{"id":14634,"date":"2021-03-19T20:06:35","date_gmt":"2021-03-20T00:06:35","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/?p=14634"},"modified":"2021-06-03T20:51:23","modified_gmt":"2021-06-04T00:51:23","slug":"mari-ruti-2012-book","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/2021\/03\/19\/mari-ruti-2012-book\/","title":{"rendered":"Mari Ruti book 2012, 2014"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p>Ruti, M. (2012). <em>The Singularity of Being.<\/em> Fordham University Press. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Ruti, M. (2014). The Call of Character: Living a Life Worth Living. Columbia University Press.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h4 class=\"wp-block-heading\">The Singularity of Being<\/h4>\n\n\n\n<p>Lacan she states focuses on repetition of trauma (RoT), contrasting this to Aristotle&#8217;s cultivation of habits consciously ,where RoT are unconscious. And the Unc and RoT are linked. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>On the one hand, insofar as the unconscious retains a clandestine record of painful experiences that cannot be adequately named, let alone affectively claimed, it crystallizes around trauma. On the other, it is exactly those affects that remain unconscious that persistently return in the form of <strong>traumatic repetitions<\/strong>. (p. 14)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>They, the RoT, build up upon one another forming a &#8220;psychic landscape&#8221; and a &#8220;highly personalized tapestry of pain.&#8221; <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In a way, nothing distinguishes one subject from another more decisively than the particularity of its approach to suffering. <strong>Trauma, as it were, resides at the root of the subject\u2019s distinctive and more or less inimitable character<\/strong>\u2014what I have in this book chosen to call \u201cthe singularity of being.&#8221; (p. 14)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h5 class=\"wp-block-heading\">Repetition Compulsion as an Articulation of Unconscious Desire<\/h5>\n\n\n\n<p>Ruti then brings us to the train analogy.  Stays on rigid tracks, can&#8217;t turn around, has a designated destination, even if its reached it a thousand times before, or if the destination keeps receding indefinitely.  &#8220;To derail it would be immensely destructive.&#8221; (p. 14)  <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>These stations, which house the subject\u2019s most symptomatic fixations, are likely to carry names such as Anxiety, Depression, Disenchantment, Weariness, Sorrow, Bitterness, and Misery. If the train consistently stops at them, it is because something in their vicinity remains unresolved or unprocessed. (p.15)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The RoT or repetition compulsion brings us to these stations over and over again.  &#8220;The repetition compulsion translates<span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\"><strong> desire<\/strong><\/span> into a mechanical, fully automatic force that eludes our efforts to redirect it.&#8221; <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>&#8220;In a way, the <strong>repetition compulsion (as a way of binding <span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\">desire<\/span><\/strong>) is one of the basic supports of our being, which is why we cling to it, why, when all is said and done, we tend to \u201clove\u201d our symptoms more than we love ourselves (to paraphrase \u017di\u017eek).&#8221;(p. 15)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>No matter how disorienting the \u201clife-orientation\u201d that the <span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\"><strong>repetition compulsion<\/strong><\/span> offers us, having this orientation is more reassuring than not having it, for the latter would mean that we would need to actively rethink our entire existential approach. <strong>We would no longer be able to count on the inevitability, or at least the high probability, of certain outcomes, but would, rather, need to face the abyss of utter unpredictability.<\/strong> This is why many of us keep choosing the \u201csubstance\u201d of our symptoms over the \u201cnothingness\u201d of their absence. (p. 15)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>The sheer reliability of the repetition compulsion<\/strong> is an immensely effective defense against the <span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\"><strong>explosive intensity of jouissance<\/strong><\/span>. Paradoxically enough, even when our <span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\">desire<\/span> takes us in pathological directions, it protects us by barring our access to the kind of unmediated enjoyment that we would experience as unbearable.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\"><p>On this view, while the \u201cdestiny\u201d that the repetition compulsion offers us is a trap, it is at the same time also a protective shield without which our lives would be much more difficult to handle. <\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>But how exactly does the \u201cstain\u201d of jouissance translate to the infinite? Surely this is not merely a matter of a<strong> persistent undeadness <\/strong>that does not let us rest. If we stay on this level, the idea of infinitude remains metaphoric at best, indicating merely that within our finite being there are energies that gesture towards the infinite. It may, then, help to reiterate the matter as follows: It is only insofar as<span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\"> <strong>jouissance<\/strong><\/span><strong> precludes self closure<\/strong> that we long for the infinite; the fact that<span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\"><strong> jouissance <\/strong><\/span>parasitizes our symbolic constitution, that it generates a <strong>rift (or a series of rifts) within our social intelligibility,<\/strong> arouses \u201cimmortal\u201d yearnings. In other words, it is our gnawing sense of being somehow less than fully self-realized, of lacking \u201cresolution,\u201d as it were, <strong>that makes us reach for the transcendent<\/strong>. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\"><p>The RoT or repetition compulsion gives structure to the subject&#8217;s jouissance so that the latter becomes more manageable. <\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>It translates the amorphous (or polymorphously perverse) pressure of <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\">jouissance<\/span> into the relatively stable \u201corganization\u201d of <span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\">desire<\/span><\/strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-dark-gray-color\">,<\/span> thereby <strong>transforming the uncontrollable urgency of the drives to the more mediated discomfort of symptomatic fixations<\/strong>. Without this organizational consistency of <span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\"><strong>desire<\/strong><\/span>, we would be compelled to ride the wave of bodily jouissance in ways that would keep us forever caught at the junction of excessive pleasure and excessive pain. (p. 16)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\">Desire<\/span><\/strong>, <strong>so to speak, gains its \u201cfullness\u201d (robustness, vitality) from its proximity to the drive<\/strong>.[ ] <span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\"><strong>Desires<\/strong><\/span> that remain faithful to the <span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\"><strong>Thing<\/strong><\/span>\u2014and that therefore automatically intertwine with the drive\u2019s trajectory\u2014attach themselves to objects that in one way or another evoke the <span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\"><strong>Thing.<\/strong><\/span> (18)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Even though <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\">desire <\/span><\/strong>is always obligated to approach the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">Thing<\/span><\/strong> obliquely, through the tangible objects it stumbles upon in the world, some of these objects come closer than others to capturing the unique aura of the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">Thing<\/span><\/strong>. Those closest to this aura are also the ones closest to the <strong>drive<\/strong> (and thus capable of animating not only <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\">desire<\/span><\/strong> but also the <strong>drive<\/strong>).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h5 class=\"wp-block-heading\">Drive Desire Thing<\/h5>\n\n\n\n<p>The <span class=\"has-inline-color has-dark-gray-color\"><strong>drive<\/strong> <\/span>and <span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\"><strong>desire <\/strong><\/span>therefore want to the same <span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\"><strong>Thing<\/strong><\/span>. But the <strong>drive<\/strong> is closer to the <span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\"><strong>Thing<\/strong><\/span> than <span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\"><strong>desire<\/strong><\/span> can ever be because the <strong>drive <\/strong>conveys the pulse of the bodily real, whereas <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\">desire<\/span><\/strong>, while obviously still connected to the body, is a function of the signifier and, as such, twice removed from the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">Thing<\/span><\/strong>. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>This should not be taken to mean that the drive can be equated with some sort of an \u201cinborn\u201d instinct <\/strong>for, far from expressing the \u201cnatural\u201d rhythm of the body, its relentlessness\u2014not to mention its deadly aspect\u2014wars against the most basic needs of the body, forcing the body into a state of over-agitation and excess stimulation even when it seeks rest and equilibrium. (18)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\"><p>the (always rather nebulous) distinction between the drive and desire is not one of nature versus culture, but merely of relative nearness to the Thing.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>This implies that even <strong>the most entrenched kernel of the subject\u2019s being<\/strong> (the drives that define the trajectory of its <span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\"><strong>jouissance<\/strong><\/span>) is partially \u201cdisciplined,\u201d linked to the historically specific desire of the Other, and therefore entirely incongruous with any notion of intrinsic humanness. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Despite our culture\u2019s obsessive eff orts to naturalize the <strong>drive<\/strong> by, for instance, hypothesizing (usually maddeningly stereotypical and reductive) distinctions between male and female sexuality, the drive is always somewhat sociohistorical. This, in turn, suggests that <strong>a different sociohistorical context would provide an opening for different configurations of the drive<\/strong>. (19)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>This unattainability of <span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\"><strong>unadulterated jouissance <\/strong><\/span>is what makes social life possible, for as enthralling as the elusive <span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\"><strong>Thing<\/strong><\/span> may be, it is\u2014like the <strong>Kantian sublime<\/strong> to which it bears a close conceptual relationship\u2014also terrifying, overwhelming, and potentially devouring. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>The task of <\/strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\"><strong>desire<\/strong><\/span>, then, is to keep us at a reassuring distance from <span class=\"has-inline-color has-dark-gray-color\">the<\/span><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\"><strong> Thing<\/strong><\/span> while at the same time allowing us to fantasize about attaining it. Fantasy, through <span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\"><strong>desire,<\/strong><\/span> usurps the place of <span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\"><strong>jouissance<\/strong><\/span>. This is why Lacan claims that<strong> \u201cdesire is a defense, a defense against going beyond a limit in jouissance\u201d<\/strong> (1966, 699).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>To the degree that <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\">jouissance<\/span><\/strong> overagitates us, preventing us from living within (the relatively harmonious) purview of the pleasure principle, we are forever attempting to purge ourselves of it even as we tirelessly aim for it. (p. 19)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\"><p>desire is a defense, a defense against going beyond a limit in jouissance<\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>Indeed, insofar as the Other generates a fantasy of<strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\"> jouissance<\/span><\/strong> as a lost state that we might one day recuperate, it protects us from the disillusioning realization that <span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\"><strong>jouissance <\/strong><\/span><strong>is antithetical to subjectivity<\/strong> not so much because we have been unfairly deprived of it, but because <strong>we are inherently incapable of managing it<\/strong>. This does not mean that we should meekly submit to the normative dictates of the Other without any attempt to resist or reconfigure their hegemonic dimensions. But it does clarify what Lacan means when he states that the drive is a \u201cfundamental ontological notion\u201d connected to \u201ca crisis of consciousness\u201d (Lacan, 1960, 127). <\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\"><p>If Freud\u2019s analysis of the unconscious already shook the foundations of the rational subject of (Cartesian) consciousness, the realization that we are constitutionally incapable of coping with the force of our drives adds yet another layer of deep ontological vulnerability to human existence. (p. 20)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>It is true that, in the Lacanian universe, the sacrifice of jouissance to the signifier is what causes the subject\u2019s lack-in-being \u2014 what brings into existence <strong>the (barred) subject <\/strong>as a site of pure negativity. Nevertheless, what is ultimately the bigger calamity is that the dissection or dismemberment of <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-dark-red-color\">the real <\/span><\/strong>by the signifier can never be fully accomplished. The remaining traces, scraps, residues, or leftovers of <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\">jouissance<\/span><\/strong> continue to destabilize the subject, threatening to dismantle it from within even as they simultaneously animate and support its embodied existence. This, I would concede, is an existential \u201ccrisis\u201d of potentially formidable proportions. (20)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>If <span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\"><strong>desire<\/strong><\/span> results from the foundational lack caused by the signifier, <strong>the drives persist as a surplus of enjoyment that continues to bubble up into the symbolic<\/strong>, allowing remnants of <span class=\"has-inline-color has-dark-red-color\"><strong>the real <\/strong><\/span>to seep into the domain of signification and sociality in a highly explosive manner. As both \u017di\u017eek and Zupan\u010di\u010d have pointed out, the trouble with <span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\"><strong>jouissance <\/strong><\/span>is less that we cannot attain it than that we cannot free ourselves of its excess. (20)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>The \u201cUndeadness\u201d of the Drives<\/strong> Undoubtedly our lives would be less complicated if we could figure out how to manage the excess <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\">jouissance<\/span><\/strong> of the <strong>drives<\/strong>. Yet my analysis thus far also suggests that our <strong>singularity<\/strong> is inextricably aligned with this excess \u2014 that our constitutive instability is merely the flipside of the fact that we are never completely absorbed by symbolic and imaginary processes of subjectivization. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>This is why it would be a mistake to confuse <strong>singularity <\/strong>with our usual understanding of personality. Even though there are conceptual linkages between the model of <strong>singularity<\/strong> I am developing and our intuitive sense of what it means to possess a distinctive individuality, disposition, or temperament, <strong>Lacanian singularity cannot be equated with what we typically refer to as a given individual\u2019s \u201cpersonality.\u201d<\/strong> <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>If we choose to envision singularity as a function of the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-dark-red-color\">real<\/span><\/strong>, we must admit that it is more likely to transmit sudden flashes of eccentricity and idiosyncrasy than to support the performative play of masks that comprises personality in its conventional sense. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>To the extent that singularity communicates something about the indelible imprint of the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-dark-red-color\">real<\/span><\/strong> \u2014 that it articulates the \u201cfragmented and panic-stricken\u201d agitation of the<strong> drive<\/strong> \u2014 it by necessity relates to what is aberrant and socially anomalous about the subject. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Singularity<\/strong> thus relates to those parts of the <strong>drive<\/strong> that manage to<strong> ooze through the sieve of the various systems of organization that are designed to stabilize human life.<\/strong> These parts are, as it were, the \u201cinhuman\u201d (not fully socialized) element that chafes against the \u201creasonable\u201d fa\u00e7ade of subjectivity and personality, lending the subject\u2019s character an uncanny \u201cmonstrousness\u201d beyond its symbolic and imaginary mandates. (21)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\"><p>our <strong>singularity<\/strong> is inextricably aligned with this excess \u2014 that our constitutive instability is merely the flipside of the fact that we are never completely absorbed by symbolic and imaginary processes of subjectivization.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>Posthumanist theory routinely insists that the human subject can never be fully present to itself\u2014that self-alienation or self-noncoincidence is an inherent component of subjectivity. However, a Lacanian understanding of what it means to reach the <strong>real <\/strong>offers us a posthumanist way of conceiving how it might be possible for us to <strong>experience an immediacy of being <\/strong>and to achieve an (always transitory) taste of self-presence. This is not a matter of attaining some sort of an essential core of being. Quite the contrary, the transcendent encounters I have been depicting extend the posthumanist critique of the essential self by revealing that <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\">the subject can only approach its singularity when it finds itself on the brink of utter disintegration<\/span><\/strong>. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In other words, they put the consistency of the self in question even more radically than do deconstructive theories of signification, for they transport us to nonlinguistic realms that liquefy the coherence of subjectivity even more effectively than the polyvalence and slipperiness of language. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In fact, it is exactly because they neutralize our usual processes of symbolization that they feel so viscerally \u201creal\u201d to us: <strong>Our powers of representation falter in the face of such episodes, so that we, quite simply, do not have the words to describe them<\/strong>. The best works of art, literature, and other cultural production may manage to convey something of their enchantment. Yet, ultimately, <strong>transcendent encounters repel or defeat the power of language as a social glue<\/strong>. They cannot ever be entirely incorporated into our symbolic universe. But this does not mean that they do not happen. Or that they lack reality. They may in fact be the most \u201c<span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\"><strong>real<\/strong><\/span>\u201d thing we ever experience. (27)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h5 class=\"wp-block-heading\">Subject of Desire, Subject of the Drive<\/h5>\n\n\n\n<p>The subject of desire is the one who stuff s one object (objet a) after another into the lack within its being, only to discover that no object can fully make up for the loss of the Thing. The <span class=\"has-inline-color has-dark-red-color\"><strong>subject of the drive<\/strong><\/span>, in contrast, is a subject of uncontrollable jouissance, which is why its emergence results in the undoing of the culturally viable individual.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>&#8230; If the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\">subject of desire<\/span><\/strong> thrives on the postponement of satisfaction, the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">drive<\/span><\/strong> has no patience with deferral: It aims directly at the sublime Thing. As a result, even though neither the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\">subject of desire<\/span><\/strong> nor the<span class=\"has-inline-color has-dark-red-color\"><strong> subject of the drive<\/strong><\/span> attains complete satisfaction, the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-dark-red-color\">subject of the drive<\/span><\/strong>\u2014the \u201cheadless\u201d subject of jouissance\u2014comes closer to it: It grazes the nub of unmitigated bliss that the <span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\"><strong>subject of desire<\/strong><\/span> can only circle from a distance. Yet because the drive is always, ultimately, the <strong>death drive<\/strong>, the closer the subject comes to full satisfaction, the closer it also comes to utter destruction. This nexus of satisfaction and self-annihilation has led critics such as \u017di\u017eek and Lee Edelman to valorize the act of <strong>subjective destitution<\/strong>\u2014the subject\u2019s suicidal plunge into the unmediated jouissance of the real\u2014as a liberatory act that, finally, grants the subject some \u201creal\u201d satisfaction. (60)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Edelman goes on to explain that because the <strong>sinthome<\/strong> cannot be substituted for any other signifier, because it \u201caccedes to no equivalent, to no translation, and thus to no meaning,\u201d it functions as a locus of idiosyncrasy that captures the individual\u2019s singularity \u201cas definitively, and as meaninglessly, as a fingerprint\u201d (36).1 On this account, <strong>singularity emerges at the very place where meaning is refused\u2014where social identity and intelligibility disintegrate<\/strong>. (61)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\"><p>a site of mindless enjoyment \u2014 a node of senseless compulsion on which the subject\u2019s singularity depends<\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>If the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-dark-red-color\">sinthome<\/span><\/strong> represents a surge of singularity beyond the social, then the final Lacan is more interested in the subject\u2019s capacity to access this singularity than in its ability to navigate its existential predicament of constitutive lack. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Indeed, if one of the principal lessons of Lacan\u2019s early thought was that it is only when the subject acquaints itself with the current of its <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\">desire <\/span><\/strong>that it gains some agency over its life, the lesson of his later thought was more radical in that he came to connect singularity to <strong>jouissance<\/strong> and to advocate<strong> identification with the <span class=\"has-inline-color has-dark-red-color\">sinthome<\/span><\/strong> as a means of sidestepping the dominant economy of the symbolic order. (62)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Lacan, in other words, transitioned from theorizing the conditions under which the subject can recognize the <strong>\u201ctruth\u201d of its<\/strong> <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\">desire<\/span><\/strong> to <strong>trying to understand the conditions under which it can forgo <\/strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\"><strong>desire<\/strong><\/span> (which, even at its most counterhegemonic, is always indebted to the Other) for the sake of the <strong>drive<\/strong> (which represents a site of singularity that is deeply antithetical to the Other).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\"><p>his later work interrogates the <strong>real<\/strong> as what has the potential to transport the subject beyond the reach of the Other by causing a categorical break with its injunctions.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>The <strong>act<\/strong> represents an unfaltering refusal of the symbolic complex of meaning that legitimates the subject as a member of a given cultural fabric; simply put, the act asks the subject to relinquish all of its normative supports by hurling itself into the abyss of the real. (65)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Yet what often gets lost in post-Lacanian accounts of the act, and sometimes even in \u017di\u017eek\u2019s own work, is the fact that although Lacan certainly describes the act as a suicidal, destructive encounter with the <strong>death drive<\/strong> whereby the subject explicitly goes against its own well-being\u2014whereby the subject sacrifices not only its social position but also the promises of its future\u2014he also <strong>links the death drive to a will \u201cto make a fresh start<\/strong>,\u201d \u201ca will to create from zero, a will to begin again\u201d.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>the act of self-negation<\/strong> that erases the subject is simultaneously a basis of a fresh form of subjectivity, not in the sense of serving as a prelude to some sort of a reassuring recentering of identity, but in the sense of instigating a sweeping realignment of priorities. (69)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Antigone&#8217;s desire is obviously not the desire of the Other, and she insists on following this desire to its bitter end. Yet the flipside of her self-destructiveness is a paradoxical kind of freedom\u2014a <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">singularity of being<\/span><\/strong> that does not let anyone else dictate the course of her desire. As Lacan states, Antigone \u201caffirms the advent of the absolute individual with the phrase, \u2018That\u2019s how it is because that\u2019s how it is\u2019\u201d (71)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h5 class=\"wp-block-heading\">Not ceding on one&#8217;s desire<\/h5>\n\n\n\n<p>Antigone is a heroine because she does not give ground relative to her desire, but rather pursues this desire beyond social limits, to \u201ca place where she feels herself to be unassailable\u201d <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>While most human beings situate themselves within a network of conventional signifiers, within what Lacan calls the \u201cmorality of the master\u201d (315), the hero as a singular creature attaches herself to \u201cthe break that the very presence of language inaugurates in the life of man\u201d (279). <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>This \u201cbreak\u201d (the hole in the symbolic through which jouissance gushes into the realm of sociality) is, of course, where <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">the Thing<\/span><\/strong> appears as lost so that <strong>what distinguishes the hero from her less noble compatriots is her willingness to directly confront the lack<\/strong> (or \u201cnothingness\u201d) at the heart of her \u201cbeing.\u201d <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In addition, while the ordinary subject tends to capitulate its <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\">desire<\/span><\/strong> in the face of external pressure, the hero pursues the track of this <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\">desire<\/span><\/strong> (the track that, as we have learned, situates her in a particular \u201cdestiny\u201d) to its conclusion <strong>regardless of the price<\/strong>. The hero knows as well as the rest of us that insisting on her <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\">desire<\/span><\/strong> is \u201cnot a bed of roses,\u201d yet she is willing to meet her fear head-on in order to accomplish this task. In Lacan\u2019s words, \u201cthe voice of the hero trembles before nothing\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>But how is it that we have, once again, transitioned from the drive energies<br>of the real to desire? Why is it that every time we try to talk about the subject of the drive, we end up back at the subject of desire?<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>what sets the drive apart from desire is its closer proximity to the<span class=\"has-inline-color has-dark-red-color\"><strong> Thing<\/strong><\/span>, then the subject who pursues its <span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\"><strong>desire<\/strong><\/span> to its outmost limit by necessity catches up with the <span class=\"has-inline-color has-dark-red-color\"><strong>drive <\/strong><\/span>(ultimately, the<span class=\"has-inline-color has-dark-red-color\"><strong> death drive<\/strong><\/span>). This is why the act of<strong> subjective destitution<\/strong> is the logical outcome of not ceding on one\u2019s<span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\"><strong> desire.<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>We have discovered that, under normal circumstances, <span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\"><strong>desire<\/strong><\/span> serves as a defense against unmanageable <span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\"><strong>jouissance<\/strong><\/span>: The incessant circling of <span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\"><strong>desire<\/strong><\/span> around the lost <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-dark-red-color\">Thing<\/span><\/strong> shields the subject from the <span class=\"has-inline-color has-dark-red-color\"><strong>Thing\u2019s <\/strong><\/span>more devouring aspects. Against this backdrop, the subject who undertakes an act of <strong>subjective destitution<\/strong>\u2014as Antigone does\u2014allows its <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\">desire<\/span><\/strong> to meet the arc of its <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\">jouissance;<\/span><\/strong> it allows its <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\">desire<\/span><\/strong> <strong>to aim directly at the fundamental fantasy<\/strong>. Such <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\">desire<\/span><\/strong>, like the mechanical pulsation of the <span class=\"has-inline-color has-dark-red-color\"><strong>drive<\/strong> <\/span>that it expresses, causes the subject to \u201cpersevere\u201d in its goal regardless of external demands to relinquish it. (73)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h5 class=\"wp-block-heading\">Will I act in conformity to what threw me out of joint?<\/h5>\n\n\n\n<p>If the service of goods\u201d valorizes utilitarian aspirations over the specificity of the subject\u2019s desire, Lacanian ethics asks, \u201c<strong>Have you acted in conformity with the<\/strong> <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\">desire<\/span><\/strong> <strong>that is in you<\/strong>\u201d Zupan\u010di\u010d spins this statement as follows: \u201cwill I act in conformity to what threw me \u2018out of joint\u2019, will I be ready to reformulate what has hitherto been the foundation of my existence?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>As Zupan\u010di\u010d explains, \u201cit is only after this choice that the subject is a subject\u201d. \u201cIt is at this level,\u201d she specifies, \u201cthat we must situate the ethical subject: at the level of something which becomes what \u2018it is\u2019 only in the act\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\"><p>Ethical betrayal, in this context, equals social compliance.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>Lacan in fact ridicules both the Aristotelian path of moderation and the Kantian notion that ethics must be \u201cdisinterested,\u201d divorced from any idiosyncratic passions. Regarding the latter, he posits that the categorical imperative (\u201cAct in such a way that the maxim of your action may be accepted as a universal maxim\u201d), in today\u2019s docile society, implies that you should never act \u201cexcept in such a way that your action may be programmed\u201d (1960, 76\u201377). That is, the categorical imperative dictates that you should only do what the mainstream morality of the Other has conditioned you to do.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\"><p>Ethics, Copjec concludes, is \u201ca matter of personal conversion, of the subjective necessity of going beyond oneself \u201d<\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>As Joan Copjec elaborates, \u201cThe ethics of psychoanalysis is concerned not with the other, as is the case with so much of the contemporary work on ethics, but rather with the subject, who metamorphoses herself at the moment of encounter with the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-dark-red-color\">real <\/span><\/strong>of an unexpected event.\u201d Ethics, Copjec concludes, is \u201ca matter of personal conversion, of the subjective necessity of going beyond oneself \u201d (76)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>These are situations where the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\">subject of desire<\/span><\/strong> yields to the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-dark-red-color\">subject of the drive <\/span><\/strong>because the repetition of the same old pattern is no longer a feasible option, because the aggravation of always wanting what one cannot have (say, social justice) becomes so overwhelming that the only \u201creasonable\u201d response is to <strong>rupture the endless cycle of <span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\">desire<\/span><\/strong> and disappointment by reaching for direct (rather than socially mediated) satisfaction; these are situations where one more spin on the wheel of <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\">desire <\/span>is so intolerable<\/strong> that the subject would rather destroy itself or its social environment than endure it. (78)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Lacanian analysis reveals that we are rarely the entirely helpless victims of our \u201cdestiny\u201d\u2014that the \u201ctruth\u201d of our desire functions as an entryway to resistance\u2014the act merely takes the attitude of <strong>not ceding on our desire<\/strong> to its absolute limit. (82)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>If analysis relies on the signifier to reconfigure our destiny, <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">the act<\/span><\/strong> (usually temporarily) ushers us beyond signification\u2014to a place that <strong>demolishes the quilting points that customarily hold together our symbolic universe.<\/strong> The hope, here, is that out of the ashes of this destructiveness rises a new private or collective set of possibilities. Clearly, neither of these approaches is perfect. But both have the potential to ensure that what seems \u201cimpossible\u201d from the point of view of the normative symbolic, however fleetingly, becomes possible.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>it is only as <strong>singular<\/strong> creatures that we can attain \u201creal\u201d satisfaction\u2014that we can develop an identity that is not entirely subsumed to the rules of social conventionality. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>This is why I have tried to illustrate that if we are to engage in embarrassing displays of surplus ardor, it is better that this ardor be directed at the \u201ctruth\u201d of our desire than at<strong> social sites of authority that seek to secure our loyalty by convincing us that, really, what we should desire is what the Other desires us to desire.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>For Badiou, <strong>there is no abstract subject who exists prior to the event<\/strong>, but only an always particular creature, particular body, particular \u201csome-one,\u201d who is summoned by an extraordinary event to <strong>become a subject<\/strong>, to become a quasi-transcendent being driven by the fire of its commitment to the truth it has discovered. (85)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>the event interpellates the subject beyond its usual ideological interpellations, beyond its usual symbolic investments, so as to make room for its singularity. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>It converts a replaceable individual\u2014an individual who, in Levinas\u2019s terms, is a (classifiable) part of a whole\u2014into an irreplaceable subject of truth.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>To be precise, it enables the \u201csome-one\u201d to attain the complex status of a \u201cuniversal singular,\u201d of a subject who is at once \u201csingular\u201d (in the sense of being unique and inimitable) and \u201cuniversal\u201d (in the sense of being traversed by a truth that is applicable to everyone without exception).<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The subject, in this sense, is a specific instance of a universal truth. Furthermore, although subjecthood is not something that everyone attains, the position of the subject is one that could in principle be inhabited by anyone; insofar as the event articulates a thoroughly generic truth, it engenders a subject whose irreplaceability consists of the fact that it is endlessly replaceable.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Peter Hallward explains the matter as follows: As far as its subjects are concerned,<strong> access to truth<\/strong> is . . . identical to the practice of freedom pure and simple. <strong>Ordinary individuals<\/strong> are constrained and justified by relations of hierarchy, obligation, and deference; their existence is literally bound to their social places. <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">True subjects<\/span><\/strong>, by contrast, are first and foremost free of relations as such, and are justified by nothing other than the integrity of their own affirmations. Pure subjective freedom is founded quite literally on the absence of relation, which is to say that it is founded on nothing at all. (89)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In Badiou\u2019s terms, Antigone\u2019s decision to disobey Creon is what turns her from a mortal creature to an immortal one. Her defiance is an act of freedom in that it liberates her from all bonds to the sociopolitical establishment.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Such an eff ort to convert the void into a nameable community inevitably ends in totalitarianism. Because<span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\"><strong> the void<\/strong><\/span> is, as Badiou puts it, \u201cthe place of an absence, or a naked place, the mere taking place of a place\u201d (quoted in Hallward 2003, 263), <strong>any attempt to \u201cfill\u201d it by definitive content\u2014to transform the singular burst of the event into something \u201crepeatable\u201d\u2014cannot but lead to a dangerous totalization<\/strong>. (99)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>\u017di\u017eek regards the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">real<\/span><\/strong> as some sort of a positive, extrasymbolic excess that attacks the symbolic from the outside, for he repeatedly stresses that the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">real <\/span><\/strong>is internal to the symbolic: the \u201c<strong>bone in the throat<\/strong>\u201d or \u201cimmanent crack\u201d that prevents the closure of the symbolic. \u017di\u017eek remains devoted to the trope of a rebellious <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">real<\/span> <\/strong>that cannot be reconciled with symbolic reality. In contrast, Badiou, as I have shown, has developed the idea that the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">real <\/span><\/strong>(or the void that generates the truth-event) can be named and (to a limited extent) rewoven into the fabric of the symbolic.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Though I agree that the emphasis on the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">real<\/span><\/strong> can be an effective means to question the ideologically complacent edifice of the symbolic, I would insist that <strong>taking up permanent residency in the<\/strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\"> <strong>real<\/strong> <\/span>is hardly a feasible option. Peering into the abyss, remaining aware of lack, tarrying with the negative, and even temporary destructiveness as a springboard to something constructive all make sense to me. But the idea of the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">real<\/span><\/strong> as an alternative to symbolic subjectivity simply does not. What would the plunge into the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">real <\/span><\/strong>achieve in tangible terms? What would it mean to \u201cstep out of the symbolic\u201d altogether? (108)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>\u017di\u017eek does not entirely appreciate the full implications of his own contention that the most radical aspect of Lacanian theory is the recognition that the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">real<\/span><\/strong> <strong>renders the symbolic unreliable<\/strong>. As he explains with regard to the signifier, \u201cAs soon as the field of the signifier is penetrated by <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\">enjoyment <\/span><\/strong>it becomes inconsistent, porous, perforated\u2014the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\">enjoyment<\/span><\/strong> is what cannot be symbolized, its presence in the field of the signifier can be detected only through the holes and inconsistencies of this field\u201d (Sublime Object 1989, 122). <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Fair enough. But why not take the next logical step of conceding that the structural impossibility of symbolic closure is precisely what makes the play of (re)signification possible? (114)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\"><p>Why not take the next logical step of conceding that the structural impossibility of symbolic closure is precisely what makes the play of (re)signification possible?<\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>As a consequence, <strong>one does not always need to exit the symbolic in a grand gesture of subjective destitution<\/strong> (or divine violence) in order to activate the subversive potentialities of the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">real<\/span><\/strong>. One merely needs to mobilize the \u201coverabundance\u201d of the signifier. (115)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h5 class=\"wp-block-heading\">Joyce&#8217;s Sinthome<\/h5>\n\n\n\n<p>And we also have learned that Lacan came to think that the aim of analysis was to allow the subject to identify with its sinthome, for doing so made it possible for it to disconnect itself from the desire of the Other. Most importantly, we have learned that the sinthome resides beyond the reach of the signifier, which is why it does not respond to analytic treatment, but can only be \u201cassumed\u201d as the symptomatic kernel of one\u2019s being.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Even though\u2014as \u017di\u017eek stresses\u2014Lacan connects the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\">sinthome<\/span><\/strong> to the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">death drive<\/span><\/strong>, he does not invariably regard identification with the <span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\"><strong>sinthome<\/strong><\/span> as a matter of <strong>subjective destitution<\/strong> (or divine violence). In the case of Joyce, such an identification is a means of <strong>linking the symbolic and the<\/strong> <span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\"><strong>real<\/strong><\/span> so as to generate fresh forms of signification<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Without question, the insurrection of the <span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\"><strong>real<\/strong><\/span> within the symbolic in Joyce\u2019s writing conveys the destructive force of the <strong>death drive<\/strong>. Joyce dissolves meaning. He undoes\u2014destroys, dismembers, and massacres\u2014language. (117)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Joyce demonstrates that even though the real as such cannot be written, one can write in such a way as to brush against it; one\u2019s signifiers can transmit energizing scraps of the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">real<\/span><\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Yet if we allow for the possibility that <strong>the signifier does not invariably obey the dictates of the big Other<\/strong>, and that <strong>the unruly energies of the<span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\"> real<\/span><\/strong> <strong>can<\/strong> <strong>regenerate, rather than merely weaken, the symbolic<\/strong>, it becomes apparent that <strong>the signifier is not always an instrument of ideological interpellation<\/strong>. While it is obvious that we are often confronted by dead signifiers\u2014signifiers that contain no trace of the real\u2014<strong>language is by definition as much a locus of creative potential as it is of hegemonic power<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\">sinthome<\/span><\/strong>, in short, makes polyvalent meaning possible. Even though it itself is not in the least bit concerned with the various meanings generated, it functions as a <strong>locus of enjoyment-in-meaning<\/strong>, enjoyment in the proliferation of meaning. (119)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Lacan thus proposes that each of us has some leeway in organizing the signifiers of the big Other. That is, we can assert our singularity not only by exchanging the symbolic for the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">real<\/span><\/strong>, but also by<strong> bringing the<\/strong> <span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\"><strong>real<\/strong><\/span> <strong>into the symbolic<\/strong>. This is exactly what Joyce does, and it is his ability to do so that leads Lacan to characterize him as a wholly singular individual.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Lacan\u2019s reading of Joyce implies that the \u201cimmortality\u201d (the agitation or \u201cundeadness\u201d) of the real can be transformed into symbolically viable modalities of vitality; the excess (\u201ctoo muchness\u201d) of the drives can become the basis for the excess (\u201coverabundance\u201d) of meaning. In this sense, <strong>pioneering forms of meaning production are a way to infuse the \u201cdead\u201d signifier with the \u201cundead\u201d energies of the drive so as to keep the symbolic moving forward<\/strong>. This gives us yet another rendering of how what is \u201cimpossible\u201d (jouissance) becomes the foundation of the possible (innovation). (123)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>When our discourse fails to transmit the real (when it is separated from the sinthome), it obeys the master\u2019s dominant law (thereby remaining unoriginal). <strong>Discourse that communicates the<\/strong> <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">real<\/span><\/strong>, in contrast, crafts what I have been calling a \u201ccharacter.\u201d Singularity, in this sense, is a matter of creative living, of the always-idiosyncratic ways in which we manage to activate the energies of the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">real<\/span><\/strong> within the symbolic. (124)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The <strong>sublimations of Galileo and Mary Wollstonecraft <\/strong>(to choose two obvious examples) were not accepted as legitimate by their social settings. But in the larger scheme of history they turned out to be exceptionally important. This is the luminous face of sublimation\u2014the face that confirms that our failure to attain the Thing can stimulate tremendous feats of originality. (139)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Unfortunately, to <strong>the degree that the Other seeks to hide its lack<\/strong> by offering us a dizzying cornucopia of unnecessary objects, our life-worlds are filled with such decoys, with distractions calculated to steer our attention away from social problems to the problem of deciding which shade of lipstick, scent of aftershave, size of television screen, or box of breakfast cereal will most satisfy us.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\"><p>From waste dumps to weapons of mass destruction, our world is filled with harmful objects that, in an increasingly symptomatic manner, represent the residue of human endeavors to compensate for the lost Thing\u2014to fill the lack that founds human \u201cbeing.\u201d<\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>As a race, we are on the brink of devastating our environment because we are overloading it by our desperate attempts to fend off the specter of nothingness.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>This is why we have a pressing ethical obligation to pay attention to the difference between objects that contain an echo of the Thing and the various lures that drown out this echo. Arguably, many of our most burning environmental problems are due to the fact that we sometimes confuse the two, with the consequence that our relationship to the world is driven by sheer gluttony rather than the quest for new forms of resourcefulness. (141)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\"><p>I want to be careful here to resist the temptation to demonize our symbolic universe in its entirety, for I do not think that the lures of consumer society even begin to exhaust its domain. Concluding that there is nothing worth venerating in our culture would only lead us back to the idea that the only way to assert our singularity is to relinquish all of our symbolic supports in an act of subjective destitution (or divine violence).<\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>Most of us have cultural reference points that connect us to something more constructive than the distractions of consumerism\u2014that provide the kinds of meaningful ideals and values that anchor us in the collective world even as we endeavor to define our singular place within that world. (142)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The fact that we are connected to specific signifieds does not mean that there is no room left for the playfulness of the signifier; <strong>it does not mean that the link between signifieds and signifiers cannot be severed<\/strong> and reconfigured. This severing may not always be easy, but it is entirely possible, as is proven not only by Joyce, but also by artists, intellectuals, politicians, and social activists (among others) who manage to revamp our cultural ideals and values from year to year, from decade to decade, so that someone from the nineteenth century would have a hard time fitting into our current cultural configuration.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>And we also know that some circuits of <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\">desire<\/span><\/strong> are more \u201ctruthful\u201d than others precisely because they are directed at objects that, however ineffably, possess this power. One might even hypothesize that those of us who are able to find objects that convey something about the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">Thing\u2019s<\/span><\/strong> aura activate the \u201cimmortal\u201d within ourselves better than those who live entirely on the level of empty (counterfeit) objects. (146)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Although Lacan certainly criticizes the corrupt nature of much of what our society sells as \u201cenjoyment,\u201d he does not ask us to shun material things in favor of some sublime ideal that will never crystallize (or even in favor of a radical act that will detach us from the world). Quite the opposite, he intimates that the various things (objects and representations) of the world are how \u201creal\u201d satisfaction makes its way into our lives.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Zupan\u010di\u010d <\/strong>thus suggests that if we are to avoid the kind of nihilism that renders the world meaningless, we must recognize that the Thing can only be approached through things. She calls this phenomenon &#8220;desublimation&#8221; because it makes the sublime accessible within the semblances of the world (2003, 180\u201381). <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>But there may not actually be any need for a new term, given that, as I have demonstrated, <strong>Lacan\u2019s theory of sublimation is designed to communicate this very idea, namely that the sublime enters the world through ordinary objects and representations. <\/strong>Ideally, this results in an enhanced capacity to fi nd value in the minutiae of everyday life. And it illustrates how drastically Lacan\u2019s existential ethos\u2014if I may call it that\u2014differs from philosophies that place satisfaction beyond the world, in some ultimate moral or divine Good, for instance. In the Lacanian vision,<strong> instead of looking for satisfaction in Platonic ideals<\/strong>, the Christian afterlife, or any other transcendent domain, we aspire to discover it in the here and now of our existence.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>what it means to persist in one\u2019s desire. According to the latter, ethics is not a matter of seeing one\u2019s <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\">desire<\/span><\/strong> to its destructive climax, but rather of keeping desire alive by refusing to close the gap between the <strong>Thing <\/strong>and things. By now we know that there are (at least) two ways to \u201caccess\u201d the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">real<\/span><\/strong>: While the act aims directly at it, sublimation takes the more subtle approach of looking for the echo of the <strong>Thing<\/strong> in ordinary objects and representations. Both have to do with the quest for satisfaction, but while the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\">jouissance<\/span><\/strong> of the act neutralizes the symbolic, sublimation aspires to reconfigure it by bringing bits of <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\">jouissance<\/span><\/strong> into the realm of signification.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\"><p>Lacanian ethics asks us to revere the utter singularity of our relationship to the Thing even when it would be easier to capitulate to the desire of the Other.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>It may in fact be that<strong> the act and sublimation are merely two different points of resistance on a continuum <\/strong>that runs from antisocial rebellion to meek social conformity, so that honoring the echo of the Thing through sublimatory efforts to reinvent social ideals and values is merely a less drastic (or desperate) manifestation of ethical action than the act is. Perhaps we are simply dealing with two faces of the attempt to ensure that what the cultural order considers \u201cimpossible\u201d somehow becomes possible. (149)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\"><p>Sublimation is a matter of ethics \u201cinsofar as it is not entirely<br>subordinated to the reality principle, but liberates or creates a space from which it is possible to attribute certain values to something other than the recognized and established \u2018common good<\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>The object that comes the closest (or remains the most loyal) to the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">Thing<\/span><\/strong> is, ethically speaking, more important than one that is merely useful. Once again, this does not mean that we have the right to expect the objects of our <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\">desire<\/span><\/strong> to capture the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">Thing<\/span>\u2019s<\/strong> aura with complete precision. But it does suggest that objects that most powerfully emit this aura are also the ones that most readily engage our passion.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Badiou\u2019s fidelity to the event is nothing other than fidelity to the echo of the <span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">Thing<\/span><\/strong>; it is nothing other than an attempt to ensure that reality is never just reality\u2014that there is room in human life for the \u201cundead\u201d (or transcendent) energies of the real. Badiou\u2019s notion of naming the event, in turn, is one way to understand how the echo of the <span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\"><strong>Thing <\/strong><\/span>finds its way into symbolic formations. (153)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>nothing on the level of everyday reality matters, that the world is composed of mere semblances, and that we should consequently aim directly at the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">real<\/span><\/strong>. This attitude strives to separate all symbolic formations from the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">real<\/span><\/strong> and to assert that the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">real<\/span><\/strong> is the only thing that matters.  Those who uphold this view rail against the notion that there could be anything in the world that is capable of giving us a little slice of the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">Thing<\/span> <\/strong>(that has the power to grant us any \u201creal\u201d satisfaction). Zupan\u010di\u010d characterizes this approach as a zealous \u201cpassion for the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">Real<\/span><\/strong>\u201d that demands an end to all ideological configurations\u2014all semblances\u2014as a distraction from the real <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">Thing<\/span><\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\"><p>It could be claimed to underlie \u017di\u017eek&#8217;s contention that the big Other is nothing but a set of ideological deceptions designed to cover over and pacify the monstrous real. It fails to acknowledge that it is only through symbolic formations (semblances and even ideologies) that the real materializes as something tangible.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p> I have conceded that many of these materializations remain \u201cempty.\u201d And undeniably there are others that are deeply hegemonic. But, as I have stressed, there are also those that carry the \u201cimmortal\u201d passion of the real into the domain of symbolization in highly transformative ways. <strong>That is, even if symbolic formations are \u201cmere\u201d semblances and ideologies, some of them convey \u201creal\u201d commitment; they communicate the kind of absolute dedication that Badiou\u2019s event also calls for, thereby feeding our sublimatory efforts to turn the world into a less insipid place<\/strong>. (154)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>If the beauty of sublimation consists of its power to conjure up new ideals by raising objects (and representations) to the <strong>dignity of the <span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">Thing,<\/span><\/strong> <strong>the decline of our ability to sublimate implies that we become more and more tightly enslaved to already existing ideals<\/strong>; we lose the ability to envision viable alternatives to the ideologies that govern our world\u2014that, as it were, constitute the \u201creality\u201d of our reality principle.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Although Butler specifies that being \u201cdispossessed\u201d by the Other (or by an array of others) does not necessarily mean that we are treated badly, but merely that we are \u201cacted upon\u201d by forces we cannot control, it is difficult to shake the impression that she advances an unnecessarily disempowered theory of what it means to come into being and persist as a human subject.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>As fiercely as Butler and \u017di\u017eek have, over the years, disagreed, they arguably<br>suffer from the same blind spot, namely the inability to appreciate the various ways in which we are the beneficiaries of the Other\u2019s discourse. In \u017di\u017eek\u2019s case\u2014as I have stressed\u2014this blind spot leads to an overvalorization of the ethical\/divine act. In Butler\u2019s, it tends to generate a masochistic discourse of irremediable deprivation. (158)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Furthermore, because of the Derridean \u201coverabundance\u201d of the signifier, our acts of meaning production can be renewed indefinitely so that there are, in principle, <strong>no limits to the human capacity to fashion new meanings<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>\u017di\u017eek himself acknowledges, whenever the symbolic gains too much power at the expense of the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">real<\/span><\/strong>, our existence loses its passion and forward-moving cadence. <strong>But when the symbolic fails to adequately mediate the disorderly energies of the<\/strong> <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">real<\/span><\/strong>\u2014when the quilting points that connect us to social sites of meaning are too fragile\u2014we feel terrorized by the overproximity of <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\">jouissance<\/span><\/strong>; we fail to gain a steady foothold in cultural narratives and other collective landmarks that would be able to anchor us in the symbolic world.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\"><p>Intensely creative states \u2014 the kinds of states that overtake our symbolic persona and transport us into an alternative existential plane\u2014are ones of heightened singularity because they allow jouissance to temporarily overshadow the more socially mediated texture of desire. <\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>Such states are moments when the echo of the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">Thing<\/span><\/strong> reverberates within the symbolic with unusual passion. Some individuals (the Joyces and the C\u00e9zannes of the world) seem capable of conjuring them into existence in a fairly reliable manner. But as a rule they dissipate after a certain interval for the simple reason that they run into resistance from the requirements of sociality.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>But I think that it is equally valuable to recognize that<strong> breakdowns in \u201cnormal\u201d psychic functioning can serve as portals to innovation<\/strong>, opening up, on the private level, the possibility of the \u201cimpossible\u201d that Badiou\u2019s truth-event is meant to release on the collective level.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\"><p>Is Lacan merely a more sophisticated version of Dr. Phil, conveying in unnecessarily obscure language what every self-help guru knows, namely that authenticity is a matter of reaching into the depths of the self to recover hidden gems that allow us to figure out the meaning of our lives?<\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>Lacan does not regard singularity (or authenticity) as a matter of self-possession or self-ownership. Whether Lacanian singularity expresses itself through a miraculous interpellation beyond ideological interpellation, an ethical\/divine act of absolute defiance, an uncompromising faithfulness to a truth-event, or the destabilizing <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-dark-red-color\">jouissance<\/span><\/strong> of the signifier,<strong> its defining attribute is existential bewilderment rather than reassurance<\/strong>: There is always something about it that <span class=\"has-inline-color has-dark-red-color\"><strong>wars against the self-help quest for unruffled lives<\/strong><\/span>. (165)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h5 class=\"wp-block-heading\">Ethics<\/h5>\n\n\n\n<p>The fact that we are partially incomprehensible to ourselves\u2014that, among other things, the often quite enigmatic \u201cdestiny\u201d generated by our desire is something we can never completely decipher\u2014does not absolve us of ethical accountability, but rather invites us to rethink the very meaning of this accountability. Butler in fact suggests that <strong>it is precisely to the extent that we acknowledge the limits of our self-possession and self-ownership that we can begin to forge genuinely ethical relationships to others<\/strong>. This is an ethics based on unqualified intersubjective generosity in the sense that our recognition of our own lack of self-consistency allows us to  feel empathy for, and remain patient with, the lack of self-consistency of others, thereby allowing us to enter into a kind of solidarity of vulnerability with them.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h5 class=\"wp-block-heading\">Love<\/h5>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\"><p>the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">Thing<\/span><\/strong> is never as powerful\u2014as likely to enliven and exhilarate us\u2014as when we fall in love<\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>in a certain sense the <strong>repetition compulsion <\/strong>is nothing but a rigid version of our language of desire\u2014it can induce us to see in others only what our fantasies dictate rather than what these others actually bring to the encounter.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The purpose of fantasmatic\/imaginary supports, then, is to keep the coveted <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">Thing<\/span><\/strong> at a reasonable distance so that the subject can relate to the other as someone comparable to itself\u2014as someone it can feel affinity for because it seems familiar. That is, <strong>the aim of fantasy is to obfuscate the fact that the enigmas of the other cannot ever be fully resolved<\/strong>, that each attempt to decode an intersubjective mystery can only spawn a multitude of new mysteries.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>if I am <strong>haunted by a surplus animation<\/strong> that agitates me while simultaneously<br>lending a <strong>thrilling singularity<\/strong> to my being, the other is also fissured by<br>intensities of desire (and drive) that it cannot fully discipline; it is caught<br>up in the same tight nexus of turbulence and singularity with which I also struggle. Likewise, in exactly the same way that I cannot access every recess of my interiority, the other cannot access every facet of its being. <strong>As a result, my demand that the other disclose its secrets is as unrealistic as it is violating.<\/strong> (177)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\"><p>\u201cPerhaps most importantly, we must recognize that ethics requires us to risk ourselves precisely at moments of unknowingness . . . when our willingness to become undone in relation to others constitutes our chance of becoming human. To be undone by another is a primary necessity, an anguish, to be sure, but also a chance\u2014to be addressed, claimed, bound to what is not me, but also to be moved, to be prompted to act, to address myself elsewhere, and so to vacate the self-sufficient \u2018I\u2019 as a kind of possession\u201d<\/p><cite>Butler cited in Ruti (177)<\/cite><\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>On this view, ethics requires us to allow ourselves to be touched by the unknowable otherness of the other in ways that <strong>transform the basic parameters of our being;<\/strong> our encounter with the enigmatic other obliges us to shed our false self-sufficiency, our conviction of being securely in control of ourselves.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<h5 class=\"wp-block-heading\">Lacanian ethics<\/h5>\n\n\n\n<p>Lacanian ethics demands us to confront what is most alarmingly \u201cinhuman\u201d (\u201cundead\u201d) about the other; it asks us to accept the other not only as our own likeness, but also as the grotesque Thing that cannot be assimilated into our symbolic or imaginary networks of meaning. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Lacanian ethics moves from the other as a reassuring \u201cface\u201d (or \u201cneighbor\u201d) to the much more difficult matter of the other as uncompromisingly \u201cother\u201d \u2014 as someone whose jouissance is potentially too close, too alien, too strong, and therefore too traumatic. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The problem with narcissism, as I have argued in this chapter, is that it prompts us to flee from any and all signs of this traumatizing otherness\u2014an act that is made relatively simple by the fact that the world offers a whole host of convenient distractions.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>As <strong>Santner states, everyday life is filled with various ways of withdrawing,<br>of \u201cnot really being there, of dying to the Other\u2019s presence\u201d. <\/strong>Tragically, even though our answerability to the other\u2019s uncanny presence may reside at the very heart of our receptivity to the world \u2014 of our ability to renew ourselves through contact with what is wholly unlike us \u2014 <strong>we frequently turn away from this answerability out of narcissistic defensiveness<\/strong>. If, as Silverman proposes, interpersonal ethics entails our willingness to let those we love disclose themselves in their own way, <strong>narcissism as an ethical failure<\/strong> makes such disclosure impossible. This is how we become incapable of discovering in the other anything besides our own image.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>If post-Levinasian ethics tends to emphasize the ethical call of the face,<br>post-Lacanian ethics tends to stress the terror-inducing strangeness of<br>the face: the ways in which the face can alarm us to the point of deep<br>ethical ambivalence.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\"><p>The political implications of this reformulation are momentous, for it shifts our attention from the nitty-gritty of pluralistic tolerance to the question of how we can relate to those who are not in the least bit similar to us and who may, consequently, make us profoundly uncomfortable.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>If post-Levinasian ethics tends to emphasize the ethical call of the face,<br>post-Lacanian ethics tends to stress the terror-inducing strangeness of<br>the face: the ways in which the face can alarm us to the point of deep<br>ethical ambivalence<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>If post-Levinasian ethics tends to emphasize the ethical call of the face,<br>post-Lacanian ethics tends to stress the terror-inducing strangeness of<br>the face: the ways in which the face can alarm us to the point of deep<br>ethical ambivalence. (189)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>On the one hand, there are those culturally intelligible qualities that \u201ccan<br>be formulated as an attribute\u201d \u2014 that make the other more or less \u201clike\u201d us, thereby facilitating our capacity to relate to it as  an entity whose existential struggles resemble our own. On the other, there is the specter of the other as <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">Thing<\/span><\/strong>, <strong>as an anxiety-producing and menacing stranger<\/strong>. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>This latter is not <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">das Ding<\/span><\/strong> as the good object, as the \u201crefound\u201d (m)other who holds the promise of unmediated satisfaction, but rather<strong> the other who comes too close<\/strong>, who is disconcerting because of its <strong>consuming overproximity<\/strong>. This is one reason that the Lacanian face is more akin to a distorted grimace than to the beseeching face of Levinasian ethics: It expresses the \u201ctoo muchness\u201d of jouissance, the involuntary spasm, cringe, or wince that betrays the other\u2019s discomfort and disorientation.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In post-Lacanian theory, Lacan\u2019s reflections on the other as <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">Thing<\/span><\/strong>, as<br>the disturbing \u201cstain\u201d that ruptures the (always fantasmatic) coherence of<br>our social world, have been recast as a political query about<strong> how we can ethically relate to what is most terrifying or off -putting (even repellent) about the other. <\/strong>In other words, the ethical concern is no longer how we might manage to recognize others as our equals even when they hold different values\u2014how we might build a viable \u201chuman\u201d community out of radically divergent opinions and outlooks\u2014but rather <strong>how we are (or are not) able to meet the \u201cinhuman\u201d aspects of the other<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The political implications of this reformulation are momentous, for it shifts our attention from the nitty-gritty of pluralistic tolerance to the question of how we can relate to those who are not in the least bit similar to us and who may, consequently, make us profoundly uncomfortable. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Furthermore, this reformulation has led to a resurgence of universalist ethics that goes against the grain of today\u2019s multicultural sensibilities. The issue is in fact so contentious that some Lacanians appear to be on a warpath against those (such as Derrida and Butler) who advocate a Levinasian perspective.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\"><p>How, precisely, do we get from the \u201cinhuman\u201d other to universalist ethics? What is such an ethics meant to accomplish? And what are its main blind spots?<\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>If the symbolic stabilizes social exchanges by imposing a set of normative expectations that regulate relationships between subjects, the imaginary allows us to view the other as equivalent to ourselves and, as such, as a possible object of our affection. However, <strong>even our symbolic and imaginary fortifications can never completely erase the other as<\/strong> <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">Thing<\/span><\/strong>, as the \u201cinhuman partner\u201d of excess <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-dark-red-color\">jouissance <\/span>that threatens to overpower the intelligible coordinates of our existence<\/strong>. (192)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>What is most innovative about post-Lacanian ethics is its emphasis on the idea that a properly ethical attitude must risk these supports, must risk an encounter with the unsettling \u201c<strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">real<\/span><\/strong>\u201d of the other\u2019s being. <strong>Ethics, in other words, can no longer be merely a matter of more or less prudent interpersonal negotiations within the symbolic and imaginary registers, but instead calls for our ability to withstand the other\u2019s devouring <span class=\"has-inline-color has-dark-red-color\">jouissance<\/span><\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>our capacity to endure the <strong>unconscious psychic intensities that get activated by the other\u2019s<\/strong> <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\">jouissance<\/span><\/strong> and that cannot be assimilated into our schemes of symbolic and imaginary reciprocity. As Lacan puts the matter, \u201cOne would have to know how to confront the fact that my neighbor\u2019s<strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\"> jouissance<\/span><\/strong>, his harmful, malignant <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\">jouissance<\/span><\/strong>, is that which poses a problem for my love\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Ethics, then, cannot avoid confronting<strong> the other\u2019s unique madness<\/strong> and existential confusion, \u201cthe always contingent . . . and, in some sense, demonic way in which he contracts a foothold in Being\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The other who claims my attention may be as bewildered, as perplexed and drastically at a loss, with respect to itself as I am with respect to myself.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>It is the realization that <strong>we do not relate to others merely on the symbolic<br>and imaginary levels, but also on the level of the <span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">real<\/span><\/strong>, that has led post-<br>Lacanian thinkers to reorient ethics from the politics of multicultural<br>tolerance to ideals of universal justice.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Multiculturalism as an arm of capital assures that every subject enters the (ultimately homogenizing) sphere of consumer economics, becoming, as it were, exchangeable through the very process that professes to promote its \u201cuniqueness.\u201d \u201cSingularity,\u201d instead of summoning the subject beyond its sociosymbolic investments, traps it in an identity category (woman, black, Asian, Arab, gay, etc.) that makes it all the more exploitable.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The<span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\"><strong> truth-event<\/strong><\/span>, as well as the process of elaboration that represents<br>fidelity to this event, thus renders \u201cdifference\u201d insignificant by<strong> introducing<br>a truth that is universally applicable to everyone concerned<\/strong>. However, this does not imply an erasure of singularity for, as we have seen, the subject of truth is always, by definition, an immortal\u2014someone who cannot be subsumed into the (unthinking) mass of the collectivity. One might in fact say that <strong>only a person who recognizes herself as singular (in the sense of not being a part of a social category) can recognize the singularity\u2014and therefore the equality\u2014of others.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>From this perspective, singularity is not merely what founds ethics, but also what comes into being by a faithful adherence to a universal (yet always specific) ethic of truths. Such an ethic is \u201cethical\u201d precisely insofar as it raises singularity to the realm of the universal.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>If class inequality cuts across gender lines, does not gender inequality also cut across class lines? How, then, do we determine the primacy of one struggle over the other?<\/strong>  It seems to me that there is no way around the fact that any given situation lends itself to different interpretations\u2014that what constitutes the void of a situation is ambiguous at best\u2014and that mediating between the various voices that aspire to name this void invariably raises concerns about power disparities. (203)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>no matter how genuinely \u201cuniversalist\u201d the intensions of Badiou and \u017di\u017eek may be, their neo-Marxist theories  repeat the masculinist and white-hegemonic weaknesses of classical Marxism so that<strong> while class (or one\u2019s status as a member of the \u201cproletariat\u201d) qualifies as a \u201cuniversal\u201d basis for progressive struggle, race, ethnicity, gender, and sexuality do not<\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>When Saint Paul is elevated to the epitome of the \u201cuniversal subject\u201d at the same time as \u201cwoman,\u201d \u201cblack,\u201d \u201cgay,\u201d and \u201cArab\u201d are relegated to the wasteland of \u201csubstance-based\u201d (and thus politically useless) identity categories, something is rotten in Denmark. I understand the connection between Saint Paul and God\u2019s \u201cuniversal\u201d command to love one\u2019s neighbor, but this hardly justifies the valorization of the Judeo-Christian tradition as the linchpin of universalist ethics. (207)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The fact that the other as \u201cinhuman\u201d <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">Thing <\/span><\/strong>inevitably derails our attempts to relate to it on a \u201chuman\u201d level does not mean that no human bond is possible; the fact that we are asked to meet the disorienting jouissance of the other does not mean that we cannot also experience the other as a socially intelligible \u201cfellow human being\u201d with whom we can enter into an interpersonal rapport of some kind.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\"><strong>One of the dangers of the post-Lacanian insistence on the \u201cmonstrous\u201d<br>aspects of the other <\/strong><\/span>is that it can eclipse the realization that, ultimately, we have a great deal in common with each other, that we can to some extent understand and even sympathize with the other. The other who is unknowable is always also in many ways knowable. In short, the fact that contemporary multiculturalist ethics has trouble coming to terms with the other as <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">Thing <\/span><\/strong>does not justify reversing matters so that we relate to the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">Thing<\/span><\/strong> exclusively, as if \u201cthe other as <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">Thing<\/span><\/strong>\u201d was the only thing the other was.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>What keeps them from arriving at the same conclusion as Butler does, namely that it is the<strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-dark-red-color\"> universality of human precariousness <\/span><\/strong>that founds ethics in the sense that my recognition that the other is as woundable as I am offers a starting point for my ethical indignation, outrage, and horror in the face of any and all violence done the other?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\"><p>The universalist leveling of social distinctions that Badiou and \u017di\u017eek advocate can be used to hide the fact that we are not, after all, \u201call equally oppressed.\u201d <\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>This is how even a marginalized subject can become an object of jealousy. This subject is resented to the degree that it is fantasized to be in possession of the kind of <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\">jouissance<\/span><\/strong> of suffering that the dominant subject lacks. (214)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In this scenario, the marginalized group is seen as robbing the dominant group of enjoyment that is \u201crightfully\u201d theirs. \u017di\u017eek understands this better than most.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Yet he, like Badiou, tends to slide into a similar position of resentment whenever the matter of the suffering \u201cother\u201d surfaces as an ethical concern. When this other belongs to the proletariat, things are still fine because the proletariat fulfills the specifications of universality set up by \u017di\u017eek and Badiou. <strong>But the minute the other who suffers is a racial, ethnic, or sexual minority, a woman, or some sort of a postcolonial subject, the limits of universality have been breached.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<h4 class=\"wp-block-heading\">The Call of Character 2014<\/h4>\n\n\n\n<p class=\"has-normal-font-size\">My goal in this book is to demonstrate that the crumbling of definitive meaning does not impoverish us\u2014that our awareness that the \u201cpoint\u201d of human existence always remains a little mysterious should not keep us from leading rewarding lives (19)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>we are always in the process of becoming<\/strong> and that it is our existential task to cultivate the unique character that gains momentum from our continuous engagement with this process; it is our responsibility to actualize our potential by tending the spirit that, in an always provisional manner, makes us who we are. (22)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Nothing is more tempting than going with the flow. Yet there are times when the only way to authentically respond to the call of our character is to wade against the current\u2014when the desires that most accurately speak the language of our character are entirely different from those we have been accustomed to take for granted.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In such situations, our task is to find our way out of the maze of collective desires that entrap us in complacent patterns of appreciation. Whether we are talking about our willingness to oppose an oppressive political system, our determination to defend a cause that seems doomed, or our ability to assert the singularity of our being over the predicates of social intelligibility that our cultural order insists on, we are expressing something about the almost inevitable clash between our social identity and our character. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Although none of us can have patterns of appreciation that are completely divorced from the processes of socialization and cultural conditioning that have brought us into being, there is still a big difference between choosing a particular set of values because these values somehow resonate with us, on the one hand, and adopting this set because we are afraid to do otherwise, on the other. That is, when our choices arise from a fear of punishment rather than from an undercurrent of passion, we have sacrificed too much. (35)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Against this backdrop, listening to the <strong>call of our character <\/strong>is important not only because it facilitates our private process of self-actualization, but also because  it is one of the few ways to ensure that we do not become so immersed in the values of our cultural order that we completely lose our critical faculties. It can serve as a means of defending the liveliness of our spirit, of fending off the kind of psychic death that can ensue from becoming too dedicated to collective norms that make us narrow-minded rather than inquisitive.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>There is often a lack of moderation to our character that stuns our social persona. This is exactly why it has the power to <strong>dislodge us from the \u201creasonable\u201d composition of our everyday experience.<\/strong> It is why one of the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">biggest challenges of human existence is to be able to respond to the call<br>of our character without at the same time wrecking the rest of our lives<\/span><\/strong>.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I stress this point because <strong>even though I am clearly rooting for what is singular rather than sanitized, I would never want to imply that our character should always trump our social or interpersonal commitments<\/strong>. Ideally, we should be able to feel authentic while simultaneously participating in the social activities, obligations, and responsibilities that bring stability to our lives. (39)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>On this view, the lack within our being is the foundation not only of our personal transformation, but also\u2014 insofar as a large enough accumulation of personal transformations results in cultural transformation\u2014of the advancement of society. (48)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In outlining the Thing\u2019s ethical code, I stressed that the enigmatic specificity of our desire can guide us to the kinds of choices that protect our character against the banalities of conventional sociality. The <span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\"><strong>repetition compulsion<\/strong><\/span>, in contrast, has a less felicitous outcome. Although it also articulates something about the specificity of our desire, it has <strong>frozen into a fixed attitude <\/strong>that strives to bar the unexpected, that <strong>strives to eliminate precisely the sort of turmoil that the Thing\u2019s startling echo tends to introduce into our lives<\/strong>. (69)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In other words, if our loyalty to the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">Thing<\/span><\/strong> asks us to remain receptive to what breaks the predictable surface of our daily existence, the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">repetition compulsion<\/span><\/strong> defends this surface. As a consequence, the more intractable our compulsion, the more likely it is that we will end up rejecting the very objects (or activities) that most alluringly resurrect the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">Thing\u2019s<\/span><\/strong> aura for us and that therefore<br>hold the greatest potential for transforming our lives. Because such objects touch the primordial foundation of our being, because they usher us to the vicinity of what is most vulnerable, most undefended, within us, they may seem too risky. The <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">repetition compulsion<\/span> counters this risk by keeping us at a safe distance from such objects<\/strong>. The problem, of course, is that by so doing it blocks<br>our access to objects for which we feel an unusually strong affinity; it deprives us of the possibility of the kind of <span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\"><strong>incandescent satisfaction<\/strong><\/span> that only the <strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-blue-color\">Thing&#8217;s echo<\/span><\/strong> is capable of giving us. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>hand, we can endeavor to rescue our character from the traumatic grip of the repetition compulsion so that the fixation of our desire gradually yield to new kinds of desires, including ones that carry a more clearly audible echo of the Thing.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>This is why there is rarely a sense of potentiality without a degree of anxiety\u2014why we often pay for our newly found freedom with the thumping of our hearts. Yet this thumping is also an indication that although the past exercises a great deal of influence over the present, the present does not need to replicate<br>it entirely faithfully. (73)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>When it comes to painting our personal masterpiece, we can definitely take things too far<\/strong>; we can become so invested in our goals and ambitions that we never give ourselves a break. Even our quest for the notoriously elusive peace of mind can cross the line to pathology, so that we spend huge amounts of energy on spiritual practices that are supposed to guide us to our destination, but that actually keep us from living our lives. But none of this changes the fact that the <strong>pain of the past can spur us to various forms of self-reflexivity and self-development<\/strong>. (76)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<blockquote class=\"wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow\"><p>The best we can do with the pain of the past is to turn it into a resource for living in the present.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n\n\n\n<p>The capacity to <strong>metabolize<\/strong>\u2014not just to endure, but to<strong><span class=\"has-inline-color has-bright-red-color\"> metabolize\u2014suffering<\/span><\/strong> is an indication of the kind of robustness of spirit that does not allow suffering to become an immovable component of our being &#8230;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>When you metabolize a substance it is broken down, absorbed, and used.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Ruti, M. (2012). The Singularity of Being. Fordham University Press. Ruti, M. (2014). The Call of Character: Living a Life Worth Living. Columbia University Press. The Singularity of Being Lacan she states focuses on repetition of trauma (RoT), contrasting this to Aristotle&#8217;s cultivation of habits consciously ,where RoT are unconscious. And the Unc and RoT &hellip; <a href=\"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/2021\/03\/19\/mari-ruti-2012-book\/\" class=\"more-link\">Continue reading<span class=\"screen-reader-text\"> &#8220;Mari Ruti book 2012, 2014&#8221;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[138,111,79,21,24,72,41,48,20],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-14634","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-butlerethics","category-desire","category-ethics_real","category-jouissance","category-lacan","category-objet-a","category-the-real","category-unconscious","category-zizek"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/14634","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=14634"}],"version-history":[{"count":125,"href":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/14634\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":15004,"href":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/14634\/revisions\/15004"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=14634"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=14634"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.terada.ca\/discourse\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=14634"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}