Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Unspeakable

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

Unspeakable: Perversion, Psychoanalysis, Prosopopoeia

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Unspeakable: Perversion, Psychoanalysis, Prosopopoeia. / Bradley, A.
In: Filozofski Vestnik, Vol. 44, No. 1, 22.12.2023, p. 97-112.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Bradley A. Unspeakable: Perversion, Psychoanalysis, Prosopopoeia. Filozofski Vestnik. 2023 Dec 22;44(1):97-112. doi: 10.3986/fv.44.1.05

Author

Bradley, A. / Unspeakable : Perversion, Psychoanalysis, Prosopopoeia. In: Filozofski Vestnik. 2023 ; Vol. 44, No. 1. pp. 97-112.

Bibtex

@article{743e0b1bbdd74938a9536433ac96f3e8,
title = "Unspeakable: Perversion, Psychoanalysis, Prosopopoeia",
abstract = "In order to speak in the voice of “the pervert,” psychoanalysis inevitably find itself performing the classic rhetorical act of prosopopoeia whereby an imagined, absent, or dead person is represented as speaking. To re-read Jacques-Alain Miller{\textquoteright}s classic essay “On Perversion” (1996), for example, we find that the pervert is adjudged to be “unspeakable”—in every sense of that word—and so they can only be ventriloquized by the figure of the analyst. If the analyst seeks to speak on behalf of the pervert, however, this essay argues that the perverse speech act is itself a form of prosopopoeia which can ventriloquize the subject position of the hysteric, the neurotic, the psychotic, and even the analyst themselves. In conclusion, the essay argues that Miller{\textquoteright}s account of the relationship between the analyst and the pervert, where each are seen to ventriloquize the other, bespeaks of a certain prosopopophilia—a love of prosopopoeia—that is the condition of being a speaking subject in the first place: I am always speaking for and as the other—even or especially when I am speaking as “myself.”",
keywords = "Freud, Lacan, Miller, perversion, psychoanalysis, prosopopoeia",
author = "A. Bradley",
year = "2023",
month = dec,
day = "22",
doi = "10.3986/fv.44.1.05",
language = "English",
volume = "44",
pages = "97--112",
journal = "Filozofski Vestnik",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Unspeakable

T2 - Perversion, Psychoanalysis, Prosopopoeia

AU - Bradley, A.

PY - 2023/12/22

Y1 - 2023/12/22

N2 - In order to speak in the voice of “the pervert,” psychoanalysis inevitably find itself performing the classic rhetorical act of prosopopoeia whereby an imagined, absent, or dead person is represented as speaking. To re-read Jacques-Alain Miller’s classic essay “On Perversion” (1996), for example, we find that the pervert is adjudged to be “unspeakable”—in every sense of that word—and so they can only be ventriloquized by the figure of the analyst. If the analyst seeks to speak on behalf of the pervert, however, this essay argues that the perverse speech act is itself a form of prosopopoeia which can ventriloquize the subject position of the hysteric, the neurotic, the psychotic, and even the analyst themselves. In conclusion, the essay argues that Miller’s account of the relationship between the analyst and the pervert, where each are seen to ventriloquize the other, bespeaks of a certain prosopopophilia—a love of prosopopoeia—that is the condition of being a speaking subject in the first place: I am always speaking for and as the other—even or especially when I am speaking as “myself.”

AB - In order to speak in the voice of “the pervert,” psychoanalysis inevitably find itself performing the classic rhetorical act of prosopopoeia whereby an imagined, absent, or dead person is represented as speaking. To re-read Jacques-Alain Miller’s classic essay “On Perversion” (1996), for example, we find that the pervert is adjudged to be “unspeakable”—in every sense of that word—and so they can only be ventriloquized by the figure of the analyst. If the analyst seeks to speak on behalf of the pervert, however, this essay argues that the perverse speech act is itself a form of prosopopoeia which can ventriloquize the subject position of the hysteric, the neurotic, the psychotic, and even the analyst themselves. In conclusion, the essay argues that Miller’s account of the relationship between the analyst and the pervert, where each are seen to ventriloquize the other, bespeaks of a certain prosopopophilia—a love of prosopopoeia—that is the condition of being a speaking subject in the first place: I am always speaking for and as the other—even or especially when I am speaking as “myself.”

KW - Freud

KW - Lacan

KW - Miller

KW - perversion

KW - psychoanalysis

KW - prosopopoeia

U2 - 10.3986/fv.44.1.05

DO - 10.3986/fv.44.1.05

M3 - Journal article

VL - 44

SP - 97

EP - 112

JO - Filozofski Vestnik

JF - Filozofski Vestnik

IS - 1

ER -