Freud Lives!
Slavoj Žižek
London Review of Books – Vol. 28, No. 10, 25 May 2006
In
recent years, it’s often been said that psychoanalysis is dead. New advances in
the brain sciences have finally put it where it belongs, alongside religious
confessors and dream-readers in the lumber-room of pre-scientific obscurantist
searches for hidden meaning. As Todd Dufresne put it, no figure in the history
of human thought was more wrong about all the fundamentals – with the exception
of Marx, some would add. The Black
Book of Communism was followed last year by the Black Book of Psychoanalysis,
which listed all the theoretical mistakes and instances of clinical fraud
perpetrated by Freud and his followers. In this way, at least, the profound
solidarity of Marxism and psychoanalysis is now there for all to see.
A
century ago, Freud included psychoanalysis as one of what he described as the
three ‘narcissistic illnesses’. First, Copernicus demonstrated that the Earth
moves around the Sun, thereby depriving humans of their central place in the
universe. Then Darwin demonstrated that we are the product of evolution,
thereby depriving us of our privileged place among living beings. Finally, by
making clear the predominant role of the unconscious in psychic processes,
Freud showed that the ego is not master even in its own house. Today,
scientific breakthroughs seem to bring further humiliation: the mind is merely
a machine for data-processing, our sense of freedom and autonomy merely a ‘user’s
illusion’. In comparison, the conclusions of psychoanalysis seem rather
conservative.
Is
psychoanalysis outdated? It certainly appears to be. It is outdated
scientifically, in that the cognitivist-neurobiologist model of the human mind
has superseded the Freudian model; it is outdated in the psychiatric clinic,
where psychoanalytic treatment is losing ground to drug treatment and
behavioural therapy; and it is outdated in society more broadly, where the
notion of social norms which repress the individual’s sexual drives doesn’t
hold up in the face of today’s hedonism. But we should not be too hasty.
Perhaps we should instead insist that the time of psychoanalysis has only just
arrived.
One
of the consistent themes of today’s conservative cultural critique is that, in
our permissive era, children lack firm limits and prohibitions. This frustrates
them, driving them from one excess to another. Only a firm boundary set up by
some symbolic authority can guarantee stability and satisfaction – the
satisfaction that comes of violating the prohibition. In order to make clear
the way negation functions in the unconscious, Freud cited the comment one of
his patients made after recounting a dream about an unknown woman: ‘Whoever
this woman in my dream is, I know she is not my mother.’ A clear proof, for
Freud, that the woman was his mother. What better way to characterise the
typical patient of today than to imagine his reaction to the same dream:
‘Whoever this woman in my dream is, I’m sure she has something to do with my
mother!’
Traditionally,
psychoanalysis has been expected to enable the patient to overcome the
obstacles preventing his or her access to normal sexual satisfaction: if you
are not able to get it, visit an analyst and he will help you to lose your inhibitions.
Now that we are bombarded from all sides by the injunction to ‘Enjoy!’,
psychoanalysis should perhaps be regarded differently, as the only discourse in
which you are allowed not
to enjoy: not ‘not allowed to enjoy’, but relieved of the pressure to enjoy.
Nowhere
is this paradoxical change in the role of psychoanalytic interpretation clearer
than in the case of dreams. The conventional understanding of Freud’s theory of
dreams is that a dream is the phantasmic realisation of some censored unconscious
desire, which is as a rule of a sexual nature. At the beginning of The Interpretation of Dreams,
Freud provides a detailed interpretation of his own dream about ‘Irma’s
injection’. The interpretation is surprisingly reminiscent of an old Soviet
joke: ‘Did Rabinovitch win a new car on the state lottery?’ ‘In principle, yes,
he did. Only it was not a car but a bicycle, it was not new but old, and he did
not win it, it was stolen from him!’ Is a dream the manifestation of the
dreamer’s unconscious sexual desire? In principle, yes. Yet in the dream Freud
chose to demonstrate his theory of dreams, his desire is neither sexual nor
unconscious, and, moreover, it’s not his own.
The
dream begins with a conversation between Freud and his patient Irma about the
failure of her treatment because of an infection caused by an injection. In the
course of the conversation, Freud approaches her and looks deep into her mouth.
He is confronted with the unpleasant sight of scabs and curly structures like
nasal bones. At this point, the horror suddenly changes to comedy. Three
doctors, friends of Freud, among them one called Otto, appear and begin to
enumerate, in ridiculous pseudo-professional jargon, possible (and mutually
exclusive) causes of Irma’s infection. If anyone had been to blame, it
transpires in the dream, it is Otto, because he gave Irma the injection:
‘Injections ought not to be made so thoughtlessly,’ the doctors conclude, ‘and
probably the syringe had not been clean.’ So, the ‘latent thought’ articulated
in the dream is neither sexual nor unconscious, but Freud’s fully conscious
wish to absolve himself of responsibility for the failure of Irma’s treatment.
How does this fit with the thesis that dreams manifest unconscious sexual
desires?
A
crucial refinement is necessary here. The unconscious desire which animates the
dream is not merely the dream’s latent thought, which is translated into its
explicit content, but another unconscious wish, which inscribes itself in the
dream through the Traumarbeit
(‘dream-work’), the process whereby the latent thought is distorted into the
dream’s explicit form. Here lies the paradox of the dream-work: we want to get
rid of a pressing, disturbing thought of which we are fully conscious, so we
distort it, translating it into the hieroglyph of the dream. However, it is
through this distortion that another, much more fundamental desire encodes
itself in the dream, and this desire is unconscious and sexual.
What
is the ultimate meaning of Freud’s dream? In his own analysis, Freud focuses on
the dream-thought, on his ‘superficial’ wish to be blameless in his treatment
of Irma. However, in the details of his interpretation there are hints of
deeper motivations. The dream-encounter with Irma reminds Freud of several
other women. The oral examination recalls another patient, a governess, who had
appeared a ‘picture of youthful beauty’ until he looked into her mouth. Irma’s
position by a window reminds him of a meeting with an ‘intimate woman friend’
of Irma’s of whom he ‘had a very high opinion’; thinking about her now, Freud
has ‘every reason to suppose that this other lady, too, was a hysteric’. The
scabs and nasal bones remind him of his own use of cocaine to reduce nasal
swelling, and of a female patient who, following his example, had developed an
‘extensive necrosis of the nasal mucous membrane’. His consultation with one of
the doctors brings to mind an occasion on which Freud’s treatment of a woman
patient gave rise to a ‘severe toxic state’, to which she subsequently
‘succumbed’; the patient had the same name as his eldest daughter, Mathilde.
The unconscious desire of the dream is Freud’s wish to be the ‘primordial
father’ who possesses all the women Irma embodies in the dream.
However,
the dream presents a further enigma: whose
desire does it manifest? Recent commentaries clearly establish that the true
motivation behind the dream was Freud’s desire to absolve Fliess, his close
friend and collaborator, of responsibility and guilt. It was Fliess who botched
Irma’s nose operation, and the dream’s desire is not to exculpate Freud
himself, but his friend, who was, at this point, Freud’s ‘subject supposed to
know’, the object of his transference. The dream dramatises his wish to show
that Fliess wasn’t responsible for the medical failure, that he wasn’t lacking
in knowledge. The dream does manifest Freud’s desire – but only insofar as his
desire is already the Other’s (Fliess’s) desire.
Why
do we dream? Freud’s answer is deceptively simple: the ultimate function of the
dream is to enable the dreamer to stay asleep. This is usually interpreted as
bearing on the kinds of dream we have when some external disturbance – noise,
for example – threatens to wake us. In such a situation, the sleeper
immediately begins to imagine a situation which incorporates this external
stimulus and thereby is able to continue sleeping for a while longer; when the
external stimulus becomes too strong, he finally wakes up. Are things really so
straightforward? In another famous example from The Interpretation of Dreams, an
exhausted father, whose young son has just died, falls asleep and dreams that
the child is standing by his bed in flames, whispering the horrifying reproach:
‘Father, can’t you see I’m burning?’ Soon afterwards, the father wakes to
discover that a fallen candle has set fire to his dead son’s shroud. He had
smelled the smoke while asleep, and incorporated the image of his burning son
into his dream to prolong his sleep. Had the father woken up because the
external stimulus became too strong to be contained within the dream-scenario?
Or was it the obverse, that the father constructed the dream in order to
prolong his sleep, but what he encountered in the dream was much more
unbearable even than external reality, so that he woke up to escape into that
reality.
In
both dreams, there is a traumatic encounter (the sight of Irma’s throat, the
vision of the burning son); but in the second dream, the dreamer wakes at this
point, while in the first, the horror gives way to the arrival of the doctors.
The parallel offers us the key to understanding Freud’s theory of dreams. Just
as the father’s awakening from the second dream has the same function as the
sudden change of tone in the first, so our ordinary reality enables us to evade
an encounter with true trauma.
Adorno
said that the Nazi motto ‘Deutschland, erwache!’ actually meant its opposite:
if you responded to this call, you could continue to sleep and dream (i.e. to
avoid engagement with the real of social antagonism). In the first stanza of
Primo Levi’s poem ‘Reveille’ the concentration camp survivor recalls being in
the camp, asleep, dreaming intense dreams about returning home, eating, telling
his relatives his story, when, suddenly, he is woken up by the Polish kapo’s
command ‘Wstawac!’ (‘Get up!’). In the second stanza, he is at home after the
war, well fed, having told his story to his family, when, suddenly, he imagines
hearing again the shout, ‘Wstawac!’ The reversal of the relationship between
dream and reality from the first stanza to the second is crucial. Their content
is formally the same – the pleasant domestic scene is interrupted by the
injunction ‘Get up!’ – but in the first, the dream is cruelly interrupted by
the wake-up call, while in the second, reality is interrupted by the imagined
command. We might imagine the second example from The Interpretation of Dreams as belonging
to the Holocaust survivor who, unable to save his son from the crematorium, is
haunted afterwards by his reproach: ‘Vater, siehst du nicht dass ich
verbrenne?’
In
our ‘society of the spectacle’, in which what we experience as everyday reality
more and more takes the form of the lie made real, Freud’s insights show their
true value. Consider the interactive computer games some of us play
compulsively, games which enable a neurotic weakling to adopt the screen
persona of a macho aggressor, beating up other men and violently enjoying
women. It’s all too easy to assume that this weakling takes refuge in
cyberspace in order to escape from a dull, impotent reality. But perhaps the games
are more telling than that. What if, in playing them, I articulate the perverse
core of my personality which, because of ethico-social constraints, I am not
able to act out in real life? Isn’t my virtual persona in a way ‘more real than
reality’? Isn’t it precisely because I am aware that this is ‘just a game’ that
in it I can do what I would never be able to in the real world? In this precise
sense, as Lacan put it, the Truth has the structure of a fiction: what appears
in the guise of dreaming, or even daydreaming, is sometimes the truth on whose
repression social reality itself is founded. Therein resides the ultimate
lesson of The
Interpretation of Dreams: reality is for those who cannot sustain
the dream.
Slavoj Žižek is the international director of the Birkbeck
Institute for the Humanities, University of London. His most recent book is Less
than Nothing: Hegel and the Shadow of Dialectical Materialism.
http://www.lrb.co.uk/v28/n10/slavoj-zizek/freud-lives
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