While theorist and provocateur Slavoj Žižek tends to get characterizedâespecially in a recent, testy exchange with Noam Chomskyâas obscurantist and muddle-headed, Iâve always found him quite readable, especially when compared to his mentor, psychoanalytic philosopher Jacques Lacan. As an interpreter of Lacanâs theories, Žižek always does his reader the courtesy of providing specific, concrete examples to anchor the theoretical jargon (where Lacan gives us pseudo-mathematical symbols). In the short Big Think clip above, Žižek’s examples range from the history of physics to the Declaration of Independence to the familiar âmale chauvinistâ scenario of a man, his wife, and his mistress. Žižek’s point, the point of psychoanalysis, he alleges, is that âpeople do not really want or desire happiness.â
This seems counterintuitive. Happiness—our own and others—is after all the goal of our loftiest endeavors, no? This seems to be the pop-psych rendition of, say, Maslowâs theory of self-actualization. But no, says Zizek, happiness is an integral part of fantasy. Like the philandererâs mistress, the object of desire must be kept at a distance, he says. Once it is achieved, we no longer want it: âWe donât really want what we think we desire.â And in keeping with Žižek’s example of infidelityâwhich may or may not involve the chauvinist killing his wifeâhe tells us that for him, âhappiness is an unethical category.â I find this statement intriguing, and persuasive, though Žižek doesnât elaborate on it above.
He does in much of his writing howeverâexplaining in Lacanian terms in his essay collection Interrogating the Real that our desire for something we think will bring us happiness can be construed as a kind of envy: âI desire an object only insofar as it is desired by the Other.â Furthermore, he writes, âwhat I desire is determined by the symbolic network within which I articulate my subjective position.â In other words, what we think we want is determined by ideologyâby the cultural products we consume, the soup of mass media and advertising in which we are permanently immersed, and the political ideals we are taught to revere. What does authentic âself-actualizationâ look like for Slavoj Žižek? He tells us aboveâit means being âready to sufferâ for the creative realization of a goal: âHappiness doesnât enter into it.â
Žižek cites the example of nuclear scientists who willingly exposed themselves to radiation poisoning in pursuit of discovery, but he could just as well have pointed to artists and writers who sacrifice comfort and pleasure for lives of profound uncertainty, religious figures who practice all kinds of austerities, or athletes who push their bodies past all ordinary limits. While there are several degrees of pleasure involved in these endeavors, it seems shallow at best to describe the goals of such people as happiness. It seems that many, if not most, of the people we admire and strive to emulate lead lives characterized by great riskâby the willingness to suffer; lives often containing little in the way of actual happiness.
Whatever stock one puts in psychoanalytic theory, it seems to me that Žižek raises some vital questions: Do we really want what we think we want, or is the âpursuit of happinessâ an unethical ideological fantasy? What do you think, readers?
Related Content:
Noam Chomsky Slams Žižek and Lacan: Empty âPosturingâ
Slavoj Žižek Examines the Perverse Ideology of Beethovenâs Ode to Joy
Slavoj Žižek on the Feel-Good Ideology of Starbucks
In His Latest Film, Slavoj Žižek Claims âThe Only Way to Be an Atheist is Through Christianityâ
Josh Jones is a writer and musician based in Durham, NC. Follow him at @jdmagness.
Slavoj Žižek: What Fullfils You Creatively Isnât What Makes You Happy is a post from: Open Culture. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Google Plus, or get our Daily Email. And don’t miss our big collections of Free Online Courses, Free Online Movies, Free eBooks, Free Audio Books, Free Foreign Language Lessons, and MOOCs.
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Slavoj Žižek: What Fullfils You Creatively Isnât What Makes You Happy
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