Identification
Ghiath el-Marzouk[1]
One can be quite neurotic,
when in the process of identification.
Freud
Preliminary
This article will discuss the phenomenon of identification
as the psychical expression of the
infant’s earliest
emotional affiliation with another person’s identity, an affiliation
which, in the Freudian formulation, is accompanied by a parallel
libidinal tie with the same person. The article will open the
discussion with the set of lexical meanings which are implied by the
term identification from a linguistic viewpoint, and will
thus underline the specific lexical meaning (viz. its reflexive
implementation) which is applied in psychoanalytic writings. It
will, then, explain the two paradoxical psychical imports of the
phenomenon in such writings: the positive import that refers to the
feeling of idealization and the negative (or pathological) import
which points to the feeling of aggressivity (as in Anna Freud’s
further formulation). These two paradoxical psychical imports will,
therefore, be considered to originate from the ambivalent
nature of the phenomenon as a derivative of the oral phase of
libidinal and ego development. Given that identification fits in,
and paves the way for, a more familiar phenomenon in such
development, namely, the Oedipus complex, the contribution of
identification towards the timely inversion (and thence the
inevitable destruction) of the Oedipus complex will further be
illustrated with reference to a few examples of psychopathological
symptoms. Then, mention will also be made of Lacan’s not easily
tractable distinction between ‘imaginary identification’ and
‘symbolic identification’ due to the considerable theoretic
changes which the distinction has already undergone in his writings.
Finally, the aforesaid conflictual interrelation between
identification and the Oedipus complex will be taken into account to
highlight the developmental aspects of the ego.
Exposition
From a linguistic perspective, the nominal form identification
is implemented to denote a set of distinctive, but related, lexical
meanings which are determined by the intrinsic variations in the
ideational content of the verbal form identify. These
intrinsic variations are, in turn, conditioned by the intended
forces of valency
which specify the number and type of objects (i.e. noun phrases)
that the verbal form has the potential to combine with. Accordingly,
the intended forces of valency correspond to the set of semantic
implementations of the verbal form, which may be adumbrated as
follows. Firstly, in the transitive implementation of the verbal
form identify, its intended force of valency assigns one, and
only one, external object: to identify someone or something is to
establish the identity of someone or something in cases of desirable
certainty, or to recognize the identity of someone or something in
cases of undesirable uncertainty (e.g. She could identify the
book among a hundred others; He even could not identify the writer
of that book; etc.). Secondly, in the ditransitive
implementation of the same verbal form, the intended force of
valency designates a combination of two external objects instead: to
identify someone with someone or to identify something with
something is simply to equate them without any reservations in cases
of desirable certainty, or to treat them as identical with some
reservations in cases of undesirable uncertainty (e.g. She
identified Stalin with Hitler; He identifies religion with illusion;
etc.). Thirdly, between the transitive and ditransitive
implementations, there arises the reflexive implementation, in which
the intended force of valency denominates a combination of an
internal object and an external one this time: to identify oneself
with someone or something is to appropriate as one’s identity the
identity of this someone or something in cases of desirable
certainty, or to amalgamate one’s identity with the identity of that
someone or something in cases of undesirable uncertainty (e.g.
She tends to identify herself with Rosa Luxemburg; He is hardly
willing to identify himself with anarchism; etc.).
Clearly, therefore, there exist in the main at least three
distinguishable lexical meanings within the ideational content of
the nominal form identification, and it is precisely the
lexical meaning of its reflexive implementation which seems to
occupy a central position in the bulk of psychoanalytic writings,
where the term identification in its present implication does
not necessarily signify the wilful establishment of one’s identity.
This is because the state of affairs which is an instance of
identification appears to manifest itself on two significant, albeit
not easily discernible, levels of psychical representation (or,
rather, development) so far as the whole process of libidinal and
ego development is concerned. Primarily, the state of affairs
represents itself in an underdeveloped fashion during infancy to the
extent that the strict borderline between the internal object and
the external object is not yet perceivable, thereby neutralizing the
sharp distinction between the inner world (i.e. the self) and the
outer world (i.e. the other). On this level of representation, the
infant is not capable of recognizing any sense of identity of
his/her own, since his/her incapability of attaining to the strict
borderline and the sharp distinction being talked about is
attributable to his/her inevitable ‘struggle’ with other phases (or
even sub-phases) of libidinal and ego development. Secondarily, the
state of affairs, on the other hand, would represent itself in a
more developed manner during infancy to the extent that the
strict borderline between the internal object and the external
object is now perceivable, thereby activating the sharp distinction
between the inner world and the outer world. On this level of
representation, the infant is able to recognize a ‘sense’ of
identity of his/her own instead, since his/her capability of
attaining to the strict borderline and the sharp distinction in
question permits him/her to generate either a feeling of
idealization or a feeling of aggressivity towards the external
object (the outer world) –with this latter feeling being addressed
with psychical belligerency through the immediate intervention of a
defence mechanism of some sort. These feelings of idealization and
aggressivity appear to be analogous with the positive and negative
(or pathological) imports of identification, as will be seen
presently.
Similarly, Freud tends to employ the term identification (or
Identifizierung) for the most part in his writings with
reference to the lexical meaning of its reflexive implementation, so
as to emphasize the psychical phenomenon whereby the infant is
inclined to pre-empt, wholly or partially, a particular
character-trait (or -traits) that he/she assimilates in the external
object, with the result that his/her identity (or the recognized
‘sense’ of it) undergoes a series of affective transformations
through a corresponding series of (rather gradual) identifications.[2] Accordingly, identification in its current implication would
express the infant’s earliest emotional affiliation with the
identity of someone or something, with the recognized ‘sense’ of
identity referring to the internal object (i.e. the inner world or
the self) and the affiliated identity of someone or something
pointing to the external object (i.e. the outer world or the other)
(cf. Freud, 1921:134). On the face of it, any instance of
identification would necessitate at least two psychical entities: an
entity which initiates the act of identification (viz. the person
who identifies himself/herself with a person or a thing) and an
entity which instigates the same act (viz. the person or the thing
that is being identified with). The person who identifies
himself/herself with a person or a thing (henceforth, the
identifier) is embodied in the actual being of the infant, and
the person or the thing that is being identified with (henceforth,
the identified) is incarnated in the perceived
character-trait (or -traits) of the parent of the same sex or any
other (human or nonhuman) agency which stands proxy for him or her.
As such, the resultant relationship between the identifier and the
identified may conduce towards psychical construction (in which case
there seems to exist remarkable affective convergence between the
two entities), or may even culminate in psychical destruction (in
which case there appears to exist considerable affective
divergence instead). It is, therefore, this perceivable polarity of
psychical construction and psychical destruction which indicates
that identification has both positive and negative (or pathological)
imports, the imports that would correspond to the generated feelings
of idealization and aggressivity referred to above.
With regard to the positive import of identification, the
identifier-identified designation may be conducive to the psychical
construction of the identifier, a construction which is modified in
the ‘non-deviant’ direction of the psychical make-up of the
identified, and is well observable in the ‘normal’ course of
libidinal and ego development. In this case, the psychical
construction would recapitulate itself in the assiduous presence of
affective convergence between the identifier and the
identified, thereby sustaining a gradual series of what may be
called, ‘psychical reconstructions’ (or even ‘constructive
transformations’), through a corresponding gradual series of
(non-alienating) identifications. As such, the two typical instances
of the identifier-identified designation in its positive import may
run as follows: the girl identifies herself with the mother (or this
latter’s female proxy), and the boy identifies himself with the
father (or this latter’s male proxy). Such positive import would
indicate a sort of idealization on the part of the identifier, an
affective procedure by means of which the identifier takes the
identified as his/her ideal or model (Freud, 1921:134f.). Hence, the
libidinal tie that is liable to emerge from positive identification
would be characterized as one variant of the ‘homosexual’ object-cathexis
(or Besetzung ‘investment’) in the narcissistic type of
attachment, which is in fact a type of object-representation.[3] This libidinal tie seems to stand in sharp contrast with the
libidinal tie that tends to arise from the more familiar phenomenon
of the Oedipus complex, a phenomenon which would exhibit
itself as a variant of the ‘heterosexual’ object-cathexis in the
anaclitic type of attachment, as will be seen presently. It is,
therefore, tempting to suggest that the present relationship which
actually exists between the identifier and the identified is in
principle a direct or an indirect replication of a past relationship
which has already existed between the parent and the grandparent of
the same sex (or the latter’s proxy), a diachronic replication which
appears to circumscribe the whole phenomenon of identification with
both ontogenetic and phylogenetic auras.
With respect to the negative (or pathological) import of
identification, on the other hand, the identifier-identified
designation may be contributory to the psychical destruction of the
identifier, a destruction that is triggered by the ‘deviant’
direction of the psychical make-up of the identified, and is also
well observable but in the ‘abnormal’ course of libidinal and ego
development. In this case, the psychical destruction would aggravate
itself in the pertinacious presence of affective divergence
between the identifier and the identified, thereby undergoing a
gradual series of what may called, ‘psychical re-destructions’ (or
rather ‘destructive transformations’), through a
corresponding gradual series of (alienating) identifications. Thus,
in order to counteract the imminent effects of the psychical
re-destruction being talked about, identification turns into a
potent defence mechanism which is described by Anna Freud as
‘identification with the aggressor’ (Freud,
Anna, 1937:109f.), though its implications have been pointed out by
her father in connection with the unpleasurable frightening
experiences that are assimilated by the infant (the identifier
himself/herself) to seek “pleasure from another source” (Freud,
1920:286; 1931:383f.). The apparent resort to this defence mechanism
is nothing else than a contumacious attempt to master, and therefore
to overcome, a form of anxiety or even phobia. It may occur in
situations where the identifier seeks to identify himself/herself
with an aggressive character-trait (or -traits) that he/she still
experiences in the identified, thereby generating the feeling of
aggressivity, as mentioned above. Typical examples of these
situations point to a boy who merely realizes the existence of an
insolent teacher and involuntarily imitates the grimace of this
teacher, or to a girl who simply imagines the presence of a dreadful
ghost and ‘voluntarily’ pretends to be this ghost. Thus, by
impersonating the perceived aggressivity of the identified, the
identifier seems to wittingly transform himself/herself from the
defensive passivity of behaviour to its offensive activity, a
transformation which marks the reversal of the role of the aggressee
into the role of the aggressor. Hence, the libidinal tie which is
liable to emanate from negative (or pathological) identification
would not be classifiable under the aforesaid narcissistic type of
attachment, as is the case with positive identification, but would
rather be categorizable under the sadomasochistic type of
attachment, which is, in fact, an abnormal fusion of libidinal and
aggressive impulses (cf. Lagache, 1962:111f.).
This sharp contrast between the positive and negative (or
pathological) imports of identification presupposes its ambivalent
nature and characterizes it as an inevitable derivative of the oral
phase of libidinal and ego development, in which the ‘chosen’ object
is now desired and then destroyed –just as the cannibal who
initially exhibits notable devouring ‘affection’ for his/her
fiercest adversaries but who ultimately devours his/her most
intimate inmates (cf. Freud, 1905a:116f; 1921:135). It
appears, therefore, that the sharp contrast between the two imports
in question is well comparable with the classical distinction
between the two sub-phases of ‘oral-sucking’ and ‘oral-biting’
propensities, as the designated terms clearly indicate (cf. Abraham,
1927). Given that the libidinal zone of the mouth orifice is the
primary ‘eroto-genic’ zone (i.e. the main source of pleasurable
experience) in the oral phase specifically, the infant who becomes
unconsciously fixated on an external object in this phase tends to
negatively (or pathologically) identify himself/herself with that
external object rather than positively identify himself/herself with
it as a related person or a related thing (i.e. the related outer
world), thereby entertaining his/her susceptibility to serious
manic-depressive oscillations at later stages. Thus, the infant’s
unconscious fixation on the mother’s breast, which is the only
external object that is available for him/her in the oral phase,
would simply result in his/her negative (or pathological)
identification with it, an identification that would subsequently
oscillate between the aggressive possession of the mother as well as
her breast at the one extreme (viz. manic oscillation) and the
disappointing forfeiture of either or both of the two external
objects altogether at the other extreme (viz. depressive
oscillation). Moreover, even in the case of the infant’s positive
identification with the parent of the same sex (or his/her proxy),
the identifier’s abnormally excessive expression of the emotional
affiliation which is concomitant with it, especially when the
emotional affiliation is narcissistically overstressed and unduly
encouraged by the identified as a means of filling certain psychical
gaps in his/her precarious self-awareness, would eventually be
destined to similar (if not the very same) manifestations of these
manic-depressive oscillations. In consequence, the sharp contrast
between the positive and negative (or pathological) imports of
identification would be radically neutralized, and would ultimately
be modified in the ‘deviant’ direction of the negative (or
pathological) import, thus foreshowing the inception of the
‘abnormal’ course of libidinal and ego development.
It follows that, in the ‘delayed’ absence of its negative (or
pathological) import, identification seems to fit in, and pave the
way for, the more familiar phenomenon of the Oedipus complex, since
the former phenomenon, in virtue of its ambivalent nature, resembles
the oral phase of libidinal and ego development. In addition, the
oral phase, as its primary ‘eroto-genic’ zone clearly signifies, is
considered to be the earliest of the three phases which mark what is
known as the ‘pre-Oedipal period’ (the other two being the anal
phase and the phallic phase). Yet, identification would still exert
its influence in the ‘nascent’ presence of the Oedipus complex, with
the identifier exhibiting two psychically discrete types of
emotional affiliation: firstly, emotional affiliation with the
parent of the same sex (in the case of identification); and
secondly, emotional affiliation with the parent of the opposite sex
(in the case of the Oedipus complex). The two typical instances of
these two types of emotional affiliation may run as follows: the
girl who identifies herself with the mother (or her female proxy)
begins to develop a true object-cathexis towards the father (or his
male proxy), and the boy who identifies himself with the father (or
his male proxy) begins to develop a true object-cathexis towards the
mother (or her female proxy). As mentioned above, the libidinal tie
which arises from identification is radically differentiated from
the libidinal tie that emerges from the Oedipus complex: while the
former tie suggests a variant of the ‘homosexual’ object-cathexis in
the narcissistic type of attachment, the latter tie refers to a
variant of the ‘heterosexual’ object-cathexis in the anaclitic type
of attachment. For a certain period, these two types of emotional
affiliation (or libidinal tie) are engendered side by side without
the immediate exertion of any influence of the one upon the other, a
state of affairs which underlines the psychical divergence between
the two. Then, with the inevitable advent of their mutual
interference, the two types become ‘identified’ with each other, as
it were, a state of affairs which underpins the psychical
convergence instead, with the normal manifestation of the Oedipus
complex originating from this interference, especially when
identification reflects its negative (or pathological) import, or in
Freud’s own words, when it “takes on a hostile colouring” (Freud,
1921:134).
It also follows that the abnormally excessive expression of the
emotional affiliation (or libidinal tie) that is concomitant with
positive identification may well actuate the inversion of the
Oedipus complex, an inversion which demarcates the psychical
transformation whereby the identifier tends to develop a true
object-cathexis towards the identified. Accordingly, the inversion
of the Oedipus complex would point to situations in which the
transformed phenomenon exemplifies a variant of the ‘homosexual’
object-cathexis in the narcissistic type of attachment, as is the
case with identification. In these situations, the distinction
between the identifier’s idealization of the identified and the
identifier’s objectivization of the identified (i.e. the infant’s
choice of the parent of the same sex as an object) amounts to a
corresponding distinction between the identified who is what the
identifier would want to be and the identified who is what
the identifier would want to have (Freud, 1921:135).[4] Given that the embodiment of positive identification is already
possible before the identifier’s development of any object-cathexis,
the distinction depends on whether or not the emotional affiliation
(or libidinal tie) endeavours to mould the identifier’s own ego
after the fashion of the identified. With the inversion of the
Oedipus complex, from this viewpoint, identification seems to
display its (‘pent-up’) ambivalent nature more conspicuously under
the analysis of certain psychopathological symptoms. Thus, in the
case studies of neurosis, on the one hand, the identifier’s symptom
may reproduce the same symptom of the identified when the latter is
being idealized, as in the case of the little girl who was
developing her mother’s excruciating cough. Here, the neurotic
symptom expresses the girl’s hostile desire to occupy her mother’s
position, while a parallel true object-cathexis is directed towards
her father under the effect of a sense of guilt (cf. Freud,
1921:136). In the case studies of hysteria, on the other hand, the
identifier’s symptom may also recreate the same symptom of the
identified but when the latter is being objectivized instead, as in
the case of young Dora who was involuntarily imitating her father’s
tormenting (catarrhal) cough this time. Here, the hysterical symptom
expresses the girl’s true object-cathexis towards her father in her
wholehearted sympathy and concern for him, while a genuinely
non-hostile desire to empathize with her mother’s affective illness
is unconsciously entertained in one form or another (cf. Freud, 1905b:119f.).
Consequently, with the intervening inversion in question, the
identifier would derive no more than a single ‘character-trait’ from
the identified, whether this identified is being idealized
aggressively or being objectivized non-aggressively.
This single ‘character-trait’ (or nur einen einzigen Zug) is
considered by Lacan to be a signifier in virtue of being an element
of a signifying system, a signifier which is initially represented
as a primordial symbolic term (a mere sign), and is then introjected
under what is termed, ‘symbolic identification’ (cf. Lacan,
1960-1:431f.). In psychoanalytic practice, symbolic identification,
which is taken to literally mean ‘identification with the
signifier’, is ultimately looked upon to denote ‘identification with
the symptom’, for which reason it marks what may be called, a
‘symptomatic signifier’ (viz. the assimilated painful cough in the
two examples cited above). In fact, Symbolic identification has
already undergone considerable theoretic changes in Lacan’s
writings: at the one extreme, it is seen as ‘identification with the
father’ in the inversion of the Oedipus complex; and at the other
extreme, it is rather viewed as ‘identification with the imago’
within a genetic theory of the ego, with the latter pointing to the
parent of the same sex in conformity with the normal psychical
operation of the phenomenon, as has been the unmarked case with the
Freudian formulation (cf. Lacan, 1953:12; 1966a:22f.; 1966b:95f.).
In either extreme, moreover, symbolic identification, as a developed
psychical operation, is sharply contrasted with the earlier
(‘primitive’) psychical operation of what is termed, ‘imaginary
identification’, an operation which literally signifies
‘identification with the image’ in the mirror stage, where the most
pristine form of reflexive self-realization is jubilantly
assimilated by the human infant –unlike the situation of the animal
infant, whose primal absorption of its own image does not appear to
meet with its approval. Imaginary identification would, thus, enter
exclusively into the realm of the imaginary order,[5] and would refer to the psychical transformation (or
transformations) which the identifier is pre-ordained to pass
through when he/she assumes a specular image of his/her own, an
image that may well incarnate the threshold of the outer world (or
the visible world per se) (cf. Lacan, 1966a:2f.; 1966b:76f.).
For this reason, introjections under imaginary identification would
mark what may be called, a ‘specular signifier’ (in
contradistinction with the aforesaid ‘symptomatic
signifier’). However, the sharp contrast in question would not
indicate that symbolic identification belongs exclusively to the
realm of the symbolic order and has nothing to do with that of the
imaginary order: it is characterized with the realm of the former
order (the symbolic), simply because it represents the final stage
of the identifier’s passage into it by means of the signifier
itself. It seems, therefore, that the fundamental motive behind
these remarkable theoretic alterations in the Lacanian formulation
is the great difficulty in specifying the determinant medium (the
imago or the signifier) which may conduce towards the
constitution of a rather developed form of the ego, given its
‘primitive’ form before the inversion of the Oedipus complex and its
‘less primitive’ form after the inversion.
The inversion of the Oedipus complex, so it appears, is the
beginning of its inevitable destruction (i.e. its ineluctable
resolution or dissolution) and, like the case of identification, is
explicable both in ontogenetic and phylogenetic terms, where the
ontogeny refers to the infant’s experience of afflictive
disappointments and the phylogeny suggests the timeliness of the
destruction when the next (predestined) phase of libidinal and ego
development sets in –just as the milk-teeth tend to fall out when
the permanent teeth start to grow. By the same token, the ambivalent
nature of the Oedipus complex is also discernible in the infant’s
obdurate behaviour in search of pleasurable satisfaction via his/her
alternating adoption of a masculine (or an ‘active’) attitude and a
feminine (or a ‘passive’) one towards the parent, an adoption which
fluctuates between the identifier’s objectivization and idealization
of the identified. However, the aforesaid pre-Oedipal phallic phase
of libidinal and ego development may well become contemporaneous
with the Oedipus complex before its ineluctable destruction, thereby
highlighting the crucial difference between masculine sexuality and
feminine sexuality, even though both are subjected to that phase in
infantile behaviour. This crucial difference is normally embodied in
the girl’s subliminal acceptance of, and then submission to, the
castration complex as an unpleasantly accomplished fact (or fait
accompli) at the one extreme, and the boy’s pent-up apprehension
and rejection of the possibility of its dreary occurrence at the
other extreme (cf. Freud, 1924:320f.; 1925:332f.). The ineluctable
destruction of the Oedipus complex may well indicate, therefore,
that it begins to succumb to a differentiated quantum of repression
(viz. primary repression), by which the initial emergence of
instinctual drives is suppressed in the id and on which all phases
of libidinal and ego development are dependent and contingent.
Hence, the seemingly dwindling residuum of the Oedipus complex (or
of the phallic phase, for that matter) portends the incipience of an
impending period of emotional and libidinal stagnation known as the
‘latency period’, which ends roughly at the age of puberty. Thus,
the object-cathexes become debilitated, so as to be abandoned, and
thence be substituted for the more strengthened introjection (or
introjections) of identification, with the perceived authority of
the identified being introjected into the ego of the identifier and
forming the nucleus of the latter’s superego. As a result, the
superego tends to appropriate the imposed severity of the identified
and perpetuate his/her prohibition against incestual ties, if any,
thereby preventing the ego itself ethically from recapitulating the
same development of the object-cathexes through their
‘desexualisation’ in Freud’s terminology or their ‘libidinal
normalization’ in Lacan’s terminology (cf. Freud, 1924:319; Lacan,
1966a:2; 1966b:76).
This conflictual interrelation between the workings of
identification and those of the Oedipus complex appears to be
reminiscent of the same conflictual interrelation between the
positive and negative (or pathological) imports of identification
itself, given its indirect contribution towards the aforementioned
desexualization of object-cathexes (which would result in their
sublimation or their transformation into affective impulses) on the
one hand, and its direct constitution of primitive forms of these
object-cathexes (which would represent themselves as primitive
instinctual drives in the id during the pre-Oedipal period) on the
other hand. Accordingly, the early establishment of identification
in either import seems to play an extremely significant role in the
psychical progression or psychical regression of the identity of the
identifier, depending for the most part on the identity of the
identified. While the positive import may conduce, without the
immediate intervention of other defence mechanisms, towards the
development of the superego, the negative (or pathological) import
tends to combine with a defence mechanism of some sort, thereby
forming one of the ego’s most powerful weapons and inducing it to
overcome anxieties or even phobias. Clearly, therefore, the
conflictual interrelation between the workings of identification and
those of the Oedipus complex would highlight the libidinal and
affective content of the ego, thus underlining the beginnings of the
developmental dimension of this psychical entity.
Summary
To conclude, the term identification (in the lexical meaning
of its reflexive implication) refers to the psychical expression of
the infant’s earliest emotional affiliation with another person’s
identity (viz. the parent of the same sex or his/her proxy). This
emotional affiliation, so it seems, is concomitant with a parallel
libidinal tie with the same person, a libidinal tie which manifests
itself as a derivative of the ‘homosexual’ object-cathexis (or -cathexes)
of a specific type of attachment. While the positive import of
identification tends to operate in accordance with the narcissistic
type of attachment, thereby generating the identifier’s feelings of
idealization towards the identified, its negative (or pathological)
import seeks to function in conformity with the sadomasochistic type
of attachment instead, thus generating the identifier’s feelings of
aggressivity towards the identified. Hence, this sharp contrast
between the two imports of identification highlights its ambivalent
nature and characterizes it as a variant of the oral phase of
libidinal and ego development, a phase which is predominant in the
practice of cannibalism, with the result that the identifier
entertains his/her psychical susceptibility to serious
manic-depressive oscillations at a later phase (or phases). What is
more, identification itself fits in, and paves the way for, the more
familiar phenomenon of the Oedipus complex, a phenomenon which,
paradoxically, ensconces itself in a derivative of the
‘heterosexual’ object-cathexis (or -cathexes) and works in congruity
with the anaclitic type of attachment. Subsequently, identification
tends to contribute towards the inversion of the Oedipus complex,
thereby converting its operation back into a variant of the
‘homosexual’ object-cathexis (as though identification were
‘identified’ with the Oedipus complex), meaning that the implicit
distinction between the identifier’s idealization and
objectivization of the identified amounts to the explicit
distinction between the former’s commitment to having and to
being. In such a perspective, identification appears to
exhibit its ambivalent nature more conspicuously in certain
psychopathological cases, where the identifier would only assimilate
a single character-trait from the identified, given the intervening
inversion in question. This single character-trait is considered to
be a signifier that is represented as a primordial symbol (a mere
sign), and is then introjected under ‘symbolic identification’ to
ultimately denote ‘identification with the symptom’, which suggests,
in turn, the formation of what may be called, the ‘symptomatic
signifier’ (as opposed to the earlier formation of what may be
called, the ‘specular signifier’ in the mirror stage). The inversion
of the Oedipus complex is, therefore, the insipience of its
inevitable destruction (i.e. its resolution or dissolution), which
marks its submission to primary repression, thus underlining the
climax of the conflictual interrelation between the complex and
identification. In consequence, the culminating conflictual
interrelation would, in turn, highlight the libidinal and affective
content of the ego, as well as the beginnings of the developmental
dimension of this psychical entity.
*** *** ***
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[1]
Born
in Deir Ezzor (Syria);
Ph.D. in Applied Linguistics (Dublin City University); Ph.D.
in Theoretical Linguistics (Trinity College Dublin); M.Phil.
in Psychoanalytic Studies (Trinity College Dublin);
currently reading for a Ph.D. in Psychoanalytic Studies.
[2]
It is worth noting, however, that
Freud also uses the term identification with
reference to the lexical meaning of its ditransitive
implementation in the context of the dream-work,
specifically. In this context, the relationship of equation
or identicalness referred to in the text is underlined to
underline the analogy between identification and
substitution.
Thus, the process whereby an image is ‘identified’ with
another, for example, is analogous with the process whereby
an image is ‘substituted’ for another, simply because the
two images in question are equated or treated as identical
(cf. Freud, 1900:231f., 431f., etc.).
[3]
Given that object-representation
refers to the psychical representation of an external object
or the outer world (i.e. an object which exists outside the
self or the inner world), and that the internal object
indicates the subject’s self in the linguistic sense (i.e.
the reflexive implementation of identification mentioned in
the text), the latter entity should not be confused with the
one that has acquired the significance of the former entity.
If an internal object is psychically represented to acquire
the significance of an external object, then the internal
object would be comparable with an image which ‘initially’
occurs in the realms of fantasy, imagination, reverie, and
day-dreaming. For this reason, the term identification
in its present formulation is often confused with other
terms, such as internalization, incorporation,
and the like.
[4]
This latter distinction may well
have been the major inspiration to Erich Fromm’s coruscating
and compelling (yet almost forgotten) book, To Have or To
Be (1979), which brings to light a significant
distinction between two modes of existence that are
struggling for the spirit of humankind. Firstly, the ‘having
mode’, which is by far the most dominant mode in modern
industrial society, owing to its unduly fixation on material
values (such as, one’s wasteful passion for the accumulation
of capital, property, etc.) and illusory power (such as,
enslaving oneself to maintain academic, bureaucratic,
political, or even social status). This mode of existence is
undoubtedly rooted in rapacity, enviousness, and
possessiveness, attributes which are typical of what is
known as the ‘anal character’. Secondly, the ‘being mode’,
which is the alternative mode of existence, since it
manifests itself in the pure pleasure of shared experience
and truly constructive rather than destructive activity.
This mode of existence is essentially based on aim-inhibited
love (in fact, ‘divine love’ regardless of any professedly
religious considerations) and the ascendancy of human values
over material ones.
[5]
Concerning mental functioning
specifically, there exist in the Lacanian formulation three
essential orders which may be summarized as follows.
Firstly, the ‘imaginary order’, which comprises the world of
signifieds, and in which the narcissistic (dual)
relationship between the ego and the specular image is
initially formulated in the mirror stage. This relationship
is constructed on the basis of illusion, seduction and
deceptions. Secondly, the ‘symbolic order’, which includes
the world of signifiers instead, and in which the anaclitic
(oppositional) relationship between the ego the other is
later formulated in the discourse of the unconscious. This
relationship is constructed on the basis of the structure of
desire in the Oedipus complex, given that signifiers do not
seem to have positive existence. Thirdly, the ‘real order’,
which embraces a specific world that contradicts the
imaginary order (with its signifieds) and, at the same time,
resists the symbolic order (with its signifiers), thus
ultimately suggesting the impossibility of (true)
articulation in general. Such impossibility is, at bottom,
attributable to the spurious nature of the signified at the
one end, and the negative nature of the signifier at the
other end.