Difference between revisions of "Linguistics and psychoanalysis"

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In 1890 the "science of language" had not yet become "general linguistics," the "fundamental science" of the humanities it would become following the work of Ferdinand de Saussure (1857-1913). Philologists studied <i>scripta</i> (written traces) and the history of languages but not their origins or that of the original language (<i>Ursprache</i>), a search that was felt to be irrelevant to the science of language, according to the first article of the bylaws of the Société linguistique de Paris, composed in 1866.
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In 1890 the "[[science]] of [[language]]" had not yet become "general [[linguistics]]," the "fundamental science" of the humanities it would become following the [[work]] of Ferdinand de [[Saussure]] (1857-1913). Philologists studied <i>scripta</i> (written traces) and the [[history]] of [[languages]] but not their origins or that of the original language (<i>Ursprache</i>), a [[search]] that was felt to be irrelevant to the science of language, according to the first article of the bylaws of the Société [[linguistique]] de [[Paris]], composed in 1866.
From the point of view of linguistics, Hans Sperber's article on the "sexual origins of language" (1912) was more an application of Freudian theory than a form of linguistic research.Émile Benveniste's rebuttal of Carl Abel's claims about the opposite meanings of words ("Über den Gegensinn der Urworte," 1885) starts from the same point: The discursive use of the euphemism or antiphrasis does not justify this claim. Moreover, there is no primitive language as far as linguists are concerned. Language is a system of signs, articulated through a process of differentiation, that organizes the first representation of the world by and for the speaking subject. At the beginning of the twentieth century, the distinction "<i>langage/langue</i>"—language as spoken versus language as system—used by de Saussure in his classes and published in the <i>Course on General Linguistics</i> after his death (1916), was not widely known.
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From the point of view of linguistics, [[Hans]] Sperber's article on the "[[sexual]] origins of language" (1912) was more an application of [[Freudian]] [[theory]] than a [[form]] of [[linguistic]] research.Émile Benveniste's rebuttal of Carl Abel's claims [[about]] the opposite [[meanings]] of [[words]] ("Über den Gegensinn der Urworte," 1885) starts from the same point: The discursive use of the euphemism or antiphrasis does not justify this [[claim]]. Moreover, there is no [[primitive]] language as far as [[linguists]] are concerned. Language is a [[system]] of [[signs]], articulated through a [[process]] of differentiation, that organizes the first [[representation]] of the [[world]] by and for the [[speaking]] [[subject]]. At the beginning of the twentieth century, the [[distinction]] "<i>[[langage]]/langue</i>"—language as spoken versus language as system—used by de Saussure in his classes and published in the <i>Course on General Linguistics</i> after his [[death]] (1916), was not widely known.
Some philologists, however, became interested in spoken language, in everyday words, in the nature of the "system" or internal structure of language (<i>langue</i>). By collecting slips of the tongue, Rudolf Meringer (1895) attempted to determine the laws of evolution and the internal operation of <i>Sprachorganismus</i> (the organism of language), comparing it to Freud's "language apparatus" (1891b). Freud borrowed eight examples from Meringer's corpus, including the opening and closing remarks of the president of parliament (1901b). Meringer failed to be amused (1907) by Freud's admiration for the quoted text. Freud in return wrote an ironic comment (1910e), distancing himself from Meringer on the basis of their divergent understanding of slips of the tongue. The two men held different points of view: Meringer prefigured the Saussurian break entailing the internal synchronic description of the structure of languages (that is, at the time of spoken use). His insistence on speech (<i>parole</i>)—which revealed the underlying structure—implied an emphasis on orality, the primary characteristic of languages.
+
Some philologists, however, became interested in spoken language, in everyday words, in the [[nature]] of the "system" or [[internal]] [[structure]] of language (<i>[[langue]]</i>). By collecting [[slips of the tongue]], Rudolf Meringer (1895) attempted to determine the laws of evolution and the internal operation of <i>Sprachorganismus</i> (the organism of language), comparing it to [[Freud]]'s "language [[apparatus]]" (1891b). Freud borrowed eight examples from Meringer's corpus, including the opening and closing remarks of the president of parliament (1901b). Meringer failed to be amused (1907) by Freud's admiration for the quoted [[text]]. Freud in [[return]] wrote an ironic comment (1910e), distancing himself from Meringer on the basis of their divergent [[understanding]] of slips of the tongue. The two men held different points of view: Meringer prefigured the [[Saussurian]] break entailing the internal [[synchronic]] description of the structure of languages (that is, at the [[time]] of spoken use). His [[insistence]] on [[speech]] (<i>[[parole]]</i>)—which revealed the underlying structure—implied an emphasis on orality, the primary characteristic of languages.
De Saussure thus gave the world approximately five thousand languages and rejected the notion of "primitive" languages, which were languages with no written tradition. According to de Saussure, a language should be considered a highly organized structure, a "system of internal relations," whose elements were arbitrary and differential and could be analyzed along two different axes: the paradigmatic (or associative) axis, the axis of elements that were "absent"; and the syntagmatic axis, the axis of elements that were "present." These elements were defined in negative terms: "In language there is only difference." On the plane of sound as well as on the plane of meaning, each element is what the others are not (this was de Saussure's concept of "value"). The axis of the spoken chain can be used to postulate the temporal linearity of the sound (or acoustic) aspect of signs, that is, the "linearity of the signifier." A language is, thus, a set of articulatory, acoustic, and representative (or symbolic) conventions that are socially imposed on the speaker, a <i>Weltanschauung</i>, a treasure deposited in the individual by the mass of speakers.
+
De Saussure thus gave the world approximately five thousand languages and rejected the [[notion]] of "primitive" languages, which were languages with no written [[tradition]]. According to de Saussure, a language should be considered a highly organized structure, a "system of internal relations," whose elements were [[arbitrary]] and differential and could be [[analyzed]] along two different axes: the paradigmatic (or associative) axis, the axis of elements that were "[[absent]]"; and the [[syntagmatic]] axis, the axis of elements that were "[[present]]." These elements were defined in [[negative]] [[terms]]: "In language there is only [[difference]]." On the plane of sound as well as on the plane of [[meaning]], each element is what the [[others]] are not (this was de Saussure's [[concept]] of "[[value]]"). The axis of the spoken [[chain]] can be used to postulate the [[temporal]] linearity of the sound (or acoustic) aspect of signs, that is, the "linearity of the [[signifier]]." A language is, thus, a set of articulatory, acoustic, and [[representative]] (or [[symbolic]]) conventions that are socially imposed on the [[speaker]], a <i>[[Weltanschauung]]</i>, a treasure deposited in the [[individual]] by the mass of speakers.
The same position is found in the work ofÉdouard Pichon (linguist and psychoanalyst, founding member of the Paris Psychoanalytic Society, then its president in 1938), from whom Jacques Lacan borrowed the idea of "foreclosure" (<i>Verwerfung</i>). From de Saussure's work, Lacan derived the concepts of the "treasure of signifiers," the unconscious structured as a language, and the condition of the unconscious. From Roman Jakobson (1963) he derived the concepts of metaphor (paradigmatic) and metonymy (syntagmatic), and reworked the concepts of condensation and displacement. Lacan also borrowed from de Saussure the idea of the arbitrariness of the sign and its duality: signified and signifier. The signified is the mental image, the concept; the signifier the acoustic image (or phonetic form). This relationship is reversed and hierarchized in Lacan (S/s) with an extreme (non-linguistic) expansion of the signifier.
+
The same [[position]] is found in the work ofÉdouard Pichon ([[linguist]] and [[psychoanalyst]], founding member of the Paris [[Psychoanalytic]] [[Society]], then its president in 1938), from whom Jacques [[Lacan]] borrowed the [[idea]] of "[[foreclosure]]" (<i>[[Verwerfung]]</i>). From de Saussure's work, Lacan derived the [[concepts]] of the "treasure of [[signifiers]]," the [[unconscious]] [[structured]] as a language, and the condition of the unconscious. From Roman [[Jakobson]] (1963) he derived the concepts of [[metaphor]] (paradigmatic) and [[metonymy]] (syntagmatic), and reworked the concepts of [[condensation]] and [[displacement]]. Lacan also borrowed from de Saussure the idea of the arbitrariness of the [[sign]] and its [[duality]]: [[signified]] and signifier. The signified is the [[mental]] [[image]], the concept; the signifier the acoustic image (or phonetic form). This [[relationship]] is reversed and hierarchized in Lacan (S/s) with an extreme (non-linguistic) expansion of the signifier.
Saussurian arbitrariness—which is what makes his work so original—does not refer to the lack of motivation between object and sign (word) (<i>Sache/Zeichen</i>) discussed in Plato's <i>Cratylus</i>, but to the absence of a one-to-one relation between elements of the system of signifieds and signifiers. The concept of "double articulation" (Martinet, 1960/1964) demonstrates this: for linguists no meaning can be attributed to a phoneme or letter, something a linguist shaped by psychoanalysis like Ivan Fonagy (1970) rejects. For Fonagy, for example, language and unconscious, language and drive, are contiguous.
+
Saussurian arbitrariness—which is what makes his work so original—does not refer to the [[lack]] of motivation between [[object]] and sign ([[word]]) (<i>Sache/Zeichen</i>) discussed in [[Plato]]'s <i>Cratylus</i>, but to the [[absence]] of a one-to-one relation between elements of the system of signifieds and signifiers. The concept of "[[double]] articulation" (Martinet, 1960/1964) demonstrates this: for linguists no meaning can be attributed to a [[phoneme]] or [[letter]], something a linguist shaped by [[psychoanalysis]] like Ivan Fonagy (1970) rejects. For Fonagy, for example, language and unconscious, language and [[drive]], are contiguous.
The same was true for Pichon, the author, with Jacques Damourette, of a voluminous grammar text and a large number of articles. It was Pichon who created the concepts of <i>pensée-langage</i>, which reflects the separation of form and content, and <i>sexuisemblance</i>, which reflects the connection between gender and sex. His work on negation (1928) and the grammatical person (1938), criticized by Benveniste as too "psychological," serves as the premise for the concept of the "shifter" in Jakobson's work, and research on "enunciation" for Benveniste. Among linguists, including contemporary linguists who speak of the (re)introduction of the subject into their field (through pragmatics, the analysis of meaning or discourse), the subject is always (or almost always) a controlling intentional subject. The failure to identify intentionality, moreover, is what ended the Saussurian analysis of anagrams (the search for a proper name buried—disseminated—in the poetic chain), although they can be understood as a search for an unconscious subject.
+
The same was [[true]] for Pichon, the [[author]], with Jacques Damourette, of a voluminous grammar text and a large [[number]] of articles. It was Pichon who created the concepts of <i>pensée-langage</i>, which reflects the [[separation]] of form and [[content]], and <i>sexuisemblance</i>, which reflects the connection between [[gender]] and sex. His work on [[negation]] (1928) and the [[grammatical]] person (1938), criticized by Benveniste as too "[[psychological]]," serves as the premise for the concept of the "[[shifter]]" in Jakobson's work, and research on "[[enunciation]]" for Benveniste. Among linguists, including contemporary linguists who [[speak]] of the (re)introduction of the subject into their field (through pragmatics, the [[analysis]] of meaning or [[discourse]]), the subject is always (or almost always) a controlling intentional subject. The failure to [[identify]] [[intentionality]], moreover, is what ended the Saussurian analysis of anagrams (the search for a proper [[name]] buried—disseminated—in the poetic chain), although they can be [[understood]] as a search for an unconscious subject.
This conscious and controlling subject marks the difference between linguistics and psychoanalysis. Here, their epistemological terrain is distinct. Linguists and psychoanalysts apprehend the same words in different ways. Linguists first try to describe languages and construct a scientific theory of their workings. Their concern is one of generalized objectivity, which could be described as an Aristotelian approach. Consequently, they attempt to eliminate any subjectivity, while psychoanalysts acknowledge it as part of the process of association. The analysts' goal is not to put forth a theory of language but of the unconscious. This is why there are so many differences between the two fields in spite of the many borrowings by psychoanalysts from linguists (philologists for Freud) in the first half of the twentieth century.
+
This [[conscious]] and controlling subject marks the difference between linguistics and psychoanalysis. Here, their [[epistemological]] terrain is distinct. Linguists and [[psychoanalysts]] apprehend the same words in different ways. Linguists first try to describe languages and [[construct]] a [[scientific]] theory of their workings. Their concern is one of generalized objectivity, which could be described as an Aristotelian approach. Consequently, they attempt to eliminate any [[subjectivity]], while psychoanalysts acknowledge it as part of the process of [[association]]. The [[analysts]]' [[goal]] is not to put forth a theory of language but of the unconscious. This is why there are so many differences between the two fields in spite of the many borrowings by psychoanalysts from linguists (philologists for Freud) in the first half of the twentieth century.
Today, however, the situation is reversing itself, and some psychoanalysts consider the near "assimilation" of the mental apparatus to the language apparatus to be a failure (Green, 1984, 1989). Moreover, the number of linguists and semiologists who acknowledge the influence of psychoanalytic theory in the humanities is growing. For example, research on the contiguity between these two fields (Michel Arrivé, Jean-Claude Milner) has been conducted by linguists who have undergone analysis or who are analysts themselves; they have introduced psychoanalytic ideas into research on sign systems, writing, enunciation, modes of text analysis, meaning, and so forth. Links between the fields exist despite the fact that their founders never met. Freud may have seen de Saussure's name quoted by Meringer; de Saussure may have seen Freud's in a report on <i>The Interpretation of Dreams</i> written by one of his colleagues at the University of Geneva (Théodore Flournoy). And although Freud never read de Saussure, it is certain that he heard him referred to as the "father" and author of the <i>Course of General Linguistics</i>. For one of Freud's patients was Raymond de Saussure, the son of Ferdinand, and Freud wrote a preface to Raymond's <i>The Psychoanalytic Method</i> (1922), where his father's book is mentioned.
+
Today, however, the [[situation]] is reversing itself, and some psychoanalysts consider the near "assimilation" of the mental apparatus to the language apparatus to be a failure (Green, 1984, 1989). Moreover, the number of linguists and semiologists who acknowledge the influence of [[psychoanalytic theory]] in the humanities is growing. For example, research on the contiguity between these two fields (Michel Arrivé, [[Jean-Claude Milner]]) has been conducted by linguists who have undergone analysis or who are analysts themselves; they have introduced psychoanalytic [[ideas]] into research on sign systems, [[writing]], enunciation, modes of text analysis, meaning, and so forth. [[Links]] between the fields [[exist]] despite the fact that their founders never met. Freud may have seen de Saussure's name quoted by Meringer; de Saussure may have seen Freud's in a report on <i>The [[Interpretation]] of [[Dreams]]</i> written by one of his colleagues at the [[University]] of Geneva (Théodore Flournoy). And although Freud never read de Saussure, it is certain that he heard him referred to as the "[[father]]" and author of the <i>Course of General Linguistics</i>. For one of Freud's [[patients]] was Raymond de Saussure, the son of Ferdinand, and Freud wrote a preface to Raymond's <i>The Psychoanalytic Method</i> (1922), where his father's book is mentioned.

Latest revision as of 01:01, 26 May 2019

In 1890 the "science of language" had not yet become "general linguistics," the "fundamental science" of the humanities it would become following the work of Ferdinand de Saussure (1857-1913). Philologists studied scripta (written traces) and the history of languages but not their origins or that of the original language (Ursprache), a search that was felt to be irrelevant to the science of language, according to the first article of the bylaws of the Société linguistique de Paris, composed in 1866. From the point of view of linguistics, Hans Sperber's article on the "sexual origins of language" (1912) was more an application of Freudian theory than a form of linguistic research.Émile Benveniste's rebuttal of Carl Abel's claims about the opposite meanings of words ("Über den Gegensinn der Urworte," 1885) starts from the same point: The discursive use of the euphemism or antiphrasis does not justify this claim. Moreover, there is no primitive language as far as linguists are concerned. Language is a system of signs, articulated through a process of differentiation, that organizes the first representation of the world by and for the speaking subject. At the beginning of the twentieth century, the distinction "langage/langue"—language as spoken versus language as system—used by de Saussure in his classes and published in the Course on General Linguistics after his death (1916), was not widely known. Some philologists, however, became interested in spoken language, in everyday words, in the nature of the "system" or internal structure of language (langue). By collecting slips of the tongue, Rudolf Meringer (1895) attempted to determine the laws of evolution and the internal operation of Sprachorganismus (the organism of language), comparing it to Freud's "language apparatus" (1891b). Freud borrowed eight examples from Meringer's corpus, including the opening and closing remarks of the president of parliament (1901b). Meringer failed to be amused (1907) by Freud's admiration for the quoted text. Freud in return wrote an ironic comment (1910e), distancing himself from Meringer on the basis of their divergent understanding of slips of the tongue. The two men held different points of view: Meringer prefigured the Saussurian break entailing the internal synchronic description of the structure of languages (that is, at the time of spoken use). His insistence on speech (parole)—which revealed the underlying structure—implied an emphasis on orality, the primary characteristic of languages. De Saussure thus gave the world approximately five thousand languages and rejected the notion of "primitive" languages, which were languages with no written tradition. According to de Saussure, a language should be considered a highly organized structure, a "system of internal relations," whose elements were arbitrary and differential and could be analyzed along two different axes: the paradigmatic (or associative) axis, the axis of elements that were "absent"; and the syntagmatic axis, the axis of elements that were "present." These elements were defined in negative terms: "In language there is only difference." On the plane of sound as well as on the plane of meaning, each element is what the others are not (this was de Saussure's concept of "value"). The axis of the spoken chain can be used to postulate the temporal linearity of the sound (or acoustic) aspect of signs, that is, the "linearity of the signifier." A language is, thus, a set of articulatory, acoustic, and representative (or symbolic) conventions that are socially imposed on the speaker, a Weltanschauung, a treasure deposited in the individual by the mass of speakers. The same position is found in the work ofÉdouard Pichon (linguist and psychoanalyst, founding member of the Paris Psychoanalytic Society, then its president in 1938), from whom Jacques Lacan borrowed the idea of "foreclosure" (Verwerfung). From de Saussure's work, Lacan derived the concepts of the "treasure of signifiers," the unconscious structured as a language, and the condition of the unconscious. From Roman Jakobson (1963) he derived the concepts of metaphor (paradigmatic) and metonymy (syntagmatic), and reworked the concepts of condensation and displacement. Lacan also borrowed from de Saussure the idea of the arbitrariness of the sign and its duality: signified and signifier. The signified is the mental image, the concept; the signifier the acoustic image (or phonetic form). This relationship is reversed and hierarchized in Lacan (S/s) with an extreme (non-linguistic) expansion of the signifier. Saussurian arbitrariness—which is what makes his work so original—does not refer to the lack of motivation between object and sign (word) (Sache/Zeichen) discussed in Plato's Cratylus, but to the absence of a one-to-one relation between elements of the system of signifieds and signifiers. The concept of "double articulation" (Martinet, 1960/1964) demonstrates this: for linguists no meaning can be attributed to a phoneme or letter, something a linguist shaped by psychoanalysis like Ivan Fonagy (1970) rejects. For Fonagy, for example, language and unconscious, language and drive, are contiguous. The same was true for Pichon, the author, with Jacques Damourette, of a voluminous grammar text and a large number of articles. It was Pichon who created the concepts of pensée-langage, which reflects the separation of form and content, and sexuisemblance, which reflects the connection between gender and sex. His work on negation (1928) and the grammatical person (1938), criticized by Benveniste as too "psychological," serves as the premise for the concept of the "shifter" in Jakobson's work, and research on "enunciation" for Benveniste. Among linguists, including contemporary linguists who speak of the (re)introduction of the subject into their field (through pragmatics, the analysis of meaning or discourse), the subject is always (or almost always) a controlling intentional subject. The failure to identify intentionality, moreover, is what ended the Saussurian analysis of anagrams (the search for a proper name buried—disseminated—in the poetic chain), although they can be understood as a search for an unconscious subject. This conscious and controlling subject marks the difference between linguistics and psychoanalysis. Here, their epistemological terrain is distinct. Linguists and psychoanalysts apprehend the same words in different ways. Linguists first try to describe languages and construct a scientific theory of their workings. Their concern is one of generalized objectivity, which could be described as an Aristotelian approach. Consequently, they attempt to eliminate any subjectivity, while psychoanalysts acknowledge it as part of the process of association. The analysts' goal is not to put forth a theory of language but of the unconscious. This is why there are so many differences between the two fields in spite of the many borrowings by psychoanalysts from linguists (philologists for Freud) in the first half of the twentieth century. Today, however, the situation is reversing itself, and some psychoanalysts consider the near "assimilation" of the mental apparatus to the language apparatus to be a failure (Green, 1984, 1989). Moreover, the number of linguists and semiologists who acknowledge the influence of psychoanalytic theory in the humanities is growing. For example, research on the contiguity between these two fields (Michel Arrivé, Jean-Claude Milner) has been conducted by linguists who have undergone analysis or who are analysts themselves; they have introduced psychoanalytic ideas into research on sign systems, writing, enunciation, modes of text analysis, meaning, and so forth. Links between the fields exist despite the fact that their founders never met. Freud may have seen de Saussure's name quoted by Meringer; de Saussure may have seen Freud's in a report on The Interpretation of Dreams written by one of his colleagues at the University of Geneva (Théodore Flournoy). And although Freud never read de Saussure, it is certain that he heard him referred to as the "father" and author of the Course of General Linguistics. For one of Freud's patients was Raymond de Saussure, the son of Ferdinand, and Freud wrote a preface to Raymond's The Psychoanalytic Method (1922), where his father's book is mentioned.