Monday 8 May 2017

Hate thy Neighbour – a contribution from Roger Litten

As part of the PIPOL activity, people in various countries and cities have rallied to the call to mobilise against the possibility of Marine Le Pen as president in France by writing. Today, of course, we know the result of the election, but even yesterday we were still waiting to hear whether France had followed the trend of UK and USA in lurching to the right. It is not the end of the struggle, of course, but at least there is more time to organise, speak out, write, and combat the waves of ignorance, fear and hate that continue to lap at the door.








Hate Thy Neighbour
Roger Litten
first published on PIPOL 8 site – 21 April 2017



The rise of the National Front in France and the entry of the discourse of the far right into mainstream politics is something that should concern us all.
We should not allow ourselves to be deceived by Marine Le Pen´s attempts to present the friendly face of fascism, going so far as to purge her own father from the party.
We psychoanalysts above all should be aware that the elimination of the father serves as a fundamental pivot for the transmission of a culture. But just what kind of culture is being promised to us here?
Have we forgotten that almost half a century ago Lacan was already situating the problematic of segregation as “the mark, the scar, left by the father´s disappearance”?[1] How then are we to ensure that we do not find ourselves sliding from the father to worse?
Recent events in America, England and other countries across Europe show that there is no room for complacency here. Although the circumstances may differ in various countries, what we are witnessing is a combination of populism, nationalism and xenophobia becoming the new norm of political discourse.
The result of the Brexit referendum provides ample evidence of the attraction of the appeal to nationalist and populist sentiments, the reactionary nostalgia for symbols of national sovereignty and tradition in a country that has still not come to terms with the decline of its once proud empire and its diminished place in the world.
But we should not overlook the key role played in the outcome of that referendum of an almost visceral response of repudiation and rejection, an overwhelming sense of fear and helplessness in the face of the unfolding refugee crisis in Europe, the prospect of a wave of undifferentiated immigration coming out of Syria and other areas of political and social breakdown in Africa and the Middle East.
The same island geography that underpinned the rise of Britain´s Empire off the back of naval power facilitates the seductive idea of shutting down our borders, cutting ourselves off from mainland Europe, turning our backs of the challenges of social, political and economic integration that it represents, and taking refuge in diffuse and ill-defined notions of national identity.
The vacuity of perhaps the most effective slogan of the Brexit campaign - “Take back control” - allowed it to stand proxy for the question of immigration. In response to Angela Merkel´s open hearted but politically naïve reaffirmation of the “open borders” policy of the European Union, the promise of being able to take back control of our national borders was able to over-ride any appeals to economic self-interest.
Amongst other concerns in the wake of the referendum there is one issue that has perhaps not received the media coverage that it warrants. This is the alarming rise in so-called “hate crimes” (in some areas up 100%)[2] since the referendum, a proliferation of attacks on foreigners, immigrants, minorities, anyone bearing a perceived trace of difference.
It is here that we perceive most clearly the disjunction between the empty rhetoric of national sovereignty and the cold reality of daily attacks in the street, serving as the outlet for a mindless violence, brutality and hatred that has been given new legitimacy by the outcome of the referendum.
What then can we contribute on these matters, especially those of us who look on with concern but have no direct part to play in the forthcoming French elections? The fact that we have no vote in this matter does not mean that we have nothing to say.
In the first instance, each one of us, as subjects and citizens, can be as articulate as possible about where we stand on these matters. But in our capacity as psychoanalysts we can seek to go beyond simple condemnation and moral outrage, attempting to account for something of the perverse attraction of the positions we condemn, the emotional logic that makes each one of us vulnerable, to one degree or another, to the seductive whispers of hatred and intolerance.
If nothing else, our experience as analysands can teach us something about the status of the subject, which as Jacques-Alain Miller long ago taught us, is by definition an immigrant, born of the signifiers of the Other, alienated from the country of its birth, and always to some extent an exile, a refugee from a jouissance to which we are never quite reconciled and about which we ultimately wish to know nothing.
But it is above all our experience of occupying the position of object in the clinic, incarnating the position of reject, refuse of discourse and of jouissance, that provides a unique platform for reading the co-ordinates of the libidinal logic at play in current political developments.
It is on this basis that already in the 1920s Freud was reading the rise of populism in Europe in the aftermath of the First World War. His great text from 1921, Group Psychology and the Analysis of the Ego, devoted to the logic of mass phenomena, remains today one of our fundamental references.
In this text Freud explores the libidinal and emotional factors at play in the formation of groups in the light of the psychic mechanisms of hypnosis and suggestion. His examination of the role of the leader in the formation of the group allowed him to situate the question of identification at the heart of group formations.
He demonstrated that it is the identification with the leader, not just as bearer of the insignias of prestige and the promise of an equal love for all, but also as standing in the place of the murdered father of the primal horde, that is the pivot for the horizontal identifications between members that make up the cohesion of any group.
Situating the leader in his or her position as substitute for the dead father allowed Freud to consider the other factors that can take the place of the leader in carrying out the same function as point of reference for the unifying tendencies of the group, asking whether “a common tendency, a wish in which a number of people can have a share, may not in the same way serve as a substitute”.
Crucially, Freud even highlighted here that a negative tendency of repulsion, rejection or hatred can play just the same unifying role in group formation as one of positive attraction. “The leader or the leading idea might also (…) be negative; hatred against a particular person or institution might operate in just the same unifying way, and might call up the same kind of emotional ties as positive attachment.”[3]
The Freudian problematic of the articulation between vertical and horizontal identifications in the group continues to provide us with a minimal but flexible framework for examining the interaction between nationalism and populism in contemporary politics. One of the more pressing issues today then becomes that of exploring the hybrid mutations of the articulation between these two axes in the era of accelerated decline of patriarchal authority and legitimacy.
Once again it is the work of Lacan that provides us with the most reliable guide in addressing these questions. His linguistic formalization of the Freudian Oedipus Complex allowed him to reduce the question of identification with the leader to the logic of subjective identifications with the master signifier. At the same time his conceptualisation of the object a as residue of jouissance not reducible to the signifier, allowed him to locate more precisely the disturbing element at the heart of subjective identity and at the root of what Freud had called the discontents of civilization.
It is the articulation between the master signifier and the object a that provides us with the framework for exploring the effects of segregation that we witness increasingly as the inexorable counterpart to the contemporary politics of identification. The more conditions of group coherence are indexed on appeals to national identity, the more aggravated are the corollary tendencies towards the elimination of disruptive residues and any heterogeneous traces of difference.
It is this logic that enables us to grasp the degree to which the cremation of the Jews (Papa Le Pen´s “detail of history”) was in fact an integral corollary of the quest for Aryan purity and adherence to symbols of national identity.
It was above all in the decade following his expulsion from the IPA, finding himself the object of excommunication by the discourse of orthodoxy, that Lacan continued to refine and question the status of object a and the logic of segregation that it entails[4]. His charting of the rise of the object to the social zenith in place of the master signifier allowed him to expose the converse logic that promised the rise of ever more extreme forms of segregation played out in the real, as predicted in his words from the Proposition of 1967:
“Let me summarise by saying that what we have seen emerge from this, to our horror, represents the reaction of precursors in relation to what will unfold as a consequence of the rearranging of social groupings by science and, notably, of the universalisation science introduces into them. Our future as common markets will be balanced by an increasingly hard-line extension of the process of segregation.”
According to this revised logic, xenophobia, racism and segregation are not simply secondary byproducts of the mechanisms at play in globalization and national unification. Rather the later Lacan was able to demonstrate that signifying identifications are in fact predicated on a primary act of rejection of an inassimilable jouissance at the level of the drive.
This is the logic that is elaborated by Eric Laurent in his indispensible text entitled Racism 2.0.[5] “The founding crime is not the murder of the father but the will to murder he who embodies the jouissance that I reject.” Identification with the signifier fails to resolve the question of jouissance not simply because the signifier never entirely covers the field of jouissance, always leaving an inassimilable and destabilizing residue, but more profoundly because of a fundamental and irremediable disjunction at the heart of the articulation between signifier and jouissance.
The fragility and instability of identifications, whether at the subjective or national level, are thus indexed on a fundamental void in the knowledge of jouissance that inhabits us, “a fundamental not-knowing with respect to the jouissance that would correspond to identification.” Because “we have no knowledge of the jouissance from which we might take our orientation”, and because we can no longer rely on the symbolic co-ordinates of the Other to provide our reference, “we only know how to reject the jouissance of others”.
Eric Laurent traces out the consequences of this logic of segregative identifications founded not simply on a rejection of jouissance but also and more problematically on a complementary denial of human identity to the one whose jouissance I reject. “He who I reject for having a jouissance distinct from mine is not a man.”
It is clear that this logic opens the door to all kinds of barbarities, perpetrated precisely in the name of national identity, against those who come to embody the jouissance that I reject in myself. It also exposes the vacuity of all the secondary rationalizations invoked to justify our discrimination as well as the fundamental duplicity of the identifications built upon this rejection. “The malicious jouissance at stake in racist discourse is the failure to recognize this logic.”
To conclude we can perhaps return to another key reference on these questions, the session devoted to racism in Jacques-Alain Miller´s course from 1985-86 on Extimacy, recently published in The Lacanian Review under the title “Extimate Enemies”[6]. In this text, Jacques-Alain Miller explains why recourse to liberal ideals of universal humanism fails to resolve the issues at stake in racism and segregation:
“This humanism becomes completely disoriented when the real of the Other manifests itself.” Appeals to the rights of man or a sense of our common humanity fail to resolve the question “because the universal mode (…) encounters its limits in the strictly particular. It encounters its limits in what is neither universal nor universalisable, in what we call with Lacan the mode of jouissance.”
It is here that Miller situates the “remainder that one could call the obscure causes of racism, against which indignation is perhaps not enough”. He then goes on to indicate the questions that arise at this point, the consequences of which we are still exploring at a theoretical, social and political level:
“Putting the hatred of the Other in question is not sufficient, since this would precisely raise the question of knowing why this Other is Other. (…) The hatred of the Other is something more than aggressiveness. In this aggressiveness there is a constant that merits the name of hatred, the hatred that aims at the real in the Other. (…) What is it that makes this Other so Other that one can hate it in its very being? It is the hatred of the jouissance of the Other. This is the most general form of modern racism that we witness. It is the hatred of the particular way in which the Other enjoys. (…)
“You are willing to recognize your neighbour as Other as long as he does not live next door to you. You are willing to love your neighbour as yourself, but above all when he is at a distance, separated from you. When this Other gets a bit closer, one has to be an optimist (…) to believe that this produces an effect of solidarity, to believe that this leads straight away to mutual recognition. (…) When the Other gets a little too close, new fantasies appear that are especially concerned with the excess of the jouissance in the Other. (…)
“The essence of the matter is that the Other is unfairly subtracting from you a certain part of your jouissance. That is the constant. The question of tolerance or intolerance (…) has to be situated at another level, which is that of the tolerance or intolerance of the jouissance of the Other – of that Other inasmuch as this Other is fundamentally the one who is robbing me of my jouissance.
“For our part, we know that the fundamental status of the object is to have always been stolen by the Other. We write this theft of jouissance minus phi, the matheme of castration. If the problem appears unsolvable, it is because the Other is Other in my interior. The root of racism is the hatred of one´s own jouissance. There is no other – if the Other is in my interior in a position of extimacy, it is also hatred of myself.”
Here we find ourselves at the heart of the logic that drives the discourse of hatred and segregation. It is up to each one of us, one by one, to grasp the way this logic plays itself out in our own experience and to trace out its consequences for an ethics and a politics based in a reading of the logic at stake in contemporary events and the future that is being promised to us.





[1] Lacan, J., “Note on the Father”, The Lacanian Review, No. 3, 2017.
[2] Sharman, J., and Jones, I., “Hate crimes rise by 100%”, The Independent, 15th February, 2017.
[3] Freud, S., “Group Psychology and the Analysis of the Ego”, Standard Edition, 18. (1921)
[4] Cf., Lacan, J., The Seminar Book XI, The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psychoanalysis, (Chs. 1 and 25); “Proposition of 9 October 1967”, in Analysis, No. 6, 1995; “Address on Child Psychosis”, Hurly-Burly, No. 8, 2012; “Preface” to Lemaire, A., Jacques Lacan, Routledge, 1977; “Television”, Television/A Challenge to the Psychoanalytical Establishment, Norton, 1990.
[5] Laurent, E., “LQ in English: Racism 2.0”, available online: http://ampblog2006.blogspot.com.es
[6] Miller, J.-A., “Extimate Enemies”, The Lacanian Review, No. 3, 2017.

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