a. Enforced or self-imposed absence from one's native country. b. The condition or a period of living away from one's country. c. One who lives away from one's country. In Portuguese exile also means solitary place, solitude, isolation. For us +, correlated words / intuitions = prison, imprisonment, limitation; guidelines concepts / impressions = confinement, captivity, internment camp; implicated styles / sensations = minimalism, aesthetics of simplicity, scarceness, or just a list.
Monday, September 8, 2025
Why is it that both Freud and Lacan adopt only the boy’s point of view? Is it
simply an effect of their ignorance and lack of interest in the specificities of
female morphology and sexuality—an effect of their misogyny? Or is it motivated
by a desire to represent female sexuality and anatomy according to its cur-
rent-day social position? And why is it that the mother’s status must shift from
phallic to castrated? The phallic mother must be understood as a fantasy, as the
(boy’s) fantasy of omnipotence and omniscience. She is represented by
psychoanalytic theory as sexually neutral, insofar as the questions of sexual
difference and sexual specificity make no sense for the pre-Oedipal child. Freud
implies that the child (boy) bestows on the mother the attributes he
acknowledges m himself,idealizing them in the process. It is for this reason,
apparently, that Freud describes her as phallic. But given that even the boy is
not yet aware of his own position as phallic, it is not simply that the boy
accords the mother a genital organ like his own (although this seems confirmed
by the case of Little Hans 119111); children of both sexes, he claims, attribute
to the mother a position in which she holds the power of life and death. The
phallic mother is the fantasy of the mother who is able to grant the child
everything, to be its object of desire. And, in turn, the child of either sex
desires to be the mother’s object of desire. But if Freud simply means that the
mother is construed as all-powerful, it is not clear why he describes her as
phallic. This description is hardly a sexually neutral characterization of her
position, and if Freud wanted to insist on her sexually indifferent status, she
could just as readily and much less contentiously be described as all-powerful.
Something more is at stake here. It is only on condition that the mother’s
all-powerful phallic status is transferred to the (symbolic) father that the
child is able to abandon its intensive attachment to her and turn instead to the
father. He is the heir to her phallic position, and it is not clear where the
child’s idea of his (castrating, all-powerful) position comes from, if not on
loan from the mother. The child’s resolution—or lack of it—of the Oedipus
complex, his or her position as masculine or feminine, depends on the way in
which this transference of status is effected, and particularly on the alignment
of maleness with the powerful and femaleness with the powerless positions that
results from this transfer. In short, the condition under which patriarchy is
psychically produced is the constitution of women’s bodies as lacking.(Volatile
Bodies, Elizabeth Grosz)
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