'' i..'',, "f rlp Page 8-Sunday, January 22, 1978-The Michigan Daily anti-oedipus (Continued from Page 6) direction. This is evident from page one. The opening lines of the book revolve around a French pun (unac- countably left unindicated in the translation) - a pun based on the fact that in French the same word, "ca", is used to render the meanings of both "it" and "id". ("Id" is' the Freudian label for that part of us which holds our instincts and drives.) The book begins, It is at work every where, functioning smoothly at times, at other times in fits and starts. It breathes, it heats, it eats. It shits and fucks. What a mistake to have ever said the id. Everywhere it is machine.s.-.- The pace of the prose never really lets up. The endurance of the reader may flag, but the energy of the authors seems boundless. Deleuze and Guattari mean many things at once when they say they are anti-Oedipus. For one thing, they mean that they are against psychia- trists whom they say are too eager to explain human phenomena in terms of the Oedipus complex. The authors assert that psychoanalysts accom- modate human realities to their the- ories, to- the detriment of their patients. Pierssens remarks, "De- leuze and Guattari say that psycho- analysis isn't only a means of under- standing, it is also a means of impos- ing something on the patient. Psycho- analysis, in a way, makes a slave out of the person who is analyzed. The patient comes to the psychoanalyst, and the psychoanalyst castrates him, Deleuze and Guattari say. The psychoanalyst imposes incomplete- ness; the psychoanalyst imposes the Oedipal triangle on the patient, trian- gulates him, organizes him into that structure of misery and dependence. And it's on the basis of this view that they say, 'No, that has to change completely." T HE AUTHORS ARE anti- Oedipus also as a result-of their conviction that the so-called Oedipal conflicts which people feel within their families are actually ex- pressions of conflicts with society as a whole. Deleuze and Guattari inisit that the social structure protects itself by in- fluencing people to express their anti- societal feelings by struggling within their families. The authors write, Oedipal desires are the bait, the disfigured image by means of which repression catches desire in the trap. If desire is repressed, this is not because it is desire for the mother and for the death of the father; on the contrary, desire becomes that only because it is repressed, it takes on 'that mask onlv under the reign of the repression that models the mask for it and plasters it on its face. Society protects itself by deflecting the energy of human desire which could shake up or destroy estab- lished structures, Deleuze and Guat- tari say. And they see the suppres- sive and perverting influence of society at work in every human sphere. Desire, they insist, is present in everything that involves people, and wherever society encounters desire, it harnesses or diverts it. According to the authors, The truth is that sexuality is everwhere: the way a bureaucrat fondles his records, a judge administers justice, a businessman causes money to circulate;- the way the bourgeoisie fucks the proletariat; and so on. A nd there is no need to resort to metaphors . . . Hitler got the fascists sexual/y aroused. Flags, nations, armies, banks get a lot of people aroused, A revolutionary machine is nothing if it does not acquire at least as much force as these coercive machines have for producing breaks and mobilizing flo ws. It is not through a desexualizing extension that the libido invests the large aggregates. On the contrary, it is through a restriction, a blockage, and a reduction that the libido is made to repress its flows in order to contain themi in the narrow cells of the type "couple, " "fami/y, " "per- son, " "objects. " Anti-Oedipus is a call for social revolution in that it presents an accounting of what the authors feel must change in society. But, notes Pierssens, the book is not a standard political tract in that it does not recommend a new social order to replace the current order. Pierssens says, "Deleuze and Guattari have said that they don't have a political program. There are things that they know very precisely: that such and such a thing doesn't work, or that such and such a thing is an oppres- sion, or a repression, and one has to fight against it. But it isn't a political theory in the traditional sense. They aren't trying to substitute one system with another, but in the system as it exists, they want to heighten the con tradictions." IERSSENS ADDS, "For them, capitalism exists everywhere,; even in the so-called socialist countries. And for them, it's in the capitalist countries- that transfor- mation, multiplication, proliferation of differences, are most visible. And that's what they want- For them, capitalism is delirious, but it heightens delirium to such a point that it finally has the greatest possibility of liberating." This social criticism advanced in Anti-Oedipus attracted many French radicals. It attracted radicals frustrated by the difficulty of effecting basic social change in their country through familiar political means. Pier- ssens points out, "There is a deadlok in politics in France, particularly in. certain groups on the left. People are i r 1% I A u O qft6 " iii: "" :: ? : : ' :i ?: : : " tppP'. 9 Ems l L:fC"'{:r{::v:":i h q Y . . N4EVER PUT JEANS IN' THE DAN AF1 YlOU'VE P15rGi AT Me DONA 0 Deleuze and Guattari ideologically cornered. So it was attrac- tive for certain people in these political movements to try to find a new route of access to politics through something which on its face is radically non- political - the libido, for example." Rallying around Anti-Oedipus was a way of "trying to escape the deadlock of strictly political debate about politics. It was a way of permitting non- political debate about politics." Although Anti-Oedipus was attractive to many leftists, the book clearly does not present a conventionally leftist ideology. But neither is it conservative. It's nearly impossible to determine its location on the standard ideological spectrum. Pierssens says the book is "on the extreme left in so far as it flows over into problems of politics, of power, et cetera." But, he says, on the other hand, "there are certain aspects of the book that are anti-left, in so far as the left, especially in France, is identified with the seizing of power, with the mechanics of power, with all of what Deleuze and Guattari call the paranoic structure of politics. And they are ab- solutely against that. On the one hand they are on the extreme left - ob- viously they don't support Giscard d'Estaing, Georges Pompidou, et cetera. But on the other hand they are also against the 'paranoia' of the left, which is why they are sometimes called right-wingers, and sometimes fascists. "They admire the United States," he continues. "But what they admire about the United States is not its mili- tary-economic structure; rather, they admire what they call the con- stant 'deterritorialization' which is typical of what happens in the United States. For them, capitalism in its most advanced stage means deterri- torialization: impossibility making things secure, impossibility of creat- ing a power which can hold on. From that point of view, the state of affairs in the United States is very positive to Deleuze and Guattari. Capitalism is a grand decomposition; it's a su- per-decadence, it's something which perpetually destroys itself. And for them, that's a positive thing. For them, it's something which is - I wouldn't say it's a model, but it's to traditional leftist thought.. "Deleuze and Guattari are fer- ocious critics of classical Marx- ism," Pierssens says. "Deleuze was a member of the Communist Party, and he rejected the party totally. Their criticism against Communism is very violent." Before the publication of Antj- Oedipus, Gilles Deleuze was a philosopher who had published an im- portant study in the field of logic. He was also a loyal disciple of Lacari. Pier- ssens comments, "With Anti-Oedipus, Deleuze blended his two interests - his interest in logic, and his interest in Lacanian psychoanalysis. The book is a sort of a translation of Lacan into the logic of Deleuze." Felix Guattari was a relatively unknown psychiatrist before the book appeared. He was (and is) the admin- istrator of a unique mental hospital in France, the La Borde-clinic. Guattari's participation in the writing of the book lent interest, Pierssens says, "because for once, one could read something about psychology written by someone who wasn't just speculating about the unconscious, but who had real ex- perience." The way in which Guattari and his colleagues run the La Borde clinic gives some insight into practical aspects of how the theories of Anti-Oedipus can be applied -- at least in the area of psychiatry. Says Pierssens, "La Borde isn't a clinic like all the rest. It's more or less self-managed; that is to say that the people there - the mentally ill people - participate in the management of the clinic, in so far as they can. "Guattari is the chief of therapy there. And it's a clinic where people function with their differences. If they need help they get help, but if not, they function in their own lives, in their own paths. When you go to visit La Borde, you're a little surprised at first. You see people doing bizarre things everywhere. It has a completely chaotic atmosphere. But for Deleuze and Guattari, it would have to be that way." The extreme -popularity of Anti- Oedipus dismayed Deleuze and Guat- tari. That may seem paradoxical, but actually it's consistend with their philosophy. The book is a criticism of the structures of society. Says Piers- sens, "They wanted to try to destroy or undermine" societal apparatusses. And the last thing they wanted to do was-to add a new structure. Pierssens Adds, "Deleuze is someone who believes very much in liberty, and he doesn't want to be made into a sort of fetish. And Anti- Oedipus was in the process of becoming a fetish." Anti-Oedipus was originally planned to be the first volume of a two-volume 'work. But the authors didn't want to add fuel to the Anti-Oedipus movement, so they put off plans for the second volume. It now appears unlikely the second volume will be published. But the danger that the Anti-Oedipus movement might turn into a Franken- stein appears to have passed. "I would say that the book is now much less im- portant than it was," says Pierssens. "The movement has almost disap- peared." tlta( C E C) n P 0o YO DNT ED HTU5 OUFT JON HTESET ANDFRSE RAHWL GE GOGESATETIN " "" i..:':X " 55some I OOWT BELIEVE THAT COMME9CIAL.11 N i ME NEITHER. s . d " A wi y. kegs* so i " :.s:...:.:.t": :} tt... :: " '"}' ':.: .t' ti.}. t:. .t, .' '} tit """";" S:"::;:; L { " "::: y:: :1 t1:; t:tititit'"i';:":tiL "' :":ti':" };f : " IF I DIDN'T' BW11 TH OUTFIT, HE'D NEVE.R EN~OUGH TO NOTICE Nl U" wa ": ::}{S S " " A 11 .--L ~~~~1 Acoiin4n' LL~ - Eu, ow .w Sundamaem1azine Susan Ades Jay Levin inside: Co-editors Elaine Fletcher Tom O'Connell Revolt and Associate Editors Cover Photo of Cathy Guisewhite by Patty Montemurri "Cathy" comic strips courtesy of Cathy Guisewhite revision on the Freudian front Gael Greene: "Blue Skies" turn grey Supplement to The Michiganaily T Ann Arbor, Michigan-Sunday, January 22, 1978 t