tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4923579679086080672024-03-05T20:16:21.371-05:00Deconstructing Phil.agitpophttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09534084374540353389noreply@blogger.comBlogger31125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-492357967908608067.post-57338343285350994842008-05-27T22:36:00.005-04:002008-05-28T00:21:42.762-04:00Q: What do America, Marxism, and Dr. Phil have in common?A: They are all eponyms. An eponym is a person who lends his or her name to a particular place, thing, or abstract idea. While the persons (Amerigo Vespucci, Karl Marx, and Dr. Phil) fit the more traditional concept of an eponym, from the greek word meaning "giving name," the named phenomena in an eponymous relationship is also frequently referred to as an eponym. Eponyms flourish in many important fields. They are quite easy to identify in science and math. Perhaps more relevant to the subject of this blog, we might point to their influence in literature, philosophy, and art. Take, for example, the numerous types of sonnets: Petrarchan, Shakespearean, Elizibethean, and Spenserian. Plato lends his name to philosophical perspectives on many subjects: Realism, love, ideals. And let's not forget R.E.M.'s greatest hits C.D. entitled "eponymous"--probably jokingly, since it is therefore <span style="font-style: italic;">not</span> an eponym. A nice bit of theory-on-the-periphery comes in with Stephen Stigler's essay "Stigler's Law of Eponymy." In it, Stigler claims that "no scientific discovery is named after the original discoverer." In a nice self-referential, meta flourish, Stigler attributes the idea--not to himself--but to the prestigious sociologist Robert K. Merton. This has many theoretical implications. First of all, it is a resounding endorsement of post-structuralism: proper names are meaningless, illogical, and basically random except, perhaps, in how they influence our subsequent use of language and knowledge. To further augment this reasoning, one nearly need to remember that someone completely unrelated to an idea, or a completely fictional person, can also give birth to an eponym. Amerigo Vespucci certainly didn't discover America--that honor would have to go to the natives living there, the early norse explorers, or Columbus. Let's not forget that other famous television psychiatrist of "Frasier" fame. But this example is a good illustration of a second point. An eponym necessarily leads to aporia--a theoretical confusion where one is confronted with an interpretive fork in the road, if not a whole set of silverware. If "Frasier" the show refers to just the one character, are the others ancillary and of secondary importance. It might not be profoundly important whether the dog Eddie is or is not a necessary part of the show, but what about the guests on Dr. Phil who are not Dr. Phil? And what about the other people similar to Dr. Phil who are not Dr. Phil? Dr. Laura, Sanjay Gupta, and Dr. Drew must feel left out. An eponymous relationship naturally focuses on the person who "gives the name" to the detriment of others. It is no coincidence that epochs, Wars, and nations are often named after the leaders who founded them. There is, in fact, a Marxist tinge to Stigler's law of eponymy since Stigler explains the law by noting that the eponymous figure is often more affluent, recognizable, and socially accepted than the true inventors, discoverers, and creators. But according to Stigler's theory, eponyms are not generally haute bourgeoise thieves, searching for unnamed nouns with which to be associated. They are usually coined after the fact, by the literate portion of society as a whole, in order to lionize certain historical figures while forgetting entire classes. And yet, even here, reality can pierce through the most surreptitious, diabolical plans. After all, an eponym is only good as long as the entire eponymous relationship stands on solid ground. I'm sure Halley would be glad to know that, a few years after his death, a famous comet was named after him. Would he still be glad if it careered toward earth? I'm guessing he wouldn't, it's just common sense, and that is what Dr. Phil "is known for."agitpophttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09534084374540353389noreply@blogger.com51tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-492357967908608067.post-7869441841591218902008-05-18T04:16:00.015-04:002008-05-27T22:32:35.879-04:00Deconstructing Phil. is Back From the Dead<span style=";font-family:";font-size:12;" >First, there are a few administrative details to consider: Today’s post has no citations since I originally developed it as an outline for a video weblog. The quotes, of course, are still good. I’d also like to provide a quick apologia for the fact that it’s been over 2 months since the last post and, in fact, there have only been 7 entries since January. Mostly, this is the result of a short hospital stay, a few Existential crisises, and the gloomy exigencies of finishing the first year of law school. Instead of using my powers of critical theory against Dr. Phil, I’ve felt compelled to channel my theoretical might at the institution of law school so as to counteract the acknowledged goal of brainwashing students into forgetting everything they’ve ever learned or thought. And I think I’ve been moderately successful. Constitutional law taught me that our nation’s most hallowed document was written by a homogeneous bunch of dilettantes who, in many fundamental ways, misread Rousseau, Locke, and Hume while only selectively admiring aspects of the ancient Roman Republic and Greek city-states. Criminal law suggests that society punishes it’s own members not out of utilitarian benevolence or retributivist motivation, but simply because without incarcerating and institutionalizing certain individuals, no one would ever feel free. In Contracts and Property, I learned that the current legal system—immensely complex and steeped in antiquated traditions—exists primarily to turn simple acts—like buying and selling goods, or living on a tiny piece of land—into situations of meta-exploitation where everything and everyone—even the greatest titans of business—is controlled, represented, and manipulated by a select class (<i>lawyers</i>) with the singular objective of preserving that one exceedingly important legal concept: stare decisis, precedent, tradition, the <i>status quo</i>. This doesn’t relate to the Dr. Phil show, but what of value ever could?<br /><br />Actually, the Derridian concept of hauntology might make interesting, even if strange, bedfellows out of yesterday’s episode and today’s blog. You see, instead of using his 40 minutes with <st1:country-region style="font-family: lucida grande;" st="on"><st1:place st="on">America</st1:place></st1:country-region> to discuss the superego’s regulation of unconscious drives, the contemporary role of the ubermensch, or even Antonio Gramsci’s idea of a hegemonic superstructure, Dr. Phil examined the supernatural (Boo! or, should I say: Boooooooooooooo!). Even with such an abnormal topic as the paranormal, it is easy to imagine how it could turn into a legitimate pursuit, like a critique on pseudosciences, or an illustration of how the reason and logic behind belief is only persuasive to those who, as Slavoj Zizek says: “already believe.” Dr. Phil, on the other hand, decided to take on the subject by talking with James Van Praagh, who he called “a world renowned medium” but who also happens to be the executive producer of a Fox show and the author of a new book, both on the subjects of ghosts and clairvoyance. Dr. Phil opened the show with the remark: “I’m a skeptic. I was trained in the scientific model.” However, I’m not sure the scientific model includes plugging lousy t.v. shows and scam books by following a self-purported medium as he wanders through <st1:place st="on"><st1:place style="font-family: lucida grande;" st="on">Hollywood</st1:place></st1:place> graveyards and studio lots and “reads” audience members. We might be able to make up a bit of what is lacking by “reading” Derrida, particularly <u>Spectres of Marx</u>. Derrida quickly points out that the very first sentence of <u>The Communist Manifesto</u> is “a specter is haunting <st1:place st="on"><st1:place style="font-family: lucida grande;" st="on">Europe</st1:place></st1:place>, the specter of communism.” After numerous allusion and citations from Hamlet, where ghosts appear and reappear, upsetting the very fabric and core of existence, Derrida introduces hauntology—a mixture of a haunting and ontology. Hauntology is where being and not being co-exist, where the traditional dichotomy of “to be or not to be” is exposed as an illusion. Derrida’s motivation seems to be partially to critique Francis Fukuyama’s <u>The End of History</u> which predicts “an end point of mankind’s ideological evolution” and “the final form of human government” in “unimprovable” liberal democracies which will lead to “an end of history.” With hauntology, Derrida hypothesizes that the end of communism heralds not the “end of history” but a rebirth of the ghost of Marxism. It is only through the rupture with the past, through the relationship of otherness with the self, through <i>differance</i>, that one can find the present and pressence. Many of the mentalist’s reliable tricks depend on hauntological phenomena. Fake psychics, like James Van Praagh, often talk extremely fast so that the audience is forced to pick out certain parts and disregard others, hopefully the inaccurate statements. Similarly, vague and general statements are habitually used. Van Praagh saw that Dr. Phil’s dead father “was proud of him,” that “there must be a mausoleum” in a cemetery, and that a particular audience member had a dead relative who died in intensive care. The psychic’s initial reading is not complete until it partly reappears and partly dissappears—as the real ghost in the room—in the readee’s replies. The psychic—and here especially we must include Marx— isn’t really telling his or her audience anything, but rather asking them to look inside their past. When Van Praagh asked an audience member if her dead motorcycle-riding, hard rock playing father had a tattoo, maybe of a rose, the response was “not that I know of.” But that is not an end to the history of the question. Von Praagh quickly responded: “Well, will you find out?” This is the “performative interpretation,” transforming what it interprets and that which simultaneously settles and unsettles being. Hauntology, then, is the remainder—the whole/hole—left after the “cold readings” of history, ontology, and non-deconstructive theory. It’s not that long until everything becomes hauntologied, that “something which one does not know, precisely” and which “comes back in advance from the past.” These words I’m writing have already died, but they will reappear, as the ghosts of what they once were to anyone interpreting them, just as I awaken the ghost of Derrida as he spoke with the spirit of Marx, who communed with Hegel, ad infinitum. Derrida claims that “the future can only be for ghosts. And the past” and this is entirely because of ghostly repetitions. Hauntology and psychics both “desynchronize us” in this way. This is true in the television world too, since shows—including Dr. Phil—are taped weeks, if not months in advance of their first air date where they will gain significance and meaning. But it is meaning inside a new and different discourse. For instance, one can easily imagine a Dr. Phil episode on school violence where a bully is interviewed. If, in between the taping and the broadcast, this same student were to brutally attack another student or go on some sort of rampage, it is clear that this has an enormous effect on how the show will be received. In a strange turn of events, as she was promoting her show, it was Jennifer Love Hewitt and not Dr. Phil who made the stupidest comment of the episode: “I have lots of people who I know will pass away one day.” The Derridian take on this is at first the obvious one: well, of course, all people die. And yet there is something which not-lives forever: hauntology. Confusion and hauntology often mix, it is to be expected, because we are all an active part of it: the ghosts to come, happy that we are not yet realized and the perverse grave robbers digging up the past for our own consumption.</span>agitpophttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09534084374540353389noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-492357967908608067.post-53776403547170373212008-03-13T03:02:00.010-04:002008-03-13T23:38:58.585-04:00The Shocking 'Caust of Watching Dr. Phil<span style="font-family:georgia;">In the blog lifespan of every postmodern critic of Dr. Phil, there inevitably comes a time when one must come to terms with a tragic and inhumane aspect of modern life: genocide. At first glance, it seems unreasonable, illogical, and even disrespectful to equate any of Dr. Phil’s actions—however misguided or despicable—to the large scale, calculated, and heinous instances of ethnic cleansing in the Holocaust, the Armenian genocide, and more recent or ongoing conflicts in the Balkans, Chechnya, or Sudan. If it is a question of moral blameworthiness, legal culpability, or adverse cultural impact, obviously Hitler, Slobodan Milošević, and others would have to take the cake. But Dr. Phil does not claim to be an International Court of Justice judge, or even an unimpeachable icon of lucid moral propriety. Instead, Herr McGraw claims his amorphous right to be broadcast into our homes and minds because he is a trained Doctor (Ph.D.) of psychology. This is a bit problematic because, psychologically speaking, there are more than ample grounds to equate Dr. Phil’s furor for helping Americans with the Führer’s goals of helping the Aryan race. A good case study of the psychology of Genocide is found in Hannah Arendt’s <em>Eichmann in Jerusalem</em> which details the political life and subsequent trial of a high ranking Nazi official who had orchestrated the deportation, ghettoization, and eventual extermination of millions of social, political, and ethnic undesirables. One might expect Arendt to find a plethora of evidence that Eichmann was a crazed psychopath, a rabid Anti-Semite, and, above all, an extreme exception far outside the normal spectrum of human society. In fact, Arendt finds quite the opposite. Arendt writes: “the trouble with Eichmann was precisely that so many were like him, and that the many were neither perverted nor sadistic, that they were, and still are, terribly and terrifyingly normal…this normality was much more terrifying than all the atrocities put together.” (253). Even more striking are Arendt’s observations that Eichmann “was obviously no case of insane hatred of Jews, of fanatical anti-Semitism or indoctrination of any kind. He ‘personally’ never had anything whatever against Jews.” (22-23). The question then becomes, if Eichmann was not an abnormal sociopath, an ardent Anti-Semite, and a atypical brute among men, how could this unexpected characterization possibly be reckoned with his role as the architect of the Holocaust? Arendt’s response, though potentially valid and accurate, is far more disturbing than any act of Nazi barbarism as it works toward explaining—though in no way justifying—a wide array of modern monstrosities. Arendt’s answer is that the “long course in human wickedness” teaches not of aberrant psychopaths and bigots, but rather the overwhelming, subversive, and dangerous power of the “banality of evil.” (231). Arendt writes that, the judges overseeing Eichmann’s trial, like almost everyone involved, simply assumed that Eichmann was lying, the psychological reports were wrong—obviously the man on trial was insane and full of calculated hatred. By doing so, they missed the real issue, that “an average, ‘normal’ person, neither feeble-minded nor indoctrinated nor cynical, could be perfectly incapable of telling right from wrong.” (23). For Arendt, “his guilt came from his obedience, and obedience is praised as a virtue.” Inspired very much by Arendt’s writing, in the mid 1960s, social psychologist Stanley Milgram set out to create a set of experiments which would empirically calculate how far people would go to follow authority, including the “willingness to follow inhumane orders.”* (Douglass Mook, <em>Classic Experiments in Psychology</em>, 335). Milgram recruited participants using a traditional method: newspaper ads and posters with vague language inviting people to take part in a psychological experiment (Mook 336). Demographic data from each recruited participants was noted as they were brought into a laboratory setting. Participants were introduced to a second individual, who was introduced as another study participant, but who was actually an actor and a member of the research team. Participants were told they would be acting as the “teacher” while the second participant (actually an actor/researcher) would be the “learner.” (Ibid.) The “learner” was sent into a separate, but adjoining, room where he or she could be heard, but not seen. The participant believed the study tested the psychology of memory since the “teacher” conveyed a signal to the “learner” who would be required to remember and communicate back the correct item to complete a pair (Ibid). Participants were told that, as “teachers,” they would be required to administer “punishments” to the “learners” in the form of increasingly severe shocks at each wrong answer (Ibid). <img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5177277660055275778" style="DISPLAY: block; MARGIN: 0px auto 10px; CURSOR: hand; TEXT-ALIGN: center" alt="" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi0Nm6ZPsR28Usz4mhBiFyGwt1bwgJW9lGMclii5PlybsRJ0lJV0qo-gfp-Nu_c_aLWnuYbxa3yMyUutU9dKI1DQmYx-JyITj0K43siXZXi6z2JIOFPVtt6Af4fy4fgudJPdci46rY7CxHf/s400/milgram.bmp" border="0" />Of course, the true intention of the study was not to gauge the ability of the “learner” to remember pairs of data, indeed, the actor/researcher in the role of “learner” would repeatedly make intentional errors to illicit the “punishment” response from the “teacher.” What was really being studied was the willingness of the “teacher” to administer what they believed to be intense and dangerous shocks, some up to 450 volts (115 volts being the power of the average wall socket). The participants as “teachers” must have known of the danger of the voltage since buttons were equipped with labels such as “slight shock” and “danger: severe shock.” (Ibid.) Furthermore, though the “learner” was actually not being shocked at all, the actor would scream. At 120 volts, the “teacher” would hear the “learner” cry that the shocks were becoming to painful and, at 150 volts, the “learner” would demand that the experiment come to a halt. Eventually, the “learner” would refuse to communicate a response, but the researcher in the room would inform the “teacher” that this should be counted as an error and shocks should continue. Participants would often ask the present researcher things like “is this safe” or “shouldn’t we stop?” but the researchers would calmly reply: “You have no choice, you must continue.” (337) The question was: at what voltage level would participants quit, refuse to continue, or simply leave? Before starting the experiment, Milgram asked this very question to a sample of middle-class adults, a group of Yale psychology students, and a panel of psychologists, who all believed only about 1% of participants would administer severe shocks (338). In fact, in Milgram’s standard experiment, 65% of participants—“normal” people demographically speaking—would obey all instructions and administer extreme shocks (337). This is an extremely disturbing finding. Perhaps you are sure that you would refuse to shock someone to death just because you might be urged on by someone with a slight bit of authority over you (like a researcher). This means, statistically speaking, next time you’re stuck on an airplane in the middle seat, both the people at your side would be entirely willing to administer a sever shock onto someone like you. These 65% of participants could vote, in a landslide, for a candidate who they would then follow completely, regardless of the marching orders. If Nietzsche was right that 100 men created the Renaissance and can save humanity from any cultural drought, it is still probable that 65 percent of them are potential Eichmanns. Furthermore, by slightly altering the circumstances, Milgram found that up to 90% of participants would continue to follow orders if they had a greater psychological distance from the victim (for example, by relaying, but not singularly fulfilling, the order to administer shocks). This relates to the Dr. Phil show since, numerous times every segment, Phil tells the guests that they should, or must, do something to “improve” their life. Particularly in the final segment, Phil extends the same advice to his willing audience—both in the studio and at (the psychologically distance of) home. From a social psychological standpoint, Herr Phil is the diabolical experimenter, counting on the fact that his followers will blindly obey his orders whatever the costs. Of course, the advice might be good, but it might also be embroiled in personal biases, partisan ideology, and individual flaws, broadcast throughout the world. Traditionally, the role of the analyst is to lead the subject to self-awareness and positive, conscious choices, not to issue commands and edicts. If someone stops drinking, beating their spouse, or molesting children simply because an authority told them to, is that real progress and a solution, or is it simply covering one disturbing psychosis (i.e. alchoholism) with another (i.e. rash obedience) that may seem innocuous but has been used to explain massacres and holocausts alike. Dr. Phil, of course, is not Eichmann any more than Stanley Milgram is. It is us, the viewers, the potential participants and “teachers,” who have the dangerous potential to obediently follow directions without thinking for ourselves. When we listen to authorities—like Dr. Phil, Nazi leaders, or researching academic—and do whatever they say, from a psychological standpoint, we are listening to our fellow participant’s screams, yet continuing to shock them to death. Of course, that is simply from a psychological standpoint. From an ethical standpoint we might wonder whether it’s better to be shocked to death than to continue living with the shocking fact that our individuality, our free thought, and our personal agency has been dead all along.<br /><br /><br /><br />*At Deconstructing Phil, we always strive to bring you first hand accounts from the writings of prominent philosophers, psychoanalysts, and theorists. While Stanley Milgram is an influential psychologist and his book <em>Obedience to Authority</em> does provide detailed and direct accounts of his famous experiments, all four copies of the book were checked out when I checked in my local university library. Mook’s textbook, however, is a fairly detailed, objective, and accurate look at some of psychology’s most notable experiments. Secondly, it should also be noted that there were serious ethical challenges to Milgram’s experiments. These concerns deal with the circumstances and awareness of the subjects, though, and do not mitigate or call into question the ultimate findings. Lastly, while this post is already long and detailed, it should be noted that another similar experiment which goes a long way toward explaining the interaction between authority and obedience is the Stanford Prison Experiment (1971).</span>agitpophttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09534084374540353389noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-492357967908608067.post-43054892432016570532008-03-03T10:44:00.006-05:002008-03-03T11:22:26.030-05:00Why I've Become L'Etranger; Dr. Phil Update; Scary MovieAs many of my readers have probably realized, it's been quite awhile since a new Deconstructing Phil. post has appeared. I've been very busy traveling, writing a faux Supreme Court brief for a guy accused of importing cocaine because he was wearing a "life's better in the Bahamas" t-shirt, and most recently writing up a contract for a strip club owner. It turns out you don't need to be on a street corner to be slapped in the face with Absurdity, you're equally vulnerable in a law library.<br /><br />We do hope to post at least once during the week (we have a really good one already in the works that links Dr. Phil to war criminals). In a nice odd turn, for those of us thinking that Dr. Phil is as Conservative as a troglodyte, today's episode is supposed to feature a much more progressive McGraw, apparently yelling at a Sex Ed teacher who refuses to teach anything but abstinence. While there probably won't be a Deconstructing Phil. post, we suggest watching it with a close reading of Macbeth (i.e. "Unsex me here," "Is this a dagger which I see before me,/ The handle toward my hand? Come, let me clutch thee." and "something wicked this way comes") to see how a frustrated sexual identity can lead to murderous rage and socio-political chaos.<br /><br />Or, if you're not a do-it-yourself sort of critical theorist, first of all, work on that, seriously, and second of all, take a look at my friend Jesse's "Filmaday weblog" which usually features his adroit reviews of (mostly current) films, but today features a special guest reviewer (namely myself) providing something of a Lacanian critique of a bizarre PBS documentary called <span style="font-style: italic;">The Queen Family</span>. Scroll down to the links section or check it out here:<br /><a href="http://filmaday.wordpress.com/">http://filmaday.wordpress.com/</a>agitpophttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09534084374540353389noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-492357967908608067.post-56237372354256899342008-02-06T23:10:00.001-05:002008-03-17T12:45:53.027-04:00I Lacan Quit Any Time I Want<span style=";font-family:";font-size:12;" >What exactly is Lacan’s idea of the Other?<span style=""> </span>A short and surprisingly faithful gloss of the concept might be that the Other is absolutely everything. The Other affects subjectivity and the properties of language.<span style=""> </span>For example, words can only be defined through other words, each in turn only definable through still more words, <i style="">ad infinitum</i>.<span style=""> </span>This is what Lacan calls “the metonymy of speech,” yet the ultimate consequence is a radical division and subjectivity of virtually any concept that is verbalized or written (<u>The Four Fundamental Concepts of Psycho-Analysis</u> 188).<span style=""> </span>Even more importantly, the Other is the vehicle, locus, and meaning of the unconscious.<span style=""> </span>As Lacan writes, the unconscious is “that which is inside the subject, but which can be realized only outside.” (147).<span style=""> </span>Of course, the Other is also essential to a Lacanian understanding of drives, since “transference [is] no more than the concept of repetition itself.” (129). Furthermore, “man’s desire is the desire of the Other” and there is a “handing back of truth into the hands of the Other.” (115, 36). Today’s episode of Dr. Phil—like most episodes—seemed to contain a vast amount of Otherness, though latent. The show introduced <st1:country-region st="on"><st1:place st="on">America</st1:place></st1:country-region> to two “pill popping” twins, Yvette and Yvonne.<span style=""> </span>Early on, it was clear how each subject “realized” herself in the opposite twin, trying to get out and pull free (188).<span style=""> </span>This is not so simple in a Lacanian universe, where every subject is divided and significant only through outside forces.<span style=""> </span>This is quite evident in the fact that, according to Dr. Phil, the twins “enable each other” which we might more usefully read as enabling each Other.<span style=""> </span>It is not simply their identity as sisters that requires an appreciation of the Other to be fully understood, but rather the entire circular logic of addiction.<span style=""> </span>As Dr. Phil explained to either Yvonne or Yvette—both were so high on Xanax, it’s hard to tell the difference—such behavior is entirely “<i style="">outside</i> the limits of acceptability.” However, one questions to what extent that alone is a problem.<span style=""> </span>Would it be okay to be a drug addict if everyone saw such behavior as acceptable? Anyone who says “yes” should read Aldous Huxley’s <span style="font-style: italic;">Brave New World</span>, paying close attention to the passages on “soma,” the wonder drug of the future that makes everyone feel great with no apparent negative side effects.<span style=""> </span>A Lacanian, though, would still see the potential dangers in such a drug, and a society that accepts it, since it represents an act of uninhibited surrender to the Other, comprehensively ingesting part of which must remain outside.<span style=""> </span>Instead, the morality and safety of the act itself has little to do with societal values or conventions.<span style=""> </span>It is precisely through the twins’ intentional internalization of such outward unacceptability that their identity, moral culpability, consciousness, and drives are formed—regardless of any moral or empirical absolutes. While Dr. Phil seems to criticize the drug use because of the “side effects” on the children, physical and mental states, and so on, Lacan point to the drug abuse as the effect of the twins’ untenable, ill conceived Others. Thus, while Dr. Phil suggests: “you need to create order, standards,” Lacan would much more likely find that it is the very social, economic, political, and psychic order which, through the standards of the Other, has forced the two to seek out such an unhealthy, precarious existence. If it is clear that the Other reveals a deep and powerful aspect of the sisters’s relationships toward each other, larger societal mores, and their drugs of choice, it should also be unmistakable that the Other is governing many more relationships in this situation. For one, I find it difficult to find drug use blameworthy through the rational of moral absolutism. Foucault, for example, called an LSD trip in <st1:place st="on"><st1:placename st="on">Death Valley</st1:placename> <st1:placetype st="on">National Park</st1:placetype></st1:place> the greatest experience of his life. For each religion-based system of morality that condemns such chemicals one could no doubt find an equal number of traditions that condone, or encourage the behavior.<span style=""> </span>In relativist terms, however, it is precisely through the mechanism of the other that such behavior is portrayed as damaging. For example, Dr. Phil often reminded one of the Y sisters that “your husband drove high: two people are dead!”<span style=""> </span>Still more frequently Dr. Phil, or one of the more conventionally well-behaved family members would says something like “drug addicts cannot raise children properly” or “this is not the right way to raise children.” It is impossible to point directly at the twins’ drug use and say, “look, look what it’s doing to you!” The other effectively converts such criticism into the positive building blocks of drives, identities, and interpersonal or communicative relationships. Similarly, one cannot point to a perfect way to raise children, but it is much more easy—in fact, one could say it is even Dr. Phil’s ultimate goal—to show the world exactly how not to handle kids, so as to inspire Others positively. However, most of this analysis has focused on how the other “can be realized only outside” of the subject, though it is equally true that it is “inside the subject.” (147) Therefore, one must question exactly how drug and child abuse are present in Dr. Phil’s personal psyche, and, of course, one’s own.<span style=""> </span>The Other also blurs the line between who and what is at stake to the point that, when Dr. Phil brought back the usual refrain that “I’m doing this for the kids...obviously” it was, in all actuality, far from obvious that he wasn’t doing it for himself, the audience, or more abstractly all non-children anywhere since, of course, one would be hard pressed to find a 7 year old on Xanax. <span style=""> </span>It is in this way that, from a psychoanalytic point of view, common sense, all of Dr. Phil’s suggestions, and even trips to qualified detox centers are all useless unless the analyst can help the patients in “the reopening of the shutter” to reveal that which has been there in the unconsciousness of the actor from the very beginning, without being fully known (131, 130).</span>agitpophttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09534084374540353389noreply@blogger.com8tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-492357967908608067.post-3306490478510234532008-02-04T22:31:00.001-05:002008-02-04T22:44:06.029-05:00I'm Serious, This is 100% SeriousRecently I was contacted by an associate producer from the Dr. Phil show. Are they seeing if I'd be a good guest? It certainly appears like that's a possibility. So, in addition to getting some very desperately needed help from Dr. Phil and his team, I may one day soon be able to give my bastion of loyal readers a quasi-insider's view of the show and it's process. All I can say is, pray for me, and, for now, enjoy this correspondance, edited, of course, for privacy reasons:<br /><br /><br /><dl> <dt><span style="font-size:85%;">"B[deleted for privacy purposes], Emily" <emily.b deleted=""></emily.b></span></dt><dt><span style="font-size:85%;">To:</span><span style="font-size:85%;"> <swoolf21 net=""></swoolf21></span></dt> <dt><span style="font-size:85%;">Subject:</span><span style="font-size:85%;"> Dr. Phil: 601-16</span></dt> <dt><span style="font-size:85%;">Date: </span><span style="font-size:85%;"><span id="header-date">Monday, February 04, 2008 21:12:21</span></span></dt> </dl> <span lang="en-us"><span style=";font-family:Georgia;font-size:85%;" ><br /><br />Dear Seth,</span></span> <p dir="ltr"><span lang="en-us"><span style=";font-family:Georgia;font-size:85%;" >Thank you for speaking with me. Could you please give me 10</span></span><span lang="en-us"></span><span lang="en-us"></span><span lang="en-us"><u> <span style=";font-family:Georgia;font-size:85%;" >SPECIFIC</span></u></span><span lang="en-us"></span><span lang="en-us"></span><span lang="en-us"><span style=";font-family:Georgia;font-size:85%;" > examples of how being an</span></span><span lang="en-us"></span><span lang="en-us"></span><span lang="en-us"> <span style=";font-family:Georgia;font-size:85%;" >“</span></span><span lang="en-us"></span><span lang="en-us"></span><span lang="en-us"><span style=";font-family:Georgia;font-size:85%;" >intellectual elitist</span></span><span lang="en-us"></span><span lang="en-us"></span><span lang="en-us"><span style=";font-family:Georgia;font-size:85%;" >”</span></span><span lang="en-us"></span><span lang="en-us"></span><span lang="en-us"><span style=";font-family:Georgia;font-size:85%;" > has caused problems in your life.</span></span></p> <p dir="ltr"><span lang="en-us"><span style=";font-family:Georgia;font-size:85%;" >Also, as it is our standard procedure, could you please email me some recent photos of yourself?</span></span></p> <p dir="ltr"><span lang="en-us"><span style=";font-family:Georgia;font-size:85%;" >Thanks!</span></span><span lang="en-us"></span><span lang="en-us"></span><span lang="en-us"></span></p> <p dir="ltr"><span lang="en-us"></span><span lang="en-us"></span><span lang="en-us"></span><span lang="en-us"></span><a name="" target="_blank"><span lang="en-us"><span style=";font-family:Georgia;font-size:85%;" >Emily B[deleted for privacy purposes]<br /></span></span></a></p> <p dir="ltr"><span lang="en-us"><span style=";font-family:Georgia;font-size:85%;" >Associate Producer</span></span></p> <p dir="ltr"><span lang="en-us"><span style=";font-family:Georgia;font-size:85%;" >The Dr. Phil Show</span></span></p> <span lang="en-us"><span style=";font-family:Georgia;font-size:85%;" >(323) -[deleted for privacy purposes]<br /><br /><br /></span></span>agitpophttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09534084374540353389noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-492357967908608067.post-85536072053059775072008-01-31T23:07:00.000-05:002008-02-07T14:51:34.012-05:00Apparently the Social Contract is not in Dr. Phil's Contract<p class="MsoNormal">Today’s episode of Dr. Phil was all about vigilante justice. As someone very interested in non-vigilante justice, this is, of course, of great interest to me. Furthermore, while the issue may not be at the forefront of contemporary political dialogue, it does at least weave through many current controversies—from immigration and the “minute men” border guards to <st1:placename st="on">Guantanamo</st1:placename> <st1:placetype st="on">Bay</st1:placetype> where the <st1:country-region st="on"><st1:place st="on">U.S.</st1:place></st1:country-region> government can hold prisoners without trials. <u>See</u> <u>Hamdi v. Rumsfeld</u>, 542 <st1:country-region st="on"><st1:place st="on">U.S.</st1:place></st1:country-region> 507 (2004). What is so interesting about Dr. Phil’s take on the subject is that it’s absolutely insane, unsupported by the vast cannon of Western philosophy, and downright dangerous.<span style=""> </span>Perhaps it isn’t so unique after all.<span style=""> </span>But when I saw yesterday’s sneak peak with individuals pulling people out of cars and pushing them, or beating them, I really figured Phil would give these people their come uppings. After all, when it comes to drug addicts, abusive spouses, child predators, and even people who are bad neighbors, Phil gives them his special treatment.<span style=""> </span>One dose of derision, a condescension drip, a shot of common sense, and a prescription for changing their deplorable lives. <span style=""> </span>Today, when we met an old woman who, as a dissatisfied Comcast customer, went into their office and smashed telephones and computers with a hammer, next being introduced to a man who spotted a suspected drunk driver rolling down the highway and boxed him off the road with his truck, only to tackle and physically restrain the supposedly inebriated man.<span style=""> </span>How did Phil react? With praise, admiration, and cheer. Only on the rarest occasion did he criticize any of the guests’ actions or motivations and, even then, it was in the most casual and subtle of ways. There are justifications for vigilante justice, of course.<span style=""> </span>Law enforcement resources are limited, they can’t be everywhere, and it seems innately unjust that two identical crimes and criminals could meet two disparate fates simply because one failed to get caught. On the other hand, being addicted to drugs or abusing spouses are actions which involve the violations of one or two specific laws, while vigilante justice, in itself, runs against all laws. Perhaps this is not clear. Let’s reference chapter 28 of Thomas Hobbes’s famous work, <u>The Leviathan</u>, which outlined the first conception of the social contract. In Hobbes definition of punishment he writes “neither private revenges, nor injuries of private men, can properly be styled punishment; because they proceed not from public authority.” One could argue that this simply means that private actions may resemble punishment, without actually entailing punishment. Yet this does not seem to be the author’s intent.<span style=""> </span>After all, Hobbes writes that members of a government “assist him that hath the sovereignty, in the punishing of another.”<span style=""> </span>This assistance is not by way of actually contacting those punished in any direct way, however, but rather through all of society consenting to the sovereignty of a public power. Hobbes is quite to the point about the dangers of what Dr. Phil terms vigilante justice when he writes: “the fact for which a man is punished, ought first to be judged by public authority, to be a transgression of the law.” In the case of the angry, old woman—who was also the most boastful—it is clear that, without a trial, and without public authority, a single citizen has, in the name of justice, levied her own punishment.<span style=""> </span>This has the appearance of being somewhat just, but only when one forgets that the woman is, in fact, overlooking public departments, non-governmental organizations, and alternative private providers, to say nothing of sovereignty and the big picture of justice.<span style=""> </span>Even more ominously, she has committed her own crime—admittedly destroying property—in order to remedy a situation she views as criminal.<span style=""> </span>In her mind, no doubt, the Comcast office got a fair desert.<span style=""> </span>However, it is not for individual citizens in their private capacities to decide such matters.<span style=""> </span>For one, this old curmudgeon might be biased against Comcast for some reason, she might be hateful in general, or outright insane. The same goes for the drunk driver; as it is, unfortunately, far too easy to think of a “reason” why two white men would want to beat and subdue an African-American without conventional legal recourse. Furthermore, if everyone could privately take action to right their own wrongs, it is easy to imagine how a back in forth would continue where the next logical step would be a whole fleet of Comcast trucks showing up and this senile desperado’s door to seek their revenge.<span style=""> </span>Intranational nuclear war is the next obvious step. The fact of the matter is, vigilante justice is not fit for society, but rather, as many social contractarians note, the state of nature.<span style=""> </span>In Locke’s <u>Second Treatise of Government</u>, he describes the state of nature as a place where “every man hath a right to punish the offender, and be executioner of the law of nature.” In fact, Locke is far more optimistic about this natural state than Hobbes, yet only because he feels this natural state is governed by the law of reason.<span style=""> </span>Even if Locke is right, it is nonetheless possible that vigilante justice can subvert the law of reason. In any case, we no longer live in the state of nature and, as Locke points out that it is “legislative and executive power of civil society, which is to judge by standing laws, how far offences are to be punished. Many benefits have been proposed that are said to arise from democracy, such as Kant’s idea that democracies do not fight with each other, thus leading to perpetual peace.<span style=""> </span>Democracy, indeed freedom itself, does have its inevitable drawbacks, though. <span style=""> </span>For democracy to even appear to work, people necessarily must give up natural freedoms in order to gain democratic ones. Increasingly, modern writers like Rousseau and Marx began to question whether it wasn’t actually industrialized economies and systems of labor and property which bound naturally free and content people, making the otherwise carefree state of nature seem objectionable.<span style=""> </span>However, what is clear among most traditional political theorists—Dr. Phil excluded—is that, for good or bad, vigilante justice works outside and against the sovereignty of the ruling government (its political forms and figures) and other important foundations of society, such as the economic order. If the day ever comes when the masses feel as though it’s just and equitable to act in the manner of Phil’s dear old Comcast subscribing guest, it will become impossible to watch the Dr. Phil show.<span style=""> </span>For one, televisions would be smuldering, broken in the rubbled remains of city streets, as individuals and sub-societal groups ravage each other in ever-escalating acts of revenge. Secondly, lacking the public remedy of courts, surely one of Phil’s many legal adversaries would make certain that McGraw would fail to see the full realization of the post-governmental state, existing, as it necessarily must, without citizens. <span style=""> </span><span style=""> </span><span style=""> </span></p>agitpophttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09534084374540353389noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-492357967908608067.post-51417794017569029492008-01-15T22:19:00.000-05:002008-01-15T22:25:55.672-05:00Seth Woolf is writing a blog entry about Dr. Phil<span style="">Tonight’s Dr. Phil was all about women posting “inappropriate” pictures of themselves (i.e. sexually provocative or evincing extensive drinking or illicit drug use) on facebook and myspace.<span style=""> </span>Even more than usual, today’s episode exhibited Dr. Phil’s proclivity toward using sweeping generalizations and blatant logical fallacies as the foundation of his analyses, which might better be characterized as arguments, if not Philicies.<span style=""> </span>The good doctor was especially fond of <i style="">Ad Hominem</i> (“Okay, but you drink and you’re seventeen!”), appeals to tradition (“You think most people see this as liberating?), false dilemmas (these girls either don’t know what they’re doing, or are making stupid decisions), guilt by association (“You don’t post the pictures, but you do run the facebook group!”), slippery slope (“you’re not gonna be able to get into any colleges, or get any jobs!”), biased sampling (“so, you went into a coma after hitting your head from drinking?”), and the straw man (“I don’t look at these pictures and see Susan B. Anthony”). Beyond these simple, generally theory-less critiques, there are also deep, philosophically disturbing problems with Dr. Phil’s contentions.<span style=""> </span>First of all, there is a large thematic and circumstantial problem with Phil’s approach.<span style=""> </span>For one, though occasionally advised guests and viewers to refrain from participating in wild, compromising behavior, his focus was much more on simply restraining oneself from posting pictures of such behavior on popular internet forums. As such, his argument is not, in fact, about ethics, aesthetics, or everyday behavior as such, but rather the mouthings of a tragically unhip Luddite.<span style=""> </span>A Marxist analysis of this strange parsing is very elucidating.<span style=""> </span>If an individual of relatively simple means and power posts such a revealing picture or written omission, it is quite damaging to job prospects, the social order, and even the rituals of courtship.<span style=""> </span>If, one the other, a major corporation or commercial power (i.e. Harpo productions, CBS, etc.) reveals selective information or negatively portrays someone it is not only said to be permissible, it is in fact lauded as being beneficial.<span style=""> </span>Consider this simple hypothetical: you are an employer combing through candidates to fill a position in your company.<span style=""> </span>You have settled on two candidates.<span style=""> </span>The first, Ms. A, had a strong interview, resume, and references, but she has a picture on facebook of her clearly intoxicated, and vomiting.<span style=""> </span>The second, Mr. B, also had a strong interview, resume, and references, and though he has no facebook account, he did appear on the Dr. Phil show in an episode that focused on spousal abuse.<span style=""> </span>If you had to choose one of these two candidates, you would probably choose Ms. A.<span style=""> </span>Similarly, one could imagine a website where users can communicate with others, view pictures and even movies of dubious social behavior, and learn potentially sensitive information about a variety of people.<span style=""> </span>Is this website facebook or myspace?<span style=""> </span>Yes, quite possibly.<span style=""> </span>On the other hand, it might just as easily be Dr. Phil’s website.<span style=""> </span>I do not intend to mirror Dr. Phils <i style="">Ad Hominem</i> thesis with and <i style="">Ad Hominem</i> antithesis of my own, however, one must realize that transference and projection are both very valid and significant issues in Freudian, Marxist, and postmodern thought.<span style=""> </span>Indeed, a more positive antithesis to Dr. Phil’s thesis would be not to criticize people who are honest and open about their personal life, while embracing technology and feeling psychologically at peace with themselves, but to instead chastise those who behave deplorably and yet hide their authentically human actions and attitudes.<span style=""> </span>It might be more accurate to say these people—and we could even include Dr. Phil among their ranks—are the ones in society who are antisocial and plagued by a certain psychotic tendency to admonish their own faults visible in the more economically and socially exploitable positions.<span style=""> </span>To delve into another area of theory, there are a great many places to go in terms of gender, sexuality, feminist, and queer theory.<span style=""> </span>Along the lines of my previous reasoning, one could take a lot from Luce Irigaray’s essay “This Sex Which Is Not One” where she writes that “woman is traditionally use-value for man, exchange value among men.<span style=""> </span>Merchandise, then.”<span style=""> </span>Particularly as Dr. Phil tried to show that the pictures he found so distasteful made employment opportunities scarce and possibilities of relationships with people like the audience member Roco impossible, it seemed more and more like the argument had less to do with one’s mental state, ethical value, and aesthetic well-being and far more to do with value as a lifeless commercial object.<span style=""> </span>Other feminists, such as Susan Moller-Okin see sex as biological while gender is performed, claiming that “public policies and laws should generally assume no social differentiation of the sexes” (<i style="">Justice, Gender, and the Family </i>175).<span style=""> </span>Clearly, this is not Dr. Phil’s way.<span style=""> </span>It is, to put it mildly, offensive and deeply biased to ask Roco if he would want to date women he only knows through “inappropriate” facebook pictures.<span style=""> </span>For one, it reinforces a societal emphasis on the female exterior, only caring about a woman’s interior when it’s being vomited up in plain view.<span style=""> </span>It also fails to ask these individuals—and one cannot forget that they are individuals—if they would ever consider dating someone like Roco. While this could be characterized as a double standard, it might be more realistic, and more inhumane, to interpret it as the male gaze and the lack of a female voice that is so often criticized by feminists.<span style=""> </span>Lastly, there is also a very real questions pertaining to queer theory here.<span style=""> </span>In “Imitation and Gender Insubordination” Judith Butler writes that “gender is a kind of imitation for which there is no original” and that “the psyche is not ‘in’ the body, but in the very signifying process through which that body comes to appear.”<span style=""> </span>These women are most assuredly not displaying themselves as women being taken advantage of, and women who are basically disgusting outcasts.<span style=""> </span>That is the act of interpreting their actions, it is the “fantasy” as much as the “gender presentation,” and it is a potentially damaging, not advantageous, to closet that which desires to roam free, despite consequences. <span style=""> </span>When one really looks at the topic with a postmodern gaze, rather than a male or Bourgeoisie gaze, the question is not why these women have facebook and myspace pages with pictures detailing their life, but rather, why doesn’t Dr. Phil?<span style=""> </span>If it isn’t clear already, the simple point is, it is Dr. Phil, not any guest, who is in a position to really hide something significant, serious, and horrendous.<span style="font-weight: bold;"><br /></span></span>agitpophttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09534084374540353389noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-492357967908608067.post-21754443229992819812008-01-02T02:11:00.000-05:002008-01-02T02:15:44.967-05:00(Ben)Jamin' with Dr. Phil: part 2?<span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);font-family:";font-size:12;color:black;" >In “The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction,” Walter Benjamin asserts that “even the most perfect reproduction of a work of art is lacking in one element: its presence in time and space, its unique existence at the place where it happens to be.” (<i style="">Illuminations</i> 220).<span style=""> </span>Benjamin goes further, pointing out that reproduction through mechanical processes also removes itself from the original and places the subsequent copies “into situations which would be out of reach for the original.” (Ibid).<span style=""> </span>In the case of Dr. Phil episodes, this is particularly true.<span style=""> </span>Imagine a guest sitting down and watching the show they appeared on during a repeat, a year or so later.<span style=""> </span>If symptoms and psychoses have intensified, it is easy to see how the patient would feel manipulated, abandoned, and like a failure. If the condition originally complained of has improved, it is likewise easy to comprehend how a repeat could retrigger or reshape a latent disorder. This is, of course, not exactly replicated when an average viewer watches a repeat, or a first-run example of mechanical reproduction. Benjamin is adamant, however, that this is as true for a spectator as it is for a participant.<span style=""> </span>It is what he calls the “aura” withering, becoming alienated, and losing its uniqueness (222).<span style=""> </span>While this idea has comprehensive implications for all arts and communicative media, Benjamin is focusing on film.<span style=""> </span>Just as film loses ritualistic value and the ability to interact with an audience, Dr. Phil’s program—as compared to a heretofore non-existent live theatre version of Dr. Phil—is embroiled in difficulties since Dr. Phil is psychoanalyzing and performing, not for real live people, but to a camera.<span style=""> </span>The audience, as Benjamin points out, is put in the position of the critic, identifying with the unseen cameraman, seeing Dr. Phil only through his mechanical, impersonal eyes (228).<span style=""> </span>While Dr. Phil claims that his show aims to help viewers at home (particularly children) as much as he tries to help guests, this is of course impossible in a true psychoanalytical sense.<span style=""> </span>Dr. Phil has the most powerful and oppressive bodyguard conceivable in the camera, taking away the audience’s freedom and preventing two-way communication. Benjamin describes a consequence by positing that “the aura that envelops the actor disappears, and with it the aura of the figure he portrays.”<span style=""> </span>(229). The mechanical reproduction inherent in the television industry seems to analogously extinguish the aura to the person, the real humanness, of Dr. Phil.<span style=""> </span>What is left?<span style=""> </span>According to Benjamin it is the “spell of the personality” and “the phony spell of a commodity.” (231). The difference between a person and a star has nothing to do with their ability to communicate artistically and everything to do with whether or not they are being filmed. Film’s salvation is that it changes the methods of participation in a way that has positive, as well as negative, effects.<span style=""> </span>It can be personal in a new, mechanical way in the sense that it is perhaps better adapted than any artistic medium to “mobilize the masses.” (240).<span style=""> </span>If the Dr. Phil show is unsuccessful, then, it may have less to do with the capabilities and disabilities that follow the camera, and more to do with the limits of psychoanalysis. <span style=""> </span>Unless one is speaking of a mass psychosis, a public and communal therapy is useless by its very nature. Benjamin ends his essay with a rather curious epilogue.<span style=""> </span>Thinking of the essay as a quarreling over semantics or an arcane argument about aesthetics is shown to be completely false.<span style=""> </span>In fact, as Benjamin makes clear, what is at stakes is far more serious: fascism, modern society, and war. Benjamin (a Marxist, of course) has a simple solution: “politicizing art.” (242). Dr. Phil’s politics are about as personal and overt as is his contact with the television audience.<span style=""> </span>Following Benjamin’s model, Dr. Phil’s vague and cautious political aesthetic—“children are important!” and “craziness is bad!”—is the perfect fodder for a war-mongering fascist. <span style=""> </span>The only question remaining is whether the aggressive Fascist of the future is today’s Dr. Phil or the viewers of his enduring repeats.</span>agitpophttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09534084374540353389noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-492357967908608067.post-24001268537028986772007-12-26T02:21:00.000-05:002007-12-26T02:26:47.079-05:00(Ben)Jamin' with Dr. Phil: part 1?<span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">Today is Christmas, a holiday with strong Messianic overtones.<span style=""> </span>It seems only fitting, therefore, that we celebrate with an exegesis of Walter Benjamin, the Jewish philosopher who points out that “like every generation that preceded us, we have been endowed with a <i style="">weak</i> Messianic power.” (“Theses on the Philosophy of History,” <i style="">Illuminations, </i>254). Benjamin writes that “there is a secret agreement between the past generations and the present one” wherein the past asserts a claim that “cannot be settled cheaply.” (Ibid.)<span style=""> </span>Benjamin’s philosophy of time is probably best expressed through his conception of “the angel of history.” (257).<span style=""> </span>Benjamin’s description is worth a closer examination:<br /><br /></span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">“His face is turned toward the past.<span style=""> </span>Where we perceive a chain of events, he sees one single catastrophe which keeps piling wreckage upon wreckage and hurls it in front of his feet.<span style=""> </span>The angel would like to stay, awaken the dead, and make whole what has been smashed. But a storm is blowing from <st1:place st="on">Paradise</st1:place>; it has got caught in his wings with such violence that the angel can no longer close them.<span style=""> </span>This storm irresistibly propels him into the future to which his back is turned, while the pile of debris before him grows skyward.<span style=""> </span>This storm is what we call progress.” (257-258).<br /><br /></span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">In fact, we call this storm the t.v. schedule. One of the particularly interesting aspects of Benjamin’s portrayal of history is what it does to the viewer.<span style=""> </span>Besides the approximate deification, the viewer is actually flummoxed.<span style=""> </span>For one, the angel of history cannot see where he or she is going.<span style=""> </span>If it is being blown away from <st1:place st="on">Paradise</st1:place> with such force, it also seems that it will not be able to return, at least not any time soon. Perhaps most importantly, the angel is in a constant state of parallax and vertigo as it continually sees history building as a giant trail of self-created refuse and wreckage. This can all be easily adapted to the small scale temporal world that exists on and around television. Somewhat recent inventions and industry changes such as Tivo or DVDs of popular shows do, in some ways, alleviated the pain and chaos felt by the angel. In its most basic sense, however, watching television forces the viewer to take the position of the angel. Television cannot, of course, show the future.<span style=""> </span>The viewer is placated and distracted with elaborate (often <i style="">trash</i>y) images of the past in lieu of control and awareness which must remain, if anywhere, in the spontaneous blackness and snow of dead air and lost signals. It is probably no secret that sitcoms and dramas are filmed months in advance.<span style=""> </span>So are many “reality” shows. Even live sports and news events are broadcast with a standard 7 second delay.<span style=""> </span>This is not to say that the television universe is entirely without order. We, the angelic viewers, know when the shows we like are usually on.<span style=""> </span>We’re aided by guides and advertisements, and even within programs we are introduced to motifs, patterns, and limits.<span style=""> </span>If each generation places a “<i style="">weak</i> Messianic power” in the generations that it expects to follow, we might also say that we found our television viewing habits on an <i style="">überweak </i>Messianic power.<span style=""> </span>As a simple thought experiment, imagine your favorite show being cancelled, perhaps inexplicably, mid-season.<span style=""> </span>Would it not cause one to mourn for that which was supposed to come while losing at least some faith in what is left? But, in television, as with all things containing an important temporal component, there are far more <i style="">überweak </i>Messianic powers at stake.<span style=""> </span>With relatively little leeway, we expect the tone, format, and style of our favorite shows to continue unchanged.<span style=""> </span>In short, we expected to see new—and yet oddly familiar—wreckage dumped in front of us as we travel, blindly, through time. <span style=""> </span>As Dr. Phil said in yesterday’s episode: “video doesn’t lie.”<span style=""> </span>However, Benjamin’s model makes one question in what way video could ever tell the truth.<span style=""> </span>As he writes: “every image of the past that is not recognized by the present as one of its own concerns threatens to disappear irretrievably” and “<i style="">even the dead</i> will not be safe from the enemy if he wins.” (255).<span style=""> </span>Yet there is a very interesting added element, one which is partially unique to television, or at least modern communication and art: the repeat. While this might appear to offer a loophole, since the wreckage is returning, for a moment allowing one to see a small portion of the future, this is, in fact, not entirely the case.<span style=""> </span>We will have to look backwards yet again, to Benjamin’s previous and most famous essay: “The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction."</span><br /><span style=""></span>agitpophttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09534084374540353389noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-492357967908608067.post-87895390516443276532007-12-17T23:13:00.001-05:002007-12-17T23:22:54.194-05:00Deconstructing Phil. Is Back; Believe It or Not<span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);"><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">I</span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">n the urban, industrialized northern hemisphere it is winter. The days are cloudy, and short.</span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);"> </span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">Darkness—both metaphorical and meteorological—prevails as final exams force the most well-intentioned students into an inescapable abyss of anxiety and incomprehension.</span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);"> </span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">In short, the time is perfect for reading Kafka, that fun-loving lawyer who teaches that man cannot know the Law, though the Law knows a man better than himself.</span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);"> </span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">Today’s episode of Dr. Phil brought 5 (later 4, when 1 quit) judgmental people into the Dr. Phil house.</span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);"> </span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">Unfortunately, Dr. P.’s characterization and theory about what constitutes a judgmental person is, as usual, vapificialess (which is my new </span><i style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">portmanteau</i><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);"> for vapid, superficial, and some other “random” word such as: useless, meaningless, senseless, or reckless).</span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);"> </span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">Kafka, on the other hand, provides an elaborate schema of different meanings and meta-meanings of judgment in his aptly named short story, “The Judgment” (which can be read </span><a style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);" href="http://www.mala.bc.ca/%7Ejohnstoi/kafka/judgment.htm">here</a><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">, though all citations come from </span><u style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">The Complete Stories</u><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">).</span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);"> </span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">The judgmental people in the Dr. P. house all fit into easily stereotyped categories, there was the “chauvinist,” the “anti-social,” “the bitch,” and my two favorites, a poor excuse for an “elitist” and a holier-than-thou Christian Right revivalist who is, according to the Dr. P. show, a “moralist.”</span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);"> </span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">Such cliché caricatures of judge-mentality do exist in Kafka’s work, as they do in P.’s.</span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);"> </span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">Like so many of P.’s guests, the unseen, but oft talked about friend of Georg, who lives in the distant and alien land of Russia is described as “dissatisfied with his prospects,” “embittered,” and “estranged”(77, 78).</span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);"> </span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">Georg, the proto-protagonist, is preoccupied with passively keeping various people in his life (his father, his friend, his fiancé, his friends) separate in easily classifiable groups under his defensive control, again similar to many of the guests.</span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);"> </span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">Even confined to the trite and shallow characterization put forward by P of what judgmental means, Georg’s father would take the whole bakery along with the cake. Having come to the decision that his son is a deceitful, bad person (read: actually inhuman), the father takes judgmental action.</span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);"> </span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">He purports to have spent years secretly corresponding with Georg’s friend telling him truths Georg was ashamed to admit to gain an advantage and, in turn, reveal these truths to Georg, screaming “till now, you’ve known only about yourself…you have been a devilish human being!” </span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);"> </span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">The next line is the key: “And therefore take note: I sentence you now to death by drowning!”</span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);"> </span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">This is interesting because it is, in effect, the most extreme statement and manifestation of Dr. P.’s conception of being judgmental: I don’t like you, I want you to die.</span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);"> </span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">At the same time, it shows how trivial and flawed it is.</span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);"> </span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">After all, no reasonable person would think, just because someone says they want you to die, you have to, or even should.</span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);"> </span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">There’s no judicial-political, economic, or social authority here.</span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);"> </span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">The father may carry familial authority, but in modern times that is hardly enough to make such a judgment binding.</span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);"> </span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">Except, of course, for the fact that Georg’s last name is Bendemann, German for boundman.</span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);"> </span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">This is one of the higher levels of judgment at play, one with deep and far ranging effects, one which, if Dr. P. has any inkling or notion of it, he’s been more preoccupied with showing that he knows how to keep a secret.</span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);"> </span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">This does not mean it does not exist on the Dr. P. show; like in Kafka’s work, there are deeper, more insidious examples of ideological interplay at stake in every judgment.</span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);"> </span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">While Kafka is quite cognizant of these deeper truths to acts of judgments, focusing about them in the story, to Dr. P. they remain only latent and subtle, if they appear at all.</span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);"> </span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">What he does say, though, is that being judgmental is about “get them, before they get you.”</span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);"> </span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">In the same show, he said “you are responsible to your own creations, you did this to yourself.”</span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);"> </span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">These phrases seem incongruous, if not utterly contradictory.</span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);"> </span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">Kafka it seems, rejects the first, or rather subsumes it beneath the second.</span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);"> </span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">How does “The Judgment” end?</span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);"> </span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">Simply put, in Georg’s suicide.</span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);"> </span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">But the fact that it is suicide—one killing one’s self—is very important here.</span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);"> </span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">The father suddenly seems to disappear.</span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);"> </span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">Kafka writes: “George felt himself urged from the room…he swung himself over” a bridge (87-88).</span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);"> </span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">This is Dr. P’s idea that “you are responsible for your own creations,” but all judgments, including those made to get someone “before they get me” are also subject to this ambivalent, Existential test. Slavoj Žižek theorizes this counter-intuitive causality quite well in his essay on another one of Kafka’s notable works, </span><u style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">The Trial</u><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">. </span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);"> </span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">He writes:</span><br /><br /></span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">“The necessary structural illusion which drives people to believe that truth can be found in laws describes precisely the mechanism of transference: transference is this supposition of a Truth, of a Meaning behind the stupid, traumatic, inconsistent fact of the Law.<span style=""> </span>In other words, ‘transference’ names the vicious circle of belief: the reasons why we should believe are persuasive only to those who already believe.” (<u>The Sublime Object of Ideology</u>, <span style=""> </span>38)<br /><br /></span><span style="color: rgb(153, 153, 153);">Replace Kafka’s sweeping, metaphorical idea of Law with his more specific idea of judgments, and you learn that, to follow any authority’s judgment is, in fact, only to follow one’s own judgment, the pre-existing belief in the authoritativeness.<span style=""> </span>Of course this is true of the judgmental people who fit Dr. P.’s more provincial model, but, more subversively, it is true of everyone.<span style=""> </span>Dr. P. equates a judgmental nature as constantly looking down at people, but one could just as easily say that listening to a judgment, no matter the source, is looking up at someone without any real justification.<span style=""> </span>There seems to be one final form of judge-mentality that even Kafka does not appear to be fully conscious of—forget Dr. P.<span style=""> </span>In his diary entries, Kafka writes of the one night when he wrote “The Judgment” by saying that it came out of his head “like a real birth.” (<u>Diaries</u>, 214).<span style=""> </span>He adds that: “only I have the hand that can reach to the body itself” (Ibid.)<span style=""> </span>At first glance, this seems like the way a visceral, relieved writer would boast of his work.<span style=""> </span>But one needs to remember how closely the story involves not just the father and son relationship, but the importance of spawning something versus causing death, including one’s own.<span style=""> </span>In addition to these ever-present motifs, the story’s famous last sentence, in its original German, carries a deep sexual, progenitive implication that it loses in translation.<span style=""> </span>The “unending stream of traffic” that is going over the bridge is the societal materialization of violent ejaculation, where <i style="">jouissance</i>, where pain and pleasure, life and death, and authority and belief meet, the source and site of the ultimate judgment.</span>agitpophttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09534084374540353389noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-492357967908608067.post-37452175325492358572007-12-05T23:55:00.000-05:002007-12-06T16:08:47.281-05:00Dr. Phil Drives Me Crazy (And Drives 41 People into Trees)This news was brought to my attention by my brother. No time for theory, but enjoy.<br /><br /><a href="http://www.accesshollywood.com/news/ah7682.shtml">Dr. Phil bus crash</a>agitpophttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09534084374540353389noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-492357967908608067.post-50539600518007229722007-11-25T02:14:00.000-05:002007-11-28T19:40:41.074-05:00Will This Message Self-Deconstruct?For the next three weeks, Deconstructing Phil. is going on a writer's strike. However, Dr. Phil is continuing on, so we hope that our patrons will bravely assume the role of thesis to Dr. Phil's antithesis by sending in guest blogs. If not, we'll be back in three weeks. Now you know what's happening; but why don't you watch the video below to see if Brecht is right that it's more fun to watch <span style="font-style: italic;">how</span> something happens?<br /><br /><br /><iframe allowfullscreen='allowfullscreen' webkitallowfullscreen='webkitallowfullscreen' mozallowfullscreen='mozallowfullscreen' width='416' height='345' src='https://www.blogger.com/video.g?token=AD6v5dyTkJu8_B6g8R6LYawIyZ-GmQGX0143w50x5vqBMDMZ4V07ED67Wm8PNbBBpOJpieOChblayqxF6Z2mXCxX0A' class='b-hbp-video b-uploaded' frameborder='0'></iframe>agitpophttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09534084374540353389noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-492357967908608067.post-18664961022323221442007-11-22T16:36:00.000-05:002007-11-28T19:41:24.315-05:00Murder He Wrote<span style="">Today’s episode of Dr. Phil showed that, even with the ongoing writers’ strike, fiction and humor are far from extinct on the airwaves.<span style=""> </span>Yesterday’s episode focused on Wade, who was brought to the Phil by Michelle, his wife.<span style=""> </span>She had recently started to suspect that her husband was a compulsive liar and, as per usual, cheating on her.<span style=""> </span>The standard schema of accusations, phil plashbacks, yelling, lie detector results, crying, and excuses resulted.<span style=""> </span>No big surprises, until the last 5 minutes or so, where we learned that the next episode (today’s) would reveal how Wade admits not only to a long list of affairs and marital transgressions, but also multiple rapes and murders.<span style=""> </span>Apparently, after the show, when heading back to Iowa (to get their divorce) Wade told Michelle that he had vague memories of raping his ex-wife and a co-worker, as well as a time where he picked up a hitchhiker who refused to have sexual intercourse, leading him to a violent outrage, murdering and dumping the woman’s body on the side of the road. <span style=""> </span>Adding to the intrigue, the audience learns of restraining orders, fruitless FBI investigations, death threats, stalkings, and suicide attempts from basically all the parties involved except Phil. While adding a certain dimension of excitement, and, perhaps most importantly, providing reason to extend the show for 2 more days, it’s also extremely unbelievable.<span style=""> </span>After all, as Dr. Phil actually made clear on the first show, Wade is a compulsive liar, fibbing about little inconsequential things and distorting big, important matters.<span style=""> </span>Considering Wade’s <i style="">modus operandi</i>, it seems far more likely that this new story of murder is a different, albeit perhaps more intense and perverse, outlet for his persistently compulsive lying.<span style=""> </span>The ethical complications, therefore, are not so apparent.<span style=""> </span>One interesting authority to consult would be St. Thomas Aquinas’ <u>Summa Theologica</u>, particularly question 110, “the vices opposed to truth.” Aquinas writes of Wade’s condition, calling it “the lie which is told ‘out of mere lust of lying and deceiving.’ This proceeds from a habit, wherefore the Philosopher [Aristotle] says (Ethic. iv, 7) that ‘the liar, when he lies from habit, delights in lying.’” (article 2).<span style=""> </span>Perhaps more importantly, in terms of ethical consequences, Aquinas argues that this type of lie has its “own measure of gravity without addition or diminution.” (article 2).<span style=""> </span>Aquinas believes that lies, by their very nature are sinful and bad—though some are worse than others depending on the nature of the lie, its end, and its nature as a sin.<span style=""> </span>The compulsive lie is only unique in that the nature (as a lie and sin) and end can provide neither mitigation nor further condemnation.<span style=""> </span>This should call attention to Aquinas’ notion that all lies are intrinsically wrong.<span style=""> </span>Why does he say this?<span style=""> </span>Following Aristotle, and more directly Augustine, Aquinas justifies this claim by writing: “words are naturally signs of intellectual acts, it is unnatural and undue for anyone to signify by words something that is not in his mind.” (article 3).<span style=""> </span>This is a startling discovery in the modern age and is a drastic contrast with any poststructuralist idea, since the latter philosophy is founded upon the concept that words do not (and can not) truthfully express intellectual ideas in a natural way.<span style=""> </span>If we take poststructuralists’ model of language and signs as accurate, while simultaneously following Aquinas’ moral code as complete and true, then we are left with no choice but to conclude that all communication is a lie.<span style=""> </span>This isn’t that difficult to imagine, especially considering today’s episode of Dr. Phil, where, in just 20 minutes we learned that Wade is a serial killer, Michelle enjoys cutting herself, and Dr. Phil kept huge secrets from his loyal fan-base.<span style=""> </span>At the same time, these accusations must all be accompanied by words like: “potentially,” “appear,” or “according to…”<span style=""> </span>Is everyone, including Dr. Phil, a liar? If we take Aquinas’ words literally—that it is “unnatural and undue for anyone to signify by words something that is not in his mind”—then the most innocent and well-meant thought-experiment, hypothetical, or act of subjective thinking could be construed as unethical whereas an objectively false accusation, if honestly believed, is completely moral and blameless.<span style=""> </span>To deconstruct Aquinas and Phil side-by-side, it seems strange that, despite the Saintly one’s definition of lying, </span><span style=""><u>Summa Theologica</u></span><span style=""> is structurally supported by unconcealed lies.<span style=""> </span>Aquinas offers many articles, containing questions, followed by several short objections, then his answers to them, plus concise and exact replies to each objection. Thus, each original objection is a hypothetical strawman for burning down, seeming to fit the philosopher’s own description of a lie.<span style=""> </span>In a similar way, the Dr. Phil show exhibits a deeply rooted structural lie by attempting to focus on a “real” and “serious” problem—i.e. compulsive lying—only to completely disregard a problem when a more attractive (for ratings, revenue, etc.) interpretation comes along—i.e. the compulsive liar is telling the truth about being a serial killer. If, as on the Dr. Phil show, everyone’s a liar, then the act of lying honestly might become a question of aesthetics more than ethics.</span>agitpophttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09534084374540353389noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-492357967908608067.post-33728440867988802372007-11-16T16:50:00.000-05:002007-11-16T16:54:32.254-05:00Anorexic to Dr. Phil: "Bite me"<span style="font-size: 12pt; font-family: "Times New Roman";">Today’s Dr. Phil show dealt with eating disorder, primarily anorexia and bulimia.<span style=""> </span>I had expected it to be a particularly telling episode, especially from the previews, which showed Phil staring down an emaciated girl with the words “you are going to die...soon!”<span style=""> </span>In fact, McGraw was far more reasonable and reasoned than normal.<span style=""> </span>He went out of his way several times to say “it’s not as easy as saying: start eating,” and he did make several salient points.<span style=""> </span>However, if there is one part of Phil’s logic and methods that needs to be addressed, surely it would be that he claims—in an apparent contradiction—that it is a problem that stems “from within” as well as being “driven by media images [and] media icons.”<span style=""> </span>McGraw did not elaborate how such a relationship between the subject’s interior psyche could be related to a larger social consciousness, but luckily Freud did precisely this in his work <i style="">Civilization and Its Discontents</i>.<span style=""> </span>Freud writes that “it was discovered that a person becomes neurotic because he [or she] cannot tolerate the amount of frustration which society imposes on him [or her] in the service of its cultural ideals.” (39).<span style=""> </span>Considering only this idea, one could imagine how any or all of the four guests on the show could have become anorexic or bulimic because of society’s imposed cultural ideas.<span style=""> </span>However, the fact that Freud writes “cannot tolerate” clouds the situation.<span style=""> </span>The standard explanation of anorexia, incorporating Freud’s vocabulary when possible, would be: the subject feels society imposing the cultural ideal of skinniness, health consciousness, and so on, causing them to try and fulfill the objective to the extreme.<span style=""> </span>But that is no longer Freud’s model.<span style=""> </span>To him, psychosis arises not from the wish to fanatically fulfill society’s imposed ideals, but rather from the subject’s inability or unwillingness to tolerate such ideals.<span style=""> </span>It would be more in line with Freud to say that these guests are, in fact, not enthralled by the media’s glamorous portrayal of youth, beauty, and tiny figures.<span style=""> </span>Instead, from the very beginning of their psychosis, they found these images and ideals to be quite disgusting and deplorable.<span style=""> </span>It was exactly this desire to not tolerate, to rebel, which drove them to the extreme, just so that they could prove to themselves, to their families and friends, to Dr. Phil, and to the whole world that the ideal is an extremely dangerous and perverse one.<span style=""> </span>Engrained within their psychosis is a realization that Freud already understood, but Dr. Phil and the mainstream media are understandably reluctant to make: “this useless thing which we expect civilization to value is beauty.” (45).<span style=""> </span>Dr. Phil can blame Nicole Ritchie and the media which fetishizes small sizes but, as Freud understands, that is simply a confined, contemporary manifestation of the problem and not the problem itself.<span style=""> </span>As he writes: “the urge for freedom…is directed against particular forms and demands of civilization or against civilization altogether.” (49). Today’s guest, then, are obsessed and drawn into the values and images of the media at the exact symbolic location of their rebellious psychosis.<span style=""> </span>Specific cultural values have always, and will always, continue to change, but the individual’s great need to “defend his [or her] claim to individual liberty against the will of the group” is an innate and unstoppable force and one which, not surprisingly, Dr. Phil cannot understand or articulate.</span>agitpophttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09534084374540353389noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-492357967908608067.post-44182276552173443242007-11-14T23:31:00.000-05:002007-11-15T11:37:25.700-05:00The Third Worldwide Web<span style="">In the nearly two months and 15 entries that comprise the Deconstructing Phil. lifespan</span><span style="">, no episode has presented such a dire need of drastic interpretation as this evening's.<span style=""> </span>“Bring</span><span style="">ing Home Katherine” part one aired today (the second half set to hit the small screen tomorrow) where Dr. Phil in</span><span style="">troduced his audience to Katherine, a girl who, at 16, fell in love via myspace with Abdullah, a </span><span style="">20 year old Palestinian man, and procured a passport to leave the country surreptitiously.<span style=""> </span></span><span style="">When she was then reported missing, the FBI intercepted her in</span><span style=""> Amman, but after she later turned 18, with her fam</span><span style="">ily unable to stop her, she “ran away” from home again to live with Abdulla</span><span style="">h and her sister called Dr. </span><span style="">Phil for help.<span style=""> </span>Dr. Phil, of course, agreeing that Katherine is in danger, blames the internet.<span style=""> </span>The real culprit is Orientalism.<span style=""> </span>As E</span><span style="">dward Said wrote in his groundbreaking work </span><span style=""><i style="">Orientalism</i>, “the Orient is not an inert fact of nature.<span style=""> </span>It is not merely <i style="">there</i>, just as the Occident itself is not just <i style="">there.</i>”<span style=""> </span>Instead, Said writes, such concepts, in a</span><span style="">ll their geographic</span><span style=""> and cultural facets, are “man-made.”<span style=""> </span>It is clear that the Orientalist picture of <st1:place st="on"><st1:city st="on">Palestine</st1:city></st1:place> presented on the Dr. Phil show is one manufactured and in many ways fan</span><span style="">tastic.<span style=""> </span>In fact, the d</span><span style="">ialogue was eerily similar to one </span><span style="">of the most famous pieces of literature addressing the topic: <i style="">Othello</i>.<span style=""> </span>Ma</span><span style="">ry, Katherine’s sister, described her as being “under a spell,” the same way Brabanzio, Desdemona’s father, describes how his daughter was “corrupted/ By sp</span><span style="">ells and medicines bought of mountebanks.” (I.iii.60-61).<span style=""> </span>The family also repeatedly alleged (with no apparent factual basis) that Katherine had been brainwashed.<span style=""> </span>At least Brabanz</span><span style="">io said it with a bit more sophistication and panache when he bemoaned “O, treason of the blood!/<span style=""> </span>Fathers, from hence trust not your daughters’ minds.” (I.i.170-171).<span style=""> </span>They</span><span style=""> also characterized both of Katherine’s premeditated, voluntary, and mostly unaided journeys to the middle east as “kidnappings.”<span style=""> </span>This is, of course, the jaundiced and Janused voice of </span><span style="">Iago, starting the whole tragedy </span><span style="">with</span><span style=""> the cry of “thieves, thieves, thieves!/<span style=""> </span>Look to your house, your daughter, and your bags./<span style=""> </span>Thieves, thieves!” (I.i.79-81).<span style=""> </span>The similarities are astounding, and it would be interestin</span><span style="">g to further compare Katherine’s story with that of Desdemona and the famous Moor (who,</span><span style=""> interestingly, some Shakespeare commentators read as an Arab).<span style=""> </span>The main point here, though, is that the picture of </span><span style="">the middle east presented by Katherine's family (with the help of Dr. Phil) is very much based on and promoting a fiction.<span style=""> </span>It is extrem</span><span style="">ely unlikely that any of the guests, or even Dr. Phil, ever visited <st1:place st="on"><st1:city st="on">Palestine</st1:city></st1:place>, and certainly none were experts</span><span style="">.<span style=""> </span>The next important thing that S</span><span style="">aid tells us a</span><span style="">bout Orientalism is that “the relationship between Occident and Orient is a relationship of power, of domination, of varying </span><span style="">degrees of a complex hegemony.”</span><span style=""> (<i style="">Orientalism</i>).<span style=""> </span><span style=""> </span>As Shawn [sic!], Katherine’s mother says: “I don’t know anything about Abdullah.”<span style=""> </span>Such lack of knowledge is utterly</span><span style=""> unacceptable for a hegemonic figure (an American, a matriarch, a mass media product, etc.)<span style=""> </span>Instead, it must be filled in</span><span style="">—</span><span style="">with xenophobic, racist, and jingoist notions if those are all that’s available.<span style=""> </span>Katherine’</span><span style="">s liberal international relations stance was stated quite adroitly and succinctly when she said: “I respect [Abdullah’s]</span><span style=""> culture, and he respects mine.”<span style=""> </span>Though no one explicitly voiced it, the ideological position of those left in <st1:state st="on"><st1:place st="on">California</st1:place></st1:state> was clearly: I don’t respect his culture (hell, I don’t even know it), but he</span><span style=""> needs to respect mine.<span style=""> </span>If more ev</span><span style="">idence is needed that this is really a power struggle in every sense of the word, si</span><span style="">mply consider the fact that Katherine’s mother was outraged that at “18, according t</span><span style="">o the state of <st1:state st="on"><st1:place st="on">Michigan</st1:place></st1:state>, [my daughter is] an adult.”<span style=""> </span>While most people would probably see this as an entirely reasonable, acceptable, and just matter of law, Shawn was so outraged at her lack</span><span style=""> of control over her daughter that she “considered taking her passport or having her kidnapped.”<span style=""> </span>Here, we can see Said’s point that “Orientalism…as su</span><span style="">ch has less to do with the Orient than it does with ‘our’ world.” (<i style="">Orientalism</i>).<span style=""> </span>Here Said seems very indebted to</span><span style=""> Lacanian psychoanalysis</span><span style="">—</span><span style="">the self being defined through t</span><span style="">he Other</span><span style="">—</span><span style="">when he writes, “Orientalism is premised upon exteriority, that is, on the fact that the Orientalist…mak</span><span style="">es the </span><span style="">Orient speak.”<span style=""> </span>When Katherine returned to <st1:country-region st="on"><st1:place st="on">America</st1:place></st1:country-region> after her first, unsuccessful expatriation attempt, her sister Mary said </span><span style="">“I’m glad she’s here on American soil and aliv</span><span style="">e.”<span style=""> </span>The Orient is where danger is located, the Occident is, by way of contrast within an artificially constructed binary, the</span><span style=""> place of safety.<span style=""> </span>But in this globalized, post-September-the-11<sup>th</sup>-of-2001 world, how far does Mary have to broaden the Other in ord</span><span style="">er to make herself and the place she lives safe seem safe?<span style=""> </span>Of course, her secure and harmless Occident co</span><span style="">uld not include the inner city, or the American military "nuclear" family.<span style=""> </span>Could it include NRA members' houses, where every room has 3 loaded guns?<span style=""> </span>The first generation immigrant living next door to the vigilante Minuteman border patrol?<span style=""> </span><span style=""> </span>T</span><span style="">he very idea of liminality seems to become the territory of the Orient as exteriority and “a <i style="">re-presence</i>, or a representation” beco</span><span style="">me vital since there is, in</span><span style=""> fact, no interiority and “no such</span><span style=""> thing as a delivered presence” (<i style="">Orientalism</i>).<span style=""> </span>When Dr. Phil says “that situation over there…is highly unstable” he wa</span><span style="">s ap</span><span style="">parently talking about <st1:city st="on">Palestine</st1:city>, but he could have just as easily </span><span style="">been talking about dozens of “Oriental” countries from <st1:country-region st="on">Iraq</st1:country-region> and <st1:country-region st="on">Iran</st1:country-region> to <st1:country-region st="on">Venezuela</st1:country-region> and <st1:country-region st="on"><st1:place st="on">Cuba</st1:place></st1:country-region>.<span style=""> </span>But it mask</span><span style="">s (or, in fact, redefines) a more important question: in what way is the <st1:country-region st="on"><st1:place st="on">United States</st1:place></st1:country-region> “highly stable”?<span style=""> </span>Every episode from the Dr. Phil canon illustrates precisely how unstable America is. In this particular case, Shawn was so worried that Abdullah and his family would “kidnap”</span><span style=""> Katherin</span><span style="">e and prevent her from filing the proper paper work to travel across the Atlantic, yet that is precisely what she had</span><span style=""> previously contemplated.<span style=""> </span>Katherine’s aunt callously cried that “Katherine needed her butt whipped” and yet expressed horror that the</span><span style=""> Oriental Arab/Muslim might be abusing her.<span style=""> </span>Similarly, when she complained to Dr. Phil, “in <st1:place st="on"><st1:country-region st="on">America</st1:country-region></st1:place>, </span><span style="">men don’t call women ‘bitch,’”</span><span style=""> Dr. Phil could only respond “well, I wish that was true.”<span style=""> </span>In fact, this reveals it all.<span style=""> </span>The es</span><span style="">s</span><span style="">ence of Orientalism, wherever it may be found, is that it expresses what Orientalists want for their Orient and (perhaps more subversively) what they would like to see in their</span><span style=""> Occident too.<span style=""> </span>When Dr. Phil says, so matter-of-factly, “at 16, Katherine shocked the world” he is—as an Oriental</span><span style="">ist—the one applying the</span><span style=""> questionable shock therapy to the world, re-shaping (and not just reporting) the Orient in his own warped and equally dangerous western space.</span><span style=""><span style=""> </span></span><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhA9zQKkcHcesV-60uv9aP9QZTWuS1wGbehvIDuRBcNRwdM42yPX2BJbnCKnJ6MhBNxn2XMNsydzvusHQ7tngA1SmSXKN5C0cSD7IGkkqLx5BI-0YtOOM_CgsPdX2hFJVYKz7Cg5rZPpI4C/s1600-h/IMG_9740.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 389px; height: 290px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhA9zQKkcHcesV-60uv9aP9QZTWuS1wGbehvIDuRBcNRwdM42yPX2BJbnCKnJ6MhBNxn2XMNsydzvusHQ7tngA1SmSXKN5C0cSD7IGkkqLx5BI-0YtOOM_CgsPdX2hFJVYKz7Cg5rZPpI4C/s400/IMG_9740.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5132926533528415586" border="0" /></a><span style="">Said is insistent, though, that Orient</span><span style="">alism is not escaped or surpassed by academics, instead Orientalism is precisely “a <i style="">distribution</i> of geopolitical awareness in aesthetic, scholarly, economic, sociological, historical, and philological texts.” (<i style="">Orientalism</i>, see also the picture from <span style="font-style: italic;">The XXth Century Citizen's Atlas</span>, John Bartholomew, Edinburgh, pp7<i style="">)</i>.<span style=""> </span>Perhaps the most important question, then, is: in this supposed critique of Dr. Phil’s Orientalism, even in breaking down his superficially Occidental world, have we really helped to define a true Orient? <span style=""> </span>No, of course <i style="">we</i> can’t, nor can anyone.<span style=""> </span>There isn’t one.</span>agitpophttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09534084374540353389noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-492357967908608067.post-65663436858455933002007-11-09T02:28:00.000-05:002007-11-09T07:43:48.311-05:00Dr. Phil's Text Messages<iframe allowfullscreen='allowfullscreen' webkitallowfullscreen='webkitallowfullscreen' mozallowfullscreen='mozallowfullscreen' width='392' height='325' src='https://www.blogger.com/video.g?token=AD6v5dxeNG5QY9g_YSJtUY3IPl0dvrmeXBp5L24FNBjS4U4EEZVf9hd-0EN5L7uqh1tBoZAHelb4xkD9_QMtaC77' class='b-hbp-video b-uploaded' frameborder='0'></iframe><br /><br /><br />Here, for the first time, Deconstructing Phil. is in video form. Today's episode of Dr. Phil dealt heavily with the properties of language and it's subsequent interpretation as a couple getting ready for marriage started feuding and verbally fighting with the groom's mother. In order to examine some of the general structuralist, poststructuralist, and deconstructionist matters brought up in the episode, Roland Barthes, Ferdinand de Saussure, and Jacques Derrida are our guides as we consider what's so interestingly and complicatingly wrong with saying things like "her sorries are 'I'm sorry you took my words that way'" or "they're fighting before they're even related".agitpophttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09534084374540353389noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-492357967908608067.post-41264477418111351242007-11-02T00:38:00.000-04:002007-11-02T02:47:44.198-04:00McGraw's Familiar QuotationsTonight, Dr. Phil appeared on the Late Show with David Letterman, right after "stupid pet tricks." Dr. Phil is actually a fairly frequent guest on the Late Show, which is particularly surprising since, especially in the past, he has been the subject of considerable ridicule. Recently, when it comes to McGraw, Dave seems to have shifted his comedic technique from open mockery to Socratic irony. Practitioners of Socratic irony take on a <span style="font-style: italic;">faux naïveté </span>to reveal the foolishness and ignorance of the person they question. In this subtler, yet still quite complex fashion, Dr. Phil gets introduced as "America's favorite t.v. mental health professional," a platitude which is in a way true, but also meaningless considering the subtextual, sarcastic implications that 1.) there are basically no other "t.v. mental health professionals" and 2.) Dr. Phil is barely a "mental health professional." While Socratic irony is often very funny, it can also expose things that are normally kept out of the dialogue, particularly here, as the questioner has become the questionee. Thus, when Letterman asked Dr. Phil about many issues that have been discussed previously on the Dr. Phil show, he got very different answers. On Britney Spears, to whom Dr. Phil recently devoted an entire episode (see "Dr. Phil Isn't a Freud of Anything"), the audience got insight into this prize quote: "you gotta not pay attention to her." It would be easy enough to say that this is simply an indication that the Dr. Phil we get on the Late Show is not the same Dr. Phil we get on the Dr. Phil Show. This is obviously partially true, yet it should not permit a complete contradiction, at least it usually doesn't. We allow dramatic actors, politicians, athletes, and other non-comedic public figures to appear on such humor-driven talk shows, often even making fun of themselves, and while this is often viewed as portraying a different side of the celebrities in question, they do not deny their other work. If we are to consider this advice good and actionable, it necessitates that we ignore not just Britney in the tabloids and Entertainment Tonight, but also as she is discussed on the Dr. Phil show. In this sense, Dr. Phil has come onto the Late Show to advertise and promote his own show and<span style="">—</span>through Socratic irony, his own precarious ideology, and lack of philosophic universality or commitment<span style="">—has criticized and dismissed it instead. Similarly, we learned what Dr. Phil really thinks about the kids he so desperately tries to protect on his own show. All week, we've heard the broken reproductive futurist record: save the kids, do it for the kids, don't endanger the kids. What did Dr. Phil say about the kids tonight? "I would just turn the hose on them." That's right, when Letterman led McGraw down the road that leads to complaining about today's youth (with their loud music, lack of clothing, and "grinding") Dr. Phil responded by suggesting (in an act reminiscent of one of the status quo's best defenses against the civil rights movement) that we turn the hose on them. When Dave questioned him on the future, Phil replied: "Where does it go from here? There's nowhere else to go...I guess we're just going to all run around naked." We could interpret this in a number of ways. Again, it might simply be a joke that is Venn-diagrammatically distant from the true value of Dr. Phil's wisdom. But what sort of wisdom can be obfuscated simply by an appearance on the Letterman show? Freud holds up to comedy just fine; consider any Woody Allen movie or the ubiquitous penis joke. There seems to be deeper things at work here. Phil could also be refuting and depreciating his advice given in more serious surroundings, now admitting that all that kids-are-the-future-are-important talk is nonsense. It could also be an admission that, though he is, in reality, working and fighting for the children, it is to no avail, the future is grim, his work is not working (it is flawed and could never work, it isn't reaching the needy, <span style="font-style: italic;">et cetera</span>). Most insidiously, one could also say Dr. Phil is, in fact, creating the problem himself. To my knowledge, very few people have championed the therapeutic possibilities of hosing children down. Perhaps the problem itself did not address until Dr. Phil chose to find it. Indeed, many people probably do not find these "problems" harmful in any way, including the deplorable</span><span style="">—wait, I mean vulnerable</span><span style="">—children committing such despicable</span><span style="">—wait, I mean helpless</span><span style="">—acts. It seems Dr. Phil is an unruptured personality with a split philosophy. To use Lee Edelman's binary of the <span style="font-style: italic;">sinthomosexual</span> and the reproductive futurist (see "The Queerest Dr. Phil Yet") we could say Dr. Phil embodies both, fighting for and against the children depending on the situation. He demands neither <span style="font-style: italic;">jouissance</span> nor an endlessly delayed realization of an impossible end, but instead seeks to continually create problems which make possible their own solutions which make possible their own problems, this is the true child he's fighting for, the child named "America's favorite t.v. mental health professional."<br /></span>agitpophttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09534084374540353389noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-492357967908608067.post-7289179789793083032007-10-27T14:27:00.000-04:002007-10-27T14:34:30.185-04:00The Birth of Phil Studies<span style=";font-family:";font-size:12;" >Today’s episode of Dr. Phil was rather uninteresting, unless, of course, you enjoy listening to former child star Danny Bonaduce recount his failed marriage and the myriad of other problems he so clearly continues to have despite being “sober.”<span style=""> </span>Still, there was some theory that we could talk about.<span style=""> </span>Phil made his usual reproductive futurist rant about how the important thing is the children and their lives.<span style=""> </span>We get it, you’re a heterosexual—yawn.<span style=""> </span>We also had the astute point by our esteemed Dr. that “there are two Danny Bonaduces—Danny Bonaduce the personality and Danny Bonaduce the real person that I know, who cares about his family and his kids.”<span style=""> </span>It would be interesting to take this to the next step: people on t.v., or in any theatrical situation, are not real people.<span style=""> </span>We could think of Žižek’s idea of acting “as if,” Baudrillard’s concept of hyperreality, <span style=""> </span>Lacan’s Borromean knot, Brecht’s alienation effect, and so much more!<span style=""> </span>It will be fun, and Dr. Phil is one thing, but I’m not going to do it with Danny Bonaduce, at least not until he starts calling himself a poet or a philosopher, or something like that.</span><br /><br /><span style=";font-family:";font-size:12;" >Instead, tonight we have a bit of meta-analysis to do as it has recently come to my attention that I did not, in fact, create the field of Phil studies.<span style=""> </span>I had hoped that, like Freud or Marx, I was working as a “founder of discursivity” (Foucault, <u>What is an Author?</u>)<span style=""> </span>Therefore, it was quite a surprise to find that, over two years ago, a pair of professors from St. Lawrence University had written a good-sized scholarly article on Dr. Phil in <u>The Journal of Religion and Popular Culture</u>, a web-based periodical from the Department of Religious Studies and Anthropology at The University of Saskatchewan.<span style=""> </span>Professor Egan and Papson’s full article, “You Either Get It or You Don't”: Conversion Experiences and <i>The Dr. Phil Show,</i><span style="">” </span>is available here: <a href="http://www.usask.ca/relst/jrpc/art10-drphil.html">http://www.usask.ca/relst/jrpc/art10-drphil.html</a>.<br /><span style=""> </span>I encourage you to at least read the abstract.<span style=""> </span>Egan and Papson are observant enough to realize that there is no religious content in the Dr. Phil show, but do assert that the episodes follow the structural pattern and the narrative of a religious conversion (particularly of the televangelist ilk) with a confession and testimonial followed by conversion and transformation.<span style=""> </span>The authors conclude that “the televised presentation of reoccurring conversions functions to produce a sense of moral authority, self-empowerment, and an imagined community [and] that the boundary between the sacred and the secular blur in this highly commodified television spectacle.”<span style=""> </span>Now, I have a friend who says he likes theory, but thinks a lot of theorists argue too much with each other.<span style=""> </span>I find these two positions difficult to reconcile, as it should be the duty of any decent theorist to envisage critiques and theories that can hold up against the entire world to reinvent and reinvigorate its intellectual understandings and possibilities.<span style=""> </span>The idea, the theory itself, might stand out in (or against) reality, but it does not reach the level of discourse until it is acknowledged, reproved, and re-proved.<span style=""> </span>Egan and Papson are already, of course, part of the discourse within Religious studies.<span style=""> </span>They’ve cited authorities within the field and it’s periphery (at least, not being an expert on theology, I assume that’s what they’ve done).<span style=""> </span>They’ve been reviewed to reach publication, and have likely been cited or read as a result.<span style=""> </span>But this is all as religion experts, or, perhaps in the amorphous field of cultural criticism.<span style=""> </span>When it comes to Phil studies, however, it is safe to assume that this is—as Dr. Phil would say—their first rodeo.<span style=""> </span>We can remedy that.<span style=""> </span>Firstly, I think Egan and Papson are wise to bring in things like Neilson ratings and advertising.<span style=""> </span>Economics and politics are central organs in Phil studies.<span style=""> </span>Egan and Papson also sagaciously pick up on the fact that the Dr. Phil we see on television is actually a staged personification.<span style=""> </span>The analysis has only one glaring deficit in that Egan and Papson do not seem to pick up on the fact that there is a Phil canon.<span style=""> </span>Instead, they simply observe two shows, “Addiction” and “The Weight Loss Challenge.” <span style=""> </span>This ignores the fact that Dr. Phil often brings back guests, revisits segments, issues, or mini-series like the Dr. Phil house and obviously expects his viewers to watch regularly, visit his website, and read his books.<span style=""> </span>More importantly, it seems to skew their findings slightly.<span style=""> </span>While both the episodes they chronicled might have taken on the mode and style of a conversion, there have also been many that might more aptly be described as promoting reversion (to better times, etc.), aversion (when something just needs to stop), or diversion (for preventing that which hasn’t actually even begun to occur).<span style=""> </span>From outside the actual mechanism of the Dr. Phil Show, the possibilities are even more numerous.<span style=""> </span>As we’ve tried to demonstrate, the show can also be seen as the location of perversion and subversion.<span style=""> </span>Even limiting oneself to the domain of theology, it might be just as fitting to describe the arc of most shows as an exorcism or, in some cases, an excommunication.<span style=""> </span>The fact is, the Dr. Phil canon is large and often contradictory.<span style=""> </span>This is also a part of Egan and Papson’s largest mistake.<span style=""> </span>While they seem to see an insidious side to Dr. Phil because he attempts to become the high priest, carving out his own commodified religion, mixing the secular and the sacred, there is an equally dark side.<span style=""> </span>Failing to promote the scriptures, the pillars of psychology—the great psalmists like Freud, Jung, etc. and their seminal works—is tantamount to heresy.<span style=""> </span>If Nietzsche and Marx are correct in their assertions that “God is dead” and “religion is the opium of the people,” then we must conclude that—if Dr. Phil is attempting to rule over a conversion to a half secularized, half sacred televangical reality—he is continuing to feed his guests’ various addictions, refusing help, and instead embracing philosophical death for all parties involved (<u>Thus Spoke Zarathustra</u>, “Critique of Hegel’s Philosophy of Right").</span>agitpophttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09534084374540353389noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-492357967908608067.post-11310195854759470352007-10-22T22:02:00.000-04:002007-10-24T10:21:47.700-04:00The Myth of Sisyphil<span style="">Tonight’s episode of Dr. Phil brought us back to an episode that first aired 3 or 4 weeks ago.<span style=""> </span>Using the unique medium of the Dr. Phlashback we can refamiliarize ourselves with the episode: “Ken’s got enough money for fancy cars, cruises, and air hockey machines and I’m on welfare”<span style=""> </span>“Keri makes the kids afraid to come visit and lies to the police” “He hits them” “She’s on drugs” “Well, I’m just gonna sit back and let ya’ll work this out.”<span style=""> </span>Apparently Dr. Phil’s strategy didn’t work the first time, but this most recent encounter was equally hostile and ineffective.<span style=""> </span>Dr. Phil summoned all his reproductive futurist gusto and teleological bourgeois might to reminded Ken and Keri that he wanted to “restore order” and “come down on the side of the kids.”<span style=""> </span>Numerous times the bickering between Ken and Keri (with wife and boyfriend respectively) got to the point that Dr. Phil just stopped.<span style=""> </span>Resuming, he always called their interactions “infantile” (which we’ve already discussed elsewhere in some detail) and “absurd.”<span style=""> </span>This should immediately bring to mind Camus’s famous concept of the Absurd, especially since it is best expressed in the essay “The Myth of Sisyphus,” where he uses the example of the mythical Greek who, as punishment for his wily and deceitful feats, had to push a huge bolder up a hill daily, to watch it roll back down and start over again. Here, there seems to be a little of Sisyphus in syndication.<span style=""> </span>The question is, then, does Dr. Phil’s interpretation of the absurd have anything to do with Camus’s Absurd, and is there, indeed, anything absurd or Absurd about the situation at hand?<span style=""> </span>First, it should be noted, that to Dr. Phil and many laypeople, absurdity is a bad thing, equated strongly with misery, unfairness, and weirdness.<span style=""> </span>To Camus, though, Absurdity is a very normal, ethical, and happy idea.<span style=""> </span>He famously writes: “one must imagine Sisyphus happy” because “</span><span style="">happiness and the absurd are two sons of the same earth. They are inseparable. It would be a mistake to say that happiness necessarily springs from the absurd discovery. It happens as well that the felling of the absurd springs from happiness.”<span style=""> </span>The core elements of Sisyphus’s (and Camus’s) Absurdity do not seem absurd when viewed through the lens of Dr. Phil and those like him because they do not speak of, or with, the same Absurdity.<span style=""> </span>To Camus, coming face to face with the Absurd is becoming “convinced of the wholly human origin of all that is human” whereas to Dr. Phil it might be something like: ceasing to be human (and instead infants, animals, monsters, et cetera).<span style=""> </span>The absurd hero looks at the world and, especially at the height of its absurdity, thinks: “all is well. This universe henceforth without a master seems…neither sterile nor futile.”<span style=""> </span>To Dr. Phil (who is not, like Sisyphus, the “wisest and most prudent of mortals) to think of life without order, end, and meaning is a tragic punishment.<span style=""> </span>Thus, we might even say that Dr. Phil does not meet the first criterion of the Absurd hero, that of consciousness.<span style=""> </span>We can say of Sisyphus, but not Dr. Phil: he “knows the whole extent of his wretched condition: it is what he thinks of during his descent.”<span style=""> </span>For Dr. Phil—and by extension Ken, Keri, and the whole gang—the Absurd epiphany has not been reached and cannot be built on until there is the realization that objective success is hopeless.<span style=""> </span>The only hope, for Sisyphus and Phil alike, is not to put the rock down, but rather to keep going while consciously embracing, not maligning, the Absurdity inherent within the system. <span style=""> </span>To try and “fix it” is worse than going against the natural order of things or defying the gods because it is to miss out on the possibility that “the lucidity that was to constitute…torture at the same time crowns…victory.” To Camus, life and its Absurdities are worth living again and again.<span style=""> </span>For Dr. Phil, we must consider the possibility that his show is, in a very real way, the locus of many suicides, perhaps chiefly his own.</span>agitpophttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09534084374540353389noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-492357967908608067.post-82088418901229331222007-10-17T23:25:00.000-04:002007-10-17T23:36:09.030-04:00The Phil in Pedophile<span style=";font-family:";font-size:12;" >Today we were bestowed with another generous helping of Dr. Phil Now, where the singular psychologist gave us his 9 ½ cents worth on an important issue: pedophilia.<span style=""> </span>Examining the case of Chester Stiles—a recently apprehended fugitive accused of raping (and video recording) a 3 year old girl—we heard from a variety of guests including the victim’s mother, her lawyer, a relevant district attorney, and the son of the woman who may have unintentionally facilitated the contact.<span style=""> </span>What is so outrageous about this outrageous current event?<span style=""> </span>The rape?<span style=""> </span>Most certainly not.<span style=""> </span>Rape is obviously a horrendous act, but unfortunately it is far too prevalent an occurrence to elicit such shock and condemnation by itself.<span style=""> </span>It would be safe to assume that, instead, the answer lies in the 3 year old victim’s youth.<span style=""> </span>It matters more that the victim was a child than that there was a lack of consent.<span style=""> </span>This socially promulgated act of fetishization in the form of reproductive futurism has been addressed in previous essays, and it will likely be discussed in further detail again.<span style=""> </span>In this situation, however, it seems completely inadequate to give up here.<span style=""> </span>There was a strange subtext to today’s episode that seemed to suggest that—on an atavistic level of psychological relics and symptoms—we were not actually discussing the righteousness of pedophilia.<span style=""> </span>Philosophically, we have only one appropriate source to turn to, Socrates, the “father” of moral and political philosophy.<span style=""> </span><span style=""> </span>Socrates was also accused, tried, and eventually executed for “corrupt[ing] the youth” and “not believ[ing] in the gods of the state” (Plato’s <u>Apologia</u>, trans. Benjamin Jowett).<span style=""> </span>Pederasty was a very real (and generally accepted) part of Socrates’s <st1:country-region st="on"><st1:place st="on">Greece</st1:place></st1:country-region>, so it is an equally real (though often bowdlerized) possibility that the great philosopher was actually being accused of a crime similar to the one outlined here by McGraw<b style=""><sup>*</sup></b>. It is curious then that Socrates’s defense does not address such a possibility, nor does it respond to Plato’s (more Platonic) version of an ethical pederastic relationship or even the abstract idea of corruption in terms of Athenian youth.<span style=""> </span>Instead, Socrates uses the important platform to defend wisdom and philosophy and, by association, one could easily interpret this as Dr. Phil’s true target.<span style=""> </span>On the first take, it seems absurd to conflate pedophilia with philosophy and the death of one of the most celebrated philosophers.<span style=""> </span>Yet even on the show pedophiles, and Mr. Stiles, were not characterized as the usual lot of ruffians and hoodlums.<span style=""> </span>Instead, the various guests and Dr. Phil described the classic pedophile as “calculated and cunning,” “charming individuals,” “and intellectualizers.”<span style=""> </span>It seems like a great many of our finest thinkers then, our philosophers par excellence, <span style=""> </span>all fit the profile of the pedophile.<span style=""> </span>Dr. Phil, in his aversion to pedophilia, echoes exactly the Athenian prosecutors who warn the public: “</span><span style=";font-family:";font-size:12;" >guard and [do] not allow yourselves to be deceived by the force of [Socrates’s] eloquence” (<u>Apologia</u>).<span style=""> </span>Socrates’s defense, his articulation of his own wisdom is simple though considerably counterintuitive.<span style=""> </span>Unlike most men (and I see no need to exclude Dr. Phil) who claim to be wise without really knowing themselves or the world, as Socrates says: “I know but little of the world [and] I do not suppose that I know” (Ibid).<span style=""> </span>A constant, deep, and serious inquiry is therefore required, a philosophical delving into the nature of existence, ethics, society, the self, et cetera.<span style=""> </span>Dr. Phil, on the other hand, inheriting the role of the prosecutor, is content to rest on “oration duly ornamented with words and phrases”<span style=""> in lieu of seeking out serious questions of truth.<span style=""> </span>In his possibly well-intentioned efforts to eliminate pedophilia, Dr. Phil has also, through his sophistry-laden methodology and motivations, also placed himself in the position of prosecuting philosophers (regardless of whether their “corrupt[ion] of the youth” is ultimately for good or evil, physical or psychic) (Ibid). <span style=""> </span>Socrates’s prophecy that the Athenian public (who voted to convict and punish him to death) and prosecutors will be reviled through history did seem to come true. <span style=""> </span>Dr. Phil reveals another way the prosecutor injures himself more than the accused in the event that truth is not actually on trial:<span style=""> </span>if no one is beyond suspicion and those most interested in getting to know and manipulate children are pedophiles, we might easily conclude that—in a philosophic sense—there is something of a pedophile in Dr. Phil and a part of Dr. Phil in every pedophile.<br /><br /><br /></span></span><b style=""><sup><span style=";font-family:";font-size:12;" >*</span></sup></b><span style=";font-family:";font-size:12;" >It seems necessary, before the argument continues any further, to point out a few facts that are quite pertinent, though perhaps not essential: 1.) Socrates’ trial is not, of course, retold by Socrates himself.<span style=""> </span>In fact, Socrates has left no works extant (leading many to conclude that he didn’t even exist) and this particular reading comes from Plato’s <u>Apologia</u>. 2.) While <span style="text-decoration: underline;"></span>the word "apologia" looks and sounds like the etymologically similar “apology” it means something somewhat different: a defense or explanation of one’s beliefs.</span>agitpophttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09534084374540353389noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-492357967908608067.post-74889259886174883722007-10-15T23:37:00.000-04:002007-10-16T14:09:42.093-04:00The Phil-Phunction<span style=";font-family:";font-size:12;" >Today’s episode, “The O.J. Simpson Book Battle,” discussed the circumstances and controversies involved in the recently published book <u>If I Did It</u>. <span style=""> </span>The show featured the work’s ghostwriter and the Goldman family as guests.<span style=""> </span>Most peculiarly, it presented Dr. Phil in a novel role, that of the literary critic, as he promised to give the audience his “reading” of the book.<span style=""> </span>When Pablo Fenjves explained that the book was proposed, agreed to, and created in the context of a “hypothetical confession,” Dr. Phil seemed unable to comprehend such an abstract idea and even noted: “hypothetical and confession, I don’t see how those two words go together.”<span style=""> </span>In the realm of critical theory, however, there are, in fact, many ways of interpreting this.<span style=""> </span>One of the more interesting pieces to discuss such issues is Michel Foucault’s essay “What is an Author?”<span style=""> </span>In this piece, Foucault makes a great many comments that help to elucidate problems in today’s Dr. Phil.<span style=""> </span>It is suggested that “today’s writing has freed itself from the dimension of expression,” that “the work, which once had the duty of providing immortality, now possesses the right to kill, to be it’s author’s murder” and that “we must locate the space left empty by the author’s disappearance.”<span style=""> </span>In fact, Foucault focuses not on the author, but rather the author-function.<span style=""> </span>The author-function is more than the realization of the act of writing—even a <i>famous</i> writer’s signed checks, grocery lists, and tic-tac-toe games are generally not authored.<span style=""> </span>Instead “the author-function is…characteristic of the mode of existence, circulation, and functioning of certain discourses within a society.”<span style=""> </span>The authorship doesn’t simply describe who wrote something, but how, when, and under what circumstances.<span style=""> </span>As Foucault writes, “literary anonymity is not tolerable,” perhaps—as this episode shows—because readers and their societal discourses need someone to punish.<span style=""> </span>Nonetheless, the author-function is a construction and the specifics are “only a projection…of the operations that we force texts to undergo, the connections that we make, the traits that we establish as pertinent, the continuities that we recognize, or the exclusions that we practice.”<span style=""> </span>If it is so mind-blowingly incredible that a hypothetical statement could also be a confessional one, it is only because <i>we</i> (not he) find it so impossible and because <i>we</i> are actually operating within a self-structured discourse which aims at separating the two concepts both hermetically and hermeneutically. <span style=""> </span>Such a perspective is only as interpretively necessary as we make it; in fact, one could easily turn around and say that the idea of a hypothetical confession is at the root of all fiction.<span style=""> </span>If it was conclusively discovered that Shakespeare was a murderer (like so many of his most realistically written characters in works of stunning detail) would that in any way affect his work?<span style=""> </span>Objectively, it doesn’t, only when viewed through the author-function does it matter in the least whether any writer is a real murderer or simply imagines.<span style=""> </span>Foucault also points out that the author-function demands a “certain unity of writing—all differences have to be resolved.”<span style=""> </span>Dr. Phil and the gang are clearly fulfilling that end of the function, but it also glazes over a more serious issue.<span style=""> </span>After all, while it might have been from interviews, it was not actually O.J. Simpson who wrote the book.<span style=""> </span>No, it was Fenjves.<span style=""> </span>The discourses are not in a position to evaluate Fenjves, however, either as a murderer or an author.<span style=""> </span>Therefore, he is pushed aside radically, left to talk about what is <i>not</i> in the book, explaining his interactions with the true author.<span style=""> </span>In this sense it seems that what Dr. Phil really can’t comprehend is that “all discourses endowed with the author-function do possess this plurality of self.”<span style=""> </span>The “I” that is talking in one sentence is never the same exact “I” that is in the next, nor does the pronoun mean the same thing as the viewer jumps through passages, between chapters, or across books or genres.<span style=""> </span>In this way, there is little connection between the speaker, the writer, and the author.<span style=""> </span>In short, Dr. Phil’s show provides an answer to Foucault’s final question that is very different from the one given by the author himself.<span style=""> </span>The question is: “what difference does it make who is speaking?”<span style=""> </span>Foucault leaves it up to the reader, whereas Phil is not shy about letting his audience know that it matters a great deal, especially when he’s the one speaking.</span>agitpophttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09534084374540353389noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-492357967908608067.post-38750553380129352352007-10-12T22:56:00.000-04:002007-10-17T12:00:56.934-04:00Dr. Phil Now or Never<span style="">Today we were treated to another dose of “Dr. Phil Now!” where Dr. </span><span style="">Philistine investigated the very current phenomenon of school shootings.<span style=""> </span></span><span style="">Obviously, we shouldn’t belittle the trauma felt by victims of <i style="">any</i> violence, nor should we condone brutal, inhumane behavior.<span style=""> </span>At the </span><span style="">same time, it might be just as wrong to refrain from belittling Dr. Phil, allowing his brutal, inhumane brand of psychology to persist without </span><span style="">criticism.<span style=""> </span>This issue touches upon many political ramifications such as gun control, education policy, and the rights and freedoms afforded to individuals (particular</span><span style="">ly young people).<span style=""> </span>The most interesting fallacy related to school shootings, though, is not overtly political, but rather historical.<span style=""> </span>D</span><span style="">r. Phil repeats an oft reported error so familiar to media reports, expert explications, and uneasy community meetings: these acts of vio</span><span style="">lence are <i style="">new</i> and <i style="">anomalous</i>.<span style=""> </span>This is an irrefutable—and perhaps deliberate—distortion of the historical record.<span style=""> </span>A Columbin</span><span style="">e survivor and guest added: “one thing got me into college, I thought it didn’t happen there.”<span style=""> </span>Again, this is the his</span><span style="">torical record being annihilated. <span style=""> </span>Even between the Columbine shooting and the Virginia Tech massacre (which apparently </span><span style="">re-opened this victim’s eyes) there were at least 9 shootings on college campuses resulting in 19 deaths and many more injuries.<span style=""> </span>In fact, there are dozens more simil</span><span style="">ar acts of violence going back to at least 1936 where a student at <st1:place st="on"><st1:placename st="on">Lehigh</st1:placename> <st1:placetype st="on">University</st1:placetype></st1:place> killed himself and his English professor after demanded that his grade be c</span><span style="">hanged.<span style=""> </span>In 1966, for instance, a meticulously planned shooting by a deranged, well-armed shooter took place atop</span><span style=""> the Tower at the <st1:place st="on"><st1:placetype st="on">University</st1:placetype> of <st1:placename st="on">Texas</st1:placename></st1:place> which k</span><span style="">illed 16 and wounded more than 30 more</span><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhoiZ9npWJhTa8M6gDDoy2RxEJe41I67Zm1JbDiNZFJesNGeZrXcIz-KyXr62Ec8hS5wMORp2afsCMbYmUZk-p5AnIPvDpQHYxcS25_IBvm-jfnTC9H9TootIODM6jJuzL0S8vf0a6Gw-bh/s1600-h/IMG_1403.JPG"><img style="margin: 0pt 10px 10px 0pt; float: left; cursor: pointer;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhoiZ9npWJhTa8M6gDDoy2RxEJe41I67Zm1JbDiNZFJesNGeZrXcIz-KyXr62Ec8hS5wMORp2afsCMbYmUZk-p5AnIPvDpQHYxcS25_IBvm-jfnTC9H9TootIODM6jJuzL0S8vf0a6Gw-bh/s200/IMG_1403.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5120650759295000162" border="0" /></a><span style="">.<span style=""> </span>In fact, a reasonable (though necessarily morbid) examination of the relevant history shows that almost all the common assumptions are wrong.<span style=""> </span>Some of the most deadly school related killings in modern times don’t even take place in <st1:country-region st="on">America</st1:country-region>, but rather as part of broader conflicts in places like Bratunac in <st1:country-region st="on">Yugoslavia</st1:country-region>, Stalino in <st1:country-region st="on">Ukraine</st1:country-region>, <st1:city st="on">Hue</st1:city> in <st1:country-region st="on">Vietnam</st1:country-region>, and Beslen in <st1:country-region st="on"><st1:place st="on">Russia</st1:place></st1:country-region>.<span style=""> </span>As these events also illustrate, such attacks are also often not the result of, as Dr. Phil muses, “heartbroken teenage boys” and “loners” but rather adults (or, more ominously by <i style="">groups</i> of adults) with deep felt social, political, and personal grudges.<span style=""> </span>Even in <st1:country-region st="on"><st1:place st="on">America</st1:place></st1:country-region>, the deadliest school-related killing was not perpetrated by a depressed, socially awkward adolescent at a modern, suburban campus.<span style=""> </span>Instead, it was at a rural <st1:place st="on"><st1:city st="on">Bath</st1:city>, <st1:state st="on">Michigan</st1:state></st1:place> schoolhouse in the year 1927 when a 55 year old school board treasurer and farmer killed 45 students and teachers, injuring 58 more.<span style=""> </span>Disgruntled over his foreclosed farm, difficult family situation, and other townspeople who ignored his fight for lower taxes, the killer used dynamite and combinations of shrapnel to destroy his own home and set off explosions in three locations at the township’s only school.<span style=""> </span>The purpose of recounting these gruesome events is not to glorify them or even compare body counts as part of a dismal contest, but instead to point out that they are not completely new phenomena, nor do they follow (at least with any great regularity) any of the characteristics so meticulously mapped out and emphasized by Dr. Phil. <span style=""> </span>This is quite different from Santayana’s famous claim that “those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it” (George Santayana <i>Reason in Common Sense</i><span style="">).<span style=""> </span>It is difficult to see how anything can be repeated when it is forgotten, covered up, or unknown to begin with.<span style=""> </span>There are many conceptions of history.<span style=""> </span>Hegel and Marx posit dialectics where various stages and interactions are thought to lead to progress and eventually a teleological perfection.<span style=""> </span>Others, like Walter Benjamin, read history as a persistent accumulation of chaos and catastrophe, with progress coming in the form of the backward-flung angel hurling through the post-lapsarian state (<i>Illuminations</i>).<span style=""> </span>In this sense, it doesn’t really matter whether our age is the pinnacle of human existence or the nadir, or even if our time is not substantially different from anything that has already occurred.<span style=""> </span>What is important is that virtually all reputable sciences, philosophies, and psychological movements (predicated on the idea that past events affect subsequent consciousness) must take account of past events and consider a broader historical context.<span style=""> </span>Otherwise, as Dr. Phil demonstrates, one’s historical perspective mirrors that dangerous relationship where the subject becomes an illogical and introverted, social outsider obsessed with destruction.<br /><br /></span></span>agitpophttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09534084374540353389noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-492357967908608067.post-21715610202437858392007-10-10T22:37:00.000-04:002007-10-10T23:08:31.314-04:00The Queerest Dr. Phil Yet“Queerness can never define an identity; it can only ever disturb one.” -Lee Edelman, <span style="font-style: italic;">No Future: Queer Theory and the Death Drive</span><br /><br />Boy, oh boy—it’s episodes like today’s that make me happy I write a blog that applies post-structural theory to the Dr. Phil Show. After introducing us to Kim and Cory, a teenage couple in a tumultuous marriage with two neglected children, Dr. Phil went on a maniacal crusade. The mission was not to promote family planning or contraceptives, nor was it even to sound the clarion call of abstinence, but instead Dr. Phil pleaded with parents of teens and the teens themselves, begging them to listen as he shouted: you’re not really in love! By the way, this <span style="font-style: italic;">isn’t</span> his first rodeo. As usual, there’s a large body of literature we might wish to consult in order to deconstruct Phil’s sophism. Since it is fairly inconceivable that any teenage lover would listen to this episode without a fit of Romantic giggles, it seems only fair that we pick a theorist who—despite his or her value—would likewise be ignored by Phil. That brings us to queer theorist Lee Edelman and his recent book <span style="font-style: italic;">No Future: Queer Theory and the Death Drive</span>. But Edelman’s queerness isn’t exactly the queerness that so rarely shows up on the Dr. Phil show. Rather, it’s the queerness that is always somehow present in the Dr. Phil show. As Edelman writes, queerness “names the side of those <span style="font-style: italic;">not</span> ‘fighting for the children,’ the side outside the consensus by which all politics confirms the absolute value of reproductive futurism” (5). We see this nearly every episode when Dr. Phil says something to his guests like “Your [insert destructive behavior here] would be fine, except you have kids!” or, more subtly, when he makes comments like “it’s time for you guys to grow up and be adults!” Thus, Dr. Phil sets himself up in the most favorable ideological position; he’s the one fighting for the children. His guests are <span style="font-style: italic;">always</span> the queer ones—man, oh man do they need help—those queer folks who aren’t acting like adults or taking proper care of the kids, their future, their Other-to-come. Surely it is not a coincidence that virtually every episode is in some way an incarnation of a plagued marriage or perverted parent-child relationship. That’s the queerness—the lack of reproductive futurism—that must be mended. At least that’s what Dr. Phil—indeed all politics and society—would have us believe. Edelman sees it differently. To disregard for a moment the specific, non-theoretical children with diaper-rashes and growling stomachs, we can begin to see what Edelman terms the “<span style="font-style: italic;">sinthomosexual</span>”(33). Building off of the Lacanian concept of the <span style="font-style: italic;">sinthome</span>, Edelman writes that <span style="font-style: italic;">sinthomosexuals</span> assert themselves “<span style="font-style: italic;">against</span> futurity [and] against its propagation, insofar as it would designate an impasse in the passage to the future and, by doing so, would pass beyond, pass through, the saving fantasy futurity denotes” (Ibid). Instead, <span style="font-style: italic;">sinthomosexuals</span> are “insisting on access to <span style="font-style: italic;">jouissance</span> in place of access to sense.” (37). In this radical juxtaposition, there is now something wrong with Dr. Phil. He’s the one continuously restaging his “dream of eventual self-realization by endlessly reconstructing, in the mirror of desire, what [he takes] to be reality itself” (79). Of course you’re miserable now, it’s about your children…What? They’re miserable too? Well, then it’s about their children…We need not applaud the guests for mistreating their children, but perhaps they should be congratulated for standing up against the tyranical “belief in a final signifier” and their attempts to undermine “the promise of futurity” (37, 35). Kim and Cory from this “troubled teen love” episode are indeed unfit in many ways. They aren’t great examples of the<span style="font-style: italic;"> sinthomosexuals</span> who triumphantly live for the <span style="font-style: italic;">jouissance</span> not the unreachable desire of futurity. Of course, Dr. Phil is also not a perfect and blameless reproductive futurist as he steps in with his Texas justice to spank the “children raising children.” The admission that children themselves—traditionally non-sexual and without agency—can be corrupted and destined to an unhappy future is something of a precarious step for Dr. Phil. While certain aspects of mainstream psychology focus on how the curable adult subject was influenced as a child (with the events and impacts reappearing through symptoms as an adult) Dr. Phil has never seemed to agree. At one point Dr. Phil suggested that he should have been involved all along (even before Kim and Cory had their kids) in order to insure a happy childhood and future. Dr. Phil is not promoting <span style="font-style: italic;">sinthomosexuality</span> or the toned down and mitigated version of reproductive futurism inherent in most psychoanalytic thought—instead he’s demanding to be involved in every conception of the future to come personally (whether it’s queer or not) from the very childish beginning, to the equally childish future that will not end.agitpophttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09534084374540353389noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-492357967908608067.post-16477143677156611142007-10-04T23:11:00.000-04:002007-11-02T01:26:12.911-04:00Dr. Phil Isn't A Freud of Anything<pre style=""></pre>Today’s episode was a “Dr. Phil Now” episode. Apparently, “Dr. Phil Now” shows are where Dr. McGraw completely (as opposed to just mostly) ignores clinical psychology—instead musing for 40 minutes about a “current event.” Today’s “current event” was the controversial, politically charged, and culturally influential demise of Britney Spears, and her subsequent loss of her children’s custody. Now—at a psychoanalytical low point that perhaps rivals Britney’s own personal nadir—it might be the best time to ask: is Dr. Phil being a doctor? It is well-known that Dr. McGraw is <span style="font-style: italic;">not</span> a psychiatrist, a medical doctor, but his ardent followers are quick to point out that he is, in fact, a trained, accredited, and practicing psychologist, with a Ph.D. in psychology. It is important, then, to ask: is Dr. Phil being a Doctor of Philosophy? If we turn to the intellectual often cited as the progenitor of psychology, Freud, the answer is clearly and emphatically in the negative. One of the works where Freud best outlines psychoanalysis is in the aptly named, and posthumously published, <span style="font-style: italic;">An Outline of Psycho-Analysis</span>. In the chapter entitled “The Technique of Psycho-Analysis” Freud writes, from the perspective of the analyst, that “with the neurotics…we make our pact: complete candour [sic] on one side and strict discretion on the other.” This is at complete odds with McGraw’s approach—emanating, as it does, from network television—which is inherently indiscrete. Furthermore, even if McGraw is using “candour,” it is both futile (since Britney is probably at a discothèque and not watching the show) and unfounded. Freud is adamant that proper psychoanalytical methodology must revolve around self-observation, personal meetings, and one-on-one discussion with the subject (Ibid.). Today’s show included former bodyguards, a bevy of lawyers, an Entertainment Tonight correspondent, and even paparazzi tycoons, but no Spears. This, alone, invalidates the process of one involving psychoanalysis in the strict, conventional sense. McGraw is also failing on another important count. As Freud writes:<br /><br />“We avoid telling [the patient] at once things that we have often discovered at an early stage, and we avoid telling [the patient] the whole of what we think we have discovered…as a rule we put off telling [the patient] of a construction or explanation till [the patient him or herself] has so nearly arrived at it that only a single step remains to be taken, though that step is in fact the decisive synthesis” (Ibid).<br /><br />Obviously, this model cannot occur here. We have only the thesis (or perhaps the antithesis) unable to properly meet as they share no (conscious) dialectic. Freud continues by saying that if psychoanalysts “proceeded in another way” they would either “have no effect or…provoke a violent outbreak of <span style="font-style: italic;">resistance</span>” (Ibid). In broader terms, it is perhaps the warped and grotesquely psychoanalytic tendencies of media outlets which has put Britney in this situation to begin with. Had we (the fans, the media, the public) not wanted to know so much about her, get inside her (head), or force our own broken syntheses—perhaps the circumstances would be quite different. Lastly, Freud writes that one of the greatest advantages helping along the psychoanalytic process is that “rationality” and “intellectual interest” to overcome suffering will be awakened through “the theories and revelations of psycho-analysis” (Ibid). By rejecting such established theories and practices, Dr. Phil might be closing off his best opportunity to help (including his own professed work). If hope to be the defenders of theory and psychoanalysis, must we be the ones to then say: “Leave Britney alone, Dr. Phil”? As Freud notes, the patient will always see the analyst not as a helper, but as “the return, the reincarnation, of some important figure out of…the past” (Ibid). We can’t really blame her (or any Dr. Phil show viewer for that matter) for associating McGraw less with Freud than with the paparazzi, the incestuous stage parent, or the poorly-matched husband (think synthesis). Freud also writes that “real sexual relations between patients and analysts are out of the question” and that affection of preference should be only sparingly granted. This might just be Dr. Phil’s most totem-less and taboo shortcoming if we consider the necessarily (albeit veiled) sexualization of Spears during the broadcast as she becomes the unattainable subject of desire, the faulty feminine idol which must be reworked, the focus of an incestuously productive dialectic, and the paradigm of an unacceptable patient-analyst relationship in virtually every other way imaginable. Here, the real neurotic resisting, perverting, and manipulating the analysis and discourse might be the one with a safe job, a comfortable marriage, and unchallenged control over his kids.<br /><pre style=""><span style=";font-family:";font-size:12;" ><span style=""> </span><span style=""> </span><o:p><br /></o:p></span></pre>agitpophttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09534084374540353389noreply@blogger.com2