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Master

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{{Top}}maître{{Bottom}} [[Image:MASTERDISCOURSE.jpg|centerthumb|right]] =====Jacques Lacan==========Hegelian Dialectic=====In his [[Works of Jacques Lacan|work]] during the 1950s [[Lacan]] often refers to "the dialectic of the master and the slave", which [[Hegel]] introduces in ''[[Phenomen­ology of Spirit]]'' (1807).  As in all his other [[Hegel]]ian references, [[Lacan]] is indebted to [[Alexandre Kojève]]'s reading of [[Hegel]], which [[Lacan]] encountered when attending [[Kojève]]'s lectures on [[Hegel]] in the 1930s.<ref>[[Alexandre Kojève|Kojève, Alexandre]]. ''Introduction to the Reading of Hegel'', 1947 [1933-39]. Trans. James. H. Nichols Jr., New York and London: Basic Books, 1969.</ref>  =====Alexandre Kojève=====According to Kojève, the [[dialectic]] of the [[master]] and the [[master|slave]] is the inevitable result of the fact that [[human]] [[desire]] is the [[desire]] for recognition.  In order to achieve recognition, the [[subject]] must impose the idea that he has of himself on an [[other]].  However, since this [[other]] also [[desire]]s recognition, he also must do the same, and hence the [[subject]] is forced to engage in combat with the [[other]].  ====="Fight to the Death"=====This fight for recognition, for "pure prestige"<ref>[[Alexandre Kojève|Kojève, Alexandre]]. ''Introduction to the Reading of Hegel'', 1947 [1933-39]. Trans. James. H. Nichols Jr., New York and London: Basic Books, 1969: 7; {{S1}} p. 223</ref> must be a "[[master|fight to the death]]", since it is only by risking his life for the sake of recognition that one can prove that he is truly [[human]].  However, the combat must in fact stop short of the [[death]] of either combatant, since recognition can only be granted by a living being.  Thus the struggle ends when one of the two gives up his [[desire]] for recognition and surrenders to the [[other]]; the vanquished one recognises the victor as his "[[master]]" and becomes his "[[master|slave]]".  In fact, [[human]] [[society]] is only possible because some [[human]] [[being]]s accept being [[master|slaves]] instead of fighting to the [[death]]; a community of [[master]]s would be impossible.  =====Master and Slave=====After achieving victory, the [[master]] sets the [[master|slave]] to work for him.  The [[master|slave]] works by transforming [[nature]] in order that the [[master]] may consume it and enjoy it.  However, the victory is not as absolute as it seems; the relation between the [[master]] and the [[master|slave]] is [[dialectic]]al because it leads to the [[negation]] of their respective positions. On the one hand, the recognition achieved by the [[master]] is unsatisfactory because it is not another man who grants him this recognition but only a [[slave]], who is for the [[master]] a mere animal or thing; thus "the man who behaves as a Master will never be satisfied."<ref>[[Alexandre Kojève|Kojève, Alexandre]]. ''Introduction to the Reading of Hegel'', 1947 [1933-39]. Trans. James. H. Nichols Jr., New York and London: Basic Books, 1969: 20</ref>  On the other hand, the [[master|slave]] is partly compensated for his defeat by the fact that, by working, he raises himself above [[nature]] by making it other than it was.  =====Outcome=====In the process of changing the world the [[master|slave]] changes himself and becomes the author of his own destiny, unlike the [[master]] who changes only through the mediation of the [[master|slave]]'s work.  [[progress|Historical progress]] is now "the product of the working slave and not of the warlike Master."<ref>[[Alexandre Kojève|Kojève, Alexandre]]. ''Introduction to the Reading of Hegel'', 1947 [1933-39]. Trans. James. H. Nichols Jr., New York and London: Basic Books, 1969: 52</ref>  The outcome of the [[dialectic]] is therefore paradoxical: the [[master]] ends up in a dissatisfying "existential impasse", while the [[master|slave]] retains the possibility of achieving true satisfaction by means of "dialectically overcoming" his slavery.  =====Jacques Lacan=====[[Lacan]] draws on the [[dialectic]] of the [[master]] and the [[master|slave]] to illustrate a wide range of points.  For example the struggle for pure prestige illustrates the [[intersubjectivity|intersubjective]] nature of [[desire]], in which the important thing is for [[desire]] to be recognised by an [[other]].  The [[master|fight to the death]] also illustrates the [[aggressivity]] inherent in the [[dual relation]]ship between the [[ego]] and the [[counterpart]].<ref>{{E}} p. 142</ref> Furthermore, the [[master|slave]] who resignedly "waits for the master's death"<ref>{{E}} p. 99</ref> offers a good analogy of the [[obsessional neurotic]], who is characterized by hesitation and procrastination.<ref>{{S1}} p. 286</ref>  =====Discourse of the Master=====[[Lacan]] also takes up the [[dialectic]]of the [[master]] and the [[master|slave]] in his theorization of the [[discourse]] of the [[master]].  In the formulation of this [[dis­course]], the [[master]] is the [[master signifier]] ('''S1''') who puts the [[master|slave]] ('''S2''') to work to produce a [[surplus]] (''a'') which he can appropriate for himself.  The [[master signifier]] is that which represents a [[subject]] for all other [[signifier]]s; the [[discourse]] of the [[master]] is thus an attempt at totalization (which is why [[Lacan ]]links the [[discourse]] of the [[master]] with [[philosophy]] and [[philosophy|ontology]], playing on the homo­phony between ''maître'' and ''m'être''<ref>{{S20}} p. 33</ref>).  However, this attempt always fails because the [[master signifier]] can never represent the [[subject]] completely; there is always some [[surplus]] which escapes representation.
==See Also==
{{See}}* [[Counterpart]]* [[Desire]]||* [[Dialectic]]* [[Discourse]]||* [[Ego]]* [[Nature]]||* [[HegelPhilosophy]]* [[SlaveProgress]]||* [[Signifier]]* [[Subject]]{{Also}}
[[Category:Psychoanalysis]]
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