Looking Awry was
first published in 1992, but the paragraph I want to discuss reads as if
written with the controversies surrounding the deaths of Trayvon Martin, Michael
Brown and others in mind. It begins with the following:
“There is, perhaps, an experience in the field of politics that entails a kind of ‘identification with the symptom’: the well-known pathetic experience ‘We are all that!,” the experience of identification when we are confronted with a phenomenon that functions as an intrusion of unbearable truth, as an index of the fact that the social mechanism ‘doesn’t work.’”
According to Zizek, successful psychoanalysis sometimes ends
with the analysand clinging to something that represents the very problem. This
is what is meant by “identification with the symptom.” He makes the example of a
character in Sergio Leone’s Once Upon a
Time in the West. Robbers force the character in his youth to play the
harmonica even as he must participate in his own brother’s murder. The incident
emotionally unhinges the boy, and from that time forward, the only thing that
holds him together is playing the harmonica, the very item that ties him to his
brother’s death.
Zizek draws an analogy to a similar phenomenon on a social
scale and Ferguson is exactly such a traumatic event. Discomforting yet
undeniable truths have come to light, showing us that our society is broken.
The original event presents us with our broken justice system, especially with
regard to young black men, and the resulting controversy brings out the worst
American society has to offer: fetishization of violence and enduring racism.
Even now as more evidence has come to light and the police themselves have admitted Officer Darren Wilson shot Mike Brown as he was running away, the
trolls are out there blaming the victim.
Zizek uses anti-Semitism as an example to elicit a number of
attitudes one may take when faced with such an “unbearable truth,” and
eventually arrives at one that has been openly adopted and employed in the wake
of the Trayvon Martin and Mike Brown shootings:
“Let us take, for example, Jew-baiting riots. A whole network of strategies—simple ignorance; treating it as some deplorable horror that does not, however, really concern us . . . ; ‘sincere compassion’ for the victims—allow us to evade the fact that the persecution of Jews pertains to a certain repressed truth of our civilization. We attain an authentic attitude only when we arrive at the experience that . . . 'we are all Jews.' And it is the same for all traumatic moments of the intrusion into the social field of some ‘impossible’ kernel that resists integration; ‘We all live in Chernobyl!,” “We are all boat people!,” and so on.” (boldface mine)
This is exactly what we have seen in the “I am Trayvon
Martin” and “I am Mike Brown” movements, whether it be hashtags using those
words on Twitter, wearing hoodies, or confronting the police with your hands in
the air. In all these cases, a number of people confronted with the usually
hidden dark side of their society react not by denying the reality of the dark
side, but by identifying with it, recognizing that it belongs to them, too.
The passage continues with a return to more psychoanalytic
terminology:
“Apropos of these cases, it should also be clear how ‘identification with the symptom’ is correlated with ‘going through the fantasy’: by means of such an identification with the (social) symptom, we traverse and subvert the fantasy frame that determines the field of social meaning, the ideological self-understanding of a given society.”
In other words, we abandon the fantasy version of our
society, the one that we usually hold, according to which police officers are always
kindly gents who lend a helping hand, the courts never fail to deliver a just
sentence, and people of all races experience equal opportunity and success.
Instead, we recognize--because some blight that was always there has raised its
ugly head--that this vision of our world is a fiction that serves as palliative.
In reality, sometimes police officers shoot unarmed teens as they run away and
that is just the beginning of the disgrace to our systems of power, to our nation,
and to ourselves.
This transformation of consciousness is integral for
positive change and healing.
My posts on Looking
Awry are likely to be more of a learning experiment than any statement of
my own original ideas. I find both Zizek and Lacan to be difficult to grasp,
but hopefully I can learn something while writing about them, and without
mucking up the concepts too much. In any case, the above passage of Zizek’s
seemed so applicable to Ferguson that I felt compelled to return to this
troubling event.
You demonstrate the care with which we should approach each sentence. The idea is not to finish the book; rather, it is to comprehend the paragraph.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Grizoo2. (Or were you being sarcastic?) In any case, I will finish the book, but as short as it is, it takes time. That one paragraph had a lot to unpack.
ReplyDelete