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Two Views of Ideology

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Title: Two Views of Ideology


1
Two Views of Ideology
  • Stuart Hall and Slavoj Zizek

2
Outline
  • Starting Questions
  • Hall
  • Ideology rediscovered
  • a process of signification
  • Site of struggle
  • classification
  • Historicized
  • Zizek
  • The book
  • Outline of the article
  • Fantasy

3
Starting Questions
  • How are Halls views of ideology different from,
    and similar to, those of Althussers, Jameson, or
    Eagletons? And how is he similar to Hebdiges
    approach? What have them learned from Gramsci?
  • Can you give some examples of media events to
    explain how ideology is a site of struggle?
  • How does Zizek move beyond Althusser in his use
    of Lacan to explain ideology? Is his view of
    form and abstraction different from Halls
    signification?
  • Can you find examples of the dream work of
    ideology?

4
Hall The rediscovery of Ideology
  • the post-war history of social scientific
    thought
  • the pluralist paradigm developing out of the
    clash of ideologies during World War II.
  • the pluralist paradigm collapsing in the face of
    the social upheavals of the '60s. ?
  • power gt the power to define reality
  • 3. a period of extraordinary science
  • -- Media as the "signifying agents
  • -- brought "the ideological" to the fore in media
    studies (65)

5
Hall The rediscovery of Ideology
  • full title "The rediscovery of Ideology
    Return of the repressed in media studies." In
    Culture, Society and the Media, 56-90. New York
    Routledge, 1982.
  • -- an attack of the traditional American approach
    to the study of mass communication, also known as
    the effects tradition (1051)

6
Ideology as a process of signification
  • Combination (narrativization) and selection
    (exclusion) process of encoding (also decoding
    the common sense of the audience) 1051
  • ? constructing privileged meanings

7
"struggle over meaning."
  • the mass media do tend to reproduce
    interpretations which serve the interests of the
    ruling class,
  • but they are also 'a field of ideological
    struggle'.
  • E.g. industrial debate p. 1052

8
classification and framework
  • Classification different systems produce
    different terms and meanings
  • Framework ? positionality p. 1053
  • Unconscious

9
Ideological signification historicized
  • Gramscis view of common sense? folklore 1055
  • P. 1056 historical grammars
  • deep structure of presuppositions
  • their logic of arrangement

10
Class struggle of language multiple meanings in
signification
  • Multiple referentiality
  • Althusser too uni-accentual p. 1060
  • closure equivalence of discourse and reality
  • The class struggle in language struggle between
    two different terms 1061
  • Changing the terms

11
The Sublime Object of Ideology
  • Critique the fundamental antagonism in Marxist
    views
  • Joins Marxism and Lacan (p. 4)
  • Post-Marxist -- affirms the irreducible
    plurality of particular struggles , demonstrating
    how they articulation into a series of
    equivalences depends always on the radical
    contingency of the social-historical process
  • Lacanian psychoanalysis enable us to grasp this
    plurality itself as a multitude of responses to
    the same impossible-real kernel

12
The Sublime Object of Ideology (2)
  • Sees antagonism of death drive vs. pleasure
    principle in many fields (e.g. democracy,
    ecology, etc.)
  • Thesis Hegelian dialectics as the most
    consistent model of such an acknowledgement of
    antagonism.

13
The Sublime Object of Ideology (3)
  • Three purposes (7)
  • -- re-introduces Lacan as non-poststructuralist,
    the most radical contemporary version of the
    Enlightenment.
  • return to Hegel by giving it a new reading on
    the basis of Lacanian psychoanalysis.
  • Re-define ideology through a new reading of
    classic motifs such as commodity fetishism.

14
How Did Marx Invent the Symptom? Outline
  1. Form of Dream//Commodity-form ? the unconscious
    the real abstraction ? money as the sublime
    object
  2. Social symptom
  3. Commodity fetishism necessary condition in
    capitalist society
  4. Ideology defined
  5. modern society is post ideological ? cynical
    reasoning fantasy in the doing

15
How Did Marx Invent the Symptom?
  • Fundamental homology between the interpretive
    procedure of Marx and Freud--. . . between their
    analysis of commodity fetishism and of dreams
    (11/t 312)

16
Form
  • Dream manifest content ? latent thought ? the
    unconscious desire
  • Dream needs analysis 2. Attention should be
    centered on form (dream work).
  • Commodity chancy determination of commoditys
    value ? determination by labor-time (a secret)
  • even after we have explained their hidden
    meaningwhat is not yet explained is simply
    their form, the process by which the hidden
    meaning disguised itself in such a form.
    (15/t313)

17
real abstraction
  • Exchange of commodity implies a double
    abstraction
  • The abstraction from the changeable character of
    the commodity
  • Abstraction from its sensual properties (17/t
    314)

18
real abstraction (2)
  • Real abstraction the act of abstraction at work
    in the very effective process of the exchange of
    commodities (17/t 315)
  • e.g.
  • positive content ? a priori categories
  • Physical content ? commodity value
  • Latent thought ? manifest content.
  • money (changeable, perishable) ? universal
    value, indestructible This immaterial
    corporality of the body within the body gives us
    a precise definition of the sublime object. (18)

19
real abstraction (3)
  • (critique of Althussers rejecting this category)
  • The real abstraction introduces the third
    element--the symbolic orderto the binary of
    real object and form of thought
  • The unconscious the form of thought external to
    the thought itself

20
The Social Symptom
  • Symptom a particular element which subverts
    its own universal foundation. (21/t 316) e.g.
    the idea of freedom negation of equivalent
    exchange.

21
Commodity Fetishism
  • 1. a definite social relation between men, that
    assumes, in their eyes, the fantastic form of a
    relation between things (Marx 1974, 77)
  • 2. A misrecognition of what is really a
    structural effect of the network of relations
    between elements (price) as an immediate
    property of one of the elements (commodity), as
    if this property belongs to it outside its
    relations with other elements. (23-24)

22
Commodity Fetishism
  • Necessary when the relations between men are not
    fetishized (as they were in feudal society).

23
Ideology
  • a social reality whose very existence implies the
    non-knowledge of its participants as to its
    essence (21/t 316)
  • Contemporary form cynicism (knows the falsehood,
    but does not denounce it). (29/t 319)
  • Cynical reason . . .leaves untouched the
    fundamental level of ideological fantasy, the
    level on which ideology structures the social
    reality itself. (30/t 320) ? not knowing in the
    doing a fetishist in practice but not in theory
    (31/t320)

24
Ideology
  • "ideology is not a dreamlike illusion that we
    build to escape insupportable reality in its
    basic dimension it is a fantasy-construction
    which serves as a support for our "reality"
    itself" (45/t 323)
  • e.g. a fathers dream of seeing his dead son
    burned.

25
Ideology (2)-- Critique of Althusser
  • a gap between ISA and ideological
    interpellation, or how does ISA internalizes
    itself?
  • this external machine of ideology exercises
    its force only in so far as it is experienced, in
    the unconscious economy of the subject, as a
    traumatic, senseless injunction.
  • The is always a residue, a leftover, a stain of
    traumatic irrationality and senselessness ?
    ensures the authority of law.

26
Fantasy as a Support of Reality
  • (against ideology as illusion to be unmasked or
    reality as illusionor fiction)
  • Lacan a hard kernel of the Real
  • The only way to break the power of our
    ideological dream is to confront the Real of our
    desire which announces itself in this dream.
  • E.g. to critique anti-Semitism
  • not by saying Jews are really not like that
  • but by pointing out that the ideological figure
    of a Jew a way to stitch up the inconsistency of
    our own ideological system.

27
Beyond Interpellation
  • the theory of ideology descending from the
    Althusserian theory of interpellation focus too
    much on the efficiency of an ideology
    exclusively through the mechanisms of imaginary
    and symbolic identification.
  • The dimension 'beyond interpellation' which was
    thus left out has nothing to do with some kind of
    irreducible dispersion and plurality of the
    signifying process ... 'Beyond interpellation' is
    the square of desire, fantasy, lack in the Other
    and drive pulsating around some unbearable
    surplus enjoyment. (124)

28
Beyond Interpellation
  • -- two readings of ideology
  • Discursive, symptomal reading
  • Extracting the kernel of enjoyment, at
    articulating the way in which beyond the field
    of meaning but at the same time internal to it
    an ideolgoy implies, manipulate, produced a
    pre-ideological enjoyment structured in fantasy.

29
Slavoj Zizek
  • a professor at the Institute for Sociology,
    Ljubljana, Slovenia
  • politically active in Slovenia during the 80s, a
    candidate for the presidency of the Republic of
    Slovenia in 1990, and  most of his works are
    moral and political rather than purely
    theoretical.
  • (source)
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