lay against him painfully aware of the strength
and tenderness in his arms (The Man on the Peak, Katerina Britt, 2305: 84).
He drew her close and once again she felt his great
tenderness, and his strength (@tes of Steel,Anne Hampson,
HPl: 190).
She now sensed in him, the male strength mated with a
devastating tenderness (Northern Sunset, Penny Jordan,
HP508: 130).
Nevertheless it is security, belonging and comfort that is the aim of it all,
and is, paradoxically, exciting, emotional, and erotic. The resolution of
the separation from the mother, the rediscovery of original, sensual and
complete fusion is the climax of the romance. The heroine will live
happily ever after in the womb provided by the hero. In romantic fantasy
loving is mothering;
to be loved is to find a mother. The powerful
presence of the lover evokes the mother who is everything to the child
and the readers regression to this emotional state is what gives the image
, of the hero power.
Throughout
the book the heroine longs for this release, fears its loss
with her separation from the hero, and resents his power over her:
Awakening to sunlight and warmth, she realized that
Raouls personality was powerful enough to enrich everything around her. Listening to the birds in the curly-roofed
leaves, she revelled in a feeling of being protected, free
from all fear and hurt, although she knew it was sheer
fantasy (Man on the Peak, Katerina Britt, 2305: 143).
He was so efficient, so reliable, and for a moment Teri
allowed herself the pleasure of dwelling on having him for
117
She had come home, home to Flint and the safe harbour of
his love where she and he would dwell in simplicity and
peace. The End (Harbour oflove) Anne Hampson, 2230:
186).
She didnt question his understanding but merely sighed
happily as she read her future in his eyes and gave herself
up to the matchless sensation of being cherished. The End
(Walk in the Shadows, Jayne Bowling, HP247: 192).
He drew her up into his arms again, while outside the
moon clothed the moor and slopes with silver and inside
the thick walls of the old house, silence brooded and the
shadows gathered in the corners. They were no longer
menacing, they represented home and were the promise
of deep content (Moorland
Magic, Elizabeth Ashton,
1741: 190).
Mother-Resource
or Neurosis?
118
AhTGELA MIILTS
THE HY.STEhXAL
ilLALE
119
ever, and that of many other readers who have shared their experiences
with me have convinced me that the vast majority of readers read
Harlequins because of social rather than psychological needs.
The powerful early emotional experience of our relationship with our
mothers is a resource women can call on through Harlequins to provide
a much needed escape. For most women, it is not the source of the need
for escape. In pointing to the psychological component of the Harlequin
experience I am not suggesting that our relationship to our mothers
leaves women incomplete or needy in a general sense. I am arguing,
rather, that this relationship provides an emotional experience powerful
enough to block out the present when women choose to regress to it.
Most of us choose to do this because our present circumstances
are
enormously strained, not because we are driven by some persistent
psychological need. When our circumstances improve our use of escape
through romance ceases.
In my own case, I began reading Harlequins when I was writing my
Ph.D. thesis-a time of great pressure when I could not justify taking any
time for myself. I got no relief, for instance, from going for a walk or to
a movie with friends because I felt that I shouldnt be there. I would, on
occasion, find myself longing for a Harlequin because I could count on
more sure and total escape from pressure with Harlequins than any other
form of leisure could provide. After I completed my thesis I no longer felt
that longing to escape into a Harlequin, no longer felt the immense
pleasure/relief when reading them, and gradually stopped.
Many women have told me that they, too, have had a Harlequin
period which gradually came to an end. On hindsight it was a time of
particular ,pressure-for
instance, when they were mothering young
children,48 under pressure as an adolescent or in the final year of
university. Other women who are intensely pressured and starved for
nurture all their lives remain dependent on Harlequins all their lives.
The lack of resources, time, and money for leisure away from home;
the lack of social and personal acceptance of womens visible leisure; the
nature of many womens lives in which work and responsibility are a
constant 24 hour reality, where there is no private place away from these;
and the emotional deprivation almost all women suffer in a heterosexually structure society where women are care providers, rarely receivers,
and where most women can expect no mothering or nurture after early
adolescence, all combine to explain why the fantasy of mothering in the
guise of a romantic hero is the predominant form of escape for women.
If even the most emotionally and materially privileged women are
deprived of and hunger for mothering, how. much more acute the need
is for many more women in less than optimum circumstances:
1)
120
ANGELA MILES
house and dream about how some day some
wonderful man who looked like a prince would
come and take me away, and how wed live
happily ever after.
Things were so ugly in my family-my
father
drunk and in a rage, hitting one of us or beating
my mother up. My mother worked most of the
time . . . Shed come home and fur supper, then
wed all sit around that wait. Finally, Mom would
give us kids our supper. Eventually my father
came home, and if he was drunk, hed storm
around. Maybe hed knock the pots off the stove
and make a holy mess. Or maybe hed take out
after my mother.
When I think about it now, it sounds crazjr, but
honestly, the worse things got at home, the more
I used to dream about how I was going to marry
some good, kind wise man who would take care
of me and how wed always love each other and
be happy.
THE NYSTERICAL
MALE
12 1
122
ANGELA MIIES
If it is true that women turn to reading romance because our lives are
so often barren of nurture and so pressured that we need to feel mothered
and we need a quick and guaranteed escape; and ifit is true that romance
serves both these needs because the romantic hero is a mother figurewhat can feminists learn from all this?
First, it shows how important it is to fight the double standards of a
culture that devalues women and all that is female if we are to successfully analyze and transform our culture. Formula romance, by far the
largest segment of the formula book market, has until very recently been
ignored by students of popular culture who have given loving attention
to westerns, mysteries, detective stories, ghost stories, and (worse)
adventure stories. What writing there is about formula romance is far
more critical than writing about other formula forms which are more
easily accepted as temporary escapes for otherwise busy; intelligent,
well-rounded
people who are generally in touch with reality. The
Harlequin reader outranks bingo player, soap watcher, prostitute, and
housewife as a negative stereotype totally defining a woman by one
activity or aspect of her life. Readers of westerns are not commonly
supposed to live in expectation of a stage coach at the door but Harlequin.
readers are presumed to believe in the Harlequin world and to live in daily
expectation of the heros arrival. In fact, Harlequin readers are as diverse
a group and have as good a grasp on reality as any other formulae
readerss4
Other negative presumptions
drawn about women from .Harlequins
also turn out to be false. Women are not masochistic and are not reading
Harlequins because they enjoy being dominated. The notion that romance is a female neurosis, or even that the female condition is neurosis .
also proves untenable when we see that romance works as an escape
because women use their relationship with their mother as a resource for
regression, not because women are actually as male-centred
or as
successfully brainwashed to believe in salvation through men as might
appear at first sight to be the case.55
The limits of analyses that do not challenge androcentric expectations
and values also become clear. The presumptions
that Harlequin romantes are 1) power fantasies for people so crushed that they cant even
fantasize power, or 2) sex fantasies for people so repressed they cant
even fantasize sex, or 3) substitutes for fantasies about individual success
for people so limited that they cannot even imagine personal achievement, are insulting.
As soon as we allow women specffic desires and interests we can see
that they are also incorrect. The popularity
of Harlequin Romances
suggests that most women are not primarily interested in and.do not gain
satisfaction from power over others or the power to aggress;% that most
womens erotic pleasure, desire, and potential does not find itself
123
124
ANGELA MImS
125
Notes
1.
Tatiana Tolstoi,
June 1982.
Hints
2.
Audrey
Claire Swafield,
Presenting?
Canadian
from
the heart
on romance
Paperbacks
Promoting
Woman
Studies 3, 2: 6.
writing,
The GuarMun
Passion!
What
Weekly,
is Harlequin
27
Really
126
ANGELA
iwus
Ann Barr Snltow, Mass Marketing Romances: Pornography
History
Review 20 (I979): 150.
Radical
The reader ls not made aware that her solution is, ln actuality, the problem. [S]o . . . .
no questioning.of, or action against, the capitalistic structure that puts her place outside
the mode of production, will take place. Swafleld, p. 5.
In 1982 Harlequin Enterprises sold 218 million books in twelve languages in 98
countries. In Canada twenty eight percent of the ,paperbacks sold were Harlequins.
Romances of all kinds, taken together made up f@ percent of paperback sales ln the Il.
S. From Margaret Jensen, Loves Sweet Returns
7ke Harlequin
Story, (Iotonto: Womens
Press, 1984), p. 34.
Harlequins exhaustive market research, pre-testing, and reader surveys are described fully by Janice Radway in Reading
the Romance:
Women,
Patr-iarchy,
and
PopularLiterature,
(ChapelHill and London: University of North CarolinaPress, 1984).
Janice Radway is one of the few analysts of Harlequins who stresses, as I do, the
importance of womens active role in interpreting the text whose literary meaning is
the result of a complex, temporally evolving interaction between a fured verbal structure
and a socially situated reader. Radway, Women Read the Romance: the Interaction of
Text and Context, Feminfsf
Studies
9, 1 (Spring 1983): 5455. Her study provides
valuable data from women themselves about how they see their Harlequin reading:This
information is enhanced by her sensitive interpretation which I refer to later.
Where I differ from Radway is her presumption that feminists make up an entirely
different interpretive community than Harlequin readers, that there is no overlap that
can be called on to aid analysis. She says that we have no evidence that we even know
how to read as romance readers do (Reading
the Romance,
p. 11). I argue, on the other
hand, that feminist analysts, as women, potentially share an interpretive community
with readers which we could explore and use as a resource (though not the only
resource) in analysis. The lack of reference to certain aspects of their experience (as
much as the false generalization of other aspects of their experience that Radway has
criticized) is a weakness in feminist analysis of Harlequins.
7.
Ibid., p. 9.
8.
Ibid.
9.
Harlequins two main lines are the classical Harlequin Romance and a series of slightly
longer format books with the same basic formula called Harlequin Presents. Books in
both series are numbered. I have included the identification numbers of the books, and
in order to distinguish books from the Harlequln Presents series from those in the other
series I have put HP before the numbers of the former.
10. Harlequin heroines and writers seem to agree: Experience had taught Chloe that
ordinary men were a sadly selfish bunch. So she conjured up an ideal. He would have
to be rich and generous; tall, dark, and handsome; kind to children and animals. And he
would possess a sense of humour. She and her sister had a good laugh over the
requirements, They both knew full well that such a man could never really exist: At least
thats what Chloe thought-until
she met Benedict Dane . . . (A VT Special Man,
Marjorie Lewty, 2282: 9).
11. Radway, Women Read the Romance, p. 61.
12. Ibid., p. 57.
13. Snitow, p. 150.
14. By good Harlequins I mean those in which the formula ls used to maximum impact.
127
Janice Radway has documented the important point that, contrary to the presumptions
of most analysts of Harlequins, formula books are not all the same to the readers. They
are not interchangeable. Readers have preferences and distinguish between good and
bad samples of the genre. She has also done valuable work in identifying, through
detailed questionnaires, the characteristics of good Harlequins.
This part of her work (see Chapter 4 of Reading the Romance) is particularly
interesting to me because my preferences agree so closely with those of the women she
interviewed. Her findings provided support for my sense that my own experience as a
reader is comparable to that of others and can serve as a source of insight into the
Harlequin experience in general.
15. These are two quotations from Hadequin publicity material. Their gist is reported over
and over again by women interviewed about their experience of Harlequin reading. See,
for instance, comments by readers interviewed by Claire Harrison for the CBC Ideas
series Love at First Sight: Romance Novels and the Romantic Fantasy. Transcript
available from CBC Transcripts, Box 500, Station A, Toronto, M5W lE6.
16. Cited by Claire Harrison, Love at First Sight.
17. As interpreted
by Claire Harrison.
18. Janet Patterson is another one of the writers who recognizes that women are not
consumers but active readers; novels are not commodities but cultural experiences (p.
23) and asks whywomen want to read Harlequins (p. 22). She is the only writer I know
who has dealt with the emotional nature of the Harlequin experience and the power of
the ritualized repetitive experience in her answer to that question. See Janet Patterson,
Consuming Passion Fireweed 11 (1981): 19-33.
19. Jensen, p. 88.
20. Childlike moments/allusions persist in ihose recent successful Harlequins
downplay womens dependence and inequality in general.
which
21. Janice Radways survey of the reading habits of forty-two regular romance readers
confirms that the impact of the plot requires the shaping of the final resolution/fusion
and that the satisfaction attained is only momentary. Most readers read the books from
beginning to end at one sitting. Once immersed in the romantic fantasy [they] do not
like to return to reality without experiencing the resolution of the narrative . . . [Their
ingenuous strategies] for avoiding disruption or discontinuity in the story betoken a
profound need to arrive at the ending of the tale and thus to achieve or acquire the
emotional gratification they already can anticipate (Reading the Romance, p. 59).
22. Over half the women Radway surveyed read more than sixteen hours a week and
another 24 percent between eleven and fifteen hours a week (Reading the Romance,
p. 59). One-third read from five to nine romances weekly, another fifty-Bve percent
completed between one and four romances weekly. She interviewed regular customers
at a romance bookstore so her sample is probably skewed toward the heavier readers.
According to Rosemary Griley in Love Lines: The RomanceReaders Guide to Printed
Pleasures, (NewYork: Facts on File Publications, 1983), cited byJensen (p. 142), light
readers of romance read up to 25 books a month and heavy readers devour eighty or
more books a month. The heaviest reader that Margaret Jensen interviewed read sixty
Harlequins a month and the lightest reader read two per month (p. 143). Most read
between twelve and sixteen per month and would therefore qualify as light readers.
Other sources confirm that romance readers are generally not occasional readers. See
Yankelevitch, K. Skelly and White, The 1978 Consumer Research Study on Reading
and Book Purchasing, (Darien, Conn.: The Group, 1978), prepared for the Book
Industry Study Group, and cited by Radway, Reading the Romance, p. 59.
128
ANGELA
MILES
While there are clearly women who are addicted to Harlequins, whose reading habits
are excessive their number can be grossly overestimated if one forgets that it takes only
from one and a half to two hours to read the books. Four or five books a month amount
to between six to ten hours a month-not a large commitment of time when compared
to other leisure forms such as fishing or watching TV sports.
23. Tania Modleski, The Disappearing
(1980): 442.
Romances, Signs 5, 3
/
24. The fact that she owed her life to Luke Van Meer didnt tie her to him (Tiger Shy, Rose
Elver, 2244: 47).
.2s. Margaret Jensen, Women and Romantic Fiction: ACase Study of Harlequin Enterprises,
Romances, and Readers, Ph.D. Dissertation,
Radway, Reading the Romances, p. 122.
McMaster University,l980,
cited in
26. For a description of those changes see Gail Han&on, Romancing the Bookshelf,
Resources for Femfnist Research 13, 3 (November 1984): 46-4, and Jensen, Loves
Sweet Return, Chapter 6, Strange Bedfellows: Feminism and Romance.
27. Margaret Atwood, The Story of Valerie Vapid, Broadside
28. One of the specifications of the Harlequin guidelines is an exotic setting. . . . I7ze exotic
se&g is the male world. Clearly the setting is exotic socially and sexually as much as
it is geographically (Patterson, Consuming Passions, p. 27, emphasisin the original).
But the exotic setting is not exotic. She is out of her depth but -enormously and
absolutely at home. It is her place, essentially domestic and offers comfort and security
and peace if she could only stay there.
29. Agreat deal of our satisfaction in reading these novels comes, I am convinced, from our
conviction that the woman is bringing the man to his knees and that all the while he is
being hateful, he is internally groveling, groveling, groveling ( Modleski, p. 441).
30. Peter Parisi, lecture delivered 6Aprill978,
in Snitow, p. 151.
THE KysTERIc;ILI.
womans journey to female personhood
constructed
and
realized
within
patriarchal
as thatparticuZarpsychic
culture
(p.
MACE
129
configuration
is
ofReproduction,
in the
The Guardian
51. Snitow, p. 154, citing Joanna Russ, Somebodys Trying to Rill Me and I Thii Its My
Husband:TheModemGothic,JournalofPopularCulture6,4(Spring
1983):66(X91.
52. Janice Radway, Reading the Romance, p. 84. (See note 40 for a brief indication of the
role Radway ascribes to this evocation of infancy in her overall analysis of Harlequin
reading.)
53. It would be interesting to see if romance fantasy generally plays a different role for
lesbian than for heterosexual women. If my analysis is correct, it may be that romance
fantasies play a less important role for lesbian women both because, paradoxically, a
female hero is a less convincing representative of the powerful mother, and because
more lesbian than heterosexual women may have mutually nurturing relationships.
I have lesbian friends who read Harlequins, which is in itself an interesting indication
that they are about something more than heterosexual love and sex. Further research on
lesbian womens relationship to romance would doubtless provide valuable insights
into the romance phenomenon.
54. Profiles of romance readers from different surveys vary somewhat but all indicate that
[the readers] mirror the general population in age, education, marital, [employment],
and socioeconomic, status. Carol Thurston, The Liberation of Pulp Romances,
P+zhology Today, (April 1983): 1415. (Bracketed word added on the basis of information from other surveys.)
55. This helps make comprehensible the fact that women brutalized by men often read
romances or even begin to read them when things get bad. They are under no illusion
that real life or real men in any way resemble the Harlequin world or the Harlequin hero.
The comfort from escape is nevertheless enormous because it does not depend on any
expectations of a male saviour of male comfort.
56. For feminist theoretical literature which supports the notion that women have a special
relationship to power see: Nancy Hartsock, Sara Ruddick, both op. cit.; Berlt As, A
Materialist View of Mens and Womens Attitudes Towards War, Women Studies
International
Forum 5, 3: 355-364; and articles in Reweaving the Web of Life:
FeminismandTNon-Violence,
ed. Pam McAllister (New Society Publishers, 1982).
57. The theoretical study of womens speciiic sexuality is less developed than the study of
our specific relationship to the world and to power. But circumstantial.evidence
from
a number of sources supports the implications from Harlequins that intimacy, nurture,
and security are central to womens erotic pleasure. When Ann Landers asked her
readers Would you be content to be held close and treated tenderly and forget about
the act? 72 percent of the 90,000 women who responded said Yes and 40 percent
of these were less than 40 years old (Shere Hite, Women and Love: CulturalRevolution
in Progress, [New York: Knopf, 19871).
THE HYiSTERK4.L
MALE
13 1
Those with the inveterate androcentrlc assumption that mens experience and
desires are necessarily womens have predictably presumed that these women are all
very sad cases of repression or stunted sexual development or have never experienced
the real thing. At a certain point, however, it becomes perverse not to use womens
responses to understand womens desires. Once we do this we are led unavoidably to
the question of whether sex and the erotic are the same for men and women.
58.
The theoretical bases of womens more connected sense of self and the world and
greater capacity for mutually affirming interdependence are described by Mary OBrien,
Nancy Chodorow, Dorothy Dlnnerstein, and Jane Flax (all op. cit.). Inthtential studies
of this specific female experience and its psychological and social importance have been
done by Jean Baker Miller, Toward
a New Psychology
of Women, (Boston: Beacon,
1976) and Carol Gilligan, In a Different
Voice: Psychological
Theory
and Womens
Development,
(Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1982).
59.
Some writers who rightly challenge the extremely negative stereotyping of Harlequin
readers and point out that we are active participants in the process and not mere passive
victims, have moved from this to a representation of Harlequins as more benign than I
think is warranted. See, for instance, the defense of Harlequins and Harlequin reading
in Margaret Jensen, Gail Hamilton, Tatiana Tolstoi, all op. cit.; and Emily Toth, Wholl
Take Romance? Womens Review of Books 1,5 (February 1984): 12-13.
60.
61.
Unless you are of the school that believes the objective should be to make life as difficult
as possible for as many women as possible so eventually they will rise up-a sort of
feminist version of the hope with which some leftists have been watching the cost of
the recession on ordinary people, waiting for the time when the crisis of capitalism
becomes its collapse and things get so bad that people finally rebel and the revolution
artives!
Toward
a Philosophy
of Female
There is a hint ofthis position in some of the critiques of Harlequins that suggest that they
offer an escape which prevents women from struggling to change their lives. It seems,
however, that womens lives are hard enough even with Harlequins. A social critique
and a commitment to social change seem to come when women get the support that
gives us the power and the space to question and to act. That should surely be what we
are.aiming to provide, not additional pressure.
62.
The dominant patriarchal cultures in Arab countries and in Japan, for instance, do not
encourage romantic fantasy or the myth of male mothering, and yet women in these
countries and the Caribbean seem to find them enormously satisfying.
63.
64.
Rich, p. 225. There Is, in fact, a well developed feminist practice which recognizes our
relationships with our mothers and our relational needs as both barriers and resources
which must be consciously embraced and transformed in ourpersonal/political
struggle
for a more human and freer world. See also: Sara Ruddick, Maternal Thinking, and
Between
Women,
op. cit., especially the chapters by Bell Gale Chevigny, Jane Lazarre,
Jane Marcus, Sara Ruddick, and Martha Wheelock; Jane Lazarre, op. tit; Baba Copper,
Mothers and Daughters of Imagination, Trivia 11 (Fall 1987): 8-20; and Judith Arcana,
Our Mothers.
Ourselves.
Motherhood
as Experience
and
Institution,
(New
8
-TSPATIALENVY
YVONNE RAINERS
THE MAN WHO EWIED
WOMEN
Peggy Phelan
Near the end of Yvonne Rainers recent film, K?zeMan who Envied
Women, the frame is filled for the second time with Donald Judds large
grey concrete sculptures luxuriating in an open Texas field. The camera
walks across these sculptures like fingers over a piano: they seem to hold
a kind of tune half hidden, half audible. The sculptures are concrete
- outlines of squares the color of tombstones. The heaviness of their frame
accentuates the hollowness of the air they embrace. Like a Wittgensteinian word game, or better still, like Mark Strands witty poem Keeping
Things Whole, Judds sculptures suggest that space is that which
negotiates between airy fields (infinite possibilities) and concrete architecture (fmite facts), while not residing entirely in either the one or the
other. As Strand puts it anthropomorphically:
When I walk/I part the
air/and always the air moves m/to fill the spaces/where my bodys been.
Filling in the spaces created by departing persons, places, and things is
the central concern of TheMan who Envied Women. Judds sculptures,
with their refusal to locate or define a spatial point of origin or termination, are the objective correlative for the difficult idea of space that
Rainers film alternatively vigilantly argues for, and whimsically hopes
for. In this combination of argument and hope Rainers film resembles
some of the best work of Jean-Luc Godard.
More interesting than the visual absence of the image of Trisha the
female protagonist, is Rainers innovative expansion of the possiblities of
the surface of the film. Using video transfers as kind of windows (frameswithin-frames),
grainy super-8 as an interruption
of the smoother surface
134
PEGGY PHELAN
It was a hard week. I split up with my husband of four years
and moved into my studio. The water heater broke and
flooded the textile merchant downstairs. I bloodied up a
pair of white linen pants. The Senate voted for nerve gas
and my gynecologist went down in Korean Airlines flight
#007. The worst of it was the gynecologist. He used to put
booties on the stirrups and his speculum was always
warm.
Although these events are linked in time, they are linked in other more
subtle ways was well. To put it simply, albeit crudely: splitting up with
Jack sets off a series of dismissals and departures. Trishas flooding
menstrual blood and her studios flooding water heater are alike in their
fits of unruliness against their spatial confiies. This private and individual
unruliness moreover, finds its public and political image in the dark
drama of Korean Airlines flight #007. Overstepping,
overflowing,
or
flying over the boundaries of space, no matter how visible or invisible
such boundaries might .appear, can have tragic consequences.
Trishas overflowing menstrual blood is crucial; Rainers title plays on
the Fre.udian notion that women are beset with penis envy. Part of
Rairiers aim is to turn the tables: she wants.to suggest that men envy
women in part because of theirinternal biological space. (Women, as it
were, carry their air space inside them. To employ this metaphor
psychoanalytically,
and from the womans point of view, violations of
air space are acts of power: the physiological and social arrangments of
heterosexuality
combine to maintain women in a subordinate position to
men. To suggest that male sexual desire is motivated at least partially by
spatial envy, a country and western song might phrase it hunger for a
home, rape becomes not only a logical, but an inevitable consequence
of the psychological-physiological
architecture of heterosexuality.) Rainer
uses the womans body and the functions of its still mysterious spaces as
a kind of lens through which contemporary
problems can be evaluated. She tries to link the mind that thinks and the body that feels in a
specifically womanly way. One might say she attempts to reinvestigate
the traditional oppositions of Western metaphysics, in the wake of
Derrida, from a feminist point of view.
Part of her correction to the story poststructuralism
tells is stylistic.
Metaphysics in Ranters view cannot go too longwithout
a joke; the films
most serious moments (with the exception of the last ten minutes or so)
are continually undercut with a joke. In what J. Hoberman thinks is the
best line in the film, Rainer, in a distorted off-center close-up reminiscent
of Hitchcock,
invites all menstruating
women [to] please leave the
theatre.3 This invitation is symptomatic of Rainers most congenial habit
of mind. Her most consistent impulse, and her most comfortable perspective, is from a distance-almost
over her shoulder. This is not a film
that asks the spectator to like the characters, to enjoy the scenery, to
THE HYLSTERICAL
MALE 135
laugh heartily, or to nod ones head knowingly
at all the familiar
conversation. The effort at the heart of this film is as engaged in throwing
you out as it is in settling you in.
I
136
PEGGY PHELAN
138
PEGGY PHELAN
pathetic understatement),
is the image that elicits the deepest meditation. In one of the only moments of unification between the sound track
and the image track, the voice of one of the off-screen commentators
(Martha Rosiers) breaks off as Dellers hand trails away from the wall
after shifting the images around in an effort to bury the gruesome image
(and the naked bodies) under all the other clippings. It is a moving
sequence, not only because Deller at last seems in sync with the world
of the film, but also because one of the questions of owning space
hinges-apparently
absolutely-on
someone else losing it.
This relationship is explored with a poignant befuddlement
as Rainer
follows the sequence of public hearings called to consider Manhattans
recent proposal to allocate housing funds to artists moving into the
Lower East Side. The idea behind this plan was to keep New York City as
a congenial space for art and artists-a cynical observer might say that
the idea exposes New Yorks own imperial lust for cultural supremacybut no matter: contemplating
moving to Jersey is viewed with equal
horror by all members of the hearings. One of the unfortunate
consequences of this proposal was that it pitted the artists against the ethnic
working-class whose very presence in Rainers overtly theoretical film,
calls into question the efficacy of art and the aesthetic impulse tomanipulate
and reorder space for some artistic good. The immense
space of Donald Judds sculptuml field and the huge canvases of Leon
Golub suddenly seem absurd: do images and representations
deserve/need to consume so much space? Do we participate
in the
construction
and maintenance of a world in which representation
literally dominates our lives, and robs some people of fourwalls? Almost
overnight we met the enemy, Trisha declares, and it was us.
II
If the spatial arrangements and rearrangements of T&has abandoned
art work (work that has fallen under the gaze of hyper-articulate
eyes)
constitute the melody of the film, part of its rhythmic structure comes
from Jacks magic headphones. Like some fantastic state-of-a-future-art
walkman, Jacks oversized mechanical ears make him privy to the
conversations of Manhattan street-strollers. It is perhaps the triplicate
repetition of these scenes that prompts Hoberman to dub Rainer the
Purple Rose of Soho, and to compare her films to Woody Allens.
Rainers one-liners are dry and infectious. They are also obsessively
concerned with sex. The space between Jacks ears, by implication,
seems overloaded with sexual puns: his head selectively receives the
world from a sexual point of view.
In the first issue of Motion Picture, Rainer writes that the purpose of
these scenes is to convey the idea that the city, for Jack, is a place full
139
140
PEGGY PHEM
141
As if this is the permission Rainer has been waiting for, the remainder of
The Man who Envied Women moves steadily away from the theoretical
pronouncement
(the world of Jack) to a more personal, and more
tentative meditation. We move more comfortably and more completely
into the world of the imagination. This world, entered only through the
portal of the feminine, is formally invoked (evoked?) by Jackie, who again
borrows Morris words:
Passing from the realm of the theory of the subject to the
shifty spaces of feminine writing is like emerging from a
horror movie to a costume ball...Feminine writing lures
with an invitation to licence, gaiety, laughter, desire and
dissolution,
a fluid exchange of partners of indefinite
identity.
Underscoring
this change in mental space Rainer cuts to Trishas
narration of a dream. She dreams her mother and Jack are lovers. Both
mother and daughter are played by Rainer. Just as Trisha seems to accept
that her mother is Jacks lover, the mother watches Jack and Trisha
(disguised behind a paper mask) in bed together. Now Trisha is furious.
But the dream is so obviously funny, so clearly a willful Oedipal reconfiguration that Trishas refusal to laugh seems hilarious. Trishas eyes are
so completely disguised she is apparently unable to see herself. Fittingly,
slinking through this Oedipal extravaganza-the
phrase is Rainers-is
a one-eyed cat. Cut back to the hallway. Jack and Jackie are embracing all
the rhetorical possibilities of physically embracing.
And then again Trishas voice: If a girl takes her eyes off Iacan and
Derrida long enough to look she may discover she is the invisible man.
That the films invisible woman, Trisha, says this only heightens the
irony; the film abandons the poetics of theory and individual masculinity
for a more persuasive look at Trishas moving pictures.
As it happens when theory is not the loudest voice in the room, what
the eye sees when it looks again is a different image altogether. Trishas
concluding ruminations, unlike Jacks initial confessions, are tentative
and groping:
Lately Ive been thinking yet again I cant live without men
but I can live without a man. Ive had this thought before,
but this time the idea is not colored by stigma ordespairfor
finality. I know that there will sometimes be excruciating
sadness but I also know something is different now,
something in the direction of unwomanliness.
Not a new
woman, not non-woman, or misanthropist, or anti-woman,
and not non-practicing
lesbian. Maybe un-woman is also
the wrong term. A-woman is closer. A-womanly. A-womanliness.
.
142
PEGGY PHELAN
I must admit that Im not sure what Trisha means by this. She seems
willing and ready to bury Jacks hold on her. And ready to bury something
larger as well. Among the more enigmatically haunting sequences in the
fti is an early one in which Trisha complains that her father chose this
week to pop out. In T&has various retellings of her stories of life with
Jack there is a feeling that she is telling the story of life with Pop as well.
Trishas exasperation with the way the memory of her father intrudes
upon her recollection of life with Jack speaks to the doubleness of the
pain of mourning. The father, like Jack, intrudes on T&ha-both
as a
maddeningly inadequate presence and as a persistent and unwelcome
absence. This is all in the realm of speculation-there
is little direct
reference to this in the film. But what is germane to T&has announcement of something different now is the persistent hope that if awomanliness
means anything at all, it might have some impact on
Trishas Oedipal dreams. With Pop and Jack tucked back in the suitcase,
maybe Trisha, her mother, and the one-eyed cat can create a new dream.
One that may well be filled with excruciating
sadness, but one that
might yet be allowed the representation
of a dream-text, one that might
raise the hiterto repressed.
We return again to the art work-for
one last rearrangement. This time
Rainer asks, If this were an art work how would you critique it? The
answer brilliantly recasts the connections between the images and
susggests that spatial arrangements, artistic and rationalistic, are inherently political. I quote just briefly from Roslers long argument:
I would feel I was being tricked into trying to deal with
things that have become incommensurable
as though they
werent incommensurable.
That I was being told that the
myths of civility at home and the problems of daily life are
only a veneer over the truth that the state destroys people.
It is as though I were being told that when dealing with the
ultimate, my worries about how 1 live my life in America
are not important.
She then goes on to elucidate the ways in which the arrangements of
the images tell political and visual stories. The uncaring emotional facade
of men that the About Men column argues against, determine[s]
how
we conduct our foreign policy. It isnt only a matter of economic interest,
but of how we choose to pursue that interest. Ifwere willing to grind up
other people because we cant be bothered to feel about them then it
does matter. What she argues for then is a new notion of spatial
privilege-an
anti-privilege;
or maybe thats the wrong term-privilegelessness is closer. A world in which the space one occupies (publicly and
privately) is not subject to or the object of envy; a world that Judds
sculptural embraces create when their spatial beginnings and endings
cannot be defmed or located.
143
The fact that the sculptures themselves dominate a wide open field in
Texas underlines the distance we need to traverse before such an ideal
spatial arrangement might occur. Judds sculptures, in other words,
demand a second look. Rainers film proposes a democracy of spatial
equality so radical that its very proposal requires a continual rearrangement not only of the images in the frame but of the frame itself.
III
I said earlier that the identification
between the camera and the
spectator inevitably effaces the power of the spectator and that implied
within this effacement there was a failure of address. Jacks sessions
which address an absent doctor and are augmented by films addressed to
an audience alert to other texts, underscore the difficulty of filmic
address. The spectator is the films invisible hearer, its unseen doctor and
deliverer of catharsis. At the Narrative Poetics Conference at Ohio State
University, Teresa DeLauretis argued that Rainers film encouraged her
to feel addressed as a women spectator and that the success of this
fulsome address was one of the greatest achievements of 77zeMan who
Envied Women. DeLauretis contended that the film saw as a woman sees
and that it did not bow to the conventions of the male gaze (conventions
that DeLauretis has long beeen skeptical about but are nonetheless
recognized by most feminist film critics) and thus advanced both feminist film theory and film practice. 6 Insofar as the distinction between
gender specific points-of-view has any validity, it is certainly true that The
Man Who Envied Women is animated from and for a womens eye. My
earlier point was more concerned with underlining the challenge of
Rainers film in terms of address itself. By upsetting the conventions of
filmic point of view (e.g.: not showing Trisha at all and thus making it
impossible to follow her gaze; the conflicting narrative angles of the
plot(s) et al.), Rainer also challenges the conventions of filmic address. By
address I mean not only the complicated and complicating processes
of identification
between character and spectator, but also the more
simple feeling of belongingness-as
ifone is invited and encouraged to be
engaged. More than simply saying post-Brechtian film, and avant-garde
film in particular, makes the spectator feel alienated-makes
the spectator recognize the gap between the technical camera eye and her own
eye, Im trying to say that what Rainers film suggests is that films deep
dependency
on point-of-view
(gender specific or otherwise) as the
primary means by which the spectator is given intimate access to a kind
of knowledge, no matter how relative-as in the elegant equivocations of
Roshomon-is
what needs to be dismantled and understood as a seductive fiction. Insofar as Trishas concluding remarks about a-womanliness can be seen as an abandonment of gender as a shorthand notion of
144
PEGGY PHELAN
145
the surface of her film. We, like Jack, are left with cut-outs whose
meaning lies in its potential to be endlessly rearranged. What makes
this film more than a smart leftist manifesto, is the innovative way in
which Rainer matches her political vision of privilegelessness with the
aesthetic possibilities of interrupted
and shared filmic space. Rainer
degrades the values of the ownership of ideas, discourse, and Manhattan
lofts, by continually rearranging what we expect film to own: the space
of its frame.
1.
The Man Who Envied Women. 16 mm, color, 125 min., 1985. Distributed
Features, 153 Waverly Place, New York, New York, 10014, CFDC, 67A
Toronto, Ontario, M5V 2M9. All quotes unless otherwise noted are from
Simon discussed this paper with me with admirable patience and insight.
and hereby absolve hlm of responsibillty for what follows.,
by First Run
Portland St.,
the film. Art
I thank him
2.
Ralner, Some Ruminations around Cinematic Antidotes to the Oedipal Net (les) while
Playing with DeLauraedipus Mulvey, or, He May Be Off Screen, but. .. Thelndependent,
April, 1986: 25.
3.
J. Hoberman, The Purple Rose of Soho, The Village Voice, April 8,1986:64. Hoberman
lucidly summarizes the feminist theoretical implications of Rainers decision not to
show Trishas image.
4.
5.
Most of the Foucault comes from Disczplfne and Punish translated by Alan Sheridan
(Random House: Vintage Books, 1974).; the Morris quotes are taken from, The Pirates
Fiance in Michel Foucuulf: Power, Truth, Strategy (Sydney: Feral, Publications, 1979),
edited by Meaghan Morris and Paul Patton.
6.
DeIauretis
conference,
talk. Rainer
Delauretls
talk was delivered with humor and polemical zeal. Rainer was present at the
and TheMan Who Envied Women was shown the night before Delauretis
answered questions after the screening but did not comment publicly after
talk.
III
-!PHALLUS OF MALICE
9
-BPARADING THE MASCULINE:
FIGURES, DECOYS AND OTHER CANARDS
Chris Tysh
CHRISTKSH
150
Fawn-lily in his mouth, he repeats the account with the insincere tone
of amazement.
error.
dear lute:
Translate my name, God said. First begin with the kiss you owe me, a
debt magnified by our discursive tatters, riven by schisms. How much
longer will I be able to duck the fenced carnival booths, the imperturbable logic of appropriations,
sliding the ring, choking up on their new
fault lines? This little pig went to market.
Here there is a question,
whose
loss of authority,
loss of seduction,
Far from seeing in these various deperditions a shift to a new topography aligned with a libertarian collapsing of the old master narratives, one
cannot help reading a certain punitive rhetoric, constructed upon the
demands of naming culprits.
From the critical theory of the Frankfurt School to the popcritique of Christopher Lasch, the discussion of loss of
authority inevitably comes around to women, who return,
empirically, as among those principally to blame for this
loss.5
P.S. Dear maleman, if it is true that une let&e arrive toujours ~2sa
destination,6 return to sender after five days, your signature will be my
charge of pleasure, my wound yours, name and leader.
Womans destiny is to be wanton, like the
bitch, the she-wolf; she must belong to all
who claim her.
Under the current banner of delegitimation
of the phallus (and the
obligatory determining and determined effects) we give in to a particular
fallacy by subscribing to a gift scenario in which the up till now
unrepresentable
female, the faulty, delinquent fringed other is being
bequeathed to those mostly discredited by the postmodern
regime of
fatherlessness. Whereas what is closer to the real and what motivates this
reinscription
of the masculine is certainly not a sense of generosity on
womens part but the imaginary distortion (as in Althussers famous
definition of ideology) which posits a female mtkonnaissunce, a notseeing that under the new discursive economy canonized on suppressing paternal authority the wolfs paw is still holding fast to the proffered
bite. The heavily financed crisis in masculine subjectivity-which
some
commentators
in a tell-tale sign of obeisance to cultural nostalgia have
dubbed hysteric-interpellates
the logic of disinheritance with the most
cunning, most recuperative twist possible under the circumstances. One
could suture at this precise juncture a well known mechanism derived
from the mourning economy in order to read this production of surplus
value where normally loss is warranted.
alors eclatait le desespoir, ce moment le plus itrange du
deuil, lorsque dans la chambre mortuaire, Zesplusproches
152
CHRIS TXSH
sajoutent celuCdont ik sont diminu&, se sentent de la
meme substance, aussi respectable que lui et meme se
considerent comme le mort authentique,
set.11digne de
simposer a la tristesse commune.8
The preposterous
canard consists of this monumental
reversal by
which the male hysteric adds onto himself that by which he is diminished, in effect purchasing another site to appropriate (and collect his.
rent). What was indexed as negative in us is reconstituted as a plus factor
after this, somme toute, painless crossing of gender boundaries, or
papas got a brand new bag.9
Commodities
cannot themselves go to
market and perform exchanges in their
own right.lO
Stamped with new ideological configurations (where an unmistakable
odor di femina replaces priority of the phallus as purveyor of meaning
and value), the-masculine subject is caught rehearsing the double game
of hysteria or what Derrida calls kriture ~2deux mains.
The hysterical symptom, in fact, is the expression of a
double unconscious fantasy: the patient simultaneously
and contradictorily,
in terms of logic of consciousness
plays both roles, masculine and fem@ne. l l
The politics of this practice take on the manner mirror of the hysteric
who, not content to experience both the womans .and the mans
sensations in the situation he conjures up forhimself,12 has the supreme
audacity to capitalize on a self marked by a spot where desire is worn out
by the memory of all losses.
****
153
Notes
1.
Paul Auster, City of Glass, (New York: Viking Penguin, 1987), p. 200.
154
CHRIS
TKSH
2.
AlainRobbeGrillet,
Recollections of a Golden Triangle, (New York: GrovePress, 1986),
trans. J. A. Underwood, p. 145: my emphasis.
3.
Jacques Derrida, Wrfting And Dzflerence, trans. Alan Bass, (Chicago: University
Chicago Press, 1978), p. 293: my emphasis in the fast two lines.
4.
Alice Jardine, Gynesb, (Ithaca and London: Cornell University Press, 197S), p. 68.
5.
Ibid., p.67.
6.
Jacques Lacan, Le S&ninaire sur La Lettre Vok+e, Ecrits, (Paris: Les Editions du Seuil,
1966), p. 41. (A letter always arrives at its destination).
7.
8.
of
Then despair would break out, that strangest moment of mourning when in the
mortuary chamber the relatives add onto ,themseIves the one by whom they are
diminished,
feeling they areof the same substance, as respectableas he and even
consider themselves to be the authentical dead, the only one worthyof commanding
general sadness.
9.
James Brown
10. Karl Marx, Capital, quoted in Gillian Beers Representing Women: Representing The
Past, Dze Feminist Reader, (New York: Basil Blackwell, 1989) p. 74. A quotation
which cites Lute Irigary, This Sex Which Is Not One.
11. SarahKofman,
TheEnigma
Of Woman,(hhaca:
CornellUniversity
is
Univer-
10
--i-
FEMINIST EJACULATIONS
Shannon Bell
Ejaculation
in Patriarchal
Texts
156 SHANNONBELL
whether female fluids were or were not progenitive. Aristotle argued
against the general belief that female seed was produced by women;
Hippocrates and Galen were the most well-known of those ancients who
argued that women emit seed. Hippocrates (460-377 b.c.) advocated a
two semen theory of generation based on the belief that both male and
female fluids contributed to conception.
In The Generation ofAnimals, Aristotle (384-322 b.c.) argued against
the two semen theory of generation and connected female fluid with
pleasure:
Some think that the female contributes semen in coition
because the pleasure she experiences is sometime similar
to that of the male, and also is attended by a liquid
discharge. But this discharge is not seminal . . . The amount
of this discharge when it occurs, is sometimes on a
different scale from the emission of semen and far exceeds
it.2
Galen, supporting the theory of female seed, made a distinction between
female fluid that was procreative and female fluid that was, pleasurable.
He identified the source of pleasurable fluid as the female prostate.
. .. the fluid in her prostate . .. contributes nothing to the
generation of offspring . . . it is poured outside when it has
done its service .. . This liquid not only stimulates . . . the
sexual act but also is able to give pleasure and moisten the
passageway as it escapes. It manifestly flows from women
as they experience the greatest pleasure in coitus ...3
Western scholars and doctors throughout
the Middle Ages remained
faithful to Hippocratess
and Galens notion of female sperm, which
came to them through Arab medicine. In fact, the theory of the female
seed survived long after the Middle Ages.*
De Graaf, a seventeenthcentury
Dutch anatomist, in his New Treatise
Concerning the Generative Organs of Women, outlined the Hippocratic and Aristotelian controversy over female semen. He sided firmly
with the Aristotelians and denied the existence of female semen. In
describing the pleasurable ejection of female fluid,. De Graaf wrote: it
should be noted that the discharge from the female prostatae causes as
much pleasure as does that from the male prostatae.s He identified the
location and source of the fluid as the ducts and lacunae . . . around the
orifice of the neck of the vagina and the outlet of the urinary passage
[which] receive their fluid from the female parastate, or rather the thick
membranous body around the urinary passage.6 De Graaf also describes
the fluid as rush[ing] out, com[ing] from the pudenda in one gush.
In the nineteenth
century, female fluids were linked with disease.
Alexander Skene, who in 1.880 identified the two ducts inside the
THE HYSTERICA
MYALE 157
158
SHANNON BELL
nineteenth-and
early twentiethcentury
erotic literature have subsequently come to be marked figments of the male imagination. Steven
Marcus, for example, states in The Other Victorians: A Study of Sexuality
.and Pornography in Mid-Nineteenth
Century England (1?66) that in
pornographic
writings
there is frost the ubiquitous projection of the male sexual
fantasy onto the female response-the
female response
being imagined as identical with the male . .. and there is
the usual accompanying fantasy that they ejaculate during
orgasm.
l1
THE HYSTEhWAL
MALE
159.
Female Pleasure:
and Sexual Science
160
SHANNON BELL
162
SHANNON BELL
and Ejaculation
The ejaculating female body has not acquired much of a feminist voice
nor has it been appropriated by feminist discourse. What is the reason for
this lacuna in feminist scholarship and for the silencing of the ejaculating
female subject? It has to do with the fact that the questions posed, and the
basic assumptions about female sexuality, are overwhelmingly
premised
on the difference between female and male bodies: the most visible
difference between men and women, and the only one we know for sure
to be permanent . . . is . . . the difference in body.30 The most important
primary differences have been that women have the ability to give birth
and men ejaculate. Womens reproductive ability has been emphasized
as a central metaphor in feminist critiques of patriarchal texts and has
been theorized
into a philsophy
of birth and an economy of
(re)production.
Feminists, in their efforts to revalorize the female body
usually devalued in phallocentric
discourse, have privileged some form
of the mother-body
as the source of ecriture feminine: writing that
evokes womens power as womens bodily experience. Mary OBrien,
for example, in ThePolitics ofReproduction (1981), provides a feminist
model for interpreting
masculinist political philosophy. OBrien begins
her project by posing the question: Where does feminist theory start?
She replies: Within the process of human reproduction.
Of that process,
sexuality is but a part. 31 OBrien names her reappropriation
and theorization of the mother-body as a philosophy of birth. Lute Irigaray writes
that historically the properties of fluids have been abandoned to the
feminine.32 The fluids, reappropriated
in feminine sexual discourse and
theorized by French feminist philosophers such as Lute Irigaray and Julia
Kristeva, have been the fluids of the mother-body: fluids of the womb,
birth fluids, menstrual blood, milk: fluids that flow. Ejacualte-fluid
that
163
shoots, fluid that sprays-has been given over to the male body. To accept
female ejaculate and female ejaculation one has to accept the sameness
of male and female bodies.
Contemporary
femininsm, however, has rejected sameness as being
defined from the.perspective
of the male body, as conformity with the
masculine model. To avoid identification
with a male phenomenon,
women have suggested that the term ejaculation should not be used.
I argue that the term should be kept while using the distinctive characteristics of female ejaculate to redefine and rewrite the meaning of the
term: female ejaculate is not spent; with stimulation one can ejaculate
repeatedly; and, a woman in control of ejaculation may ejaculate enormous
quantitites.
The second factor in feminists failure to embrace ejaculation as a
powerful body experience is their understandable
concern regarding
possible male control over female ejaculation in the context of a masculinist and heterosexual script in which ejaculation is presented as
something men do to womens bodies. The Boston Womens Health
Collective, editors of Our Bodies, Our Selves (1984), warn women that
the G-Spot and female ejaculation could be used to re-instate so-called
vaginal orgasms as superior and could becom[e] a new source of
pressure to perform33 Ehrenreich, Hess and Jacobs, inRe-making Love.
The Femin&ation
of Sex (1986) misconstrue the emphasis in The G-Spot
on the urethra as a return to Freuds primacy of the mature vaginal
orgasm. Ehrenreich et al, argue that Chapter Four of The G-Spot, The
Importance of Healthy Pelvic Muscles, which links strong pubococcygeus muscles (PC muscles) with ejaculation and G-Spot orgasms and
provides case vignettes of women who discuss the merits of strenghtening their PC muscles, encourages women to strengthen the muscles that
hold the penis in place.34 In my experience these muscles do not in fact
hold the penis in place; rather, they push it out and spray the ejaculate.
The penis (if one is around) may then reenter until the glands and ducts
surrounding the urethra become so enlarged in size through stimulation
that they expel the penis and spray again. Ehrenreich et al, also claim that
the acrobatics necessary to achieve the new orgasm privilege maledominant sexual positions. ss This criticism is odd since Ladas et al
provide case vignettes of ejaculation in many different positions: woman
on top, rear entry, man on top, partner using his/her hand, and woman
using her own hand. They provide case histories from lesbians and note
that preliminary reports indicate that there may be a higher incidence
of female ejaculation in the lesbian population
than there is among
heterosexual women.36
Female ejaculation is about power over ones own body. For :many
women who do experience ejaculation, however, it is a passive experience-something
that happens, not a capacity and process they control.
If feminists are going to appropriate and reclaim the female body, it is
very important that women provide feminist scripts of the ejaculating
Ejaculation
Guide
165
by the time we left New York I was so sore from masturbating that I could
hardly walk or pee: This was not the thrill I had expected. So I sat down
again with these womens experiences and took notes. And I realized
that they had not emphasized the crucial aspect about ejaculating: it is
necessary to PUSH OUT.
/
Step One: Find what has come to be known as your G-Spot; dont call
it that, it is named after Grafen,berg, a,man. It is the muscle and spongy
tissue around that part of your urethra that is inside your vagina. It begins
about a finger (more or less) inside your vagina and is about a fmger long
and a finger wide. If the muscles that go around your vagina (the
pubococcygeus muscles) have not been used much, they have to be built
up. The muscles can be built up by doing contractions: contracting the
top of your vagina against the bottom and releasing. This is fun and you
could have an orgasm or two. You could start by doing twenty-five
contractions three times a day for one week, then fifty three times a day,
then one hundred.
Step Two: Using whicheverlhand
you usually masturbate with, take
two or three fingers and rub them against the part of your urethra inside
your vagina. Press hard and notice the feeling which may seem like
having to urinate. This is a signal that you are ready to ejaculate. Now,
place the middle fmger slightly below the external part of your urethra
and begin to masturbate the same way you rub your clitoris. (I begin with
a slow firm up and down motion, increasing the speed and pressure as
I approach ejaculation.) As you are,masturbating you will notice that the
two ducts, one at each side of your urethra feel full and perhaps
somewhat painful. There are another twenty-nine ducts scattered over
the top of your vagina and once you identify the body sensation you will
be able to locate them on your lower abdomen. They are located in a
pyramid from your clitoris to lust above your ovaries.
Step X!zree: Take your other hand and press down on one or more of the
ducts from the outside. Push your urethra out and push, the way you do
when you urinate. Acrucial aspect about ejaculating is that it is necessary
to PUSH OUT. Liquid will com!e shooting out of your urethra in a steady
stream or in a jet.
.
I
I can ejaculate only in positfons in which I can push my entire pelvis
out and up: on my knees with legs a foot and a half apart; on my back with
my pelvis raised up; weight distributed on my feet and shoulders, and
knees at least two feet apart; and, squatting or standing, again with feet
far enough apart so I can push my urethra up and out.
If your partner is female, you may be able to help her ejaculate. As you
stimulate her anterior vaginal iwall and the exterior part of her urethra,
get her to push out when she is ready. You will both feel the glands and
ducts aroundthe urethra swelling and filling with liquid. If the muscles
have atrophied, as mine had, contraction exercises may be required.
What ejaculation will do for you sexually is to give you a powerful
pleasurable kinesthetic, visual, and auditory experience-a
total body
l-HE HYSTERICAl
MALE
167
experience.
You can repeat it almost indefinitely
once your body
awakens to it.
Ejaculate: The ejaculate changes in amount, color, odor, and taste
during your menstrual cycle. At ovulation the fluid is very hot (it
corresponds to your vaginal temperature),
thick, yellow, and pungent.
Following ovulation the fluid is thinner, there is more of it, it is clear, and
plesantly salty. It remains this way until bleeding starts, at which point it
is again thick for the first day or so. It then returns to being clear.
Health: I have found that ejaculating during ovulation-because
it
reduces vaginal temperature-reduces
yeast infections that result from
the increase in vaginal temperature at ovulation.
Safer Sex: The same safe sex rules apply for girl cum as boy cum: keep
it out.of all mucous membranes and your blood stream; keep it our of your
partners eyes.
Ejaculating
Pfcture: The picture is meant to be pornographic,
erotic,
and educational. It is of me-the author. of the text. It is encoded in
traditional pornographic
genre-shaven
pussy-because
I like it and I
think ejaculating serves to deconstruct the image itself as well as the
Women Against Pornography reading and critique of the image. This is
not a young pussy, but for the viewer who equates hairlessness with the
pre-pubescent girl and the girl with powerlessness, the visual inscribes
an active sexual organ and a powerful sexual organ. The indiscretion of
the author showing her own genitalia (the lived body) subverts the
written body, transgressing writing the body, and transgresses her own
written text.
Notes
1.
Hippocrates, Db genituke, eds. and trans. W.C. Lyons and J.N. Hattock, (Cambridge:
Pembrooke Press, 1978) chap. 6 (7.478).
2.
3.
Cited in Josephine Sevely, Eves Secrets. A New Theory of Female Sexuality, (New York:
Random House, 1987), pSl.,
4.
DanieIIe Jacquart and Claude Thomasset, SexuaZity and Medicine in the Middle Ages,
trans. Matthew Adamson, (Great Britain: Polity Press, 1988) pp. 6674.
5.
Rainer de Graaf, New Treatise Concerning the Generative Organs of Women (1672),
annot. trans. H.B. Jocelyn and B.P. SetcheUJountaZofReproduction
and Fertility, Sup
plement 17, (Oxford: BlackweB Scientific Publications, 1972), p.107.
6.
Ibid., p.141.
7.
Ibid., p.141.
8.
168
9.
SHANNON
BELL
and
Sex&&v
1880-1930,
10. Sigmund Freud, Fragments of an Analysis of a Case of Hysteria (1905), The Standard
Edition
of the Compfete P~choIogical
Works by Sigmund
Freud,
Vol. VII, trans. and
ed. James Strachey, (London: The Hogarth Press and the Institute of Psycho-analysis,
19531, p.84.
11. Steven Marcus, The Other
Nineteenth
Century
Vfctorfans:
England,
(mew
and
A Study of Sexual@
York: Basic Books,
Emma
Goldman,
Its Physfofogy
13. T. Van de Velde, IdealMarriage:
Heinemann Medical Books), 1965, p.138.
and
and
Pont&raphy
in Mid-
1966), p.194:
Technique,Second
in Paradise,
(New York: Wenner15. Thomas Gladwin and Seymour B. Samson, TrukMan
Gren Foundation for Anthropological
Research Inc., 1956), p.233.
Human
Sexuaffty,
Redent
(New
Discoveries
SexuaC
Responsk,
Behavior
in the
(Boston: Little
22. WiUiam R. Masters, Virginia E. Johnson, and R.C. Kolodny, Masters and Johnson on Sex
and Human
Loving,
(Boston: Little, Brown, 1982), p.69.
23. Ibid., p.70.
24. Milan Zaviacic, et al, Female Urethral Expulsions Evoked by Local Digital Stimulation
of the G-Spot: Differences in the Response Patterns, 7he Journal
of Sex Research
24
(1988): 312-13.
eds. IsabeIIe De
25. Helene Cixous, The Iaughof the Medusa, New French Feminisms,
CourtIvronandElaIneMarks,
(Amherst: UnivershyofMassachusettsPress,
1980). p.250.
26. MichelFoucault,
Three.
TheHfstoryofSexuaZfty,
VoI.1, (NewYork:
VintageBooks,
1978) Part
of Sexual Behavior
14
27. Heli Abate, Vaginal Eroticism: A Replication Study, Archives
(1985): 530-33 and HeIi Ahate and Zwi Hoch, The G-Spot and Female Ejaculation:
A Current Appraisal, Journal
of Sex and Marital
ikniphy
12 (1986): 217.
28. J.K. Davidson, Sr., CA. Darling, and C. Conway-Welch, The Role of the Grafenberg Spot
and Female Ejaculation In the Female Orgasmic Response: An EmpIricaI Analysis, The
Journal
of Sex and Marftul
Therapy
15 (1989): 120.
THE HYSTE~C2.L
MALE
169
32. Lute Irigaray, This Sex Which fs Not One, (New York: Cornell Press, 1985), p. 116.
33. The Boston Womens Health Collective, Our Bodies, Our Selves, (New York: Simon &
Schuster, Inc., 1984), p.171.
34. Barbara Ehrenreich, Elizabeth Hess, and Gloria Jacobs, Re-Making Love. TheFemfnizution of Sex, (New York: Anchor Press, 1986), p.185.
Whither
the
Phallus?
11
-!THE FETISH IN SEX, LIES &VIDEOTAPE:
WHITHER THE PHALLUS?
Berkeley Kaite
While in Paris last summer, I picked up a copy of Paris Passion, the
anglo guide to Parisian cultural life. Within its bulging middle section full
of The Best of Paris (an annual tribute) was the The Best Bicentennial
Buy. The featured revolutionary souvenirwas a snapshot from the waist
down of a pair of mens boxer shorts worn by a model. The graphic on
the front, from waist to crotch, is a silkscreen of a guillotine. The blade
of the machine has descended and claimed another victim: the tip of a
recently dismembered penis beneath the blade is visible at the level of
the models crotch. The intersection of the guillotine-surely
the most
potent symbol of the masses under seige, of dismemberment,
and of a
little death to the bourgeoisie-with
contemporary castration suggests a
cynicism and an emergent hysteria around the uncoding of men as
men? A phallic signifier? Hardly. Witty? Very. Overdone? To anchor the
visual image the caption is offered: Tired of that unsightly bulge? Buy the
man in your life these souvenir Bicentennial boxer shorts. Guaranteed to
cut a fine figure. 100 percent cotton. Cost (a snip at): 139F.
It does suggest, as per the panic thesis*, that men may be the ones
who are panicking (No longer the old male cock as the privileged sign
of patriarchal power.. . but the postmodern penis which becomes an
emblematic sign of sickness, disease, and waste. Penis burnout, then, for
the-end of the world), and that the phallus (or at least the penis) is under
seige. If nothing else, the way we think about sexual difference is
changing: strategies of the representation, negotiation, and containment
of sexual difference are, in the late eighties/early nineties, undergoing a
172
BERKELEYKAITE
radical renunciation.
Consider the following three examples: Unlike
Norma Jean Baker who tried to become Marilyn Monroe, Madonna is not
only saved by the politics of cynicism but knows that the image is
radically separated from the real. She also presents the video, Open
Your Heart, as an indictment of spectatorship and the prerogative of the
male gaze. As she performs a Gildalike striptease on stage, surrounded
by several male onlookers, these same men are exposed as incapacitated
by the spectacle: they look at their peril. One is trapped in eyeglasses as
thick and blurry as coke bottles (and we appropriate his point of view
when we are offered a look through those lenses); anothercannot
look
long or Well enough: the black.screen descends and cuts off his viewing
pleasure; others are mere cardboard cutouts whom Madonna shoots
dead with an imaginary gun. As the great spoiler of the voyeurs
pleasure, her capacity to command the gaze is the small death or
emasculation of the spectators in the video.
A second example can be found in the television ads for Black Label
beer,. which also recode difference in the way they fetishize and phallicize the female body; make a spectacle of the male body; and display the
negative image of the black and white film so that the final visual
narrative is a reversal of what it should be-all in the service of seduction.
Thirdly and in another vein, Pee-wee Herman himself is symptomatic
of contemporary
disturbances around the negotiation of sexual difference. Constance Penley writes that when Pee-wee and the other characters on the Playhouse television show oscillate between male and
female personas, it constitutes an oscillation without anxiety.. . a postmodernist stage of camp subjectivity, one distinguished by acapacity for
zipping through sexual roles that is as fast and unremarkable as zapping
through the channels.4
In what follows I will isolate one element in the signification
of
difference, notably fetish objects and relations. At the risk of making a
fetish of fetishism, I will explore the election of the fetish in the service
of seduction, particularly the way it stages a play of differences, or cuts
a fine line between affirmation and denial. And, I will alsoaddress the
question, Does this play of fetishism have something to do v+th contemporary hysterical inscriptions that serve to recode masculinity?
Sex, Lies & Videotape
The Fetish
,.
174
BEhKELEYkXlTE
175
177
the Camera,
the Videotape
How can the video camera and videated image be fetishized? And how
does this fetishization relate to difference? Neither the camera nor the
moving picture, in themselves, are sexual. But they have been sexualized
in Sex, Lfes G Vfdeotupe and other cultural technologies. Susan Sontag,
in her memorable On Photography, writes of the cameras inescapable
(sexual) metaphor.. . named without subtlety whenever we talk about
loading and aiming a camera, about shooting a frlm.*O Christian Metz
has outlined with precision the relationship between the frlmic lexis and
fetishism.*l While it is the photograph, according to Metz, that fs a fetish,
or can be fetishized, a film and cinema negotiate fetishism. Metzs
commentary about absence, loss, fragmentation,
and death is pertinent
here. Recall that fetishism is structured around a number of metaphoric
and metonymic transactions: based on the substitutive power of partobjects, the fetish operates through suspended belief (and disbelief), an
investment (frequently visual) in simultaneous absence and presence.
Like photography,
the fetish overlayswith death and loss in the way it
captures and ossifies a moment that is highly condensed and ultimately
misrepresented
or misquoted and cut out of its referent. Of equal
importance here is what the fetish does not say (or cannot say), in other
words what it summons in absence or the absence-loss-that
it evokes.
What Phillippe Dubois calls thanatography,
or photographys
affiliation with death, is the subversive phantasy/fiction
that challenges, or
gives new meaning to, the presumed real.22 This harkens back to
Marxs comment about the magic and necromancy in the subversive
power of the fetish: it combines the dead labor of commodities and the
death of the referent in the photograph. The indexical authority of photo
and moving image suspends both time and space. The power of mastery
and captivity, which the representation
bestows on its referent, is a
frozen moment. People and objects are, in the words of Metz, instantaneously abducted from one world and re-presented in another. (As with
death), the photo preserves the past; the moment is forever held for
178
BERKELEY K2IiE
179
it is captured by the eye of the voyeur, and his eye alone. The domestication of the fetish entertains this notion.
The Technology
of Seduction
180
BERKELEY KAITE
I want to retain the argument that the fetish, in any transaction, is tied
to a destabilizing construction of otherness, and that this construction
operates in a whole network of relationships throughout
the film. This
precarious working through of the domestication of the threat of otherness, at once negotiates a simulated difference and indifference; it both
empowers and emasculates. This is evident in other areasof the films
discursive and dramatic plays on the management
of identity in the
framework
of images of separation and collusion. Frequently, for
example, the soundtrack is juxtaposed with visuals that do not exactly
contradict the speaking voice of the narrative: that is the point. The
claustrophobia
of the fetish-the
over-coded endowment,
metaphoric
and metonymic, of the object through its exchange value-is indicated in
the way characters and their symbolic properties are interchanged for
one another or, at least, in the way they coalesce to suggest that the
boundaries between lies/truth, men/women,
the real/representation,
are blurred and contested.
The first instance of such a visual and verbal paraphrase occurs when
Graham drives into the city. All we see, and this is the fir&scene of the
film, is the shadow of the front of his car as it traverses the ashphalt. It
comes to a sudden stop and we hear a voice-over of Ann saying (to her,
therapist): Garbage. As she discusses, without any reflection upon
what she is expressing, her concern with what to do with all the
garbage. She puts her hands to her forehead and extends them outwards
as if to suggest her head will explode-from
all the garbage. Her voice is
paired with our visual introduction to Graham. We soon discover that he
too is no stranger to garbage of his own (Garbage: animal entrails;
entrails: bowels, intestines, meaning interior or internal),
This fetishistic hyper-coding
whereby the object embodies (in exchange) both one and the other, or when it is an indictment of the
referent, is underscored very early in the film, beginning with Anns and
Grahams shared, repressed garbage. When Graham arrives and is met
at the front door by Ann (their first encounter), he immediately asks if he
can use the bathroom. After he reappears in the living room Ann remarks,
That was quick. Graham replies nonchalantly,
False alarm. After a
THE HYSTERKXL
iMALE
181
brief chat with Ann he announces with a nervous laugh: Im ready to use
the bathroom now. These non-normative
comments first establish
Graham as merely an oddball. But the oblique references to anality (or at
least to Grahams internal functions: what else can they be?) implicate
Ann and Graham in an anxious circularity. They share the same universe
(via these visual and verbal associations to garbage), and the seductive
machinery of the film is set in motion by the metonymic displacements
of the characters. Indeed, later that evening Ann visits Graham asleep on
the couch upstairs and gazes at him as though in a narcissistic trance.
At various points there is an equivalence between other characters; the
films fluidity is achieved through these narcissistic overlaps and exchanges. Ann and Cynthia are also implicated in a confusion of identities.
As Ann talks to her therapist about her relationship with her husband
John, the sound-track of her voice is accompanied by a scene in which
John and Cynthia are engaged in sexual foreplay. Later, after Cynthia
announces that she would like to do it in her sisters bed (with of course
her sisters husband), John and Cynthia meet for an afternoon tryst at his
home. It is during this illicit. exchange that Graham and Ann share secrets
over lunch. However, the editing of these two scenes confuses who is
speaking. While Cynthia approaches John in bed, so that her hair covers
the side of her face, Ann asks Graham, in their off-screen dialogue, if she
can reveal something personal. At that moment it is not clear who
posesses the speaking voice. It could also be Cynthias, in fact there is a
strong illusion that it is. The phenomenon
of disembodied voices occurs
several times throughout the film and of course underscores the castrating transactions of the fetish; that is, the boundaries around categories of
.difference are susceptible to a seductive dissolution.
Disembodied voices are also a characteristic of Grahams videotapes.
His talking heads are the. substitute for carnal knowledge. And carnal
knowledge in this fetishized universe of representation refers us back to
the limp signifier and auto- erotic self-referentiality.
These would seem
to compete or contrast with the lustful and fully illicit liaisons between
Cynthia and John. But the videotapes and the video camera are what
fascinate and disturb, thus supplanting and dispersing any real referent. They do this because like all videated production they aspire to a
perfection, as Hal Foster notes, subsuming all signs of labor in their own
regirne.29 In Sex, Lfes G Vfdeotape the videos are also implicated in
scenarios of loss and displacement: sex for Graham is removed from the
laborious as he loses himself in the images, or is consumed by them.
The talking heads, and Grahams subversive relationship to phallic
sexuality, stand outside the laws of sexual difference and other, official,
discourses on sexuality and the law. There are, for example, references
to auto-eroticism (which in the case of women, after all, isexclusive of
phallic donor-ship), the first made in the context of Anns therapy. On one
of Grahams videotapes we hear him ask a woman the most unusual
location shes masturbated
in; he later reveals that sometimes his
182
BERKELEY-E
subjects do things for the camera. And Cynthia masturbates for the
camera as well. Prior to that confession (made to her sister); and during
her videotaping, Cynthia invokes a disembodied penis with the following account of the first time she saw a penis:
The organ itself seemed like a separate thing, a separate
entity to me. I mean, when he finally pulled it out and I
could look at it and touch it I completely forgot there was
a guy attached to it. I remember literally being startled
when the guy spoke to me.
\
THE HYSTERICAL
MALE
183
from the marriage, John protests a little too loudly that he does not really
care and that it is his wifes problem that she will not accept his
commitment to his work. He however immediately receives the shattering news that he has lost the big account (due to his philandering with
Cynthia and continually deferring appointments
with the client) and is
doomed to severe disapproval from his colleagues, and the terminal
position of junior partner. In this scene, he also looks like junior in his
white suit, vest, bow-tie and glasses, and little boys clothes (like Pee-wee
Herman, one notes). He has been emasculated in more ways than one.
Like the ear in Blue Velvet, the fetish opens multiple narratives,
preventing
closure: not unlike Graham who stirs up the bourgeois
complacency of the triangular relationship. It unsettles in its seduction
and is one route to prying open the tensions and frictions in any text. In
terms of contemporary
affect, Sex, Lies G Videotape may point to a decentered gaze and, at the risk of sounding too optimistic, a politics of
sexual dislocation.30 For Graham, the videos are a substitute for a limp
signifier, at least within the semantics of the film, recall the loss of his
own phallic potency. Rather than inscribing a map of erotic significance
on the womans body,31 fetishistic negotiations more appropriately
suggest that strategies of the male gaze indict the male body, and its
representations,
and of course eroticize castration. Kaja Silverman interprets the great masculine renunciation,
which occurred with the
relaxing of sumptuary laws in the eighteenth century, as the repression
of exhibitionism
and narcissism in the male subject, with the consequent
male identification
with woman-as-spectacle.
The consequences arising from the contested terrain of the representation
is the female form
endowed to cover up male loss, the flaw of the real.32 Whether a willful
injunction to dispossession, or the discursive construction of difference
which straddles the negation of difference, the fetish and fetish relations
work to fictionalize coherence. In spite of Grahams looking at women, *
he is in fact looking at a deflated representation of his disembodied self.
Can men have penis envy? Or, whats pee-wee about Herman?
Notes
1.
Lynne Kirby, Male Hysteria and Early Cinema, Camera Obscura 17 (May 1988):126.
The issue entitled Male Trouble contains articles that re-work theory (Oedipal identiBcations, malemasochism) and popular culture (Pee-wee Herman, Three Men and a
Baby, Jerry Lewis). See also the Canadian Journal of Politic&and Social Theory 13:12 (1989). for the development of arguments for the hysterical male.
2.
ArthurKroker, MarilouiseKroker,
and David Cook, ThePanicEnqvcZopedia,
New World Perspectives, 1989).
3.
Charles Acland, Look what theyre doing on TV! Towards an appreciation of the
complexity of music video, Wide Angle 10:2 (1988). Acland discusses music videos, in
particular Madonnas Papa Dont Preach, and urges intertextual and inter-media
(Montreal,
184
BERKELEY KMTE
considerations (p. 9). See Lisa A. Lewis, Female Address ln Music Video.Journal
of
Communica#on
Inquiry 11:l (Winter 1987) for a rather different emphasis: Madonna... rewrites the tragic Marilyn Monroe image she references, into a decidedly
female image of recognition and power (p. 78). E. Ann Kaplans analisis of Madonna
videos ls as celebratory as Lewiss although she advances a more complex, and not
unproblematic, understanding of seduction and thevideo in Rocking Around tke Clock:
Music Television, Postmodernism G Consumer Culture, (New York: Methuen, 1987).
4.
5.
Edmond Grant suggests that the film is inaccessible and unsatisfying because the
character of Graham is merely a space cadet who never quite turns into a flesh-andblood being with realistic sexual troubles, Films in Review (October 1,989). Wrltlng ln
The New Yorker, Terrence Rafferty also localizes the idealistic problem of Graham
within the poppsychology truism, Get in touchwith your feelings, ln Lies, Lies, and
More Lies, (7 August 1989). Both reviews put the film within the paleof an auteurs
quirkiness; enigmas that cannot be explained; characters who are simple, lf repressed;
and a story with an outrageous plot device (Grant). What is left begging and
unexplored is the question of the films appeal; how it seduces (it is merely ackpowledged that Soderbergh offers some topflight visuals [Grant] and a slick, eclectic
technique [Rafferty]); the role of seduction in the film itself(and its attendent discourse
on truth); and the repressions in the text, not just in the characters. Harlan Jacobson,
in his review of the film, Truth or Consequences, Film Commentauly-August,
1989),
is concerned with Soderberghs potential as a director and the baffling fact that he ls only
. 26. In Video Love: Sex, Lies and Videotape, Greil Marcus, in a review which waffles
between the appreciative and the dismissive, argues that it is pointless to look for
meaning anywhere in this film notable for its off-market funkiness, ENclitic 11:3
(1989). Havent these people ever watched MTV or Mu&Music or exp,erlenced videos
and their seductive pleasures? In this same issue of EN&@ there are commercial
advertisements which is justMable for specialized publications that are continually
threatened by small circulation numbers and a low return. (One advertisement for
example, is for Dehnonlcos Seafood Grille-Ifit swims, Weve got it!-and underneath,
in small letters: We welcome the American Express Card). But two other advertisements on page 5 suggest that videeappeal has purchase, even amohg intellectuals,
which locates the film culturally (rather than as the project of a relatively autonomous
authdr, or a flawed study of a character (Graham) who places himself so far outside of
everyone elses norma&y, outside of the politeness that keeps life level, that he no longer
even recognizes his transgressions [Marcus, p.301). The ads are for EZTV, LAs
Premiere Video Gallery with a screening room; and Channel One Video.
6.
Sigmund Freud, Fetishism, (1927) in On Sexual@, trans. James Strachey; ed. Angela
Richards, (Harmondswotth: Penguin, 1983 [1927]) p. 353. See also Sigmund Freud,
Three Essays on the Theory of Sexuality, in On Sexuality [ 19051; and .SpIitting of the
Ego in the Process of Defence, Sfandard Edition, Vol. 23, trans. James,Strachey, (New
York: Norton, 1940). Other sources are: Robert C. Bak, Fetishism, Journal of the
American Psychoanalytic Association 1 (1953); Michael BaIint, A Contribution on
Fetishism,IntwnationalJoun~alo~P~~oanalysFF
16 (1935); J.C. FIugel, Polyphalllc Symbolism and the Castration Complex, ZntemationalJournal
ofPsychoanalysis
S(1924);AngelGarma.
TheMeaningandGenesisofFetishlsm,Intwn~tionalJoumal
of Psychoanalysis 37 (1956); W.H. Gillespie, Notes on the Analysis of Sexual
THE
HYSTERICAL
MALE
185
8.
Kaja Silverman, via Lacan, argues that linguistic castrations precede the perception of
anatomical threat in The Acoustic Mirror: 27zeFemale Voice in Psychoanalysis and
Cinema, (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1988).
9.
10. KarlMarx, The German Ideology, ed. C. J. Arthur, (New York: International Publishers,
1970 [1846]). See also Marxs essay, The Fetishism Of Commodities and the Secret
Thereof, Cap&f, Vol. 1, ed. Frederick .Engels, trans. Samuel Moore and Edward
Aveling, (New York: International Publishers, 1967 [1867]). W.J.T. Mitchell discusses
fetishism and ideology in Marxs rhetoric inZconology:Zmage, Tex< Ideology, (Chicago
and London: The University of Chicago Press, 1986). Linda Williams compares and
contrasts Freud and Marx on fetishism, with special emphasis on the sexual fetish in
hard-core pornographic films, in Fetishism and Hard Core: Marx, Freud, and the
Money Shot, ForAdulC Users Only: i%eDilemma of ViolentPornography,
ed. Susan
Gubar and Joan Hoff, (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1989)
11. Marx, The German Ideology, p. 47.
12. Marx, Capita4 Vol. 1, p. 76.
13. Marx, Capital, Vol. 1, p. 72.
14. Marx, Capital, Vol. 1, pp. 71,72.
15. Colin Mercer, A Poverty of Desire: Pleasure and Popular Politics, in Formations
Pleasure, ed. The Formations Collective, (London: Routledge, 1983), p. 93.
.
of
16. Jean Baudrillard, For a Critique of the Political Economy of the S&n, trans. Charles
Levin, (St. Louis, Missouri: Telos, 1981), p. 91.
17. D.N. Rodowick, Vision, Desire and the Film Text, Camera Obscura 6 (1980); and,
The DifEculty of Difference, Wide Angle 5, 1 (1982).
18. Elizabeth WiIson, Adorned
1985), p. 20.
(London:
Virago,
19. BerIceley Kaite, Reading the Body Textual: The Shoe and Fetish Relations in Soft and
Hard Core, The American Journal of Semiotics 6.4 (1989).
20. Susan Sontag, On Photography,
21. Christian Metz, Photography
22. Quoted in Metz.
186
BERKELEYK4lT.E
&Popular
30. On these see inter alia, Kaja Silverman, Fassbinder and Lacan: A Reconsideration of
Gaze, Look and Image, Camera Obscura 19 (January 1989); Sharon Willis, Seductive
Spaces: Private Fascinations and Public Fantasies in Popular Cinema, in Seduction and
7heory: Readings of Gender, Representation and Rhetoric, ed. Dianne Hunter, (Urbana: University of IEinois, 1989); Dana Polan, Brief Encounters: Mass Culture and the
Evacuation of Sense, in Studies in Entertainment:
Critical Approaches to Mass
Culture, ed. Tania Modleski, (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1986).
31. The phrase is from The Legs of the Countess, by Abigail Solomon-Godeau, in which
the author writes of the appropriation of fetishistic scopophilla by the Countess de
Castiglione. October 39 (Winter 1986).
32. I would emphasize loss rather than lack, the former being more dialectical and
recuperative. See, Kaja Silverman, Fragments of a Fashionable Discourse, in Studies in
_ Entertainment;
J. C. Flugel, The Psychology of Clothes, .(New York: International
Universities Press, 1931); for an elaboration of male lack, see Kaja Silverman, The
Acoustic Mirror and Fassbinder and Lacan.
12
!MY FIRST CONFESSION
Stephen Pfohl
I recall a time in which I wanted a baby sister but would settle for a doll,
a simulacrum of a girl to play boy with. It was my third birthday and I insisted. My parents bought me the doll, a cute girl doll, frilled and femipleased with this
nine.AtfiistIwas
my eyes. Then I
gift, a delight to
of my parents
heard the sound
the garden. I had
moving about in
ject of inquisibecome the subeyes wondering
tion:
worried
voices
that
and
troubled
Well
now that you
asked,
play with arc you
have a doll to
what you truly
really sure thats
upon me, judgwant?
Eyes
they waited for
ing my desire,
self. A strange
signs of a normal
me, I hid within
unease overtook
formed.
Some
myself,
transeluded, silenced,
other
me exI conabject.
No,
made
I had desired, its
fessed, the doll
This I want no
what girls want.
burst the tension
longer. 11 Smiles
turned to the
and ease reboy, hugged by
body of a young
America in the
adults. It was
early nineteen-fifties
and it was no time to play boy with a cute girl doll.
There were imaginary Indians on television, snakes in the jungle electric
and communists behind the curtain. Back to the toy store went my baby
sister, an uncertain double replaced by a six shooting gun. Many wild savages did I slay, each recording a continuous count notched upon the
handle of my weapon; and each day felt better, the further I progressed
from the shame of my first confession.
13
-BSIMULATIONS
Andrew Haase
189
everything..
in terms of seeing.6
190
ANDREWHAASE
eyes. But she could not. Two gazes stalked her eyes, gazes from which
she could not-and did not desire to-escape.8Why
can 0 not divert her
own gaze? Reneand Sir Stephen desire to stalk 0.0 could not escape.
0 does not desire to escape.
In the sou-uenir shops, tourists jostle for position among books as black
racks display postcards of Michelangelos David. I come to the David
with millions of others.
The production of Truth is the production of a certain representation
of
power (i.e., juridico-discursive)
which governs both the thematics of
repression and the theory of the law as constitutive of desire.%tervention
in the history of Truth is possible only as a critique of representation.
Can a representation
of critique eviscerate Truth? A representation
of a
representation
plays in metamorphosis.
When I photograph
the David, a representational
reality seduces the
male body, the,male desire. I am before the lens: I instantaneously make
another body for myself, I transform myself in advance into an irnage.lO
The Davids body and Michelangelos body are mine.
:
Zarathustras camel, lyantzhg to be well loaded, takes up what is most
and speeds into the desert as if it could escape itseW
1
Of course I am speaking of male homosexual
desire?
the Symbolic
19 1
The hyperreal.
is
grey
for renouncing
its presence?
Because Rene was leaving her free, and because she loathed her
freedom. Her freedom was worse than any chains. Her freedom was
separating her from Rent. I6
192
AiYDhTEWiUASE
no longer exists.
creates my body or mortifies
/
it, according to its caprice.18
of torture,
limited to
193
pleasure of
In an era of representational
corporalityi the subject, as principle of
constancy, falls away. The Symbolic Order, the structure of exchange
between the unconscious subject and the ego, is posited aposterforf
.
The Truth of psychoanalysis (conceived objectively or in terms of
alethefu ) is dumb.26 .Imaginary egos speak the Symbolic Order as
representation.
Situationally
reconstituted,
this ego shifts modes,
demands interminably.
Os freedom is the condition for the possibility of renouncing
that
freedom. Roissy teaches that you are totally dedicated to something
outside yourself.27 I am dedicated to nothing.
Desiring-production
is that which crosses boundaries to discover new
lands and new streams, to open up new worlds and new areas.
Desire, moving in ever changing flows does not want revolution, it is
revolutionary in its own right, as though involuntarily, by wanting what
it wants. The nature of desire, however, to flow in an undirected
manner, is intolerable to both fascism and multi-national capital. Patriarchy effectively channels heterogeneous
desire through women as a
powerhouse
of male desire and as a force of absorption? Yet, the
new male ego could never have developed as a ruler-ego, one that was
isolated from women and opposed to them, without the (admittedly enforced) cooperation of women themselves.2B
Today, postmodern desire lives as dead desire, as a digital paroxysm
between polar oppositions within a network of dead power. Patriarchal apologies are invalid when control and power are no longer at issue;
yet men continue to simulate positions of control within socioeconomic
spheres. This secret of powers lack of existence that the great politicians shared also belongs to the great bankers, who know that money is
nothing, that money does not exist; and it also belonged to the great
theologians and inquisitors who knew that God does not exist, that God
is dead.29 The mediascape constitutes the very male desire from which
it comes.
I!%
AhDREWlUASE
195
sexuality. Real sexual activity has not been suppressed. The pleasure
of power-the
power of pleasure; mutually reinforcing
each other,
confirming, constituting an interpolar relation. Why does a science of,
sex lay out the Truth as an analytical visibility, a permanent transparency?38Discoume on sex and sexual pleasure have restructured our
activities in manageable terms. An explosion of sex-speak has produced
a new sex and a new flesh.
Science refuses to speak of sex itself; instead, it concerns itself primarily with aberrations, perversions, exceptional oddities, pathological
abatements, and morbid aggravations.39 The desire of psychoanalysis
always already conditions its discourse, conditions a relations of the
subject to another subject.
Freikorps members, protofascists, soldier males who eventually formed
the core of the S.S., provide us with an easy target. Male desire has always
been critiqued (and venerated) in the guise of war and sport and science.
Klaus Theweleit asks why the fear of dissolution through union with a
woman actually causes desire to flee from its object, then transform itself
into a representation
of violence. Y~ODoes the cathexis of fear into a
representation of violence imply that representations
of violence are
fear-productions?
On the basis of his clinical practice, Reich reports that
soldier males often in fact suffered from sustained erections.41
Why is the pessimism offered by apocalyptic prophets not shared by a
consumer public indulging in ultra-fashion and image purchasing?
Romantic desire for union with the other calls out in the name of holy
transcendence and male orgasm. Theweleit presupposes an alienation
(non-union) that can and should be overcome. Lacans conception of the
gaze forecloses this possibility. For Iacan, memory of dissolution implies
. the subject sustaining itselfina function of desire, not z&ion. The gaze
is imagined by the subject in the field of the Other.42 An experience of
dissolution must be conceived as the revelation of a subjects condition
as always already de-centered, a revelation which can only be enacted
from a centered position (non-dissolved):
The continual valorization of positions considered traditionally
feminine (decentering,
liquidity, dissolution, fragmentation)
is a popular
ploy among male feminists who desire to act out personality traits
historically assigned to women (passivity, sensitivity, naturalness, passion, etc.) and to reinforce conservative gender distinctions (women as
hysteric, mother, virgin, whore,t&tory
of becoming,
etc.).*3 Oppression through exaltation.44.
Photographs
take me.
196 AhDREWHAASE
As images replace images with cinematic speed, romantics look around
and blink. Ive never had real sex and I dont want it. In the day and age
of A.I.D.S., the sex/death link formulates a sex without secretions.4Yrhe
postmodern preference: media-sex. More bang for your f&k.
Zarathustms child, wanting to will its own will, wanting a new
beginning, a game, a self-propelled wheel, a frost movement, a sacred
Yes, forgets and embodies innocence as if it could create itself.46
Cinematic velocity forecloses pictorial comparison. The annihilation of
the. reflexive viewer inaugurates a war for ratings. Has cinema ever
. :
allowed us to question?
?Ihe simulacrum is never that which conceals the truth-it is the truth
which conceals that there is none. The simulacrum is trueJn4
The desire for fascism: As constantly present and possible.i.it can, and
does, become our production. At a certain point and under certain
conditions the masses wanted it. The production
of male-female relations is a crude example of it. 48 Heterogeneous
and homogeneous
elements present within individuals and societies are united in it.49
Computers which employ digital languages (011) to store bits of information present distorted pictures of experience. Music, digitally encoded onto compact discs, is read as (0) or (1) by C. D. players and
translated back into musical notes. While the digital systems increase
clarity and distinctness (analogue recordings are less clear and distinct)
they lose resonance (available on analogue recordings). This results from
aninability to represent the infiite sound gradations between (0) and
(1). .The thrust for a more perfect simulation must continue.
This
analysis is obsolete. It manifests a nostalgia for a real which has always
already been reconstructed. Within the mediascape the body is constituted along digital lines. Radios, amplifiers, TVs, sound systems, present
only O/l sound to the human ear. Perhaps at first, a few musical
aficionados object that something sounds wrong.
Soon the body
adjusts; the ear adapts, digital music sounds better. A self-fulfiiing
prophecy is enacted. The world has indeed become flat. The band plays
live Muzak. ~0 I want my MTV.
In writing, perceived reality is annihilated in order to preserve the life
of an ideational representation,
in a process which proceeds from
compulsion and the reconstructs approximate models as determinate
paradigms.5*
Today, in the postmodern era, sexuality is relegated to technology and
the mediascape: authorized dealers of orgasmic pleasures, fantasy, and
the body.
THE H-Y3TERKAL
MALE
197
I am cinematic?
Philosophical
inquiry, insisting on an apolitical, ahistorical, asexual
perspective, effectuates precise images of human existence and experience.
Western literature moves from narrated presentations (myths and fables)
to confessional representations of Truth (confessions).52 The confession
can no longer exist if concealment of transgression is not possible, if
desire and activity are formulated within an obscene cinema. Today,
however, surveillance (exterior/interior)
and the policing of desire have
become unnecessary in an era where the variation between models,
between the screen ofthe movie theater and the screen ofthe body, have
been eliminated. The desperate quest for an authority of reception and
absolution, for a master to whip my,inner thighs, has been abandoned.
I cannot confess my sins because I dont have any.
As the arc of postmodern power circles back upon itself, transgression
becomes recombinant (philosophers as capitalists, capitalists as artists,
artists as preachers, preachers as movie stars, movie stars as presidents)
or nostalgia @e-vamped styles as the avant-garde of fashion, neo-psychedelic as musics cutting edge).
Today the bodys enunciation of a discourse on sex cannot be separated
from the enunciated bodys sexuality. Today the bodys enunciation of a
discourse on sex has replaced the enunciated bodys sexuality. The noise
of body moans.
As I speak I fuck?
Mans desire is desire of the Other.53 For Lacan, male desire functions
(as it returns to the subject) as lack of a specific object of desire (objet
petfta ) and of the condition of being the desired of the Other. Desiringproduction
introduces an alternative which includes Lacans conception as a limited case.s4 However, as models, both constitute reality; as
reality, both are symptoms of their models.
Within postmodernity,
re-representation
emerges as quintessentially
political. Re-representation
makes reality. *
Literature is not based on experience. Approximate demos, support the.
continued search for more reality than the real. However, the complete
1gS ANDR+?WfUASE
codification of women (Demi Moore is Raquel Welch, Raquel Welch is
Holly Hunter, Holly Hunter is Daryl Hannah, Daryl Hannah is Cher, Cher
is Glen Close is...) presupposes then denounces the existence of real
wo.men. Male desire drives the search for its object via lack. ,Ifthis search
is taken to its logical extreme then it selfdestructs in ten seconds.
Rarely have philosophers directed a steady gazeto these objects situated
between disgust and ridicule, where one must avoid both hypocrisy and
scandal. 55
My anatomy is matched up with clothing,
tectural spaces, metaphysical constructs.
instruments
of torture,
archi-
I want nihilism?
Whoever sins by symbols will be punished
being enacted.
199
The agency of domination does not reside in the one who speaks (for it
is [s/he] who is constrained), but in the one who listens and says nothing;
not in the one who knows and answers, but in the one who questions and
is not supposed to know. And this discourse of truth finally takes effect,
not in the one who receives it, but in the one from whom it is wrested.63
When the rituals of domination are perfected to the point of completion,
domination ceases to exist?
That which is thus alienated in needs constitutes an Urverdrdngung
(primal repression), an inability, it is supposed, to be articulated in
demand, but it re-appears in something it gives rise to that presents itself
in [humans] as desire (dus Begehren ).&( When the lacuna between the
needs of a subject and what can be articulated in demand falls to zerodesire is cryogenized.
Pornography is condemned
is everywhere.
by enlightened
individuals.
Pornography
The phone begins to ring as I unlock the apartment door. Its 20in
Boston. The answering machine clicks on. After a few seconds I hear,
Hello. Hello. This is Keri. From the Cape? I know I havent spoken to you
for a while. But I.. . I pickup the phone. I say, Hello. She says she wants
to meet for a drink at ten. I hung-up. I smile. My sister is not yet home from
work. I turn on some lights and turn on the shower. Steam covers the
mirror. As the hot water slaps my back I masturbate with efficiency. My
eyes close and I reach up to touch my tits. I reach up to touch Keris tits.
I want my desire to remain unreadable. Balls of whitish come slip down
the drain.
The twentieth
century professes to loosen repressive mechanisms,
proliferate tolerance, and diminish disqualification of perverts.65 In the
completion of repression as tolerance have we all become perverts? Have
we all become perversions?
When heterogeneity
becomes transgression, when perversion is the
Law, when the media has eclipsed the role of the family, when a
computer is smarter than mommy and daddy, when a movie star is
stronger than brother or sister, more beautiful, more handsome, more
desirable than anyone on the street, when the fucking on screen forces
the cock to become stiff and smooth.
Iam themanwhofuckswomeninfilms.
A representation
shifter sine qua
Anthony Perkins
Rourke is Marlon
Iamthemanwhofuckswomen.
200 ANDREWHAASE
I watch carefully as Keri enters the bar. She gives the bouncer some proof
and looks around: I smile at her. Keri is excited. She hugs me for a long
time. She squeezes my face between her hands. She kisses ,my lips. I ask
Keri what shes been doing. Keri asks me about my work. I spoke about
Nietzsche. Keri asks me why1 study philosophy. I say To meet women.
Keri takes my hand and laughs. I smile. I want her to say Youre brilliant.
Youre beautiful. I want to fuck you. I take a sip from my beer.
No contemplation
is possible. The images fragment perception
into
successive sequences, into stimuli toward which there can be only
instantaneous response, yes or no-the limit of an abbreviated reaction.
Film no longer allows you to question. It questions you, and directly.66
It &as 0, in the Story of0, it was she who sometimes leaned back against
a wall, pale and trembling, stubbornly impaled by her silence, bound
there by her silence, so happy to remain silent. She was waiting for more
than permission, since she already had permission. She was waiting for
an order. 67 As I write of 0 I am pornographic.
When the project to delineate all possible positions is realized, those
positions become obsolete. If it is possible at last to talk with such
defmitive understanding
about power, sexuality, the body, and discipline, even down to their most delicate metamorphoses,
it is because at
some point all this f.shere and now over with .qo upset the opponent,
can a Judo-pragmatic
approach use an aggressors own momentum?
After reading half of 0 I am bored. This paper and ink, thisimagination;
they are no match for a dn6ma veritb, a cinema from which there is no
escape, where escape has been accounted for and even the guaranteed
orgasms of Jamaica commercials leave one blasi.
Sex itself
no longer exists?
20 1
so I tell her not to worry. I tell her Im not worried. I want to say I dont
have it so you can fuck me. I remember to look at her eyes. The waitress
approaches and I want Keri to order another round. She orders another
round.
Technologys ability to represent experience within binary categories
(nature/culture,
wet/dry, dark/light, -/+, body/mind,
evil/good, O/l,
passion/reason, feminine/masculine)
reconstructs reality in accordance
with its own formulation. Cinema as a hyper-perfect simulation of multidimensional space/time.
Postmodern nihilism petrifies my body. I am terrorized, I think. Affirming
a digital reality is the will to nihilism, a desire to go under.
Identification:
the principle of love. Why do I become erect and participate (as Rentdoes) in whatever may be demanded of or inflicted on
her?
Keri uncrosses her legs and leans forward. I watch her hair fall on the
glass table. Imoved the hairoffmyface.
She says, 1mpetrifiedofA.I.D.S.
I wont fuck anyone.
Digital simulation invades psychoanalysis: Lacan notes that the phallus
belongs to being, and man, whether male or female, must accept having
it and not having it, on the basis of the discovery that [s/he] isnt
it.721nsofar as all subjects participate in the masquerade, one either
seems to have the phallus (male/l) or seems not to have the phallus
(female/O). Iacans representation is symptomatic of the individuals rearticulation
by a binary reality. A restricted economy constrains the
excesses once permitted within a general economy. Ambiguity has been
exorcized. The phallus no longer circulates in liquid flows. A subject
spoken by a digital Symbolic Order is now just male (1) or just female
(O).
Filmic Truth: the principle
of intelligibility
at the fin-de-millenium
Just past midnight I am drunk. I look at Keris eyes. I smile. I say, Ready?
She says, Ready? She will walk quickly toward the cars. I want Keri to
say, So would you like to come over for a drink instead of going straight
home? She says, Why dont you come over for a drink instead of going
straight home?
At some point in history, sex derived its meaning and necessity from
medical interventions.
Now, when fucking has become a simulation of
cinematic positioning,
from what can sex derive its meaning and
necessity?
202
ANDREWIUASE
203
Is 0 passive or
I am silent. I want Keri to shut up. My mouth will fuck her cunt. Her cunt
fucks my mouth. My cock fucks her mouth. Her mouth fucks my cock.
Keri says, You cant come in my mouth. I come on my stomach.
The bodys external appearance
is not immutable.75
204:
Ah?Dh!EWHAASE
205
0 felt herself being weighed and measured as the instrument she knew
full well she was, and it was as though compelled by his gaze and, so to
speak, in spite of herself that she withdrew her gloves.8o
Invasion of the Body Snatchers discloses the secret of re-processed
corporality:~The pod-people have already been here.81 Theyre us.
I hate Keri because she will fuck me. I hate Keri because she is a porno
star. I am not a porno star. I think porn is misogynistic. I think porn causes
rape. I think Keri is sick. I hate her because she will never fuck me. I took
a sip from my beer. It is 20outside;
Postmodern cinema performs a double-reverse jump cut as shards of
glass from an exploding mediascape slice through flesh and leave the
body in a bloody- heap. An audience strip-tease to excite celluloids
transparent desire; the orgasms of masochistic pleasure, as the body
becomes a screen. Out-takes of exhibitionism
and melodrama are to be
acted out in our seats. Entering a suture-stream of complete metamorphoses from persona to persona, from situation to situation. Simultaneously, the double negation of filmic pleasure and ftic
desire which
returns us to the theater without malice or cause. The come shot. No
movement, no liquidity, only mirror imaginations, eternally reoccurring
fractal deaths. Instead of fucking we watch movies.*
Notes
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Male Fantasies;
Klaus Theweleit,
Stephen
Conway
Ibid.,
(Minneapolis:
University
of Minnesota
Press,
p. 35.
p. 302.
Arthur
Kroker
Hyper-Aesthetics
Ibid.,
Culture and
p. 21.
FriedrichWihehuNietzsche,
ThusSpokeZarathustra,
OnthelhreeMetamorphoses,
Kaufmann
1987).
1954).
(New
York:
Viking
Penguin
pp. 137-40.
6.
Theweleit,
7.
Michel Foucault,
The Histoty of Sexuality, Vol.
(New York
Vintage Books,
1978)
pp. 59.62.
8.
Pauline
p.74.
9.
Foucault,
10.
Roland Barthes,
Camera Lucida:
(New York: Hill and Wane. 1981).
p. 261.
Reage,
The
Story of0,
trans.
Sabine
dEstree
I:An Introduction,
(New
York:
trans.
Baiiantine
Robert
Hurley
Books,
1965),
10.
trans.
Richard
Howard
206
ANDREWEUAS&
pp. 13740.
12. Jean BaudriIIard, Simulations, trans. Paul Foss, Paul Patton, and PhRip Beitchman (New
York: Semiotext(e), 1983) p. 155.
13. Ibid., p. 157.
14. Jacques Lacan,&rf&:A Selection, The Signiticationof the Phallus, trans. Alan Sheridan
(New York: W. W. Norton &Company, 1977X p. 289.
15. BaudriRard, Simulations,
p. 155.
eds.
Scene,
Poe, p. 37.
pp. 270-72.
1987),
pp. 13740,
n. 13 (Spting 1983)
THE HYSTERICAL
&XL??
207
of Sexual@,
53.
p. 44.
pp. 137-9.
Simulations,
p. 1.
(New
Lacan, Four
Fundamental
of Sexualiiy,
Concepts,
p. 59.
p. 235.
of Sexual&,
p. 24.
of Sexual@,
p. 68.
208
ANDREW h!AASE
Simulations,
p. 119.
p. 152.
1
73. Zke New English Bib&, Job 28.22 (New York: Oxford University Press, 1972) p. 591.
77. Iaura Mulvey, Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema, in Art After Modernkim:
Retkinking Representation, ed. Brian Waliis (New York: The New Museum of Contemporary -& 19841, pp. 361-373.
I
78. Theweleit, p. 214.
79. Ibid.
80. Reage, p. 69.
81. Don Siegel (director). Invasion of the Body Snatchers, 1956. Remade by Philip Kaufman
(director), 1978.
.
Editors note: This Is part of a longer work in progress which has been edited due to
space limitations
Iv
-BDADDYS
NO
14
THE PHALLIC MOTHER:
PLATONIC META-PHYSICS
OF LACANS IMAGINARY
Lorraine
:
r
Gauthier
2 13
always miss the mark, they are but lies, errors, mbconnaissance. It is this
inherent structure of metaphor which guarantees that, as a trope constituted by an absent referent, it must necessarily fail to express Truth.
Truth is, therefore, an absence of Truth. Truth, for them, is constructed
as an absent signifier which they define, in linguistic terms, as a signifier
of absence and which they articulate as entre or as lack. Rearticulating
Heideggers notion of a split being, Lacan specifically seeks to overthrow
the concept of presence with that of an unbridgeable gap which makes
Truth unattainable.
In The Other and the One: Psychoanalysis, Reading and the Symposium John Brenkman suggests that Lacan has indeed destroyed the
foundation of the metaphysics of presence by successfully explaining
the source of the gap in the desire for Truth, as articulated by Plato in l7ze
Symposfum.3 According to Brenkman, Lacans work demonstrates how
the refusal to accept the castration of the mother has led philosophers to
seek the existence of one univocal, causal Truth. Such a recognition,
Brenkman argues, is the goal of Lacanian psychoanalysis and the undoing
of metaphysical idealism in that it seeks the reinsertion of the corporeal.
The corporeal which is reintegrated, however, is that of a castrated
maternal, a body lacking a signifier, unable to achieve human status
except through the Phallus.
In her interpretation
of Plato, Lute Irigaray, the French feminist
philosopher and psychoanalyst, argues that the basis of metaphysics is
less the concept of presence than the displacement of maternal corporeal presence onto the paternal ideal. For her, the metaphorical repression of Truth as absence exposed by Lacan and Derrida conceals yet
another mtkonnafssance.
In pursuing further the implications of Heidegger, Lacan, and Derridas definition of metaphor-i&y
as itself metaphysical, she discovers in the repressed referent of the metaphor not a
metaphysics of presence, of Origin, as her contemporaries
have done,
but rather the suppression of a denial of corporeal maternal origin,
repressed yet again in the signifier of absence, and thus maintained in the
modern critique of metaphysics.4
Irigiray has not analyzed Lacans work in the same detailed fashion
with which she took on Freuds Femininity in her well known article
The Blind Spot of an Old Dream of Symmetry.s But Irigarays reading of
Platos metaphysics and of its continued survival in Freudian psychoanalysis delineates the contours of an Irigarean reading of the French
Freud, the man who insists on returning to Freud to tell us what, in light
of modern linguistics, Freud really meant. Such a reading leads to a
rather different conclusion than Brenkmans. It demonstrates that within
his triadic division of human existence into the realms of the Real, the
Imaginary, and the Symbolic, Lacans conceptualization
of the maternal
has merely reiterated, in the language of modern linguistics, an age old
devaluation and exclusion of the mother.
We find in Lacan some striking parallels to Plato-the emphasis on the
visual and the characterization
of birth as death, for example. Platos
2 14 LORRALNE GAUTHIER
Truth passes through muter, the matter which Irigamy examines in her
analysis of The Allegory of the Cave, as a metaphorical
expression/
repression of maternal origin. Similarly, for Lacan, the truth of the subject
in relation to the symbolic Other passes through theimaginary
relationship of the ego to the other-and it is there, in the intermediary realm, as
in Plato, that the mother resides.6 Although Lacan recognized this
matricidal basis, his work accepts it as necessary. It becomes in his
thought the necessary precondition
for a truly human symbolic existence. By claiming that woman does not exist, that, as women, we
enter the sexual relationship only as a mother (quoad matrem), that
we are more closely linked to the realm of the real, the subhuman realm
of chaos, Lacan rearticulates,
in modem linguistic terms, the nonexistence to which we have been relegated by the metaphysical concept
of Being.
The close links between Lacans work and Platos matriphobia demonstrate the need to critically assess the works of post-modernist
iconoclasts so that, as feminists, we may truly break metaphysicss! continuing
matricide. In order to demonstrate how, from a feminist perspective,
Lacans work is less a deconstruction
of metaphysical thought than a
continuation
of it, I will concentrate, in this paper, on Lacans indebtedness to the Platonic and Hegelian idealism which he purports to destroy.
Truth
as Non-Truth
the real and then the symbolic Other is formative of the self. For Lacan,
there is no totality, no One except for the gap which separates self and
Other and by which Other constitutes self. Lacan thus opposes to the
Platonic One, a concept of the Other which is defined as lack, an Other
which in fact does not exist.9
The Truth of the radical split expressed in the concept of desire as gap
is not, however, a logical category of origin or of causation. Lacan argues
that there is no original gap since the original experience of the subject
has already been displaced onto objects or symbols to which the truth of
his/her symptom and discourse refer. Truth, as displacement,
is thus
nothing but an erasure of traces which psychoanalysis, as a Heideggerian
unveiling, attempts to expose. If there is an original repression, Lacan.
expresses it in a rather Nietzschean fashion as the lack of Truth on
truth. lo
This lack of Truth is articulated by Lacan in his linguistic concept of
truth as cause, as discourse. In the equivocity of the term cause, we find
te.e Lacanian subjects trajectory, whose course conflates telos and origin
much as the neophyte philosopher in search of Platonic Truth has done.
As Irigaray has shown in her critique of Plato; hysteronproteron, as do
the equivocal central terms in the Allegory of the Cave, articulates the
denial of corporeal origin through the conflation of origin and telos.
Among these polysemic words, hysteru is of particular importance. More
commonly known as meaning uterus, hystera appears in the allegory in
its second, more obtuse connotation
of hysteron, things which lie
behind. A variation of the word, hysterein, also means to be behind, but
in temporal terms, suggesting that.which comes later, which lags behind
and therefore, what is yet to come, what lies ahead. Similarly,proteron,
the antonym of hysteron, spatially means things in front, but temporally
refers to what is prior, hence something past, what lies behind. These
contradictory meanings are further complicated when the two terms are
combined to produce the Greek locution, which is very important in the
allegory: hysteronproteron, meaning opposites. In this definition, it is
the spatial relationship, the behind of the hysteron and the in front of the
proteron which are emphasized. The temporal future and past implicated in the defmition of these words are discarded. This privileging of
the spatial, both in the allegory and in the Greek language obscures,
according to Irigaray, the fact that things which lie behind in the
hysteron are reinscribed into those which come later, and that things
that are prior in theproteron
are projected onto what lies in front.
The double connotation of hystera as uterus and as things which lie
behind, of course, points to the unspoken relationship between womb
and origin. This relationship is again suggested by the numerous terms
Plato uses to define matter as that in which all things come to be, such
as the word muter, which means mother, earth, and source.* Thus for
Irigaray, it is no accident that the search for Truth, for origin, is
articulated via an allegory of a cave, the womb of the earth. The
216
LORRAINE
GAUTHIkR
THE HYSTERICALMALE 2 17 ~
what was already there. In this search for and evasion of truth, akin to
Nietzsches fictive fming of reality within a series of partial and perspectivist truths and to Heideggers errancy, truth, according to Lacan,
instills itselfwithin
a realm of lies and errors, constituting itself as fiction.
It is, however, no longer, as it was for Nietzsche, a question of desire
imposing fiction as truth. Rather, desire is itself the fiction of truth, the
truth of a fictive subject expressed in his/her discourse. For Lacan,
what is indeed spoken in the cause, what is eternally displaced, is desire.
In its Platonic definition as lack and in its Hegelian sense as recognition,
this desire articulates truth as mt?connaissance,as non-truth.
The truth
of the subjects desire is its lack of truth, its continuous displacement.
This concept of truth, instituted in the structure of fiction, is far
removed from Platos pedagogical concept of Truth as attainable knowledge. For Plato, as for Hegel, Truth and knowledge are one and the same.
For Lacan truth is nothing else but that which knowledge
cannot
understand.
In fact, as he insists, the division experienced by the
subject, [is experienced] as the division between knowledge and Truth.
Lacans emphasis on the supremacy of language in his description of the
speaking subject as a spoken subject reiterates the Heideggerean
formula language speaks. But if, for Lacan, language speaks, it speaks
falsely. One needs to draw out the truth of the subjects, speech as
evidenced in his/her discourse, especially in the gaps, the slips, the
metaphors, or the jokes where the insatiability of desire articulates itself,
against the falsity or mkonnaissance imposed on him/her by language.*
Within metaphysics, ignorance or contradiction
is what delineates
truth from error, from non-truth. For Lacan, m6connaissance is what
articulates truth as non-truth and this m&onnakisance cannot be grasped
through the language of logic, but rather surfaces in the speech of the
subject, in his/her discourse, in which the subject of the hzonciution
and of the 6nonct5are different. Lacan underscores this when he remarks
that in the discourse which develops itself in the register of error,
something happens through which truth can irrupt, and this truth is the
Truth ofwhat his [sic] desire had been. From his perspective, it is in the
field of psychoanalysis especially that the search for truth in the discourse of the subject develops itself normally-in
the order.of lies, of
mbconnafssunce,actually of deniual,and denial, as Freud has taught us,
is both expression and repression, or rather the expression of repression.19
Thus Lacans critique of the metaphysics of truth replaces the concept
of Truth with a concept of non-truth. But is this non-truth any less
metaphysical for being the negative of metaphysical Truth? Is metaphysics adequately defined by Truth as presence, as original cause, or is this
itself a metaphysical defmition? Within Irigarays definition of metaphysics as meta-physics, as that which lies outside the corporeal realm, the
fundamental question would in fact be: has Lacans critique of metaphys-
THE HYSTERICALMALE 2 19
original gap in the realm of the Real; its necessary misrepresentation
and
eventual revelation as such in the realm of the Imaginary; and its more
accurate though necessarily incomplete expression in the realm of the
Symbolic. Just as Freuds mature woman must be the mother for lack of
having her own mother, the maternal, in Lacan, will come to represent
the manque-&%re
through her manque-ctuvofr,
her lack of the Phallus.23
Desire
The Original
as Gap:
ManqueWtre
Although no gap is original, the gap is itself original. The gap is that by
which life comes to be. The original and originating gap is produced at
birth.24 The gap as origin, as birth, occurs in the separation of the egg
from the embryonic enclosure which sustains it. In each tearing of the
membranes of the egg from which the foetus exits in becoming a new
born Lacan asks us to imagine a moment in which something escapes.
And this something he humorously calls Zhomelette,but more theoretically terms the lamella.,25 This lamella, Iacan tells us,
this organ, which is characterized by nonexistence
but
which is nonetheless an organ-is the libido. . ..It is the
libido, as pure instinct of life, that is to say of immortal life,
of irrepressible life, of life which does not need any organ,
of life simplifiedand i.ndestructible.26
As initiation
Lacan insists,
to life, therefore,
the real gap is that which the living being loses of his part
of life through sexual reproduction.
This gap is real because, it relates to something which is real, which is this,
that the human being, from being subject to sex, has fallen
under the exigency of individual death.27
It is this gap, this part of himself that the individual loses at birth
which is represented by all the objets a. They serve to symbolize the
most profound lost object. And later, sexuality will install itself in this
gap. In the realm of the Symbolic, this gap which constitutes sexuality
revolves around the central fact that the subject depends on the signifier
and that the signifier is the site of the Other. But as Lacan tells us, this
gap in the realm of the Symbolic %omes to take up once again another
gap which is the real and anterior gap, to be located at the coming to be
of the human being, that is, at the time of sexual reproduction.
nZBLying
at the origin of life, therefore, the gap inaugurates the Real, a realmwhich
\
220
LORRAINE
GAUTHIER
22 1
moment they were carried up, this way and that, to their
birth, like shooting stars. Er himself was not allowed to
drink of the water. How and by what means he came back
to the body he knew not; but suddenly he opened his eyes
and found himself lying on the funeral pyre at dawn.31
When we note the similarity between Platos definition of Being as
immaterial, of the soul as non-corporeal and Lacans definition of the
lamella, Lacans innovations appear even less unconventional.
As in the
rebirth of the Platonic eternal soul, Lacans immortal life, although
reduced to corporeal mortality is organless and bodiless.s2 The lamella,
for Lacan, is
something extra flat, which moves like an amoeba. Only
its a little more complicated. But it passes everywhere.
And since it is something. ..which has a relationship to that
which the sexed being has lost within sexuality, it is, like
the amoeba in relation to sexed beings, immortal.. .since it
survives this division, since it subsists beyond all fissiparous intervention.33
For Plato, it is aletheia, Truth as the negation of forgetfulness,
as
disclosure, that will lead the soul back to.the omniscience and immortality which it enjoyed before its corporeal birth. As birth is achieved at the
cost of the Truth the soul once possessed, the reclamation of that Truth,
described in the Allegory of the Cave, is achieved at the cost of ones
corporeal life.34 As Irigaray has shown us, the passageway which led from
ignorance to Truth, from auto-reflection to self-contemplation
stops at
the door of death. It is the death of vision, of the pupil, of corporeality
that allows us to see presence which has neither beginning nor material
supp~rt.~~ The crossing of this threshold requires a jump, a leap which
will never be accomplished in this life. It requires the transformation
of
the body into soul, which can then cross any division, any wall, any
barrier, It is thus the corporeality of man which marks the divide
between the sensible and the intelligible, between non-truth and Truth.
Death introduces man to the life and time of the Father.
The morbidity that, in Irigarays view, characterizes metaphysics is as
central an aspect of Lacans thinking as that of Platos. The Truth of the
Platonic philosopher is constituted by a desire for a knowledge that he
lacks and which will be attained through the piercing of the pupil, the
death of the body. Although, like Plato, the birth of human life, in
Lacanian terms, is achieved at the cost of immortal life, for him, there is
no reclaiming of the wholeness of the embryonic world. Nevertheless,
the truth of the Lacanian subject is constituted by desire as gap in which
death is also intricately woven. For Lacan, death inheres not only at the
origin of corporeal life, in the realm of the Real to which Freud himself
222
LORRAINE
GAUTHIER
had linked the death instinct, but, more importantly for him, at the origin
of the symbolic expression through which desire attempts to humanize
itself and its subject. Death therefore, plays a central role in the Lacanian
subjects second birth, his/her introduction
into the Symbolic realm
even though for this rebirth Lacan does not insist on the death of the
body, as did Plato.
It is also no accident that those who lead the Platonic souls to the Plain
of Lethe, to drink of the river of forgetfulness, are female, as are those
who complete the cycle of sexual reproduction,
the mark of death in life
in Lacans version. Woman robs life of its immortality. Her role as conduit
to corporeal existence was clearly delineated by,Plato as ambiguous and
passive, as matter which lies between idea and representation.
In Lacan,
the articulation, as we will see, is somewhat different, but the message
remains the same. For if Lacans birth is more corporeal than Platos, as
the essential elements of the relationship within which self loses self, the
embryo and the placenta repeat the exclusion of the maternal which
Irigaray has disclosed as inherent in Platos problematic of similitude, in
the circularity of the self and its mirrored image, its .other. This death
within rebirth rearticulated by Lacan as the gap which structures desire
maintains the exclusion of the maternal body from the site of truth. For
what the infant loses at birth is neither its mother nor the uterus in which
it evolved. The cutting of the umbilical cord, for Lacan, is the original split
wifhfn the %ubject and not between subjects, not between mother
and child.36
Woman plays no role in the original gap which structures the human
being, though passage through her is the cause of that structuring gap.
She remains essential within the realms of the Real and the Imaginary, in
the prelude to the childs attainment offull humanity. Just as Freud makes
explicit, while retaining, the repression of the maternal,
in Lacans texts,
the continued suppression of the maternal will make explicit the hystera
which served as matrix for the developing philosopher in Platos Aliegory of the Cave. Within the Lacanian realms of the Real and the
Imaginary, the maternal, as in Platos conception, will continue to serve
an instrumental role, one which must be surpassed, as the site through
which the child must travel on its way to human subjectivity.37
The Maternal
Other
in the Realm
of the Real
The pre-literate neonate has at its disposai no signifier except its cry.
According to Lacan, this gives rise to a double error which structures the
relationship between mother and child as pre-human. The cry signifies
for the mother a need which she stifles by satisfying it thus preventing the
child from entering into communication
with her.3* Conversely, the
child, not knowing that it seeks more than its satisfaction, mistakes the
THE HYSTERICAL
AGUE
223
mother for the site in which what it lacks can be found. In Iacanian terms,
it erroneously constructs the mother as the site of the signifier, as the
Other. The dependence of the prematurely born human infant which
gives rise to the illusion that the mother is the site of the signifier
produces thereby the fantasy of the omnipotence of the mother, defined
by Lacan, as the phallic mother.
But these needs of the infant and its request for satisfaction are not
what they seem to be. 39They can represent what the infant has irrevocably lost through birth, that part of immortal life whose loss was represented by its separation from its placenta. The breast, as a response to a
vital need is but another representative of this radical loss and, with all
other such representatives, it assumes the form of what Lacan calls the
objet a. But more importantly,
Lacan, following Hegel, argues that in the
prehuman infant, needs are from the very beginning more a demand for
love than a request for satisfaction. Expressed as need, however, this
demand for love remains unrequited, free to attach itself to yet another
need, both need and demand becoming distorted in the process.
The movement from need to demand cannot be traced chronologically
in the development
of the infant since pure need never exists in the
human. What this movement entails, theoretically, is a shift away from
the desired object as that which satisfies a need, tos desiring subject who
demands to be loved. This shift was originally articulated by Diotimus in
her speech to Socrates where she pointed out to him the error inherent
in concentrating
on the desired object rather than on the desiring
subject.40 In Lacans Hegelian conceptualization,
demand for love is none
other than the demand for recognition, the demand to be the object of
desire of the mother. But here also, the narcissistic nature of Lacans
desiring subject can be traced back to its Platonic roots, to the text on
which he has commented at some length. In the Symposium, Alcibiades
accuses Socrates of misleading everybody by pretending to be in love,
when in fact, he is himself the beloved rather than the lover.41 This is the
narcissism of which Hegel speaks in his definition of desire as desire for
recognition and it is this shift of register from object of desire to desiring
subject which Iacan defines in the transition of needs to demand. He
redefines the neonates object of desire, its Other, that which satisfies a
need, that from which a gap can be ftlled, in terms of the other, that from
which it receives recognition. The mother, who played the original real
Other, the source of the means by which the infant vainly seeks to
express its desire through a request for the satisfaction of needs, is
transformed into the imaginary other, object of the infants desire for
recognition. \
In the pre-symbolic, pre-human realms, the infants desire willbe
doubly determined by the mother, since desire arises in the gap between
the request for the satisfaction of needs and the demand for love, both of
which are represented by the mother. But according to Lacan, desire can
be found in neither the desire for satisfaction nor the demand for love. It
224
LORRAINE
GAUTHIER
for Recognition:
Realm of the Imaginary
225
mother, that the child desires to be. In seeking recognition by the other,
the child is seeking the signifier of its desire, is seeking to transform the
other into the Other, the site of its recognition.
Ifthisnarcissism
was the only element in the concept ofdesire as desire
of the other there would be no reason why the mother herself could not
break this narcissistic selfreferentiality.
But the equivocity of the French
preposition de, with its objective and subjective connotations,
establishes, for Lacan, the essentially closed circuit of the dyadic relationship
between mother and child. De indicates that desire is not only a question
of desiring the other but is also the desire to be the desire of the other,
to be that which the other desires. The phallic mother, as the original real
Other, must abdicate her position because she lacks the signifier of
desire, the Phallus. Lacking it, she therefore desires it, since desire, in the
Platonic terms which Lacan has appropriated,
is the desire, amongst
otherthings,
to have what one lacks. Like the child, the mother searches
for the signifier in the other, which in this mother/child
relationship is
the child itself. In order to be the object of the mothers desire, therefore,
the child must become the Other, the Phallus, the site of all signifiers of
desire. The subject, Lacan tells us, is brought to really occupy the place
of the Other, that is of the Mother.46
In this circumvolution,
the child, lacking the requisite signifier, can
neither express its desire nor represent itself to itself, as object of
desire.47 Something must therefore intervene between mother and child
but its intervention ,must, like the presentation
of Platos Truth, be
prepared. In Iacan, this intervention will be preceded by the insertion of
a gap, in fact, of two different gaps in two very different and important
stages, both demarcated by the visual, as in the intermediary stages in the
Allegory of the Cave.
Visual metaphors are crucial to the allegory as they are to metaphysics
in general. Plato continuously uses the metaphor of the visible to clarify
what is invisible. The relationship between the invisible and the nonvisible, between Truth and the Sun, is the relationship
between the
absent signifier of the metaphor and the metonymic displacement of
desire-a relationship which has been occluded by the metaphor itself. It
is, therefore, a relationship between two absences. Platonic idealism,
however, seeks the Truth in the present signifier of the metaphor,
defming it as a mirror capable of adequately reflecting its absent counterpart.
Of all the visual metaphors which play a predominant
role in The
Allegory of the Cave, mirrors, according to Irigarays critique, are of
exceptional importance because the reversions, inversions, and contradictions within the Platonic scope are most clearly exposed here. Mirrors
not only epitomize the solidification of fluidity, but as reflective mechanisms they have their own blind spots. Mirrors have no memory, keep no
trace of the imprint of that which presents itself to them and hence the
irreducible inversion/reversion
of all imprints cannot be detected. The
226
LORRAINE
GAUTHIER
fundamental
metonymic displacement,
the projection of depth onto
surface,,of containment onto reflection, of procreation onto imitation, all
vague traces that are conjured away by mirrors. And of course mirrors
reflect neither themselves nor the role which they play. They are selfeffacing in the.elucidation
of Truth. Nothing is said of the fact that the
positioning of the mirrors themselves, like that of the fire and reflective
wall in the cave, determines what is reflected. As Nietzsche warned,
mirrors only pick up the form and solidity which they presuppose.48
In Greek, mirror, as surface, as topos, also relates to :matter.49 In
Platonic terms, the mirror, like matter, does not impose its own form on
the image it reproduces. In fact, like matter and mother, like the absent
signifier within metaphor, like Freuds cryptic writing pad, the mirrors
sole purpose is to facilitate defmition,representation,
inscription while
absenting itself from the production. Mirrors share with matter/mother
the capacity to receive, reflect, and reproduce Being. As in all mirrors,
the image is perverted, inverted and distorted through its reflection,
through the deflection of the corporeal onto the ideal. In Irigarays
critique of Plato, it is this ideologic, this reasoning through images,
through reflections which has defmed in its terms and syntax the
metaphysical relationship to origins0
Though mirroring as a tool of idealist perception was discarded by
Hegel, Nietzsche, Heidegger, and their followers, it will present itself
again in Lacans famous mirror stage betraying a latent idealism in his
theorization. Whereas for Plato, the mirror phase is used in the allegory
to denigrate its reflective powers in favour of the Truth inherent in the
One whose image it attempts to reproduce, in Lacans mirror stage, the
setting up of an alternate other and the articulation of the gap between
self and other is at issue. In the maternal realm of the Imaginary, however,
this gap remains as hidden as in the series of reflections found in Platos
uterine allegory. Like Platos prisoners journey out of the cave, Iacans
entire realm of the Imaginary as the prelude to the Symbolic, ,is reduced,
specialized, centred upon the specular image. His analysis of the
inter-subjective
relationships
experienced within that realm revolves
around the gaze through which the subject becomes the object, the
viewer becomes the viewed, and sees him/herself as such. Lacan insists
on the importance of the three terms for, as he says, there is never a
simple duplicity of terms. It is not merely that I see the other. Rather, I
see him/her seeing me, which implies a third term, to notethat he/she
knows that I see him/her. The circle is closed. There are always three
terms in a structure, Lacan insists, even if these three terms are not
explicitly present.sl
This tripartite division reflects, of course, the tripartite division between Platonic Being as Existence, Being as Identity, and Being as
Representation. The gap, between Being as Existence and its attributions
as Identity is rearticulated through a variety of screens onto which Being
is projected. The two most important of these, and in Platonic terms, the
THE HYSTERICAL
MALE
227
most appropriate, are the Sun and the soul. There is on the one hand, the
presence of Being as Existence projecting itself onto the Sun. On the
other hand, there is representation,
the introjection of Being as Identity,
as sameness, as similitude, as imitation, as reflection, within the soul. The
eye marks the entrance to both, for it is in the blindness produced by the
Sun, the forced opening of the pupil, the consumptionand
extinction
of sight, that the soul as the place/time of the reminiscence of Truth
locates itself.52 Agup fn vfsion thus structures the articulation of the void
inherent in Platos concept of Being. In this gap, in the addition of Being
as Identity, between Itself as Existence and its solar representation/
reproduction,
not only is the univocity of Beings Existence undermined,
but corporeality is negated.53
For Lacan, it is the vfsfon ofthegup which structures his concept of rhe
subject. The recognition of ones corporeal self through its mirrored
image distinguishes the human from the animal.. Just as Platos formulation exiled the body, in Lacans conceptualization
it is not the surface of
the body itself but the surface reflected as form that allows the subject to
appropriate
the other, the speculative image, as self. For Lacan, the
mirror stage inaugurates a concept of self through the identification
with the image as semblance.s4 Much as Platos neophyte philosopher
in the allegory would see his image as reflection, as self, before he saw his
shadow as other, Lacans subject must see his/her specular image as self
before he/she recognizes this self as other. It is unquestionably
the
recognition of alter&y which is at issue here, but an alterity which is
,constituted, much as Platos, through sameness, through reflection.
In theorizing the childs relationship with its specular image as a
narcissistic identification
structured by the desire for recognition, Lacan
emphasizes the gap between the seeing subject and the seen image. This
split in the subject was of course there from birth but was occluded in the
imaginary relationship to the mother as maternal object of desire. In the
mirrored image, the child grasps itself as a whole at a time when it has not
yet experienced this physically. 55As Iacan insists the mere sight of the
total form of the human body gives the subject an imaginary mastery of
his/her body, prematurely in relation to the real mastery.56 What this
image represents, of course, is the ego ideal and what it establishes is the
gap between the subject and its ego.5
But despite this foray into a representation
of the gap structuring the
subject, the mirror phase cannot represent the lack inherent in desire no
more than it could represent the Truth of Being for Plato. Lack is not
representable.
Referring to Parmenides, Iacan reminds us,, What is
missing in this reflection which gazes back from the mirror, in this mot
in which the child conflates his/her self, is the truth of the desiring
subject, theje quf &sire. The gap that exists between the subject and its
image, between the self and theego, is the gap where desire resides, the
gap which renders impossible the narcissistic search for self through
reflection. A subject can no more be adequately reflected in an object,
228
LORRAIiYE GAUT.HIER
even its own reflection, than could Platos Being fmd an adequate
representation
of itself in its attribute. Lacan bases his notion of subjective truth upon this very impossibility.
In Lacans theory, the mirror stage rearticulates the realm of the Real,
the site of the mother as the site as Other, as the impossibility
of
disarticulating
self and other, of recognizing the gap that structures
recognition.
Just as for Plato the matter/mother
could not offer any
adequate reflection of Being, for Lacan, the mother cannot offer any
adequate signifier of the gap. The desiring subject, failing to express its
desire within the maternal realm of reflective imaginary, as it had also
failed to do in the realm of the Real, takes up once again its search for the
signifier of desire. The realization that the signifier of desire is not to be
found on the mothers body brings on the castration complex, the next
stage in the subjects journey towards the truth of his/her desire.
The castration complex, for Lacan, is not a question of the subject
having or not having the Phallus. What is decisive is that the subject
leam[s] . . . that the mother doesnt have it. In so doing, the subject seals
the conjunction of desire, in so far as the phallic signifier is its mark, with
the threat or envy of the manqu&&avok.5*
The recognition of the
mothers manqueduvoir
will permit the subject tocontinue its search
for the signifier to express its desire as manque-ct-h-e. The mother is
therefore characterized by the lack of the signifier rather than by the
signifier of the lack.
Before desire learns to recognize itself as. the desire for recognition,
Lacan tells us, it exists purely in the realm of the imaginary relationship,
on the specular stage, projected, alienated into the other.? The recognition of itself as desire is also constituted
by the visual, however.
Castration, as Irigaray tells us, is really a matter of a manque-d-vofr,
rather than a manquedavok.
In Plato, the gap as pupil/hymen
dialectically separated and united the depth of the cave and the shining light,
un-truth and Truth, mother/matter
and the ideal Father. In Lacan, the gap
signified by the Phallus, lacking in the mother, represented by the father,
differentiates and unites them. The conjunction of the visual and womens
genitalia is notable in the philosophical
premises of both authors.
For Lacan, the visual recognition of the absence within the mother
allows the possibility of signification, of the symbolic expression of that
which so far has eluded expression, even as it has articulated itself
everywhere. The recognition of the Phallus as that which, as the privileged signifier of desire, supplants the absent penis, will pry apart the
self-enclosed circuit of desire which structured the relationship of the
child with the mother. As the demand for love held in check the
destructiveness of the undifferentiated
chaotic needs, so the Phallus as
signifier must hold in check the incestuous absorption of self by the
other, of the child by the mother.
But it can be argued that, in the Hegelian terms in which Lacan
articulates his concept of desire as desire for recognition,
the Phallus
THE HY3TERKA.L
ilA4LE
229
simply signifies its own desire and not the desired signifier of desire. One
must remember Lacans own play on words whereby the desire for (de)
the other simultaneously represents the desire of (de) the other. Lacking
the Phallus, the mother desires it as much as does the child who seeks the
signifier of desire. In constructing the Phallus as the object of their desire,
the mother and the child simply express the Phalluss own desire to be
recognized as the object of desire of the other and hence narcissistically
to be the object of its own desire. In wanting to be the desire of the other,
tht Phallus, like the desiring mother in the realm of the Imaginary, cannot
be the Other, cannot offer the signifier that would recognize the other as
a subject who seeks recognition through its desire. It does not recognize
the other as a desiring subject unless this other desires it, unless this other
makes the Phallus its object of desire and not the signifier of its own
unattainable narcissistic desire. There is room for only one desire here;
and only one desire recognizes the desire of the other as the desire for
recognition:The
supposed narcissistic bond between mother and child
is theoretically reinserted between the Phallus and the subject who seeks
the signifier of its desire. Just as through the attainment of Platonic Truth,
through the death of the body, the Father is reabsorbed in the son, is
inscribed within the soul of mortals thus achieving immortality;
and
bypassing the death of birth, Lacans Phallus reinscribes itself into that by
which it is represented. In the mothers and the childs desire to be Ze
d&k de Zuutre, the desire ofthe other must pass through, and in fact,
must remain a desirefov the Other. The Phallus as Other transforms their
desire into its own reflection, mirroring, as it were, the narcissism of the
signifier.
This narcissistic desire relegates the woman to the status of other and
obliterates her desire unless it passes through his signifier. Is it any
wonder that one of the unanswerable questions in this paradigm is what
do women want? Rather than express desire as gap, the Phallus represses both sexes desire for the original gap which it purports to
represent. Reminiscent of Hegels virile consciousnesses which, though
sustained by life, are constituted by the threat of death, the Phallus, as
symptom, as the signifier of repression, only serves to anchor this virile
desire in the Platonic concept of sameness where Being as Existence
reflects itself through metaphorical signification by passing through the
concept of Being as Identity. In Lacans work, this is camouflaged as the
relationship between the symbolic Other as site, and the other as desire
for recognition. The subject, constituted by a desire qualified as male,
seeks the phallic Other through the Platonic intermediary of the ego and
the imaginary other. This backdrop of masculine self-reflexivity continues to be, of course, mater, matter/mother,
the maternal Imaginary, the
sphere of reflection through which she is excluded from Zogos connoted
either as Platonic reason or as the Iacanian Symbolic.
Irigaray has shown how in Platos exploration of Truth in the Allegory
of the Cave, the function fulfiied by matter/mother
has been appropri-
230
LORRALNE GAUTHIER
THEHYSTERICAI;~
231
Lute Irigaray, Ce sexe qui nen estpas un, (Paris: Les Editions du Minuit, 1977) p. 98;
This Sex Which
is Not One, trans. by. Gillian C. Gill, (Ithaca, New York: Cornell
University Press, 1985) pp. 8990. From now on the page number within parentheses
brackets refers to the English translation.
2.
Zuphflosophfe,
(Paris: Les Editions de Minuit, 1972), p. 320;
trans. with notes by A. Bass (Chicago: The University of Chicago
Press, 1982). For the role that matricide plays in Derridas work see L. Gauthier Truth
as Eternal Metaphorical Displacements: Traces of the Mother in Derridas Patricide,
Canadian
Journal
of Political and Social Theory, 13,1-2, (1989): l-24.
Margins
- 3.
4.
ofPhfIo$ophy,
John Brenkman, The Other and the One: Psychoanalysis, Reading and the Symposium,
Yale French
Studies
55/56: 443.
Lucelrigaray,
Speculum
of
Speculum
the Other
del'autrefmme,
Woman,
6.
For Idgarays analysis of Platos Allegory of the Cave see her essay Platos Hystera in
Speculum,
pp. 242-364; L k&pa
de Platon in Speculum,
pp.301-457.
7.
Jacques Lacan, Le seminaire, livre IL Le moi dans latheorie de Freud et dans sa technique
de la psychanalyse, (Paris: Les Editions du Seuil, 1978), p. 262.
8.
9.
10. Lacan,&r&
pp. 522,710-15,805,868.
ontologique
du Tim&e
de PI&on,
13. The mother is excluded from the constitution of the gap in the realm of the Real, from
the separation of the embryo from its placenta. In the realm of the Real, however, she
will play the fictive role of the real Other, the source of all satisfaction, the bearer of the
232
LOhTRAINE GAUTHIER
signitler of signification, the phallic mother. The gap in the realm of the Real will be
discussed below (pp. 18- 21).
14. Written this way, ex-istence represents the split which constitutes human subjectivity.
15. Lacan, Le sbminaire, Iivre II, p. 354. This is a straight reversal of Parmenides famous
dictum that what does not exist cannot be expressed.
I
_
and 521.
de kapsychanalyse,
17. Lacan, Le skninaire, 1ivreXI: Les quatre conceptsfondamentaux
(Paris: Les Editions du Seuil, 1973), pp. 172, 127; Le skminaire, livre I: Les i&its
techniques deFreud, (Paris: Les Editions du Seuil, 1975) p. 290. Plato, Heideggerand
Freud are the crucial references for Lacans conception of desire as lack but it is Hegels
formulation of desire which informs his notion of desire as the desire of the other.
18. For an analysis of the relationship between truth, speech, and language in which Lacan
compares the relationship of speech to language in the mad, the neurotic, and in the
modem discourse of scienttic objectivity, see Lacan&its,
pp. 279-81. For a discussion
of the relationship between Heideggers and Lacans notions of language see Casey and
Woody in Smith and Kerrigan, pp. 75-112 and especially pp. 88102. i
19. Lacan, &zrits, pp. 808,798,856
20. Lacan, Le s&.$naire,
(Harsmondsworth,
Middlesex,
pp. 5965.
31. :Plato, The Republic, trans. with intro. and notes by W. H. Cornford; (London: Oxford
University Press, 1975), pp. 358.59.
Le dminaire,
livre
Xl,
233
p. 187.
p. 444 (354). It should be remembered that for Plato only the dead
36. If the placenta is indeed an exclusively foetal tissue this does not indicate that it has
no relation to the mother. As Helene Rouch suggests, the placenta is spatially closer to
maternal tissues than to those of the foetus. It establishes a relationship between the
two, a relationship whose fusional element is perhaps indicated by the fact that upon
expulsion of the placenta, the mother also expulses the inner lining of her uterus. The
insistence that the placenta belongs solely to the infant rather than being a passageway
between mother and foetus is symptomatic of an ideology which dissects and isolates,
a metaphoric hermeneutics which separates signiflers rather than emphasizing their
contiguous relationship. See Helene Rouch, Le placenta: un parasite non egoiste,
S&zinafresZimitesfronti2res,
(14 avril1983): 8-10. For an analysisoftheplacentaassite
see Julia Kristeva, Noms de lieu, in Polylogue, (Paris: Les Editions du Seuil, 1977).
37. The trajectory is complicated and so it is worth remembering the role she plays at both
ends. As objets she represents the gap inherent at birth, As castrated, she represents the
gap inherent ln subjectivity and hence opens the door to the Symbolic from which she
nonetheless remains excluded, as she was from the original structuring gap. Although
Lacan excludes the mother from any role in the coming to be of the structuring gap, he
argues that she inaugurates the entire process by acting as the real Other for the neonate.
It is because of this role that Lacan defines women as much more entangled in the realm
,of the real than are men (Iacan, Le shinaire,
livre I, p. 187).
38. Lacan, &%rits, p. 691.
39. Needs, for Lacan, as for Hegel and Plato before hlm, are characteristic of the animal
world. Lacan tells us, however, that while the infant is not yet human neither is it animal
(Lacan, Le dmfnaire,
Iivre I, pp. 24243).
40. Plato, The Symposium,
p. 83.
p. 268.
livre
IZ,
p. 352.
234
LOhTRAINE GAUTHIER
(294301,331).
53
As well, Irigaray argues that Platos unilateral and unequivocal conception of Truth is
tautological. Being, he claims, can have but one Truth, that of its own Existence. It can
abide no ambiguities, no obscurities, no phantoms. There is but Truth and non-truth.
But, as Irigaray points out, whiIe on the one hand the relationship between Truth and
non-truth is de&ted by Being, on the other hand, the relationship between Being and
non-being is defined by Truth.
54
55
It is of interest, as Irigaray points out, that the child, who is seeing him/herselfin
the
mirror, is held by its mother. By what logic could the child differentiate his/her image
from that of the mothers? Her inclusion, though seemingly fortuitous, cannot be purely
accidental. See Irigaray, Speculum, p. 160.
56
Iacan, Le shtnaire,
57
The image also inaugurates the possibility of the order of presence and absence, that
is to say, the order of the SymboUc. Lacan, Le sgminaire, liwe II, p. 371.
58
59
Lacan, Le shinaire,
60
61
Lacan, Le shinaire,
livre I, p. 93.
Iivre Z, p. 193.
15
-BLACANIAN PSYCHOANALYSIS AND FEMINIST
METATHEORY
Charles Levin
of Totemism3
ies are rarely cited .m the ,arts and social science literature, with the
exception of Klein and D.W. Winnicott, who are mentioned very sparingly indeed. On the other hand, Iacan is taken seriously by nearly
everyone doing up-to-date cultural or feminist research. And of course he
is frequently cited on such matters as metaphor and metonymy, and on
the relation of the tropes to the dreamwork. Nobody refers to Ella Sharpe,
who developed this connection in the nineteen thirties.4
The reasons for this condensation of psychoanalytic thought into the
lone figure of Lacan are no doubt obscure, but they may have to do with
the logic of identification.
In order for Lacan to embody psychoanalysis,
psychoanalysis first has to be reduced to the body of Freud himself. Then,
on the basis of a fantasy about the betrayal of this body, Lacan can attempt
to reembody true psychoanalysis (the return to Freud) inthe name of
the father. Thus Lacan appears well situated both to share and to resolve
the feelings of ambivalence which anyone approaching psychoanalysis
is likely to feel.
Nearing psychoanalysis,
especially in the atmosphere of a totemic
fantasy such as this, it is easy to feel as if one is entering an already
controlled space-specifically,
the authoritarian
fathers space. Moreover, as Lacan was to point out, the dead father is rather difficult to
dislodge from his privileged position in the carefully self-cancelling
structure of an obsessional discourse. The deliberate patterns of displacement and deferral in Lacans .&rits and seminars provide a seductive
occasion for the deflection and management of (Oedipal) ambivalence
and conflict.
As Jane Gallop suggests in The Daughters Seduction, Lacans appeal
to feminists may be related to the way in which he set himself up as the
cock of the walk, a kind of contemporary
ally and lover who provides
magical access to the feared and admired oppressor to be overthrown.5
Iacan not only disposes of the master, but resurrects him aswell: he is
both a rebel and a redeemer, committing and then expiating the crime
of desiring to partake in a fantasied omnipotence,
such as that so
commonly ascribed to Freud himself, and so universally resented in him.
Lacan serves, in other words, as a conduit for projective identification
onto the father.
The myth of Freud as primitive father is of course fundamental
to
psychoanalytic politics. If psychoanalysis is the dead body of Freud, then
the rituals over his remains--the vigil against grave-robbers, the appropriation and resurrection of the corpus as the body of the analyst himself,
sitting at the right hand of Freud-are as characteristic
of Lacanian
practice as they are of the International
which so unceremoniously
expelled him. Lacan, however, is neitherfather,
nor son, nor brother, but
a kind of trinitarian demiurge-like
Thoth, a doyen of writing,
[a] god of resurrection...interested...
in death as a repetition of life and life as a rehearsal of death.. . . Thoth repeats
237
Unfortunately,
this resolution of the problem of Freuds space (his
resting place) runs into its own complications,
which emerge most
clearly in neostructuralist
developments of Lacans thought. Deconstructionist symbolics are immersed in rivalry with the parents, obsessed with
creation as a process of dismemberment
and annihilation. The theory
and practice of textuality have become a sort of allegory about what is
stolen from the paradoxical father (the supplement,
or name without
referent or substance) and from the irretrievable mother (the virginhymen-origin,
or substance and referent without name). This cosmogony is not exclusively Oedipal: it also draws upon the Orestiu. In the
Lacanian version of that less celebrated tragedy, however, revenge
against the mother never seems to be followed by reconciliation with her
law, and the taming of the Eumenides (primitive superego). The Lacanian father may be an oppressor, but he remains the only source of
order, while the mother becomes, in a sense, much more dangerous: she
is the betrayer, and this appears to be a feature of Lacans thinking which
persists, not only in the writings of Kristeva, but even in the antipatriarchal discourse of Lute Irigaray, as Gallop suggests.
Philippe Soilers is reported to have said that Lacans political problems
arose because he had run afoul of the psychoanalytic
matriarchy.8
Princess Bonaparte (who ransomed Freud after the Anschluss) was not
the only daughter (or imaginary wife) of Freud whose authority Lacan
disputed. There were also Melanie Klein and Anna Freud herself, who
between them presided over English-speaking psychoanalysis for nearly
half a century. Implicit in Lacans denunciation of ego psychology, and
his return to Freud, was the fantasy of a march against the domestication,
the feminization
of psychoanalytic
theory. The publication
of AntiOedipus during the heyday of Lacans notoriety was a continuation of this
hyper-masculine
ethos, with its virile imagery of the social process, and
its picture of Lacan himself as a family-oriented
counter-insurgent
who
had emasculated desire by theorizing it as a lack.9
In general, the fact that Freud had a mother gets little play in the
Lacanian imagination. But Freud actually seems to have had a privileged
relationship with his mother. She had heard a prophecy that he would be
a great man, and told him about it. In some ways, Freuds feeling about
his own creation, psychoanalysis, was like his mothers attitude toward
him: he thought he had brought something significant into the world. A
Themes
240
CULES
LEWN
THE HYSTERICM
MAL?? 24 1
Theoretical Problems
The implications
of Roses sociolinguistic
approach to the unconscious emerge clearly in her exclusion of alternative perspectives on the
mirroring relationships of early infancy. In a passing dismissal of Winnicotts work, for example, Rose states: The mother does not mirror the
child to itself... she grants an image to the child, which her presence
instantly deflects9 Roses point is essentially an epistemological
(or
deconstructive)
one, namely, that the subject has no originary identity,
that the baby does not have an itself to be mirrored back to itself by the
mother. But this sophisticated (essentially positivistic) vigilance against
every hint of essentialism or misplaced concreteness conceals the inability of the Lacanian paradigm to grasp the problem of the infant subjects
(relationship
to its own) world of feelings and emotions, and the
fulfiients
and conflicts inherent in the infants capacity for experience
in relation to other bodily subjects. In other words, Rose emulates
Lacans tendency to replace the specificity of individual differences with
the generality of a schematism.
Infants have very complicated feelings (ways of experiencing physical
needs and sensations, as well as desires and emotions, some of which are
observably violent). They also elicit an environment-they
are not restricted to the pure reactivity of behavioural psychology and the theory
of primary narcissism. *OAll of these qualities of the small childs subjectivity can be intuited, recognized, respected, and accepted by the childs
human objects (the caretakers)-or
at the other extreme, they can be
ignored, denied, or utterly disqualified. Of course, the infant will always
have to learn to take others into account more than he or she may wish
to- Freuds reality principle, like Lacans Symbolic Order, says essentially
this. But when the infants expressivity is systematically disqualified-or
in other words, when the caretaker(s) can only grunt an image to the
child (as Rose would have it), while being unable to mirror the child
back to itself, the survival of the child will come to depend on an.
243
The widespread belief that Lacan represents the only critical development within psychoanalysis since Freud has encouraged an overestimation of the arbitrariness of subjective psychosocial experience. Yet the
apparent regularities of human sexuality (which tend to be either wildly
exaggerated or grossly underestimated)
cannot be explained entirely by
the hypothesis of an endlessly displaced instinct or signifier. And so the
doctrine of essential sexual randomness seeks compensation in an overly
systematized, structural-linguistic
(i.e., disembodied) conception of the
symbolic process.
Lacan was perhaps the only psychoanalytic innovator of his generation
not to take advantage of the fact that symbolization begins in the babys
body, rather than with the fathers (Symbolic) intervention against the
(Imaginary) motherchild
dual unity. His effective exclusion of the
. 244
CHARLESLEMN
intimate role the mother plays in the childs symbolic and linguistic
development
in Western culture led him to pose the question of the
psychic significance of the signifying gesture in an original way. Lacans
emphasis on the link between symbolization and the paternal order had
the welcome effect of enrich.ing philosophic criticism of the ideal types
of linguistic meaning privileged in the rationalist tradition.24
But the deeper influence of Lacans thought has been to reinforce the
Cartesian ontological split on a new leveLzs Lacanian deconstruction
depends, in practice, on a hypostatization
of systems: in the Lacanian
tradition, play is derived theoreticalIy from the manipulability
of the
formal elements that make up systems of signification, and not from the
symbolizing body. The concrete and irreducible-what
cannot be accounted for on the formal plane of rational codification-tends
to be
deduced from logical failures of the ideal type-the breakdown
of the
formal system-as revealed through manipulation of the linguistic signifier. From this has developed the technique of deconstruction,
which
always interprets the informal as a by- product or effect of the formal. In
consequence, post-Lacanian theory has found itself in the unenviable
position of having to derive and to explain the tacit and arational
dimension of experience (subjectivity, sexuality), while treating hypethetical systems, such as language, as given.
According to Jacqueline Rose, language is always moving in two
directions, or functioning in contradictory ways. At the superstructural
level, language tends toward thefz!xzng of meaning, the fusion of signifier
and signSed, which entails the positioning
of the subject in the
symbolic order and the imposition of an arbitrary sexual identity. At the
infrastructural
level, however,
language engenders the slippage of
meaning, which produces the displacement of the subject and what Rose
describes as the constant failure of sexuality.
The problemwith
this account is not that it challenges the capacity of
a substantive language to name sexuality-that
point is well-taken; the
problem is that it reduces sexuality to the insufficiencies and aporias of
the signifying process itself. Sexuality becomes the crisis of universal
semfosir. The point is not to deny the confluence of sexuality and
language, but to show that the axis of Roses linguistic perspective, in the
traditional base-superstructure
model, generates an abstract opposition
between form (inevitably failing language) and material (a hypothetical
deduction of sexuality as the excess or remainder of linguistic systems),
which might be termed the dialectic of the text and the anti-text. The
orientation of this epistemological
framework is a double one. In the
beginning, the world can be known only through the text, the order of
writing, which is thus in a sense a kind of originary secondarity. Yet the
knowledge gained by means of the text is always re-marked by an Other,
the invisible and illusive anti-text, which exercises, sui ,generis, a
powerfully disruptive influence.
245
In Roses more sober terms, this means that sexuality (and by implication, all of our psychosomatic
being, or body, in the psychological
sense) is a piece of social writing- a superimposition,
or inscription. For
Iacan.. . there is no prediscursive reality. ,126On the other hand, says Rose,
there lies concealed beneath (and in a sense within) this observable but
arbitrary order of signifier-s, a kind of anti-text similar to a purepotent&
a formless plasticity subsisting in the blanks between the marks-in the
margins, gaps and abysses which inhabit the order of discourse, with its
visible plane of discrete elements arranged in systemic relations of
opposition.
Tnc internal nothingness of this diacritical function, the
absentfa of d@&ance, torments every structure imposed upon it, and
therefore sexuality itself. Thus, Roses astute definition of sexuality
(constituted
as a division in language, a division which produces the
feminine as its negative term*) maps precisely onto the formalist
opposition between inchoate force (dz~fhyance, desire, power, nature)
and the superstructural
plane of aleatory effects (the fictional order of
human signs). At its Nietzchean best, this dialectic of presence and
absence, mark and blank, phallus and castrationtext
and anti-text, gives
Iacanian Rationalism a wonderfully
Dionysian turn; at its worst, however, it deteriorates into the terroristic domination of the simulacrum,
the precession of the model, the combinatory, and the code, of which
Jean Baudrillard speaksz8
Lacanian Anti-Lacanianisni
and the Problem of D$@+ence
There has been an endless round of debates about all this. Lacanians,
ex-Lacanians, and deconstructionists
have argued interminably
about
whether the phallus is the penis, or is not the penis,29 and about whether
discourse may after all really be organized around something other than
the phallus, some other principle, such as what Samuel Weber calls the
Thallus, n3 or what Derrida variously termed supplement, hymen, and
so on. At stake in all of these debates is the principle of differencetextual, sexual, and ontological.
One of Freuds greatest contributions was to draw our attention to the
extraordinary emotional significance of the human body, and of parts of
the body in particular, not least the penis. These parts (which of course
include the mouth and anus, and constitute a zonal symbolic quite
different from the binary genderal coding which so preoccupies Iacanians) are not only of narcissistic significance to children, but the sites of
enormous struggles which sometimes last a lifetime.
As I have argued, when Lacan discusses the phallus, he is engaging the
meanings of the body on a somewhat different plane.
246
CHARLES LEVTN
. ..the phallus is not a phantasy, if by that we mean an
imaginary effect. Nor is it as such an object (part-, internal,
good, bad, etc.) in the sense that this term tends to
accentuate the reality pertaining in a relation. It is even
less the organ, penis or clitoris, that it symbolizes. And it
is not without reason that Freud used the reference to the
simulacrum that it represented for the Ancients.
For the phallus is a signifier whose function
...is.. .to
designate as a whole the effects of the signified.31
THE flSTERIC4L
MXLE
247
240 CSLEWN
The Epicenity of the Text
The problem of idealization, and how it affects human sexuality (as an
incorrigible part of it), is an important theme of Jane Gallops masterly
misreading of Lacan. 34Gallop approaches the question in the most direct
way possible-through
the medium of her transference
onto Lacan
himself. She works through Lacans texts in terms of her own impulse to
rationalize and split, to idealize and devalue, to double each experience
into manageably separate but interchangeable
chains of affirmation and
negation. A particularly impressive occasion for these reflections occurs
in Gallops encounter with Lacans famous essay on the phallus.
After some twenty readings, Gallop had noticed that at the top of page
690 of the original French edition of hrits, the word phallus itself was,
inexplicably,
not accompanied by the usual masculine article Ze, as
proper French requires, but by the feminine La. The ramifications of
such a lapsus for a close reader of Lacan are far from trivial. Like the
phallus itself, the word La is, according to Lacan, a signifier without a
signified. In the seminar Encore, he frequently crossed out the feminine article when it appeared in conjunction with the word for woman,
declaring, il ny a pas la femme, la femme nest pas toute.35 One can
imagine Gallops readerly delight when she encountered ,the misprint
I;a phallus at the very beginning of the page.
A feeling of exhilaration
accompanies my glide from
phallus to La. Loaded down with the seriousness of
ideological meaning and sexual history, the phallus mires
me in its confusion with the male organ. La seems to fly
above all that in a disembodied ether of pure language, an
epicene utopia where gender is variable at will. But the
La at the top of page 690 is nearly impossible to read...
although I am convinced of the arbitrary relation between
signifier and signified, the masculinity of the phallic signifier serves well as an emblem of the confusion between
phallus and male which inhere in language, in our Symbolic Order.%
In this passage,Gallop
traces the two movements of language which
Jacqueline Rose described. In the rising (or slipping) phase; the phallus,
as signifier, is liberated from the penis,, as signified, in order to become
the figure of an asexual or perhaps bisexual freedom, the trace of an
epicene utopia. n In the falling (or furing) phase, however, signifier and
signified are reconnected,
to mark or fur the masculinity
of the
symbolic order.
Jane Gallops temptation was to soar. After twenty odd readings of the
phallus, her discovery of the misplaced La makes her feel weightless-
250
C-S
WN
Mary Jacobus, The Question of Language: Men of Maxims and &ire MiU on the Floss,
in Wtitfng anCSexuaZ DfJprence, ed. Elizabeth Abel (Chicago: University of Chicago
Press, 19821, pp.37-52.
2.
Barbara Johnson, The Frame of Reference: Poe, Lacan, Derrida, inPsyc~oanaZysis and
the Question of the Text, ed. Geoffrey Hartmarm (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University,
1978). pp. 167,165.
3.
This paper was Brst presented at Elspeth Probyns Canadian Communications Association panel on Feminist~Perspectives in Communication, Winnipeg,:June, 1986. An
earIier version was published In Borderlines 7 (Summer, 1987).
4.
Ella Freeman Sharpe, Dream AnaZysis (New York: Brtmner/ Maze], 1978 [ 1937]), pp.9
1.0, W-39.
5.
JaneGallop, TkeDaughtersSeductton:FeminismandPsychoanalys~(Ithaca:
University Press, 1982), pp.3336.
Cornell
TH.. H-KSTEhXX
MALE
25 1
6.
7.
Julia Kristeva, Within the Microcosm of the Talking Cure in Joseph H. Smith and
WI&m Kerrigan, eds., Znrerpretirzg Lacun (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1983),
pp.424 Cf. Gallop, The Duu&tets Seduction, pp.1178; 113-5.
8.
9.
SekZity:
Hero (Cambridge:
and Schixophrentu,
Jacques Lawn
trans.
11. SigmundFreud(1937),
AnalysisTerminableandInterminable,
InStundurdEditfonof
the Complete Psychologicul Work of Stgmund Freud (Vol. 23). trans. James Strachey
(London: Hogarth, 1953-74) p.252.
12. Jacquclinc Rose, Introduction II in Mitchell and Rose, p.42. This article has been
reprinted as Feminine Sexuality-Jacques Lacan and the ecole freudienne, in Jacqueline Rose, Sezualfty in the FieId of Vision (London: Versa, 1986) pp.49-81.
13. Rose, p.28.
14. Melanie Klein, 7he Psycho-Analysis of Children, trans. Aiix Strachey (London: Hogarth,.
1932; Virago Press, 1975), pp.1356
15. See for example, Anika Lemaire, JacquesLawn, trans. David Macey (London: Routledge
and Kegan Paul, 1977) p.92; also, Kristeva, op. cit.
16. One of the implications of Lacans anchoring of the Symbolic in the paternal phallus is
that desire itself is conceived in its most fundamental constitution as little more than a
displacemebt of narcissistic envy, since Lacanian desire has its roots in the desire of the
Other, which for Lacan is or&inaBy the mothers projection of Lack. Deleuzes
Nietzschean reading of Lacanian desire as ressentiment is thus entirely appropriate.
at the University of Ottawa (1983) the
17. At a recent conference on post-structuralism(e)
addresses of Ellie Ragland-Sullivan, Jacques Alain-Miller, and Stuart Schncidermann all
traded on the medico-Bngulstic fantasy of Lacans discovery of the %uctures of the
unconscious.
18. For example, Louis Ahhusser, Freud and Lacan, in Lenin and Philosophy, trans. Ben
Brewster (New York: Monthly Review Press, 1971), p.216; Lacan (1964). 27ze Fobur
Fundamental
Concepts of Psycho-Analysis, trans. Alan Sheridan (Harmondsworth,
Middlesex: Pelican, 1977). pp.20-1.
19. Rose, p.30.
20. The outlook of experimental psychology has changed in the Lastten years, largely as a
result of mom sophisticated infant research. Forpsychoanalytlcally oriented summaries
and interpretations of neonatological research, see Daniel Stem, The Znfwpersonal
World of the Znfant (New York: Basic Books,. 1985) and Victoria Hamilton, Narcissus
and Oedipus: the Children of Psychoanalysis (London: RKP, 1982). The view of
classical and Lacanian psychoanalysis is stated in Juliet Mitchells review of Hamilton in
Psychoanalysis and Chiid Development, New Lef Review, 140 (1983): 92-96.
21. Sigmund Freud, The Interpretation
of Dreams, Standard
252
CHARLES
LEVTN
22. For discussion of the idea that unintegration is part of a natural psychic rythm, see Anton
Ehrenzweig, T?re Hidden Order of Art (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1967);
Marion MiIner, On Not Being Able to Paint (London: Heinemarm, 1957); and D.W.
Winnicott, PZaying and Real@ (Harmondsworth, Middlesex: Pelican, 1971).
23. Rose, p.28.
24. See Lute Irigaray, This Sez Which FFNor One, trans. Catherine Porter (Ithaca: Cornell
University Press, 1985); and Speculum of the Other Woman, wan.& Gillian G. Gill
(Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1985). For further discussion of Irigaray, see also the
article by Gauthier in this volume.
25. Cf. Jane Gallop, Reading hacan (Ithaca, N. Y.: Cornell University Press), pp.59-60; p.
160.
Rose, p.55.
31. Jacques Lacan, f%rit.r: A Selection, trans. Alan Sheridan (New York: ,Norton,
p.285.
1977),
Liore XX:Encore
p. 268.
Diane Rubenstein
thought
about becoming
George Bush
254
DIANE RUBENSTEIN
Umberto Eco evokes what is at stake in this realm of the Absolute Fake
in his depiction of Disneylands reconstructed Oval Office: Elsewhere,
on the contrary, the frantic desire for the almost real arises only as a
neurotic reaction to the vacuum of memories, the Absolute Fake is the
offspring of the unhappy awareness of a present without depth.4 We
might as well insert the id-a president without depth. The scandal that
the trompe ZoeUposes for political and esthetic representation since the
Renaissance is situated in its unreal reversion (p. 60). The aim of the
reconstructed
Oval office in both Disneyland and Washington
is to
supply a sign that will fool (trompe) the eye and abolish the distinction
of reference. (Or, as in Bushs own words: This isnt any signal. Its a
direct statement. If its a signal, fme.5) In the history of the late 20th
century presidency, Bush marks a peculiar instance of the relation of
reference to signification. While American presidents sinceGerald Ford
have been empty signifiers, rarely has there been such a Lacanian relation
to language that Bush daily enacts. Bushspeak may be the closest
approximation
outremer of the Lacanian unconscious: ca parle. It says
what it knows while the subjectdoes not know it.16 With Bush, we have
a presidential subject that cannot be understood as a signified (i.e., as
objectively knowable). This is preparation for the fmal turn of the screw:
Quayle as Baudrillards fatal st.rategy, where the metamorphosis,
tactics
and strategies of the object exceed the subjects understanding.(Carter
posed problems of a different psychoanalytic order. Forhe demonstrated
the fissure between idea and affect. Carter always seemed to smile at the
wrong time.)
The end of milennia presidency is a twin appeal to the image
repertoire and the symbolic order. As image repertoire, it can be read as
a litany of bad presidential performances:
LBJ abusing his dogs and
exposing his belly; Nixon hunched and glistening like a concerned toad,
Gerald Ford tripping over.. .I Reagan, as a hyperreal president could
always satisfy our iconic interests: Reagan was nice as Iago was honest
because his image repertoire required it of him.8 Moreover, Reagan was
always tangible as symbol if not as image. In the difference between
image repertoire and the symbolic order we can first glimpse the subtle
passage from hyperreality
to seduction. What sets Bush apart from
Reagan is his intractable opacity. For Bush is a simulacra without
perspective. He appears as a pure artefact (our environmental
president, our education
president) against a vertical backdrop. Bush
replaces Reagans tangibility with the tactile vertigo of the afterimage.
Richard Goldstein concurs: now were in the grip of something that no
longer requires a spokesman .9 This tactile vertigo recounts the sub
jects insane desire to obliterate his own image and thereby vanish
(~~62). Life becomes a Jeff Koons tableau. Koons the artist and Bush the
seducer know how to let the signs hang. Bush/Koons, suspended in
ether.
THE HyStiM
MALE
255
256
DUh?E RUBENSTEIN
castigate his caution (or prudence), are like those critics of Ronald
Reagan who saw him either as a hypocrite or vacuous and thereby missed
his remarkable sign function and theoretic challenge. The depthlessness
and nonobligation
of the sign is constitutive of the post-modern presidency. And if Reagan was conceptually tragic yet hilarious Bush profers
a no less metaphysical hilarity: the acute metaphysical appeal of the
trompe loeil.
It may appear bizarre to characterize Bush as seductive. After all, this
is the man who Newsweek decreed had a wimp factor too strong a
disability ever to become president. But we should not make the mistake
of confounding the autonomous or disembodied signifier with charisma
or its lack. Charisma, like vulgar notions of seduction, has everything to
do with the body; seduction, on the other hand connotes a whole
strategy of appearances
interpreted
in terms of play,. challenges,
duels (p. 7). Indeed, the Bush presidency when read againstBaudrillards
Seduction seems less an instance of the wimp factor than a transvestite
oversimulation
of femininity. The same impersonator for Bush on Suturday Night Live, Dana Carvey, is also the punishing church lady. This
oscillation between the two Bush persona uncannily evokes both of
Carveys characterizations,
especially that of the phallic mother and her
appeal for the male masochist. This recentering
around the strong
mother entails a concommitant
displacement of male subjectivity. Political pundits such as Peter Hart and Texas senator Carl Parker have an
idiomatic appreciation of Bush as feminine simulator. Hart calls Bush the
Don Knotts of American politics. Parker compares Bushs macho
performance
against that of Reagan: Reagan can portray a real macho
guy. Bush cant. He comes offlooking like Liberace.16 Both analogies are
telling figures. Don Knotts was most known as Andy Griffiths inept
deputy, Barney Fife, whose failed attempts to impose a law recall the
hysterics of Al Im in charge Haig. Knotts is the perfect second fiddle
(as is Bush). His tremendous effort at and failure to control becomes a
caricature of male potency. Knotts, like Bush, exemplifies the masochistic self victimization
of one who is so visibly trying to please. Indeed,
Knotts seems an ersatz made for television (pi-e-telethon) Jerry Lewis.
While Liberace is a rhetorically charged topos, he too can jbe read like
Knotts or Bush as an oversimulation
of the feminine.
The transvestite is an apposite figure for Bush. Like thetransvestite
Bush parodies signs by oversignification.
Bush, like Baudrillard, knows
that it is the transubstantiation
of sex into signs that is the secret of all
seduction. n (p. 13) Moreover, what we witness with Bush as with male
hysteria in general, is not the recoding of men as men but rather a process
of uncoding.
As with Jerry Lewis, Bushs frenetic effort to control the
(political) spectacle finally yields to a male subject position which
dem.olishes any prospect of a coherent masculine subjectivity.*
Reagans obtuse meaning was literally impertinent;
Bushs persona is
incoherent. Bush-wimp and the macho Bush; Bush with Barbara, Bush
THE HXSTERKXL
M4L!?
257
with Baker; the kinder gentile Bush of the new WASP cultural hegemony
against the macho cowboy Texan who puts tobasco sauce on his tuna
yet always seems to look as if he has just escaped from a dude ranch.19
What fascinates us in Bush is precisely this unresolved and contradictory self-formation-the
self-cancelling spiralling of signs that is also the
fascination towards the neuter: one libido? or Barthesian nectarine which
dampens oppositions? In Sad@ Fourlev LoyoAz, Barthes discusses Fouriers
classification scheme in which there is always a reserved portion (l/8).
This reserved portion is liminal or neuter: The neuter is what comes
between the mark and the non-mark, this sort of buffer, damper, whose
role is to muffle, to soften, to fluidify the semantic tick-tack, that
metronome-like noise the paradigmatic alternative obsessively produces:
yes/no, yes/no.. .n This portion is shocking as it is contradictory
and
disturbing. It is necessarily ambiguous and it undermines meaning. The
neuter is a qualitative, structural relation which subverts the very idea
of norm and normality. To enjoy the neuter is perforce to be disgusted
by the average .20And despite his many protestations, Bush is no average
WY*
Yet Bush is a transvestite-feminine
dissimulator in a parodic sense:
The seduction is itself coupled with a parody in which an implacable
hostility to the feminine shows through and which might be interpreted
as a male appropriation
of the panoply of female allurements (p. 14).
This repudiation of the feminine is most evident in a contest situation,
such as the Bush-Ferraro debate in which Bush kicked a little ass (a good
ole Texas phrase) or in his televisual dual with Dan Rather that guy
makes Leslie Stahl look like a pu~sy.~~ His repudiation of the feminine is
twinned with an overcompensation
of masculine behavior that can only
look to Jerry Lewis Nutty Professor for an equally apt hysterical enactment. The Bush wimp is like the Lewis-Kelp character cured of what ails
(Ailes) him via a substitute ego of simulated virility. Bush as wimp is
transformed
to macho-Bush only by an excess of masochistic selfvictimization.
Dana Carveys brilliant parody of Bushs campaign selfmanagement is to the point: Voicelow. Voice getting lower. Doctors tell
me it can go lower still.** The exhibition of Bush-suffering
throughout
the entire 1988 campaign is enacted via the body: His voice is lowered,
his mannerisms contained. Moreover, the oscillation between a passive
and a hypermale (often misread as the opposition
between Peggy
Noonan and Roger Ailes) underlines the lack of a stable balance within
a single male subjectivity, thus joining Bush to the ranks of other late 80s
male hysterics: Pete Rose, General Noriega and Bob Saget.
Like the transvestite, there is nothing latent about Bush. It is only latent
discourse that tries to hide the secret of appearances. Seduction is a
manifest discourse offering us the lure (Zeurre> of the secret of appearances. What Bush offers is nothing less than the faker than the falseOprah Winfreys head on Ann-Margrets body on the cover of TV Guide.
Bush becomes in this reading a blank empty sign that bespeaks the anti-
It is this void, this missing dimension that ties Bush the trbmpe ZoeU
president to Bush the hysterical male presidency. For it is the inner
absence that terrifies the hysteric. Bush is described by Steven V. Roberts
as a man in his middle sixties who still didnt know who he was or where
he wanted to go.28 This panic is sometimes evinced in a self-reflective
comment: Im looking introvertedly
and I dont like what I see. This
uncertainty and terror over his fragile concept of identity is underscored
by his manic 1988 campaign insistence that Im one of you. This
rhetorical tick (like.the hysteresis of Kochs Howm I doing?) was
repeatedeight
times in his New Hampshire speech and in numerous
states: Massachusetts Born there. Im one of them, too. n Texas: Im one
of them, too. (or in dialect: Ah am one of yal.) Connecticut:
I think
it might be kind of nice to have a Connecticut kid in the White House. n29
259
(Mary
McGrory
notes
form
Bush
&.s mastered.)
262
D,!ANERUBENSTEIN
Bush, like an hysteric, turns his body into a mirror. He is what he does and
does not eat (pork rinds, broccoli).53 But this is a mirror that has been
turned against the wall by effacing the potential seductiveness of his body
(after all, he is relatively good looking and fit) by de-sexualizing it. This
desexualization
can be read against the classic scenario in which strong
female subjects (Marilyn Quayle, Barbara Bush) are obligated to assume
male lack. (To the extent that Bush is also a male-masochist, this is his
fantasy as well). The gaze of the sexual (m)other of the Bush presidency
is quite different from Nancys fawning. Barbara Bush answers the call to
look upon and accept. male lack. The denegation of her Wellesley
commencement
address acknowledges and embraces male castration
(even and especially as it rewrites the First Lady as a man). Marilyn Quayle
insisted during the campaign that she was not getting paid to be Dans
advisor even if she was doing what an advisor would normally get paid
for. We witness a reorientation:
a recentering of the Strong Mother and
a combination
of female magnaminity and male masochisms4 Barbara
Bush is so popular because she is so reassuring. But her reassurance is not
that she allows herselfto visibly grow old, but rather that she encourages
us to be passive without guilt.
If Barbara follows the Lacanian route of the acceptance of male lack,
Bush in his desexualization offers us an ultimatum: You will not seduce
me. I dare you to try. Yet as Baudrillard notes, seduction shows through
in negation. The dare is one of its fundamental forms. A challenge is met
with a response. This is the real sense of read my lips and not, as Peggy
Noonan would have it, an attempt to establish unequivocal meaning.55
Bush closes down the game by dramatizing his refusal to be seduced (i.e.,
cash in on his popularity) yet at the same time dramatizing a need for
seduction.
Bush, seductive and oblique, is the perfect end of millenium president.
If Ronald Reagan showed the signifier in a permanent state of depletion
(the Barthesian third or obtuse .meanin@, then Bush proffers another sign
strategy: the .obliquity of the seducer who knows how to let the signs
hang. Who needs a White House astrologer when you have a seducer
who knows when signs are favorable and has the requisite male maso
chism to enjoy suspense? We recall Baudrillards words with a poignancy
for the events of last fall. Bush is the luckiest man in the world, some say.
I disagree. Bush only appears lucky because of the uncanny deployment
of a seduction strategy:
Signs are favorable only when left suspended and will
move of themselves to their appointed destiny. The seducer.doesnt
use signs up all at once but waits for the
moment when they will all respond, one after the other,
creating a unique conjuncture and collapse. (p. 109)
Notes
1.
Jean BaudriRard, Seduction, trans. Brian Singer (translation modlfled), w: St. Martins
Press 1990) p. 64. All references to Seduction appear in the body of the text and refer
to the Singer translation.
2.
S magazine, August 1988, p. 98. See also The Wit and Wfsdom of George Bush, Ken
Brady and Jeremy Solomon, ed., (NY: St. Martins Press, 1989). p. 27.
3.
Spu magazine, November 1988, p. 128. The hII quote runs as follows: The holocaust
was an obscene period in our nations history. I mean this centurys history. But we all
lived in this century. I didnt live in this century.
4.
5.
6.
Bite Benvenuto and Roger Kennedy, The Works of Jacques Lacan, (NY: St. Martins
Press, 1986), p. 166.
7.
MarkPoster, JeanBaudrfZ&zrd:Selected
8.
Mark Crispin Miller, Boxed In: The Culture of TV, @vanston, IL: Northwestern
1988). p. 80.
9.
Richard Goldstein, The New Wasp Hegemony in the Wake of Bush, Enclftfc, Vol. 11,
No. 2, Issue 22, pp. 8-14.
(NY: Harco?,
Brace, Jovanovich,
10. Mark Green and Gail MacColl, Ronald Reagans Reign of Ewor,
1987h 9.
11. MTfmes,
1983), pp.
Up,
(NY: Pantheon,
12. I am indebted to Scott Bukatmans brilIiant reading of Jerry Lewis: Paralysis in Motion,
Jerry Lewiss Life as a Man, Camera Obscura, 17 May 1988, pp. 194-205.
13. NyTfmes, March 9,1990, Bl, Maureen Dowd, Bush-Speak.
14. Kaja Silverman, Historical Trauma and Male Subjectivity in E. Ann Kaplan, cd.
Psychoanalysfs and Cinema, (NY: Routledge 1990), p. 111. (The reference is to
Jacques Lacan, SemfnafrexvIII,
p. 4.)
15. SW, August 1988, p. 98.
16. Brady and Solomon, pp. 13-14.
17. Lynne Kirby, Male Hysteria and Early Cinema, Camera Obscura 17, May 1988, p. 126.
18. Bukatman, Paralysis in Motion, p. 195.
19. NY Times, May 6,1990, Maureen Dowd and Thomas Friedman, Those Fabulous Bush
and Baker Boys, p. 58.
20. Roland Barthes, Sade, Fourfer, Loyola, (NY: Hi and Wang, 1976), p. 107-109.
21. Brady and Solomoti, Wft and Wfsdom, p. 44.
22. NY Times, March 9,1990, Bl , Dowd, Bushspeak.
264
DUNE RUBENSlZN
23. Dowd and Friedman, Those Fabulous Bush and Baker Boys, p. 62.
24. On this topic of Lets Pretend (as well as the way Poppy Bush continuaRy pops up), Bush
recaEs Pee-Wee Herman. See the article by Constance Penley, The Cabmet of Dr. PeeWee:~Consumerism and Sexual Terror, Camera Obscuru 17, May 1988, for implicit
comparisons between Bush and Pee-Wee on playing house, I know you are but what
am I? and especially: No! None of that stu!E Cames over, pp. 133-135. Penleys
article is also excellent for a treatment of the unheimlich In both Pee-Wees and Bushs
playhouses.
25. NYTimes, December 16,1989 p. 10, Richard L. Berke, Bushs Drug Deal: The D.E.A.
Meets the Keystone Cops. See also Richard Baker Lets Pretend, NIT, September 27,
1989, p. 37.
Decree: No More
27. Brady and Solomon, p. 26. (Wa.Gz~ngton Post, Nov. 3, 1984, p. AS).
28. Steven V. Roberts, review of The Quest for the Presidency
Review, Dec. 10,1989, p. 38.
29. Brady and Solomon, Turning
Mayl2,
1988, A32.
41.
WaUStreetJournaI,
42.
43.
Michel Foucault, This L Not a Pipe, (Berkeley: UC Press, 1982) pp. 22-25.
44.
45.
46.
47.
265
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Photo:
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contributors
Mb-k Lewis is a writer and artist and a member of the collective Public
Access in Toronto. His current project involves Leni?i in Ruins, a
photographic
essay on contemporary
politics in Eastern ,and Central
Europe.
AttiZa Richard Lucas is a Canadian artist living in Berlin. He is best
known for his mythological :paintings on sacrificial power;, from Berlin
skinheads to American military cadets.
EZkeTown writes on Canadian art and culture.
David HZynsky, a photographer
living in Toronto, is currently completing a documentary (street photography)
project on Eastern Europe.
Jennifer Bbomer, Associate Professor of Architecture at the University of Florida, teaches design and theory, and is a Fellow of the Chicago
Institute for Architecture and Wbanism. She is currently massaging her
dissertation into a book, Desiring Architecture: The Scrypt ofJoyce and
Piranesi, forthcoming fromYale University Press; and, as the work of her
fellowship,
is, with Nina Hofer, building constructions
and writing a
book which together twist the separatrix of the structure/ornament
dich.otomy. She is also plotting The Domesticity Project with Catherine
Ingraham.
Marc de Guewe is a Toronto artist and writer.
Art in Ruins andArt. The na.me is a program. The English team of artists
Hannah Vowles and Glyn Banks call themselves Art in Ruins and the name
has a double meaing. Art in late-capitalist society has lost its mythic
autonomous character. On ftrst sight it serves as a satisfaction for cultural
needs, and is bound to the capitalist system of exploitation,
which is
more orientated to commercial aspects than to the human. Art becomes
a spectacle, which is running on empty. The spectacle full% its function, if it can mask the contradictions
of the system. The artist within it
is the sole subject on which the objects (as no longer existing subjects)
can elevate themselves. Art inRuins, art finds itself only as a ruin, in a state
of dissolution.
. *A&y Gordon teaches in the graduate sociology program at the University of California, Santa Barbara. She writes on feministtheory
and
postmodem
thought.
.
:
TeresaPodZesneyis a graduate student in New York Universitys Department of Cinema Studies. Her writing on the construction of whiteness and womanhood
maps the connections between neo-manifestdestinarianism, revisionist histories of the Western US, Cinemascope and
hair colour technologies.
Geoffrey Bendz is a freelance photographer
living in Montreal.
numerous
Chris Tysh, originally from Paris, France, lives in Detroit where she
teaches and writes. Lecturer at Wayne State University, she is the editor
of Everyday Life and In Camera Publications. Her books of poetry
include Secretsof EZeganceand Porne.
Shannon BeZZis a pornographic woman. She is contributing to taking
the seed out of dissemination in cultural, political and academic contexts. Popular culture publications on female ejaculation include: What
shoots and sprays and shoots and sprays? A woman, Rites For Lesbian
and Gay Liberation, ~01.5, No.9, 1989; Kvirmer spurter de ogsa! ,
Cupfdo, Nr. 4/1990; Nice Girls Dont Do It, (a docuporn film) made by
K. Daymond. Current non-ejaculatory publications include: The Political-Libidinal Economy of the Socialist Female Body: Flesh and Blood,
Work and Ideas, Dialectical Anthropology,
Vol. 15, (1990), No. 1.
270
THE HYSTERICALMALE
in the logics of
at SUNY Stony Brook.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
coverArt
Mark Lewis, They Sucked a Filthy Tongue No Mother
Page vi
Attila Richard Lukacs, True North,
Diane Farris Gallery, Vancouver
1 of 4 panels, 1987
Page x
Photograph
Page xii
Photograph
Pages 5,7,9,
Photographs
11
by David Hlynsky
Page 12
Art in Ruins, Hannah Vowles and Glyn Banks, Over-site, 1987, installation detail, Edinburgh, Scotland
Page 56
Photograph
Page 71
Photograph
by Geoffrey Bendz
Page 91
Photograph by Mark Lewis
He Licked His Lip Until it Bled, 1987
Page 92
Cover: Q Harlequin Presents
Loves Sweet Harvest by
Sally Heywood
Page 148
Attila Richard Lukacs
stizz, 50 x 80
Diane Farris Gallery
Page 166
Photograph
by Ruthann
of Shannon Bell
Tucker
272,
THE HY3TERKA.L
iVALE
Page 170
Photograph taken from Pad
Summer edition, 1989
Page 186
Illustration
Pasifon
by Teri Weidner
CultureTexts
THE J3YSTERICAlLMALE: new feminist
Edited and with an introduction
theory
by
EVER LOVE,
TONGUE
NO MOTHER
1987.
St. Martins
and bound
* New York,
NY 10010
in Canada
Feminism
ISBN
Cl-332-05297-9