Murillo (2018) A Lacanian Theory of Curriculum
Murillo (2018) A Lacanian Theory of Curriculum
Murillo (2018) A Lacanian Theory of Curriculum
Curriculum in Higher
Education
The Unfinished Symptom
Fernando M. Murillo
A Lacanian Theory of Curriculum
in Higher Education
Fernando M. Murillo
A Lacanian Theory
of Curriculum in
Higher Education
The Unfinished Symptom
Fernando M. Murillo
University of British Columbia
Vancouver, BC, Canada
This Palgrave Pivot imprint is published by the registered company Springer Nature
Switzerland AG
The registered company address is: Gewerbestrasse 11, 6330 Cham, Switzerland
Foreword
v
vi Foreword
through his pen, but through his teaching. In his student William Pinar’s
vocabulary, it was Khlor’s “subjective presence” that communicated this
irreducible vision of curriculum. As with all the great teachers who do
not write (e.g. Socrates and Jesus), Khlor’s ideas were passed down to
and through students like Timothy Leonard, the aforementioned Pinar,
and Pinar’s student, Janet Miller. These ideas came together within
a community of scholars who founded the field we now call “curricu-
lum theory” or “curriculum studies”, a movement that initiated a full
reconceptualization of curriculum. The Reconceptualists used Khlor’s
vision, articulated and developed most boldly by Pinar, as their fuel. The
Reconceptualists took up this work within the legacy and traditions of
those shipbuilders of the humanities at the turn of the century, after their
vessels barely survived the two great wars. They sought to awaken the
field of Education out of its social scientific slumber and point to a vision
of curriculum that was not limited by the near sightedness of the institu-
tional school.
Today, what little remains of the Reconceptualist tradition in curric-
ulum has in many ways forgotten and abandoned these projects. Sadly,
this tradition never became truly apostolic. But, again, there are the
exceptions that prove the rule. Here, in this book, we have the work of a
student of a student of Paul Khlor, a student of William Pinar, Fernando
Murillo, his first book in English. When one reads Murillo’s proposal in
this book, it must be read within this genealogical and historical con-
text. Murillo himself affirms this exegetical key. When he writes “I pro-
pose an approach to psychoanalytic critique organized in a guiding grid
of thought that brings together elements from psychoanalytic as well as
curricular theory”, he is proposing more than a simple study (something
important in its own right). He is moving towards an epochal reorgani-
zation.
In this short book, Murillo gestures to something radical and ambi-
tious: a ressourcement, a return to the sources of the modern humani-
ties and the reconceptualists of curriculum. He writes, movingly, that
“Ignoring the psychoanalytic constitution of subjectivity in its core
dimensions of desire, libidinal ties, suffering, and anxiety cannot go
without consequences in the formative enterprise of curriculum work”.
While Murillo clearly speaks at the classic confessional interval of interi-
ority, I also hear him modulate into a register that critiques the present
and profound ignorance of the field of Education, including the state of
Foreword vii
the study of curriculum. This is not a purely critical move and Murillo is
careful to absolutely distinguish his ideas from the “critical” traditions,
above all critical pedagogy. What we find instead is a brilliantly destruc-
tive act of fidelity, faithful to the modern tradition of psychoanalysis in its
widest sense and the project of the reconceptualization of curriculum in
its original spirit.
Murillo avoids fad and group-think cliches in his bold embrace of the
difficult humanism that “is not to make us feel better, or ‘produce’ or
ameliorate anything, but to allow us to be ourselves more authentically”.
This authenticity results in nothing more or less than the ability—indeed,
the courage—to look at the full scope of the catastrophe, inside and out.
The reader who is not called to an existential conversion in these pages
is in most need of its conviction. For my part, I see and hear it as a pro-
posal that tests the very possibility of a future for curriculum and, indeed,
Education as an academic discipline. Rather than challenge through nov-
elty, however, Murillo goes back into the idea of Bildung and brings it
forward into a powerful series of associations.
With respect to his method, Murillo embraces the classic descriptive
scope of psychoanalysis and phenomenology while at the same time turn-
ing it psychically against the technocratic clutter of the common sense
notion of educational “practice.” He insists that:
This expectation and demand for theory to ‘do’ things is, as we have
shown, a symptomatic expression of a certain anxiety about being in the
world. A world that is experienced as frightening in its complexity and
unpredictability, that might expose our fragility, and that opens up the
possibility of having to face the unknown existential aspects of our human
condition, is met with a compulsion to act, to intervene, to prescribe how
things should be done rather than describe them as they are.
and the person. The result of his efforts is not so much a “result” as they
are an inspiration, a hope in a time of increasing hopelessness.
In his final line—which I will not spoil by quoting for the reader
here—Murillo brings us to the spectacular site of love as the clearing that
his symptomatic theory of curriculum unties. The Unfinished Symptom is
a clearing, then, in the most fundamental sense of transcendental clarity:
the clearing that destroys what is destructible to reveal what is eternal. In
these pages, gentle reader, you will find an unbinding of life and breathe
from the clutches of death. Let it burn and hurt.
1 Introduction 1
5 Concluding Thoughts 83
Index 89
ix
CHAPTER 1
Introduction
1 At the end of his life, Lacan made his allegiance to Freud even clearer: “it is up to you
mental concept and its corresponding sound-image. These two components are, in his
view, inseparable just as the two sides of a sheet of paper. To illustrate this relation, Saussure
used a diagram where the Signified is placed above the Signifier.
1 INTRODUCTION 5
the Symbolic, Imaginary, and the Real (the topography through which
Lacan understands the configuration of subjectivity) are lenses to read a
variety of cultural expressions, as they appear and develop in our specific
contexts, in our day-to-day engagement in and with the world. Put dif-
ferently, to think with Lacan may allow us to get “under the hood” of
educational and lived experience, and into the subtler and yet decisive
dynamics that explain their phenomena, that find their roots in the uni-
versality of the human drama.
On the other hand, and as we mentioned earlier, the distinction
between normal and abnormal (or pathological) disappears. Though a
cause of suffering, symptoms are no longer a pathology to be treated or a
malaise that requires fixing within the context of the clinic but are rather
constitutive expressions of the self that can be read, recognized, and
dealt with in the wider cultural context. Symptoms are signifiers that sig-
nal aspects of our present configuration of personality and leave traces of
the direction and trajectory of our desires. Hinging on enjoyment, some
symptoms tend to persist. Paying attention to the nature and structure of
the symptom can allow for a productive reading of cultural, sexual, soci-
opolitical and, of course, educational expressions of subjectivity.
Working with and through educational issues from a Lacanian form
of psychoanalysis requires both knowing about Lacan—through second-
ary sources—but also of and from Lacan himself—through careful and
systematic study of his works. Through such a practice one finds that a
psychoanalytic understanding in Lacanian terms necessarily involves a
return to Freud: an analytical stance that digs behind what shows itself as
apparent, a capacity to read and interpret the accidents of human exist-
ence through their mythopoetic substance, and a rejection of any form
of approach to analytical work directed at merely strengthening the ego.
What we learn from Lacan in the field of curriculum studies is not
only an attentiveness to the word, the signifier, to language and the
ways in which it covers, displaces, but also brings to the surface expres-
sions of desire. We also learn to develop an openness to grapple with
the ongoing, open-ended, and fundamentally noncoincidental nature of
our process of becoming, the both tragic and sublime pull and push of
an ego, an ideal-ego, and an ego-ideal: the substance of curricular work
at its purest. In other words, the struggle of the relation between who
I believe to be, who I believe I should be, and who I believe the Other
wants me to be, a struggle that begins the moment we step into lan-
guage and ends at death.
8 F. M. MURILLO
References
Bernfeld, S. (1973). Sisyphus or the Limits of Education. Berkeley: University of
California Press.
Lacan, J. (2006). Écrits. New York: W. W. Norton.
Lacan, J. (2008). My Teaching. London: Verso.
Pinar, W. (1999). The Reconceptualization of Curriculum Studies. Counterpoints,
70. Contemporary Curriculum Discourses: Twenty Years of JCT
(pp. 483–497).
CHAPTER 2
Introduction
That curriculum is a situation that produces certain kinds of consequences
other than that related exclusively to content learning or skills is a well-
accepted notion. Especially among those of a more progressive and critical
bend, there seems to be an agreement that through curricular activity we
learn ways of being in the world; that we construct a vision of ourselves
and those around us, mainly due to the fact that the pedagogical situation
is imbued not only in technical content, but in political, social, and cultural
beliefs that shape both students’ and teachers’ dispositions.
the World Bank and the OECD, universities all over Europe and in most countries in the
American continent are adopting curricular designs based on practical skills, the use of quan-
titative standards of measurement, and imposing cost-efficiency rationales on their programs,
causing a reduction in the length of degree programs, the reduction of classroom interac-
tion on exchange for computer platforms, a lowering of standards for student admission and
graduation, among other transformations to the spirit and purpose of the university.
2 THE FORMATION OF THE SUBJECT: CURRICULUM … 11
2 The paper was to be delivered originally in 1936 but he was interrupted 10 minutes
into his presentation and forced to step down, as the main organizer of the conference
deemed it impenetrable. This did not discourage Lacan from continue to develop his theo-
retical (and stylistic) approach, and thirteen years later gave the same paper again, this time
gaining international attention.
2 THE FORMATION OF THE SUBJECT: CURRICULUM … 13
However, these designs might not actually produce the effects one
would hope for.
This is clear in Anne Phelan’s suspicion of designating prior identi-
ties via curriculum design, because “human beings constantly exceed and
frustrate prior identifications, often contradicting their own expressed
and deepest commitments”, reason why “designating a prior identity…
does not guarantee anything” (2010, p. 321).
In this tension between a liberatory call for action and the impossi-
bility of teleological designs for identity formation, Grimmett draws an
interesting point: institutional discourses do have an effect, as the schol-
arship of Critical Discourse Analysis has shown (see the work of Norman
Fairclough, for example).
But are these effects predictable?
Phelan does not seem to think so, and she warns us again about the
“incalculability of action”, reminding us that “subjectivity is a quality of
human interaction and not a set of characteristics individuals possess”
(2010, p. 326). Jacques Lacan would agree. As he indicates in his Ècrits,
“every discourse derives its effects from the unconscious” (p. 701).
Discourse then has effects, but since they are derived from the uncon-
scious, they cannot be foreseen.
Phelan’s view of subjectivity is in sync with psychoanalysis. As
Deborah Britzman (2009) asserts, a defining trait of curricular work is
that “all education suffers a radical fate of indeterminacy” (p. viii). I am
not exactly sure that indeterminacy is what is “suffered”. It certainly was
not the case in older traditions of study. But the main point stands.
Even though pedagogical experience has shown the consistent failure
at attempting to control outcomes via teleological curricular discourses,
their existence and imposition should not be regarded as unproblematic.
In Civilization and its Discontents (1957), Freud points out that ineffi-
cacious at realizing all their aims as some discourses can be, they never
the less are not innocuous: they do produce effects. In view of the cir-
cumstances that the term “effect” can give the impression of referring to
visible behaviors, or that they can be planned, controlled or traced back
to a “cause”, I prefer to turn to the language suggested by Britzman
(2003b), when she refers to education as a process that entails psychical
consequences. This way, we become more attuned to the consideration of
the dynamics that take place in the ongoing psychic (re)construction of
subjectivity through the use of language.
16 F. M. MURILLO
4 This is a central element in the diagnosis that Norbert Lechner (2002) does of Chilean
civil society after the violent US intervention in the country in the 70s. Neoliberal democ-
racy’s failure to represent people in their fears and dreams help explain societal disaffection
for civic participation.
18 F. M. MURILLO
scholars shocked and perplexed. Facing such horrors and hopeless times,
for some it was time to recognize the danger of an action-oriented
mentality, and ultimately, the impossibility of idealistic grand utopias.
Taubman would agree with such sentiment, as he sees that one of the
implications of psychoanalysis for curriculum is that it puts us in a situ-
ation where “we must accept our own complicity in the realities we dis-
cover in the classroom” (2011, p. 172).
In this sense, Deborah Britzman’s claim is timely: “the approach that
can best turn education inside out”, in the interrogation of our complicit
intentions and “…to understand its inhibitions, symptoms, and anxieties,
is psychoanalysis” (2009, p. viii). It is to the exploration of these issues
expressed in curricular work that we now turn.
5 Lacan’s framework of subjectivity also follows a tripartite model, just as the topology of
the psyche in Freud. The Freudian psychical apparatus is formed, as the reader will recall,
by the Id, the Ego, and the Super Ego. The Ego (in charge of self-preservation) is con-
tinuously in a position of having to reconcile the demands of the Id (drives and instincts)
and the Super Ego (sense of obligations). In such relation of mediation, in which the Ego
actively tries to seek pleasure and avoid unpleasure, tensions are bound to emerge.
22 F. M. MURILLO
image that marked her discourse: that of her father. As he recounts it, the
outcome of the finding came with the deliverance of meaning: “…it was
enough for me to remark that she had not had [her father’s] support…for
her to be cured of her symptom” (Ècrits, p. 88).
As an object of interpretation, the symptom is a signifier with no
universal meaning (Evans 1996). The non-universality of meaning
attributed to the chain of signifiers operating in the transference in the
pedagogical relation leads me to suggest the theorization of curriculum
in terms of its function as catalyst in an unfinished symptom.
I recognize a commonality between analysis and pedagogy (apart
from the fact that both were identified as the “impossible professions”
by Freud), in that—as Lacan indicates—“psychoanalytic action”, as well
as pedagogical action, “develops in and through verbal communica-
tion, that is, in a dialectical grasping of meaning” (Ècrits, p. 83). Being
a meaning-making practice, curriculum always implies the making of a
subject, since as Lacan suggested, “every meaning phenomenon implies
a subject” (ibid.). In this dialectic, the understanding and attribution
of a meaning is constructed differently by each subject involved in the
relation.
In this sense, the completion of the response to the signifiers/images
provided in the pedagogical relation set up by curriculum is marked by a
hallmark trait: its unpredictability.
Our need to constantly respond and complete the symptom is predi-
cated on our own sense of incompleteness, of being split right from the
moment of weaning, the sense of loss that comes thereafter, and the con-
stitution of our desire in terms of the desire of the other.
Britzman (2009) seems to be pointing to this as she discusses educa-
tion as both interminable and impossible: “education itself will be inter-
minable because it is always incomplete, and because it animates our own
incompleteness” (p. 3).
Being a (complicated) conversation as it is, the psychical responses
with which we take part in the dialectic of the curricular situation are
varied.
As mentioned earlier, Deborah Britzman identifies anxiety, along
with inhibitions, as common completions of the symptom initiated
in the pedagogical relation (2014). In what appears to be a shared
diagnosis, Taubman (2011) also references work that identifies anx-
iety as an “essential topic” to be addressed in teacher education
programs (p. 108).
2 THE FORMATION OF THE SUBJECT: CURRICULUM … 27
This is the type of conversation Lacan has in mind when he says that
transference happens every time people speak in a full and authentic
manner. Conversation that allows for the flow of transference differs dra-
matically from the instrumental use of talk in the classroom that teach-
ers incorporate as a strategy to get students to do or learn something
(Huebner 1999).
In considering the performative effect of curriculum in the ongoing
(re)configuration of the subject through a use of language that appears
as an unfinished symptom, psychoanalysis opens the invitation to rethink
received and familiar notions and, in so doing, reimagine the possibili-
ties of joining in a conversation that, acknowledging our sufferings and
desires of the Real, can lead us in the subjective reconstruction of more
honest and authentic lives.
References
Bracher, M. (1993). Lacan, Discourse and Social Change: A Psychoanalytic
Cultural Criticism. New York: Cornell University Press.
Britzman, D. (1998). On Some Psychical Consequences of AIDS Education.
In W. Pinar (Ed.), Queer Theory in Education (pp. 265–277). Abingdon:
Routledge.
Britzman, D. (2003a). Practice Makes Practice: A Critical Analysis of Learning to
Teach. Albany, NY: SUNY Press.
Britzman, D. (2003b). After-Education: Anna Freud, Melanie Klein, and
Psychoanalytic Histories of Learning. Albany, NY: SUNY Press.
Britzman, D. (2009). The Very Thought of Education: Psychoanalysis and the
Impossible Professions. Albany, NY: SUNY Press.
Britzman, D. (2011). Freud and Education. New York, NY: Routledge.
Britzman, D. (2014). That Other Scene of Pedagogy: A Psychoanalytic
Narrative. Changing English, 21(2), 122–130.
Butler, J. (2004). The Judith Butler Reader (S. Salih, Ed.). Malden: Blackwell.
Da Silva, T. (2001). Espacios de Identidad: Nuevas visiones sobre el currículum.
Barcelona: Octaedro.
Evans, D. (1996). An Introductory Dictionary of Lacanian Psychoanalysis. New
York, NY: Routledge.
Freud, S. (1949). An Outline of Psychoanalysis. New York: W. W. Norton.
Freud, S. (1957). Civilization and Its Discontents. London: Hogarth Press.
Grimmett, P., & Halvorson, M. (2010). From Understanding to Creating
Curriculum: The Case for the Co-Evolution of Re-Conceptualized Design
with Re-Conceptualized Curriculum. Curriculum Inquiry, 40(2), 241–262.
32 F. M. MURILLO
Introduction
To some, bringing together psychoanalysis and education might seem
an odd combination, if not one that can be perceived with a hint of
reluctance, unease, or in the best case, with intrigue, as Peter Taubman
assesses in his study of the history of the relationship between these two
practices (Taubman 2011). But the affinity between the psychoanalytic
and the curricular act is manifold. For one, both analysis and pedagogy
were identified by Freud as impossible professions. Though a central
notion to the understanding of their workings, their compatibility goes
beyond that.
The investigative practice in curriculum, as a complex and heteroge-
neous field, involves the identification and delimitation of an area to be
examined. Such a field that concerns research in curriculum studies, for
Pinar (1975), is an educational experience. Within this field, Britzman
(2009) zooms in an area that highlights a more specific problem that
speaks of the affinity of education and analysis: the psychoanalytic prob-
lem of “trying to understand the expressions and symbolizations of inter-
nal plurality” (p. 118). This internal plurality, though originated in the
quotidian interaction with the (M)Other, is systematically interpellated
and transformed in the deliberate and intentional efforts carried out in
the institutionalized practice of both education and psychotherapy.
In this sense, both analysis and pedagogy are an act, a term that car-
ried particular significance for Lacan, as they involve a dynamic, move-
ment and intentionality. Though the educative work of analysis (and
the analytical work of education) is sustained in words, they are none-
theless a form of intervention. They carry real, imaginary and symbolic
consequences.
As I claimed in the previous chapter, these consequences operate
in curricular work as unfinished symptoms. As these psychical (and in
occasions somatic) dynamics operate in symbolic forms, i.e. through
words, we recognize the centrality of language, and in particular, the
signifier. Britzman presents this position plainly yet poignantly: “Freud
is the writer for people who want to find out what words may have
done to them, and may still be doing” (2009, p. vii). Though symp-
toms and their etiology can only be looked at in retrospective, a psy-
choanalytic critique of curriculum looks at the material traces of its
discourse, the marks of desire and assumptions, that constitute elements
that appear as unfinished symptoms, ready to elicit their completion
by the other. As we will see, a psychoanalytic critique of curriculum
involves the consideration of curriculum in its dimension of language
but also temporality.
Historically, there has been a line of incisive criticism that has delved
into the conditions of schooling and their effects on the lebenswelt
of those who inhabit the educational world (Pinar 1975). Though
approached from different angles and traditions, such investigations seem
3 CRITIQUE: BETWEEN THEORY AND METHOD 35
It must be noted here that, because of its stance and conviction, the
critical attitude is not always tolerated by authority and can entail a dan-
gerous endeavor. Recall the story of the English priest John Ball, who in
a famous sermon preached in the 1380s declared:
…things cannot go right in England until all goods are held in common,
and the lords are not greater masters than ourselves; We are all descended
from Adam and Eve… [yet] they have handsome manors and houses and
we the pain and travail, the rain and winds in the fields. And it is from our
labor that they get the means to maintain their estates. Let us go to the
king, and tell him we shall have it otherwise, or else we will provide a rem-
edy ourselves.
Not long after this sermon John Ball was tried, hung, drawn, quartered
and beheaded as a traitor.
The antecedents to the critical attitude provided by Foucault allow for
the understanding of critique as a practice fundamentally involved and
sustained in the interaction of the triad of power, knowledge (truth) and
the subject.
Seen this way, critique has a pedagogical function. It illuminates the
assumptions on which knowledge is presented as valid, and the power
relations that, at once, make that presentation possible and create the
conditions for individuals to assume a certain subject position. One can
see, then, how emancipation—in a true critical attitude—encompasses
far more than merely what is external to the individual, as Habermas
suggested.
As curriculum also operates in the same triad, one where subjectivity is
at stake, for William Pinar (2015), critique is a crucial practice of curricu-
lum studies. In agreement with the attitude described by Foucault, Pinar
asserts that critique implies “not only non-coincidence but reconstruc-
tion as questioning, skepticism, forming finally conviction” (p. 197).
Methodologically, critique in curriculum studies is “informed by lived
experience”, though not taken as self-evident nor driven by whimsies of
passions, but an intellectual exercise that is “juxtaposed with academic
knowledge and compelled by conviction” (p. 197). The element of con-
viction resonates strongly with the Latin root of critique. The art of
critiquing curriculum, in this sense, and because of its objects and impli-
cations, is an act of judgment: a practice of aesthetic appraisal, mediated
by experience, and sustained in ideology.
40 F. M. MURILLO
Opposing Projects
In reconstructing the history of the relationship between psychoanalysis
and education, Peter Taubman (2011) recognizes that not all approaches
to the analytical and pedagogical act share the same understanding of
their purpose, nor an orientation that guides their practice. As he sug-
gests, the regard toward the unconscious and its effects is the central
element that explains the split within these two impossible professions,
giving place to the conformation of two different and opposing agendas,
which he terms the therapeutic project and the emancipatory project.
In general terms, the analytical and pedagogical act guided by the
therapeutic project is characterized by an effort to “cure” the patient-
student of illness or ignorance. In this effort, the process is directed to
the attainment of particular goals, such as a change in opinion or behav-
ior. Taubman points out that even teachers or analysts who reject the
behavioral-medical approaches to their practice, demonstrate a commit-
ment to this project every time they orient themselves to reaching some
sort of preset outcome, or give into the pragmatic compulsion to act,
even when such commitments are directed to raising awareness of social
inequalities or other noble pursuits of the like.
In contrast to the therapeutic project that, ultimately, disavows the
unconscious, the emancipatory project is directed to an understanding of
inner life, “without promising the result will be a happier…or more just
life…or a higher test score” (Taubman 2011, pp. 6–7). Instead, it offers
“questions and an interminable analysis, rather than answers and solu-
tions” (p. 7). He further explains that the emancipatory project aspires
to problematize taken-for-granted views of ourselves and others, bring-
ing in a consideration of the unconscious with its desires, memories, and
fears, and providing a theoretical orientation to the understanding and
redirection of lived experience. As a critical practice, it “relies on a crit-
ical hermeneutic, but one that attends to its own desires, the unruliness
of the body, and both the Eros and aggression of conscious and uncon-
scious thought” (p. 28).
The distinctive element that delimitates one project from the other,
then, is the critical attitude: emancipatory criticality can never foresee its
results, nor expects to do so. For Zaretsky (2004), the North American
version of psychoanalysis (and by extension, the pedagogical discourses
that stemmed from it) eventually “became a method of cure and a form
of self-improvement rather than a critical stance” (cited in Taubman
2011, p. 26).
3 CRITIQUE: BETWEEN THEORY AND METHOD 41
This is to a large extent what can be seen across the work of Sigmund
Freud and Jacques Lacan in the field of psychoanalysis, and William Pinar
in curriculum studies (see for example Pinar 1975, 2006, 2015). None
of them shied away from using the term method when referring to and
describing the logics of their work. Method, after all, in its Greek root
methodos is a path one traverses, and we are implicated in that walk right
now.
For Jacques Lacan, his method, i.e. rethinking, was a form of com-
mentary that—though heavily recursive—was organized, as he explains,
with a guiding grid composed of a particular way of approaching ele-
ments of psychic dynamics that helped him think through the lived expe-
riences of symptoms.
Provisionally, and at the present stage of this work, I propose an
approach to psychoanalytic critique organized in a guiding grid of
thought that brings together elements from psychoanalytic as well as cur-
ricular theory. This approach includes primordially the attention to lin-
guistic utterances and the enoncé (i.e. the subject of the enunciation) as
modeled in the work of both Freud and Lacan, in conjunction with the
type of commentary organized in juxtaposition present primarily in the
work of William Pinar and in Deborah Britzman.
In focusing not on the whole of discourse, but in bits that may trig-
ger new insight (as Freud suggests in his discussion of method in the
Outline of Psychoanalysis), this form of investigation would work as a syn-
optic analysis; that is, the presentation of critical commentary by juxtapo-
sition of segments of discourse and theory that is relevant for insight into
the object of this method: the processes of subjection through curricular
discourse.
Approached as a form of study, this method of analysis shares in the
rationale described by Pinar (1975) when he outlines a method for the
analysis of educational experience: “The analyst of educational expe-
rience… attempts to discover what factors are operative in educational
experience, what relations among what factors under what circumstances,
and finally, what fundamental structures describe or explain the educative
process” (p. 392). This outline, which he would soon after refine as the
method of Currere as presented at the AERA that same year, reflects to
a large extent the investigative stance of the work of Freud and Lacan,
particularly when it comes to explaining the structures subjacent to what
is perceived as experience. Recall here, for example, that a Lacanian
approach looks at symptomatic formations as expressions of psychical
3 CRITIQUE: BETWEEN THEORY AND METHOD 43
work. “The politically progressive critic”, he writes, “is always about the
business of unmasking, attempting to unveil the ideological struggles
behind seemingly innocent or harmonious work….”. And specifies that
contemporary psychoanalytic criticism “demystifies the transindividual
struggles (whether social or ideological) that the work…is understood to
encode” (p. 29).
Bracher seems to agree with this political stance, in what appears to be
a therapeutic approach, as he insists in linking analysis to the conditions
to bring about “benign social change”, and invoking other authors that
endorse psychoanalytic criticism in terms that it “reconceives texts not
only as, in deconstructionist terms, undecidable objects, nor as, in vari-
ants of Marxist criticism, ideological templates, but also as sites of effec-
tive action, as scenes of forceful statements with consequences…” (1993,
p. 23).
Dean, in analyzing the work of Slavoj Zizek (who somehow articu-
lates Lacan and Marxism), seems uncomfortable when confronted with
some of the emancipatory insights of psychoanalytic critique that face
the therapeutic project with difficult facts: “when Zizek characterizes the
ideological field as constituted around a deadlock [i.e. impossibility] that
by definition does not admit of discursive or practical manipulation, the
possibilities for political struggle and melioration start to seem bleak”
(p. 25).
Such preoccupation would perhaps dissipate if we were to shift the
question, as Dwayne Huebner once suggested, from how can we control
(practical manipulation, or amelioration, in Dean’s vocabulary), to how
can we see ourselves anew.
In spite of the particularities of Dean’s and Bracher’s project, they do
recognize important elements that characterize the impetus and possi-
bilities of a psychoanalytic approach to criticism. From Dean, that is its
engagement in analyzing not only the imaginary and the symbolic rep-
resentations, but also with that which resists representation: the real, and
with it, desire, the drives, and jouissance. From Bracher, a form of study
that is attentive towards the psycho-social significance and consequences
of discourse for the human subjects who encounter and engage with it.
Seen as a problem of reading/interpretation/demystification, psy-
choanalytic critique is ultimately an issue of transference and counter-
transference, that is, a matter of the speech act and a confrontation with
our desire, resistance”, and defenses. As Freud came to realize, it is pri-
marily a matter of listening and speaking and allowing ourselves to be
46 F. M. MURILLO
The Symptom
As it has been established by psychoanalytic experience, symptoms
carry symbolic meaning, and as such—as Lacan noted—are an issue of
language. Though presented as metaphors (symptoms, like the uncon-
scious, are structured like a language) they represent “the return of
truth” of unconscious content and must, therefore, “be interpreted in
the signifying order” (Lacan, Ècrits, p. 194). The formation of symp-
toms can occur from different scenarios. Britzman (2003), for exam-
ple, focuses on the Freudian account that takes them as the result of a
chain preceded by an arousal of danger, an anxiety, a defense and a com-
promise formation. In this account, symptoms can also be seen as the
expression of conflicting desires. But symptoms, like those expressed in
physical ailments, can also be triggered not by issues of desire per se, but
by a lack of transference of libidinal energy and its fixation in the body
(as in those produced in narcissism or hysteria) or by not releasing inter-
nal conflicts by use of the word (the symptom as a word trapped in the
body. Recall here Lacan’s treatment of a woman with abasia, who could
not walk without assistance, whose symptom disappeared as soon as her
perception of lack of support from her father was exposed).
Interestingly enough, even though a symptom is a pathological
formation, it sometimes appears and persists because it provides an
3 CRITIQUE: BETWEEN THEORY AND METHOD 47
The Subject
The communicative situation that curriculum configures and rests upon,
reveals its performative effects in that, in the discursive device of asser-
tion and reiteration, it “produce[s] the phenomena that it regulates and
constrains” (Butler 1993, p. xii). One such phenomena is the restruc-
turation of subjectivity. Anne Phelan (2015) invokes Hanna Arendt to
explain that in the assembly of people not only ideas or approaches are
48 F. M. MURILLO
1 It is worth noting here that even though the mirror stage first appears linked to a par-
ticular point of developmental maturity, the term stage in Lacan is not tied to the develop-
mental discourse of psychology or the natural sciences, but rather it refers to the presence
of a moment marked by a before and after.
3 CRITIQUE: BETWEEN THEORY AND METHOD 49
Language and Temporality
When Lacan locates the subject in the symbolic order, distinguishing
it from the ego (which he locates in the imaginary) he sets in motion
important consequences for the understanding and investigation of sub-
jectivity, not only for the practice of analysis in the context of psycho-
therapy but also for education and the critique of curriculum.
50 F. M. MURILLO
past and the future are ever-present, like the river, which at one and the
same moment exists not only where he sees it to be, but also at its source and
its mouth. The water which has yet to pass is tomorrow, but it already exists
upstream; and that which has passed is yesterday, but it still exists, elsewhere
downstream” (Terziani 2002). This way, and as in Carolyn Dinshaw’s
(2012) discussion of the meaning of “now”, it can be said that the cur-
ricular situation—in its temporal and biographical dimension—is a per-
manent state of transition: the overlap of the “already” and “not yet”.
Unlike the modern (and neoliberal) view of temporality, which is linear,
measurable and oriented to the future, the analytic stance shows that the
past conditions our experience of the present in powerful ways, though it
can in no way determine our futures in predictable ways. In a piece titled
“Curriculum as concern for man’s temporality” (originally published in
1967), Dwayne Huebner points out that the orientation to the future
embedded in the language of “goals” and “objectives” basically oblite-
rate a basic awareness of historicity. One of the problems of such lack of
awareness of the past is that it blinds us to what has been our own com-
plicity with what we are experiencing in the perceived present and leaves
us trapped in the compulsion to act by repetition.
In the juncture of language and temporality though, there is another
and often ignored phenomenon that brings together language, desire,
and unconscious in the formation of the subject: that of the enigmatic
signifier.
2 On this issue, Joël Dor (1997) notes that “a sign can make sense only retroactively,
since the signification of a message emerges only at the end of the signifying utterance
itself” (p. 41).
3 CRITIQUE: BETWEEN THEORY AND METHOD 53
Desire
Reading cultural expressions as symptoms involves recognizing the
trajectory and direction of desire. Desire longs for recognition and
acknowledgment, that is why it expresses itself through the appearance
of symptoms. As a propelling force of human existence and agency,
desire occupies a prominent place of attention for psychoanalytic theory
and practice. An important part of what we say, feel, think, do or try to
do (and sometimes what we fail to say or do) is predicated on desire.
Although desire can sometimes appear to be very similar to need and
demand, they are not exactly the same thing. A need remains linked to
biologic functions and instincts, and demands are the linguistic expres-
sion of such needs. While the articulation of a need in a demand can
usually satisfy the need until a new one arises, demand cannot really sat-
isfy—if only temporarily—another basic human craving: the love of the
Other.
3 CRITIQUE: BETWEEN THEORY AND METHOD 55
3 In his series of talks “Lacan para multitudes”, offered at the Museum of Contemporary
through texts and every text is in itself a social practice” (dialogue recorded by Revista Zona
Erógena, Nº 35, 1997).
58 F. M. MURILLO
References
Bennett, A. (2004). The History Boys. London: Faber and Faber Limited.
Bracher, M. (1993). Lacan, Discourse and Social Change: A Psychoanalytic
Cultural Criticism. Ithaca and London: Cornell University Press.
Britzman, D. (2003). After-Education: Anna Freud, Melanie Klein, and
Psychoanalytic Histories of Learning. Albany: SUNY Press.
Britzman, D. (2009). The Very Thought of Education: Psychoanalysis and the
Impossible Professions. Albany, NY: SUNY Press.
Britzman, D. (2010). Freud and Education. New York: Routledge.
Britzman, D. (2014). That Other Scene of Pedagogy: A Psychoanalytic
Narrative. Changing English, 21(2), 122–130.
Butler, J. (1993). Bodies That Matter: On the Discursive Limits of “Sex”. New
York: Routledge.
Clarke, M., & Phelan, A. (2015) The Power of Negative Thinking in and for
Teacher Education. Power & Education 0(0), pp. 1–15.
Dean, J. (2002). Art as Symptom: Zizek and the Ethics of Psychoanalytic
Criticism. Diacritics, 32(2), 21–41.
Dinshaw, C. (2012). How Soon Is Now? Medieval Texts, Amateur Readers, and
the Queerness of Time. Durham and London: Duke University Press.
Doll, W. (2015). Seeking a Method Beyond Method. Keynote presented
at the fifth triennial conference of the International Association for the
Advancement of Curriculum Studies, University of Ottawa.
Dor, J. (1997). Introduction to the Reading of Lacan: The Unconscious Structured
Like a Language. New York: Rowman & Littlefield.
Evans, D. (1996). An Introductory Dictionary of Lacanian Psychoanalysis.
London: Routledge.
Foucault, M. (1997). The Politics of Truth. South Pasadena, CA: Semiotext(e).
Habermas, J. (1972). Knowledge and Human Interests. Beacon Press.
Horkheimer, M. (2000). Teoría Tradicional y Teoría Crítica. España: Paidós.
Lacan, J. (1989). The Family Complexes. London: W. W. Norton.
Phelan, A. (2015). Curriculum Theorizing and Teacher Education: Complicating
Conjunctions. Routledge.
Pinar, W. (1975). Curriculum Theorizing: The Reconceptualists. Berkeley:
Mccutchan Pub Corp.
Pinar, W. (1995). Understanding Curriculum: An Introduction to the Study of
Historical and Contemporary Curriculum Discourses. New York: Peter Lang.
Pinar, W. (2006). The Synoptic Text Today and Other Essays: Curriculum
Development After the Reconceptualization. New York: Peter Lang.
Pinar, W. (2015). Educational Experience as Lived. Knowledge, History, Alterity:
The Collected Works of William F. Pinar. Taylor & Francis.
60 F. M. MURILLO
Introduction
An authentic psychoanalytic understanding and investigation of the
unconscious, in the tradition inaugurated by Sigmund Freud, is one
based on the exploration of the psychic functions of language and the
workings of the transference.
In this tradition, one is invited to overthrow received meanings about
education and reconceive it in terms of its psychic significance in the
1 One wonders whether the term “neoliberal” still applies, given the now universal and
unescapable marketization of both private and public life, where truly there is no alter-
native. Dismissing one of its central pillars, that of freedom of choice, liberalism in its
present form is no longer “neo” (a revitalization of its central assumptions), but rather
post-liberalism.
64 F. M. MURILLO
The World Bank, on the other hand, in its key document “Peril
and Promise” (2000)—developed by their “Task Force for Higher
Education and Society”—does declare a focus on educational systems
across the globe, having as primary audience government officials,
higher education policymakers, and anyone in a decision-making posi-
tion “responsible for enacting reforms” (p. 20). The document does
three things: (a) it defines the role of higher education in supporting
the process of economic development (b) identifies the obstacles in
higher education for that aim, and (c) it sketches solutions to overcome
such obstacles.
Although it declares not to be a “universal blueprint for reforming
higher education systems” (p. 14), their warning of “the cost of being
left behind” and “having to face a future of increasing exclusion” (pp.
14–15), their recommendations on funding models, governance and cur-
riculum development expressed as “the bottom line”, and the monetary
funding they provide for the implementation of such policies suggest
otherwise.
Due to the encompassing influence of this document in particular,
both in the definition of the international political agenda for higher
education reform, and its framing of a notion of knowledge, profession-
als, and their purpose and processes of formation—central elements of
attention for curriculum—the analysis presented here focuses its atten-
tion on this particular text.
Instances of this framing are found from the very opening and
throughout the text. Before developing its agenda for the improvement
of “quality”, the text declares:
Imaginary Threat
The efficacy of the interpellation of such master signifiers and tone can
be partially explained in the ambivalence of its appeal: on the one hand,
it hinges on fear. The perception of threat and the feeling of fear can have
both an immobilizing effect as well as they can be a prompt for rapid
action. The use of foreboding images as that of “rising poverty”, “isola-
tion”, “unpreparedness for survival”, among others, play powerfully at the
level of the ego. In Freud’s account of the psychical apparatus, the ego
has as the main function the mediation with the outside world, working
primarily in terms of self-preservation and the avoidance of unpleasure. As
such, the “perils” to which the text constantly refer are a powerful and
direct appeal to the ego and one of its primordial functions.
Following Bracher (1993), the sense of threat “affects one’s narcissis-
tic sense of security not only at the symbolic level”—something the text
accomplishes by the strategy of reiteration—“but also in the Imaginary
register”. As such, words selected by the World Bank’s Task Force, like
the ones just mentioned, work with a “subtle but ominous resonance for
the body ego that is at the core of our narcissism and sense of well-being”
(pp. 121–122).
On the other hand, the master signifiers and tone also appeal to the
activation of an image or ego-ideal of moral obligation. Perhaps tapping
on a sense of heroism, the definition of “solutions” presented as “prom-
ise” activate a practical stance on the audience, making them suscepti-
ble to comply and do what it takes to install conditions that, unpopular
as they may be, are deemed rational and aimed for the greater good, to
spare the nation of rising difficulties as presented by the world’s most
influential financial institution.
The best higher education institution is a model and an impetus for creat-
ing a modern civil society. This is an ideal that is not often realized, but is
nevertheless a standard against which to measure national systems. (p. 44)
What we see here is that the whole idea of higher education is con-
structed on an image, an ideal of what is expected. It installs an imagos of
an institution that embodies social norms, that is a model for civil society.
Paradoxically, the World Bank acknowledges the inexistence of such insti-
tution in reality (“an ideal that is not often realized”), yet it assumes it as
“the standard against which to measure national systems”.
Not only the standard of the institution it uses to judge the system is
imaginary. The subjects it educates are also constructed in the same reg-
ister: “…higher education helps to promote the enlightened citizens who are
necessary for a democracy” (p. 44). Yet the image is left up for the reader
to complete on her own terms, as the text makes no elaboration around
what an “enlightened citizen” might be. The problem is not a matter of
more or less detailed descriptions of the image though.
The problem with the reliance on the register of the imaginary for sub-
jective formation is twofold: first, images are extremely precarious. They
break. They cannot, therefore, sustain our notions of value or dignity, at
least not for long. The second one is that privileging the strengthening of
the ego (located in the register of the imaginary) also strengthens one of
its central features: that of adaptation to reality (something ego psychology
profits enormously from). One can start thinking about the political impli-
cations of such a developed attitude of compliance and social adaptation.
As a psychic dynamic, Jacques Lacan did not hold back in his attack
against the psychological practice of imaginary strengthening of the
(conscious) ego, as it is from there that enslaving suffering stems. This is
why, in the opening quotation, Lacan sees in the severing of the knot of
imaginary servitude an act of love.
Aggressiveness
The imposition of an image after which higher education, the peo-
ple who work in it, and the future professionals must conform to is an
act of aggressiveness. This is so not just because of the arbitrariness of
the World Bank’s curricular policy or the imposition of its enforcement
through monetary incentives for governments. For Lacan, aggressive-
ness is always already embedded in language as, by virtue of speaking, we
impose meaning on the other.
4 ANALYZING SYMPTOMS IN POLICY: A PSYCHOANALYTIC READING 69
2 For Education, the 25 specific competencies are mostly related to abilities for manage-
I believe there are at least three closely related aspects that, in interre-
lation, help shed light on the psychic origin and effects of the discourse
of the World Bank.
One of those aspects is the dynamics that take place in group psychol-
ogy or the experience of a “collective mind”. In his “Group Psychology
and the Analysis of the Ego”, Sigmund Freud (1949) explains the per-
spective of group psychology as a concern for the individual as a mem-
ber of a collective, i.e. a profession, a guild, or an institution. In such
a context, as is the case of the collective of teachers and other educa-
tion professionals who work within institutional communities, we find
the expression of a particular kind of instinct: that of the “group mind”.
Within that setting, Freud notes, individuals “feel, think and act in a
manner quite different from that in which each individual would in a
state of isolation” (p. 7). By bringing attention to the fact that our con-
scious acts are predicated on an unconscious substratum, he describes a
series of phenomena that are proper to the collective mind, among which
two are of interest for the context of our discussion.
One is that in a group “the sentiment of responsibility which always
controls individuals disappears entirely” (p. 9), setting the stage for a felt
need to accept the will of a leader, someone who carries the responsibil-
ity of vision, passion, and sense of direction.
The other phenomenon—classed among the hypnotic order—is that
of contagion. “In a group”, Freud explains, “every sentiment and act is
contagious, and contagious to such degree that an individual readily sac-
rifices his personal interest to the collective interest” (p. 10).
Commenting on the forces of susceptibility and influence in the group
psychology of education, Deborah Britzman (2003) points to a crucial
aspect for our understanding of the guild’s acceptance of curricular pol-
icy as authority. In the experiences of group membership, she suggests,
“individuals appear to give up the more obdurate parts of their individu-
ality for the sake of being loved…”. (p. 111).
This search for love brings in the second interrelated aspect, that of
the existence and effects of libidinal ties. These ties do not just animate
the drive to know or sustain the relation of transference between student
and teacher. They also create and maintain a sense of membership and
belonging to a group. At the same time, Britzman notes, it is this sub-
strate of emotion that creates a sense of identification with the leader (s)
of the group and the libidinal ties to the authority.
74 F. M. MURILLO
But a third element that brings together the workings of group men-
tality and the libidinality of the adherence to authority can be found in
the symbolic function of the phallus.
As a function, it starts early in the Oedipal drama, when the child
associates the absence of the mother with the presence of the father
(when she’s not with me, it’s because she’s with him). The father then
first appears as a rival phallic object and then as the one who is presumed
to have the phallus, or the object of desire of the mother (Dor 1997).
In this drama, the child needs to master this profound sense of loss by
symbolizing the understanding that “he is not the one and only object
of his mother’s desire, that is, the object that fills the lack in the Other (the
phallus)” (Dor 1997, p. 113). Once the child enters the realm of lan-
guage (operates from the register of the symbolic) he achieves a symbolic
mastery of the lost object. In an act mediated by repression, language
structures a process of metaphorization, of signifying substitution, where
the repression of the “phallic signifier, the signifier of the mother’s
desire” (Dor, p. 113) finds expression in a complete different signifier
that takes its place. We can see here the dynamic of the enigmatic signi-
fier in operation.
In what continues to operate throughout our lives in the ambiva-
lence of desire between being like the other and having the other, the
repressed phallic signifier appears in our (unconscious) desire to dictate
the law (as a paternal metaphor of that who has the phallus) or comply
with the law, and so gain the affection of the mother.
As Britzman (2003) notes, an important aspect of the phallus, for the
context of our discussion, is that it inaugurates and sustains a simulta-
neous relationship between love and authority, which at first are experi-
enced as the same.
To begin to understand the position of the World Bank’s Task
Force as policymakers (those who dictate the law), it helps to consider
the fact that, in order to substitute for the object of desire lost in the
primal oedipal drama, we turn to engaging our desire in the realm of
objects through language. In order to accomplish this substitution,
Dor explains, “desire must become speech in the form of a demand”
(p. 118).
Is the expression of a demand through the language of policy a
demand for love and attention?
In the symbolic substitution of desire for signifiers, desire “remains
forever unsatisfied because it had to become language”, Dor explains,
4 ANALYZING SYMPTOMS IN POLICY: A PSYCHOANALYTIC READING 75
and in becoming a demand, “desire gets more and more lost in the
signifying chain of discourse”, moving “from object to object, always
referring to an indefinite series of substitutes and at the same time to
an indefinite series of signifiers that symbolize these substitute objects”
(p. 118).
As an expression of libidinal desire, curriculum shows throughout
its history a reflection of such substitutive chain of phallic origin in its
ongoing and continued demand for something else. For example, in the
sixteenth century in colonial Spanish America, the curriculum demanded
from teachers and students a focus on reading, writing and “virtuous
good manners”. During the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries prayer,
grammar, math, and catechism were added to the official curriculum.
From the nineteenth century and on the list of demands grows exponen-
tially, to the present time where international agencies demand of educa-
tion to be a regulator of the economy and the market.
The discourse of curricular policy (as a metaphor of the paternal
law) exerts important psychic consequences on those who receive it
and consume it. In providing the mirror image after which educators
must conform to, the discourse produces two simultaneous effects. It
intervenes in the construction of the ego of educators, providing the
terms through which the ego will continue its job of reality testing and
adaptation, creating the sediment of what is perceived as identity. At
the same time, I would suggest that the discourse of curricular pol-
icy acts as the super-ego of the teaching profession. Drawing from the
libidinal ties and group psychology of the professions, it positions itself
as an authority figure. By doing that, just as in the Freudian account
of the workings of the superego in relation to the ego, it builds on
the residual traces of the parental authority figures to dictate the law,
set limits, bring new needs to the fore, prioritize moral positions, and
castigate the ego with feelings of guilt when—in alliance with the Id—
it fails to comply with the demands set upon it or simply disregards
them to allow the satisfaction of the instinctual desires from the drives.
This positioning of the policy as super-ego and its effect at the level of
the ego help explain, in part, the attitude of compliance among some
teachers who feel they earn the moral reward of thinking of themselves
as “good teachers” and “professionals” based on their ability to fol-
low the protocols, standards, contents, and techniques dictated by the
policy.
76 F. M. MURILLO
3 In contrast, for Lacan, the first virtue of knowledge is the capacity to face that which is
more efficiently and rapidly” (p. 17). It’s a present where “systematic
knowledge has replaced experience” (p. 17).
The disavowal of experience (something built through biographical
involvement in an interplay of past and present) and the insistence on
the use-value of education as preparation for possible economic scenarios
that do not yet exist reveal its orientation to the future.
In an open letter to right-wing Chilean politicians, the acclaimed
queer novelist, activist, and performer Pedro Lemebel brings attention
to this orientation toward the future as a common trait among the neo-
liberal. Referring to their participation in the overthrowing of socialist
president Salvador Allende in the 70s, he writes: “…we have not forgot-
ten, and we will never forget, even if you hate it that the past will resur-
face when you least expect it. The past is inconvenient for you and all of
your friends within the pact, that is why you all look cross-eyed and amnesic
towards the future”. The World Bank’s erasure and disavowal of experi-
ence and historicity do not mean the past will not come back. As psycho-
analytic experience has shown, one forgets what one does not want to
remember, but forgetting does not mean getting rid of.
If education shares with analysis in the status of being impossible
and interminable, the teacher can be seen as akin to the analyst in the
description of the nature of their practice and process of formation, as
described by Freud and Lacan. As it becomes clear in pieces such as
the Outline of Psychoanalysis (Freud 1949) and The Formation of the
Analyst (Lacan, Écrits), the process of learning the discipline of the ana-
lyst/teacher is based on practical experience and sustained in academic
knowledge (a firm base on linguistics and literature come to the fore in
Lacan). But above all, one is formed in the transference, in the open and
genuine conversation with the other, marked by the free flow of libidi-
nal energy. Perhaps a difference in the education of the analyst and the
teacher, as Deborah Britzman pointed out in a conversation, lies in that
the education of the analyst accepts madness. At the same time, the edu-
cation of teachers has also expelled and disavowed the Eros that animates
its very practice.
The curricular policy outlined in Peril and Promise does away with
anything that does not conform to what can be measured in its use value
in the arena of labor market and economic exchange (recall here their
deeming of the study of humanities and arts as a choice based on tradi-
tions and absence of better facilities, and as a cause of “educated unem-
ployment”). Prioritizing efficiency and rapidness in the delivery and
4 ANALYZING SYMPTOMS IN POLICY: A PSYCHOANALYTIC READING 79
References
Bracher, M. (1993). Lacan, Discourse and Social Change: A Psychoanalytic
Cultural Criticism. Ithaca and London: Cornell University Press.
Britzman, D. (2003). After-Education: Anna Freud, Melanie Klein, and
Psychoanalytic Histories of Learning. New York: SUNY Press.
Britzman, D. (2009). The Very Thought of Education: Psychoanalysis and the
Impossible Professions. Albany: SUNY Press.
Britzman, D. (2010). Freud and Education. New York: Routledge.
Dor, J. (1997). Introduction to the Reading of Lacan: The Unconscious Structured
Like a Language. New York: Rowman & Littlefield.
Evans, D. (1996). An Introductory Dictionary of Lacanian Psychoanalysis. New
York: Routledge.
Freud, S. (1949). An Outline of Psychoanalysis. New York: W. W. Norton.
Gonzáles, J., & Wagenaar, R. (Eds.). (2008). Universities’ Contribution to the
Bologna Process, an Introduction. Tuning Project. Spain: Publicaciones de la
Universidad de Deusto.
Pinar, W. (1975). Curriculum Theorizing: The Reconceptualists. Berkeley:
McCutchan Pub. Corp.
Savater, F. (2004). El Valor de Educar. Barcelona: Ariel.
Taubman, P. (2010). Alan Badiou, Jacques Lacan and the Ethics of Teaching.
Educational Philosophy and Theory, 42(2), 196–212.
Taubman, P. (2011). Disavowed Knowledge: Psychoanalysis, Education and
Teaching. New York: Routledge.
The World Bank. (2000). Higher Education in Developing Countries: Peril and
Promise.
CHAPTER 5
Concluding Thoughts
The categories and the analysis presented thus far show that rather than
reaching a conclusion as a closure or end point of a discussion, they rep-
resent potential starting points for new ways of reading, analyzing, and
understanding educational phenomena. In this concluding section, then,
instead of forcing a final word on the matter, we will recapitulate some of
the points we set out to achieve at the beginning and offer some after-
thoughts on what they might imply for an understanding of curriculum.
In the first section of this book, our intent was to gain an understand-
ing of curriculum that would take into account the more inward aspects
of psychic dynamics that operate in decisive ways in the formation of the
subject. The theorizing we performed drawing on curricular theory and
psychoanalysis revealed curriculum in its nature and function as a symp-
tom. But before we can refer to some of the implications that such a
theory of curriculum entails, we must first dispel a basic misconception
that has taken root in education regarding the notion of theory. It is
not uncommon to encounter among educationalists today a demand for
theory to be practical. Such sentiment is patently present in the expec-
tation for a theoretical account to tell us “How will this help me in my
work next Monday?”. This expectation and demand for theory to “do”
things are, as we have shown, a symptomatic expression of a certain anx-
iety about being in the world. A world that is experienced as frighten-
ing in its complexity and unpredictability, that might expose our fragility,
and that opens up the possibility of having to face the unknown existen-
tial aspects of our human condition, is met with a compulsion to act, to
intervene, to prescribe how things should be done rather than describe
them as they are.
Theory, in its ancient Greek root (θεωρία) means to contemplate.
To theorize, then, is an act of “beholding” a phenomenon, of contem-
plating it in a way that brings about an speculative understanding of it.
In the context of this discussion, theorizing means engaging with the
language of the field, criticising it, determining the intellectual history
of the vocabulary it uses, conceptualizing its practices, and envisioning
different ways to think and talk about the phenomena it encounters.
As such, the aspects of curriculum we have developed across this book
delineate the contours of a particularly Lacanian theory of curriculum,
one that has brought about an understanding of it as a symptom, and a
set of descriptions of its functions that work as categories for its critique.
The notion of symptom disclosed to us an aspect of curriculum as an
expression of the existential drama of being and becoming. It revealed
that what is at stake in educational experience is the assertion and consti-
tution of ourselves as subjects, and along with it, the possibility of being
undone and shattered by it at the same time. In this sense, the unfinished
symptom in curriculum appears a placeholder for what might happen in
one’s own process of formation, a process that is, for the most part, open
to risk and failure. It is fraught with anxiety and fear, but also hope and
love. The unfinished symptom is a placeholder for what desire produces:
5 CONCLUDING THOUGHTS 85
a tension between what was, what could have been, and what might be:
the fear of missing and losing, but also the drive to go after the not-yet.
As we came to realize, the symptomatic nature of curriculum is closely
related to an issue of knowledge. In its appearance, the symptom articu-
lates a truth, and as Lacan emphasized, symptoms are truth. This truth is
not the kind of truth one might commonly associate with propositional
knowledge (knowing about something, facts, information), but is rather
a more profound sense of what is actually the case about ourselves at a
more intimate level. Although academic knowledge does play a funda-
mental role in the formation of subjectivity (and is in itself a product of
desire), the truth of the symptom is what gives us a sense of the Real.
Lacan insisted that, since symptoms are articulated in the signify-
ing order, they can only be interpreted within that order, that is, in the
domain of language and words. This is the basic premise on which our
approach to curricular criticism—the second task we set out to achieve—
finds its foundation. Understanding curriculum as symptom, then, invites
us to reread the phenomena of education. This implies reading not just
“between the lines” but actually reading the lines themselves again. It
is in this phenomenological stance that we can be attuned to the real-
ity of the phenomena that we encounter and that gives itself to us in its
very mode of appearance. Reading and interpreting the symptoms articu-
lated in curriculum and its language can perhaps be compared to a story
about a wheelbarrow as told by Zlavoj Zizek in a commentary for The
Guardian (19 February 2005):
Recall the old story about a worker suspected of stealing. Every evening,
when he was leaving the factory, the wheelbarrow he was rolling in front
of him was carefully inspected, but it was always empty - till, finally, the
guards got the point: what the worker was stealing were the wheel-barrows
themselves.
Reference
Lacan, J. (2013). The Triumph of Religion, Preceded by Discourse to Catholics.
Cambridge: Polity Press.
Index
A C
act, 2, 13, 16, 17, 20–24, 27–29, 34, clinical, 4, 20, 25
35, 37–40, 43, 45, 48, 50, 51, compulsion, 17, 40, 51, 79, 84, 86
55, 58, 62, 67–69, 72–74 conversation, 26, 30, 31, 43, 46, 78,
alterity, 3 79
analyzing, 1, 45, 61, 83 critical pedagogy, 16, 18
anxiety, 2, 16, 19, 24–29, 46, 50, 79, criticism, 34–36, 44, 45, 47, 55, 58,
80, 84 62, 66, 85, 86
appearance, 2, 5, 6, 10, 16, 47–49, 54, critique, 6, 8, 33–39, 41–43, 45, 46,
76, 85 49, 50, 54–56, 58, 63, 84, 86
cultivation, 2, 3, 10, 11
cultural, 3, 7, 9, 13, 14, 16, 36, 44,
B 54, 55, 57, 71
becoming, 2, 4, 7, 11, 12, 17, 25, 28, curriculum studies, 2, 3, 7, 10, 12, 34,
48, 62, 75, 79, 84 35, 39, 42, 57
being, 2, 3, 5, 9, 11, 12, 14, 17,
21–26, 37, 48, 50, 51, 53, 56,
63, 65, 67, 73, 74, 76, 84, 86 D
Bernfeld, Siegfried, 5, 6 defense mechanisms, 16, 27, 79
Bildung, 3, 4, 11 desire, 2, 5–7, 14, 16, 17, 19,
Bobbitt, Franklin, 10 21–24, 26, 28, 30, 31, 34, 36,
Britzman, Deborah, 13, 15, 16, 19, 40, 43, 45, 46, 49, 51, 53, 63,
20, 22–28, 34, 35, 42, 43, 46, 71, 74
48, 50, 56, 62, 64, 71–74, 77, discourse, 5, 6, 10, 14, 15, 17, 18, 22,
78, 80 26, 28, 34, 35, 40, 42–45, 48,
50, 54, 55, 57, 58, 62–66, 69, human, 3, 7, 10, 11, 15, 25, 36, 37,
70, 72, 73, 75 44, 45, 49, 54, 56, 57, 84
drama, 2, 7, 8, 25, 49, 74, 84 humanities, 3, 4, 44, 71, 78
dreams, 17, 57, 79, 80
drives, 5, 6, 11, 21, 30, 45, 53, 75,
76, 79, 86 I
dynamics, 6, 7, 13, 15, 20, 21, 34, 35, Imaginary, 7, 21–24, 29, 30, 34, 45,
42, 46, 62–64, 70, 73, 76, 80, 49, 64, 67–70, 76, 79, 80, 87
84, 86, 87 impossible profession, 1, 2
individual, 3, 5, 6, 10, 30, 37
individuality, 22, 73, 80
E instruction, 3
Educating, 1–3 interpellation, 18, 47, 65, 67, 86
education, 1–3, 6, 10–13, 15, 16, intuition, 2
18, 20, 22, 23, 25–27, 29, 30,
33–35, 40, 41, 43, 47, 49, 50,
55–58, 61–73, 75–78 J
educators, 2, 17, 28, 75, 80 jouissance, 6, 21, 45, 47, 53
Ego, 16, 21–23, 27–29, 67, 68
enjoyment, 2, 6, 7, 47
existence, 3, 7, 15, 17, 18, 36, 47, K
54, 73 knowledge, 3, 8, 13, 14, 20, 24, 28,
37–39, 44, 55, 56, 58, 63, 65,
66, 69–72, 77–79, 85
F
failure, 1, 15, 17, 18, 80, 84
formation, 2–4, 6, 9, 10, 13, 15, L
21–25, 35, 46, 49, 51, 55, 62, Lacan, Jacques, 2, 4–8, 12, 15, 19–29,
63, 65, 68, 69, 71, 72, 76, 78 31, 34, 36, 42–49, 51–53, 55,
Foucault, Michel, 37–39, 81 57, 58, 66, 68–70, 77, 78
Freud, Sigmund, 1, 2, 4–7, 15, 16, 18, Lacanian, 2, 4–8, 12, 13, 21, 30, 35,
20, 25–27, 34, 35, 42, 43, 45, 42, 44, 63, 64, 76, 84–86
50, 56, 58, 61, 67, 71, 73, 77, 78 language, 4, 5, 7, 11–13, 15, 21–25,
28, 30, 31, 34, 41, 43, 44, 46,
48–53, 57, 58, 61, 62, 64, 68, 72
G love, 8, 12, 43, 54, 55, 68, 73, 74, 84,
governing, 1, 37, 38 86, 87
H M
Huebner, Dwayne, 11, 30, 31, method, 8, 33, 40–42
45, 51 mirror stage, 12, 22, 48, 49
Index 91
temporality, 34, 41, 49–51, 77 understanding, 2–4, 7, 11, 14, 16, 18,
text, 8, 14, 35, 57, 58, 63–69, 72, 76, 22, 24, 26, 28, 29, 34, 35, 39,
77, 86, 87 40, 44, 46, 48–50, 53, 57, 58,
theorization, 8, 26, 41 61, 63, 64, 66, 69–71
transference, 12, 13, 20, 21, 26,
29–31, 45, 46, 58, 61, 63, 69, 73
Tyler, Ralph, 10, 11 V
von Humboldt, Wilhelm, 3, 79
U
unconscious, 4, 5, 13, 15–25, 30, 35,
40, 43, 44, 46, 47, 51, 53–55,
57, 58, 61, 63, 71, 73