The Ideal-Ego and the Fantasy of
the Body in Bits and Pieces: 1
At first glance, Bildnis einer Trinkerin (1979) seems
to provide an extended illustration of two of the most
accepted tenets of feminist film theory. Like the theories
of Laura Mulvey and Mary Ann Doane, it seems to suggest
that there is a certain collapse between woman and the
image,1 and to propose as an alternative to this specular
implosion the masquerade of femininity.2 Its female
protagonist is pathologically obsessed with her own
mirror reflection; that reflection engrosses all of
her desire, and completely defines her relations to
all of the other characters in the film. A long fantasy
sequence in the second half of Bildnis, however, shows
her assuming in succession a whole range of professional
roles, and in the process manipulating the contours
of her bodily imago. Here, she seems to have achieved
some distance from the mirror, to be detached from the
identities which it figures forth. Because of the parodic
aspect of the fantasy sequence, this detachment might
well be taken for irony, and the images it inflects
as a politically enabling masquerade of femininity.
I want to advance a very different reading of Bildnis
einer Trinkerin, to show that, from the very beginning,
"Madame" (Tabea Blumenschein) stands at an
irreducible distance from the mirror, and that her pathological
relation to her own reflection is the logical extension
not of too complete a specular "captation,"
but of her inability to accept her exteriority to the
idealizing image. I also want to use Ottinger's film
to challenge the larger assumption-which sometimes informs
the equation of woman and spectacle-that the female
subject stands outside lack, along with the particular
reading of psychoanalysis from which that assumption
proceeds.3
Bildnis provides a wide-ranging commentary on what Lacan
calls the "imaginary," on the psychic register
that is specific to identification and narcissism, and
which the author of Seminar II places in the closetst
possible relation with the specular.4 Bildnis tells
the story of a woman who abandons her past, and with
it her name, in order to dedicate herself uninterruptedly
to the adoration and exhibition of herself-as-image.
More precisely, it recounts the narrative of a woman
who decides to take seriously the impossible mandate
which is culturally imposed upon the white female subject:
that she conform to the visual specifications of an
ideal femininity. Bildnis brilliantly dramatizes the
fantasy of bodily disintegration which haunts this project,
and the consequent self-hatred into which self-love
constantly threatens to devolve. However, it refuses
to characterize the imaginary as a "feminine"
domain, as a presymbolic space from which woman never
fully emerges, or to which she easily regresses from
the symbolic order.
Rather, like Lacan's early seminars, which will figure
prominently in the following pages, Bildnis shows the
imaginary to be fundamentally reparative, and, hence,
unthinkable prior to the subject's symbolic structuration.
It suggests, that is, that the images of an ideal unity
within which the subject attempts to locate herself
are not only always inflected by meaning, but are also
conjurations against the void which is introduced by
language. And if the imaginary cannot be thought apart
from the symbolic, neither can the symbolic be "entered"
without imaginary mediation; it is only through the
coordinates of that necessary fiction, the self, as
Bildnis shows, that the subject is able to apprehend
the other.
The theoretical gendering of the imaginary as "feminine"
consequently represents a misrecognition of the part
that register plays within all subjectivity. Finally,
Ottinger's fourth feature film takes very seriously
both the dangers and impasses to which the logic of
the imaginary can lead, and its undeniable seductions,
pleasures, and powers-seductions, pleasures, and powers
which are at the heart of its own spectatorial appeal.
In "Film and the Masquerade," Mary Ann Doane
claims that for the female spectator, who is here
representative of the normative female subject, "there
is a certain overpresence of the image-she is the
image." She argues that because of the "closeness"
of this relationship, "the female spectator's
desire can be described only in terms of a kind of
narcissism-the female look demands a becoming. It
thus appears to negate the very distance or gap specified
by Metz and Burch as the essential precondition for
voyeurism" [
]. Although Doane is careful
to specify this "overpresence of the image"
as a theoretical construction, her own insistence
upon the importance of masquerade as a mechanism for
opening up an interval between the female spectator
and the spectacle confers upon that construction a
certain psychic reality, at least within the present
symbolic order. 5
The white protagonist of Bildnis is not introduced
in terms of her biographical specificity-we are in
fact never given a single concrete detail about her
past-but rather in terms of what might be called her
"mission." A disembodied female voice-over
characterizes her as someone destined to embody the
feminine ideal. It invokes this ideal by enumerating
a number of the names with which it has been associated
throughout the history of Western representation:
She, a belle of antique grace and raphaelic harmony,
a woman, created like no other to be Medea, Madonna,
Beatrice, Iphigenia, Aspasia, decided one sunny winter
day to leave La Rotunda. She bought a one-way ticket
to Berlin- Tegel.
However, this proliferation of names attests to the
impossibility of locating the feminine ideal within
any individual woman, even within the realm of literature
or art; it can only be conjured forth through a range
of mythical figures. The images which accompany the
voice-over commentary attest further to the abstract
nature of this ideal. Ottinger's "belle of antique
grace and raphaelic harmony" is not depicted
through the specificity of feature or limb, but through
the spectacle of swirling red fabric, and the sound
of high-heeled shoes tapping with exaggerated precision
on a green marble floor.
When we are finally given a close-up of Madame's face,
it is shot through a glass door, as if to stress its
distance from actuality. But even this guarded attempt
to corporealize the ideal is doomed to failure. Almost
immediately, the exquisitely composed image of Madame's
face and raised hand is "liquified" or destabilized
by the cleaning woman, who squeezes water out of cloth
onto the other side of the door's transparent surface
[
].
This series of shots demands to be read in relation
to the project outlined in the opening monologue.
There, we are told that Madame is leaving La Rotunda
for Berlin because Berlin seems to her a place where
she will be able to devote herself uninterruptedly
to a very singular goal:
She wanted to forget her past, rather leave it like
a ragged house. With heart and soul she wanted to
concentrate on one affair. Her affair. To finally
follow her destiny was her sole wish. Berlin, foreign
to her, appeared to be the right place to live her
passion undisturbed. Her passion was to drink, live
to drink-a drunken life, live of a drunkard. Upon
landing at Berlin-Tegel, her decision had become irrevocable.
Inspired by a Berlin folder that was presented to
her by a friendly stewardess, she decided to set up
a drinking schedule
.. She decided to do a sort
of boozer's sightseeing, briefly, to use sightseeing
for her very private needs
.. Her plans for a
narcissistic worship of loneliness have deepened and
intensified to the point where they have entered a
stage worthy to be lived, not to risk being lost in
realms of phantasy. Now had come the time to let everything
come true.
As this commentary makes clear, the object of the
passion to which Madame commits herself for the duration
of Bildnis is only ostensibly alcohol. The consumption
of wine and brandy is really a metaphor for another
kind of incorporation, one much more difficult to
effect. It is a metaphor, that is, for Madame's attempt
to assimilate or become the specular ideal in relation
to which she, like all female subjects, is (negatively)
defined. However, whereas for Doane the dilemma of
femininity is the excessive proximity of the mirror,
for Madame the problem is rather its irreducible distance.
Alcoholism functions as an appropriate metaphor for
the project described by the voice-over for two reasons.
First of all, the consumption of alcohol leaves behind
no permanent "deposit" or residue. It results
only in a very transitory and delusory euphoria, which
then gives way to a sense of emptiness and loss, and
must consequently be endlessly repeated if its effects
are to be sustained. Alcohol also lends itself to
Ottinger's purposes because it is a fluid substance.
Implicit in the Narcissus myth, as in Ottinger's retelling
of it, is an insistence on the impossibility of the
lover's incorporative desire for the idealized self,
and liquidity assumes a privileged role in the articulation
of this impossibility. Because the image which engrosses
him is reflected in a pool, he cannot embrace it without
shattering it.
Lacan provides an important definition of the fragmented
body in Seminar I. He suggests that it is "an
image essentially dismemberable from its body"
[
], that it provides the fantasy through which
the subject acknowledges his or her distance from
the idealizing representation within which he or she
would like to find his or her "self." It
could thus be said that any attempt to enter the impossible
frame of that representation leads inexorably, as
in the Narcissus legend, to the subject's "fall"
into an image which is the very opposite of the one
which is desired: his or her headlong "plunge,"
that is, into an image of bodily decomposition.
As we will see, the shot in which water streaks down
the window separating Madame's face from the camera
is only the first of many occasions on which her attempt
to approximate the status of an exemplary spectacle
ultimately leads to an experience of a radical corporeal
disintegration. Over and over again, the protagonist
of Bildnis ventures into the streets of Berlin in
the guise of the image which she wishes to become,
only to have that image quickly lose its shape and
coherence as she commences her evening of drinking.
However, the film never permits the spectator to imagine
that he or she stands safely outside the insane project
to which Madame devotes herself. It prolongs the moment
of mécon-naissance long enough to remind us
of the jubilation it affords-long enough, that is,
to evoke in us once again our own inextinguishable
desire to approximate the ideal.
The airport scene provides a witty dramatization of
the no-exit logic of the narcissism to which Madame
commits herself upon her arrival in Berlin. She is
thwarted in her first attempt to leave Tegel by the
window washer who stands on the other side of the
door. Her second attempt initially meets with no greater
success; the electric door in front of which she stands
fails to open, and Madame searches in vain for a knob
to turn. The claustral binarism which leads relentlessly
from the desire for unity to the fantasy of the fragmented
body is of course a trademark of the imaginary register.
However, Bildnis emphasizes more than once during
this scene that although the imaginary promotes closure,
it is not itself isolated from the symbolic. Not only
does the female voice-over evoke the ideal femininity
which Madame seeks to embody with names that are redolent
with cultural significance, but she arrives in Berlin
at the same time as three "professional"
woman in extravagantly styled houndstooth suits.
As their names suggest-Common Sense (Monika von Cube),
Social Question (Magdalena Montezuma), and Exact Statistics
(Orpha Termin)-these figures provide parodic representatives
of the symbolic order. Although one of their primary
functions in the film is to demonstrate the inadequacy
of a whole range of social discourses to account for
the peculiar pleasures and dangers to which Madame
surrenders herself, their presence in virtually every
important public scene also speaks to all of the ways
in which the symbolic intrudes into the imaginary
register. The obsessive conversational return of each
of the houndstooth woman to the comforting certitudes
of her professional discourse also suggests the extension
of the imaginary into the symbolic.
The scene following Madame's arrival at Tegel begins
with a spectacular shot of her leaving her hotel,
which once again stresses the close imbrication of
imaginary and symbolic. Dressed in an exquisite black
dress and matching hat, with a golden spiral hanging
from each ear, she is emphatically situated within
the mise-en-scène of her desire, on the side
of a hyperbolically idealized image [
]. That
image is also classically articulated, organized according
to the strictest perspectival principles. At the moment
when Madame first comes into sharp focus, she is framed
by an ornate interior doorway, and she stays within
this frame until she is lost from sight. Even her
movement through this doorway fails to disrupt the
fixity of the composition, since it is in turn framed
by a second doorway. And the interior entrance seems
to lead to yet another doorway, which represents a
kind of vanishing point. This shot functions as a
powerful reminder that, even at its most imaginarily
alluring, the field of vision is never free of symbolic
definition.
The casino where Madame begins her "sightseeing"
tour of Berlin provides the site for one of the film's
most explicit repudiations of the heterosexual imperative
at the heart of classic cinema. In the elevator leading
to the gambling room, a uniformed man attempts without
success to interest her, first by exhibiting his card
tricks, then by showing her the photos of naked woman
on the reverse side of the cards. Although here, as
in many other scenes in the film, the protagonist
of Bildnis functions emphatically as an erotic spectacle,
it is not for the benefit of the male look.6 Her indifference
to the uniformed man strips that look of its usual
phallic pretensions, not the least of which is its
claim to confer meaning on the female body.
A later shot in the same scene again situates Madame
beyond the reach of the male scopic drive, and outside
the libidinal economy which it conventionally implies.
This shot begins with a close-up of her black-gloved
hand placing an elegant glass of white wine on the
casino table. The contents of this glass, which now
occupies the center of the frame, are brilliantly
illuminated, gold against a black background. Significantly,
however, this light does not radiate outward, but
is entirely contained by the contours of the glass,
as if-like the protagonist of Bildnis-it shines only
for itself. A man's fingers reach from right frame
toward Madame's hand, which lies beside her drink.
She immediately frees herself from his hold, and slowly
lifts the glass to her lips [
]. The glass casts
a luminescent reflection on her face and neck, a reflection
which is framed and echoed by her long spiral earrings.
Lacan suggests in Seminar II that the shadow of the
ego always falls upon the object [
]. Here, that
relation is reversed, attesting to both the initial
exteriority of the images through which the ego constitutes
itself, and the infinite reversibility of its relation
to the object.
The camera shares Madame's indifference to the man's
appropriative hand; like her, it never even turns
to glance at the man. However, although the feminist
spectator might be tempted to offer a lesbian reading
of this indifference-a reading which many other scenes
in the film support-the shot under discussion points
unequivically in a different direction. Here, Madame
is clearly locked in a narcissistic self-embrace.
Alcohol is ostensibly an external substance, pointing
at least tentatively to the possibility of a libidinal
investment in the exterior world. However, the shimmering
reflection of the glass on Madame's face and neck
makes clear that her relation to its contents is less
under the sign of "having" than "being."7
When she appears in the ornate double doorway of her
hotel prior to leaving for the casino, Madame seems
at least momentarily to approximate the image around
which her desire revolves. The ensuing cab ride, however,
already attests to a certain unravelling of this coherence.
Initially, she is located firmly in the back seat
of the car, but eventually she projects herself imaginarily
into the driver's seat, in the guise of a young white
man with a moustache and black leather jacket [
].
Significantly, this masculine masquerade fails to
alter the terms of her self-address. What this scene
dramatizes is less the production of an ironie distance
from the mirror than the conjuration of yet another
ideal image of self, this time male rather than female.
As is so frequently the case in Bildnis, either the
image cannot be assumed, or it quickly loses its seductive
luster. The fantasmatic cab driven by Madame in her
capacity as male driver knocks over the cart of Lutze,
a homeless white woman, and spills its contents all
over the street. This accident provides another demonstration
of the inability of the self to contain the images
out of which it is ostensibly composed. But here,
at least, the specter of disintegration is successfully
exteriorized.
As she leaves the casino, Madame once again encounters
Lutze, who helps her into a cab and washes one of
its windows with spit and a rag. Like that important
series of shots organized around window washing in
the airport scene, Lutze's actions serve to liquify
or destabilize the image on the other side of the
glass. Her face also functions as a kind of alternative
mirror. As Lutze wipes the window with her rag, Madame
stares intently at her features, even turning to look
back when the cab pulls away. This scene early positions
the wealthy woman in a narcissistic relation to her
homeless counterpart. However, this relation differs
markedly from that described by Lacan in "The
Mirror Stage." Lutze does not provide Madame
with an idealized self-image, but with the opposite;
she literalizes the fantasy of the body in bits and
pieces, which constantly threatens to undermine that
image.
Back in her hotel room at the end of her first day
in Berlin, Madame resorts once more to alcohol as
a device for closing the gap between herself and ideality.
Her room has been transformed into a narcissistic
shrine: two identical photographs of its occupant
in masculine clothing hang on the wall above the bed,
each lit by three lights in the shape of votive candles.
Madame again positions herself in relation not only
to feminine perfection, but also to what might be
called "the man she would like to have been."8
Bildnis einer Trinkerin thus equips its protagonist
with both a female and a male ego-ideal. And, unlike
the woman about whom Freud writes,9 Madame reserves
for herself the right to approximate each in turn.
The wine Madame consumes facilitates a series of extraordinary
fantasies. Because these fantasies are "actualized"
at the level of the image, but not the narrative,
they dramatize the resistance that the spectacle of
woman can offer to the forward movement of the story.
Each takes the spectator into what Mulvey calls "a
no man's land outside its own time and space,"
and gives "the quality of a cut-out or icon,
rather than verisimilitude, to the screen" [
].
Of course, given its larger preoccupation with female
specularity, and, most particularly, with those idealized
images of femininity which can be neither temporally
nor spatially localized, this quality inheres as well
in many of the film's other images; this fantasy sequence
merely represents its apotheosis.
In the first shot of the sequence, a dwarf (Paul Glauer)
stands to the right of an elaborate granite fountain,
bowing and gesturing to Madame to approach. She enters
from the other side, sits down on the ledge of the
fountain, and drinks from its contents [
]. The
hyperreal acuity of the sounds made by her approaching
footsteps and the placement of her glass on the ledge
evoke the clink of ice cubes in a glass. This acoustic
version of the alcohol metaphor surfaces again in
the next fantasy, where it is given a visual analogue.
Here, Madame and the dwarf slowly climb a glass-enclosed
stairway [
]. This structure has the shape and
the opaque consistency of the glasses conventionally
used for iced tea or mint juleps. The third fantasy
shows the dwarf, in extreme long-shot, carrying a
drink on a tray toward a pagoda, in which Madame sits.
She raises the glass to her lips.
In the final, and most aesthetically compelling fantasy,
Madame and the dwarf ceremonially cross a brook on
the round steps provided for that purpose, again producing
a sound evocative of ice against glass. Here, as in
the other fantasies, her clothing, the music, and
the general mise-en-scène connote "the
Orient." The dwarf plucks an orange flower from
the water and hands it, as if it were a glass, to
Madame. She raises it to her lips, her head thrown
back voluptuously [
]. Three more shots repeat
this gesture, emphasizing the contrast between the
intense orange of the flower, the rich black and blue
of Madame's dress, and the exaggerated pallor of her
complexion [
].
Each of the first three fantasies consists of only
one isolated shot, as if to insist at a formal as
well as conceptual level on its status as "cut-out"
or "icon" The final fantasy, on the other
hand, consists of four shots. Interestingly, however,
this recourse to montage does not serve to advance
the narrative; each subsequent shot merely works to
reiterate the action shown in the preceding one. The
final fantasy does nevertheless dramatize an "advance,"
but one which is spatial rather than temporal. Whereas
the camera remains at a discreet remove from its human
subjects in the first three fantasies, in the last
one it abandons this principle. In each of its four
shots, the distance between Madame and the camera
diminishes, until her face is finally shown in an
eroticizing close-up which isolates the activity of
drinking from all else. I say "the distance between
Madame and the camera," but what is really at
issue here is the distance between the protagonist
of Bildnis and her ideal imago. In the first three
fantasies, that imago remains unapproachable, but
in the final four shots, Madame moves closer and closer
to the desired mirror, until she almost achieves in
relation to it that proximity which Doane characterizes
as the feminine norm.
Significantly, in the shot immediately preceding the
fantasy sequence, Madame is shown lying with her back
to the images that hang on the wall above the bed.
Consequently, she is not overtly positioned as an
external spectator in relation to the ideal she seeks
to approximate, which presumably facilitates the imaginary
approach to it dramatized by the flower-drinking shots.
However, not only are all of the fantasy images marked
by a high degree of "unreality," located
in a "no man's time and space" -a place,
that is, where no one can actually "be"-but
each is emphatically displayed for an implied viewer,
who can only be Madame. The final shot of her lifting
the flower to her mouth gives way to two scenes in
which the axis of vision is much more fully foregrounded,
in ways which work to place her once again at an irreducible
distance from ideality. Here, Madame is subordinated
to the gaze, in her capacity both as spectacle and
as look.
The Ideal-Ego and the Fantasy of the Body in Bits
and Pieces: 2
The first of the two scenes to foreground the axis
of vision does so by deploying the gaze to problematize
Madame's quest to approximate the feminine ideal.
In it, she sits at a table in a coffee shop drinking
brandy after brandy, the empty glasses ranged in front
of her. Here, the ingestion of alcohol offers none
of the narcissistic gratification it provides in the
fantasy sequence; instead, it is manifestly desperate
and obsessional. Madame faces a window, toward which
she repeatedly grimaces and gesticulates [
].
At first, she appears to be addressing someone on
the other side of the window, but as the scene progresses,
it becomes increasingly apparent that the window is
important less for its transparent properties than
its reflective ones. Madame's gestures and grimaces
are not directed to the world outside the restaurant,
but to the body in bits and pieces, or-to state the
case somewhat differently-to the principle of decomposition
which now threatens to gain the upper hand. Significantly,
that principle is once again represented by Lutze,
who is now placed in an even more intimate psychic
relation to Madame than in the cab scene. In the only
shot which purports to show what Madame sees when
she looks at the window, Lutze pushes her cart toward
the restaurant from the rear of the frame, until she
stands directly behind the reflection cast on the
glass by Madame [
]. This shot not only indicates
that the window functions as a mirror in the coffee
house scene, but it also incontrovertibly establishes
Lutze as the image which that mirror shows.
Significantly, Lutze passes through the window which
maintains her exteriority in the cab scene, and into
the space where the other woman sits. Madame summons
her inside the restaurant, in an explicit acknowledgement
of the psychic affinities which link her to the "bag
lady." The two woman drink several double brandies,
but the alcohol again fails to provide Madame with
the desired méconnaissance. Finally, in a reversal
of the Narcissus legend, she attempts to shatter rather
than embrace the mirror. She tosses the contents of
a glass of brandy onto the window, much as one might
throw something into a pool of water to disrupt the
image formed there. As she does so, two other patrons
of the coffee shop quickly pull out their cameras.
They point them not at Madame or Lutze, who replicates
the action of her friend, but at the streaming surface
of the window [
]. They thus photograph Madame
not as "herself," but in the guise of the
image she attempts to efface.
The photographers' action serves as another potent
reminder that self-recognition is never a purely imaginary
transaction. That transaction involves not only subject
and image, represented in the restaurant scene by
Madame and the window/Lutze, but also the gaze, which
is metaphorized-as it is in Lacan's eleventh seminar10-by
the camera. The gaze, which can perhaps best be defined
as the inscription of Otherness within the field of
vision, radically exceeds the, human looks through
which it often manifests itself. It impresses itself
upon us phenomenologically through that sense which
we all have at moments of acute self-apprehension
of being seen from a position outside ourselves, a
position which Bildnis inscribes through the flash
of the camera. That experience of specularization
constitutes a necessary feature of identification;
we can only effect a satisfactory captation when we
not only see ourselves, but feel ourselves being seen
in the shape of a particular image.
I say "particular image" because the gaze
does not photograph us directly, but through the cultural
representations which intervene between it and us-representations
which Lacan calls the "screen"11 Although
we often treat these representations as simple mirrors,
they do not so much reflect us as cast their reflection
upon us. They are carriers of-among other things-sexual,
racial, and class difference. For these reasons, the
subject does not always occupy the field of vision
happily. No image can be comfortably assumed by the
subject unless it is affirmed by the gaze, but the
gaze does not necessarily photograph the subject in
ways that are conducive to pleasure. As is so clearly
the case in this scene, the gaze often imposes upon
the subject an unwanted identity.
Even before the actual cameras are pointed at the
window within which Madame sees herself as a body
in bits and pieces, the screen is firmly in place.
It manifests itself through a conversation taking
place elsewhere in the restaurant. At a certain point
in this scene, Common Sense, Social Question, and
Exact Statistics enter, and order "Houndstooth"
desserts. As they eat their sweets, they engage in
a conversation about alcohol abuse. At the precise
moment that Madame and Lutze are ejected from the
coffee house, one of them provides a verbal gloss
on the sereen through which those figures have been
"photographed": "Disgusting! Woman
getting drunk in public!"
This commentary serves an extremely important funetion.
It suggests that the image of the fragmented body
is no more "authentic" than those within
which Madame more jubilantly apprehends herself. In
other words, it disposes of any temptation on the
part of the spectator to see the restaurant window
as the mirror in which Madame discovers her "true"
self. Like the spectacle of ideal femininity, that
of corporeal disintegration is culturally produced,
and projected onto certain bodies by the social gaze.
Not surprisingly, then, when Madame apprehends the
distance which separates her from that femininity,
she visualizes herself in the guise of Lutze. As I
stressed in Chapter 1, in our culture, homeless bodies
signify the very unravelling of the bodily ego.
The next morning, an unseen hand pushes under Madame's
hotel room door a copy of a newspaper with the headline
"Wealthy Foreign Lady Raised the Roof at Coffee-House
?Mohring.'" When Madame picks up the paper, she
discovers that it also features one of the unflattering
pictures taken of her the day before. She carries
the picture to the mirror, ostensibly to compare it
with her reflected image. But the dissatisfied expression
on her face shows that she is unable to separate the
two representations. After several more unsuccessful
attempts to isolate the mirror image from the newspaper
photograph, she throws the contents of a glass of
wine against her recalcitrant reflection, in a repetition
of the previous day's action and looks at it once
more [
]. Again Bildnis stresses that there can
be no direct access to the "self," and that
even the subject's relation to the literal mirror
involves all kinds of cultural coercions.
The film cuts immediately from this shot to a scene
which, although clearly fantasmatic, is nevertheless
curiously embedded in the large narrative, and which
again draws attention to the gaze. This scene begins
with the oblique image of a sexually ambiguous figure
whistling and gesturing, as if signalling the opening
of a circus performance. This is followed by an overhead
shot which shows a large auditorium, with a conspicuously
empty orchestra space. Five woman, all dressed in
black, file ceremoniously down the aisle and sit in
the front row. A second whistle is heard. Madame enters
and is encorted to her seat by the androgynous figure.
The camera cuts to a medium shot of the black-clothed
woman, who turn around en masse to stare at Madame
[
]. Their faces have been dramatically made
up, as if for a dumb show. The character presiding
over this strange "event," who can now be
seen to be an eldery woman, brings Madame a glass
and a bottle of champagne. Madame takes a sip of the
champagne, and gestures her enthusiasm to her server.
Again, the camera cuts away to the five women in the
front row, who continue to stare fixedly at the drinking
woman. There is a final shot of Madame; she takes
another sip from the glass, puts on her dark glasses,
and adopts a theatrically spectatorial position [
].
This scene, which might be said to make a spectacle
out of spectatorship, demands to be read in relation
to the one which follows it. This next scene begins
with a close-up of the blue video monitor in Madame's
room. It shows the dwarf carrying a large cooked turkey
on a platter into the same room. He stands motionless
for several moments, as if displaying the turkey,
and then carries it over to the bedside table and
bows. The camera then pans away from the monitor to
the right, revealing the "actual" night
table and turkey. Madame enters the frame, picks up
the carving knife that accompanies the bird, and stabs
with it violently around one of the two images of
herself hanging on the wall [
]. Again, that
image is illuminated by a bracket of candle-shaped
electric lights, as if it were a shrine. Madame is
dressed in the same pink satin nightgown that she
wears when tossing the wine against the mirror, suggesting
that this scene is the continuation of that one.
Whereas in earlier scenes Madame lay with her back
to the images on the wall, she is now manifestly a
viewer of them. This unwanted exteriority promotes
aggressivity; located at a stubborn distance from
the figure standing in front of it, the idealizing
representation becomes a threatening rival which must
be destroyed. This scene thus dramatizes the "despair"
side of what Mulvey characterizes as the "long
love affair/despair between image and self-image"
[
].
In the auditorium fantasy, the desire for the elimination
of the hated rival finds dramatic fulfilment. Again,
Madame is positioned as spectator rather than spectacle,
but now the stage remains conspicuously empty. This
void permits her once again to make a narcissistic
claim on ideality, this time from the position of
spectatorship. She attempts, in other words, to retreat
from specularity to vision-to position herself as
gaze, and thereby to achieve the narcissistic gratification
which is denied her in her capacity as image. But
this is an impossible aspiration. The subject always
looks from a position within the field of vision.
Even when adopting a spectatorial position, in other
words, he or she is subordinate to the gaze, which
remains outside. The impossibility of Madame's project
is signified in this scene not only by the hyperbolic
specularization of her look, bur also by the fixed
stare of the five black-clothed women.
I have interpreted the auditorium scene as though
it followed the scene in Madame's room, but that is
not the order decreed by Bildnis. When these two scenes
are considered in their actual sequence, the second
assumes the status of the spectacle which is called
for by the first. The shot that begins with the video
monitor and ends with Madame stabbing around her portrait
comes as the "reverse" counterpart to the
one of her sitting in the auditorium in an attitude
of exaggerated scopic anticipation. In the transition
from the one to the other, her look is even more emphatically
disassociated from the gaze. She is transferred from
the seemingly transcendental viewing position of a
theater spectator to one in front of the ideal imago,
a position manifestly defined by exclusion and insufficiency.
The Ideal-Ego and the Fantasy of the Body in Bits
and Pieces: 3
Yet another fantasy sequence occurs immediately after
Madame and Lutze visit the lesbian bar. In this sequence,
Madame aspires to occupy not only the position of
the gaze, but also that of the spectacle "photographed"
by the gaze. This sequence is initiated by an extreme
long shot of Madame sitting in a sky-blue dress on
a decorative park bench, symmetrically positioned
in front of a bridge over the Spree, and framed by
trees. Again, the compositional impulse is classical.
The dwarf enters from the left, places a picture of
himself on the ground beside the bench, and exits
to the left. A close-up of Madame's left eye follows,
accompanied by the dick of a camera [
]. This
image gives way to six more shots of her sitting in
the same place. The camera moves progressively closer
to its human subject [
], cutting back between
each shot to the close-up of her eye. The last of
the eye images introduces a series of six "professional"
fantasies. At the end of this series, the frame sequence
is repeated in reverse, beginning with a close-up
of Madame's eye, and concluding with an extreme long
shot of her sitting on the park bench while the dwarf
removes his photograph. In the latter, the dwarf enters
from the left, and carries away his portrait.
The close-ups of Madame's eye that are interspersed
between the images of her on the park bench are extremely
brief, more like "flashes" than composed
images. Like the sound which accompanies them, they
suggest the opening and closing of a still camera
shutter. Because of the metaphoric value afforded
the camera in the restaurant scene, these shots make
very evident Madame's renewed aspiration to occupy
the position of the gaze. However, whereas the auditorium
scene dramatizes her attempt to abolish the spectacle
she cannot inhabit, the situation here is more complicated.
The eye/park bench series does not dramatize Madame's
ambition to become a transcendental gaze, outside
spectacle, but rather her attempt to occupy the point
from which she is "photographed." She seeks
to safeguard the ideality of herself as spectacle
by functioning simultaneously as the gaze, thereby
imposing a purely imaginary logic on the field of
vision.
Once again, Bildnis attests in all kinds of ways not
only to the alterity of the gaze, but also to the
unavoidable imbrication of imaginary and symbolic.
To begin with, in each of the professional fantasies,
Madame "performs" not for herself, but for
the houndstooth woman, who, as I have already suggested,
offer a parodic personification of the symbolic order.
Moreover, although Madame never produces "embodied"
speech in any of these fantasies, each depends in
some central way upon a verbal text, whether it be
the soliloquy from Hamlet, the outraged monologue
a business owner directs toward his recalcitrant secretary,
an advertising brochure for coffins, the words of
a popular song, or the exclamations of onlookers during
a tightrope performance,. Sometimes these texts are
spoken by a voice-over, and at other times they are
spoken by a voice internal to the fiction, but we
are never given images uninflected by language. The
professional fantasies are also characterized by a
certain degree of narrative elaboration, which, like
the centrality of language and the spectatorial role
played by the houndstooth ladies, testifies to the
omnipresence of the symbolic.
The eye/bench sequence introduces yet another term
that cannot be assimilated to a hermetic narcissism:
the photograph which the dwarf places on the ground
beside Madame. That photograph does not show the fantasizing
subject, but an image seemingly extraneous to her
specularization. Nevertheless, its introduction works
somehow to precipitate the ensuing sounds and images,
suggesting that for Madame-as for the subject described
by Lacan-the self is an "other." The images
that constitute the moi come from outside, and cannot
be "owned."
The figure of the dwarf is an element in excess both
of a hermetic narcissism, and a claustral imaginary.
Miriam Hansen characterizes that figure as the representative
of Madame's "death wish" and the "master
of ceremonies" within the domain of her fantasies.12
He performs some version of each of these functions
in the eye/bench sequence. His appearance in the park
both opens and closes that sequence, and the first
fantasy begins when he pulls back the curtain from
the stage on which Madame will subsequently "deliver"
Hamlet's most famous soliloquy. That gesture suggests
that the scenes that follow are being ordered or "managed"
from another "scene," and that Madame's
desires are the desires of the Other. The soliloquy
from Hamlet, moreover, immediately introduces a topic
which will resurface repeatedly in the professional
fantasies, only to be subordinated each time to a
concern with "appearances." The first words
Madame "speaks" after appearing on the stage
are "To be or not to be-that is the question."
The subsumption of death to a narcissistic problematic
indicates perhaps more strikingly than anything else
that the fantasy sequence represents an imaginary
displacement of a symbolic problematic.
In his second seminar, Lacan remarks that the fully
constituted subject is a dead subject, he or she "engage[s]
in the register of life" only from a place "outside
life" [
]. The Rome discourse also attributes
an annihilatory force to the symbolic order; the signifier
murders what it designates.13 And in Seminar XI, Lacan
proposes that the subject accedes to language only
at the cost of "being." He allegorizes the
entry into the symbolic as an old-fashioned highway
robbery, in which the alternatives are not money or
life, but meaning or life. The subject, of course,
always chooses meaning, and hence speaks from the
domain of death.14
However, Lacan writes in the Écrits that "fear
of death" is subordinate to "narcissistic
fear of damage to one's own body" [
]. He
thereby underscores the reluctance of the subject
to arrive at a conscious acceptance of his or her
"being-for-death"-his or her unwillingness,
that is, to confront the nothingness or manque-à-être
out of which desire issues. The ego represents the
primary vehicle of this denial, that through which
the subject procures for him or herself an illusory
plenitude.
As is so often the case within the psychic domain,
we are not dealing here with a simple denial, but
with a simultaneous avowal and disavowal. The only
ego capable of filling the lack at the heart of subjectivity
is the one which affords a "jubilant"self-recognition,
and this exemplary unity-which always assumes in the
first instance a corporeal form-is impossible to sustain.
It inexorably gives way to its antithesis, corporeal
decomposition. The body in bits and pieces might thus
be said to provide the imaginary construct through
which the subject indirectly apprehends both his or
her distance from the mirror, and his or her manqué-à-être.
The eye/bench fantasy sequence enacts precisely the
displacement I have just described. The Hamlet soliloquy
offers let another version of the old-fashioned highway
robbery, only here the options are more starkly stated;
the alternatives are, quite simply, life and death.
But even as this grim choice is articulated, it undergoes
an imaginary transmogrification. While listening to
the famous monologue, Social Question, Common Sense,
and Exact Statistics comment not on the relative merits
of the two possibilities it presents, but on Madame's
unsuitability for the role she plays. "The lead
is totally drunk!" one of them exclaims. Another
complains that Hamlet is a "breeches" rather
than a female part. Again, attention is deflected
away from death to the specular domain, or, to state
the case slightly differently, from manque-à-
être to the moi.
The subsequent fantasies subordinate death even more
fully to a "fear of narcissistic damage to the
body." Madame literally falls out of her assigned
role in two of these fantasies, dramatically opening
up that gap between the subject and its ideal imago
which Lacan associates with the fantasy of the fragmented
body. In one scene, she loses her balance while attempting
to walk a tightrope and plummets to the ground; in
another, she rolls unconscious off the hood of a stunt
car after it drives through a wall of flames. Bildnis
shows this last fall three times, with virtually identical
shots, as if to emphasize the loss of corporeal control.
In the remaining fantasies, Madame's fall out of the
idealizing frame is more metaphorically rendered.
In the scenes in which she represents an advertising
consultant, a secretary, a singer, and a coffin salesman,
she remains manifestly exterior to the roles she plays.
This exteriority is perhaps most strikingly communicated
through the sound track; the voices which speak "for"
Madam are not synchronized or "married"
to her body, but manifestly derive from elsewhere.15
Parts of the fantasy sequence might seem to provide
precisely that masquerade which Doane presents as
an alternative to classic femininity. However, Madame's
dislocation from the parts she plays in that sequence
is only obscurely and intermittently parodic. For
the most part, it does not represent an ironic deformation
of the social vraisemblance, or the production of
a psychically and politically enabling distance from
the images which would otherwise engulf her, but a
manifestation of the abyss separating the female subject
from an exemplary specularity. In other words, it
is a signifier of the impasse at the heart of traditional
femininity: the impossibility of approximating the
images in relation to which one is constantly and
inflexibly judged. In this fantasy sequence, as in
those which precede it, Bildnis suggests that if the
specular domain figures more centrally in conventional
female subjectivity than it does in its masculine
counterpart, that is not because woman is the image,
but because-more than man-she is supposed to be.
The scene which follows immediately after the eye/bench
fantasy sequence provides a further caution against
a too easy assimilation of that sequence to a masquerade
paradigm. In it, an already drunk and slightly dishevelled
Madame boards a fish-shaped boat, orders a bottle
of wine, and initiales a glass-breaking competition
with a group of other passengers. She is abruptly
ejected from the boat, and stumbles with her wine
bottle along the edge of the Spree to a cheap café,
where she finds Lutze and her cart. The two woman
then wander from bar to bar in an alcoholic haze,
a spectacle which constitutes the very opposite of
mastery.
The Ideal-Ego and the Fantasy of the Body in Pieces:
4
The next two shot sequences, which represent the events
of a single day, but which do not cohere "scenically,"
offer several more images of an idealized femininity.
Significantly, however, Bildnis does not provide the
female spectator with, easy identificatory access
to these images. The first sequence positions Madame
in the same frame as Lutze, stressing once again the
intimate relation between the ideal imago and the
fragmented body. Those two figures walk away from
the camera, which occupies a fixed, low-angle position,
toward the Column of Victory. At a certain moment,
they simultaneously-and seemingly involuntarily-drop
their purses. In keeping with the metaphoric value
consistently attributed to its owner, Lutze's bag
spills its contents on the ground. Madame's, on the
other hand, remains closed, an apparently sealed unity.
Lutze returns for her possessions, but Madame continues
walking after dropping hers [
].
A photographer picks up the abandoned purse and follows
Madame for a time, as if to return it to her. Eventually,
he abandons his pursuit, empties the contents of the
bag on the curb, and photographs them one after another.
These photographs, which are presented as six brief
close-ups, reveal in succession a bottle of medicine,
a tube of lipstick, a small pink heart, an address
book, a watch, and a rocket knife. As the inclusion
of the heart would suggest, these objects represent
less another inscription of the fragmented body than
a half-humorous catalogue of the elements of Madame's
"interiority." If the contents of her psyche
can be so easily exteriorized, it is clearly because
they derive in the first instance from outside. Once
again, then, Bildnis works to deconstruct the notion
of the 'self."
The six objects found in Madame's handbag testify
as much to her symbolic structuration as they do to
her imaginary capitation. The address book connects
her not only to the order of language, but to that
of the name and-by implication-kinship. The watch
signifies the social and economic regulation of time,
and belies any easy relegation of Madame to a presymbolic
space. The tube of lipstick offers an obvious synechdoche
for woman-as-spectacle or, to be more precise, for
all of the feminine props and appurtenances through
which the female subject attempts to approximate the
ideal image. The pocket knife surfaces again in a
closely adjacent scene, where it evokes the aggressivity
implicit within the subject's relation to that image.
Together with the medicine bottle, the knife represents
the culturally induced "malady" at the heart
of classic femininity.
In this series of shots, as in the restaurant scene
and the final fantasy sequence, the camera clearly
represents the gaze. Significantly, it is once again
situated at an emphatic remove from Madame's look;
it "takes" her from behind, from a position
which is inaccessible to her vision. However, although
the gaze constitutes both a literal and a metaphoric
third term in relation to Madame and Lutze, and so
stands outside the insistently dyadic logic through
which the imaginary articulates the interactions of
self and other, ego and reflection, it is once again
shown to play a determinative "backstage"
role. And as in the coffee shop scene, it does not
"photograph" its object directly, but through
a series of intervening images.
Madame makes one final attempt to embody the image
of her desire later in the same day. She leaves the
bar where she has beeil drinking with Lutze and walks
out into the dark, past a series of shop windows,
and down to the pavement below. A spotlight illuminates
her as she progresses, and her high heels produce
the by-now familiar sound of ice against glass. At
the end of this shot, Madame lifts her arms dramatically
toward the sky. For a brief moment, she lays claim
not only to a generalized ideality, but also to a
very specific image from the history of Western representation-the
image of Rita Hayworth in a black sheath dress and
gloves, singing "Put the blame on Mame."
This citation from Charles Vidor's Gilda (1946) serves
a complex function. Although the scene in question
inscribes such an idealized feminine eroticism that
Hayworth was to feel inadequate to the task of representing
it in day-to-day life for ever after, it is constantly
on the verge of giving war to the body in bits and
pieces. Disintegration haunts Gilda's performance
from the very beginning of this scene, and ultimately
it triumphs as she begins removing her clothing, and
is dragged from the dance floor in a state of masochistic
intoxication. The spotlit image of Madame raising
her arms to the darkened sky is also placed in the
closest possible intimacy with the fragmented body,
although here that relation is conveyed formally rather
than narratively. This shot is cross-cut with the
scene in which Willi and Lutze stagger drunkenly amid
the debris surrounding the railroad tracks, and finally
embrace incoherently in a ruined glass railway station.
Lest the spectator fail to note the significance of
this montage, Bildnis cuts from the final shot of
Willi and Lutze in the railway station to a medium
close-up of Madame's hand reaching into the left of
the frame with a knife [
]. The knife casts a
theatrical shadow against the wall. Almost immediately
this shot yields to a series of rapid-fire images.
First, a shadow of the hand and knife, appears against
the wall from the left frame, followed by a smaller
version of this shadow in the lower fight frame. Then,
in a jump cut, Madame walks into the frame from the
right, her outstretched hand still holding the knife,
and crosses over to the corner of the room. She stabs
the wall around the edges of her shadow with the weapon.
This shot gives war first to the shadow image of a
hand-held knife striking the wall from the left frame,
and then to one of an, ambiguous body shadow.
In shot seven of this sequence, the shadow of a second
person appears on the left, also with knife in hand.
Shot eight reveals the person to be Lutze. Her right
arm, which holds the sharpened implement, is dramatically
extended, and she is framed by a large shadow. Madame
stands next to her, facing away from the camera, one
arm protectively lifted. She struggles with Lutze,
who says, "It's me, Madame! I'm your only friend,
Madame! Stop that rubbish, Madame!" She "combs"
her own hair and that of her friend with the knife.
Madame faces Lutze acquiescently, and the two embrace.
In this shot sequence, as in that which follows, Madame
wears a dress composed primarily of silver foil. She
has attempted to close the gap between herself and
her ideal imago by literally "putting on"
the mirror. However, the dress does not entirely close
in the back, and in the final moments of the film
this gap will become more and more pronounced. The
exaggerated shadows cast on the white wall throughout
this sequence also render visible that dislocation
of body and image which is for Lacan the very definition
of corporeal fragmentation. As before, the exteriority
of the idealizing representation provokes violence;
in asserting its independence from the desiring subject,
the beloved imago becomes a hated rival and must be
destroyed. Significantly, the sound of the knife striking
the wall is connected acoustically to all the many
variations of the sound of ice cubes clinking in a
glass; indeed, the ice cubes clinking can be heard
in the knife stabs, and vice versa.
The final sequence of Bildnis is organized around
a text by Peter Rosei. This text, titled "Drinkers,"
circulates among a series of narratively inconsequential
characters, each of whom reads a passage aloud. Ottinger
herself initiates this textual relay, in the guise
of a derelict alcoholic. Sitting on a bench with a
bottle of alcohol, she reads,
"Wondrous plan: to heighten a pleasure so much
that it torments one to death. Lately I talked it
over with Lipsky. He meant: ?Our manias are nothing
but Eryns in the theater of cruelty.' I said: ?So
we hate ourselves.' ?Yes,' Lipsky said, ?It's not
that bad.'"
This passage makes explicit the metaphoric connection
between alcohol and narcissism. It also suggests once
again that a libidinal economy organized entirely
around the attempt to approximate an ideal imago could
more justly be characterized as "self-hatred"
than "self-love." since the demands it makes
on the subject are impossible to sustain for more
than a delusory moment. However, since the "intoxication"
of that moment is so extreme that all other pleasures
pale by comparison, there is nothing more addictive.
The final section read from the Rosei text also emphasizes
the thrill that comes from being lifted even briefly
into the rarefied atmosphere of ideality. It compares
that experience to planetary travel; "drinkers
are travellers," reads a businessman into whose
open suitcase Madam has dropped the book, "they're...moved
without moving. You pick them up, you give a lift.
Can you see the galaxy?" The Rosei text stresses
not just the pleasures, but also the life-threatening
dangers of this sublation. To identify with ideality
is to refuse lack, and with it desire; consequently,
it is to turn away from life itself. For this reason,
the Rosei passage concludes, "self-sufficiency
could only be ruin [ous]."
The penultimate shot of Bildnis shows Madame lying
unconscious on a flight of stairs leading to a train
station. Lutze finds her there and attempts to lift
her to a standing position. As she does so, a crowd
of people rush down the stairs, obscuring the two
woman from our view. Lutze screams in terror, indicating
that Madame has been trampled to death by the crowd.
This shot must be read in relation to the one with
which the film concludes. In it, Madame walks down
a hallway constructed entirely of mirrors in her silver-foil
dress [
]. As she proceeds, she crushes her own
reflection underfoot. This shot, which has no narrative
locus, repeats the one which precedes it at a metacritical
level. It thus makes clear that Madame's death is
less literal than symbolic-the event outside the train
station is to be understood not as her physical demise,
but as a signifier for her full and final surrender
to the morbidity of that psychic trajectory which
leads from self-idealization to self-disgust. Madame's
destruction o the many mirrors which reflect her image
back to her in the final shot of the film is only
the most dramatic instance of that aggressivity toward
the ideal image which follows inexorably from the
aspiration to ideality, here brilliantly indexed through
the silver-foil dress.
Bildnis einer Trinkerin dramatizes vividly the closed
logic of the psychic loop which leads from the aspiration
to ideality to the fantasy of the body in pieces,
and back again. However, it has nothing to say about
how we might break out of this closed logic, and into
a relational field which includes the other. It also
affords us no alternative model for conceptualizing
how idealization might work We are left with the sense
that its operations always annihilate the other and
the self alternately, that having once exalted an
object, the subject will first attempt to murder it
so as to take its place, and then fall in turn into
radical self-disarray.
Notes
1. I do not mean to suggest that the formulations
advanced by these two theorists are in all respects
commensurate. Laura Mulvey's concern is with the positioning
of woman as spectacle within classic cinema (see "Visual
Pleasure and Narrative Cinema," in Visual and
Other Pleasures [Bloomington: Indiana University Press,
1989], pp. 14-26). Mary Ann Doane addresses rather
what she sees as the psychic proximity of the female
subject, particularly of the female spectator, to
the image-her lack of symbolic differentiation from
it (see The Desire To Desire: The Woman's Film of
the 1940's [Bloomington: Indiana University Press,
1987]; and "Film and the Masquerade: Theorizing
the Female Spectator," in Femmes Fatales: Feminism,
Film Theory, Psychoanalysis [NewYork: Routledge, 1991],
pp. 33-43).
2. This argument derives primarily from Doane's "Film
and the Masquerade," pp. 24-26. But Mulvey also
talks about female transvestism in her "Afterthoughts
on ?Visual Pleasure and Narrative Cinema' inspired
by King Vidor's Duel in the Sun," in Visual and
Other Pleasures, pp. 29-38. For an engagement with
the second of these formulations, see Chapter 1.
3. Again, within film studies, it is primarily Doane
who has articulated the argument that woman stands
outside lack. See, in addition to the texts cited
above, "Woman's Stake: Filming the Female Body;"
in Femmes Fatales, pp. 165-177.
4. Lacan there observes that "Bilder [images]
means imaginary" (137).
5. I am arguing in same crucial respects against Doane's
formulation. However, it would seem important to acknowledge
that whatever the differences in our models with respect
to how we account for the dilemmas of normative femininity,
we are agreed in arguing that they can only be overcome
if the female subject accepts her distance from the
representations which define her. See Doane, "Film
and the Masquerade," pp. 22-26.
6. For a discussion of the cinematic conventions surrounding
the male look, see Mulvey, "Visual Pleasure and
Narrative Cinema."
7. Although Bildnis does not seem to me to be a film
primarily about lesbian desire, it clearly contains
many lesbian tropes and locations, and even a number
of manifestly lesbian characters. Judith Mayne offers
an excellent formulation of this apparent contradiction
in The Woman at the Keyhole (Bloomington: Indiana
University Press, 1990). Mayne suggests that although
Madame is herself narcissistic rather than lesbian,
she circulates primarily within a world of woman,
one which is often transected by lesbian desire: "The
woman drinker appears to live entirely and exclusively
within the narcissistic world of her own regressive
fantasies, but female figures of social marginality
function, however briefly and tangentially, as marks
of otherness and signs of fascination. On the other
end of the social spectrum, the film is equally taken
up with how Blumenschein's woman drinker tantalizes
and even challenges the less obviously narcissistic
but equally self-enclosed world of the three houndstooth
ladies. Lutze fascinates the woman drinker in some
of the same ways that the woman drinker fascinates
the three houndstooth ladies, with the significant
difference that the woman drinker, located on the
brink between subject and object, is much more susceptible
to crossing over those boundaries than the houndstooth
trio" [
]. Lutze, as Mayne suggests, is
clearly a figure who is able to step over the threshold
of the mirror stage and into a relational visual field.
She thus remains a key player within the lesbian "thematic"
of the film. Madame, on the other hand, remains for
the most part on the far side of that threshold.
8. For a discussion of the woman who takes as her
ego-ideal the man she would like to have been, see
Charter 1 of this book.
9. See Sigmund Freud, "Femininity,"in The
Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works,
trans. James Strachey (London: Hogarth Press, 1964),
vol. 22, pp. 132-33.
10. See Jacques Lacan, Four Fundamental Concepts of
Psycho-Analysis, trans. Alan Sheridan (New York: Norton,
1978), p. 106. For a general discussion o the gaze,
see not only this text, but Charter 3 of my Male Subjectivity
at the Margins, and Chapter 4 of the present volume.
In the latter, I provide a fuller discussion of the
metaphorization of the gaze as a camera.
11. See Lacan, Four Fundamental Concepts, pp. 91-107;
Male Subjectivity, Chapter 3; and Charpers 1 4, and
6 of the present volume for an account of the screen.
12. Miriam Hansen, "Visual Pleasure, Fetishism
and the Problem of Feminine/Feminist Discourse: Ulrike
Ottinger's Ticket of no Return," New German Critique,
no. 31 (1984): 100.
13. Jacques Lacan, "The Function and Field of
Speech and Language in Psychoanalysis, in Écrits,"
p. 104.
14. Four Fundamental Concepts, pp. 210-11.
15. Synchronization implies above all else a unified
subject. Its absence here attests yet again to the
heterogeneity of Madame's bodily ego, as well as to
her dependence upon the Other. For an analysis of
the cinematic norm of synchronization, and its implications
for sexual difference, see my The Acoustic Mirror:
The Female Voice in Psychoanalysis and Cinema (Bloomington:
University of Indiana Press, 1988), Chapter 2.
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