APPROPRIATION AND COUNTER-APPROPRIATION: TEE CASE OF ROQUENTIN A Thesis Presented to the Faculty of the Graduate School of Cornell University in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy by James Dennis LeBlanc August 1984 */^~-L-K^ APPROPRIATION AND COUNTER-APPROPRIATION: THE CASE OF POQUENTIN James Dennis LeBlanc, Ph*D« Cornell University 1984 As the title suggests, there are two principle aspects of this dissertation* The first concerns a par ticular notion of appropriation} as well as its reverse, what is terned in this study ,fcounter-appropriation.M This first aspect consists of theoretical considerations and draws on a body of information which permits the use of a kind of ontologicai psychoanalysis* The second aspect of this study is an application of these theoreti cal views to the character of Roquentin, the existential- ly—ill protagonist in Jean-Paul Sartre's novel, LA H^§??« On the whole, the discourse and behavior of Sartre1 s char acter are used to both illustrate and confirm the various facets of the psychoanalytic structure that is proposed in this text — a dissertation which is, therefore, a study of both theory and literature* In the first section, the focus is on a particular moment in La. Nausée: Roquentin's narration of his inabil ity to pick up a piece of paper which lies on the ground in front of his hotel* His documentation of bis usual fondness for handling, staring at, destroying, and even bringing the trash to his mouth is explicated in ^reat de tail* The main thrust of the second chapter is towards a reading of Freud against Sartre. although Sartre sees his own work as fundamentally opposed to that of Freud, the positions of the two theorists are used here in a comple mentary fashion to support a certain notion of desire that is appropriâtive in nature. Sartre1s L'Etre et le géant» Lacan1 s "Signification du phallus, 11 Laplanchefs Vje e_l mort e_n. psychanalyse and several of Freud9 s works are y cons idered» The third and final chapter of this study reveals the importance of Roquentin's interest in handling discarded scraps of paper, and his recent inability to engage in this activity, in relation to the rest of the novel. The concept of apropriation, which is introduced in the pre ceding chapter, is extended to include "counter-appropria- tion#" In addition, the idea of a "playful" attitude is introduced and Juxtaposed with Sartre's esprit de sérjLeux in an effort to analyze and explain the nature of Roquen- tin's nausea. BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH Jim LeBlanc was born in Fitchburg, Massachusetts on April 3, 1953» He spent eighteen years in central New England, with his educational pursuits often running sec ond to his interest in carrying a football through a mass of large, angry bodies or trying to hit a baseball on to the roof of his math teacher 1s house beyond the Left field fence. Not having had much success at either athletic venture, he decided to abandon this particular path to sell-fulfillment after graduating from Cashing Academy in 1971. Ris undergraduate college days were spent mostly along the road marked "Sex, Drugs and Rock and Roll," which was quite a popular thoroughfare at the time. It was not until he had tried six different majors, dropped out of school, and worked in a brake shoe factory in in ner-city Boston that he decided that hunting truth in an academic world might be a rewarding quest. He finally graduated from Miami University ( the one in Ohio, not the one in Florida) in 1977 with a B«A« in French. He went to graduate school immediately and earned his M.A. from the same institution in 1979. -ii- Now that he is "educated," he has decided to leave truth to her private bath, at least if she is to be found secluded within the walls of the university. HLe intends to engage in non—academic ventures» He is fully aware that in so doing he might never catch a glimpse of Diana — but he won't be devoured by his own hounds either. -iii- ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I wish to thank my parents for their endless support, and also Pat Gill for preserving my sense of humor during the writing of this work* John Weigel, Russ Reising, and Cliff Hallam all deserve credit for teaching me the impor tance of literature and philosophy. I also wish to thank Jane Gallop* Peggy Kamuf Neil Hertz and especially Rich t ard Klein» without whose advice and instruction this dis sertation would never have come to be» -iv- TABLE OF CONTENTS BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH ii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS • . • . • . . iv Phftpt?r a&£& INTRODUCTION 1 I. THE SCRAPS OF PAPER • • • • . . . . . . • . . .. 7 II. TO HAVE AND TO BE • • . . . 76 III. TO PLAY OR NOT TO PLAY 152 CONCLUSION 246 BIBLIOGRAPHY 250 ## —v- INTRODUCTION "Je l'ai» la saleté» la Nausée*" 1 The nausea in Sar tre's novel is something Roquentin !>as • or so the protago nist maintains early on in his Journal* Later in the text, however» we read: "La Nausée ne m'a pas quitté et je ne crois pas qu'elle nie quittera de sitôt; nais je ne la subis plusf ce n'est plus une maladie ni une quinte passagère: c'est moi*"2 "La Nausée • • • c'est moi"; the nausea in Sartre's novel is something Roquentin i_s_* It is this interrelation of having and being and Roquentin 1s shifting awareness of the roles of these two predicative modes that will concern us in the following pages* Lô. flausee. we shall maintain, is a novel about appropriation — appropriation of material objects, appropriation of the world one experiences, appropriation of oneself* More over, this desire for possession is founded on a desire for being — not just any being, of course, but a specific notion of being (one which, unfortunately, is unattaina ble)* This desired ontological status is what Sartre terms elsewhere the ep-soi-pour-soi• the in-itseIf-for-it- self* Consciousness seeks the kind of solid, inmutable 1 Jean-Paul Sartre, La Causée (Paris: Sallimard, 1938), p. 32* 2 Ibid*» p. 161. -1- -2- being of the in-itself — the being of a stone, for exam ple — while at the same time wishing to remain the con- tinuous creator» the free foundation of its existence: be- ing-for-itself• It is towards this end that an individual engages in appropriative behavior. In an effort to elucidate this concept of appropria tion and its role in Roquentin's diary» we shall need to focus both on theoretical considerations and on Roquen tin's discourse itself. Regarding the latter» we shall see that one moment» in particular» in Roquentin's text seems to contain the entire universe of the writer's ap- propriative behavior» and functions as a dense» microcosm- ic kernel of psychological factors that serve to inform his journalistic project as a whole. For this reason» we shall spend considerable time examining this crucial point in the text: Roquentin's description of his pastime of picking up scraps of paper from the street» followed imme diately by his recounting of his recent inability to pick up a particular sheet of paper. Later we shall turn our attention to the ramifications of our discoveries as they apply to other points in the text. In conjunction with this aspect of our inquiry» we shall need to establish a certain theoretical groundwork on which to base our con clusions. We shall draw from both the theoretical works of Sartre ( LLEÎXÊ. ê± 1^- PeW*» for "the most part) and from Freudian and post-Freudian psychoanalytic theory (Bache- -3- lard, Lapianche, Lacan)* Although Sartre often claims to be in severe opposition to Freud, «re hope to show that the systems of the two thinkers can be utilized in a comple mentary fashion, in spite of their occasionally glaring points of contention» Sartre's ontological considerations may be made to serve as a beneficial tool for the clarifi cation and elaboration of Freud's psychoanalytic theories, just as Freud's point of view will be shown to provide an interesting perspective from which to extend and highlight the phenomenological conclusions of Sartre1s work. Thus, the scope of the following study will be two- dimensional: ( 1 ) ,,£*e tenter une psychanalyse des çhos- e^,«3 as Sartre describes what he calls "la psychanalyse existentielle," and (2) to propose a psychoanalytic read ing of Roquentin's existential anxiety and of the factors which contribute to its arising and ultimate resolution in the mind of Sartre's protagonist. Roquentin announces early on that his Journalistic project will be an attempt to organize his day-to-day life. In fact, he states his resolution with the first words of the "feuillet sans date": "Le mieux serait d'éc rire les événements au jour le jour . .. surtout les 3 Jean-Paul Sartre, J^jgtre e_£ le n.jaflt (Paris: Gallimard, 1943), p. 690. Sartre attributes this notion of a phe nomenological psychoanalysis, quite rightly, to Bache lard.
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