Difference between revisions of "Signifier"

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signifier (sigmfiant)                Lacan takes the term 'signifier' from the work of
 
signifier (sigmfiant)                Lacan takes the term 'signifier' from the work of
  

Revision as of 03:18, 18 May 2006


signifier (sigmfiant) Lacan takes the term 'signifier' from the work of

the Swiss linguist, Ferdinand de Saussure. The term was not used by Freud,

who was unaware of Saussure's work. According to Saussure, the signifier is

the phonological element of the SIGN; not the actual sound itself, but the mental

image of such a sound. In Saussure's terms, the signifier is the 'acoustic image'

which signifies a SIGNIFIED (Saussure, 1916: 66--7).

    Whereas Saussure argues that the signifier and the signified are mutually

interdependent, Lacan states that the signifier is primary and produces the

signified. The signifier is first of all a meaningless material element in a closed

differential system; this 'signifier without the signified' is called by Lacan the

'pure signifier', though this is a question of logical rather than chronological

precedence. 'Every real signifier is, as such, a signifier that signifies nothing.

The more the signifier signifies nothing, the more indestructible it is' (S3, 185).

It is these meaningless indestructible signifiers which determine the subject;

the effects of the signifier on the subject constitute the unconscious, and hence

also constitute the whole of the field of psychoanalysis.

    Thus for Lacan language is not a system of signs (as it was for Saussure) but
 a system of signifiers. Signifiers are the basic units of language, and they are

'subjected to the double condition of being reducible to ultimate differential

elements and of combining according to the laws of a closed order' (E, 152).

     By the phrase 'reducible to ultimate differential elements', Lacan follows

Saussure in asserting the fundamentally differential character of the signifier.

Saussure states that in language there are no positive terms, only differences

(Saussure, 1916: 120).



      By the phrase 'combining according to the laws of a closed order', Lacan
  asserts that signifiers are combined in signifying chains according to the laws
  of metonymy.
      The signifier is the constitutive unit of the symbolic order because it is

integrally related with the concept of STRUCTURE; 'the notion of structure and

   that of signifier appear inseparable' (S3, 184). The field of the signifier is the
   field of the Other, which Lacan calls 'the battery of signifiers'.
      Lacan defines a signifier as 'that which represents          a subject for another

signifier', in opposition to the sign, which 'represents something for some-

   one'. (Sll, 207). To be more precise, one signifier (called the master signifier,
   and written Si) represents the subject for all other signifiers (written S2)∑
   However, no signifier can signifv the subject.
      Although the term 'signifier' is absent from Freud's work, Lacan's use of the
   term focuses attention    on  a recurrent theme in Freud's writings. Freud's

examples of psychoanalytic interpretations constantly focus on purely formal

linguistic features. For example, he analyses his own failure to remember the

   name 'Signorelli' by dividing the word into formal segments and following the
   associative links with each segment (Freud, 1901: ch. 1). Thus Lacan's
   insistence that the analyst attend to the signifiers in the analysand's speech
   is not really an innovation in technique but an attempt to theorise Freud's own
   method in more rigorous terms.
      While it is true that when Lacan talks about signifiers he is often referring to
   what others would call simply 'words', the two terms are not equivalent. Not

only can units of language smaller than words (morphemes and phonemes) or

larger than words (phrases and sentences) also function as signifiers, but so

   also can non-linguistic things such as objects, relationships and symptomatic
   acts (S4, 288). The single condition which characterises something              as  a

signifier, for Lacan, is that it is inscribed in a system in which it takes on

   value purely by virtue of its difference from the other elements in the system.
   It is this differential nature of the signifier which means that it can never have a
   univocal  or fixed meaning (S4, 289);       on the contrary, its meaning varies

according to the position which it occupies in the structure.



References