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ISBN 0-203-98187-1 Master e-book ISBN ISBN 0-7484-0851-7 (Print Edition) parallax Issue 8 July–September 1998 julia kristeva 1966–96: aesthetics.politics.ethics guest editor: Griselda Pollock Introduction 1 Griselda Pollock Dialogue with Julia Kristeva 5 De L’étrangeté du Phallus ou le Féminin Entre Illusion et Désillusion 19 Julia Kristeva Experiencing the Phallus as Extraneous, or Women’s Twofold Oedipus Complex 29 Julia Kristeva Strangers in Analysis: Nationalism and the Talking Cure 43 John Mowitt Three Images for Kristeva: From Bellini to Proust 61 Stephen Bann To Inscribe in the Feminine: A Kristevan Impossibility? or Femininity, Melancholy and 75 Sublimation Griselda Pollock Transcendence, Fixation and Belief in the Vicissitudes of the Imaginary 107 John Lechte Julia Kristeva and her histories 121 Adrian Rifkin Book Reviews Donna Landry and Gerald Maclean (eds), The Spivak Reader 129 Sara Ahmed Judith Butler, Excitable Speech 133 Lynn Turner Christina Mazzoni, Saint Hysteria 137 Marq Smith Adrian Piper, Out of Order, Out of Sight, Vols I and II 141 Joanne Morra Francesca Hughes (ed.), The Architect: Reconstructing Her Practice 145 Rob Stone Nadir Lahiji and D.S.Friedman, Plumbing: Sounding Modern Architecture 149 Stephen Walker Keith Ansell Pearson, Viroid Life: Perspectives on Nietzsche and the Transhuman Condition 153 John Protevi vi Conference Report Politics, Friendship and ‘democracy to come’; Jacques Derrida’s Politics of Friendship 159 Paul Bowman parallax, 1998, vol. 4, no. 3, 1–4 Introduction Griselda Pollock In June 1996, the Centre for Cultural Studies hosted a conference entitled Aesthetics. Politics. Ethics: Julia Kristeva 1966–96. It was held at the Leeds City Art Gallery whose monumental neighbour is the equally nineteenth century structure of Cuthbert Broderick’s Town Hall: the proximities of, and the tensions between the state and culture are often the very topics of Cultural Studies. This conference could have been hosted by one of several subgroups within the University of Leeds and the Department of Fine Art in particular. As an art historian, I could have planned this event to consider the contributions of Julia Kristeva to ways of thinking about the aesthetic, the image, and the larger historical frameworks within which certain themes have been obsessively pursued. As a feminist theorist I could have arranged this event to consider Julia Kristeva’s significant interventions in the political and cultural theories of femininity, sexual difference and revolution. As a critic of modern and contemporary art, I could have invited her to focus analysis on questions of modernity and post modernity in literature, film and the visual arts. As a director of the Centre for Cultural Studies I might have thought we needed to take time to assess the whole political and cultural climate of our moment of extreme tensions between left and right, the outbreaks of neotribalism, xenophobia and racism, the questions of globalisation in contemporary capitalism and the impact of media massification and the information society on the status of singularity and subjectivity. Julia Kristeva has credentials for being called upon to assist in all such reflections. In the end, we opted for organising this event through the Centre for Cultural Studies since it would be within that fictional space that all of the above could be brought into play. Our aim was to touch on the complex relations between politics, aesthetics, and ethics. According to Jürgen Habermas, these domains were structurally severed at the beginning of the era of modernity and their segregation functioned as the defining feature of, if not the condition for the development of modernity. In the era of so-called postmodernity the contradictions inhering in modernity’s fantasies of order and progress, rationality and science, have come home to roost, presenting us with a deeply depressing contemporary scenario that is only temporarily lightened by fantasmatic, and to my mind, fantastically misplaced, utopian hopes lodged in one or other of these divided realms: art, new technology, philosophy. In the Centre and its larger institutional partner at the University of Leeds, the Department of Fine Art, we have been reputed for a blockheaded pertinacity in our interest in and commitment to historical 1353–4645/98 $12·00 © 1998 Taylor & Francis Ltd 2 POLLOCK materialism, addling our graduates’ brains in week one of most core courses with their sudden immersion in Chapter I of Volume I of Das Kapital and the Introduction to the Grundrisse. Justified not so much on political as intellectual grounds, this training in the masterful transformations of Hegelian philosophy by their application to the fundamental structures of the political economy of capitalism already exposes students to the complex intellectual hybridism that is necessary in order to encompass either the social production of art or the analysis of contemporary culture. The problem for us all at the end of this century is to accept the historical failures of the very structures and theories in which the moderns placed their hope while not succumbing to the despair and disillusionment that must attend the attenuation of all religions or dogmas, the so-called grand narratives, including those of modernity or communism. Julia Kristeva has herself stated that: Our civilisation is going through a depression…We intellectuals must seek out the causes of this discontent. This is not a time for advice. It is the moment for diagnosis—a negative one…I would not give an optimistic prognosis. I believe the moment of militancy is over and we are living in a therapeutic age in which which we must face up to our problems.1 Within these few words are the seeds of this conference: a desire to bring intellectuals together for a kind of ‘facing up to the problems’ rather than a rash of overconfident prediction or prescriptions for action. For such an event not to be merely another piece of academic self-promotion and scholarly competition, it must have both a political and an ethical commitment—or rather show a historical self-understanding of the intellectual’s function and limitations. The role of the intellectual, as David Macey has shown, so involved with a history of modern France, has shifted dramatically from the political engagement of Zola’s mighty ‘J’accuse’.2 As Zygmunt Bauman has argued, the intellectual has lost the role of legislator or even legislator’s conscience, to become localised, partisan, a mere interpreter of ever dividing subcultures and their particular languages and interests.3 I think a conference focussing upon the work of Julia Kristeva that takes place both in her presence and with her active participation offers us another model: a model committed to the political, ethical and philosophically rigorous role of the intellectual in the social totality. One new aspect of the concept of the intellectual she has offered us comes from her conjugation in both theoretical and professional work of scholar/ thinker/teacher and analyst. In my own work, a double formation within conflicting strands of intellectual and political activism has forged a continuing concern to push the limits of the productive relations and tensions between Marxism and psychoanalysis in the belief that to address the intricate imbrications of class, sexual and cultural difference, we need simultaneously theories of the social and productive totalities, theories of the ideological and the cultural, theories of the text and the sign, and theories of the subject and of difference. I would like to take this space once again to thank Julia Kristeva for her participation in the event of which this publication is the monument. Her graciousness in responding so positively to our request for dialogue and a lecture was truly appreciated because any person of her stature must always run the risk of being consumed by the need of others to have ‘direct access’ to the star. In order to minimise that dreadful aspect of the commodification of intellectual life I arranged this conference to begin with a dialogue between Julia Kristeva and the very considerable number of graduate students in the audience. I did hope to attract several hundreds of people all paying full rate so that my academic adventures would also win me brownie points on the now accountancy-led scales of university assessment where how much money I attract can be counted, while how much academic value I generate cannot. But I am more pleased to report PARALLAX 3 that the take up for this conference has largely been amongst graduates students in this and other universities. I am sure that as apprentices to the academic world graduate students attend many conferences as silent witnesses to the performance of a David Lodge-like internet where academics, well known to each other from a hundred other conferences, veil their well honed competitiveness behind publicly claimed familiarities. To minimise this traditional format, we shall start with a forum for public discussion of the issues raised by the now considerable work of Julia Kristeva. I want to comment briefly on the time frame established for the conference. Julia Kristeva arrived in Paris as a graduate student in 1966—the date if any that can be used for the beginning of the post-structuralist revision—Ecrits, Of Grammatology—you name it, the works that still constitute an intellectual frame were first delivered in the mid 1960s. Julia Kristeva both joined and transformed the intellectual scene she entered in 1966 with a series of major books that culminate with the most recent Sens et Non Sens de la Révolte.4 She is still one of the most significant, provocative and compelling intellectuals of her generation and our time. This conference was organised to offer some acknowledgement of the pleasure and stimulation of this remarkable body of work that dares to reach to the most advanced limits of linguistic philosophy while plumbing the affective depths of the social and personal psyches of the human subject, not only writing about love, death, horror, depression and maternity, but providing the means to think about such domains of social practice and cultural investigation without romanticism or mysticism. For thirty years, the years that bridge the historical period in European history from the revolts of 1968 through the ratification of the new right’s hegemony in Western economies, from the new social movements in the West of the 1960s to the end of Eastern European Communism, from the Beatles to Bosnia, from the aftermath of the Algerian war to contemporary Muslim fundamentalism, from the television era to the internet, Julia Kristeva’s works follow an elliptical traverse across a historical territory whose current contours we may hardly be equipped to map. But let me close with a quote from her paper on a ‘New Type of intellectual: The Dissident’: For true dissidence today is perhaps what it has always been: thought. Now that Reason has been absorbed by technology, thought is only tenable as an ‘analytical position’ that affirms dissolution and works through differences. It is an analytic position in the face of subjective, sexual and linguistic identity. From this, modern philosophy only retains either the notion of a position in order to offer a specialist or totalizing point of view (as in Marxism, Freudianism, Phenomenology and various forms of empiricism); or else it retains only the notions of analysis as dissolution, and writes in a style similar to that of an outmoded avant-garde such as symbolism. Torn between being the guardian of the law and that instance which disavows the law, hasn’t philosophy turned away from thought? Julia Kristeva sees the displacement of Reason and Right and the Death of Man by the ‘sudden surge of women and children in discourse’ which renders both myths of resurrection and renaissance improbable and untenable: But through the efforts of thought in language, or precisely through the excesses of language whose very multitude is the only sign of life, one can attempt to bring about the multiple sublations of the unnameable, the unrepresentable, the void. This is the real cutting edge of dissidence.5
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