Point de capiton

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Definition

The French term point de capiton is variously translated in English editions of Lacan's work as "quilting point" or "anchoring point."

To avoid the confusion resulting from this variety of translation, the term has here been left in the original French.

Literally an "upholstery button" it has also been translated as "anchoring point".

It literally designates an upholstery button, the analogy being that just as upholstery buttons are places where "the mattress-maker's needle has worked hard to prevent a shapeless mass of stuffing from moving too freely about.[1]

The upholstery button is an anchoring point on a quilt which "prevents a shapeless mass of stuffing from moving too freely about.[2]

In the same way, the point de capiton is a point (signifier) that fixes the meaning inside an ideological field, stops the meaning from sliding about.

In the same way, the point de capiton is a point at which "signified and signifier are knotted together."[3]

The signifiers or signifying chain are unstable and liable to slippages of meaning.

Lacan introduces the term in his 1955-6 seminar on the psychoses to account for the fact that despite the continual slippage of the signified under the signifier, thereare nevertheless in the normal (neurotic) subject certain fundamental "attachment points" between the signified and the signifier where this slippage is temporarily halted.

A certain minimum number of these points are "necessary for a person to be called normal," and "when they are not established, or when they give way'" the result is psychosis.[4]

This helps to explain how it is that in the psychotic experience, "the signifier and the signified present themselves in a completely divided form."[5].

--- For Lacan the link between signifier and signified is so precarious that whereas Saussure saw the whole system as more or less grounded, Lacan sees only occasional points of stability.

These points of stability are referred to as points de capiton, or "quilting points," points "by which the signifier stops the otherwise endless movement to produce "the necessary illusion of a fixed meaning." ---

Diachrony and Synchrony

The point de capiton is thus the point in the signifying chain at which "the signifier stops the otherwise endless movement of the signification" and produces the necessary illusion of a fixed meaning.[6]

Since the signifying chain has both a diachronic and a synchronic dimension, so also does the point de capiton:

Diachrony

PointdeCapiton.gif

1. The diachronic dimension of the point de capiton lies in the fact that communication is always a retroactive effect of punctuation.

It is only when the sentence is completed that the sense of the first words is determined retroactively.

This function is illustrated in the elementary cell of the graph of desire, in which the point de capiton is the leftmost point of intersection between the vector S-S' and the vector A-S.

Synchrony

2. The synchronic aspect is metaphor, by which the signifier crosses the bar into the signified.

"The synchronic structure (of the point de capiton) is more hidden, and it is this structure that takes us to the source. It is metaphor."[7]

See Also

References

  1. Bowie, 1991: 74
  2. Bowie, Malcolm. 1991. p.74
  3. Lacan, Jacques. The Seminar. Book III. The Psychoses, 1955-56. Trans. Russell Grigg. London: Routledge, 1993. p.268
  4. Lacan, Jacques. The Seminar. Book III. The Psychoses, 1955-56. Trans. Russell Grigg. London: Routledge, 1993. p.268-9
  5. Lacan, Jacques. The Seminar. Book III. The Psychoses, 1955-56. Trans. Russell Grigg. London: Routledge, 1993. p.268
  6. Lacan, Jacques. Écrits: A Selection. Trans. Alan Sheridan. London: Tavistock Publications, 1977. p.303
  7. Lacan, Jacques. Écrits: A Selection. Trans. Alan Sheridan. London: Tavistock Publications, 1977. p.303