repression and denial. An ideology, a system or a regime becomes totalitarian when it denies the virtual character of both its world and its subject (democracy represses truth's basic lie, which makes it possible for the repressed to return). Žižek's analysis of totalitarianism, particularly Stalinism, shows how a totalitarian system denies its subject, which, being desire for the Real, cannot act in the name of truth but must acknowledge the contingency of its action (a political act can fail to reach its goal), whereas an established system can no longer fail and has to deny its flaws. Any political act disrupts the (evolution of) the symbolic order and thus is revolutionary, creating an event ex nihilo. An act is a jump into the inconsistency of the symbolic order, i.e. into "das Ding," a jump both into and out of the nihil in which our world is grounded. Politics therefore can never be Realpolitik. The realization that politics is a symbolic phenomenon, supported not by "the real," but by signifiers, is the Lacanian foundation of Žižek's political theory." /> Act without denial - de Kesel Marc | sdvig press

Act without denial

Slavoj Žižek on totalitarianism, revolution and political act

Marc de Kesel

pp. 299-334


This document is unfortunately not available for download at the moment.

Not implemented yet !