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ANGEL AK I

journal of the theoretical humanities


volume 13 number 2 august 2008

sex and gender


ontemporary discourses on sexuality are
C largely underpinned by the historicist
assumption that, as Charles Shepherdson puts
it, subjectivity has no essential form, but is a
product of history, whereby the body itself
is considered as yet another constructed
phenomenon which, like clothing, social
norms, or gender and all other of the subjects
role[s] in the symbolic order, would shift with the
fashions of history (85). According to this
historicist view, Shepherdson continues, any a. kiarina kordela
reference to sexual difference as not a historical
construal will be taken as an appeal to
naturalism or essentialism (94). Yet psycho- GENRE
analysis claims that there is a distinction between
gender roles, which are indeed historical pro- with and beyond gender
ducts, and human sexuality, which, far from
being ahistorical, is both inevitably historical and sex (a psychoanalytic
and not a product of history (99). Far from being intervention)
natural, the human sexual drive is itself intrin-
sically perverted insofar as, as Freud demon-
strated, the purportedly normal sexual object indicates the direction toward which [meaning
can at all be replaced by a substitute object (sens)] fails (echoue) and the discourse encoun-
(86). The fact that the sexual drive is ters its limit (Book XX 79; Livre XX, 74).1
constitutively denatured, that it does not follow For psychoanalysis, beyond historical representa-
the automatic machinery of the instinct in tions, including their constructions of gender,
nature, means that sexuality in the human there is no nature but the sexed failure of
animal is intrinsically bound to representation, representation itself. If there is sex, as something
which is why, to repeat, human sexuality is real beyond representation, it is not because of
inevitably historical (8687). The distinction some essentialized nature but because thought
between the instinct and the drive already (representation) necessarily fails.
indicates that psychoanalysis is not concerned That is, thought always fails to form the
with a naturalistic conception of the body, or of totality of its object, be it the world or the
sexual difference (88). subject. To clarify this point, let us turn to Kants
But the historicist might ask why, then, sex is distinction between the understanding, which
not a historical product. Because, as Lacan refers to experience so far as it can be given,
argued, unlike gender a historico-discursively and reason, which aims at the completeness or
constructed positive predicate of the subject sex absolute totality of all possible experience

ISSN 0969-725X print/ISSN1469-2899 online/08/020093^15 2008 Taylor & Francis and the Editors of Angelaki
DOI: 10.1080/09697250802432203

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[which] is itself not experience but a trans- in boundaries, and the antithesis that the
cendent concept, such as the totality of the world . . . is infinite with regard to both time and
subject or of the world (Kant, Prolegomena 70). space (Kant, Critique 47071; B454/A426
The task of reason is to form a totality out of all B455/A427). What reason momentarily forgets
possible experience, and, because this is impos- here is that space and time, together with the
sible, reason necessarily fails. Reason fails appearances in them, are nothing existing in
means the constitution of the totality fails. themselves and outside of my representations,
But why is this failure sexed, or even dual that is, reason forgets that the thing- or the world-
rather than single? There are two aspects in which in-itself is not in space and time (Kant,
reason examines the totality of experience: the Prolegomena 82, x52c). Since the question
limits of this totality in time and space, and the addressed here concerns the limits of the world
causal relations that determine the totality. Kant in time and space, the true referent of world is
calls the first aspect mathematic, as it involves not the world-in-itself but the world as appear-
the addition of temporal or spatial parts, and the ance, that is, our representations of the world.
second dynamic, as it examines the causal Hence, Kant concludes, in the case of the
dynamism governing the totality. In both cases, mathematic antinomy, both the thesis and the
reason fails because it arrives at antinomic antithesis . . . are false (82, x52c).
conclusions. However, the fact that the thesis and the
When it inquires into the causality determin- antithesis of the mathematic antinomy are
ing the totality of experience, reason is forced to false with regard to the totality of the world-
admit as equally true both the thesis that in-itself does not mean that they do not provide
causality in accordance with laws of nature is true statements about the totality of another
not the only one from which all the appearances object our cognition or representation of the
of the world can be derived; rather, [i]t is also world. In Kants words, in the case of the
necessary to assume another causality through mathematic antinomy, I cannot say the world is
freedom in order to explain them; and the infinite . . . nor will I say that it is finite;
antithesis that there is no freedom, but every- instead, I will be able to say . . . only something
thing in the world happens solely in accordance about the rule in accord with which experi-
with laws of nature (Kant, Critique 48485; ence . . . is to be instituted and continued,
B472/A444B473/A445). This is the dynamic thereby determining the magnitude (of experi-
antinomy, whose falsehood . . . consists in repre- ence) not the magnitude of the world (Critique
senting as contradictory what is compatible 526, 528; A520/B548, A523/B551). As for the
(Prolegomena 83, x53). For, while natural world in itself, the mathematic antinomy entails
necessity and freedom might appear to be an indefinite judgment, that is, an unanswer-
incompatible, if natural necessity is referred able question, as to whether the world as a totality
merely to appearances and freedom merely to exists beyond our representations (Prolegomena
things in themselves, no contradiction arises if 82, x52c).
we at the same time . . . admit both kinds of Having seen that reason has two ways of failing,
causality; natural necessity can attach to all the question now arising is: which of the two
connections of cause and effect in the sensuous antinomies articulates each of the two sexes?
world [appearances], while freedom can be Having designated the totalizing function of
granted to the cause which is itself not an reason as the phallic function [], Lacan
appearance (but the foundation of appearance aligned the male sex with the dynamic antinomy,
[i.e., the thing in itself]) (8485, x53). by stating that the male totality or man as whole
When, on the other hand, reason examines the acquires his inscription (prend son inscription),
totality of experience in terms of its limits in time with the proviso that this function is limited due
and space, then it is initially misled to admit as to the existence of an x by which the function x
true both the thesis that the world has a is negated (niee) (Book XX 79). To paraphrase
beginning in time, and in space it is also enclosed foregrounding the Kantian undertones, the

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function of reason in its dynamic aspect, which And sexual difference, which we can thus see as
subjects the totality of all appearances to natural the index of the kind of jouissance that one is
laws, succeeds only with the proviso that this able to obtain, consists in the following (36). By
totalization is limited owing to the existence of an totalizing the phallic function, by positing that
exception, freedom, by which the total application which escapes it (feminine enjoyment) as an
of the law is negated (on the level of things in exception to which one cannot have access as long
themselves). By contrast, the female sex will not as one derives phallic enjoyment, the male sex
allow for any universality it will be a not-whole, can either give up the possibility of feminine
insofar as it has the choice of positing itself in x enjoyment or sacrifice phallic enjoyment alto-
or of not being there (de nen pas etre) (80). gether for the sake of feminine enjoyment. By
Whether it posits itself in the totalizing function contrast, the female sex, which does not pose any
that subsumes everything under the dimensions of exception and thus does not form a totality, can
time and space, as appearances, or whether it is have access to both the phallic and, at least
not there but exists in itself, beyond appearances, potentially, the feminine enjoyment. In Finks
is a question which the female sex, with its succinct formulation: a man is someone who,
indefinite judgment, leaves open. Translated regardless of chromosomes, can have one or the
into the more linguistically informed Lacanian other [enjoyment] (or at least thinks he can have
idiom, what remains indefinite is whether the other by giving up the one), but not both;
woman poses herself entirely in the totalizing a woman is someone who, regardless of chromo-
function of representation (the signifier), or somes, can potentially have both (41).
whether, in Joan Copjecs words, there is some- When combined, Finks reading of sexual
thing feminine jouissance [enjoyment], that difference as the two ways in which the subject
does not exist in the symbolic order, so that, as relates to enjoyment, and the Kantian reading
Lacan puts it, Woman is not whole (pas toute) thereof, as the two ways in which the subject
with respect to the symbolic order or representa- relates to the formation of an all, reveal that
tion (Copjec, Read My Desire 224; Lacan, jouissance or enjoyment is another name for
Critique 7). It is this impossibility of the the All itself, even if, in the former case,
formation of totality on the part of the female specifically the all of enjoyment, as opposed to,
sex, of the fact that woman cannot form a whole, say, the all of the world or anything else. This
a universe, that is expressed in Lacans notorious observation is, of course, already obvious in
statement that Woman [La femme] doesnt Lacans discussion of enjoyment in his seminar
exist, that is, that there is no such thing as XX, Encore, where the concept is consistently
Woman, Woman with capital W indicating the discussed in terms of the One (i.e., the whole),
universal (Copjec, Read My Desire 225; Lacan, but it also makes clear that even the most atheist
Television 38; idem, Book XX 72). and formalist conceptualization of human life and
To formulate sexual difference in another way, the world, as Lacans, cannot escape, in fact, is
which will also clarify Copjecs reference to not far removed, from their most religious and
feminine jouissance, another name for the mythic accounts, whose aim, as Fink rightly
phallic function is phallic enjoyment, while observes, is to form a whole. Lacan may have
feminine enjoyment is what escapes the totality of strived for scientificity and have encourage[d]
the phallic function. While phallic jouissance, his audience and himself to stop thinking in
as Bruce Fink puts it, is a paltry or fallible terms of wholeness, such as shapes of circles
enjoyment, a satisfaction . . . [that] always leaves and spheres, as an approach that is as distant
something more to be desired, the feminine or from the religious and mythic haunting ghost of
Other jouissance is an ideal of a better wholeness as possible, but what he has actually
satisfaction, a satisfaction that would never fail shown is that, even in the postmodern age of
us, never come up short, never disappoint us, ultimate deconstruction, these ghosts survive,
and which, since we can conceive of its and they do so as nothing less than the sole
possibility . . . must be (Knowledge 37, 35). remnant of the real (Fink, Knowledge 31).

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These two different relations to jouissance or mistaken for ontological principles (Kant,
the All pertain already to the abstract, universal Critique 52021; A50910/B53738).
subject addressed by philosophy, even as philo- In terms of sexgenre associations, Kants
sophy has generally remained unaware of it. argument entails the distinction between a male
For, as Copjec puts it, the universal subject is transitive knowledge, whose object is supposed to
necessarily sexed . . . because [its] failure, far lie outside itself (being or thing-in-itself), and a
from being singular as is naively assumed, female self-referential knowledge, whose object is
occurs in one of two different ways: in the itself (knowledge or representation). In philoso-
mode of either the dynamic or of the mathematic phical terms, this is the distinction between
antinomy (Copjec, Read My Desire 21213). ontology and epistemology, both of which,
What escapes discursive determination is the however, can address the universal, the former
failure of reason to conceive of discourse, and with regard to being, the latter regarding all
hence of history, culture, and politics in their possible knowledge, as in Kants own Critique of
totality. We could therefore say about sex and the Pure Reason, which is a transcendental critique
body as real what Hannah Arendt has said about of the possibility and limits of universal reason.
human nature in general, namely that it does Contrary to the standard association of the male
not exist, for it is not a positively given entity gender with the universal, and of the female
but the sheer negativity effected by the failure of gender with the particular, the KantianLacanian
positivity to form a totality (Arendt, The Human conception of sexual difference indicates that the
Condition 193). Sex designates the two possible female sex deals no less with the universal than
failures of reason through which the subject can the male sex.
relate to totality, and it is an effect, but not a Extending the argument beyond the realm of
realization of social discourses (Copjec, Read philosophy, this sexually defined genre distinction
My Desire 210). In other words, sex presupposes corresponds to that between positivistic sciences
culture as its cause, but it itself is not realized that assume that their object is given from the
within culture. This is why sexual outset, as a thing-in-itself that remains unaffected
difference . . . is a real and not a symbolic by the act of knowing it, and those sciences that
difference though we must not forget that presuppose a transferential relation between the
the real itself is the failure of a historically object and the knowledge that examines it,
specific social, political, and cognitive order, and notably among them psychoanalysis. However,
as such, to repeat Shepherdsons words, inevi- for psychoanalysis the thing-in-itself is nothing
tably historical (Read My Desire 207). In short, other than the pure negativity of the failure of
sex and the body itself cannot take form reason, or, to put it in Slavoj Zizeks words, the
without undergoing . . . subjection to representa- Thing-in itself is effectively a pure Thing-
tion, yet it is the failure of representation of-Thought [Gedankending] . . . nothing but a
(Shepherdson 99). lack, which emerges only because beyond the
Returning to Kant, the mathematic antinomy phenomenal appearance there is only a certain
shows us that reason cannot say what the object negative self-relationship because of which the
is, but only how the empirical regress is to be positively given phenomenal world is perceived as
instituted, thereby revealing what he calls the mere appearance (Sublime Object 172, 193).2 If
rule of reason as a regulative principle of the thing-in-itself is a pure Thing-of-Thought,
reason itself, as opposed to the principle of the then the difference between transitive and self-
absolute totality of the series of conditions, as referential genres of knowledge is only epipheno-
given in itself in the object, which would be a menal; more accurately, it reflects the two modes,
constitutive cosmological principle. And the male and female, of relating to this void or
value of his intervention, Kant continues, lies in negative self-relationship of representation to
preventing the subscription of objective reality itself. The two genres do not have two distinct
to an idea that merely serves as a rule, that is, in cognitive objects, being and representation, but
preventing epistemological principles from being one common object: the thing-in-itself, which is

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nothing other than the lack of representation. And inexhaustibility of the process of meaning, in the
the apparent difference between the two emerges fact that there will always be another signifier to
out of the specific mode of reasons failure determine retroactively the meaning of all that
pertaining to each. On the one hand, the female have come before or, in Kantian terms, that
failure of reason forgets that the so-called self- there will always be another condition in the
referential genres are also transitive, or that the regress of the series of conditioned. On the other
regulative principle of reason is effectively the hand, in its dynamic mode, the rule of reason
constitutive principle of external reality; in short, also requires us to presuppose all the other
for female reason there are only regulative signifiers, the total milieu that is necessary for
principles. On the other hand, the male failure the meaning of one, as the simultaneity of all
of reason involves a short-circuit between appear- signifiers or phenomena that is, it requires us
ance and external reality as the thing-in-itself, to presuppose the totality of all signifiers (Read
whereby it perceives the laws of the former as the My Desire 205, 220). In short, the rule of reason
laws of the latter, not because it is conscious of the is the (female) demand of an infinite regress in the
fact that the thing-in-itself is thoughts failure but diachrony of signifiers or phenomena coupled
because it forgets the mediation of representation with the (male) demand for the synchronic
altogether; in other words, for male reason there totality of all signifiers. It is both antinomies
are only constitutive principles. that constitute the rule of reason, that is, a rule
In conclusion, the KantianLacanian concep- that, according to Kants dualism, should derive
tualization of sexual difference undermines the only from the mathematic antinomy, whose field
traditional gendering of the universal and the is the realm of reason, and not from the dynamic
particular, and shows further that, even though all antinomy, which is supposed to provide cosmo-
genres of knowledge have one and the same logical and not regulative (i.e., epistemologi-
object the thing-in-itself which is a thing- cal) principles. In other words, Copjecs argument
of-thought they appear as having distinct inadvertently helps us see that linguistics already
objects being and representation because of presupposes what I have been arguing here,
the two distinct failures of reason, that is, because namely the collapse of the traditional philosophi-
of sexual difference. The internal split of all cal distinction between constitutive and regulative
knowledge, the fact that its object is both the thing- principles, that is, between ontology and epis-
in-itself and the thing-of-thought, manifests itself temology. The rule of language shows us that,
due to sexual difference as the external opposition as Lacan puts it, the nature of things . . . is the
between transitive and self-referential genres. nature of words (Book XX 73).
Insofar as the use of language presupposes
both antinomies, every human being subject to
bisexuality
language employs both antinomies and is, there-
But sexual difference itself, as I shall presently fore, bisexual. As Lacan puts it, referring to his
argue, is an internal opposition that manifests formulations of the two sexes: These are the
itself as external. The necessity of this conclusion only possible definitions of the so-called man or
is pointed to, although not drawn, particularly in woman portion for that which finds itself in the
Copjecs commentary on Lacans formulas of position of inhabiting language. The human
sexuation. As Copjec writes, the rule of reason, subject is internally split in two portions, the
which can also be called the rule of language or male and the female, and, as is expressly
of the signifier, is itself a genuine contra- formulated in Freudian theory, at any given
diction, an antinomy. We must not miss the fact, situation every subject is allowed to inscribe
however, that the antinomy in question is neither itself in this part or the other, regardless of
the dynamic nor the mathematic, but an whether [it is] provided with the attributes of
antinomy between these two antinomies. For, in masculinity attributes that remain to be
its mathematic mode, the rule of reason, as determined or not (80). Lacan refers here
Copjec writes, enjoins us . . . to believe in the specifically to Freuds argument that the human

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subject is characterized by an unconscious Arendt writes, that there are restrictions on


general bisexual disposition [allgemeinen bisex- this use, indicated by the words as a scholar.
uellen Anlage]. This unconscious bisexuality is For the scholar is not the same as the citizen,
not meant in the common sense of the word the former being a member of . . . a [public]
which refers to the practice of engaging in society of world citizens, whereas the citizen
bisexual relations for which, as Freud remarks, as a member of the (private) civil society, such as
Ferenczis homo-erotism [Homoerotik] would in his capacity as an officer in service, has no
be a better name but precisely in the sense right to refuse to obey (Kant, Foundations 87;
of an internal unconscious split between the Arendt, Lectures 39). Many have pointed out this
two sexes, regardless of ones male or female interesting reconfiguration occurring in Kants
attributes or conscious sexual practices (Freud, text, whereby the traditionally public space of
Gesammelte Werke V: 4546 n. 1; idem, Three professions and social services becomes
Essays 13 n. 1).3 private, while the term public is reserved
for a space that transcends all society, public and
private (in the traditional sense of the words), as
universal and particular
the realm of the scholar. What has not drawn
As we know, it is a topos in all branches of so much attention is the fact that Kant fashioned
traditional philosophy, from ontology and epis- enlightened civil society exclusively on the model
temology to ethics and political philosophy, to of his dynamic (male) antinomy.
oppose the universal to the particular, and Kants predilection towards the dynamic
to privilege the former. It is equally a classical antinomy in this context may be justified by the
topos within feminist theories to deem the fact that his cornerstone in defining the totality of
universal as a male specialty, and to attempt civil society concerns not its spatial or temporal
to undermine its claims through an alternative, limits but the causes determining any action
female voice, which invokes and foregrounds the within this totality the alternative between
importance of the particular. This gesture freedom and obedience or law which, as
may indeed deviate from the philosophical such, pertain to the territory of the dynamic
canon, with its general proclivity towards the antinomy. We recall that in the context of pure
universal, but it is no less complicit in reason, Kant subjugates all appearances to the
sustaining and reinforcing the established oppo- determinism of the law, while he reserves free-
sition between the universal and the parti- dom for the exception to appearances, the thing-
cular. In this section, I want to show that the in-itself. This dictate of reason finds here its
opposition between the so-called universal and perfect correlate in political philosophy: if
particular is due to a conceptual conflation unconditional obedience is reserved merely for
between universality proper and totality. I shall the citizen of civil society (appearances), and
also propose a reconceptualization of the relation freedom for scholars as world citizens (thing-
between universal and particular beyond the in-itself), no contradiction arises if the impera-
traditional notions of either their opposition or tive, Argue as much as you will, and about what
dialectic synthesis. you will, but obey!, is addressed to the very
Once again, I shall take Kant as my starting same subjects, but in different relations on one
point to tease out certain insights from both what side, as members of the community in which
appears to be accurate and what appears to be one must obey; and, on the other, as a
problematic in his argumentation. In his notor- member of . . . a society of world citizens, where
ious definition of Enlightenment, Kant posited the scholar certainly can argue without hurting
the totality of body politics through the postulate the affairs for which he is in part responsible as a
that reason must always be free, allowing you, passive member (Kant, Foundations 87). To
the scholar, to argue as much as you will, and enhance the historical irony involved here, we
about what you will before the reading could say that, by grounding civil society on the
public, under the crucial precondition, as dynamic antinomy, the Enlightenment rewrites

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the Cartesian cogito as: I think freely, therefore, space the concern of the (female) mathematic
I obey. antinomy, which we thus find nested within the
The political stakes of this logical hat trick are (male) dynamic antinomy in the guise of the
amply evident in Frederics II jubilant response: antithesis, as if turning the corner of one of
Let them reason all they want to as long as they Lacans Mobius strips. Just as in mathematical
obey (as cited in Foucault 34). He obviously cases, every part leads to a still smaller part,
understood that the freedom granted to the one so, too, regarding dynamic causality, every
realm is inconsequential to the juridical rigidity event always has another event above it as its
of the other. As Arendt admonishes, political cause . . . [which is] supported again by others,
freedom in Kant might be reserved only for the without ever getting stability and support from a
spectator, the scholar capable of assuming the self-sufficient thing as an unconditioned original
general standpoint of impartiality, which being unless, of course, one poses freedom as
takes others into account but knows nothing of an unconditioned original being (Kant,
how to combine with them in order to act Prolegomena 82, x52c; idem, Critique 498;
(Lectures 44). Yet Arendt continues to point out A467/B495). This, however, is something that
that Kants intention is not a return to the ancient the mathematic antinomy cannot do; so what we
Greek bios theoretikos (from theorein, to look really have here is a leap in reason, in which a
at) and the supremacy of the spectators way (female) mathematic question receives a (male)
of life (55). Rather, insofar as political action is dynamic response. Well, the society of
practical, and practical means moral in Kant, the Enlightenment has been patriarchal . . . What
always concern[ing] the individual qua indivi- is new?
dual, its true opposite would be, not theory, Yet as much as Arendt discerns the pitfalls of
but speculation the speculative use of reason Kants political philosophy and its paralyzing
(61). And the speculative interest of reason, function within the realm of civil society, she
Kant tells us, lies in grasp[ing] the whole chain nevertheless persists on focusing on specu-
of conditions fully a priori and comprehend[ing] lation. Is her persistence a profoundly, even if
the derivation of the conditioned, starting with unintentionally, anti-feminist gesture? Why
the unconditioned (Critique 498; A467/B495). doesnt she, like many feminists and others,
It is on the side of dogmatism or the thesis of invite us to forget the totality and focus on the
the dynamic antinomy which, we recall, posits particular?
the exceptional domain of the freedom of the I want to suggest that her reasons relate to the
thing-in-itself or of the world scholar that the intimation that there is a way of constituting the
speculative interest of reason is expressed, universal without forming a totality, that is, there
since it succeeds in stopping the regress in the is a universal that forms itself without presuppos-
series of conditions for given appearances by ing an exception, be it freedom or the particular.
posing freedom as absolutely unconditioned. This universal emerges not out of any antinomy of
By contrast, the antithesis in the dynamic reason but out of reasons failure and success,
antinomy which acknowledges no exception to known as the not-all set. In set theory, the obstacle
the natural or civil laws cannot do this, so preventing the (male) totality from constituting
that in it every event always has another event itself is not the (female) diachronic regression in
above it as its cause, and hence the regress is the series of the conditioned but the self-
never allowed to stop (498, 520; A467/B495, referentiality of the synchronic totality. The
A509/B537). attempt to form the totality as the set of all sets
What the realm of causality or of civil law fails not because we always run the risk of
needs in order to constitute a totality is some- encountering yet another set but because it
thing unconditioned freedom to prevent the cannot be decided whether or not it itself (the set
regression to infinity in the series of conditions. of all sets) is included as a member of itself. Thus
But, crucially, infinity is a category pertaining the set of all sets constitutes not a closed or
not to causality but to extension in time and exclusionary totality but an open universality,

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whereby one of its elements (the set of all sets) is totalized. For instance, opposing the particular to
both inside and outside the set which, as such, is a the universal as its exception is an act that, rather
not-all set. As Kojin Karatani puts it, the moment than undermining the latter, totalizes it. The
Cantor . . . treated infinity as a number, thus feminine voice that pursues this practice reveals
making the set of all numbers (infinity) a member that its true sex is male, contributing to the
of itself, the set of all numbers became not-all, and totalization of the universal. Only the particulars
set theory suddenly became pierced with para- recognition as both universal and its exception
doxes (70). can undermine the totalizing tendency of the
The first philosopher who articulated the universal and neither sex, as we shall see in the
paradox of the not-all set avant la lettre, prior next section, can obtain this recognition without a
to Cantor and set theory, was Karl Marx. As further mode of subjectivation.
Karatani puts it, by treating capital itself, and The stereotypical coupling of the universal
therefore money itself the presumed exception with the male gender, and the particular with
to all other commodities as a commodity, the female, is facilitated by the general conflation
Marx identifies a paradox in which a class of the of universality and totality. In truth, however,
meta-level [money] descends to the object level to universality and particularity are one anothers
occupy the same locus as the members [commod- supplements, and it is only the totalization of the
ities]; in other words, to become a member of universal that pits them against each other.
itself (6970). For, as Marx points out, if gold
confronts the other commodities as money it is
only because it previously confronted them as a the bisexual genre: ethics
commodity, and nothing could have won a
monopoly as the universal equivalent if it Having distinguished the universality of the not-
itself were not like all other commodities all set from the totality of the dynamic antinomy,
(16263). This is true not only as long as gold or now we must also differentiate the not-all set from
other more or less valuable objects of utility were the not-all of the female infinite regress of the
used as money; on the contrary, the fact that any mathematic antinomy a further distinction that
kind of money, including worthless paper money, has not been made in extant accounts of Lacanian
is also a commodity is evident particularly in theory.4 The relevant questions arising here are
advanced capitalism, where money is a major two: if the two Kantian antinomies provide the
commodity, being sold by credit companies for matrix of sexual difference, what is the not-all set
more money. Money, therefore, is both the the blueprint of? And is there a genre that
exception to and a member of the set of all operates according to the not-all-set logic?
commodities, rather than a barometer con- The response to the first question is rather
ceived as the exception outside the totality of all evident: insofar as the not-all-set logic recognizes
other commodities (Karatani 70). the supplementary identity between the universal
Comparing Kants dynamic antinomy and and the particular what the two sexes mistake
Marxs not-all set we can see the difference for external opposites it is the blueprint of
between totality and universality: a totality is Freuds aforementioned unconscious bisexuality.
grounded on the exclusion of an exception (as in Freuds thesis entails that, even as the subject
Kants enlightened civil society, into which may consciously identify with either the parti-
freedom is not allowed to step), and is as such cular or the universal, unconsciously it identifies
exclusory rather than universal; universality, by with both, without any contradiction, since es
contrast, is all-inclusive, which is why it is not-all, gibt in diesem System keine Negation [there is in
that is, it does not exclude its own exceptional this system [the unconscious] no negation]
precondition (such as the world of commodities, (Freud, Gesammelte Werke X: 285). It follows
which includes within itself money, its constitu- that, although both sex and the unconscious
tive exception). Positing an excluded exception is pertain to the level of the real, their domains
the mechanism through which the universal is within the real are distinct, as is evident in the

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fact that negation is operative in sex and not in determines the meaning and value of the signifiers
the unconscious. within the field in question, while imposing
Lacan foregrounds the difference between the specific moral (ideological) values that dictate its
unconscious and the sexual realms within the telos (Tarrying 217). By contrast, when, accord-
register of the real by stating, first, that the status ing to the not-all set, the exceptional Master-
of the unconscious is ethical and, second, that Signifier is also included within the set of all other
ethics is manifestly beyond-sex (hors-sexe), or signifiers, then its arbitrary monopolization of the
outside of sex (Four Fundamental Concepts 34; function of the exclusive signifier like that of
idem, Book XX 85, 85 n. 20). If sex is, the money in the set of commodities becomes
unconscious and the ethical are what wants and evident, and the ideology of the discourse runs
ought to be, respectively. Responding to our the risk of being undermined. If and when the
second question, bisexuality or the not-all set inclusion of the Master-Signifier within the
bypasses the perceived opposition between the ideological field succeeds in undermining it,
ontological question of what is and the then the discourse yields to language, whose
epistemological question regarding the represen- sole function consists in safeguarding the
tation of what is, and instead addresses the genre identity of a being to itself, regardless of its
of ethics, whose concern is what ought to be. historical past and the value attributed by the
The ethical is pre-ontological because, like the discourse to it, that is, regardless of any possible
unconscious . . . it is neither being, nor non- teleology and ideological system of values.
being, but a manque-a-etre, a want-to-be, To make the distinction between discourse and
something unrealized or unborn which, as language more clear, let us turn to Lacans
such, may ought to be and, hence, may come to be example of an ethical act in Sophocles
(Lacan, Four Fundamental Concepts 2930, 23).5 Antigone, and let us consider the proper name
To understand the inextricable relation Polynices, which designates Antigones brother
between ethics and the not-all set we must spell as much after his having become a traitor and
out Lacans distinction between discourse and fratricide as it did before. King Creons decree not
language, which is pivotal in Lacans conceptua- to bury Polynices is conceivable only outside of
lization of the ethical act. Lacan introduced this language, in the kingdom of discourse, for it is
distinction already in his third seminar stating: only there that the opposition between good and
evil emerges, since in the realm of discourse the
Firstly, there is a synchronic whole, which is being of him who has lived cannot be detached
language as a simultaneous system of struc- from all he bears with him in the nature of good
tured groups of opposition, then there is what and evil, of destiny, of consequences for others, or
occurs diachronically, over time, and which is
of feelings for himself (Lacan, Book VII 279). By
discourse. One cannot but give discourse a
contrast, from the value-free, non-teleological
certain direction in time, a direction that is
defined in a linear manner . . . It is in this perspective of language, once a being bears a
diachronism that discourse is set up. (Lacan, proper name, funeral rites cannot be refused to it,
Book III 54) regardless of its historical past, for there is no
moral measure from which to judge it. All that
Like anything that presupposes a diachronic remains is the universal recognition, shared by all
direction or teleology, discourse is constituted in cultures in all times, that one cannot be finished
the mode of the dynamic antinomy, that is, on the with his remains simply by forgetting that the
basis of an exception, a signifier which Lacan calls register of being of someone who was identified by
Master-Signifier, and which is excluded from the name has to be preserved by funeral rites a
rest of the signifiers, so that the latter form a recognition which, from the perspective of
closed totality. As Zizek writes, the Master- language, cannot admit any exception (279).
Signifier brings about the closure of an ideolo- Here we have the chance to see not only the
gical field by way of designating the Supreme formal difference between the mathematic anti-
Good (God, Truth, Nation, etc.), which nomy and the not-all set of language but also

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the difference in their ethical, and hence socio- Given that any value is ideological, and all
political, implications. For both, the two possible value judgments aim at sustaining the very
opposing judgments Polynices is bad and ideology that pronounces them, value judgments
Polynices is good are equally false because are self-interested and, as such, as Kant would be
they presuppose that ones redemptive value is the first to admit, not ethical. Here we meet
predicated on ones historical past, as judged by Arendt once again, who argues that it is only on
existing norms. What if, from the perspective of the ethical level that the Who, the truly free
death, as it were (i.e., of funeral rites), people are subject, emerges. For, in Kristevas summary of
value-free, neither good nor bad?6 As Kant writes Arendts argument, this subject is marked by the
in the context of the mathematic antinomy, if two uniqueness of an excess which is disclosed
mutually opposed judgments presuppose an inad- only in and attached to an action, which
missible condition, then, despite their con- is distinguished . . . from labor and the
flict . . . both of them collapse, because the work, remains independent of what [the
condition collapses under which alone either of acting subject] may achieve, and transcends
them would be valid (Kant, Critique 517; mere protective activity motivated by patholo-
A503/B531). Indeed, both the mathematic anti- gical self-interests (Arendt, The Human
nomy and language reveal that the judgments of Condition 17980, 211, as cited in Kristeva 174).
discourse appear as true because of the inad- I will make a parenthesis here to stress once
missible condition of excluding a third possibi- more that the above distinction between the not-
lity: that Polynices may be value-free. Yet, unlike all set and the mathematic antinomy has not been
the mathematic antinomy, language challenges taken into account even by the best, to my
discourse and its inadmissible condition not by knowledge, psychoanalytic commentaries on
means of a regression to infinity in the magnitude ethics and/or feminism. For instance, Copjec
(of experience), which would show that the astutely points out that Lacans ethics takes off
process through which we could arrive to the from the proposal that being is not-all or there is
absolute and true condition (the true value of no whole being, but she quickly merges this not-
Polynices) is indeterminately far. In the mathe- all with the feminine not-all of the mathematic
matic antinomy, the absolute condition is posited antinomy when she goes on to write that it is
as given, even if out of reach. As opposed to this, woman who is guardian of the not-all of being
language shows hic et nunc that there is no possible (Imagine theres no Woman 7).7 The present
such condition because any discursive system of argument suggests that a properly feminist
values is by definition a not-all system that appears approach to the issue of gender, sex, and the
to be teleological only through the prism of its genres of ethics and politics should take off from
ideology, itself posited as unquestionable truth the difference between the two distinct logics out
only insofar as it excludes a suturing Master- of which a not-all emerges, the one being a
Signifier outside the set of the rest of the signifiers. reduction to a kind of bad infinity, the other
Thus, unlike the mathematic antinomy, lan- being self-referentiality, as the proper ground for
guage passes judgment on social reality itself, not defining the genre of ethics.
on our knowledge thereof: language has a fatal A further reason why the mathematic anti-
effect on discourse (history), for the permission to nomy is easily conflated with the not-all set is
bury Polynices presupposes the collapse of their shared affinity to self-referentiality. The
Creons system of values. (Let us not forget that mathematic antinomy is said to be self-referential
Sophocles tragedy was written as part of the because presumably its object is knowledge itself,
attempts to establish in Athenian society a new as opposed to external reality but this
political system democracy.) This means that, opposition, as we have seen, is untenable. By
while any genre of knowledge has more or less an contrast, the not-all set is truly self-referential, in
impact on historical reality, when we speak of that it includes within itself its constitutive
ethics we speak of a genre with direct con- presupposition (e.g., money, ideological Master-
sequences on action and history. Signifier). The latter self-referentiality has effects

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equally on thought and social reality, effects that there is no guarantee against the possibility of
can be compared to an arrest of time and the the excess the risk has to be assumed, it is part
institution of a new order of things, with its own of the very field of the political (Welcome to the
values, laws, and causal relations. As Lacan puts Desert of the Real 15354). I would venture to
it, the unique value involved in Antigones argue, though, that as much as it is indeed
ethical contumacy is essentially that of langu- practically impossible to have a guarantee against
age . . . that separation of being from the char- the possibility of the bad excess, this is not the
acteristics of the historical drama . . . [which] is ultimate word regarding ethics and politics. I will
precisely the limit or the ex nihilo (Lacan, Book maintain that there is at least a formal criterion
VII 279). This limit alone deserves the name of between the ethical act and the excess of horror,
freedom, for it is not a freedom exiled from which will also help us define better the relation
civil society, as in Kants enlightened world, but, between sex and ethics.
as Arendt writes, it is a radical beginning, an It is the not-all-set logic itself that provides this
unconnected new event breaking into the formal criterion. As Alain Badiou has made this
continuum . . . of chronological time, a thought suggestion, I turn here to his comparison between
of an absolute beginning, a creatio ex nihilo Nazism and the ethical event introduced by
that abolishes the sequence of temporality and Marx. Marx is an event for political thought,
establishes a Novus Ordo Seclorum [new order Badiou writes, because he designates, under the
of ages] (Arendt, Life of the Mind II: 208, 207). name proletariat, the central void of early
However, one must always be very cautious bourgeois societies. By contrast, the Nazi
with this rhetoric of rupture in historical time, seizure of power in 1933 . . . although formally
for, as both Arendt and Lacan, with their shared indistinguishable from an event, only reinforces
allusions to the Holocaust, remind us, the end of the old order since it conceives itself as a
the old is not necessarily the beginning of the German revolution, that is, as a closed
new, and the foundation legends, with their particularity of an abstract set [ensemble] (the
hiatus between disaster and salvation only Germans or the Arians), which, as such, is
indicate the problem without solving it; they exclusionary. My sole objection to Badious
only point to the abyss of nothingness that argument is that, after all, Nazism is formally
opens up before any deed that cannot be distinguishable from Marxs event, for, unlike
accounted for by a reliable chain of cause and Nazism, Marxs genuine event . . . relates to the
effect, since the latter could account only for particularity of a situation [bourgeois society]
events within the old order (II: 204, 20708; see only from the bias of its void [proletariat], thus
also Lacan, Four Fundamental Concepts 27476). preventing the universality of the situation from
Even though the shape of the new order cannot becoming a closed totality, with its void as
ever be predicted on the basis of the laws and its exclusion. As Badiou concludes: the funda-
causal relations of the old order, this does not mental ontological characteristic of an event is to
mean that it is impossible to distinguish formally inscribe, to name, the situated void of that for
between a rupture that instead of sustaining its which it is an event (69, 7374). An act, like a
moment of freedom within itself leads to a genre, can be characterized as ethical only insofar
phenomenon such as the Nazi horror, and an as it operates according to the bisexual logic of
authentic historical break with the established the not-all set, which names its inadmissible
order. Can one know whether the rupture is condition, the void that was excluded in the old
ethical, indeed introducing a new order, or order in order for the latter to totalize itself as a
whether it is a delusional rupture that in truth closed, teleological system of values.
replicates and reinforces the old order? In other It is evident, therefore, that the traditional
words, can one distinguish between the genre of attribution of the ethical capacity to maleness and
ethics and the genre of horror in history? the concomitant claim, made also by Freud, that
In response to this question, and at a very women are incapable of ethics, is profoundly
urgent historical moment, Zizek argues that untenable. What remains open is how each sex,

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structured so that it either forms a totality by whether this involves the afterlife or the two sexes
positing an exclusion or forms no totality by as an external opposition (I: 199201).
regressing to infinity, can enter the ethical mode The affinities between Arendt and Baruch
by forming a self-referential universality. The Spinoza, the philosopher who founded modern
answer to this question may involve, as Joan monism, go beyond the above monistic conception
Copjecs work suggests, two distinct considera- of the world and the human subject. A further
tions of the subjects relation to ethics, that is, a Spinozian theme traversing Arendts thought
masculine and a feminine ethics (see Copjec, derives from his assertion that truth accompanied
Imagine theres no Woman). But I will not by joy can be accessed not through imagination or
address this question here. reason but only through a third kind of knowl-
edge which does not explain the essence of any
singular thing but of the universal, without any
sub specie aeternitatis: the genre of relation to time, but under a certain species of
ethics or history eternity (481; Ethics, part II, prop. 44, cor. 2,
dem.). It is this kind of knowledge that is
Continuing the above line of thought, while presupposed for Arendts Who to be realized,
borrowing Arendts succinct words once again, for, as she writes: one must not . . . consider man
the ethical genre sustains the inner duality of as he is and not consider what is mortal in mortal
the two-in-one (Life of the Mind I: 198). The things, but think about them to the extent that
duality that the thinking being must sustain as they have the possibility of immortalizing
a relation of the two-in-one, rather than an (Arendt, The Human Condition 56, citing
opposition, is thoughts ability to conceive of Aristotles Nicomachean Ethics 1177 b31). As
reality and existence both in terms of time Kristeva remarks, Aristotelian theater the
and space and outside them, in terms of the political art par excellence is important for
void of self-referentiality. As Arendt puts it, Arendt because of the capacity of narrated
generalization is inherent in every thought, just action to immortalize the living, for the polis
as every thought is applicable everywhere, so was for the Greeks . . . first of all their guarantee
that looked from the perspective of the everyday against the futility of individual life and was
world of appearances, the everywhere of the reserved for the relative permanence, if not
thinking ego . . . is a nowhere, which might be immortality, of mortals (Arendt, The Human
conceived only as a Void. Yet the absolute void Condition 188, 56; Kristeva 75).
can be a limiting boundary concept, so that the Arendts invocation of Aristotelian theater
mere fact that we are in possession of these extends the above permeation of being and
limiting boundary concepts enclosing our thought by the atemporal dimension of the
thought within unsurmountable walls . . . does nowhere into the historical domain of action
not tell us more than that we are indeed finite in time and space. In a paradoxical move, the
beings. Insofar as the duality of the two- precondition for thought and being to be
in-one is sustained as such, it is the atemporal historicized becomes the submission of historical
void of thought itself that relegates us back to action to the narrative perspective under the
time and space and makes us aware of our species of eternity. The precondition of historical
finitude and mortality. Thus, Mans finitude, consciousness is the narrative de-historicization of
irrevocably given by virtue of his own short time historical action. In other words, the fully realized
span set in an infinity of time stretching into both historical Who narrates history not from
past and future, constitutes the infrastructure, as within discourse but from within language.
it were, of all mental activities. It is only due to There is, therefore, no formal genre difference
the deterioration of this duality into a split between ethics and any proper narrative repre-
capable only of relating to either the one or the sentation of history.
other side of the duality that introduces yet This supplementary relation between historical
another variation of the two-world theory, time and the species of eternity is comparable to

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the other scandalous paradox of the twentieth 1 All brackets in citations are mine.
century: Freuds dependence of the pleasure 2 We must not, however, infer, as both Hegel and
principle on the death drive, something beyond Zizek do, that therefore [t]he supersensible . . . is
the pleasure principle, which is nevertheless its appearance qua appearance; for, albeit nothing
precondition.8 Each thinker transforms the one of but a lack, this negative self-relationship of
two opposite poles into the supplementary representation to itself has real effects on repre-
precondition of the other: just as the death sentation, such as, to repeat Ziz eks words, to
drive becomes pleasures presupposition beyond make it appear as mere appearance, and is
pleasure, the perspective of eternity becomes therefore itself a real beyond appearance, even as
it cannot ontologically exist but in its effects
historys presupposition beyond history. When it
(appearance) (Hegel 89).
comes to any opposition of traditional metaphy-
sics, from the universal and the particular to the 3 An affinity between Freuds concept of bisexual-
historical or appearance and its beyond, only ity and the common use of the term nevertheless
bisexual logic can grasp their immanent or remains on the level of the unconscious, insofar as
allhumanbeings are capable ofmaking a homosex-
supplementary relation.
ual object-choice and have in fact made one in their
I will conclude by recapitulating the most
unconscious (Freud, Three Essays 11 n.1). Note also
important contributions of the above discussion that Lacans attribution of sexuality to the failure
to feminist theory in general, and specifically to of reason eliminates all biological remnants in
the discussion of the relations among gender, sex, Freuds grounding of his thesis on a presumed
and genre: (1) by going beyond the discursive tendency towards bisexuality (Bisexualitat) in
constitution of subjectivity and gender, and by higher animals in general (Freud, Gesammelte
taking into account the real as the failure of WerkeV: 46 n.1; idem,Three Essays13 n.1).
discourse, psychoanalysis allows us to focus on 4 I have introduced this distinction elsewhere
sexual, rather than simply gender, difference; this (see Kordela).
consideration of sex overcomes the traditional
5 This distinction between the two realms of the
couplings of genre and gender, both by under-
real may bear similarities to the distinction intro-
mining and revising traditional genre classifica-
duced by Jacques-Alain Miller in his class,
tions and by revealing radically new Orientation lacanienne, between two different
reconfigurations between them and the two levels of the real, R1 and R2, which Fink describes
sexes. (2) The distinction between totality and as follows: (1) a real before the letter, that is, a
universality proposed here offers a decisive presymbolic real, which, in the final analysis, is
contribution to the long debates, in various but our own hypothesis (R1), and (2) a real after
fields from philosophy and social and political the letter which is characterized by impasses and
theory to feminist theory, about the relation impossibilities due to the relations among the ele-
between the universal and the particular, while ments of the symbolic order itself (R2), that is,
which is generated by the symbolic (The Lacanian
dismantling their canonical associations with each
Subject 182 nn.11, 27). It is evident that sex pertains
sex. (3) The further distinction between the
to the level of R2, since it indeed comes after the
feminine not-all and the not-all set allows for a letter and is generated by the symbolic as its
thorough redefinition of the genres of ethics and byproduct. What seems more intractable in com-
historical narratives, while irre- plying with this scheme is the unconscious, which
vocably severing the traditional being, as Lacan has put it, structured like a lan-
linkage between maleness and guage, is hard to be conceived also as before the
ethics. letter or presymbolic (Lacan, Book III 167). Yet if
we take into account that one of the central func-
tions around which the symbolic is organized is
notes
negation, and that this function is not operative
My gratitude goes to Linda Schulte-Sasse, Mathew either in the unconscious or in language, as defined
Collins, and Ben Davis for thoughtful feedback here in distinction from discourse, then it may well
throughout various stages of the present work. be that the statement that the unconscious is

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genre
structured like language should be taken in this Fink, Bruce. The Lacanian Subject: Between
precise sense of language, and then the Language and Jouissance. Princeton: Princeton UP,
unconscious could be said to be presymbolic. 1995.
This hypothesis is supported by Lacans further
Foucault, Michel. What is Critique? Trans. Lysa
commentary on the above statement, which
Hochroth. The Politics of Truth. Ed. Sylve're
asserts that the unconscious and everything that
Lotringer and Lysa Hochroth. New York:
belongs to analytic communication . . . whatever it
Semiotext,1997. 23^ 82.
may be, isnt a language in the sense in which this
would mean that its a discourse ^ Ive never said Freud, Sigmund. Gesammelte Werke. Ed. Anna
it was a discourse ^ but is structured like a Freud. London: Imago 1952; Frankfurt/M: Fischer,
language (167). 1999.
6 Here I am paraphrasing Kants example of the Freud, Sigmund. Three Essays on the Theory of
body that instead of having either a bad or a good Sexuality. Trans. James Strachey. New York: Basic,
smell might be odor-free (see Kant, Critique 517; 2000.
A503/B531).
Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich. Phenomenology
7 In my opinion, the feminine not-all relates to of Spirit.Trans. A.V. Miller.Oxford: Oxford UP,1977.
hysteria ^ which is traditionally linked to woman,
Kant, Immanuel. Critique of Pure Reason. Ed.
as is clear both in Freud and Lacan and in later
and trans. Paul Guyer and Allen W. Wood.
commentators, such as Fink ^ an organization of
Cambridge: Cambridge UP,1998.
subjectivity that resists the ethical act, insofar as
the hysterics desire . . . is to sustain the desire of Kant, Immanuel. Foundations of the Metaphysics of
the father (Lacan, Four Fundamental Concepts 38; the Morals and What is Enlightenment? Trans. Lewis
see also Fink, The Lacanian Subject 107). White Beck. Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, Library
of Liberal Arts,1959.
8 This in itself suffices to explain why Lacan
argues that toute pulsion [every drive], the oral, Kant, Immanuel. Prolegomena to Any Future
the anal, the scopic, and the invocatory, est vir- Metaphysics that Will be Able to Come Forward as
tuellement pulsion de mort [is virtually a death Science. Trans. James Ellington. Indianapolis:
drive] (Ecrits II 215). Hacket,1977.
Karatani, Kojin. Architecture as Metaphor: Language,
Number, Money. Ed. Michael Speaks. Trans. Sabu
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A. Kiarina Kordela
2085 Jefferson Ave.
Saint Paul, MN 55105
USA
E-mail: kordela@macalester.edu

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