Method in the Madness: Hysteria and the Will to Power

At the very start of a chapter on hysteria in her book From Mastery to Analysis: Theories of Gender in Psychoanalytic Feminism, Patricia Elliot cites Nietzsche’s “truths are illusions of which one has forgotten that they are illusions”. This paper follows this connection between hysteria and the wor...

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Main Author: Matthew Gildersleeve
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2016-07-01
Series:Social Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2076-0760/5/3/29
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author Matthew Gildersleeve
author_facet Matthew Gildersleeve
author_sort Matthew Gildersleeve
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description At the very start of a chapter on hysteria in her book From Mastery to Analysis: Theories of Gender in Psychoanalytic Feminism, Patricia Elliot cites Nietzsche’s “truths are illusions of which one has forgotten that they are illusions”. This paper follows this connection between hysteria and the work of Nietzsche. This paper will highlight how a Lacanian interpretation of hysteria can elucidate Heidegger’s reading of Nietzsche’s Will to Power and how this interpretation of the Will to Power can better explain the value and importance of hysteria for psychoanalysis and philosophy. I will show that the hysteric’s discourse has a “higher value” than the master’s discourse because it meets Nietzsche’s definition of art, which aims at life’s enhancement rather than the master’s knowledge or truth which aims at the preservation of life. My work will explain how the hysteric’s discourse can transform the master’s discourse into the analyst’s discourse through the Will to Power. This is important, as this is the ultimate aim of psychoanalysis where “At the end of analysis the subject passes to the position of analyst”. This is the ultimate aim of psychoanalysis because “For Lacan, the Discourse of the Analyst is revolutionary because it articulates the truth of the (unconscious) subject”. Fundamentally, the objective of this article is to demonstrate that “hysteria is to be understood not as an ‘abnormal’ condition but as one possible manifestation of the subject’s uncanny relationship to itself”.
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spelling doaj.art-deb1908dce3c4f9296c2a9dde37ae7802022-12-22T03:30:38ZengMDPI AGSocial Sciences2076-07602016-07-01532910.3390/socsci5030029socsci5030029Method in the Madness: Hysteria and the Will to PowerMatthew Gildersleeve0School of Social and Behavioural Sciences, The University of Queensland, St Lucia QLD 4072, AustraliaAt the very start of a chapter on hysteria in her book From Mastery to Analysis: Theories of Gender in Psychoanalytic Feminism, Patricia Elliot cites Nietzsche’s “truths are illusions of which one has forgotten that they are illusions”. This paper follows this connection between hysteria and the work of Nietzsche. This paper will highlight how a Lacanian interpretation of hysteria can elucidate Heidegger’s reading of Nietzsche’s Will to Power and how this interpretation of the Will to Power can better explain the value and importance of hysteria for psychoanalysis and philosophy. I will show that the hysteric’s discourse has a “higher value” than the master’s discourse because it meets Nietzsche’s definition of art, which aims at life’s enhancement rather than the master’s knowledge or truth which aims at the preservation of life. My work will explain how the hysteric’s discourse can transform the master’s discourse into the analyst’s discourse through the Will to Power. This is important, as this is the ultimate aim of psychoanalysis where “At the end of analysis the subject passes to the position of analyst”. This is the ultimate aim of psychoanalysis because “For Lacan, the Discourse of the Analyst is revolutionary because it articulates the truth of the (unconscious) subject”. Fundamentally, the objective of this article is to demonstrate that “hysteria is to be understood not as an ‘abnormal’ condition but as one possible manifestation of the subject’s uncanny relationship to itself”.http://www.mdpi.com/2076-0760/5/3/29NietzscheLacanHeideggerhysteria
spellingShingle Matthew Gildersleeve
Method in the Madness: Hysteria and the Will to Power
Social Sciences
Nietzsche
Lacan
Heidegger
hysteria
title Method in the Madness: Hysteria and the Will to Power
title_full Method in the Madness: Hysteria and the Will to Power
title_fullStr Method in the Madness: Hysteria and the Will to Power
title_full_unstemmed Method in the Madness: Hysteria and the Will to Power
title_short Method in the Madness: Hysteria and the Will to Power
title_sort method in the madness hysteria and the will to power
topic Nietzsche
Lacan
Heidegger
hysteria
url http://www.mdpi.com/2076-0760/5/3/29
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