Techne and impossibility: re-reading Zizek's ideology-critique as geisteskritik

Article


Hourigan, Daniel. 2010. "Techne and impossibility: re-reading Zizek's ideology-critique as geisteskritik." International Journal of Zizek Studies. 4 (1), pp. 1-24.
Article Title

Techne and impossibility: re-reading Zizek's
ideology-critique as geisteskritik

ERA Journal ID34656
Article CategoryArticle
Authors
AuthorHourigan, Daniel
Journal TitleInternational Journal of Zizek Studies
Journal Citation4 (1), pp. 1-24
Number of Pages24
Year2010
Place of PublicationLeeds, United Kingdom
ISSN1751-8229
Web Address (URL)http://zizekstudies.org/index.php/ijzs/article/view/232/328
Abstract

This discussion delineates and explores Zizek's ideology-critique towards the end of conceptually distinguishing the deployment of techne as the other side of impossibility, as revealed by his dialectical materialism. Techne appears herein as the other side of impossibility as the credentials of Zizek's style of critique rest on there being an ideal point in constellations of value and social ties (Geist) in the aesthetics of the life-world that encourage the crafting of the identity of the human subject and, at the same moment, hide the full realisation of this identity from the subject, making it impossible for s/he to develop the identification of their subjectivity beyond merely a token gesture of what they can 'become.' This discussion thus attempts to locate and articulate this moment of impossibility in its various modalities and elucidate techne on these grounds, revealing Zizek's critique as one of Geist in the sense Adorno gave to the term.

Keywordsdialectical materialism; ideologies
ANZSRC Field of Research 2020440603. Economic geography
500301. Aesthetics
441005. Social theory
Public Notes

Copyright 2010 IJZS. IJZS is an open access journal. Its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use.

Byline AffiliationsGriffith University
Institution of OriginUniversity of Southern Queensland
Permalink -

https://research.usq.edu.au/item/q298q/techne-and-impossibility-re-reading-zizek-s-ideology-critique-as-geisteskritik

Download files


Published Version
Hourigan_IJZS_v4n1_PV.pdf
License: CC BY-NC-ND
File access level: Anyone

  • 1706
    total views
  • 613
    total downloads
  • 1
    views this month
  • 2
    downloads this month

Export as

Related outputs

Law and the Unconscious
Hourigan, Daniel. 2024. "Law and the Unconscious." The Routledge Handbook of Cultural Legal Studies. United Kingdom. Routledge.
Emergent Systems: Virtuality, Legality, Formality
Hourigan, Daniel. 2023. "Emergent Systems: Virtuality, Legality, Formality ." Mitchell, Daniel, Pearson, Ashley and Peters, Timothy D. (ed.) Law, Video Games, Virtual Realities: Playing Law. United Kingdom. Routledge. pp. 95-110
Forced Migration Narratives and the Nation-State: ‘Out’ and ‘Go, Went, Gone’
Hourigan, Daniel. 2023. "Forced Migration Narratives and the Nation-State: ‘Out’ and ‘Go, Went, Gone’ ." Critique (Washington): studies in contemporary fiction. https://doi.org/10.1080/00111619.2023.2221780
On Harrowing in Dead Europe
Hourigan Daniel. 2022. "On Harrowing in Dead Europe ." Journal of Australian Studies. 46 (1), pp. 60-71. https://doi.org/10.1080/14443058.2021.2019087
Queer, Difference, Heresy: Salt Lane Witches in 'Rupetta' and Out
Hourigan, Daniel. 2018. "Queer, Difference, Heresy: Salt Lane Witches in 'Rupetta' and Out." Writing from below. 4 (1).
Asylum Seekers and Refugees in Australian Literature
Hourigan, Daniel. 2020. "Asylum Seekers and Refugees in Australian Literature." Gildersleeve, Jessica (ed.) The Routledge Companion to Australian Literature. New York. Routledge. pp. 254-261
On the possibility of legal form in Mieville's speculative fictions
Hourigan, Daniel. 2018. "On the possibility of legal form in Mieville's speculative fictions." Law and Literature. 30 (2), pp. 167-184. https://doi.org/10.1080/1535685X.2017.1370800
Indigeneity: Before and Beyond the Law by Kathleen Birrell]
Hourigan, Daniel. 2019. "Indigeneity: Before and Beyond the Law by Kathleen Birrell]." Law and Literature. 31 (2), pp. 294-297. https://doi.org/10.1080/1535685X.2019.1576974
The symptoms of the just: psycho-pass, judg(e)ment, and the asymptomatic commons
Hourigan, Daniel. 2018. "The symptoms of the just: psycho-pass, judg(e)ment, and the asymptomatic commons." Pearson, Ashley, Giddens, Thomas and Tranter, Kieran (ed.) Law and justice in Japanese popular culture: from crime fighting robots to duelling pocket monsters. Milton Park, United Kingdom. Routledge. pp. 19-31
Specters and Psychoanalysis in the Turn to Law and Affect
Hourigan, Daniel. 2019. "Specters and Psychoanalysis in the Turn to Law and Affect." Law and Literature. 31 (1), pp. 129-145. https://doi.org/10.1080/1535685X.2017.1327694
Breach! The law's jouissance in Mieville's The City and The City
Hourigan, Daniel. 2013. "Breach! The law's jouissance in Mieville's The City and The City." Law, Culture and the Humanities. 9 (1), pp. 156-168. https://doi.org/10.1177/1743872111404849
Postmodern anarchy in the modern legal psyche: law, anarchy and psychoanalytic philosophy
Hourigan, Daniel. 2012. "Postmodern anarchy in the modern legal psyche: law, anarchy and psychoanalytic philosophy." Griffith Law Review. 21 (2), pp. 330-348. https://doi.org/10.1080/10383441.2012.10854743
True blood and the southern belle of theory
Hourigan, Daniel. 2011. "True blood and the southern belle of theory." Taylor, Jodie and Baker, David (ed.) Erotic Screen and Sound Conference 2011: Culture, Media and Desire. Brisbane, Australia 15 - 18 Feb 2011 Brisbane, Australia.
Law and enjoyment: power, pleasure and psychoanalysis
Hourigan, Daniel. 2015. Law and enjoyment: power, pleasure and psychoanalysis. Abingdon, Oxfordshire, England. Routledge.
Post-structuralism
Hourigan, Daniel. 2011. "Post-structuralism." Southerton, Dale (ed.) Encyclopedia of consumer culture. Thousand Oaks, CA. United States. SAGE Publications Ltd. pp. 1132-1137
Obsession
Hourigan, Daniel. 2011. "Obsession." Southerton, Dale (ed.) Encyclopedia of consumer culture. Thousand Oaks, CA. United States. SAGE Publications Ltd. pp. 1056-1057
Cinema
Hourigan, Daniel. 2011. "Cinema." Southerton, Dale (ed.) Encyclopedia of consumer culture. Thousand Oaks, CA. United States. SAGE Publications Ltd. pp. 163-165
Minimalism, bloodied and raw: Palahniuk's literary violence
Hourigan, Daniel. 2009. "Minimalism, bloodied and raw: Palahniuk's literary violence." Dixon, Chris and Jacobs, Jason (ed.) 2nd Conference of the International Society for Cultural History (ISCH 2009): Cultures of Violence and Conflict. Brisbane, Australia 20 - 23 Jul 2009 Brisbane, Australia.
Zizek and the ontological emergence of technology
Hourigan, Daniel. 2009. "Zizek and the ontological emergence of technology." Cosmos and History: the journal of natural and social philosophy. 5 (2), pp. 250-263.
The cadence of becoming
Hourigan, Daniel. 2010. "The cadence of becoming." Westbrook, Anna and Farrell, Charlotte (ed.) UNSW Postgraduate Symposium (EMPA 2010): Metamorphoses: Transformations, Transgressions. Sydney, Australia 10 Sep 2010 Sydney, Australia. https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.1817373
Techne and mysticism: courting psychosis?
Hourigan, Daniel. 2010. "Techne and mysticism: courting psychosis?" International Journal of Zizek Studies. 4 (4), pp. 1-20.
Ecology
Hourigan, Daniel. 2014. "Ecology." Butler, Rex (ed.) The Zizek dictionary. Durham, United Kingdom. Acumen Publishing. pp. 71-74
Palahniuk's tyranny of language and ontological minimalism
Hourigan, Daniel. 2010. "Palahniuk's tyranny of language and ontological minimalism." Kritike. 4 (2), pp. 26-32.
Badiou and Zizek on Mallarme: the critique of object-art
Hourigan, Daniel. 2012. "Badiou and Zizek on Mallarme: the critique of object-art." Minerva: an internet journal of philosophy. 16, pp. 25-35.
Ghost in the Shell 2, technicity and the subject
Hourigan, Daniel. 2013. "Ghost in the Shell 2, technicity and the subject." Film-Philosophy. 17 (1), pp. 51-67.