In this book, Chyatat Supachalasai offers a reinterpretation of Marx's concept of the proletariat through a Lacanian lens, drawing on the works of Karl Marx and Jacques Lacan.
Building on the intellectual connection between Marx and Lacan, Supachalasai proposes "proletariat discourse", which arises from a re-reading of Marx's proletariat through Lacanian psychoanalysis, drawing on key concepts such as the hysteric, alienation, enjoyment, anxiety, and trauma. Supachalasai argues that Lacan's notion of capitalist discourse, developed in the 1970s, reveals an inherent "non-relationship" aspect within this discourse, indicating the position of proletariat discourse. This proletariat discourse encapsulates three essential components. First, it establishes an agreement and disagreement between Marxist political theory and Lacanian psychoanalysis. Second, it posits that Marx's understanding of the proletariat can be redefined and comprehended through a Lacanian psychoanalytic framework. Lastly, while portraying Marx's proletariat as a subject of resistance to capitalism, this discussion connects with Lacan's goal of seeking an "exit from capitalism". However, from a Lacanian perspective, this connection also highlights the limitations inherent in Marx's concept of the proletariat.
The Proletariat Discourse will be of great interest to scholars and readers interested in Lacanian-Marxist partnership, psychoanalysis, political thought, Lacanian studies, and critical theory.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Preface 1. Introduction 2. Situating Proletariat Discourse: The Unconscious of Capitalist Discourse 3. Hysterical Proletariat and the Spectre of Communism: From the Spectre of Marx to the Spectre That Haunts Marx 4. Reexamining Alienation and Commodity Fetishism: Proletariat in the Vel of Alienation and the Contradictory Principles of the Unconscious 5. A Dialectic of Proletariat Self-Enjoyment: From a Pathological Existence to the Proletariat in a Logic of Lacanian Woman 6. Reassessing Surplus-Value: Proletariat in the Two Dimensions of Anxiety and a Psychoanalytic Act 7. Trauma as a Political Factor: Rethinking Dialectical Materialism and the Proletariat as Post-Traumatic Subject 8. Proposing a Lacanian Formula for Proletariat Discourse