Article

The Work of Alterity: Bataille and Lacan

Authors:
To read the full-text of this research, you can request a copy directly from the author.

Abstract

Diacritics 26.2 (1996) 31-48 The topic of alterity may appear at first to be beyond the scope of Bataille's work, but it is from such questioning that his practice of writing takes its full contours and questions the renewal of literary textuality. Strangely, Bataille fights against writing, an attitude that shows a will to disappear in order to reach sovereignty. Writing, in such a context, supports not only certain useful figures for his particularly heterogeneous works but also the presence of alterity. Feminine imagos, set as the literary equivalent of the eradication of meaning and words, act as levers from which a character produces itself or rather disarticulates and vanishes. Bataille's fight against writing shows strong similarities to some Lacanian notions: the subject, pleasure ("jouissance"), and, of course, woman. Before trying to map out this perilous comparison -- there is no possible perfect transition between the two -- we must first extract the significant elements that make it possible. To this end, we propose some reflections on Bataille's concepts of Oedipus and castration. In so doing, we will be in a better situation to link Lacan and Bataille's works but also to understand where Lacan has been inspired by Bataille and how Lacan distinguishes himself in his interpretation of the imaginary, the symbolic, the Law, and feminine imagos -- especially in the way Lacan, contrary to Bataille, "eradicates" alterity. These questions are necessary steps in opening up a reflection inspired by the work of Bataille and in our desire to actualize purposes yet also extend unresolved polemic effects which this paper can only partially address. To present the necessity of such polemical reflections fits Bataille's thought as well, which refuses to conclude and takes its meaning from throwing away all possible speech. Feminine imagos are an essential leitmotif in Bataille's narratives and, more importantly, a cohesion factor for his thought that transcends all domains of writing to give a foundation to the works. With themes such as transgression, subversion, and the renewal of the Law, we reach an aporia not only of Bataille's text but also, as Susan Rubin-Suleiman puts it, of literary modernity: Indeed, if we look at the autofictional purposes and the literary production of Bataille, we must underline an "aporia" in the subversive nature of his texts. This challenge to Bataille generally focuses on his literary works without considering his theoretical works beyond some "canonical" titles. Nevertheless, the lesser-known texts may offer another reading of Bataille's eroticism and defuse criticism strictly centered on the supposedly pornographic and phallocentric content of novels like L'histoire de l'oeil and Madame Edwarda. Before branding the works of Bataille as "sexist," we must consider that he was one of the first male authors of his generation to denounce the "castration" dominating society and individuals. Mario Perniola, discussing a text of Georges Bataille, emphasizes his condemnation of imperialism behind the use of many terms: "the imperialist image of the eagle, even when it presents itself with the attributes of revolution, unsuccessfully hides its Promethean and Icarian pretensions." This interpretation finds an echo in another text of Bataille, "L'oeil pinéal," where Bataille directly links the castration to the myth of Prometheus: "the legend of Prometheus is linked to the castration complex," says Bataille. Perniola's words point directly to the patriarchal order upon which this imperialism lies, disguising itself as revolution; they show Bataille's profound disagreement with such a social and individual foundation. It is also difficult to affirm the predominance of a phallocentric stance in Bataille. The oedipal figures, for example, are much too paradoxical in their modes of deportment, reestablishment, and destruction. We should note here how "pornographic imagination...

No full-text available

Request Full-text Paper PDF

To read the full-text of this research,
you can request a copy directly from the author.

Article
Full-text available
Georges Bataille believes that most of his contemporary discourses were spiritual and/or intellectual ones. They were, for him, vegetation-like discourses looking upward and underlining the role of head and thinking in their paradigms. He, instead, introduced the notion of “base materialism” which highlights the role of the lower parts of the body; it is here that Bataille raises the notion of “Acéphale” who has beheaded himself with a dagger in his right hand, and thus has beheaded the ruling head of his own body as well as the heads of his surrounding social discourses. For George Bataille, humans are linguistic being entrapped forever in a language system. However, he believes that this system is full of fissures and that through transgressive moments one can experience these voids within language. Through transgression one can look directly in the abyss of language, though he/she cannot see the extremity of these voids and thus Bataille believes that one cannot reach any signified, and therefore, any Bataillean “Impossible.” As one can witness, linguistic human being is entrapped within narratives of language system defining him in terms of cause and effect and their related items namely linear time and space. Georges Bataille believes that any heterogeneous element which crosses the defined taboos of the body of self and society at some transgressive moments is regarded as a “foreign body” and an “alterity.” This foreign body, as he regards, at the instants of transgression experiences “sovereignty” which means that he is at the epic of being a “sovereign being,” of course momentarily, because he at those moments has stepped upon any ruling borders and is bound with no taboo and thus is the “sovereign” of instants. The present study endeavors to analyze Stephen Dedalus in A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man and his Bataillean experiences in terms of narrative and language. A Portrait will be concentrated in the light of the heterogeneous notions of Georges Bataille in order to investigate if one can consider Stephen Dedalus as a horizontal Bataillean character. This study attempts to trace Bataille’s notion of language as an unsolvable maze in A Portrait; the maze which has entrapped human beings forever. It is here that his view of the linear narrative and its linear time and space, is raised and is analyzed through a Bataillian viewpoint.
Article
This article examines how Georges Bataille, one of the celebrated precursors of the postmodern death of a linguistic subject (the subject of the signifier), is also a Nietzschean, pre-Freudian thinker who offers us an account of the birth of an affective subject (the subject of mimesis). If critics still tend to recuperate Bataille within a “metaphysics of the subject,” the present article shows that the central concept of his thought (i.e., “sovereign communication”) needs to be reconsidered in the light of his debt to Pierre Janet’s “psychology of the socius,” an interpersonal psychology that transgresses precisely this metaphysics. In line with contemporary theoretical developments, Bataille’s account of the birth of the subject out of the laughter of the socius offers us a theoretical model to rethink the foundations of subjectivity in relational, mimetic terms.
ResearchGate has not been able to resolve any references for this publication.