Page Two-Sunday, January 22, 1978-The Michigan Daily The Michigan. Daily--Sunday, Jc RAMPILINGS/su san ades7 WHEN FOUR MEN and four wom- en signed a one-year lease on three stories of paint-chipped clap- board house, and populated it with two dogs, assorted lovers, six stereos, ten- th-hand furniture and home-grown bean sprouts, I was among them. My parents refused to admit to their friends that their daughter had "joined a commune," but in their laissez faire tradition, they made no value judgment except to say, "If that's what makes you happy ..." I assured them "co- operative living" would make me very happy. I was very wrong. The blissful period of this adventure in modern habitation was short-lived. It started with lofty discussions around an Alice Lloyd Hall dinner table and ended the day my seven friends fled town for the summer, leaving me an eight-bed- room, unfurnished house to sublet until the fall. The subletters who stumbled into their $50-a-month rooms on June 1st in- cluded a hot-rod fiend, a Michigan State packaging major, a travelling costume jewelry saleswoman, a reclusive guru, an elusive=Daily reporter and a Bridge master en route to Harvard Law. Col- lectively, they were more easily classi- fied as anarchists. The phone I installed for my guests was the victim of one disconnect, cour- tesy of Ma Bell, and one $15 re-connect, while I was the victim of a string of un- paid phone calls. Ants, in alarming numbers, seemed to have more control over the house than did the human resi- dents. And the shower curtain, a mar- velous slime green, had enough life in it to get up and do the cha-cha. So, when my co-operative cronies and I returned in September, we joined for- ces in a massive effort to whip our maligned house back into shape. AND WHEN WE were done, we made provisions to team up on just about everything else, too. A work wheel was posted, and a cooking sched- ule. Lists went up for shopping needs - co-op and supermarket - and before the first month was out; bills were tacked up in full view with notices alongside announcing due dates and warning of the approaching rent pay- ment. The refrigerator sported remind- ers that the tomatoes were getting soft or the cottage cheese was turning sour, and lo-and-behold, that night's sched- uled spaghetti was speckled with the curdled white stuff, whether you liked it or not. Green beans found their way in- to tuna fish; eggplant tiptoed through four-alarm chili. By the end of every week, our refrigerator was as hollow as a gourd, not a cucumber seed had gone uneaten. We owed it all to our thrifty, nifty shopping routine, which made its first inroads on my sanity sometime in late October. TUESDAY: cooking teams (2 people per night) place menus with all neces- sary ingredients in envelope on bulletin board. WEDNESDAY: co-op shopper and food store shopper compile all menus, rummage through all cup- boards, refrigerators and freezers, list all items, in exact quantities, to be pur- chased. Items divided into two lists headed "co-op" and "groceries." THURSDAY: D-Day. FRIDAY: Post such notes as: "Jackie, couldn't find slivered blanched almonds for your Turbot with Almond Egg Puff, bought three bananas instead." So much for creative food gathering. Dinner was served promptly at 6:00, which worked nicely into everyone's lifestyle but mine; house meetings, fre- quent and long, were scheduled for midnight - about the time I'd be cudd- ling up with my chemistry book for the night. The phone was never available when I was, and even when that cool, sleak receiver was finally in my grip, there was still no peace. When I had the phone installed, I made the fateful mistake of opting for a system that allows you, through an an- noying little click, to know when someone is trying to call in on your busy phone. The clicking will not stop until you have taken a message from the in- truding caller. This can be done by briefly depressing the phone's discon- nect button, which puts the original caller on hold and engages the second caller. After the message is taken, you depress the disconnect button again to bring back= the original caller. Mean- while, to the second caller, this all sounds somewhat ridiculous: "Sorry, you can't talk to Stuart right now, I'm on the phone." And the fun just begins when you're on long distance. ONE HELLISH week in February, when I couldn't find a convenient night to cook, missed four consecutive 6:00 dinners, perfunctorily hopskotched through the supermarket, and was interrupted six times during a three- minute phone conversation (no kid- ding), I blew the whistle. I called an See RAMBLINGS, Page 7 sundav mdmadgzine ACESTIC PUZZLE A. Instruments designed to illustrate the dynamics of rotating bodies B. Costs; financial outlcys C. Solitary; withdrawn; hermit-like D. Science of the construction and operation of vehicles far travel in interplanetary or interstellar space E. Practice or principle of submitting a question at issue to the whole body of voters F. A certain type of pre-me d student can be found in abundance here (2 words) G. Alert (3 words) H. Occasionally; once in a while (3 words) I. Thrilling; exciting J. Offends; affronts K. State of being balanced or in equipoise L "-cake" Rousseau Les Confessions, later attributed to Marie 'A'nfondtfe( tWbrds) 71 85 161 101 174 192 115 6 210 217 2 77 90 99 105 38 185 199 37 80 8 177 88 111 141 14 156 - - 7 32 46 114 125 131 139 67 72 86 92 154 42 63 103 113 166 135 142 171 36 157 - - - - - - - - - -- 66 74 81 93 110 149 152 167 191 195 200 209 33 55 78 62 91 98 165 178 212 23 39 94 59 75 1 133145164196 3 64 106 11 172 184 30 50 13 120 5 130 97 20 45 27 54 208 189 176 144 132 148 201, M. Growing of plants in nutrient solutions with or without an inert medium to provide mechanical support N. 2nd most popular religion in terms of number of adherents 0. Dissection of the tongue P. Customs; practices 0. Scientist who suggested sphere completely around a star (Full name) R. Pertaining to the measurement of infrared light S. Yellowish or grayish fade (comp) T. Urban draw; evening activity U. Lightweight metal used in areospace industry V. Beginning to be apparent; commencing W. Demands and compels X. Deserves; estimates 21 44 117 151 159 4 51 70 95 100 136 15 43 96 169 128 119 61 175 123 60 109 147 163 138 206 173 48 153 25 188 204 134 16 49 - - -_ - - - _- - 34 137 47 56 118 150 170 183 17 186 193 214 68 10 107 116 127 140 146- 155 160 180 190 BY STEPHEN J. POZSGA I Copyright 1977 INSTRUCTIONS Guess the words defined at the left and write them in over their numbered dashes. Then, transfer each letter to the cor- responding numbered square in the grid above. The letters printed in the upper-right-hand corners of the squares indi- cate from what clue-word a particular square's letter comes from. The grid, when filled in, should read as a quotation from a published work. The darkened squares are the spaces between words. Some words may carry over to the next line. Meanwhile, the first letter of each guessed- word at the left, reading down, forms an acrostic,"giving the author's name and the title of the work-from which the quote is extracted. As words and phrases begin to form in the grid, you can work back and forth from clues to grid until the puzzle is complete. Answer to Last Week's Puzzle "The only way to destroy art is to destroy society and this is one reason why avant-garde artists have so often seemed to campaign not merely against the ex- isting social order but also against the continuing ex- istence of the social organ- ism." Edward Lucie-Smith Art Now (Continued from Page 3) . Forties, Fifties and Sixties. It's ma- terial is almost totally unfamiliar this side of the Atlantic. . If it seems curious a psychoanalyst could have such a major impact in France and yet draw practically no attention here, one has to consider the history of psychoanalysis in Europe, and, specifically, in France. George Rosenwald, a professor of psychology at the University and a psychotherapist, explains: "It's not only that Lacan is not accepted here. You have to remember also that Freud had a very obscure history in France. Freud never caught on in France the way he caught on in England or the United States. The great market for Freud has been in the United States, and, to some extent, in England, especially in the last 30 years, since the war." Freud just didn't take hold in France befor World War II, or during the immediate post-war years. And when in the late Forties and early Fifties, France became ready to begin institutionalizing psychoanaly- sis, it was Lacan who presided. THE IMPETUS BEHIND La- can's work is the idea that the "classical" Freudians, who carried the torch for psychoanalysis in Freud's later years and after his death in 1939, misrepresented Freud, trying to make his theories seem clear-cut when they originally were ambiguous. Of course, it's difficult to make ob- jective judgments on whether it's Lacan's school or some other school which is most loyal to what Freud ac- tually said. Notes Rosenwald, Lacan and his rivals constantly trade punches over that issue: "Lacan's concept is that he is returning us to Freud. Other people dispute this, and say that he is simply cancelling the advances that psychoanalysis has made since 1940. He thinks that he's in the tradition of Freud, but the people whom he is opposing - and sometimes quite venomously - they also think they're in the tradition. So, can everybody be in the tradition?" What Lacan has done is create a map of the human psyche, using Freud's concepts as signposts. He makes his formulations with the aim of keeping people from viewing psy- chology as a cut-and-dried affair; he feels that the classical Freudians have tried to make psychology too much like a biological science, burying the ambiguities which were prominent in Freud's theories. And Lacan adds principles of linguistics to the psychological picture, seeing the organization of language as parallel to the organization of the unconscious. Before looking at the unconscious as Lacan sketches it, consider, for comparison, the psyche as it comes across in Freud's own writings. It takes many bookshelves to hold all the volumes written by Freud, and to summarize them in a few sentences is to oversimplify them. But if we must oversimplify, it's necessary to go directly to the essential nugget at the core of Freudianism, the Oedipus complex - the attraction we feel as children for the parent of the opposite sex, and the resultant guilt is fear that this attraction will be severely punished. Freud held that the Oedi- pal complex is d turning point in our sexual devlopmen t iukttir iorr and socialization. In Freud's view, the degree of our success in getting through the obstacle course of Oedi- pal family conflicts determines the degree to which we are psychologic- ally well-adjusted. In other words, the more trapped an individual is by Oedipal guilt, the greater the psycho- logical problems awaiting that indi- vidual in later life. HOW DOES THE complex work? Take the example of fear of flying, which at first glance seems quite remote from a child- hood wish to kill one parent and marry the other. Freud would say that when someone is afraid of trav- elling by air, the fear involved is the combination of fear of heights, fear of high speeds, and fear of crashing. Heights, speed, and crashing - they all suggest exhilaration, or the release of lots of energy. The connec- tion between exhilaration and sexual feelings is apparent. Thus, it is clear why Freud would call the fear of flying an expression of anxiety over the issue of sex. By subcon- sciously connecting air travel with sex, and expressing anxiety toward it, a person who fears flying is able to release tension over a sexual conflict without being forced to recognize its sexual significance. And where does the sexual conflict come from? Freud would say that it originates from inadequate resolution of ten- sions arising from the childhood family situation. And that brings us around to Oedipus. Lacan re-arranges the Freudian picture. He takes the Oedipus com- plex off center stage - in fact, he starts from scratch and builds a new model of the unconscious. Dominat- ing that structure is something Lacan calls the phallus, or the "signification of the phallus.'' When Lacan speaks of the phallus, he isn't referring to the anatomical organ. For Lacan, the phallus is a symbol which encompasses many things. It represents sexuality, or-at least heterosexual sexuality, be- cause, Lacan writes, "it is the most tangible element in the realm of sexual copulation." It also repre- sents for Lacan the Oedipal threat of castration or punishment, a threat which,according to Freud, is exper- ienced by women as well as by men. The symbolism of the phallus goes further. For Lacan, because the phallus represents the threat of punishment, it stands for authority in all its forms. Lacan says that the threat of castration lurks as the implicit force-behind all order, all authority, all law and all tradition. A ND THE PHALLUS also repre- sents the fact that people almost never feel fulfilled - we strive for fulfillment like a donkey chasing a carrot dangling before its eyes, incapable of finally reaching the mark. We strive for sexual fulfill- ment, for physical fulfillment, for spiritual fulfillment; we strive to keep body and soul intact. And for Lacan, this striving is represented by. the phallus. .Linked to the concept of the phallus is the concept of the "Name-of-the- father." What the Name-of-the- father means is this: when, as children, we experience the threat of castration, the threat seems larger than life, and consequently the threat is perceived as coming from a larger- than-life parent. The Name-of-the- father is Lacan's label for this image of the hyper-powerful parent. Institu- tions like the law, Lacan says, draw thei'power by 'associatixig - thern selves in people's minds with the Name-of-the-father. There are many more similar con- cepts in Lacan's lexicon. The psycho- analyst's intention in formulating these concepts is not to alter Freud- ian theory, but to clarify it. He seeks to emphasize what he considers im- portant Freudian ideas which have been ignored or twisted by the classi- cal Freudians. One of the tools Lacan uses to clarify Freud is linguistics, which he employs as a kind of compass in mapping the psyche. Lacan says, "The unconscious is structured in the most radical way like a language." He stresses the linguistic distinction between the word used to convey something, and the thing it conveys - the distinction between the "signi- fier" and the "signified." Lacan says, for example, that a neurotic symptom - such as fear of flying - is a signifier, a symbol, a code em- ployed by the unconscious to express something. Rosenwald comments that there are many possible dimensions to the application of linguistics to psychol- ogy. He says, "It isn't as though each child discovers for himself or herself that there is, say, the threat of annihilation, or of castration, or of being cut off from people on whom you depend. But these dangers already lurk in the language itself, and also in the social networks and relationships which are founded on the language. The words we have for relationships, and the linguistic foun- dation of social reality, have these things built into them." ACAN MERGES the Oedipus complex with linguistics by as- serting that the phallus func- tions as a signifier in the psyche. The following passage from Ecrits ex- plains this point: In Freudian doctrine, the phallus is not a phantasa, if by thatwe mean an imaginar.v effect. Nor is it as such an object (part-, in- ternal, good, bad, etc.) in the sense that this terns tends to accentuate the reality pertaining in a relation. it is even less the organ, penis or clrnis,t hat it symbolizes... The phallus is the privileged sinifier of that mark in which the role of the logos is. joined with the advent of desire. Why does Lacan write in a style that's so difficult to understand? Notes Michel Pierssens, "He does it purposely. The traditional Freudians have a tendency to simplify, and for Lacan, that's a betrayal of Freudian- ism. Because he addresses himself to psychoanalysts (and to psychoan- alysts in training) - people who will have to understand the very twisted complications of the unconscious - it seems to him absolutely indispens- able that these people be initiated into subtlety, initiated into compli- cation, into ellipsis, into condensa- tion, into allusion, because the uncon- scious works that way. Lacan's style is training in the complexity of the unconscious." Rosenwald adds, "It isn't just an obstacle course. He wants to make it difficult because it is difficult. He wants to represent within his own style the difficulty of re-establishing the original Freudian ambiguities. Freud was ambiguous about what psychoanalysis was, and as the decades have gone by we have contributed to making it less and less ambiguous, and more and more clear-cut. in order to gain one's attention, and, in a sense, throw you back on your own resources, knock you- back on-your heels; 'Lacan hits again. It isn'1 ambiguous." 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