Contents of spoon-archives/deleuze-guattari.archive/papers/stiv.guattari1

>From deleuze-approval@world.std.com Thu Apr 7 17:48:35 1994 Date: Thu, 07 Apr 94 18:24:10 EDT From: CJ Stivale Subject: Guattari, Molecular Revolution 1 The Machine at the Heart of Desire: Felix Guattari's Molecular Revolution [excerpt 1 of 4] _Works & Day_ 2.2 (1985): 63-85 Charles J. Stivale Wayne State University [Please excuse typos and anachronisms] In 1972, the Parisian intellectual scene was jolted by the publication of a rather arcane and lengthy manifesto of sorts entitled _L'Anti-Oedipe, Capitalisme et Schizophr?nie_ I (Anti-Oedipus, Capitalism and Schizophrenia [AO]. Of the two authors, only Gilles Deleuze was familiar to the French intelligentsia as a renowned university philosopher who had published works on Kant, Spinoza, Nietzsche, and Proust, among others. The co-author of _Anti-Oedipus_, Felix Guattari, while less widely known, was prominent both in the French political domain and in the psychoanalytic arena, yet was neither in lockstep with orthodox Freudian practice, nor entirely in synch with the reigning Lacanian alternative to orthodoxy. And while the subsequent collective and individual works of Deleuze and Guattari have received recognition in France, only the translation of selected works by Deleuze have attracted any attention in the American intellectual market place.\1 Thus, the [then] recent translation of essays from Guattari's political and psychiatric activities, \2 while unsatisfactory from several perspectives, is a welcome complement to the better-known Deleuzian corpus already available in English. In this essay, I propose to situate Guattari's contribution to contemporary French thought in light of this [new] edition of translated essays. As noted in the book's introduction, Guattari worked since the early 1950s as a psychotherapist at the Clinique de La Borde founded by Jean Oury. Given that Guattari's orientation to psychoanalysis was initially practical, his theoretical essays in this domain were inspired by a decade of clinical psychiatry; likewise, Guattari political practice, particularly his participation in the events of May 1968, gave rise to his extensive political writing. Thus, the first obstacle which this edition presents to readers is its overall division into three thematic sections: 1. Institutional Psychotherapy"; '2. Towards a New Vocabulary"; 3. Politics and Desire." Besides the fact that this seemingly concise, thematic classification of Guattari's writing is entirely arbitrary \3, a more serious objection is that this classification obscures the reader's understanding of Guattari's concurrent psychoanalytical and political development from the 1960s to the present. While the editors do provide footnotes to situate each essay chronologically, the reader attempting to understand the relationship between Guattari's psychoanalytical practice and political engagement is forced to shuffle back and forth throughout the volume in order to reconstitute the influence of each domain of activity on the other. I will therefore lay out a chronological overview of _Molecular Revolution_, an alternate "map" whose function is solely heuristic, but which will at least provide an outline allowing readers to trace the author's development: 1. The Pre-Molecular essays through 1968), 2. Machine and Desire (1969-1972), 3. Molecular Politics (1973-1978) and 4. Schizo-Analysis and the Global "Molecule" (essays since 1979). 1. The Pre-molecular In _Molecular Revolution_, there are only five essays from Guattari's early period, all of which are taken from his first collection, _Psychanalyse et Transversalite'_ [PT], and the earliest essay, "Transversality," relates to an essential psychotherapeutic concept which Guattari elaborated throughout the 1960s, the nature of the "group" within the psychiatric institution. In two earlier, untranslated papers, "Le Transfert" (The Transfer) and especially "Introduction `a la therapie institutionnelle" (Introduction to institutional psychotherapy), Guattari had already described an "effect of subjectivity" through which a subject affirms him/herself through language on the plane of groups, thereby constituting a "subjective unity of the group" on the social plane. Since the ailing subject is "a citizen first, and individual afterwards" [PT 145], to affect a cure, the subject must shift from his or her exterior, subjugated group association (that is, factory, club) to an institutional subject group constantly interpreting its own position. Guattari's psychotherapeutic position constitutes a critique of the Freudian and Lacanian dependence on totalizing, referential myths (Oedipus, the great Other and the unconscious structured as language) for rearticulation and interpretation of all subjective histories. Readers familiar with _Anti-Oedipus_ cannot help but recognize herein the seeds of the later manifesto, and can therefore situate "Transversality" in the direct line of this problematic, as an initial sketch of the approach which will become "schizoanalysis": on the one hand, the rejection of the Freudian "castration complex" which affirms, says Guattari, that since "anxiety for the external" (MR 12), and on the other hand, the affirmation of institutional therapeutics whose "object is to try to change the data accepted by the super-ego into a new kind of acceptance of 'initiative,' rendering pointless the blind social demand for a particular kind of castrating procedure to the exclusion of anything else" (MR 13-14). Opposing what he considers as Freudian "signifying logic," Guattari thus foregrounds the social realm as the source from which both illness and cure derive, the former arising from an essentialism in which castration and punishment form the basis of "social reality," the latter produced through institutional therapeutics by subverting the dominant "logic" and by constructing precise, transversal relationships which free patients to recognize the social determination of anxiety. Guattari then defines the opposition between subject-groups and subjugated groups \4 as "that of a subjectivity whose work is to speak, and a subjectivity which is lost to view in the otherness of society" (MR 14). Guattari affirms that any attempt at group analysis requires the group to enunciate unconscious "group desire" \5 in order "to create the conditions favourable to a particular mode of interpretation, identical...to a transference" (MR 17). This transference must not be fixed, territorialized, but must be one of "_transversality_ in a group," an idea opposed to "a) verticality, as described in the organogramme of a pyramidal structure (leaders, assistants, etc.); b) horizontality, as it exists in the disturbed wards of a hospital, or, even more, in the senile wards; in other words a state of affairs in which things and people fit in as best they can with the situation in which they find themselves" (MR 17). Guattari describes this new concept in terms of a "coefficient of transversality," comparing it to the "adjustable blinkers" worn by horses that allow them the visual range from total blindness to full vision: "In a hospital, the "coefficient of transversality" is the degree of blindness of each the each d the people present. However, I would suggest that the offical adjusting of all the blinkers, and the overt communication that results from it, depends almost automatically on what happens at the level of the medical superintendent, the nursing superintendent, the financial administrator and so on. Hence all movement is from the summit to the base. There may,of course, be some pressure frorn the base, but it never usually manages to make any change in the overall structure of blinders. Any modification must be in terms of a structural redefinition of each person's role, and a reorientation of the whole institution. So long as people remain fixated on themselves, they never see anything but themselves." (MR 18) As "a dimension that tries to overcome both the impasse of pure verticality and that of mere horizontality," transversality would be achieved in hospitals "when there is a maximum of communication among different levels and, above all, in different meanings.... Only if there is a certain degree of transversality will it be possible - though only for a time, since all this is subject to continual re-thinking - to set going an analytic process giving individuals a real hope of using the group as a mirror" (MR 18, 20). Since this approach explicitly questions power relations as it suggests therapeutic aims, the concomitant political and psychoanalytical implications are evident: "It is my hypothesis," concludes Guattari, "that there is nothing inevitable about the bureaucratic self-mutilation of a subject group, or its unconscious resort to mechanisms that militate against its potential transversality. They depend, from the first, on an acceptance of the risk - which accompanies the emergence of any phenomenon of real meaning - of having to confront irrationality, death, and the otherness of the other" (MR 23). The corresponding early essays in _Molecular Revolution_ branch from this dual perspective: on the one hand, in "The Group and the Person" (1966-1968; MR section 1), Guattari continues his work in "transversality" by aggressively defining his militant therapeutic approach as an alternative to Communist, bureaucratic (State) and psychoanalytical totalization; on the other hand, "Causality, Subjectivity and History" (1966) and "Students, the Mad and 'Delinquents"' (1969; both in MR section 3) provide explicitly political readings of two historical periods, the former article analyzing "signifying breakthroughs" (_coupures signifiantes_) from Lenin to Vietnam, the latter examining the "institutional revolution of May 1968." \6 Notes [excerpt 1] 1/ For an extensive bibliography on the works of Deleuze and Guattari, see SubStance 44/45 (1984). 2/ All references to _Molecular Revolution: Psychiatry and Politics_ will be abbreviated in the text MR. 3/ For example, "Transversality," in section 1, certainly constitutes a search for "New Vocabulary"; "Towards a Micro-Politics of Desire," again, in section 1, clearly applies to "Politics and Desire." In my references to these essays, I will indicate in which section they are located. 4/ Readers should be attentive to various discrepancies between the Penguin translation and terminology chosen in other translations particularly in the Hurley, et. al., translation of _Anti-Oedipus_: for example, _groupes assujettis_ and _groupes-sujets_, translated in _Anti-Oedipus_ as "subjugated groups" and "subject-groups", are rendered inconsistently in MR both as "dependent groups" and "independent groups" and as "subjugated groups' and "subject groups" (as in the "Glossary," MR 288-90). See Patton [I&C 8, 1981: 41-48] for a discussion of terminological difficulties in translations of Deleuze and Guattarl. 5/ "I think it convenient to distinguish, in groups, between the 'manifest content' -- that is, what is said and done, the attitudes of the different members, the schisms, the appearance of leaders, of aspiring leaders, scapegoats and so on - and the 'latent content', which can be discovered only by interpreting the various escapes of meaning (ruptures de sens) in the order of phenomena. We may define this latent content as group desire': in the order of phenomena. We may define this latent content as group desire': it must be articulated with the group's specific form of love and death instincts (un ordre pulsionnel d'Eros et de mort)" (MR 15). 6/ It is disappointing that several other essays in PT from this initial period are not included in MR. In his introduction to the translation, David Cooper states that "the selection of articles in this book omits a number of pieces, all of them interesting but having many local references directed at a French public" (3). This criterion would also apply to several articles which are included, and some of the essays omitted have general, and not merely local, significance: for example, in "Les neuf theses de l'Opposition de gauche" ("The Nine Theses on Leftist Opposition," 1966), Guattari presents his first concise political analysis, which he subsequently revises and develops in "Extraits de discussions: fin juin 1968" ('Excerpts from discussions, end of June 196'); "D'un signe `a l'autre" ("From one sign to the other," 1966) is both a response to the prevailing Lacanian psychoanalytical heterodoxy and a first sketch of the semiotic theory which Guattari develops in subsequent periods. ------------------

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