The time is fast approaching when I will need to have a topic for a dissertation and I can at this moment only admit to my uncertainty about what that topic will be. I had entertained the idea, prior to returning from Germany, that it would concern itself with 'discourse' in some sense - this on account of my thesis having been on Lacan's theory of discourse, the prospect at that time of working more with discourse ala Laclau, and because I had tentatively explored having Angermüller as the Mainz-member for my dissertation committee. But, while I retain interest in Lacan's thought about this matter, I have too many disputes with Laclau's (to my mind totalizing) tendencies in that regard and while what Angermüller does with discourse is intriguing, I cannot see myself developing or adapting his approach to my areas of interest.
The thought then emerges that I should foreground those areas of attention and interest in my ruminations on this problem. Here, I can at least say something about my hopes. I want to develop some sort of theoretical model or collection of concepts that will be applicable with whatever situational modifications to; poetry (of the sort that I care about); fiction (and here a canonical, if modern or contemporary author seems a smart choice); film (not Lynch or Hitchcock but something cool still), and; art (possibly performance art in some sense, though object art is also a viable option).
& I then wonder if my interest in the body might be of help in that. My interests here are all over the map (from sound poetry to fashion, the body "overwritten with signifiers" to the voice as object), and that is both energizing and somewhat discouraging. There is a body of scholarship on the "body" that is of a size already that it would take years to begin to feel I had a good grasp on the debates, issues and theories already out there. Some narrowing and pruning would have to be done to even consider this as a reasonable possibility in the time remaining to me to complete a PhD, and the question must be asked as well; do I want to use the entire time I have to do that or might it not be better to just get the damned dissertation done?
So, in a very lame attempt to narrow the field, while retaining the body and adding other areas of extant interest and curiosity, I have the following possible knot of things out of which to derive a central question (or questions) around which to structure a book (which is how I prefer to think of the diss for a variety of reasons).
Language Embodied / Embodied Language
- What psychoanalysis, Freud and Lacan preeminently, have to contribute to understanding the body's imbrication in language.
- Voice, a unique site of interface between the two, particularly at its more extreme points or edges - sound poetry, glossolalia, aphasias, psychosis as well as in modes which diminish the sense of subjective engagement as with routinized and depersonalized speech or parapraxes as discussed by Freud and others.
- Voice as object.
- Speech (parole) vs Langue, as well as Speech as semiosis (ala Peirce).
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lay it on me/us