The Theory of The Four Discourses - Julien Quackelbeen
The Theory of The Four Discourses - Julien Quackelbeen
The Theory of The Four Discourses - Julien Quackelbeen
Julien Quackelbeen
That is what Jacques Lacan proved. It will not take much to get the same movement
repeated together with the work of renovation and exploration due to it. Therefore, I
would like to propose to you one of Jacques Lacan’s constructions which, to me,
seems to present the following advantage: it is in accordance with the current fashion
for theories of discourse and it resists deviations and psychologisation.
This formalisanon is in conformity with the particular being who has had the
advantage of being born with a choice: ability to learn a language and to become a
divided subject $, who is represented by a signifier (S1) for another signifier (S2),
and for whom only part of his enjoyment can be signified, for whom a part, (a), is not
captured in the signifier and is left as a remainder; or the other option which does not
accept this absence-of-being: although he was born with the ability to learn a
language, he does not enter into discourse, into the social bond and therefore
remains a human being who is totally taken up with enjoyment.
This primordial choice results either in a divided subject tied to the signifying chain, a
neurotic subject, or in a psychotic subject.
This bipartition - the subject is chained to or rejected, foreclosed from the discourse -
does not constitute the only trait of it. The differentiation of the four types of social
bond permits the interpretation of several preliminary conditions which are necessary
in the work. In the first place, the therapeutic community and its degree of
institutionalisation is often considered as a discourse of the Master. Taking the
position of agent has an effect of Mastery on the Other:
The Other is caught in a network of signifiers, in a knowledge. This produces a
remainder, residue of the enjoyment that is not caught up in the signifying chain, the
object ‘little a’ as “(no)-more-enjoyment”.
What makes the agent speak is the truth that drives him. The divided subject
remains unconscious.
The unconscious desire of the discourse of the Master needs to be placed on this
level: no subjectivity is allowed, certainly no stories or actualising of problems. It is of
the greatest importance for a Therapeutic Community, for an institution, to determine
this unconscious desire and to gauge accurately the degree of its manifestation.
From the very first, every one who intervenes will have to place himself in relation to
this desire, otherwise he will get imprisoned there, whether he is a psycho-analyst or
not.
It is known that this discourse is pre-eminently therapeutic, which means both the
best and the worst can be expected from it. The worst certainly will happen, if one
places oneself in a dual relation, one of symbiosis, because such a relationship is
doomed to end up in repetition; it is mortifying, and always results in aggression.
Where the Master pretends to be identical to himself, to S1, it is impossible for him to
reach S2, to approximate to the Big Other represented by S2; not being ready to
admit his imperfection, he cannot present himself as a desiring subject.
If this discourse is the required condition for the speaking being to reach any other
form of social bond, then what has to be done to escape from the unfavourable
perspective mentioned above?
Several conditions are decisive to me in answering this question, the most important
being that not everything can be expected from one single discourse, one does not
refer to one sacrosanct and therefore totalitarian discourse. This mistake has often
been made, even by the defenders of psychoanalysis. Consequently, they haven’t
got time to meditate on impossibility and impotence, inherent in every discourse.
The hope they provoked changed, in the inevitable disappointment, into bitter
criticism. It is not a matter of replacing the discourse of the Master by its reverse, the
discourse of the psychoanalyst; the point is not to forget that formalisation of the four
discourses demands all four of them. The constitutive disjunctions, impossibility and
impotence - which form the motor of the system -, lead the agent to a moment in
which he is out of the discourse and thus forced to pass to another one. The
alternation of the discourses constitutes the explicit aim, as it allows each of the four
elements in turn to occupy the four fixed places of any discourse, and allows a
passage from one form of impotence to another, from one mode of the impossible to
another. Thus, the discourse of the analyst can function for the different dualities
created by the Master, the institution, the therapist, the educator... and the patient,
as a reference to the third. In this manner the place of the patient is isolated as the
appropriate one to represent the complaint of his divided subjectivity $, and in
addressing himself to the other, to the Master (S1), he incites this latter to produce a
knowledge (S2), which he declares impotent with respect to object (a), reason of
desire.
It is the task of the psychoanalyst to see to it that this discourse of the hysteric can
be maintained in relation to the one of the therapist. He does this by taking a specific
place in the discourse characteristic to him, that of object (a). He allows the patient
to make himself a subject $, so that the master signifiers (S1) obscuring his destiny
can be brought forth.
The psychoanalyst becomes the depository of the family history, of the unconscious
incorporated by the family myth. It is his task to transform the anamnesis into a
family romance, and to get hold of the place that the patient fills in the unconscious
desire of his close relations, to find out how their demands fail to coincide with those
of the patient. How many therapeutic processes start without having verified the
demand, without having made sure that there is one!
Working with close friends, parents, family, also creates the possibility to make
manifest the discourse of the university. These so-called important personages have
seldom been important because of their function, but rather boring, due to their
massive and stupefying knowledge, S2, about the patient who is considered as a
thing, 'das Ding’. They all become defenders of such a knowledge. This happens
without realising either that this science finds its truth in their own unconscious, or
that the reduction of the Other to a thing obliges him to repress all subjectivity.
The work here consists of releasing the patient from his trap. One has to undermine
this knowledge about the patient, break it up into splinters, reduce their chatter to the
truth of his speaking, and shake the certainty represented by this knowledge.
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