Coming
By Jean-Luc Nancy and Adèle Van Reeth
()
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Jean-Luc Nancy
Jean-Luc Nancy (1940–2021) was Distinguished Professor of Philosophy at the Université de Strasbourg and one of the late twentieth and early twenty-first century’s foremost thinkers of politics, art, and the body. His wide-ranging thought runs through many books, including Being Singular Plural, The Ground of the Image, Corpus, The Disavowed Community, and Sexistence. His book The Intruder was adapted into an acclaimed film by Claire Denis.
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Coming - Jean-Luc Nancy
COMING
Coming
PRELIMINARIES
ADÈLE VAN REETH: "Jouissance," pleasure: Now that is a difficult word to handle. It can mean satisfaction or excess, gluttony or voluptuousness … It’s something of an indecent or suspicious word: It’s embarrassing. It’s almost impossible to handle.
JEAN-LUC NANCY: That’s true, it doesn’t make our task easy; either it has an obscene resonance, or it evokes greedy domination … But perhaps that’s not by chance: If it makes us ill at ease, it’s probably out of fear that it carries too much with it, it demands too much …
AVR: That at least is the situation today, when pleasure [jouissance] is associated with a sexual experience that people seek out or, on the contrary, that is frightening. Yet jouissance, etymologically, generally goes beyond the realm of sexuality.
JLN: Etymologically, there is no special relationship between the word jouir (from the Latin gaudere, to rejoice
) and sexuality. For a long time, jouissance has had a mainly legalistic sense, designating the effect of complete possession of something, a possession that allows a complete, limitless use of what I own: I am the owner of my pen, and if I want to destroy it, I can.
We are going to try to see how and why the first meaning of jouissance has gradually shifted over to the sexual meaning. I even have the impression that there is a twofold movement: first a veering toward the sexual, or sensual; then, more recently, an extension of the word toward consummation, in the name of a critique of the society of consumption. Today, jouissance is understood as consummation, but we forget that the end result of consummation [consommation] is consuming [consumation], hence the end of jouissance. I find it striking that jouissance is often understood in a critical, pejorative sense, and used about everything: Smart phones, for instance, are perceived as objects of pleasure [jouissance].
Then, we should remember that pleasure [jouissance] evokes two terms that belong to the same lexical field: on one hand, joy [joie]; on the other, rejoicing [réjouissance]. It even seems to me that these two terms have not always been distinguished: Think about the joy
of the troubadour poets, which designates a joy of love that is indeed sensual, even sexual, but where precisely jouissance in the sense of consummation must be avoided. One of the ordeals of courtly love even consisted of the knight sleeping with his lady without making love!
That is interesting: Joy can be thought of without jouissance. Today, joy has even become for us the opposite of jouissance: It elevates us, while jouissance is more corporeal, more earthly.
AVR: Joy might be de-sexed [désexuée], then, while jouissance might be sexual.
JLN: In a way, yes. De-sexed, very spiritual. The word joy
almost summons the adjective spiritual.
In the language of today, when we say what a joy to … ,
it’s very different from what a pleasure!
If I say to someone: The passage you wrote was truly for me a great joy,
that is not the same thing as saying, It was a pleasure to meet you.
AVR: Let’s try to define the terms we’ll need to discuss jouissance. How do you distinguish pleasure from joy?
JLN: It seems to me that pleasure corresponds more to what in Kant is called pleasant, to what relates to me as a subject: Pleasure pleases me [le plaisir me plaît], that is, it suits something inside me. Whereas joy carries me rather outside of myself, towards something else. To be even more precise, we must call on another word that we don’t currently use: that of beatitude. In common use, bliss
[béat] is a critical word, generally associated with optimism: We speak of blissful optimism. In reality, beatitude is the state of one who is blessed, or beatus in Latin. In the Catholic church, beatification designates the state previous to canonization. If I think of this word, it’s because we find it in Spinoza, for whom joy occupies a very important place, starting from the basic difference between joyful passions and sad passions. Yet beatitude, in Spinoza, is first of all the state we reach when we are in the love of God, which for Spinoza is synonymous with intellectual love. Today, this term has become outmoded, almost ridiculous, but Spinoza defines it in the final proposition in his Ethics in a way I find truly admirable: Beatitude is not the reward of virtue, but its very practice.
Here we should not understand virtue in the moral sense, like total compliance with a certain moral demand. Virtus in Latin is the exercise of a force that is positive, the force of striving toward that love of God who is at the same time (since God, for Spinoza, is nature) the love of nature, the love of the world, of Being in general. With Spinoza, one can say that whereas pleasure is above all centripetal and appropriative, joy, on the other hand, is centrifugal and dis-appropriative, a disposition that is both active and striving towards something outside.
AVR: Would jouissance, then, be aligned with joy or beatitude?
JLN: From the perspective of Spinoza, I would say it’s aligned with joy, since jouissance is a movement, an impulse [élan] and a passage, whereas beatitude (also called felicity
) designates a state, the state of knowledge of God or of the whole order of nature. It’s the same as the difference between tension and accomplishment, or between movement and rest. That said, virtue
also designates, in keeping with its Latin sense, active power, effort with something in view, as the last statement from the Ethics I cited signals. So it is also a desire, or an appetite: not desire for an object but the desire of persevering in one’s being,
that is, going as far as possible in the act of existing. So beatitude is a state in which the desiring act is constantly renewed, re-launched. Spinoza notes that we experience joy from it
by using the verb gaudere (from which joy
and jouissance derive) and not laetare (whereas he first called joy laetitia, a more spiritual joy, less agitated or tumultuous).
We should note that Spinoza is far from praising sexual jouissance, but his thinking about the desire to be in an infinitely renewed impulse [élan] of correspondence with the infinite itself, with all the excess that one might find in it, has something remarkably sexual about it, although Spinoza himself does not note this.
AVR: You also mentioned the closeness between jouissance and rejoicing, réjouissance. How do you define rejoicing?
JLN: Rejoicing is not a term that’s much used today, but it has often been associated with the public, the popular: I’m thinking of the expression of réjouissances populaires, popular festivities. The idea of festivities, réjouissances, refers to festive excess, to a certain suspension of everyday activities, but also to obligation and finality. That is where we find jouissance, in the sense of joyful acclamations greeting the arrival of an important person, like the jouissance of the people at the arrival of the king. I owe this to the poet Michel Deguy, who writes, "Jouissance is one of the rhetorical figures of acclamation at the arrival of someone. Come! Into the erotic poem I will entwine lines of thought."
AVR: Joy and réjouissance, then, are both on the side of excess, just like jouissance. Yet the evolution of the concept of jouissance can be observed as starting from the notion of appropriation: jouissance, pleasure, is no longer understood today as an aspect of property; one can enjoy something that one does not own. It is more on the side of expropriation.
JLN: That is probably when there is contradiction in the use of terms that may refer to a contradiction within the thing itself. You’ve just said that one does not own the thing one enjoys. But the law says exactly the opposite! The law stipulates that if it’s a matter of an object, you are fully free to enjoy it. Freedom—in the sense of unbounded right—is implied by the idea of jouissance. So you can only do that if you are the owner of it. I don’t have the right to do anything I like with your microphone, for example, because it’s yours.
AVR: You do have the right! It’s morality that forbids that, not the law.
JLN: Oh yes, it’s the law! Because if I break your microphone …
AVR: I could sue you.
JLN: You could sue me. Whereas if I break this remote control that’s next to me and that belongs to me, no one can sue me.
AVR: So jouissance understood in its legalistic sense defines the appropriation of an object and designates an owner, whereas non-legalistic jouissance, jouissance as experience, is not a matter of appropriation.
JLN: And to find out how the sense of the word—but also, I think, the thing—could lead in two different directions at once, we must question ourselves. For example, much has been spoken of possessing someone sexually. Today I have the impression it’s less current, and poorly regarded. I’m sure one could easily find attestations, even literary ones, that would permit us to conceive of a form of possessing a woman that is not harmful for her, that would not lead her to be treated as a sexual object. But a woman can also possess
a man; that is true also for a homosexual partner. These kinds of possessive relationships have been described (or written about) thousands of times. But if we so dislike using this term today, it’s because we understand this possession, precisely, only as an appropriation, and because we belong to an era when possession can only be understood as possession of an object by a subject. Consequently, possessing a person comes down to making him or